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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Continental Dragoon, by Robert Neilson
+Stephens, Illustrated by H. C. Edwards
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Continental Dragoon
+ A Love Story of Philipse Manor-House in 1778
+
+
+Author: Robert Neilson Stephens
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 3, 2009 [eBook #30589]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONTINENTAL DRAGOON***
+
+
+E-text prepared by David Edwards, Katherine Ward, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from
+digital material generously made available by Internet Archive
+(http://www.archive.org)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 30589-h.htm or 30589-h.zip:
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30589/30589-h/30589-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30589/30589-h.zip)
+
+
+ Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive. See
+ http://www.archive.org/details/continentaldrago00stepiala
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ Hyphenation has been made consistent.
+
+ Archaic and variable spellings are preserved.
+
+ The author's punctuation style is preserved, except quotation
+ marks, which have been standardized.
+
+ Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
+
+ Text in bold face is enclosed by equal signs (=bold=).
+
+
+
+
+
+THE CONTINENTAL DRAGOON.
+
+by
+
+R. N. STEPHENS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Works of R. N. STEPHENS.
+
+An Enemy to the King.
+The Continental Dragoon.
+
+_In Press_:
+The Road to Paris.
+
+L. C. PAGE AND COMPANY, Publishers,
+(INCORPORATED)
+196 Summer St., Boston, Mass.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "_'Take that rebel alive!' ordered Colden._"
+
+Photogravure from original drawing by H. C. Edwards.]
+
+
+THE CONTINENTAL DRAGOON
+
+A Love Story of Philipse Manor-House in 1778
+
+by
+
+ROBERT NEILSON STEPHENS
+
+Author of
+"An Enemy to the King"
+
+Illustrated by H. C. Edwards
+
+"Love's born of a glance, I say"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Boston
+L. C. Page and Company
+(Incorporated)
+1898
+
+Copyright, 1898
+By L. C. Page and Company
+(Incorporated)
+
+Entered at Stationer's Hall, London
+
+FIFTH THOUSAND
+
+Colonial Press:
+Electrotyped and Printed by C. H. Simonds & Co.
+Boston, U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ Chapter Page
+ I. The Riders 11
+ II. The Manor-house 32
+ III. The Sound of Galloping 50
+ IV. The Continental Dragoon 65
+ V. The Black Horse 87
+ VI. The One Chance 116
+ VII. The Flight of the Minutes 140
+ VIII. The Secret Passage 156
+ IX. The Confession 180
+ X. The Plan of Retaliation 197
+ XI. The Conquest 214
+ XII. The Challenge 236
+ XIII. The Unexpected 252
+ XIV. The Broken Sword 267
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+ "'Take that rebel alive!' ordered Colden." Frontispiece
+
+ "'Give it to the Colonel.'" 82
+ "Leaned forward on the horse's neck." 111
+ "'You are too late, Jack!'" 154
+ "'Go, I say!'" 196
+ "'I take my leave of this house!'" 248
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE RIDERS.
+
+
+"I dare say 'tis a wild, foolish, dangerous thing; but I do it,
+nevertheless! As for my reasons, they are the strongest. First, I wish
+to do it. Second, you've all opposed my doing it. So there's an end of
+the matter!"
+
+It was, of course, a woman that spoke,--moreover, a young one.
+
+And she added:
+
+"Drat the wind! Can't we ride faster? 'Twill be dark before we reach
+the manor-house. Get along, Cato!"
+
+She was one of three on horseback, who went northward on the Albany
+post-road late in the afternoon of a gray, chill, blowy day in
+November, in the war-scourged year 1778. Beside the girl rode a young
+gentleman, wrapped in a dark cloak. The third horse, which plodded a
+short distance in the rear, carried a small negro youth and two large
+portmanteaus. The three riders made a group that was, as far as could
+be seen from their view-point, alone on the highway.
+
+There were reasons why such a group, on that road at that time, was an
+unusual sight,--reasons familiar to any one who is well informed in
+the history of the Revolution. Unfortunately, most good Americans are
+better acquainted with the French Revolution than with our own, know
+more about the state of affairs in Rome during the reign of Nero than
+about the condition of things in New York City during the British
+occupation, and compensate for their knowledge of Scotch-English
+border warfare in remote times by their ignorance of the border
+warfare that ravaged the vicinity of the island of Manhattan, for six
+years, little more than a century ago.
+
+Our Revolutionary War had reached the respectable age of three and a
+half years. Lexington, Bunker Hill, Brooklyn, Harlem Heights, White
+Plains, Trenton, Princeton, the Brandywine, German-town, Bennington,
+Saratoga, and Monmouth--not to mention events in the South and in
+Canada and on the water--had taken their place in history. The army of
+the King of England had successively occupied Boston, New York, and
+Philadelphia; had been driven out of Boston by siege, and had left
+Philadelphia to return to the town more pivotal and nearer the
+sea,--New York. One British commander-in-chief had been recalled by
+the British ministry to explain why he had not crushed the rebellion,
+and one British major-general had surrendered an army, and was now
+back in England defending his course and pleading in Parliament the
+cause of the Americans, to whom he was still a prisoner on parole. Our
+Continental army--called Continental because, like the general
+Congress, it served the whole union of British-settled Colonies or
+States on this continent, and was thus distinguished from the militia,
+which served in each case its particular Colony or State only--had
+experienced both defeats and victories in encounters with the King's
+troops and his allies, German, Hessian, and American Tory. It had
+endured the winter at Valley Forge while the British had fed, drunk,
+gambled, danced, flirted, and wenched in Philadelphia. The French
+alliance had been sanctioned. Steuben, Lafayette, DeKalb, Pulaski,
+Kosciusko, Armand, and other Europeans, had taken service with us. One
+plot had been made in Congress and the army to supplant Washington in
+the chief command, and had failed. The treason of General Charles Lee
+had come to naught,--but was to wait for disclosure till many years
+after every person concerned should be graveyard dust. We had
+celebrated two anniversaries of the Fourth of July. The new free and
+independent States had organized local governments. The King's
+appointees still made a pretence of maintaining the royal provincial
+governments, but mostly abode under the protection of the King's
+troops in New York. There also many of those Americans in the North
+took refuge who distinctly professed loyalty to the King. New York was
+thus the chief lodging-place of all that embodied British sovereignty
+in America. Naturally the material tokens of British rule radiated
+from the town, covering all of the island of Manhattan, most of Long
+Island, and all of Staten Island, and retaining a clutch here and
+there on the mainland of New Jersey.
+
+It was the present object of Washington to keep those visible signs of
+English authority penned up within this circle around New York. The
+Continental posts, therefore, formed a vast arc, extending from the
+interior of New Jersey through Southeastern New York State to Long
+Island Sound and into Connecticut. This had been the situation since
+midsummer of 1778. It was but a detachment from our main army that had
+cooperated with the French fleet in the futile attempt to dislodge a
+British force from Newport in August of that year.
+
+The British commander-in-chief and most of the superior officers had
+their quarters in the best residences of New York. That town was
+packed snugly into the southern angle of the island of Manhattan, like
+a gift in the toe of a Christmas stocking. Southward, some of its
+finest houses looked across the Battery to the bay. Northward the town
+extended little beyond the common fields, of which the City Hall
+Square of 1898 is a reduced survival. The island of Manhattan--with
+its hills, woods, swamps, ponds, brooks, roads, farms, sightly
+estates, gardens, and orchards--was dotted with the cantonments and
+garrisoned forts of the British. The outposts were, largely, entrusted
+to bodies of Tory allies organized in this country. Thus was much of
+Long Island guarded by the three Loyalist battalions of General Oliver
+De Lancey, himself a native of New York. On Staten Island was
+quartered General Van Cortlandt Skinner's brigade of New Jersey
+Volunteers, a troop which seems to have had such difficulty in finding
+officers in its own State that it had to go to New York for many of
+them,--or was it that so many more rich New York Loyalists had to be
+provided with commissions than the New York Loyalist brigades required
+as officers?
+
+But the most important British posts were those which guarded the
+northern entrance to the island of Manhattan, where it was separated
+from the mainland by Spuyten Duyvel Kill, flowing westward into the
+Hudson, and the Harlem, flowing southward into the East River. King's
+Bridge and the Farmers' Bridge, not far apart, joined the island to
+the main; and just before the Revolution a traveller might have made
+his choice of these two bridges, whether he wished to take the Boston
+road or the road to Albany. In 1778 the British "barrier" was King's
+Bridge, the northern one of the two, the watch-house being the tavern
+at the mainland end of the bridge. Not only the bridge, but the
+Hudson, the Spuyten Duyvel, and the Harlem, as well, were commanded by
+British forts on the island of Manhattan. Yet there were defences
+still further out. On the mainland was a line of forts extending from
+the Hudson, first eastward, then southward, to the East River. Further
+north, between the Albany road and the Hudson, was a camp of German
+and Hessian allies, foot and horse. Northeast, on Valentine's Hill,
+were the Seventy-first Highlanders. Near the mainland bank of the
+Harlem were the quarters of various troops of dragoons, most of them
+American Tory corps with English commanders, but one, at least, native
+to the soil, not only in rank and file, but in officers also,--and
+with no less dash and daring than by Tarleton, Simcoe, and the rest,
+was King George III. served by Captain James De Lancey, of the county
+of West Chester, with his "cowboys," officially known as the West
+Chester Light Horse.
+
+Thus the outer northern lines of the British were just above King's
+Bridge. The principal camp of the Americans was far to the north. Each
+army was affected by conditions that called for a wide space of
+territory between the two forces, between the outer rim of the British
+circle, and the inner face of the American arc. Of this space the
+portion that lay bounded on the west by the Hudson, on the southeast
+by Long Island Sound, and cut in two by the southward-flowing Bronx,
+was the most interesting. It was called the Neutral Ground, and
+neutral it was in that it had the protection of neither side, while it
+was ravaged by both. Foraged by the two armies, under the approved
+rules of war, it underwent further a constant, irregular pillage by
+gangs of mounted rascals who claimed attachment, some to the British,
+some to the Americans, but were not owned by either. It was, too,
+overridden by the cavalry of both sides in attempts to surprise
+outposts, cut off supplies, and otherwise harass and sting. Unexpected
+forays by the rangers and dragoons from King's Bridge and the Harlem
+were reciprocated by sudden visitations of American horse and light
+infantry from the Greenburg Hills and thereabove. The Whig militia of
+the county also took a hand against British Tories and marauders. Of
+the residents, many Tories fled to New York, some Americans went to
+the interior of the country, but numbers of each party held their
+ground, at risk of personal harm as well as of robbery. Many of the
+best houses were, at different times during the war, occupied as
+quarters by officers of either side. Little was raised on the farms
+save what the farmers could immediately use or easily conceal. The
+Hudson was watched by British war-vessels, while the Americans on
+their side patrolled it with whale-boats, long and canoe-like, swift
+and elusive. For the drama of partisan warfare, Nature had provided,
+in lower West Chester County,--picturesquely hilly, beautifully
+wooded, pleasantly watered, bounded in part by the matchless Hudson
+and the peerless Sound,--a setting unsurpassed.
+
+Thus was it that Miss Elizabeth Philipse, Major John Colden, and Miss
+Philipse's negro boy, Cuff, all riding northward on the Albany
+post-road, a few miles above King's Bridge, but still within territory
+patrolled daily by the King's troops, constituted, on that bleak
+November evening in 1778, a group unusual to the time and place.
+
+'Twas a wettish wind, concerning which Miss Elizabeth expressed, in
+the imperative mood, her will that it be dratted,--a feminine wind,
+truly, as was clear from its unexpected flarings up and sudden
+calmings down, its illogical whiskings around and eccentric changes of
+direction. Now it swept down the slope from the east, as if it meant
+to bombard the travellers with all the brown leaves of the hillside.
+Now it assailed them from the north, as if to impede their journey;
+now rushed on them from the rear as if it had come up from New York to
+speed them on their way; now attacked them in the left flank, armed
+with a raw chill from the Hudson. It blew Miss Elizabeth's hair about
+and additionally reddened her cheeks. It caused the young Tory major
+to frown, for the protection of his eyes, and thus to look more and
+more unlike the happy man that Miss Elizabeth's accepted suitor ought
+to have appeared.
+
+"I make no doubt I've brought on me the anger of your whole family by
+lending myself to this. And yet I am as much against it as they are!"
+So spake the major, in tones as glum as his looks.
+
+"'Twas a choice, then, between their anger and mine," said Miss
+Elizabeth, serenely. "Don't think I wouldn't have come, even if you
+had refused your escort. I'd have made the trip alone with Cuff,
+that's all."
+
+"I shall be blamed, none the less."
+
+"Why? You couldn't have hindered me. If the excursion is as dangerous
+as they say it is, your company certainly does not add to my danger.
+It lessens it. So, as my safety is what they all clamor about, they
+ought to commend you for escorting me."
+
+"If they were like ever to take that view, they would not all have
+refused you their own company."
+
+"They refused because they neither supposed that I would come alone
+nor that Providence would send me an escort in the shape of a surly
+major on leave of absence from Staten Island! Come, Jack, you needn't
+tremble in dread of their wrath. By this time my amiable papa and my
+solicitous mamma and my anxious brothers and sisters are in such a
+state of mind about me that, when you return to-night and report I've
+been safely consigned to Aunt Sally's care, they'll fairly worship you
+as a messenger of good news. So be as cheerful as the wind and the
+cold will let you. We are almost there. It seems an age since we
+passed Van Cortlandt's."
+
+Major Colden merely sighed and looked more dismal, as if knowing the
+futility of speech.
+
+"There's the steeple!" presently cried the girl, looking ahead. "We'll
+be at the parsonage in ten minutes, and safe in the manor-house in
+five more. Do look relieved, Jack! The journey's end is in sight, and
+we haven't had sight of a soldier this side of King's Bridge,--except
+Van Wrumb's Hessians across Tippett's Vale, and they are friends.
+Br-r-r-r! I'll have Williams make a fire in every room in the
+manor-house!"
+
+Now while these three rode in seeming security from the south towards
+the church, parsonage, country tavern, and great manor-house that
+constituted the village then called, sometimes Lower Philipsburgh and
+sometimes Younker's, that same hill-varied, forest-set, stream-divided
+place was being approached afar from the north by a company of mounted
+troops riding as if the devil was after them. It was not the devil,
+but another body of cavalry, riding at equal speed, though at a great
+distance behind. The three people from New York as yet neither saw nor
+heard anything of these horsemen dashing down from the north. Yet the
+major's spirits sank lower and lower, as if he had an omen of coming
+evil.
+
+He was a handsome young man, Major John Colden, being not more than
+twenty-seven years old, and having the clearly outlined features best
+suited to that period of smooth-shaven faces. His dark eyes and his
+pensive expression were none the less effective for the white powder
+on his cued hair. A slightly petulant, uneasy look rather added to his
+countenance. He was of medium height and regular figure. He wore a
+civilian's cloak or outer coat over the uniform of his rank and corps,
+thus hiding also his sword and pistol. Other externals of his attire
+were riding-boots, gloves, and a three-cornered hat without a military
+cockade. He was mounted on a sorrel horse a little darker in hue than
+the animal ridden by Miss Elizabeth's black boy, Cuff, who wore the
+rich livery of the Philipses.
+
+The steed of Miss Elizabeth was a slender black, sensitive and
+responsive to her slightest command--a fit mount for this, the most
+imperious, though not the oldest, daughter of Colonel Frederick
+Philipse, third lord, under the bygone royal régime, of the manor of
+Philipsburgh in the Province of New York. They gave classic names to
+quadrupeds in those days and Addison's tragedy was highly respected,
+so Elizabeth's scholarly father had christened this horse Cato.
+Howsoever the others who loved her regarded her present jaunt, no
+opposition was shown by Cato. Obedient now as ever, the animal bore
+her zealously forward, be it to danger or to what she would.
+
+Elizabeth's resolve to revisit the manor hall on the Hudson, which had
+been left closed up in the steward's charge when the family had sought
+safety in their New York City residence in 1777, had sprung in part
+from a powerful longing for the country and in part from a dream which
+had reawakened strongly her love for the old house of her birth and of
+most of her girlhood. The peril of her resolve only increased her
+determination to carry it out. Her parents, brothers, and sisters
+stood aghast at the project, and refused in any way to countenance it.
+But there was no other will in the Philipse household able to cope
+with Elizabeth's. She held that the thing was most practicable and
+simple, inasmuch as the steward, with the aid of two servants, kept
+the deserted house in a state of habitation, and as her mother's
+sister, Miss Sarah Williams, was living with the widow Babcock in the
+parsonage of Lower Philipsburgh and could transfer her abode to the
+manor-house for the time of Elizabeth's stay. Major Colden, an unloved
+lover,--for Elizabeth, accepting marriage as one of the inevitables,
+yet declared that she could never love any man, love being admittedly
+a weakness, and she not a weak person,--was ever watchful for the
+opportunity of ingratiating himself with the superb girl, and so
+fearful of displeasing her that he dared not refuse to ride with her.
+He was less able even than her own family to combat her purpose. One
+day some one had asked him why, since she called him Jack, and he was
+on the road to thirty years, while she was yet in her teens, he did
+not call her Betty or Bess, as all other Elizabeths were called in
+those days. He meditated a moment, then replied, "I never heard any
+one, even in her own family, call her so. I can't imagine any one ever
+calling her by any more familiar name than Elizabeth."
+
+Now it was not from her father that this regal young creature could
+have taken her resoluteness, though she may well have got from him
+some of the pride that went with it. There certainly must have been
+more pride than determination in Frederick Philipse, third lord of the
+manor, colonel in provincial militia before the Revolution, graduate
+of King's College, churchman, benefactor, gentleman of literary
+tastes; amiable, courtly, and so fat that he and his handsome wife
+could not comfortably ride in the same coach at the same time. But
+there was surely as much determination as pride in this gentleman's
+great-grandfather, Vrederyck Flypse, descendant of a line of viscounts
+and keepers of the deer forests of Bohemia, Protestant victim of
+religious persecution in his own land, immigrant to New Amsterdam
+about 1650, and soon afterward the richest merchant in the province,
+dealer with the Indians, ship-owner in the East and West India trade,
+importer of slaves, leader in provincial politics and government,
+founder of Sleepy Hollow Church, probably a secret trafficker with
+Captain Kidd and other pirates, and owner by purchase of the territory
+that was erected by royal charter of William and Mary into the
+lordship and manor of Philipsburgh. The strength of will probably
+declined, while the pride throve, in transmission to Vrederyck's son,
+Philip, who sowed wild oats, and went to the Barbadoes for his health
+and married the daughter of the English governor of that island.
+Philip's son, Frederick, being born in a hot climate, and grandson of
+an English governor as well as of the great Flypse, would naturally
+have had great quantity of pride, whatever his stock of force,
+particularly as he became second lord of the manor at the lordly age
+of four. And he could not easily have acquired humility in later life,
+as speaker of the provincial Assembly, Baron of the Exchequer, judge
+of the Supreme Court, or founder of St. John's Church,--towards which
+graceful edifice was the daughter of his son, the third lord,
+directing her horse this wintry autumn evening. As for this third
+lord, he had been removed by the new Government to Connecticut for
+favoring the English rule, but, having received permission to go to
+New York for a short time, had evinced his fondness for the sweet and
+soft things of life by breaking his parole and staying in the city,
+under the British protection, thus risking his vast estate and showing
+himself a gentleman of anything but the courage now displayed by his
+daughter.
+
+Elizabeth, therefore, must have derived her spirit, with a good
+measure of pride and a fair share (or more) of vanity, from her
+mother, though, thanks to that appreciation of personal comfort which
+comes with middle age, Madam Philipse's high-spiritedness would no
+longer have displayed itself in dangerous excursions, nor was it
+longer equal to a contest with the fresher energy of Elizabeth. She
+was the daughter of Charles Williams, once naval officer of the port
+of New York, and his wife, who had been Miss Sarah Olivier. Thus came
+Madam Philipse honestly by the description, "imperious woman of
+fashion," in which local history preserves her memory. She was a
+widow of twenty-four when Colonel Philipse married her, she having
+been bereaved two years before of her first husband, Mr. Anthony
+Rutgers, the lawyer. She liked display, and her husband indulged her
+inclination without stint, receiving in repayment a good nursery-full
+of what used, in the good old days, to be called pledges of affection.
+Being the daughter of a royal office-holding Englishman, how could she
+have helped holding her head mighty high on receiving her elevation to
+the ladyship of Philipsburgh, and who shall blame her daughter and
+namesake, now within a stone's throw of St. John's parsonage and in
+full sight of the tree-bowered manorial home of her fathers, for
+holding hers, which was younger, a trifle higher?
+
+Not many high-held heads of this or any other day are or were finer
+than that of Elizabeth Philipse was in 1778, or are set on more
+graceful figures. For all her haughtiness, she was not a very large
+person, nor yet was she a small one. She was neither fragile nor too
+ample. Her carriage made her look taller than she was. She was of the
+brown-haired, blue-eyed type, but her eyes were not of unusual size or
+surpassing lucidity, being merely clear, honest, steady eyes, capable
+rather of fearless or disdainful attention than of swift flashes or
+coquettish glances. The precision with which her features were
+outlined did not lessen the interest that her face had from her
+pride, spirit, independence, and intelligence. She was, moreover, an
+active, healthy creature, and if she commanded the dratting of the
+wind, it was not as much because she was chilled by it as because it
+blew her cloak and impeded her progress. In fine, she was a beauty;
+else this historian would never have taken the trouble of unearthing
+from many places and piecing together the details of this fateful
+incident,--for if any one supposes that the people of this narrative
+are mere fictions, he or she is radically in error. They lived and
+achieved, under the names they herein bear; were as actual as the
+places herein mentioned,--as any of the numerous patriotic Americans
+who daily visit the genealogical shelves of the public libraries can
+easily learn, if they will spare sufficient time from the laudable
+task of hunting down their own ancestors. If this story is called a
+romance, that term is used here only as it is oft applied to actual
+occurrences of a romantic character. So the Elizabeth Philipse who,
+before crossing the Neperan to approach the manor-house, stopped in
+front of the snug parsonage at the roadside and directed Cuff to knock
+at the door, was as real as was then the parsonage itself.
+
+Presently a face appeared furtively at one of the up-stairs windows.
+The eyes thereof, having dwelt for an instant on the mounted party
+shivering in the road, opened wide in amazement, and a minute later,
+after a sound of key-turning and bolt-drawing, the door opened, and a
+good-looking lady appeared in the doorway, backed up by a servant and
+two pretty children who clung, half-curious, half-frightened, to the
+lady's skirts.
+
+"Why, Miss Elizabeth! Is it possible--"
+
+But Elizabeth cut the speech of the astonished lady short.
+
+"Yes, my dear Mrs. Babcock,--and I know how dangerous, and all that!
+And, thank you, I'll not come in. I shall see you during the week. I'm
+going to the manor-house to stay awhile, and I wish my aunt to stay
+there with me, if you can spare her."
+
+"Why, yes,--of course,--but--here comes your aunt."
+
+"Why, Elizabeth, what in the world--"
+
+She was a somewhat stately woman at first sight, was Elizabeth's
+mother's sister, Miss Sarah Williams; but on acquaintance soon
+conciliated and found to be not at all the formidable and haughty
+person she would have had people believe her; not too far gone in
+middle age, preserving, despite her spinsterhood, much of her bloom
+and many of those little roundnesses of contour which adorn but do not
+encumber.
+
+"I haven't time to say what, aunt," broke in Elizabeth. "I want to get
+to the manor-house before it is night. You are to stay with me there a
+week. So put on a wrap and come over as soon as you can, to be in
+time for supper. I'll send a boy for you, if you like."
+
+"Why, no, there's some one here will walk over with me, I dare say.
+But, la me, Elizabeth,--"
+
+"Then I'll look for you in five minutes. Good night, Mrs. Babcock! I
+trust your little ones are well."
+
+And she rode off, followed by Colden and Cuff, leaving the two women
+in the parsonage doorway to exchange what conjectures and what
+ejaculations of wonderment the circumstances might require.
+
+Night was falling when the riders crossed the Neperan (then commonly
+known as the Saw Mill River) by the post-road bridge, and gazed more
+closely on the stone manor-house. Looking westward, from the main
+road, across the hedge and paling fence, they saw, first the vast lawn
+with its comely trees, then the long east front of the house, with its
+two little entrance-porches, the row of windows in each of its two
+stories, the dormer windows projecting from the sloping roof, the
+balustraded walk on the roof-top; at both ends the green and brown and
+yellow hints of what lay north of the house, between it and the
+forest, and west of the house, between it and the Hudson,--the
+box-hedged gardens, the terraces breaking the slope to the river, the
+deer paddock enclosed by high pickets, the great orchard. The Hudson
+was nearer to the house then than now, and its lofty further bank,
+rich with growth of wood and leaf, was the backing for the westward
+view. To the east, which the riders put behind them in facing the
+manor-house, were the hills of the interior.
+
+"Not a sign of light from the house, and the shutters all closed, as
+if it were a tomb! It looks as cold and empty as one. I'll soon make
+it warm and live enough inside at least!" said Elizabeth, and turned
+westward from the highway into the short road that ran between the
+mansion and the north bank of the Neperan, by the grist-mill and the
+gate and the stables, down a picturesque descent to a landing where
+that stream entered the Hudson.
+
+She proceeded towards the gate, where, being near the southeast corner
+of the house, one could see that the south front was to the east front
+as the base to the upright of a capital L turned backward; that the
+south front resembled the east in all but in being shorter and having
+a single porched entrance, which was in its middle.
+
+As the party neared the gate, there arose far northward a sound of
+many horsemen approaching at a fast gallop. Elizabeth at once reined
+in, to listen. Major Colden and Cuff followed her example, both
+looking at her in apprehension. The galloping was on the Albany road,
+but presently deviated eastwardly, then decreased.
+
+"They've turned up the road to Mile Square, whoever they are," said
+Elizabeth, and led the way on to the gate, which Cuff, dismounting,
+quickly opened, its fastening having been removed and not replaced.
+"Lead your horse to the door, Cuff. Then take off the portmanteaus and
+knock, and tie the horses to the post."
+
+She rode up to the southern door in the east front, and was there
+assisted to dismount by the major, while Cuff followed in obedience.
+Colden, as the sound of the distant galloping grew fainter and
+fainter, showed more relief than he might have felt had he known that
+a second troop was soon to come speeding down in the track of the
+first.
+
+Elizabeth, in haste to escape the wind, stepped into the little porch
+and stood impatiently before the dark, closed door of the house of her
+fathers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE MANOR-HOUSE.
+
+
+The stone mansion before which the travellers stood, awaiting answer
+to Cuff's loud knock on the heavy mahogany door, had already acquired
+antiquity and memories. It was then, as to all south of the porch
+which now sheltered the three visitors, ninety-six years old, and as
+to the rest of the eastern front thirty-three, so that its newest part
+was twice the age of Elizabeth herself.
+
+Her grandfather's grandfather, the first lord of the manor, built
+the southern portion in 1682, a date not far from that of the
+erection of his upper house, called Philipse Castle, at what is now
+Tarrytown,--but whether earlier or later, let the local historians
+dispute. This southern portion comprised the entire south front, its
+length running east and west, its width going back northward to, but
+not including, the large east entrance-hall, into which opened the
+southern door of the east front. The new part, attached to the
+original house as the upright to the short, broad base of the
+reversed L, was added by Elizabeth's grandfather, the second lord, in
+1745. The addition, with the eastern section of the old part, was
+thereafter the most used portion, and the south front yielded in
+importance to the new east front. The two porched doors in the latter
+front matched each other, though the southern one gave entrance to the
+fine guests in silk and lace, ruffles and furbelows, who came up
+from New York and the other great mansions of the county to grace
+the frequent festivities of the Philipses; while the northern one led
+to the spacious kitchen where means were used to make the aforesaid
+guests feel that they had not arrived in vain.
+
+The original house, rectangular as to its main part, had two gables,
+and, against its rear or northern length, a pent-roofed wing, and
+probably a veranda, the last covering the space later taken by the
+east entrance-hall. The main original building, on its first floor,
+had (and has) a wide entrance-hall in its middle, with one large
+parlor on each side. The second floor, reached by staircase from the
+lower hall, duplicated the first, there being a middle hall and two
+great square chambers. Overhead, there was plentiful further room
+beneath the gable roof. Under the western room of the first floor
+was the earlier kitchen, which, before 1745, served in relation to
+the guests who entered by the southern door exactly as thereafter
+the new kitchen served in relation to those entering by the eastern
+door,--making them glad they had come, by horse or coach, over the
+long, bad, forest-bordered roads. Adjacent to the old kitchen was
+abundant cellarage for the stowing of many and diverse covetable
+things of the trading first lord's importation.
+
+The Neperan joined the Hudson in the midst of wilderness, where
+Indians and deer abounded, when Vrederyck Flypse caused the old part
+of the stone mansion to grow out of the green hill slope in 1682. He
+planted a foundation two feet thick and thereupon raised walls whose
+thickness was twenty inches. He would have a residence wherein he
+might defy alike the savage elements, men and beasts. For the front
+end of his entrance-hall he imported a massive mahogany door made in
+1681 in Holland,--a door in two parts, so that the upper half could be
+opened, while the lower half remained shut. The rear door of that hall
+was similarly made. Ponderous were the hinges and bolts, being
+ordinary blacksmith work. Solid were the panel mouldings. He brought
+Holland brick wherewith to trim the openings of doorways and windows.
+He laid the floor of his aforesaid kitchen with blue stone. The
+chimney breasts and hearthstones of his principal rooms were seven
+feet wide.
+
+Here, in feudal fashion, with many servants and slaves to do his
+bidding, and tenants to render him dues, sometimes dwelt Vrederyck
+Flypse, with his second wife, Catherine Van Cortlandt, and the
+children left by his first wife, Margaret Hardenbrock; but sometimes
+some of the family lived in New York, and sometimes at the upper
+stone house, "Castle Philipse," by the Pocantico, near Sleepy Hollow
+Church, of this Flypse's founding. He built mills near both his
+country-houses, and from the saw-mill near the lower one did the
+Neperan receive the name of Saw Mill River. He died in 1702, in his
+seventy-seventh year, and the bones of him lie in Sleepy Hollow
+Church.
+
+But even before the first lord went, did "associations" begin to
+attach to the old Dutch part of the mansion. Besides the leading
+families of the province, the traders,--Dutch and English,--and the
+men with whom he held counsel upon affairs temporal and spiritual,
+public and private, terrestrial and marine, he had for guests red
+Indians, and, there is every reason to believe, gentlemen who sailed
+the seas under what particular flag best promoted their immediate
+purposes, or under none at all. That old story never _would_ down, to
+the effect that the adventurous Kidd levied not on the ships of
+Vrederyck Flypse. The little landing-place where Neperan joined
+Hudson, at which the Flypses stepped ashore when they came up from New
+York by sloop instead of by horse, was trodden surely by the feet of
+more than one eminent oceanic exponent of--
+
+ "The good old rule, the simple plan,
+ That they should take who have the power
+ And they should keep who can."
+
+A great merchant may have more than one way of doing business, and I
+would not undertake to account for every barrel and box that was
+unladen at that little landing. Nor would I be surprised to encounter
+sometime, among the ghosts of Philipse Manor Hall, that of the
+immortal Kidd himself, seated at dead of night, across the table from
+the first lord of the manor, before a blazing log in the seven-foot
+fireplace, drinking liquor too good for the church-founding lord to
+have questioned whence it came; and leaving the next day without an
+introduction to the family.
+
+This 1682 part of the house, in facing south, had the Albany road at
+its left, the Hudson at its right, and at its front the lane that ran
+by the Neperan, from the road to the river. Thus was the house for
+sixty-three years. When the first lord's grandson, Elizabeth's
+grandfather, in 1745 made the addition at the north, what was the east
+gable-end of the old house became part of the east front of the
+completed mansion. The east rooms of the old house were thus the
+southeast rooms of the completed mansion, and, being common to both
+fronts, gained by the change of relation, becoming the principal
+parlor and the principal chamber. The east parlor, entered on the
+west from the old hall, was entered on the north from the new hall;
+and the new hall was almost a duplicate of the old, but its ceiling
+decorations and the mahogany balustrade of its stairway were the more
+elaborate. This stairway, like its fellow in the old hall, ascended,
+with two turns, to a hall in the second story. Besides the new halls,
+the addition included, on the first floor, a large dining-room and the
+great kitchen; on the second floor, five sleeping-chambers, and, in
+the space beneath the roof-tree, dormitories for servants and slaves.
+Elizabeth's grandfather gave the house the balustrade that crowns its
+roof from its northern to its southern, and thence to its western end.
+He had the interior elaborately finished. The old part and its
+decorations were Dutch, but now things in the province were growing
+less Dutch and more English,--like the Philipse name and blood
+themselves,--and so the new embellishments were English. The second
+lord imported marble mantels from England, had the walls beautifully
+wainscoted, adorned the ceilings richly with arabesque work in wood.
+He laid out, in the best English fashion, a lawn between the eastern
+front and the Albany post-road. He it was who married Joanna, daughter
+of Governor Anthony Brockholst, of a very ancient family of
+Lancashire, England; and who left provision for the founding of St.
+John's Church, across the Neperan from the manor-house, and for the
+endowment of the glebe thereof. And in his long time the manor-house
+flourished and grew venerable and multiplied its associations. He had
+five children: Frederick (Elizabeth's father), Philip, Susannah, Mary
+(the beauty, wooed of Washington in 1756, 'tis said, and later wed by
+Captain Roger Morris), and Margaret; and, at this manor-house alone,
+white servants thirty, and black servants twenty; and a numerous
+tenantry, happy because in many cases the yearly rent was but nominal,
+being three or four pounds or a pair of hens or a day's work,--for the
+Philipses, thanks to trade and to office-holding under the Crown, and
+to the beneficent rule whereby money multiplies itself, did not have
+to squeeze a living out of the tillers of their land. The lord of the
+manor held court leet and baron at the house of a tenant, and
+sometimes even inflicted capital punishment.
+
+In 1751, the second lord followed his grandfather to the family vault
+in Sleepy Hollow Church. With the accession of Elizabeth's father,
+then thirty-one years old, began the splendid period of the mansion;
+then the panorama of which it was both witness and setting wore its
+most diverse colors. The old contest between English and French on
+this continent was approaching its glorious climax. Whether they were
+French emissaries coming down from Quebec, by the Hudson or by horse,
+or English and colonial officers going up from New York in command of
+troops, they must needs stop and pay their respects to the lord of the
+manor of Philipsburgh, and drink his wine, and eat his venison, and
+flirt with his stunning sisters. Soldiers would go from New York by
+the post-road to Philipsburgh, and then embark at the little landing,
+to proceed up the Hudson, on the way to be scalped by the red allies
+of the French or mowed down by Montcalm's gunners before impregnable
+Ticonderoga. Many were the comings and goings of the scarlet coat and
+green. The Indian, too, was still sufficiently plentiful to contribute
+much to the environing picturesqueness. But, most of all, in those
+days, the mansion got its character from the festivities devised by
+its own inmates for the entertainment of the four hundred of that
+time.
+
+For Elizabeth's mother, of the same given name, was "very fond of
+display," and in her day the family "lived showily." Her husband (who
+was usually called Colonel Philipse, from his title in the militia,
+and rarely if ever called lord) had the house refurnished. It was he
+who had the princely terraces made on the slope between the mansion
+and the Hudson, and who had new gardens laid out and adorned with tall
+avenues of box and rarest fruit-trees and shrubs. Doubtless his deer,
+in their picketed enclosure, were a sore temptation to the country
+marksmen who passed that way. Lady, or Madam, or Mrs. Philipse, the
+colonel's wife, bedazzled the admiring inhabitants of West Chester
+County in many ways, but there is a difference between authorities as
+to whether it was she that used to drive four superb black horses over
+the bad roads of the county, or whether it was her mother-in-law, the
+second lord's wife. Certainly it was the latter that was killed by a
+fall from a carriage, and certainly both had fine horses and
+magnificent coaches, and drove over bad roads,--for all roads were bad
+in those days, even in Europe, save those the Romans left.
+
+Of all the gay and hospitable occasions that brought, through the
+mansion's wide doors, courtly gentlemen and high-and-mighty ladies,
+from their coaches, sleighs, horses, or Hudson sloops, perhaps none
+saw more feasting and richer display of ruffles and brocade than did
+the wedding of Mary Philipse and Captain Morris, seven years after the
+death of her father, and two after the marriage of her brother. It was
+on the afternoon of Sunday, Jan. 15, 1758. In the famous east parlor,
+which has had much mention and will have more in course of this
+narrative, was raised a crimson canopy emblazoned with the Philipse
+crest,--a crowned golden demi-lion rampant, upon a golden coronet.
+Though the weather was not severe, there was snow on the ground, and
+the guests began to drive up in sleighs, under the white trees, at two
+o'clock. At three arrived the Rev. Henry Barclay, rector of Trinity,
+New York, and his assistant, Mr. Auchmuty. At half-past three the
+beauteous Mary (did so proud a heart-breaker blush, I wonder?) and the
+British captain stood under the crimson canopy and gold, and were
+united, "in the presence of a brilliant assembly," says the old county
+historian.[1] Miss Barclay, Miss Van Cortlandt, and Miss De Lancey
+were the bridesmaids, and the groomsmen were Mr. Heathcote (of the
+family of the lords of the manor of Scarsdale), Captain Kennedy (of
+Number One, Broadway), and Mr. Watts. No need to report here who were
+"among those present." The wedding did not occur yesterday, and the
+guests will not be offended at the omission of their names; but one of
+them was Acting Governor De Lancey. Colonel Philipse--wearing the
+ancestral gold chain and jewelled badge of the keepers of the deer
+forests of Bohemia--gave the bride away, and with her went a good
+portion of the earth's surface, and much money, jewelry, and plate.
+
+After the wedding came the feast, and the guests--or most of
+them--stayed so late they were not sorry for the brilliant moonlight
+of the night that set in upon their feasting. And now the legend! In
+the midst of the feast, there appeared at the door of the banquet-hall
+a tall Indian, with a scarlet blanket close about him, and in solemn
+tones quoth he, "Your possessions shall pass from you when the eagle
+shall despoil the lion of his mane." Thereupon he disappeared, of
+course, as suddenly as he had come, and the way in which historians
+have treated this legend shows how little do historians apply to their
+work the experiences of their daily lives,--such an experience, for
+instance, as that of ignoring some begging Irishwoman's request for "a
+few pennies in the Lord's name," and thereupon receiving a volley of
+hair-raising curses and baleful predictions. 'Tis easy to believe in
+the Indian and the prophecy of a passing of possessions, even though
+it was fulfilled; but the time-clause involving the eagle and the lion
+was doubtless added after the bird had despoiled the beast.
+
+It was years and years afterward, and when and because the eagle had
+decided to attempt the said despoiling, that there was a change of
+times at Philipse Manor Hall. Meanwhile had young Frederick, and
+Maria, and Elizabeth, and their brothers and sisters arrived on the
+scene. What could one have expected of the ease-loving, beauty-loving,
+book-loving, luxury-loving, garden-loving, and wide-girthed lord of
+the manor--connected by descent, kinship, and marriage with royal
+office-holding--but Toryism? In fact, nobody did expect else of him,
+for though he tried in 1775 to conceal his sympathy with the cause of
+the King, the powers in revolt inferred it, and took measures to
+deter him from actively aiding the British forces. His removal to
+Hartford, his return to the manor-house,--where he was for awhile, in
+the fall of 1776, at the time of the battle of White Plains,--his
+memorable business trip to New York, and his parole-breaking
+continuance there, heralded the end of the old régime in Philipse
+Manor Hall. The historians say that at that time of Colonel Philipse's
+last stay at the hall, Washington quartered there for awhile, and
+occupied the great southwestern chamber. Doubtless Washington did
+occupy that chamber once upon a time, but his itinerary and other
+circumstances are against its having been immediately before or
+immediately after the battle of White Plains. Some of the American
+officers were there about the time. As for the colonel's family, it
+did not abandon the house until 1777. With the occasions when, during
+the first months of Revolutionary activity in the county, use was
+sought of the secret closets and the underground passage thoughtfully
+provided by the earlier Philipses in days of risk from Indians, fear
+of Frenchmen, and dealings with pirates, this history has naught to
+do.
+
+In 1777, then, the family took a farewell view of the old house, and
+somewhat sadly, more resentfully, wended by familiar landmarks to New
+York,--to await there a joyous day of returning, when the King's
+regiments should have scattered the rebels and hanged their leaders.
+John Williams, steward of the manor, was left to take care of the
+house against that day, with one white housemaid, who was of kin to
+him, and one black slave, a man. The outside shutters of the first
+story, the inside shutters above, were fastened tight; the bolts of
+the ponderous mahogany doors were strengthened, the stables and mills
+and outbuildings emptied and locked. Much that was precious in the
+house went with the family and horses and servants to New York. Yet be
+sure that proper means of subsistence for Williams and his two helpers
+were duly stowed away, for the faithful steward had to himself the
+discharge of that matter.
+
+So wholesale a departure went with much bustle, and it was not till he
+returned from seeing the numerous party off, and found himself alone
+with the maid and the slave in the great entrance-hall, which a few
+minutes before had been noisy with voices, that Williams felt to the
+heart the sudden loneliness of the place. The face of Molly, the maid,
+was white and ready for weeping, and there was a gravity on the
+chocolate visage of black Sam that gave the steward a distinctly
+tremulous moment. Perhaps he recalled the prediction of the Indian,
+and had a flash of second sight, and perceived that the third lord of
+the manor was to be the last. Howbeit, he cleared his throat and set
+black Sam to laying in fire-wood as for a siege, and Molly to righting
+the disorder caused by the exodus; betook himself cellarward, and from
+a hidden place drew forth a bottle of an old vintage, and comforted
+his solitude. He was a snug, honest, discreet man of forty, was the
+steward, slim but powerful, looking his office, besides knowing and
+fulfilling it.
+
+But, as the months passed, he became used to the solitude, and the
+routine of life in the closed-up, memory-haunted old house took on a
+certain charm. The living was snug enough in what parts of the mansion
+the steward and his two servitors put to their own daily use. As for
+the other parts, the great dark rooms and entrance-halls, we may be
+sure that when the steward went the rounds, and especially after a
+visit to the wine-cellar, he found them not so empty, but peopled with
+the vague and shifting images of the many beings, young and old, who
+had filled the house with life in brighter days. Then, if ever, did
+noise of creaking stair or sound as of human breath, or, perchance,
+momentary vision of flitting face against the dark, betray the present
+ghost of some old-time habitué of the mansion.
+
+When the raiding and foraging and marauding began in the county, the
+manor-house was not molested. The partisan warfare had not yet reached
+its magnitude. After the battle of White Plains in 1776, the British
+had retained New York City, while the main American army, leaving a
+small force above, had gone to New Jersey. Late in 1777, the British
+main army, leaving New York garrisoned, had departed to contest with
+the Americans for Philadelphia. Not until July, 1778, after Monmouth
+battle, did the British main army return to New York, and the American
+forces form the great arc, with their chief camp in upper West Chester
+County. Then was great increase of foray and pillage. The manor-house
+was of course exempt from harm at the hands of King's troops and Tory
+raiders, while it was protected from American regulars by Washington's
+policy against useless destruction, and from the marauding "Skinners"
+by its nearness to the British lines and by the solidity of its walls,
+doors, and shutters. Its gardens suffered, its picket fences and gate
+fastenings were tampered with, its orchards prematurely plucked. But
+its trees were spared by the British foragers, and the house itself
+was no longer in demand as officers' quarters, being too near King's
+Bridge for safe American occupancy, but not sufficiently near for
+British. Hessians and Tories, though, patrolled the near-by roads, and
+sometimes Continental troops camped in the neighboring hills. In 1778,
+the American Colonel Gist, whose corps was then at the foot of Boar
+Hill, north of the manor-house, was paying his court to the handsome
+widow Babcock, in the parsonage, when he was surprised by a force of
+yagers, rangers, and Loyalist light horse, and got away in the nick of
+time.[2] The parsonage, unlike the manor-house, was often visited by
+officers on their way hither and thither, but I will not say it was
+for this reason that Miss Sally Williams, the sister of Colonel
+Philipse's wife, preferred living in the parsonage with the Babcocks
+rather than in the great deserted mansion.
+
+On a dark November afternoon, Williams had sent black Sam to the
+orchard for some winter apples, and the slave, after the fashion of
+his race, was taking his time over the errand. The shades of evening
+gathered while the steward was making his usual rounds within the
+mansion. Molly, whose housewifely instincts ever asserted themselves,
+had of her own accord made a dusting tour of the rooms and halls. She
+was on the first landing of the stairway in the east hall, just about
+to finish her task in the waning light admitted by the window over the
+landing and by the fanlight over the front door, when, as she applied
+her cloth to the mahogany balustrade, the door of the east parlor
+opened, and Williams came out of that dark apartment.
+
+"Lord, Molly!" he said, a moment later, having started at suddenly
+beholding her. "I thought you were a ghost! It's time to get supper, I
+think, from the look of the day outside. I'll have to make a light."
+
+From a closet in the side of the staircase he took a candle, flint,
+and tinder, talking the while to Molly, as she rubbed the balusters.
+Having produced a tiny candle-flame that did not light up half the
+hall, Williams started towards the dining-room, but stopped at a
+distant sound of galloping horses, which were evidently coming down
+the Albany road. The steward and the maid exchanged conjectures as to
+whether this meant a British patrol or "Rebel" dragoons, "Skinners" or
+Hessian yagers, Highlanders, or Loyalist light horse; and then
+observed from the sound that the horses had turned aside into the Mile
+Square road.
+
+But now came a new sound of horses, and though it was of only a few,
+and those walking, it gave Williams quite a start, for the footfalls
+were manifestly approaching the mansion. They as manifestly stopped
+before that very hill. And then came a sharp knock on the mahogany
+door.
+
+"See who it is," whispered Molly.
+
+Williams hesitated. The knock was repeated.
+
+"Who's there?" called out Williams.
+
+There was an answer, but the words could not be made out.
+
+"Who?" repeated Williams.
+
+This time the answer was clear enough.
+
+"It's I, Williams! Don't keep me standing here in the wind all
+night."
+
+"It's Miss Elizabeth!" cried Molly; and Williams, in a kind of daze of
+astonishment, hastily unlocked, unbolted, and threw open the door.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE SOUND OF GALLOPING.
+
+
+A rush of wind came in from the outer gloom and almost blew out the
+candle. Williams held up his hand to protect the flame and stepped
+aside from before the doorway.
+
+The wind was promptly followed by Elizabeth, who strode in with
+the air that a king might show on reentering one of his palaces,
+still holding her whip in her gloved hand. Behind her came Colden,
+the picture of moody dejection. When Cuff had entered with the
+portmanteaus, Williams, seeing but three horses without, closed
+the door, locked it, and looked with inquiry and bewilderment at
+Elizabeth.
+
+"Br-r-r-r!" she ejaculated. "Light up my chamber, Molly, and have a
+fire in it; then make some hot tea, and get me something to eat."
+
+Elizabeth's impetuosity sent the open-mouthed maid flying up-stairs to
+execute the first part of the order, whereupon the mistress turned to
+the wondering steward.
+
+"I've come to spend a week at the manor-house, Williams. Cuff, take
+those to my room."
+
+The black boy, with the portmanteaus, followed in the way Molly had
+taken, but with less rapidity. By this time Williams had recovered
+somewhat from his surprise, and regained his voice and something of
+his stewardly manner.
+
+"I scarcely expected any of the family out from New York these times,
+miss. There----"
+
+"I suppose not!" Elizabeth broke in. "Have some one put away the
+horses, Williams, or they'll be shivering. It's mighty cold for the
+time of year."
+
+"I'll go myself, ma'am. There's only black Sam, you know, and he isn't
+back from the orchard. I sent him to get some apples." And the steward
+set the candlestick on the newel post of the stairway, and started for
+the door.
+
+"No, let Cuff go," said Elizabeth, sitting down on a settle that stood
+with its back to the side of the staircase. "You start a fire in the
+room next mine, for aunt Sally. She'll be over from the parsonage in a
+few minutes."
+
+Williams thereupon departed in quest of the stable key, inwardly
+devoured by a mighty curiosity as to the wherefore of Elizabeth's
+presence here in the company of none but her affianced, and also the
+wherefore of that gentleman's manifest depression of spirits. His
+curiosity was not lessened when the major called after him:
+
+"Tell Cuff he may feed my horse, but not take the saddle off. I must
+ride back to New York as soon as the beast is rested."
+
+"Why," said Elizabeth to Colden, "you may stay for a bite of supper."
+
+"No, thank you! I am not hungry."
+
+"A glass of wine, then," said the girl, quite heedless of his tone;
+"if there is any left in the house."
+
+"No wine, I thank you!" Colden stood motionless, too far back in the
+hall to receive much light from the feeble candle, like a shadowy
+statue of the sulks.
+
+"As you will!"
+
+Whereupon Elizabeth, as if she had satisfied her conscience regarding
+what was due from her in the name of hospitality, rose, and opened the
+door to the east parlor.
+
+"Ugh! How dark and lonely the house is! No wonder aunt Sally chose to
+live at the parsonage." After one look into the dark apartment, she
+closed the door. "Well, I'll warm up the place a bit. Sorry you can't
+stay with us, major."
+
+"It is only you who send me away," said Colden, dismally and
+reproachfully. "I could have got longer leave of absence. You let me
+escort you here, because no gentleman of your family will lend himself
+to your reckless caprice. And then, having no further present use for
+me, you send me about my business!"
+
+Elizabeth, preferring to pace the hall until her chamber should be
+heated, and her aunt should arrive, was striking her cloak with her
+riding-whip at each step; not that the cloak needed dusting, but as a
+method of releasing surplus energy.
+
+"But I do have further present use for you," she said. "You are going
+back to New York to inform my dear timid parents and sisters and
+brothers that I've arrived here safe. They'll not sleep till you tell
+them so."
+
+"One of your slaves might bear that news as well," quoth the major.
+
+"Well, are you not forever calling yourself my slave? Besides, my
+devotion to King George won't let me weaken his forces by holding one
+of his officers from duty longer than need be."
+
+But Colden was not to be cheered by pleasantry.
+
+"What a man you are! So cross at my sending you back that you'll
+neither eat nor drink before going. Pray don't pout, Colden. 'Tis
+foolish!"
+
+"I dare say! A man in love does many foolish things!"
+
+The utterance of this great and universal truth had not time to
+receive comment from Elizabeth before Cuff reappeared, with the stable
+key; and at the same instant, a rather delicate, inoffensive knock was
+heard on the front door.
+
+"That must be aunt Sally," said Elizabeth. "Let her in, Cuff. Then go
+and stable the horses. My poor Cato will freeze!"
+
+It was indeed Miss Sarah Williams, and in a state of breathlessness.
+She had been running, perhaps to escape the unseemly embraces of the
+wind, which had taken great liberties with her skirts,--liberties no
+less shocking because of the darkness of the evening; for though De la
+Rochefoucauld has settled it that man's alleged courage takes a
+vacation when darkness deprives it of possible witnesses, no one will
+accuse an elderly maiden's modesty of a like eclipse.
+
+"My dear child, what could have induced you----" were her first words
+to Elizabeth; but her attention was at that point distracted by seeing
+Cuff, outside the threshold, about to pull the door shut. "Don't close
+the door yet, boy. Some one is coming."
+
+Cuff thereupon started on his task of stabling the three horses,
+leaving the door open. The flame of the candle on the newel post was
+blown this way and that by the in-rushing wind.
+
+"It's old Mr. Valentine," explained Miss Sally to Elizabeth. "He
+offered to show me over from the parsonage, where he happened to be
+calling, so I didn't wait for Mrs. Babcock's boy----"
+
+"You found Mr. Valentine pleasanter company, I suppose, aunty, dear,"
+put in Elizabeth, who spared neither age nor dignity. "He's a widower
+again, isn't he?"
+
+Miss Sally blushed most becomingly. Her plump cheeks looked none the
+worse for this modest suffusion.
+
+"Fie, child! He's eighty years old. Though, to be sure, the attentions
+of a man of his experience and judgment aren't to be considered
+lightly."
+
+Those were the days when well-bred people could--and often did,
+naturally and without effort--improvise grammatical sentences of more
+than twelve words, in the course of ordinary, every-day talk.
+
+"We started from the parsonage together," went on Miss Sally, "but I
+was so impatient I got ahead. He doesn't walk as briskly as he did
+twenty years ago."
+
+Yet briskly enough for his years did the octogenarian walk in through
+the little pillared portico a moment later. Such deliberation as his
+movements had might as well have been the mark of a proper self-esteem
+as the effect of age. He was a slender but wiry-looking old gentleman,
+was Matthias Valentine, of Valentine's Hill; in appearance a credit to
+the better class of countrymen of his time. His white hair was tied in
+a cue, as if he were himself a landowner instead of only a manorial
+tenant. Yet no common tenant was he. His father, a dragoon in the
+French service, had come down from Canada and settled on Philipse
+Manor, and Matthias had been proprietor of Valentine's Hill, renting
+from the Philipses in earlier days than any one could remember. His
+grandsons now occupied the Hill, and the old man was in the full
+enjoyment of the leisure he had won. His rather sharp countenance,
+lighted by honest gray eyes, was a mixture of good-humor, childlike
+ingenuousness, and innocent jocosity. The neatness of his hair, his
+carefully shaven face, and the whole condition of his brown cloth coat
+and breeches and worsted stockings, denoted a fastidiousness rarely at
+any time, and particularly in the good (or bad) old days, to be found
+in common with rustic life and old age. Did some of the dandyism of
+the French dragoon survive in the old Philipsburgh farmer?
+
+He carried a walking-stick in one hand, a lighted lantern in the
+other. After bowing to the people in the hall, he set down his
+lantern, closed the door and bolted it, then took up his lantern, blew
+out the flame thereof, and set it down again.
+
+"Whew!" he puffed, after his exertion. "Windy night, Miss Elizabeth!
+Windy night, Major Colden! Winter's going to set in airly this year.
+There ain't been sich a frosty November since '64, when the river was
+froze over as fur down as Spuyten Duyvel."
+
+There was in the old man's high-pitched voice a good deal of the
+squeak, but little of the quaver, of senility.
+
+"You'll stay to supper, I hope, Mr. Valentine."
+
+From Elizabeth this was a sufficient exhibition of graciousness. She
+then turned her back on the two men and began to tell her aunt of her
+arrangements.
+
+"Thankee, ma'am," said old Valentine, whose sight did not immediately
+acquaint him, in the dim candle-light, with Elizabeth's change of
+front; wherefore he continued, placidly addressing her back: "I
+wouldn't mind a glass and a pipe with friend Williams afore trudging
+back to the Hill."
+
+He then walked over to the disconsolate Colden, and, with a very
+gay-doggish expression, remarked in an undertone:
+
+"Fine pair o' girls yonder, major?"
+
+He had known Colden from the time of the latter's first boyhood visits
+to the manor, and could venture a little familiarity.
+
+"Girls?" blurted the major, startled out of his meditations.
+
+The old country beau chuckled.
+
+"We all know what's betwixt you and the niece. How about the aunt and
+me taking a lesson from you two, eh?"
+
+Even the gloomy officer could not restrain a momentary smile.
+
+"What, Mr. Valentine? Do you seriously think of marrying?"
+
+"Why not? I've been married afore, hain't I? What's to hinder?"
+
+"Why, there's the matter of age." Colden rather enjoyed being
+inconsiderate of people's feelings.
+
+"Oh, the lady is not so old," said the octogenarian, placidly, casting
+a judicial, but approving look at the commanding figure of Miss
+Sally.
+
+Then, as he had been for a considerable time on his legs, having
+walked over from the Hill to the parsonage that afternoon, and as at
+best his knees bent when he stood, he sat down on the settle by the
+staircase.
+
+Miss Sally, though she knew it useless to protest further against
+Elizabeth's caprice, nevertheless felt it her duty to do so,
+especially as Major Colden would probably carry to the family a report
+of her attitude towards that caprice.
+
+"Did you ever hear of such rashness, major? A young girl like
+Elizabeth coming out here in time of war, when this neutral ground
+between the lines is overridden and foraged to death, and deluged with
+blood by friend as well as foe? La me! I can't understand her, if she
+_is_ my sister's child."
+
+"Why, aunt Sally, _you_ stay out here through it all," said Elizabeth,
+not as much to depreciate the dangers as to give her aunt an
+opportunity of posing as a very courageous person.
+
+Miss Sally promptly accepted the opportunity. "Oh," said she, with a
+mien of heroic self-sacrifice, "I couldn't let poor Grace Babcock stay
+at the parsonage with nobody but her children; besides I'm not Colonel
+Philipse's daughter, and who cares whether I'm loyal to the King or
+not? But a girl like you isn't made for the dangers and privations
+we've had to put up with out here since the King's troops have
+occupied New York, and Washington's rebel army has held the country
+above. I'm surprised the family let her come, or that you'd
+countenance it by coming with her, major."
+
+"We all opposed it," said Colden, with a sigh. "But--you know
+Elizabeth!"
+
+"Yes," said Elizabeth herself with cheerful nonchalance, "Elizabeth
+always has her way. I was hungry for a sight of the place, and the
+more the old house is in danger, the more I love it. I'm here for a
+week, and that ends it. The place doesn't seem to have suffered any.
+They haven't even quartered troops here."
+
+"Not since the American officers stayed here in the fall o' '76," put
+in old Mr. Valentine, from the settle. "I reckon you'll be safe enough
+here, Miss Elizabeth."
+
+"Of course I shall. Why, our troops patrol all this part of the
+country, Lord Cathcart told us at King's Bridge, and _we_ have naught
+to fear from them."
+
+"No, the British foragers won't dare treat Philipse Manor-house as
+they do the homes of some of their loyal friends," said Miss Sally,
+who was no less proud of her relationship with the Philipses, because
+it was by marriage and not by blood. "But the horrible "Skinners," who
+don't spare even the farms of their fellow rebels--"
+
+"Bah!" said Elizabeth. "The scum of the earth! Williams has weapons
+here, and with him and the servants I'll defend the place against all
+the rebel cut-throats in the county."
+
+The major thought to make a last desperate attempt to dissuade
+Elizabeth from remaining.
+
+"That's all well enough," said he; "but there are the rebel regulars,
+the dragoons. They'll be raiding down to our very lines, one of these
+days, if only in retaliation. You know how Lord Cornwallis's party
+under General Grey, over in Jersey, the other night, killed a lot of
+Baylor's cavalry,--Mrs. Washington's Light Horse, they called the
+troop. And the Hessians made a great foray on the rebel families this
+side the river."
+
+"Ay," chirped old Valentine; "but the American Colonel Butler, and
+their Major Lee, of Virginia, fell on the Hessian yagers 'tween
+Dobbs's Ferry and Tarrytown, and killed ever so many of 'em,--and I
+wasn't sorry for that, neither!"
+
+"Oho!" said Colden, "you belong to the opposition."
+
+"Oh, I'm neither here nor there," replied the old man. "But they say
+that there Major Lee, of Virginia, is the gallantest soldier in
+Washington's army. He'd lead his men against the powers of Satan if
+Washington gave the word. Light Horse Harry, they call him,--and a
+fine dashing troop o' light horse he commands."
+
+"No more dashing, I'll wager, than some of ours," said Elizabeth,
+whose mood for the moment permitted her to talk with reason and
+moderation; "not even counting the Germans. And as for leaders, what
+do you say to Simcoe, of the Queen's Rangers, or Emmerick, or
+Tarleton, or"--turning to Colden--"your cousin James De Lancey, of
+this county, major?"
+
+The major, notwithstanding his Toryism, did not enter with enthusiasm
+into Elizabeth's admiration for these brave young cavalry leaders.
+Staten Island and East New Jersey had not offered him as great
+opportunities for distinction as they had had. It was, therefore, Miss
+Sally who next spoke.
+
+"Well, Heaven knows there are enough on either side to devastate the
+land and rob us of comfort and peace. One wakes in the middle of the
+night, at the clatter of horses riding by like the wind, and wonders
+whether it's friend or foe, and trembles till they're out of hearing,
+for fear the door is to be broken in or the house fired. And the sound
+of shots in the night, and the distant glare of flames when some poor
+farmer's home is burned over his head!"
+
+"Ay," added Mr. Valentine, "and all the cattle and crops go to the
+foragers, so it's no use raising any more than you can hide away for
+your own larder."
+
+Elizabeth was beginning to be bored, and saw nothing to gain from a
+continuation of these recitals. Doubtless, by this time, her room was
+lighted and warm. So, thoughtless of Colden, she mounted the first
+step of the stairway, and said:
+
+"I have no doubt Williams has contrived to hide away enough provisions
+for _our_ use. So _I_ sha'n't suffer from hunger, and as for Lee's
+Light Horse, I defy them and all other rebels. Come, aunt Sally!"
+
+She had ascended as far as to the fourth step of the stairway, and
+Miss Sally was about to follow, when there was heard, above the wind's
+moaning, another sound of galloping horses. Like the previous similar
+sound, it came from the north.
+
+Elizabeth stopped and stood on the fourth step. Miss Sally raised her
+finger to bid silence. Colden's attitude became one of anxious
+attention, while he dropped his hat on the settle and drew his cloak
+close about him, so that it concealed his uniform, sword, and pistol.
+The galloping continued.
+
+When time came for it to turn off eastward, as it would do should the
+riders take the road to Mile Square, it did not so. Instead, as the
+sound unmistakably indicated, it came on down the post-road.
+
+"Hessians, perhaps!" Miss Sally whispered.
+
+"Or De Lancey's Cowboys," said Valentine, but not in a whisper.
+
+Elizabeth cast a sharp look at the old man, as if to show disapproval
+of his use of the Whigs' nickname for De Lancey's troop. But the
+octogenarian did not quail.
+
+"They're riding towards the manor-house," he added, a moment later.
+
+"Let us hope they're friends," said Colden, in a tone low and slightly
+unsteady.
+
+Elizabeth disdained to whisper.
+
+"Maybe it is Lee's Light Horse," she said, in her usual voice, but
+ironically, addressing Valentine. "In that case we should tremble for
+our lives, I suppose."
+
+"Whoever they are, they've stopped before the house!" said Miss Sally,
+in quite a tremble.
+
+There was a noise of horses pawing and snorting outside, of directions
+being given rapidly, and of two or three horses leaving the main band
+for another part of the grounds. Then was heard a quick, firm step on
+the porch floor, and in the same instant a sharp, loud knock on the
+door.
+
+No one in the hall moved; all looked at Elizabeth.
+
+"A very valiant knock!" said she, with more irony. "It certainly
+_must_ be Lee's Light Horse. Will you please open the door, Colden?"
+
+"What?" ejaculated Colden.
+
+"Certainly," said Elizabeth, turning on the stairway, so as to face
+the door; "to show we're not afraid."
+
+Jack Colden looked at her a moment demurringly, then went to the door,
+undid the fastenings, and threw it open, keeping his cloak close about
+him and immediately stepping back into the shadow.
+
+A handsome young officer strode in, as if 'twere a mighty gust of wind
+that sent him. He wore a uniform of blue with red facings,--a uniform
+that had seen service,--was booted and spurred, without greatcoat or
+cloak. A large pistol was in his belt, and his left hand rested on the
+hilt of a sword. He swept past Colden, not seeing him; came to a stop
+in the centre of the hall, and looked rapidly around from face to
+face.
+
+"Your servant, ladies and gentlemen!" he said, with a swift bow and a
+flourish of his dragoon's hat. His eye rested on Elizabeth.
+
+"Who are you?" she demanded, coldly and imperiously, from the fourth
+step.
+
+"I'm Captain Peyton, of Lee's Light Horse," said he.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE CONTINENTAL DRAGOON.
+
+
+The Peytons of Virginia were descended from a younger son of the
+Peytons of Pelham, England, of which family was Sir Edward Peyton, of
+Pelham, knight and baronet. Sir Edward's relative, the first American
+Peyton, settled in Westmoreland County. Within one generation the
+family had spread to Stafford County, and within another to Loudoun
+County also. Thus it befell that there was a Mr. Craven Peyton, of
+Loudoun County, justice of the peace, vestryman, and chief warden of
+Shelburne Parish. He was the father of nine sons and two daughters.
+One of the sons was Harry.
+
+This Harry grew up longing to be a soldier. Military glory was his
+ambition, as it had been Washington's; but not as a mere provincial
+would he be satisfied to excel. He would have a place as a regular
+officer, in an army of the first importance, on the fields of Europe.
+Before the Revolution, Americans were, like all colonials, very loyal
+to their English King. Therefore would Harry Peyton be content with
+naught less than a King's commission in the King's army.
+
+His father, glad to be guided in choosing a future for one of so many
+sons, sent Harry to London in 1770, to see something of life, and so
+managed matters, through his English relations, that the boy was in
+1772, at the age of nineteen, the possessor, by purchase, of an
+ensign's commission. He was soon sent to do garrison duty in Ireland,
+being enrolled with the Sixty-third Regiment of Foot.
+
+He had lived gaily enough during his two years in London, occupying
+lodgings, being patronized by his relations, seeing enough of society,
+card-tables, drums, routs, plays, prize-fights, and other diversions.
+He had made visits in the country and showed what he had learned in
+Virginia about cock-fighting, fox-hunting and shooting, and had taken
+lessons from London fencing-masters. A young gentleman from Virginia,
+if well off and "well connected," could have a fine time in London in
+those days; and Harry Peyton had it.
+
+But he could never forget that he was a colonial. If he were
+treated by his English associates as an equal, or even at times
+with a particular consideration, there was always a kind of
+implication that he was an exception among colonials. Other
+colonial youths were similarly treated, and some of these were glad
+to be held as exceptions, and even joined in the derision of the
+colonials who were not. For these Harry Peyton had a mighty disgust
+and detestation. He did not enjoy receiving as Harry Peyton a
+tolerance and kindness that would have been denied him as merely an
+American. And he sometimes could not avoid seeing that, even as
+Harry Peyton, he was regarded as compensating, by certain attractive
+qualities in the nature of amiability and sincerity, for occasional
+exhibitions of what the English rated as social impropriety and
+bad taste. Often, at the English lofty derision of colonials, at
+the English air of self-evident superiority, the English pretence of
+politely concealed shock or pain or offence at some infringement of a
+purely superficial conduct-code of their own arbitrary fabrication,
+he ground his teeth in silence; for in one respect, he had as good
+manners as the English had then, or have now,--when in Rome he did
+not resent or deride what the Romans did. He began to think that the
+lot of a self-respecting American among the English, even if he
+were himself made an exception of and well dealt with, was not the
+most enviable one. And, after he joined the army, he thought this
+more and more every day. But he would show them what a colonial
+could rise to! Yet that would prove nothing for his countrymen, as
+he would always, on his meritorious side, be deemed an exception.
+
+His military ambition, however, predominated, and he had no thought of
+leaving the King's service.
+
+The disagreement between the King and the American Colonies grew,
+from "a cloud no bigger than a man's hand," to something larger.
+But Harry heard little of it, and that entirely from the English
+point of view. He received but three or four letters a year from
+his own people, and the time had not come for his own people to write
+much more than bare facts. They were chary of opinions. Harry
+supposed that the new discontent in the Colonies, after the repeal of
+the Stamp Act and the withdrawal of the two regiments from Boston
+Town to Castle William, was but that of the perpetually restless,
+the habitual fomenters, the notoriety-seeking agitators, the mob,
+whose circumstances could not be made worse and might be improved by
+disturbances. Now the Americans, from being a subject of no
+interest to English people, a subject discussed only when some rare
+circumstance brought it up, became more talked of. Sometimes, when
+Americans were blamed for opposing taxes to support soldiery used
+for their own protection, Harry said that the Americans could protect
+themselves; that the English, in wresting Canada from the French,
+had sought rather English prestige and dominion than security for the
+colonials; that the flourishing of the Colonies was despite English
+neglect, not because of English fostering; that if the English had
+solicitude for America, it was for America as a market for their own
+trade. Thereupon his fellow officers would either laugh him out,
+as if he were too ignorant to be argued with, or freeze him out,
+as if he had committed some grave outrage on decorum. And Harry would
+rage inwardly, comparing his own ignorance and indecorousness with the
+knowledge and courtesy exemplified in the assertion of Doctor Johnson,
+when that great but narrow Englishman said, in 1769, of Americans,
+"Sir, they are a race of convicts, and ought to be thankful for
+anything we allow them short of hanging."
+
+There came to Harry, now and then, scraps of vague talk of uneasiness
+in Boston Town, whose port the British Parliament had closed, to
+punish the Yankees for riotously destroying tea on which there was a
+tax; of the concentration there of British troops from Halifax,
+Quebec, New York, the Jerseys, and other North American posts. But
+there was not, in Harry's little world of Irish garrison life, the
+slightest expectation of actual rebellion or even of a momentous local
+tumult in the American Colonies.
+
+Imagine, therefore, his feelings when, one morning late in March in
+1775, he was told that, within a month's time, the Sixty-third, and
+other regiments, would embark at Cork for either Boston or New York!
+
+There could not be a new French or Spanish invasion. As for the
+Indians, never again would British regulars be sent against them. Was
+it, then, Harry's own countrymen that his regiment was going to
+fight?
+
+His comrades inferred the cause of his long face, and laughed. He
+would have no more fighting to do in America against the Americans
+than he had to do in Ireland against the Irish, or than an English
+officer in an English barrack town had to do against the English. The
+reinforcements were being sent only to overawe the lawless element.
+The mere sight of these reinforcements would obviate any occasion for
+their use. The regiment would merely do garrison duty in America
+instead of in Ireland or elsewhere.
+
+He had none to advise or enlighten him. What was there for him to do
+but sail with his regiment, awaiting disclosures or occurrences to
+guide? What misgivings he had, he kept to himself, though once on the
+voyage, as he looked from the rocking transport towards the west, he
+confided to Lieutenant Dalrymple his opinion that 'twas damned bad
+luck sent _his_ regiment to America, of all places.
+
+When he landed in Boston, June 12th, he found, as he had expected,
+that the town was full of soldiers, encamped on the common and
+quartered elsewhere; but also, as he had not expected, that the troops
+were virtually confined to the town, which was fortified at the Neck;
+that the last time they had marched into the country, through
+Lexington to Concord, they had marched back again at a much faster
+gait, and left many score dead and wounded on the way; and that a host
+of New Englanders in arms were surrounding Boston! The news of April
+19th had not reached Europe until after Harry had sailed, nor had it
+met his regiment on the ocean. When he heard it now, he could only
+become more grave and uneasy. But the British officers were scornful
+of their clodhopper besiegers. In due time this rabble should be
+scattered like chaff. But was it a mere rabble? Certainly. Were not
+the best people in Boston loyal to the King's government? Some of
+them, yes. But, as Harry went around with open eyes and ears, eager
+for information, he found that many of them were with the "rabble."
+News was easy to be had. The citizens were allowed to pass the barrier
+on the Neck, if they did not carry arms or ammunition, and there was
+no strict discipline in the camp of New Englanders. Therefore Harry
+soon learned how Doctor Warren stood, and the Adamses, and Mr. John
+Hancock; and that a Congress, representing all the Colonies, was now
+sitting at Philadelphia, for the second time; and that in the Congress
+his own Virginia was served by such gentlemen as Mr. Richard Henry
+Lee, Mr. Patrick Henry, Mr. Thomas Jefferson, and Colonel Washington.
+And the Virginians had shown as ready and firm a mind for revolt
+against the King's measures as the New Englanders had. Here, for once,
+the sympathies of trading Puritan and fox-hunting Virginian were one.
+Moreover, a Yankee was a fellow American, and, after five years of
+contact with English self-esteem, Harry warmed at the sight of a New
+Englander as he never would have done before he had left Virginia.
+
+But it did not conduce to peace of mind, in his case, to be convinced
+that the colonial remonstrance was neither local nor of the rabble.
+The more general and respectable it was, the more embarrassing was his
+own situation. Would it really come to war? With ill-concealed
+anxiety, he sought the opinion of this person and that.
+
+On the fourth day after his arrival, he went into a tavern in King
+Street with Lieutenant Massay, of the Thirty-fifth, Ensign Charleton,
+of the Fifth, and another young officer, and, while they were
+drinking, heard a loyalist tell what one Parker, leader of the
+Lexington rebels, said to his men on Lexington Common, on the morning
+of April 19th, when the King's troops came in sight.
+
+"'Stand your ground,' says he. 'Don't fire till you're fired on, but
+if they mean to have a war, let it begin here!'"
+
+"And it began there!" said Harry.
+
+The English officers stared at him, and laughed.
+
+"Ay, 'twas the Yankee idea of war," said one of them. "Run for a stone
+wall, and, when the enemy's back is turned, blaze away. I'd like to
+see a million of the clodhoppers compelled to stand up and face a line
+of grenadiers."
+
+"Ay, gimme ten companies of grenadiers," cried one, who had doubtless
+heard of General Gage's celebrated boast, "and I'll go from one end of
+the damned country to the other, and drive 'em to their holes like
+foxes. Only 'tis better sport chasing handsome foxes in England than
+ill-dressed poltroons in Bumpkin-land."
+
+"They're not all poltroons," said Harry, repressing his feelings the
+more easily through long practice. "Some of them fought in the French
+war. There's Putnam, and Pomeroy, and Ward. I heard Lieutenant-Colonel
+Abercrombie, of the Twenty-second, say yesterday that Putnam--"
+
+"Cowards every one of 'em," broke in another. "Cowards and louts. A
+lady told me t'other day there ain't in all America a man whose coat
+sets in close at the back, except he's of the loyal party. Cowards and
+louts!"
+
+"Look here, damn you!" cried Peyton. "I want you to know I'm American
+born, and my people are American, and I don't know whether they are of
+the loyal party or not!"
+
+"Oh, now, that's the worst of you Americans,--always will get
+personal! Of course, there are exceptions."
+
+"Then there are exceptions enough to make a rule themselves," said
+Harry. "I'm tired hearing you call these people cowards before you've
+had a chance to see what they are. And you needn't wait for that, for
+I can tell you now they're not!"
+
+"Well, well, perhaps not,--to you. Doubtless they're very dreadful,--to
+you. You don't seem to relish facing 'em, that's a fact! You'll be
+resigning your commission one o' these days, I dare say, if it comes to
+blows with these terrible heroes!"
+
+Harry saw everybody in the room looking at him with a grin.
+
+"By the Lord," said he, "maybe I shall!" and stalked hotly out of the
+place.
+
+His wrath increased as he walked. He noticed now, more than before,
+the confident, arrogant air of the redcoats who promenaded the
+streets; how they leered at the women, and made the citizens who
+passed turn out of the way. Forthwith, he went to his quarters, and
+wrote his resignation.
+
+When the ink was dry he folded up the document and put it in the
+pocket of his uniform coat. Then that last tavern speech recurred to
+him. "If I resign now," he thought, "they'll suppose it's because I
+really am afraid of fighting, not because the rebels are my
+countrymen." So he lapsed into a state of indecision,--a state
+resembling apathy, a half-dazed condition, a semi-somnolent waiting
+for events. But he kept his letter of resignation in his coat.
+
+At dawn the next morning, Saturday, June 17th, he was awakened by the
+booming of guns. He was soon up and out. It was a beautiful day.
+People were on the eminences and roofs, looking northward, across the
+mouth of the Charles, towards Charlestown and the hill beyond. On that
+hill were seen rough earthworks, six feet high, which had not been
+there the day before. The booming guns were those of the British
+man-of-war _Lively_, firing from the river at the new earthworks.
+Hence the earthworks were the doing of the rebels, having been raised
+during the night. Presently the _Lively_ ceased its fire, but soon
+there was more booming, this time not only from the men-of-war, but
+also from the battery on Copp's Hill in Boston. After awhile Harry
+saw, from where he stood with many others on Beacon Hill, some of the
+rebels emerge from one part of the earthworks, as if to go away. One
+of these was knocked over by a cannon-ball. His comrades dragged his
+body behind the earthen wall. By and by a tall, strong-looking man
+appeared on top of the parapet, and walked leisurely along, apparently
+giving directions. Harry heard from a citizen, who had a field-glass,
+the words, "Prescott, of Pepperell." Other men were now visible on
+the parapet, superintending the workers behind. And now the booming of
+the guns was answered by disrespectful cheers from those same unseen
+workers.
+
+The morning grew hot. Harry heard that General Gage had called a
+council of war at the Province House; that Generals Howe, Clinton,
+Burgoyne,[3]--these three having arrived in Boston about three weeks
+before Harry had,--Pigott, Grant, and the rest were now there in
+consultation. At length there was the half-expected tumult of drum and
+bugle; and Harry was summoned to obey, with his comrades, the order to
+parade. There was now much noise of officers galloping about, dragoons
+riding from their quarters, and rattling of gun-carriages. The booming
+from the batteries and vessels increased.
+
+At half-past eleven Harry found himself--for he was scarcely master of
+his acts that morning, his will having taken refuge in a kind of
+dormancy--on parade with two companies of his regiment, and he noticed
+in a dim way that other companies near were from other different
+regiments, all being supplied with ammunition, blankets, and
+provisions. When the sun was directly overhead and at its hottest, the
+order to march was given, and soon he was bearing the colors through
+the streets of Boston. The roar of the cannon now became deafening.
+Harry knew not whether the rebels were returning it from their hill
+works across the water or not. In time the troops reached the wharf.
+Barges were in waiting, and field-pieces were being moved into some of
+them. He could see now that all the firing was from the King's vessels
+and batteries. Mechanically he followed Lieutenant Dalrymple into a
+barge, which soon filled up with troops. The other barges were
+speedily brilliant with scarlet coats and glistening bayonets. Not far
+away the river was covered with smoke, through which flashed the fire
+of the belching artillery. A blue flag was waved from General Howe's
+barge, and the fleet moved across the river towards the hill where the
+rebels waited silently behind their piles of earth.
+
+At one o'clock, Harry followed Lieutenant Dalrymple out of the barge
+to the northern shore of the river, at a point northeast of
+Charlestown village and east of the Yankees' hill. There was no
+molestation from the rebels. The firing from the vessels and batteries
+protected the hillside and shore. The troops were promptly formed in
+three lines. Harry's place was in the left of the front line. Then
+there was long waiting. The barges went back to the Boston side. Was
+General Howe, who had command of the movements, sending for more
+troops? Many of the soldiers ate of their stock of provisions. Harry,
+in a kind of dream, looked westward up the hill towards the silent
+Yankee redoubt. It faced south, west, and east. The line of its
+eastern side was continued northward by a breastwork, and still beyond
+this, down the northern hillside to another river, ran a straggling
+rail fence, which was thatched with fresh-cut hay. What were the men
+doing behind those defences? What were they saying and thinking?
+
+The barges came back across the Charles from Boston, with more
+troops, but these were disembarked some distance southwest, nearer
+Charlestown. General Howe now made a short speech to the troops
+first landed. Then some flank guards were sent out and some cannon
+wheeled forward. The companies of the front line, with one of which
+was Harry, were now ordered to form into files and move straight
+ahead. They were to constitute the right wing of the attacking
+force, and to be led by General Howe himself. The four regiments
+composing the two rear lines moved forward and leftward, to form, with
+the troops newly landed, the left wing, which was to be under General
+Pigott. The cannonading from the river and from Boston continued.
+
+The companies with which was Harry advanced slowly, having to pass
+through high grass, over stone fences, under a roasting sun. These
+companies were moving towards the hay-thatched rail fence that
+straggled down the hillside from the breastwork north of the redoubt.
+Harry had a vague sense that the left wing was ascending the
+southeastern side of the hill, towards the redoubt, at the same time.
+His eye caught the view at either side. Long files of scarlet coats,
+steel bayonets, grenadiers' tall caps. He looked ahead. The stretch of
+green, grassy hillside, the hay-covered rail fence looking like a
+hedge-row, the rude breastwork, the blue sky. Suddenly there came from
+the rail fence the belching of field-pieces. Two grenadiers fell at
+the right of Harry. One moaned, the other was silent. Harry, shocked
+into a sense that war was begun between his King and his people,
+instantly resolved to strike no blow that day against his people. But
+this was no time for leaving the ranks. Mechanically he marched on.
+
+Heads appeared over the fence-rail, guns were rested on it, and there
+came from it some irregular flashes of musketry. Then Harry saw a man
+moving his head and arms, as if shouting and gesticulating. The musket
+flashes ceased. Harry did not know it then, but the man was Putnam,
+and he was commanding the Yankees to reserve their fire. The British
+files were now ordered to deploy into line, and fire. They did so as
+they advanced, firing in machine-like unison, as if on parade, but
+aiming high. Nearer and nearer, as Harry went forward, rose the fence
+ahead and the breastwork on the hill towards the left. Why did not the
+Yankees fire? Were they, indeed, paralyzed with fear at sight of the
+lines of the King's grenadiers?
+
+All at once blazed forth the answer,--such a volley of musketry, at
+close range, as British grenadiers had not faced before. Down went
+officers and men, in twos and threes and rows. Great gaps were cut in
+the scarlet lines. The broken columns returned the volley, but there
+came another. Harry found himself in the midst of quivering, writhing,
+yelling death. The British who were left,--startled, amazed,--turned
+and fled. As mechanically as he had come up, did Harry go back in the
+common movement. General Howe showed astonishment. The left wing, too,
+had been hurled back, down the hill, by death-dealing volleys. The
+rabble had held their rude works against the King's choice troops.
+Never had as many officers been killed or wounded in a single charge.
+There had not been such mowing down at Fontenoy or Montmorenci. These
+unmilitary Yankees actually aimed when they fired, each at some
+particular mark! Harry had heard them cheering, and had thought they
+were about to pursue the King's troops; they had evidently been
+ordered back.
+
+The troops re-formed by the shore. Orders came for another assault.
+Back again went Harry with the right wing, bearing the colors as
+before. He had secretly an exquisite heart-quickening elation at the
+success of his countrymen. If they should win the day, and hold this
+hill, and drive the King's troops from Boston! He knew, at last, on
+which side his heart was.
+
+There was more play of artillery during this second charge. Harry
+could see, too, that the village of Charlestown was on fire, sending
+flames, sparks, and smoke far towards the sky. It was not as easy to
+go to the charge this time, there were so many dead bodies in the way.
+But the soldiers stepped over them, and maintained the straightness of
+their lines. Again it seemed as if the rebels would never fire. Again,
+when the King's troops were but a few rods from them, came that
+flaming, low-aimed discharge. But the troops marched on, in the face
+of it, till the very officers who urged them forward fell before it;
+then they wavered, turned, and ran. Harry's joy, as he went with them,
+increased, and his hopes mounted. The left wing, too, had been thrown
+back a second time.
+
+There was a long wait, and the generals were seen consulting. At last
+a third charge was ordered. This time the greater part of the right
+wing was led up the hill against the breastwork. With this part was
+Harry. One more volley from the rebel defences met the King's troops.
+They wavered slightly, then sprang forward, ready for another. But
+another came not. The rebels' ammunition was giving out. Harry's
+heart fell. The British forced the breastwork, carrying him along. He
+found himself at the northern end of the redoubt. Some privates lifted
+him to the parapet; he and a sergeant mounted at the same time, and
+leaped together into the redoubt. They saw Lieutenant Richardson, of
+the Royal Irish Regiment, appear on the southern parapet, give a shout
+of triumph, and fall dead from a Yankee musket-ball. A whole rank that
+followed him was served likewise, but others surged over the parapet
+in their places. The rebels were defending mainly the southern
+parapet. Many were retreating by the rear passageway. Harry saw that
+the King's troops had won the redoubt. He took his resolution. He
+threw the colors to the sergeant, pulled off his coat, handed it to
+the same sergeant, shouting into the man's ear, "Give it to the
+colonel, with the letter in the pocket;" picked up a dead man's
+musket, and ran to the aid of a tall, powerful rebel who was parrying
+with a sword the bayonets of three British privates. The tramp of the
+retreating rebels, invading British, and hand-to-hand fighters raised
+a blinding dust. Harry and the tall American, gaining a breathing
+moment, strode together with long steps, guarding their flank and
+rear, to the passageway and out of it; and then fought their course
+between two divisions of British, which had turned the outer corners
+of the redoubt. There was no firing here, so closely mingled were
+British and rebels, the former too exhausted to use forcibly their
+bayonets. So Harry retreated, beside the tall man, with the rebels. A
+British cheer behind him told the result of the day; but Harry cared
+little. His mind was at ease; he was on the right side at last.
+
+[Illustration: "'GIVE IT TO THE COLONEL.'"]
+
+Thus did young Mr. Peyton serve on both sides in the same battle,
+being with each in the time of its defeat, striking no blow against
+his country, yet deserting not the King's army till the moment of its
+victory. His act was indeed desertion, desertion to the enemy, and in
+time of action; for, though his resignation was written, it was not
+only unaccepted, but even undelivered. Thus did he render himself
+liable, under the laws of war, to an ignominious death should he ever
+fall into the hands of the King's troops.
+
+During the flight to Cambridge, Harry was separated from the tall man
+with whom he had come from the redoubt, but soon saw him again, this
+time directing the retreat, and learned that he was Colonel Prescott,
+of Pepperell. Some of the rebels discussed Harry freely in his own
+hearing, inferring from his attire that he was of the British, and
+wondering why he was not a prisoner. Harry asked to be taken to the
+commander, and at Cambridge a coatless, bare-headed captain led him
+to General Ward, of the Massachusetts force. That veteran militiaman
+heard his story, gave it credit, and, with no thought that he might be
+a spy, invited him to remain at the camp as a volunteer. Harry
+obtained a suit of blue clothes, and quartered in one of the Harvard
+College buildings. In a few days news came that the Congress at
+Philadelphia had resolved to organize a Continental army, of which the
+New England force at Cambridge was to be the present nucleus; that a
+general-in-chief would soon arrive to take command, and that the
+general-in-chief appointed was a Virginian,--Colonel Washington. Harry
+was jubilant.
+
+Early in July the new general arrived, and Harry paid his respects to
+him in the house of the college president. General Washington advised
+the boy to send another letter of resignation, then to go home and
+join the troops that his own State would soon be raising. On hearing
+Harry's story, Washington had given a momentary smile and a look at
+Major-General Charles Lee, who had but recently published his
+resignation of his half-pay as a retired British officer, and who did
+not know yet whether that resignation would be accepted or himself
+considered a deserter.
+
+Peyton sent a new letter of resignation to Boston, then procured a
+horse, and started to ride to Virginia. Six days later he was in New
+York. In a coffee-house where he was dining, he struck up an
+acquaintance with three young gentlemen of the city, and told his name
+and story. One of the three--a dark-eyed man--thereupon changed manner
+and said he had no time for a rascally turncoat. Harry, in hot
+resentment, replied that he would teach a damned Tory some manners. So
+the four went out of the town to Nicholas Bayard's woods, where, after
+a few passes with rapiers, the dark-eyed gentleman was disarmed, and
+admitted, with no good grace, that Harry was the better fencer. Harry
+left New York that afternoon, having learned that his antagonist was
+Mr. John Colden, son of the postmaster of New York. His grandfather
+had been lieutenant-governor.
+
+Harry had for some time thought he would prefer the cavalry, and
+he was determined, if possible, to gratify that preference in
+entering the military service of his own country. On arriving home
+he found his people strongly sympathizing with the revolt. But it was
+not until June, 1776, that Virginia raised a troop of horse. On the
+18th of that month Harry was commissioned a cornet thereof. After
+some service he found himself, March 31, 1777, cornet in the First
+Continental Dragoons. The next fall, in a skirmish after the battle
+of Brandywine, he was recognized by British officers as the former
+ensign of the Sixty-third. In the following spring, thanks to his
+activity during the British occupation of Philadelphia, he was made
+captain-lieutenant in Harry Lee's battalion of light dragoons. After
+the battle of Monmouth he was promoted, July 2, 1778, to the rank of
+captain. In the early fall of that year he was busy in partisan
+warfare between the lines of the two armies.
+
+And thus it came that he was pursuing a troop of Hessians down the New
+York and Albany post-road on a certain cold November evening. Eager on
+the chase, he was resolved to come up with them if it could be, though
+he should have to ride within gunshot of King's Bridge itself.
+Suddenly his horse gave out. He had the saddle taken from the dead
+animal and given to one of his men to bear while he himself mounted in
+front of a sergeant, for he was loath to spare a man. Approaching
+Philipse Manor-house, the party saw a boy leading horses into a
+stable. Captain Peyton ordered some of his men to patrol the road, and
+with the rest he went on to the manor-house lawn.
+
+Here he gave further directions, dismounted, knocked at the door, and
+was admitted to the hall where were Miss Elizabeth Philipse, Major
+Colden, Miss Sally Williams, and old Matthias Valentine; and, on
+Elizabeth's demand, announced his name and rank.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE BLACK HORSE.
+
+
+Thanks to the dimness, to his uniform, and to his swift entrance,
+Peyton had not been recognized by Major Colden until he had given his
+name. That name had on the major the effect of an apparition, and he
+stepped back into the dark corner of the hall, drawing his cloak yet
+closer about him. This alarm and movement were not noticed by the
+others, as Peyton was the object of every gaze but his own, which was
+fixed on Elizabeth.
+
+"What do you want?" her voice rang out, while she frowned from her
+place on the staircase, in cold resentment. Her aunt, meanwhile, made
+the newcomer a tremulous curtsey.
+
+"I want to see the person in charge of this house, and I want a
+horse," replied Peyton, with more promptitude than gentleness, yet
+with strict civility. Elizabeth's manner would have nettled even a
+colder man.
+
+Elizabeth did not keep him waiting for an answer.
+
+"I am at present mistress of this house, and I am neither selling
+horses nor giving them!"
+
+Peyton stared up at her in wonderment.
+
+The candle-flame struggled against the wind, turning this way and
+that, and made the vague shadows of the people and of the slender
+balusters dance on floor and wall. From without came the sound of
+Peyton's horses pawing, and of his men speaking to one another in low
+tones.
+
+"Your pardon, madam," said Peyton, "but a horse I must have. The
+service I am on permits no delay--"
+
+"I doubt not!" broke in Elizabeth. "The Hessians are probably chasing
+you."
+
+"On the contrary, I am chasing the Hessians. At Boar Hill, yonder, my
+horse gave out. 'Tis important my troops lose no time. Passing here,
+we saw horses being led into your stable. I ordered one of my men to
+take the best of your beasts, and put my saddle on it,--and he is now
+doing so."
+
+"How dare you, sir!" and Elizabeth came quickly to the foot of the
+stairs, a picture of regal, flaming wrath.
+
+"Why, madam," said Peyton, "'tis for the service of the army. I
+require the horse, and I have come here to pay for it--"
+
+"It is not for sale--"
+
+"That makes no difference. You know the custom of war."
+
+"The custom of robbery!" cried Elizabeth.
+
+Captain Peyton reddened.
+
+"Robbery is not the custom of Harry Lee's dragoons, madam," said he,
+"whatever be the practice of the wretched 'Skinners' or of De Lancey's
+Tory Cowboys. I shall pay you as you choose,--with a receipt to
+present at the quartermaster's office, or with Continental bills."
+
+"Continental rubbish!"
+
+And, indeed, Elizabeth was not far from the truth in the appellation
+so contemptuously hurled.
+
+"You prefer that, do you?" said Peyton, unruffled; whereupon he took
+from within his waistcoat a long, thick pocketbook, and from that a
+number of bills; which must have been for high amounts, for he rapidly
+counted out only a score or two of them, repocketing the rest, and at
+that time, thereabouts, "a rat in shape of a horse," as Washington
+himself had complained a month before, was "not to be bought for less
+than Ł200."[4] Peyton handed her the bills he had counted out.
+"There's a fair price, then," said he; "allowing for depreciation. The
+current rate is five to one,--I allow six."
+
+Elizabeth looked disdainfully at the proffered bills, and made no move
+to take them.
+
+"Pah!" she cried. "I wouldn't touch your wretched Continental trash. I
+wouldn't let one of my black women put her hair up in it. Money, do
+you call it? I wouldn't give a shilling of the King for a houseful of
+it."
+
+"I beg your pardon," said Peyton, cheerfully. "Since July in '76 there
+has been no king in America. I leave the bills, madam." He laid them
+on the newel post, beside the candlestick. "'Tis all I can do, and
+more than many a man would do, seeing that Colonel Philipse, the owner
+of this place, is no friend to the American cause, and may fairly be
+levied on as an enemy--"
+
+"Colonel Philipse is my father!"
+
+"Then I'm glad I've been punctilious in the matter," said Peyton, but
+without any increase of deference. "Egad, I think I've been as
+scrupulous as the commander-in-chief himself!"
+
+"The commander-in-chief!" echoed Elizabeth. "Sir Henry Clinton pays in
+gold."
+
+"I meant _our_ commander-in-chief," with a suavity most irritating.
+
+"Mr. Washington!" said Elizabeth, scornfully, with a slight emphasis
+on the "Mr."
+
+"His Excellency, General Washington." Peyton spoke as one would in
+gently correcting a child who was impolite. Then he added, "I think
+the horse is now ready; so I bid you good evening!"
+
+And he strode towards the door.
+
+Elizabeth was now fully awake to the certainty that one of the horses
+would indeed be taken. At Peyton's movement she ran to the door,
+reaching it before he did, and looked out. What she saw, transformed
+her into a very fury.
+
+"Oh, this outrage!" she cried, facing about and addressing those in
+the hall. "It is my Cato they are leading out! My Cato! Under my very
+eyes! I forbid it! He shall not go! Where are Cuff and the servants?
+Why don't they prevent? And you, Jack?"
+
+She turned to Colden for the first time since Peyton's arrival.
+
+"My troop would make short work of any who interfered, madam," said
+Peyton, warningly, still looking at Elizabeth only.
+
+"Oh, that I should have to endure this!" she said. "Oh, if I had but a
+company of soldiers at my back, you dog of a rebel!"
+
+And she paced the hall in a great passion. Passing the newel post, she
+noticed the Continental bills. She took these up, violently tore them
+across, and threw the pieces about the hall, as one tosses corn about
+a chicken-yard.
+
+Major Colden had been having a most uncomfortable five minutes. As a
+Tory officer, he was in close peril of being made prisoner by this
+Continental captain and the latter's troop outside, and this peril was
+none the less since he had so adversely criticised Peyton in the talk
+which had led to the duel in Bayard's woods. He had not put himself
+on friendly terms with Peyton after that affair. There was still no
+reason for any other feeling towards him, on Peyton's part, than
+resentment. Now Jack Colden had no relish for imprisonment at the
+hands of the despised rebels. Moreover, he had no wish that Elizabeth
+should learn of his former defeat by Peyton. He had kept the meeting
+in Bayard's woods a secret, thanks to Peyton's having quitted New York
+immediately after it, and to the relation of dependence in which the
+two only witnesses stood to him. Thus it was that he had remained well
+out of view during Elizabeth's sharp interview with Peyton, being
+unwilling alike to be known as a Tory officer, and to be recognized by
+Peyton. His civilian's cloak hid his uniform and weapons; the dimness
+of the candle-light screened his face.
+
+But matters had reached a point where he could not, without appearing
+a coward, refrain longer from taking a hand. He stepped forward from
+the dark remoteness.
+
+"Sir," said he to Peyton, politely, "I know the custom of war. But
+since a horse must be taken, you will find one of mine in the stable.
+Will you not take it instead of this lady's?"
+
+Peyton had been scrutinizing Colden's features.
+
+"Mr. Colden, if I remember," he said, when the major had finished.
+
+"You remember right," said Colden, with a bow, concealing behind a not
+too well assumed quietude what inward tremors the situation caused
+him.
+
+"And you are doubtless now an officer in some Tory corps?" said
+Peyton, quickly.
+
+"No, sir, I am neutral," replied Colden, rather huskily, with an
+instant's glance of warning at Elizabeth.
+
+"Gad!" said Peyton, with a smile, still closely surveying the major.
+"From your sentiments the time I met you in New York in '75, I should
+have thought you'd take up arms for the King."
+
+"That was before the Declaration of Independence," said Colden, in a
+tone scarcely more than audible. "I have modified my opinions."
+
+"They were strong enough then," Peyton went on. "You remember how you
+upheld them with a rapier in Bayard's woods?"
+
+"I remember," said Colden, faintly, first reddening, then taking on a
+pale and sickly look, as if a prey to hidden chagrin and rage.
+
+It seemed as if his tormentor intended to torture him interminably.
+Peyton, who knew that one of his men would come for him as soon as the
+horse should be saddled and bridled, remained facing the unhappy
+major, wearing that frank half-smile which, from the triumphant to the
+crestfallen, seems so insolent and is so maddening.
+
+"I've often thought," said Peyton, "I deserved small credit for
+getting the better of you that day. I had taken lessons from London
+fencing-masters." (Consider that the woman whom Colden loved was
+looking on, and that this was all news to her, and imagine how he
+raged beneath the outer calmness he had, for safety's sake, to wear.)
+"'Twas no hard thing to disarm you, and I'm not sorry you're neutral
+now. For if you wore British or Tory uniform, 'twould be my duty to
+put you again at disadvantage, by taking you prisoner."
+
+The face of one of Peyton's men now appeared in the doorway. Peyton
+nodded to him, then continued to address the major.
+
+"As for your request, my traps are now on the other horse, and there
+is not time to change. I must ride at once."
+
+He stepped quickly to the door, and on the threshold turned to bow.
+
+Then cried Elizabeth:
+
+"May you ride to your destruction, for your impudence, you bandit!"
+
+"Thank you, madam! I shall ride where I must! Farewell! My horse is
+waiting."
+
+And in an instant he was gone, having closed the door after him with a
+bang.
+
+"_His_ horse! The highwayman!" quoth Elizabeth.
+
+"Give the gentleman his due," said Miss Sally, in a way both mollified
+and mollifying. "He paid for it with those." She indicated the strewn
+fragments of the Continental bills on the floor.
+
+"Forward! Get up!"
+
+It was the voice of Captain Peyton outside. The horses were heard
+riding away from the lawn.
+
+Elizabeth opened the door and looked out. Her aunt accompanied her.
+Old Valentine gazed with a sagely deploring expression at the torn-up
+bills on the floor. Colden stood where he had been, lest by some
+chance the enemy might return and discover his relief from straint.
+
+"Oh," cried Elizabeth, at the door, as the light horsemen filed out
+the gate and up the branch road towards the highway, "to see the
+miserable rebel mounted on my Cato!"
+
+"He looks well on him," said her aunt.
+
+It was a brief flow of light from the fresh-risen moon, between
+wind-driven clouds, that enabled Miss Sally to make this observation.
+
+"Looks well! The tatterdemalion!" And Elizabeth came from the door, as
+if loathing further sight of him.
+
+But Miss Sally continued to look after the riders, as their dark forms
+were borne rapidly towards the post-road. "Nay, I think he is quite
+handsome."
+
+"Pah! You think every man is handsome!" said the niece, curtly.
+
+Miss Sally turned from the door, quite shocked.
+
+"Why, Elizabeth, you know I'm the least susceptible of women!"
+
+Old Mr. Valentine nodded sadly, as much as to say, "I know that, all
+too well!"
+
+As the racing clouds now rushed over the moon, and the horsemen's
+figures, having become more and more blurred, were lost in the
+blackness, Miss Sally closed and bolted the door. The horses were
+faintly heard coming to a halt, at about the junction of the branch
+road with the highway, then moving on again rapidly, not further
+towards the south, as might have been expected, but back northward,
+and finally towards the east. Meanwhile Elizabeth stood in the hall,
+her rage none the less that its object was no longer present to have
+it wreaked on him. Such hate, such passionate craving for revenge, had
+never theretofore been awakened in her. And when she realized the
+unlikelihood of any opportunity for satisfaction, she was exasperated
+to the limit of self-control.
+
+"If you had only had some troops here!" she said to Colden.
+
+"I know it! May the rascal perish for finding me at such a disadvantage!
+'Twas my choice between denying my colors and becoming his prisoner."
+
+This brought back to Elizabeth's mind the talk between Colden and
+Peyton, which her feelings had for the time driven from her thoughts.
+But now a natural curiosity asserted itself.
+
+"So you knew the fellow before?"
+
+"I met him in '75," said Colden, blurting awkwardly into the
+explanation that he knew had to be made, though little was his stomach
+for it. "He was passing through New York from Boston to his home in
+Virginia, after he had deserted from the King's army--"
+
+"Deserted?" Elizabeth opened wide her eyes.
+
+Colden briefly outlined, as far as was desirable, what he knew of
+Peyton's story.
+
+It was Miss Sally who then said:
+
+"And he disarmed you in a duel?"
+
+"He had practised under London fencing-masters, as he but now
+admitted," replied Colden, grumpily. "He made no secret of his
+desertion; and in a coffee-house discussion I said it was a dastardly
+act. So we--fought. Since then I've met officers of the regiment he
+left. Such a thing was never known before,--the desertion of an
+officer of the Sixty-third,--and General Grant, its colonel, has the
+word of Sir Henry Clinton that this fellow shall hang if they ever
+catch him."
+
+"Then I hope my horse will carry him into their hands!" said
+Elizabeth, heartily. "My poor Cato! I shall never see him again!"
+
+"We may get him back some day," said Colden, for want of aught better
+to say.
+
+"If you can do that, John Colden, and have this rebel hanged who dared
+treat me so--" Elizabeth paused, and her look dwelt on the major's
+face.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Then I think I shall almost be really in love with you!"
+
+But Colden sighed. "A rare promise from one's betrothed!"
+
+"Heavens, Jack!" said Elizabeth, now diverted from the thought of her
+horse. "Don't I do the best I can to love you? I'm sure I come as near
+loving you as loving anybody. What more can I do than that, and
+promising my hand? Don't look dismal, major, I pray,--and now make
+haste back to New York."
+
+"How can I go and leave you exposed to the chance of another visit
+from some troop of rebels?" pleaded Colden, in a kind of peevish
+despair, taking up his hat from the settle.
+
+"Oh, that fellow showed no disposition to injure _me_!" she answered,
+reassuringly. "Trust me to take care of myself."
+
+"But promise that if there's any sign of danger, you will fly to New
+York."
+
+"That will depend on the circumstances. I may be safer in this house
+than on the road."
+
+"Then, at least, you will have guns fired, and also send a man to one
+of our outposts for help?" There was no pretence in the young man's
+solicitude. Such a bride as Elizabeth Philipse was not to be found
+every day. The thought of losing her was poignant misery to him.
+
+"To which one?" she asked. "The Hessian camp by Tippett's Brook, or
+the Highlanders', at Valentine's Hill?"
+
+"No," said Colden, meditating. "Those may be withdrawn if the weather
+is bad. Send to the barrier at King's Bridge,--but if your man meets
+one of our patrols or pickets on the way, so much the better. Good-by!
+I shall see your father to-night, and then rejoin my regiment on
+Staten Island."
+
+He took her hand, bent over it, and kissed it.
+
+"Be careful you don't fall in with those rebel dragoons," said
+Elizabeth, lightly, as his lips dwelt on her fingers.
+
+"No danger of that," put in old Valentine, from the settle, for the
+moment ceasing to chew an imaginary cud. "They took the road to Mile
+Square." The octogenarian's hearing was better than his sight.
+
+"I shall notify our officers below that this rebel force is out," said
+Colden, "and our dragoons may cut it off somewhere. Farewell, then! I
+shall return for you in a week."
+
+"In a week," repeated Elizabeth, indifferently.
+
+He kissed her hand again, bowed to Miss Sally, and hastened from the
+hall, closing the door behind him. Once outside, he made his way to
+the stables, where he knew that Cuff, not having returned to
+Elizabeth, must still be.
+
+"It's little reward you give that gentleman's devotion, Elizabeth,"
+said Miss Sally, when he had gone.
+
+"Why, am I not going to give him myself? Come, aunty, don't preach on
+that old topic. My parents wish me to be married to Jack Colden, and I
+have consented, being an obedient child,--in some things."
+
+"More obedient to your own whims than to anything else," was Miss
+Sally's comment.
+
+The sound of Colden's horse departing brought to the amiable aunt the
+thought of a previous departure.
+
+"That fine young rebel captain!" said she. "If our troops take him
+they'll hang him! Gracious! As if there were so many handsome young
+men that any could be spared! Why can't they hang the old and ugly
+ones instead?"
+
+Mr. Valentine suspended his chewing long enough to bestow on Miss
+Sally a look of vague suspicion.
+
+The door, which had not been locked or bolted after Colden's going,
+was suddenly flung open to admit Cuff. The negro boy had been thrown
+by the dragoons' visit into an almost comatose condition of fright,
+from which the orders of Colden had but now sufficiently restored him
+to enable his venturing out of the stable. He now stood trembling in
+fear of Elizabeth's reproof, stammering out a wild protestation of his
+inability to save the horse by force, and of his inefficacious
+attempts to save him by prayer.
+
+Elizabeth cut him short with the remark, intended rather for her own
+satisfaction than for aught else, that one thing was to be hoped,--the
+chance of war might pay back the impertinent rebel who had stolen the
+horse. She then gave orders that the hall and the east parlor be
+lighted up.
+
+"For the proper reception," she added to her aunt, "of the next
+handsome rebel captain who may condescend to honor us with a visit.
+Mr. Valentine, wait in the parlor till supper is ready. I'll have a
+fire made there. Come, aunt Sally, we'll discuss over a cup of tea the
+charms of your pretty rebel captain and his agreeable way of relieving
+ladies of their favorite horses. I'll warrant he'll look handsomer
+than ever, on the gallows, when our soldiers catch him."
+
+And she went blithely up the stairs, which at the first landing turned
+rightward to a second landing, and thence rightward again to the upper
+hall. The darkness was interrupted by a narrow stream of light from a
+slightly open doorway in the north side of this upper hall. This was
+the doorway to her own room, and when she crossed the threshold she
+saw a bright blaze in the fireplace, lights in a candelabrum, cups and
+saucers on a table, and Molly bringing in a steaming teapot from the
+next room, which, being northward, was nearer the kitchen stairs. This
+next room, too, was lighted up. Solid wooden shutters, inside the
+windows of both chambers, kept the light from being seen without, and
+the wind from being felt within.
+
+As Elizabeth was looking around her room, smiling affectionately on
+its many well-remembered and long-neglected objects, there was a
+sudden distant detonation. Molly looked up inquiringly, but Elizabeth
+directed her to place the tea things, find fresh candles, if any were
+left in the house, and help Cuff put them on the chandelier in the
+lower hall, and then get supper. As Molly left the room, Miss Sally
+entered it.
+
+"Elizabeth! Oh, child! There's firing beyond Locust Hill. It's on the
+Mile Square road, Mr. Valentine says,--cavalry pistols and rangers'
+muskets."
+
+"Mr. Valentine has a fine ear."
+
+"He says the rebel light horse must have met the Hessians! There 'tis
+again!"
+
+"Sit down, aunt, and have a dish of tea. Ah-h! This is comfortable!
+Delicious! Let them kill one another as they please, beyond Locust
+Hill; let the wind race up the Hudson and the Albany road as it
+likes,--we're snugly housed!"
+
+Williams, who had, from the upper hall, safely overheard Captain
+Peyton's intrusion, and had not seen occasion for his own interference,
+now came in from the next room, which he had been making ready for Miss
+Sally, and received Elizabeth's orders concerning the east parlor.
+
+Meanwhile, what of Harry Peyton and his troop?
+
+Riding up the little tree-lined road towards the highway, they saw
+dark forms of other riders standing at the point of junction. These
+were the men whom Peyton had directed to patrol the road. They now
+told him that, by the account of a belated farmer whom they had
+halted, the Hessians had turned from the highway into the Mile Square
+road. Peyton immediately led his men to that road. Thus, as old
+Valentine said, that part of the highway between the manor-house and
+King's Bridge remained clear of these rebel dragoons, and Major Colden
+stood in no danger of meeting them on his return to New York. The
+major, nevertheless, did not spare his horse as he pursued his lonely
+way through the windy darkness. When he arrived at King's Bridge he
+was glad to give his horse another rest, and to accept an invitation
+to a bottle and a game in the tavern where the British commanding
+officer was quartered.
+
+The Hessians had not gone far on the Mile Square road, when their
+leader called a halt and consulted with his subordinate officer. They
+were now near Mile Square, where the Tory captain, James De Lancey,
+kept a recruiting station all the year round, and Valentine's Hill,
+where there was a regiment of Highlanders. Their own security was
+thus assured, but they might do more than come off in safety,--they
+might strike a parting blow at their pursuers. A plan was quickly
+formed. A messenger was despatched to Mile Square to request a small
+reinforcement. The troop then turned back towards the highway, having
+planned for either one of two possibilities. The first was that the
+rebel dragoons, not thinking the Hessians had turned into the Mile
+Square road, would ride on down the highway. In that case, the
+Hessians would follow them, having become in their turn the
+pursuers, and would fall upon their rear. The noise of firearms would
+alarm the Hessian camp by Tippett's Brook, below, and the rebels
+would thus be caught between two forces. The second possibility was
+that the Americans would follow into the Mile Square road. When the
+sound of their horses soon told that this was the reality, the
+Hessians promptly prepared to meet it.
+
+The force divided into two parts. The foremost blocked the road, near
+a turning, so as to remain unseen by the approaching rebels until
+almost the moment of collision. The second force stayed some rods
+behind the first, forming in two lines, one along each side of the
+road. As to each force, some were armed with sabres and cavalry
+pistols, but most, being mounted yagers of Van Wrumb's battalion, with
+rifles.
+
+As for the little detachment of Lee's Light Horse that was now
+galloping along the Mile Square road, under Harry Peyton's command,
+the arms were mainly broadswords and pistols, but some of the men had
+rifles or light muskets.
+
+The troop went forward at a gallop against the wind, there being
+just sufficient light for keen eyes to make out the road ahead.
+Harry Peyton was inwardly deploring the loss of time at Philipse
+Manor-house, and fearing that the prey would reach its covert, when
+suddenly the moon appeared in a cloud-rift, the troops passed a turn
+in the road, and there stood a line of Hessians barring the way.
+
+Ere Peyton could give an order, came one loud, flaming, whistling
+discharge from that living barrier. Harry's horse--Elizabeth
+Philipse's Cato--reared, as did others of his troop. Some of the men
+came to a quick stop, others were borne forward by the impetus of
+their former speed, but soon reined in for orders. No man fell, though
+one groaned, and two cursed.
+
+Harry got his horse under control, drew his broadsword with his right
+hand, his pistol with his left,--which held also the rein,--and
+ordered his men to charge, to fire at the moment of contact, then to
+cut, slash, and club. So the little troop, the well and the wounded
+alike, dashed forward.
+
+But the line of Hessians, as soon as they had fired, turned and fled,
+passing between the two lines of the second force, and stopping at
+some further distance to reform and reload. The second force, being
+thus cleared by the first, wheeled quickly into the road, and formed a
+second barrier against Peyton's oncoming troop.
+
+Peyton's men, intoxicated by the powder-smell that filled their
+nostrils as they passed through the smoke of the Hessians' first
+volley, bore down on this second barrier with furious force. They were
+the best riders in the world, and many a one of them held his
+broadsword aloft in one hand, his pistol raised in the other, the rein
+loose on his horse's neck; while those with long-barrelled weapons
+aimed them on the gallop.
+
+The Hessians and Peyton's foremost men fired at the same moment. The
+Hessians had not time to turn and flee, for the Americans, unchecked
+by this second greeting of fire, came on at headlong speed. "At 'em,
+boys!" yelled Peyton, discharging his pistol at a tall yager, who fell
+sidewise from his horse with a fierce German oath. The light horse
+men dashed between the Hessians' steeds, and there was hewing and
+hacking.
+
+A Hessian officer struck with a sabre at Peyton's left arm, but only
+knocked the pistol from his hand. Peyton then found himself threatened
+on the right by a trooper, and slashed at him with broadsword. The
+blow went home, but the sword's end became entangled somehow with the
+breast bones of the victim. A yager, thinking to deprive Peyton of the
+sword, brought down a musket-butt heavily on it. But Peyton's grip was
+firm, and the sword snapped in two, the hilt in his hand, the point in
+its human sheath. At that instant Peyton felt a keen smart in his left
+leg. It came from a second sabre blow aimed by the Hessian officer,
+who might have followed it with a third, but that he was now attacked
+elsewhere. Peyton had no sooner clapped his hand to his wounded leg
+than he was stunned by a blow from the rifle-butt of the yager who had
+previously struck the sword. Harry fell forward on the horse's neck,
+which he grasped madly with both arms, still holding the broken sword
+in his right hand; and lapsed from a full sense of the tumult, the
+plunging and shrieking horses, the yelling and cursing men, the whirr
+and clash of swords, and the thuds of rifle-blows, into blind, red,
+aching, smarting half-consciousness.
+
+When he was again aware of things, he was still clasping the horse's
+neck, and was being borne alone he knew not whither. His head ached,
+and his left leg was at every movement a seat of the sharpest pain. He
+was dizzy, faint, bleeding,--and too weak to raise himself from his
+position. He could not hear any noise of fighting, but that might have
+been drowned by the singing in his ears. He tried to sit up and look
+around, but the effort so increased his pain and so drew on his
+nigh-fled strength, that he fell forward on the horse's neck,
+exhausted and half-insensible. The horse, which had merely turned and
+run from the conflict at the moment of Peyton's loss of sense,
+galloped on.
+
+Clouds had darkened the moon in time to prevent their captain's
+unintentional defection from being seen by his troops. They had,
+therefore, fought on against such antagonists as, in the darkness,
+they could keep located. The moon reappeared, and showed many of the
+Hessians making for the wooded hill near by, and some fleeing to the
+force that had re-formed further on the road. Some of the Americans
+charged this force, which thereupon fired a volley and fled, having
+the more time therefor inasmuch as the charging dragoons did not this
+time possess their former speed and impetus. The dragoons, in disorder
+and without a leader, came to a halt. Becoming aware of Peyton's
+absence, they sought in vain the scene of recent conflict. It was
+soon inferred that he had been wounded, and, therefore of no further
+use in the combat, had retreated to a safe resting-place. It was
+decided useless to follow the enemy further towards the near British
+posts, whence the Hessians might be reinforced,--as they would have
+been, had they held the ground longer. So, having had much the better
+of the fight, the surviving dragoons galloped back towards the
+post-road, expecting to come upon their captain, wounded, by the
+wayside, at any moment. He might, indeed, to make sure of safe refuge,
+ride as far towards the American lines as the wound he must have
+received would allow him to do.
+
+Such were the doings, on the windy night, beyond Locust Hill, while
+Elizabeth Philipse and her aunt sat drinking tea by candle-light
+before a sputtering wood fire. Elizabeth having set the example, the
+others in the house went about their business, despite the firing so
+plainly heard. Black Sam had, after Elizabeth's arrival, returned from
+the orchard, whither he had gone late in the day, lest he might
+attract the attention of some dodging whale-boat or skulking Whig to
+the few remaining apples. He had been let in at a rear door by
+Williams, who had repressed him during the visit of the American
+dragoons,--for Sam was a sturdy, bold fellow, of different kidney from
+the dapper, citified Cuff. At Williams's order he had made a roaring
+fire in the east parlor, to the great comfort of old Mr. Valentine,
+and was now putting the dining-room into a similar state of warmth and
+light. Williams was setting out provisions for Molly presently to
+cook; and the maid herself was, with Cuff's assistance, replenishing
+the hall chandelier with fresh candles.
+
+The sound of firing had put Elizabeth's black boy into a tremulous and
+white-eyed state. When Molly, who stood on the settle while he handed
+the candles up to her, assured him that the firing was t'other side of
+Locust Hill, that the bullets would not penetrate the mahogany door,
+and that anyhow only one bullet in a hundred ever hit any one, Cuff
+affrightedly observed 'twas just that one bullet he was afraid of; and
+when, at the third discharge, Molly dropped a candle on his woolly
+head, he fell prostrate, howling that he was shot. Molly convinced him
+after awhile that he was alive, but he averred he had actually had a
+glimpse of the harps and the golden streets, though the prospect of
+soon possessing them had rather appalled him, as indeed it does many
+good people who are so sure of heaven and so fond of it. He had been
+reassured but a short time, when he had new cause for terror. Again a
+horse was heard galloping up to the house. It stopped before the door
+and gave a loud whinny.
+
+[Illustration: "LEANED FORWARD ON THE HORSE'S NECK."]
+
+Molly exchanged with Cuff a look of mingled wonder, delight, and
+doubt; then ran and opened the front door.
+
+"Yes!" she cried. "It is! It's Miss Elizabeth's horse! It's Cato!"
+
+Cuff ran to the threshold in great joy, but suddenly stopped short.
+
+"Dey's a soldier on hees back," he whispered.
+
+So Molly had noticed,--but a soldier who made no demonstration, a
+soldier who leaned forward on the horse's neck and clutched its mane,
+holding at the same time in one hand a broken sword, and who tried to
+sit up, but only emitted a groan of pain.
+
+"He's wounded, that's it," said Molly. "Go and help the poor soldier
+in, Cuff. Don't you see he's injured? He can't hurt you."
+
+Molly enforced her commands with such physical persuasions that Cuff,
+ere he well knew what he was about, was helping Peyton from the horse.
+The captain, revived by a supreme effort, leaned on the boy's shoulder
+and came limping and lurching across the porch into the hall. Molly
+then went to his assistance, and with this additional aid he reached
+the settle, on which he dropped, weak, pale, and panting. He took a
+sitting posture, gasped his thanks to Molly, and, noticing the blood
+from his leg wound, called damnation on the Hessian officer's sword.
+Presently he asked for a drink of water.
+
+At Molly's bidding the negro boy hastened for water, and also to
+inform his mistress of the arrival. Elizabeth, hearing the news, rose
+with an exclamation; but, taking thought, sat down again, and, with a
+pretence of composure, finished her cup of tea. Cuff returned with a
+glass of water to the hall, where Molly was listening to Peyton's
+objurgations on his condition. The captain took the glass eagerly, and
+was about to drink, when a footstep was heard on the stairs. He turned
+his head and saw Elizabeth.
+
+"Here's my respects, madam," quoth he, and drank off the water.
+
+Elizabeth came down-stairs and took a position where she could look
+Peyton well over. He watched her with some wonderment. When she was
+quite ready she spoke:
+
+"So, it is, indeed, the man who stole my horse."
+
+"Pardon. I think your horse has stolen _me_! It made me an intruder
+here quite against my will, I assure you."
+
+"You will doubtless not honor us by remaining?" There was more
+seriousness of curiosity in this question than Elizabeth betrayed or
+Peyton perceived.
+
+"What can I do? I can neither ride nor walk."
+
+"But your men will probably come for you?"
+
+"I don't think any saw the horse bear me from the fight. The field was
+in smoke and darkness. My troops must have pursued the enemy. They'll
+think me killed or made prisoner. If they return this way, however, I
+can have them stop and take me along."
+
+"Then you expect that, in repayment of your treatment of me awhile
+ago--" Elizabeth paused.
+
+"Madam, you should allow for the exigencies of war! Yet, if you wish
+to turn me out--"
+
+Elizabeth interrupted him:
+
+"So it is true that, if you fell into the hands of the British, they
+would hang you?"
+
+"Doubtless! But you shouldn't blame _me_ for what _they'd_ do. And how
+did you know?"
+
+"Help this gentleman into the east parlor," said Elizabeth, abruptly,
+to Cuff.
+
+"Ah!" cried Peyton, his face lighting up with quick gratitude. "Madam,
+you then make me your guest?" He thrust forward his head, forgetful of
+his condition.
+
+"My guest?" rang out Elizabeth's voice in answer. "You insolent rebel,
+I intend to hand you over to the British!"
+
+There was a brief silence. Each gazed at the other.
+
+"You will not--do that?" said Peyton, in a voice little above a
+whisper.
+
+"Wait and see!" And she stood regarding him with elation.
+
+He stared at her in blank consternation.
+
+Again, the sound of the trample of many horses.
+
+"Ah!" cried Peyton, joyfully. "My men returning!"
+
+He rose to go to the door, but his wounded leg gave way, and he
+staggered to the staircase, and leaned against the balustrade.
+
+Elizabeth's look of gratification faded. She ran to the door, fastened
+it with bolt and key, and stood with her back against it.
+
+The sound, first distant as if in the Mile Square road, was now
+manifestly in the highway. Would it come southward, towards the house,
+or go northward, decreasing?
+
+"They are my men!" cried Peyton to Cuff. "Call them! They'll pass
+without knowing I am here. Call them, I say! Quick! They'll be out of
+hearing."
+
+"Silence!" said Elizabeth to Cuff, in a low tone, and stood
+listening.
+
+Peyton made another attempt to move, but realized his inability. 'Twas
+all he could do to support himself against the balustrade.
+
+"My God, they've gone by!" he cried. "They'll return to our lines,
+leaving me behind." And he shouted, "Carrington!"
+
+The voice rang for a moment in the remoteness of the hall above. Then
+complete silence within. All in the hall remained motionless,
+listening. The sound of the horses came fainter and fainter.
+
+"Carrington! Help! I'm in the manor-house,--a prisoner!"
+
+A look of despair came over his face. On Elizabeth's the suspense gave
+way to a smile of triumph.
+
+The sound of the horses died away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE ONE CHANCE.
+
+
+Peyton staggered back to the settle and sank down on it, exhausted.
+Elizabeth, hearing black Sam moving about in the dining-room, which
+was directly north of the hall, bade Molly summon him. When he
+appeared, she ordered him and Cuff to carry the settle, with the
+wounded man on it, into the east parlor, and to place the man on the
+sofa there. She then told Molly to hasten the supper, and to send
+Williams to her up-stairs, and thereupon rejoined her excited aunt
+above. When Williams attended her, she gave him commands regarding the
+prisoner.
+
+Peyton was thus carried through the deep doorway in the south side of
+the hall into the east parlor, which was now exceedingly habitable
+with fire roaring and candles lighted. In the east and south sides of
+this richly ornamented room were deeply embrasured windows, with low
+seats. In the west side was a mahogany door opening from the old or
+south hall. In the north side, which was adorned with wooden pillars
+and other carved woodwork, was the door through which Peyton had been
+carried; west of that, the decorated chimney-breast with its English
+mantel and fireplace, and further west a pair of doors opening from a
+closet, whence a winding staircase descended cellarward. The ceiling
+was rich with fanciful arabesque woodwork. Set in the chimney-breast,
+over the mantel, was an oblong mirror. The wainscoting, pillars, and
+other woodwork were of a creamy white. But Peyton had no eye for
+details at the moment. He noticed only that his entrance disturbed the
+slumbers of the old gentleman--Matthias Valentine--who had been
+sleeping in a great armchair by the fire, and who now blinked in
+wonderment.
+
+The negroes put down the settle and lifted Peyton to a sofa that stood
+against the western side of the room, between a spinet and the
+northern wall. At Peyton's pantomimic request they then moved the sofa
+to a place near the fire, and then, taking the settle along, marched
+out of the room, back to the hall, closing the door as they went.
+
+Peyton, too pain-racked and exhausted to speak, lay back on the sofa,
+with closed eyes. Old Valentine stared at him a few moments; then,
+curious both as to this unexpected advent and as to the proximity of
+supper, rose and hobbled from the parlor and across the hall to the
+dining-room. For some time Peyton was left alone. He opened his eyes,
+studied the flying figures on the ceiling, the portraits on the
+walls, the carpet,--Philipse Manor-house, like the best English houses
+of the time, had carpet on its floors,--the carving of the mantel, the
+clock and candelabrum thereupon, the crossed rapiers thereabove, the
+curves of the imported furniture. His twinges and aches were so many
+and so diverse that he made no attempt to locate them separately. He
+could feel that the left leg of his breeches was soaked with blood.
+
+Finally the door opened, and in came Williams and Cuff, the former
+with shears and bands of linen, the latter with a basin of water.
+Williams, whom Peyton had not before seen, scrutinized him critically,
+and forthwith proceeded to expose, examine, wash, and bind up the
+wounded leg, while Cuff stood by and played the rôle of surgeon's
+assistant. Peyton speedily perceived on the steward's part a reliable
+acquaintance with the art of dressing cuts, and therefore submitted
+without a word to his operations. Williams was equally silent,
+breaking his reticence only now and then to utter some monosyllabic
+command to Cuff.
+
+When the wound was dressed, Williams put the patient's disturbed
+attire to rights, and adjusted his hair. Peyton, with a feeling of
+some relief, made to stretch the wounded leg, but a sharp twinge cut
+the movement short.
+
+"You should make a good surgeon," Peyton said at last, "you tie so
+damnably tight a bandage."
+
+"I've bound up many a wound, sir," said Williams; "and some far worse
+than yours. 'Tis not a dangerous cut, yours, though 'twill be
+irritating while it lasts. You won't walk for a day or two."
+
+"It's remarkable your mistress has so much trouble taken with me, when
+she intends to deliver me to the British."
+
+Peyton had inferred the steward's place in the house, from his
+appearance and manner.
+
+"Why, sir," said Williams, "we couldn't have you bleeding over the
+floor and furniture. Besides, I suppose she wants to hand you over in
+good condition."
+
+"I see! No bedraggled remnant of a man, but a complete, clean, and
+comfortable candidate for Cunningham's gallows!" Peyton here forgot
+his wound and attempted to sit upright, but quickly fell back with a
+grimace and a groan.
+
+"Better lie still, sir," counselled Williams, sagely. "If you need any
+one, you are to call Cuff. He will be in waiting in that hall, sir."
+And the steward pointed towards the east hall. "There will be no use
+trying to get away. I doubt if you could walk half across the room
+without fainting. And if you could get out of the house, you'd find
+black Sam on guard, with his duck-gun,--and Sam doesn't miss once in
+a hundred times with that duck-gun. Bring those things, Cuff."
+Williams indicated Peyton's hat, remnant of sword, and scabbard, which
+had been placed on the armchair by the fireside.
+
+"Leave my sword!" commanded Peyton.
+
+"Can't, sir!" said Williams, affably. "Miss Elizabeth's orders were to
+take it away."
+
+Williams thereupon went from the room, crossed the east hall, and
+entered the dining-room, to report to Elizabeth, who now sat at supper
+with Miss Sally and Mr. Valentine.
+
+Cuff, with basin of water in one hand, took up the hat, sword, and
+scabbard, with the other.
+
+"Miss Elizabeth!" mused Peyton. "Queen Elizabeth, I should say, in
+this house. Gad, to be a girl's prisoner, tied down to a sofa by so
+small a cut!" Hereupon he addressed Cuff, who was about to depart:
+"Where is your mistress?"
+
+"In the dining-room, eating supper."
+
+"And Mr. Colden, whom I saw in that hall about an hour ago, when I
+bought the horse?"
+
+"Major Colden rode back to New York."
+
+"_Major_ Colden! Major of what?"
+
+"New Juzzey Vollingteers, sir."
+
+"What? Then he is in the King's service, after all? And when I was
+here with my troops he said he was neutral. I'll never take a Tory's
+word again."
+
+"Am you like to hab de chance, sir?" queried Cuff, with a grin.
+
+"What! You taunt me with my situation?" And Harry's head shot up from
+the sofa as he made to rise and chastise the boy; but he could not
+stand on his leg, and so remained sitting, propped on his right arm,
+panting and glaring at the negro.
+
+Cuff, whose whiteness of teeth had shown in his moment of mirth, now
+displayed much whiteness of eye in his alarm at Peyton's movement, and
+glided to the door. As he went out to the hall, he passed Molly, who
+was coming into the parlor with a bowl of broth.
+
+"Hah!" ejaculated Peyton as she came towards him. "They would feed the
+animal for the slaughter, eh?"
+
+Molly curtseyed.
+
+"Please, sir, it wa'n't they sent this. I brought it of my own accord,
+sir, though with Miss Elizabeth's permission."
+
+"Oh! so Miss Elizabeth _did_ give her permission, then?"
+
+"Yes, sir. At least, she said it didn't matter, if I wished to."
+
+"And you did wish to? Well, you're a good girl, and I thank you."
+
+Whereupon Peyton took the bowl and sipped of the broth with relish.
+
+"Thank you, sir," said Molly, who then moved a small light chair from
+its place by the wall to a spot beside the sofa and within Peyton's
+reach. "You can set the bowl on this," she added. "I must go back to
+the kitchen." And, after another curtsey, she was gone.
+
+The broth revived Peyton, and with all his pain and fatigue he had
+some sense of comfort. The handsome, well warmed, well lighted parlor,
+so richly furnished, so well protected from the wind and weather by
+the solid shutters outside its four small-paned windows, was certainly
+a snug corner of the world. So far seemed all this from stress and
+war, that Peyton lost his strong realization of the fate that
+Elizabeth's threat promised him. Appreciation of his surroundings
+drove away other thoughts and feelings. That he should be taken and
+hanged was an idea so remote from his present situation, it seemed
+rather like a dream than an imminent reality. There surely would be a
+way of his getting hence in safety. And he imbibed mouthful after
+mouthful of the warm broth.
+
+Presently old Mr. Valentine reappeared, from the east hall, looking
+none the less comfortable for the supper he had eaten. A long pipe was
+in his hand, and, that he might absorb smoke and liquor at the same
+time, he had brought with him from the table, where the two ladies
+remained, a vast mug of hot rum punch of Williams's brewing. He now
+set the mug on the mantel, lighted his pipe with a brand from the
+fire, repossessed himself of the mug, and sat down in the armchair,
+with a sigh of huge satisfaction. It mattered not that this was the
+parlor of Philipse Manor-house,--for Mr. Valentine, in his innocent
+way, indulged himself freely in the privileges and presumptions of old
+age.
+
+Peyton, after staring for some time with curiosity at the smoky old
+gentleman, who rapidly grew smokier, at last raised the bowl of broth
+for a last gulp, saying, cheerily:
+
+"To your very good health, sir!"
+
+"Thank you, sir!" said the old man, complacently, not making any
+movement to reciprocate.
+
+"What! won't you drink to mine?"
+
+"'Twould be a waste of words to drink the health of a man that's going
+to be hanged," replied Valentine, who at supper had heard the ladies
+discuss Peyton's intended fate. He thereupon sent a cloud of smoke
+ceiling-ward for the flying cherubs to rest on.
+
+"The devil! You _are_ economical!"
+
+"Of words, maybe, not of liquor." The octogenarian quaffed deeply from
+the mug. "They say hanging is an easy death," he went on, being in
+loquacious mood. "I never saw but one man hanged. He didn't seem to
+enjoy it." Mr. Valentine puffed slowly, inwardly dwelling on the
+recollection.
+
+"Oh, didn't he?" said Peyton.
+
+"No, he took it most unpleasant like."
+
+"Did you come in here to cheer me up in my last hours?" queried Harry,
+putting the empty bowl on the chair by the sofa.
+
+"No," replied the other, ingenuously. "I came in for a smoke while the
+ladies stayed at the table." He then went back to a subject that
+seemed to have attractions for him. "I don't know how hanging will go
+with you. Cunningham will do the work.[5] They say he makes it as
+disagreeable as may be. I'd come and see you hanged, but it won't be
+possible."
+
+"Then I suppose I shall have to excuse you," said Peyton, with
+resignation.
+
+"Yes." The old man had finished his punch and set down his mug, and he
+now yawned with a completeness that revealed vastly more of red
+toothless mouth than one might have calculated his face could contain.
+"Some take it easier than others," he went on. "It's harder with young
+men like you." Again he opened his jaws in a gape as whole-souled as
+that of a house-dog before a kitchen fire. "It must be disagreeable to
+have a rope tightened around your neck. I don't know." He thrust his
+pipe-stem absently between his lips, closed his eyes, mumbled
+absently, "I don't know," and in a few moments was asleep, his pipe
+hanging from his mouth, his hands folded in his lap.
+
+"A cheerful companion for a man in my situation," thought Peyton. His
+mind had been brought back to the future. When would this resolute and
+vengeful Miss Elizabeth fulfil her threat? How would she proceed about
+it? Had she already taken measures towards his conveyance to the
+British lines? Should she delay until he should be able to walk, there
+would be two words about the matter. Meanwhile, he must wait for
+developments. It was useless to rack his brain with conjectures. His
+sense of present comfort gradually resumed sway, and he placed his
+head again on the sofa pillow and closed his eyes.
+
+He was conscious for a time of nothing but his deadened pain, his
+inward comfort, the breathing of old Mr. Valentine, the intermittent
+raging of the wind without, and the steady ticking of the clock on the
+mantel,--which delicately framed timepiece had been started within the
+hour by Sam, who knew Miss Elizabeth's will for having all things in
+running order. Peyton's drowsiness wrapped him closer and closer.
+Presently he was remotely aware of the opening of the door, the tread
+of light feet on the floor, the swish of skirts. But he had now
+reached that lethargic point which involves total indifference to
+outer things, and he did not even open his eyes.
+
+"Asleep," said Elizabeth, for it was she who had entered with her
+aunt.
+
+Harry recognized the voice, and knew that he was the subject of her
+remark; but his feeling towards his contemptuous captor was not such
+as to make him take the trouble of setting her right. Therefore, he
+kept his eyes closed, having a kind of satisfaction in her being
+mistaken.
+
+"How handsome!" whispered Miss Sally, who beamed more bigly and
+benignly after supper than before.
+
+"Which one, aunty?" said Elizabeth, looking from Peyton to old
+Valentine.
+
+Her aunt deigned to this levity only a look of hopeless reproof.
+
+Elizabeth sat down on the music-seat before the spinet, and became
+serious,--or, more accurately, businesslike.
+
+"On second thought," said she, "it won't do to keep him here waiting
+for one of our patrols to pass this way. In the meantime some of the
+rebels might come into the neighborhood and stop here. He must be
+delivered to the British this very night!"
+
+Peyton gave no outward sign of the momentary heart stoppage he felt
+within.
+
+"Why," said the aunt, speaking low, and in some alarm, "'twould
+require Williams and both the blacks to take him, and we should be
+left alone in the house."
+
+"I sha'n't send him to the troops," said Elizabeth, in her usual
+tone, not caring whether or not the prisoner should be disturbed,--for
+in his powerlessness he could not oppose her plans if he did know
+them, and in her disdain she had no consideration for his feelings.
+"The troops shall come for him. Black Sam shall go to the watch-house
+at King's Bridge with word that there's an important rebel prisoner
+held here, to be had for the taking."
+
+"Will the troops at King's Bridge heed the story of a black man?" Aunt
+Sally seemed desirous of interposing objections to immediate action.
+
+"Their officer will heed a written message from me," said the niece.
+"Most of the officers know me, and those at King's Bridge are aware I
+came here to-day."
+
+Thereupon she called in Cuff, and sent him off for Williams, with
+orders that the steward should bring her pen, ink, paper, and wax.
+
+"Oh, Elizabeth!" cried Miss Sally, looking at the floor. "Here's some
+of the poor fellow's blood on the carpet."
+
+"Never mind. The blood of an enemy is a sight easily tolerated," said
+the girl, probably unaware how nearly she had duplicated a famous
+utterance of a certain King of France, whose remark had borne
+reference to another sense than that of sight.[6]
+
+Williams soon came in with the writing materials, and placed them, at
+Elizabeth's direction, on a table that stood between the two eastern
+windows, and on which was a lighted candelabrum. Elizabeth sat down at
+the table, her back towards the fireplace and Peyton.
+
+"I wish you to send black Sam to me," said she to the steward, "and to
+take his place on guard with the gun till he returns from an errand."
+
+Williams departed, and Elizabeth began to make the quill fly over the
+paper, her aunt looking on from beside the table. Peyton opened his
+eyes and looked at them.
+
+"It does seem a pity," said Miss Sally at last. "Such a pretty
+gentleman,--such a gallant soldier!"
+
+"Gentleman?" echoed Elizabeth, writing on. "The fellow is not a
+gentleman! Nor a gallant soldier!"
+
+Peyton rose to a sitting posture as if stung by a hornet, but was
+instantly reminded of his wound. But neither Elizabeth nor her aunt
+saw or heard his movement. The girl, unaware that he was awake,
+continued:
+
+"Does a gentleman or a gallant soldier desert the army of his king to
+join that of his king's enemies?"
+
+Quick came the answer,--not from aunt Sally, but from Peyton on the
+sofa.
+
+"A gallant soldier has the right to choose his side, and a gentleman
+need not fight against his country!"
+
+Elizabeth did not suffer herself to appear startled at this sudden
+breaking in. Having finished her note, she quietly folded it, and
+addressed it, while she said:
+
+"A gallant soldier, having once chosen his side, will be loyal to it;
+and a gentleman never bore the odious title of deserter."
+
+"A gentleman can afford to wear any title that is redeemed by a
+glorious cause and an extraordinary danger. When I took service
+with the King's army in England, I never dreamt that army would be
+sent against the King's own colonies; and not till I arrived in
+Boston did I know the true character of this revolt. We thought we
+were coming over merely to quell a lawless Boston rabble. I gave in
+my resignation--"
+
+"But did not wait for it to be accepted," interrupted Elizabeth,
+quietly, as she applied to the folded paper the wax softened by the
+flame of a candle.
+
+"I _was_ a little hasty," said Harry.
+
+"The rebel army was the proper place for such fellows," said
+Elizabeth. "No true British officer would be guilty of such a deed!"
+
+"Probably not! It required exceptional courage!"
+
+Peyton knew, as well as any, that the British were brave enough; but
+he was in mood for sharp retort.
+
+"That is not the reason," said Elizabeth, coldly, refusing to show
+wrath. "Your enemies hold such acts as yours in detestation."
+
+"I am not serving in this war for the approbation of my enemies."
+
+At this moment black Sam came in. Elizabeth handed him the letter, and
+said:
+
+"You are to take my horse Cato, and ride with this message to the
+British barrier at King's Bridge. It is for the officer in command
+there. When the sentries challenge you, show this, and say it is of
+the greatest consequence and must be delivered at once."
+
+"Yes, Miss Elizabeth."
+
+"The commander," she went on, "will probably send here a body of
+troops at once, to convey this prisoner within the lines. You are to
+return with them. If no time is lost, and they send mounted troops,
+you should be back in an hour."
+
+Peyton could hardly repress a start.
+
+"An hour at most, miss, if nothing stops," said the negro.
+
+"If any officer of my acquaintance is in command," said Elizabeth,
+"there will be no delay. Cuff shall let the troops in, through that
+hall, as soon as they arrive."
+
+Whereupon the black man, a stalwart and courageous specimen of his
+race, went rapidly from the room.
+
+"One hour!" murmured Peyton, looking at the clock.
+
+Molly, the maid, now reappeared, carrying carefully in one hand a cup,
+from which a thin steam ascended.
+
+"What is't now, Molly?" inquired Elizabeth, rising from her chair.
+
+Molly blushed and was much confused. "Tea, ma'am, if you please! I
+thought, maybe, you'd allow the gentleman--"
+
+"Very well," said Elizabeth. "Be the good Samaritan if you like,
+child. His tea-drinking days will soon be over. Come, aunt Sally, we
+shall be in better company elsewhere." And she returned to the
+dining-room, not deigning her prisoner another look.
+
+Miss Sally followed, but her feelings required confiding in some one,
+and before she went she whispered to the embarrassed maid, "Oh, Molly,
+to think so sweet a young gentleman should be completely wasted!"
+
+Molly heaved a sigh, and then approached the young gentleman himself,
+with whom she was now alone, saving the presence of the slumbering
+Valentine.
+
+"So your name is Molly? And you've brought me tea this time?"
+
+"Yes, sir,--if you please, sir." She took up the bowl from the chair
+and placed the cup in its stead. "I put sugar in this, sir, but if
+you'd rather--"
+
+"I'd rather have it just as you've made it, Molly," he said, in a
+singularly gentle, unsteady tone. He raised the cup, and sipped.
+"Delicious, Molly!--Hah! Your mistress thinks my tea-drinking days
+will soon be over."
+
+"I'm very sorry, sir."
+
+"So am I." He held the cup in his left hand, supporting his upright
+body with his right arm, and looked rather at vacancy than at the
+maid. "Never to drink tea again," he said, "or wine or spirits, for
+that matter! To close your eyes on this fine world! Never again to
+ride after the hounds, or sing, or laugh, or chuck a pretty girl under
+the chin!"
+
+And here, having set down the cup, he chucked Molly herself under the
+chin, pretending a gaiety he did not feel.
+
+"Never again," he went on, "to lead a charge against the enemies of
+our liberty; not to live to see this fight out, the King's regiments
+driven from the land, the States take their place among the free
+nations of the world! _By God, Molly, I don't want to die yet!_"
+
+It was not the fear of death, it was the love of life, and what life
+might have in reserve, that moved him; and it now asserted itself in
+him with a force tenfold greater than ever before. Death,--or, rather,
+the ceasing of life,--as he viewed it now, when he was like to meet it
+without company, with prescribed preliminaries, in an ignominious
+mode, was a far other thing than as viewed in the exaltation of
+battle, when a man chances it hot-headed, uplifted, thrilled, in
+gallant comradeship, to his own fate rendered careless by a sense of
+his nothingness in comparison with the whole vast drama. Moreover, in
+going blithely to possible death in open fight, one accomplishes
+something for his cause; not so, going unwillingly to certain death on
+an enemy's gallows. It was, too, an exasperating thought that he
+should die to gratify the vengeful whim of an insolent Tory girl.
+
+"Will it really come to that?" asked Molly, in a frightened tone.
+
+"As surely as I fall into British hands!"
+
+Peyton remembered the case of General Charles Lee, whose resignation
+of half-pay had not been acknowledged; who was, when captured by the
+British, long in danger of hanging, and who was finally rated as an
+ordinary war prisoner only for Washington's threat to retaliate on
+five Hessian field officers. If a major-general, whose desertion, even
+if admitted, was from half-pay only, would have been hanged without
+ceremony but for General Howe's fear of a "law scrape," and had been
+saved from shipment to England for trial, only by the King's fear that
+Washington's retaliation would disaffect the Hessian allies, for what
+could a mere captain look, who had come over from the enemy in action,
+and whose punishment would entail no official retaliation?
+
+"And your mistress expects a troop of British soldiers here in an hour
+to take me! Damn it, if I could only walk!" And he looked rapidly
+around the room, in a kind of distraction, as if seeking some means of
+escape. Realizing the futility of this, he sighed dismally, and drank
+the remainder of the tea.
+
+"You couldn't get away from the house, sir," said Molly. "Williams is
+watching outside."
+
+"I'd take a chance if I could only run!" Peyton muttered. He had no
+fear that Molly would betray him. "If there were some hiding-place I
+might crawl to! But the troops would search every cranny about the
+house." He turned to Molly suddenly, seeing, in his desperate state
+and his lack of time, but one hope. "I wonder, could Williams be
+bribed to spirit me away?"
+
+Molly's manner underwent a slight chill.
+
+"Oh, no," said she. "He'd die before he'd disobey Miss Elizabeth. We
+all would, sir. I'm very sorry, indeed, sir." Whereupon, taking up the
+empty bowl and teacup, she hastened from the room.
+
+Peyton sat listening to the clock-ticks. He moved his right leg so
+that the foot rested on the floor, then tried to move the left one
+after it, using his hand to guide it. With great pains and greater
+pain, he finally got the left foot beside the right. He then undertook
+to stand, but the effort cost him such physical agony as could not be
+borne for any length of time. He fell back with a groan to the sofa,
+convinced that the wounded leg was not only, for the time, useless
+itself, but also an impediment to whatever service the other leg might
+have rendered alone. But he remained sitting up, his right foot on the
+floor.
+
+Suddenly there was a raucous sound from old Mr. Valentine. He had at
+last begun to snore. But this infliction brought its own remedy, for
+when his jaws opened wider his tobacco pipe fell from his mouth and
+struck his folded hands. He awoke with a start, and blinked
+wonderingly at Peyton, whose face, turned towards the old man, still
+wore the look of disapproval evoked by the momentary snoring.
+
+"Still here, eh?" piped Mr. Valentine. "I dreamt you were being hanged
+to the fireplace, like a pig to be smoked. I was quite upset over it!
+Such a fine young gentleman, and one of Harry Lee's officers, too!"
+
+And the old man shook his head deploringly.
+
+"Then why don't you help me out of this?" demanded Peyton, whose
+impulse was for grasping at straws, for he thought of black Sam urging
+Cato through the wind towards King's Bridge at a gallop.
+
+"It ain't possible," said Valentine, phlegmatically.
+
+"If it were, would you?" asked Harry, a spark of hope igniting from
+the appearance that the old man was, at least, not antagonistic to
+him.
+
+"Why, yes," began the octogenarian, placidly.
+
+Harry's heart bounded.
+
+"If," the old man went on, "I could without lending aid to the King's
+enemies. But you see I couldn't. I won't lend aid to neither side's
+enemies.[7] I don't want to die afore my time." And he gazed
+complacently at the fire.
+
+Peyton knew the hopeless immovability of selfish old age.
+
+"God!" he muttered, in despair. "Is there no one I can turn to?"
+
+"There's none within hearing would dare go against the orders of Miss
+Elizabeth," said Mr. Valentine.
+
+"Miss Elizabeth evidently rules with a firm hand," said Peyton,
+bitterly. "Her word--" He stopped suddenly, as if struck by a new
+thought. "If I could but move _her_! If I could make her change her
+mind!"
+
+"You couldn't. No one ever could, and as for a rebel soldier--"
+
+"She has a heart of iron, that girl!" broke in Peyton. "The cruelty of
+a savage!"
+
+Mr. Valentine took on a sincerely deprecating look. "Oh, you mustn't
+abuse Miss Elizabeth," said he. "It ain't cruelty, it's only proper
+pride. And she isn't hard. She has the kindest heart,--to those she's
+fond of."
+
+"To those she's fond of," repeated Harry, mechanically.
+
+"Yes," said the old man; "her people, her horses, her dogs and cats,
+and even her servants and slaves."
+
+"Tender creature, who has a heart for a dog and not for a man!"
+
+The old man's loyalty to three generations of Philipses made him a
+stubborn defender, and he answered:
+
+"She'd have no less a heart for a man if she loved him."
+
+"If she loved him!" echoed Peyton, and began to think.
+
+"Ay, and a thousand times more heart, loving him as a woman loves a
+man." Mr. Valentine spoke knowingly, as one acquainted by enviable
+experience with the measure of such love.
+
+"As a woman loves a man!" repeated Peyton. Suddenly he turned to
+Valentine. "Tell me, does she love any man so, now?" Peyton did not
+know the relation in which Elizabeth and Major Colden stood to each
+other.
+
+"I can't say she _loves_ one," replied Valentine, judicially,
+"though--"
+
+But Peyton had heard enough.
+
+"By heaven, I'll try it!" he cried. "Such miracles have happened! And
+I have almost an hour!"
+
+Old Valentine blinked at him, with stupid lack of perception. "What is
+it, sir?"
+
+"I shall try it!" was Peyton's unenlightening answer. "There's one
+chance. And you can help me!"
+
+"The devil I can!" replied Valentine, rising from his chair in some
+annoyance. "I won't lend aid, I tell you!"
+
+"It won't be 'lending aid.' All I beg is that you ask Miss Elizabeth
+to see me alone at once,--and that you'll forget all I've said to you.
+Don't stand staring! For Christ's sake, go and ask her to come in!
+Don't you know? Only an hour,--less than that, now!"
+
+"But she mayn't come here for the asking," objected the old man,
+somewhat dazed by Peyton's petulance.
+
+"She _must_ come here!" cried Harry. "Induce her, beg her, entice
+her! Tell her I have a last request to make of my jailer,--no,
+excite her curiosity; tell her I have a confession to make, a plot
+to disclose,--anything! In heaven's name, go and send her here!"
+
+It was easier to comply with so light a request than to remain
+recipient of such torrent-like importunity. "I'll try, sir," said
+the peace-loving old man, "but I have no hope," and he hobbled
+from the room. He left the door open as he went, and Harry, tortured
+by impatience, heard him shuffling over the hall floor to the
+dining-room.
+
+Peyton's mind was in a whirl. He glanced at the clock. These were his
+thoughts:
+
+"Fifty minutes! To make a woman love me! A proud woman, vain and
+wilful, who hates our cause, who detests me! To make her love me! How
+shall I begin? Keep your wits now, Harry, my son,--'tis for your life!
+How to begin? Why doesn't she come? Damn the clock, how loud it ticks!
+I feel each tick. No, 'tis my heart I feel. My God, _will_ she not
+come? And the time is going--"
+
+"Well, sir, what is it?"
+
+He looked from the clock to the doorway, where stood Elizabeth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE FLIGHT OF THE MINUTES.
+
+
+The silence of her entrance was from her having, a few minutes
+earlier, exchanged her riding-boots for satin slippers.
+
+"I--I thank you for coming, madam," said Peyton, feeling the necessity
+of a prompt reply to her imperious look of inquiry, yet without a
+practicable idea in his head. "I had--that is--a request to make."
+
+He was trembling violently, not from fear, but from that kind of
+agitation which often precedes the undertaking of a critical task, as
+when a suppliant awaits an important interview, or an actor assumes
+for the first time a new part.
+
+"Mr. Valentine said a confession," said Elizabeth, holding him in a
+coldly resentful gaze.
+
+"Why, yes, a confession," said he, hopelessly.
+
+"A plot to disclose," she added, with sharp impatience. "What is it?"
+
+"You shall hear," he began, in gloomy desperation, without the
+faintest knowledge of how he should finish. "I--ah--it is this--" His
+wandering glance fell on the table and the writing materials she had
+left there. "I wish to write a letter--a last letter--to a friend."
+The vague general outline of a project arose in his mind.
+
+Elizabeth was inclined to be as laconic as implacable. "Write it,"
+said she. "There are pen and ink."
+
+"But I can't write in this position," said Peyton, quickly, lest she
+might leave the room. "I fear I can't even hold a pen. Will you not
+write for me?"
+
+"I? Secretary to a horse-thieving rebel!"
+
+"It is a last request, madam. A last request is sacred,--even an
+enemy's."
+
+"I will send in some one to write for you." And she turned to go.
+
+"But this letter will contain secrets."
+
+"Secrets?" The very word is a charm to a woman. Elizabeth's curiosity
+was touched but slightly, yet sufficiently to stay her steps for the
+moment.
+
+"Ay," said Peyton, lowering his tone and speaking quickly, "secrets
+not for every ear. Secrets of the heart, madam,--secrets so delicate
+that, to convey them truly, I need the aid of more than common tact
+and understanding."
+
+He watched her eagerly, and tried to repress the signs of his
+anxiety.
+
+Elizabeth considered for a moment, then went to the table and sat down
+by it.
+
+"But," said she, regarding him with angry suspicion, "the confession,--the
+plot?"
+
+"Why, madam," said he, his heart hammering forcefully, "do you think I
+may communicate them to you directly? The letter shall relate them,
+too, and if the person who holds the pen for me pays heed to the
+letter's contents, is it my fault?"
+
+"I understand," said the woman, entrapped, and she dipped the quill
+into the ink.
+
+"The letter," began Peyton, slowly, hesitating for ideas, and glancing
+at the clock, yet not retaining a sense of where the hands were, "is
+to Mr. Bryan Fairfax--"
+
+"What?" she interrupted. "Kinsman to Lord Fairfax, of Virginia?"
+
+"There's but one Mr. Bryan Fairfax," said Peyton, acquiring confidence
+from his preliminary expedient to overcome prejudice, "and, though
+he's on the side of King George in feeling, yet he's my friend,--a
+circumstance that should convince even you I'm not scum o' the earth,
+rebel though you call me. He's the friend of Washington, too."
+
+"Poh! Who is your Washington? My aunt Mary rejected him, and married
+his rival in this very room!"
+
+"And a good thing Washington didn't marry her!" said Peyton,
+gallantly. "She'd have tried to turn him Tory, and the ladies of this
+family are not to be resisted."
+
+"Go on with your letter," said Elizabeth, chillingly.
+
+"'Mr. Bryan Fairfax,'" dictated Peyton, steadying his voice with an
+effort, "'Towlston Hall, Fairfax County, Virginia. My dear Fairfax: If
+ever these reach you, 'twill be from out a captivity destined,
+probably, to end soon in that which all dread, yet to which all must
+come; a captivity, nevertheless, sweetened by the divinest presence
+that ever bore the name of woman--'"
+
+Elizabeth stopped writing, and looked up, with an astonishment so
+all-possessing that it left no room even for indignation.
+
+Peyton, his eyes astray in the preoccupation of composition, did not
+notice her look, but, as if moved by enthusiasm, rose on his right leg
+and stood, his hands placed on the back of the light chair by the
+sofa, the chair's front being turned from him. He went on, with an
+affectation of repressed rapture: "''Twere worth even death to be for
+a short hour the prisoner of so superb--'"
+
+"Sir, what are you saying?" And Elizabeth dropped the pen, and stood
+up, regarding him with freezing resentment.
+
+"My thoughts, madam," said he, humbly, meeting her gaze.
+
+"How dare you jest with me?" said she.
+
+"Jest? Does a man jest in the face of his own death?"
+
+"'Twas a jest to bid me write such lies!"
+
+"Lies? 'Fore gad, the mirror yonder will not call them lies!" He
+indicated the oblong glass set in above the mantel. "If there is
+lying, 'tis my eyes that lie! 'Tis only what they tell me, that my
+lips report."
+
+Keeping his left foot slightly raised from the floor, he pushed the
+chair a little towards her, and himself followed it, resting his
+weight partly on its back, while he hopped with his right foot. But
+Elizabeth stayed him with a gesture of much imperiousness.
+
+"What has such rubbish to do with your confession and your plot?" she
+demanded.
+
+"Can you not see?" And he now let some of his real agitation appear,
+that it might serve as the lover's perturbation which it would be well
+to display.
+
+"My confession is of the instant yielding of my heart to the charms of
+a goddess."
+
+In those days lovers, real or pretended, still talked of goddesses,
+flames, darts, and such.
+
+"Who desired your heart to yield to anything?" was Miss Elizabeth's
+sharply spoken reply.
+
+"Beauty _commanded_ it, madam!" said he, bowing low over his
+chair-back.
+
+"So, then, there was no plot?" Her eyes flashed with indignation.
+
+"A plot, yes!" He glanced sidewise at the clock, and drew self-reliance
+from the very situation, which began to intoxicate him. "_My_ plot, to
+attract you hither, by that message, that I might console myself for
+my fate by the joy of seeing you!"
+
+"The joy of seeing me!" She spoke with incredulity and contempt.
+
+A glad boldness had come over Peyton. He felt himself masterful, as
+one feels who is drunk with wine; yet, unlike such a one, he had
+command of mind and body.
+
+"Ay, joy," said he, "joy none the less that you are disdainful! Pride
+is the attribute of queens, and tenderness is not the only mood in
+which a woman may conquer. Heaven! You can so discomfit a man with
+your frowns, _what_ might you do with your smile!"
+
+He felt now that he could dissimulate to fool the very devil.
+
+But Elizabeth, though interested as one may be in an oddity, seemed
+not otherwise impressed. 'Twas something, however, that she remained
+in the room to answer:
+
+"I do not know what I have done with my frown, nor what I might do
+with my smile, but, whatever it be, _you_ are not like to see!"
+
+"That I know," said Peyton, and added, at a reckless venture, "and am
+consoled, when I consider that no other man has seen!"
+
+"How do you know that?"
+
+"Your smile is not for any common man, and I'll wager your heart is as
+whole as your beauty."
+
+She looked at him for a moment of silence, then:
+
+"I cannot imagine why you say all this," quoth she, in real
+puzzlement.
+
+"'Tis an easing to the tortured heart to reveal itself," he answered,
+"as one would fain uncover an inner wound, though there be no hope of
+cure. I can go the calmer to my doom for having at least given outlet
+in words to the flame kindled in a moment within me. My doom! Yes, and
+none so unwelcome, either, if by it I escape a lifetime of vain
+longing!"
+
+"Your talk is incomprehensible, sir. If you are serious, it must be
+that your head is turned."
+
+"My head is turned, doubtless, but by you!"
+
+He was now assuming the low, quick, nervous utterance that is often
+associated with intense repressed feeling; and his words were
+accompanied by his best possible counterfeit of the burning, piercing,
+distraught gaze of passion. Though he acted a part, it was not with
+the cold-blooded art of a mimic who simulates by rule; it was with the
+animation due to imagining himself actually swayed by the feeling he
+would feign. While he _knew_ his emotion to be fictitious, he _felt_
+it as if it were real, and his consequent actions were the same as if
+real it were.
+
+"I'm sure the act was not intentional with me," said Elizabeth. "I'd
+best leave you, lest you grow worse." And she moved towards the door.
+
+Peyton had rapid work of it, pushing the chair before him and hopping
+after it, so as to intercept her. In the excitement of the moment, he
+lost his mastery of himself.
+
+"But you must not go! Hear me, I beg! Good God, only a half hour
+left!"
+
+"A half hour?" repeated Elizabeth, inquiringly.
+
+"I mean," said Peyton, recovering his wits, "a half hour till the
+troops may be here for me,--only a half hour until I must leave your
+house forever! Do not let me be deprived of the sight of you for those
+last minutes! Tis so short a time, yet 'tis all my life!"
+
+"The man is mad, I think!" She spoke as if to herself.
+
+"Mad!" he echoed. "Yes, some do call it a madness--the love that's
+born of a glance, and lasts till death!"
+
+"Love!" said she. "'Tis impossible you should come to love me, in so
+short a time."
+
+"'Tis born of a glance, I tell you!" he cried. "What is it, if not
+love, that makes me forget my coming death, see only you, hear only
+you, think of only you? Why do I not spend this time, this last hour,
+in pleading for my life, in begging you to hide me and send the troops
+away without me when they come? They would take your word, and you are
+a woman, and women are moved by pleading. Why, then, do I not, in the
+brief time I have left, beg for my life? Because my passion blinds me
+to all else, because I would use every moment in pouring out my heart
+to you, because my feelings must have outlet in words, because it is
+more than life or death to me that you should know I love you!--God,
+how fast that clock goes!"
+
+She had stood in wonderment, under the spell of his vehemence. Now, as
+he leaned towards her, over the chair-back, his breath coming rapidly,
+his eyes luminous, she seemed for a moment abashed, softened, subdued.
+But she put to flight his momentary hope by starting again for the
+doorway, with a low-spoken, "I must go!"
+
+But he thrust his chair in her way.
+
+"Nay, don't go!" he said. "You may hear my avowal with propriety. My
+people are as good as any in Virginia."
+
+She stood regarding him with a look of scrutiny.
+
+"You are a rebel against your king," she said, but not harshly.
+
+"Is not the King soon to have his revenge? And is that a reason why
+you should leave me now?"
+
+"You deserted your first colors."
+
+"'Twas in extraordinary circumstances, and in the right cause. And is
+that a reason why you--"
+
+"You took my horse."
+
+"But paid you for it, and you have your horse again. Abuse me, madam,
+but do not go from me. Call me rebel, deserter, robber, what you will,
+but remain with me. Denunciation from your lips is sweeter than praise
+from others. Chastise me, strike me, trample on me,--I shall worship
+you none the less!"
+
+He inclined his body further forward over the chair-back, and thus was
+very near her. She put out her hand to repel him. He moved back with
+humility, but took her hand and kissed it, with an appearance of
+passion qualified by reverence.
+
+"How dare you touch my hand?" And she quickly drew it from him.
+
+"A poor wretch who loves, and is soon to die, dares much!"
+
+"You seem resigned to dying," she remarked.
+
+"Have I not said 'tis better than living with a hopeless passion?"
+
+"And yet death," she said, "_that_ kind of a death is not pleasant."
+
+"I'm not afraid of it," said he, wondering how the minutes were
+running, yet not daring the loss of time to look. "'Tis not in
+consigning me to the enemy that you have your revenge on me, 'tis in
+making me vainly love you. I receive the greater hurt from your
+beauty, not from the British provost-marshal!"
+
+"Bravado!" said she.
+
+"Time will show," said he.
+
+"If you are so strong a man that you can endure the one hurt so
+calmly, why are you not a little stronger,--strong enough to ignore
+this other hurt,--this _love_-wound, as you call it?"
+
+She blushed furiously, and much against her will, at the mere word,
+"love-wound." Her mood now seemed to be one of pretended incredulity,
+and yet of a vague unwillingness that the man should be so weak to her
+charms.
+
+Peyton conceived that a change of play might aid his game.
+
+"By heaven," he cried, "I will! 'Tis a weakness, as you imply! I shall
+close my heart, vanquish my feelings! No word more of love! I defy
+your beauty, your proud face, your splendid eyes! I shall die free of
+your image. Go where you will, madam. It sha'n't be a puling lover
+that the British hang. A snap o' the finger for your all-conquering
+charms!--why do you not leave me?"
+
+"What! Do you order me from my own parlor?"
+
+Hope accelerated Peyton's heart at this, but he feigned indifference.
+
+"Go or stay," he said; "'tis nothing to me!"
+
+"You rebel, you speak like that to me!"
+
+Her speech rang with genuine anger, and of a little hotter quality
+than he had thought to raise.
+
+He was about to answer, when suddenly a sound, far and faint, reached
+his ear. "Isn't that--do you hear--" he said, huskily, and turning
+cold.
+
+"Horses?" said Elizabeth. "Yes,--on the road from King's Bridge."
+
+She went to one of the eastern windows, opened the sash, unfastened
+the shutter without, and let in a rush of cold air. Then she closed
+the sash and looked out through the small panes.
+
+"Is it--" said Peyton, quietly, with as much steadiness as he could
+command, "I wonder--can it be--"
+
+"A troop of rangers!" said Elizabeth. "And Sam is with them!" She
+closed the shutter, and turned to Peyton, her face still glowing with
+the resentment elicited by the cavalier attitude he had assumed before
+this alarm. "Go or stay, 'tis nothing to you, you said! The last
+insult, Sir Rebel Captain!" and she made for the door.
+
+"You mustn't go! You mustn't go!" was the only speech he could summon.
+But she was already passing him. He snatched a kerchief from her
+dress, and dropped it on the floor. She did not observe his act.
+"Pardon me!" he cried. "Your kerchief! You've dropped it, don't you
+see?"
+
+She turned and saw it on the floor.
+
+Peyton quickly stepped from behind his chair, stooped and picked up
+the kerchief, kissed it, and handed it to her, then staggered to his
+former support, showing in his face and by a groan the pain caused him
+by his movement.
+
+"Your wound!" said Elizabeth, standing still. "You shouldn't have
+stooped!"
+
+Harry's pain and consequent weakness, added to his consciousness of
+the rapidly approaching enemy, who had already turned in from the main
+road, gave him a pallor that would have claimed the attention of a
+less compassionate woman even than Elizabeth.
+
+"No matter!" he murmured, feebly. Then, as if about to swoon, he threw
+his head back, lost his hold of the chair-back, and staggered to the
+spinet. Leaning on this, he gasped, "My cravat! I feel as if I were
+choking!" and made some futile effort with his hand to unfasten the
+neck-cloth. "Would you," he panted, "may I beg--loosen it?"
+
+She went to his side, undid the cravat, and otherwise relieved his
+neck of its confinement. She could not but meet his gaze as she did
+so. It was a gaze of eager, adoring eyes. He feebly smiled his
+thanks, and spoke, between short breaths, the words, "The hour--I
+love you--yes, the troops!"
+
+The horses were clattering up towards the house.
+
+A voice of command was heard through the window.
+
+"Halt! Guard the windows and the rear, you four!"
+
+"Colden's voice!" exclaimed Peyton.
+
+Elizabeth was somewhat startled. "He must have been still at King's
+Bridge when Sam arrived," said she.
+
+"He must be a close friend," said Peyton.
+
+"He is my affianced husband."
+
+Peyton staggered, as if shot, around the projection of the spinet, and
+came to a rest in the small space between that projection and the west
+wall of the room. "Her affianced! Then it's all up with me!"
+
+The outside door was heard to open. Elizabeth turned her back towards
+the spinet and Peyton, and faced the door to the hall. That, too, was
+flung wide. Peyton dropped on his right knee, behind the spinet,
+leaning forward and stretching his wounded leg out behind him, just as
+Colden rushed in at the head of six of the Queen's Rangers, who were
+armed with short muskets. The major stopped short at sight of
+Elizabeth, and the rangers stood behind him, just within the door.
+Peyton was hidden by the spinet.
+
+"Where is the rebel, Elizabeth?" cried Colden.
+
+She met his gaze straight, and spoke calmly, with a barely perceptible
+tremor.
+
+"You are too late, Jack! The prisoner has eluded me. Look for him on
+the road to Tarrytown,--and be quick about it, for God's sake!"
+
+Colden drew back aghast, thrown from the height of triumph to the
+depth of chagrin. Peyton, fearing lest the one joyous bound of his
+heart might have betrayed him, remained perfectly still, knowing that
+if any movement should take Elizabeth from between the soldiers and
+the projection of the spinet, or if the soldiers should enter further
+and chance to look under the spinet, he would be seen.
+
+"Don't you understand?" said Elizabeth, assuming one impatience to
+conceal another. "There's no time to lose! 'Twas the rebel Peyton!
+He's afoot!"
+
+"The road to Tarrytown, you say?" replied Colden, gathering back his
+faculties.
+
+"Yes, to Tarrytown! Why do you wait?" Her vehemence of tone sufficed
+to cover the growing insupportability of her situation.
+
+"To the road again, men!" Colden ordered. "Till we meet, Elizabeth!"
+And he hastened, with the rangers, from the place.
+
+[Illustration: "'YOU ARE TOO LATE, JACK!'"]
+
+Peyton and Elizabeth remained motionless till the sound of the horses
+was afar. Then Elizabeth called Williams, who, as she had supposed,
+had come into the hall with the rangers. He now entered the parlor.
+Elizabeth, whose back was still towards Peyton, who had risen and was
+leaning on the spinet, addressed the steward in a low, embarrassed
+tone, as if ashamed of the weakness newly come over her.
+
+"Williams, this gentleman will remain in the house till his wound is
+healed. His presence is to be a secret in the household. He will
+occupy the southwestern chamber." She then turned and spoke, in a
+constrained manner, to Peyton, not meeting his look. "It is the room
+your General Washington had when he was my father's guest."
+
+With an effort, she raised her eyes to his, but shyly dropped them
+again. He bowed his thanks gravely, rather shamefaced at the success
+of his deception. A moment later, Elizabeth, with averted glance,
+walked quickly from the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE SECRET PASSAGE.
+
+
+The steward immediately set about preparing the designated chamber for
+occupancy, so that Peyton, on being carried up to it a few minutes
+later, found it warm and lighted. It was a large, square, panelled
+apartment, in which the fireplace of 1682 remained unchanged, a wide,
+deep, square opening, faced with Dutch tile, of which there were
+countless pieces, each piece having a picture of some Scriptural
+incident. Into this fireplace, where a log was burning crisply, Peyton
+gazed languidly as he lay on the bed, his clothes having been removed
+by black Sam, who had been assigned to attend him, and who now lay in
+the wide hall without. Williams had taken another look at the wound,
+and expressed a favorable opinion of its condition. A lighted candle
+was placed within Peyton's reach, on a table by the bedside. Williams
+had brought him, at Elizabeth's orders, part of what remained from the
+general supper. The captain felt decidedly comfortable.
+
+He supposed that Colden, after abandoning the false chase, would make
+another call at the house, but he inferred from Elizabeth's previous
+conduct that she could and would send the Tory major and the rangers
+back to King's Bridge without opportunity of discovering her guest.
+And, indeed, Elizabeth had so provided. On returning to the
+dining-room from her fateful interview with Peyton, she had answered
+the astonished and inquisitive looks of Miss Sally and Mr. Valentine,
+by saying, in an abrupt and reserved manner, "For important reasons I
+have chosen not to give the prisoner up. He will stay in the house for
+a time, and nobody is to know he is here. Please remember, Mr.
+Valentine." The old man tried to recall Peyton's words in asking him
+to send Elizabeth to the parlor, and made a mental effort to put this
+and that together; failing in which, he decided to repeat nothing of
+Peyton's conversation, lest it might in some way appear that he had
+"lent aid." He now lighted his lantern, and sallied forth on his long
+walk homeward over the windswept roads. Elizabeth, who, much to the
+dismay of her aunt's curiosity, had not broken silence save to give
+orders to the servants, now charged Williams to stay up till Colden
+should return, and to inform him that all were abed, that there was no
+news of the escaped prisoner, and that she desired the major to hasten
+to New York and relieve her family's anxiety. This command the steward
+executed about midnight, with the result that the major, utterly
+tired out and sadly disappointed, rode away from the manor-house a
+third time that night, more disgruntled than on either of the two
+previous occasions. By this time the house was dark and silent,
+Elizabeth and her aunt having long retired, the latter with a remark
+concerning the effect of late hours on the complexion, a hope that Mr.
+Valentine would not fall into a puddle on the way home, and a
+curiosity as to how the rebel captain fared.
+
+The rebel captain, afar in his spacious chamber, was mentally in a
+state of felicity. As he ceased to remember the conquered, abashed
+look Elizabeth's face had last worn, he ceased to feel ashamed of
+having deceived her. Her earlier manner recurred to his mind, and he
+jubilated inwardly over having got the better of this arrogant and
+vengeful young creature. Even had she been otherwise, and had his life
+depended on tricking her with a pretence of love, he would have valued
+his life far above her feelings, and would not have hesitated to
+practise on her a falsehood that many a gentleman has practised on
+many a maid for no higher purpose than for the sport or for the
+testing of his powers, and often for no other purpose than the maid's
+undoing in more than her feelings. How much less, then, need he
+consider her feelings when he regarded her as an enemy in war, of whom
+it was his right to take all possible advantage for the saving of his
+own or any other American soldier's life! These thoughts came only at
+those moments when it occurred to him that his act might need
+justification. But if he thought he was entitled to avail himself of
+these excuses, he deceived himself, for no such considerations had
+been in his mind before or during his act. He had proceeded on the
+impulse of self-preservation alone, with no further thought as to the
+effect on her feelings than the hope that her feelings would be moved
+in his behalf. He had been totally selfish in the matter, and yet,
+while it is true he had not stopped to reason whether the act was
+morally justifiable or not, he had _felt_ that her attitude warranted
+his deception, or, rather, he had not felt that the deception was a
+discreditable act, as he might have felt had her attitude been
+kindlier. Even had he possessed any previous scruples about that act,
+he would have overcome them. As it was, the scruples came only when he
+thought of that new, chastened, subdued look on her face. Only then
+did he feel that his trick might be debatable, as to whether it became
+a gentleman. Only then did he take the trouble to seek justifiable
+circumstances. Only then did he have a dim sense of what might be the
+feelings of a girl suddenly stormed into love. He had never been
+sufficiently in love to know how serious a feeling--serious in its
+tremendous potency for joy or pain--love is. In Virginia, in London,
+and in Ireland, he had indulged himself in such little flirtations,
+such amours of an hour, as helped make up a young gentleman's
+amusements. But he had long been, as he was now, heart-free, and,
+though it occurred to him that, in this girl, so great a change of
+mien must arise from a pronounced change of heart, he had no thought
+that her new mood could have deep root or long life. So, less from
+what thoughts he did have on the subject than from his absence of
+thought thereon, he lapsed into peace of mind, and went to sleep,
+rejoicing in his security and trusting it would last. Her face did not
+appear in his dreams. He had not retained a strong or accurate
+impression of that face. His mind had been too full of other things,
+even while enacting his impromptu love-scene, to make note of her
+beauty. He had been sensible, of course, that she was beautiful, but
+there had not been time or circumstance for flirtation. He had not for
+an instant viewed her as a possible object of conquest for its own
+sake. She had been to him only an enemy, in the shape of a beautiful
+young girl, and of whom it had become necessary to make use. And so
+his dreams that night were made up of wild cavalry charges, rides
+through the wind, and painful crushings and tearings of his leg.
+
+Elizabeth's thoughts were in a whirl, her feelings beyond analysis.
+She was sensible mainly of a wholly novel and vast pleasure at the
+adoration so impetuously expressed for her by this audacious
+stranger, of a pride in his masterful way, of applause for that very
+manner which she had rebuked as insolence. Was this love at last?
+Undoubtedly; for she had read all the romances and plays and poems,
+and, if this feeling of hers were a thing other than the love they
+all described, they would have described such a feeling also.
+Because she had never felt its soft touch before, she had thought
+herself exempt from it. But now that it had found lodgment in her,
+she knew it at once, from the very fact that in a flash she
+understood all the romances and plays and poems that had before
+interested her but as mere tales, whose motives had seemed arbitrary
+and insufficient. Now they all took reality and reason. She knew at
+last why Hero threw herself into the Hellespont after Leander, why
+all that commotion was caused by Helen of Troy, why Oriana took
+such trouble for Mirabel, why Juliet died on Romeo's body, why Miss
+Richland paid Honeywood's debts. The moon, rushing through a cleft
+in the clouds (she had opened one of the shutters on putting out the
+candles), had for her a sudden beauty which accounted for the fine
+things the poets had said of it and love together. Yes, because it
+opened on her world of romance a magic window, letting in a wondrous
+light, waking that world to throbbing life, clothing it with
+indescribable charm, she knew the name of the key that had unlocked
+her own heart. Now she knew them all,--the heroes, the fairy princes,
+the knights errant; perceived that they were real and live,
+recognized their traits and manners, their very faces, in that
+bold, free, strong young rebel; he was Orlando, and Lovelace, and
+Prince Charming, and Ćneas, and Tom Jones, and King Harry the Fifth,
+and young Marlowe, and even Captain Macheath (she had read forbidden
+books guilelessly, in course of reading everything at hand), and
+Roderick Random, and Captain Plume, and all the conquering, gallant,
+fine young fellows, at the absurd weakness of whose sweethearts she
+had marvelled beyond measure. She understood that weakness now, and
+knew, too, why those sweethearts had, in the first delicious hours
+of their weakness, trembled and dropped their eyes before those young
+gentlemen. For, as she mentally beheld his image, she felt her own
+cheeks glow, and in imagination was fain to drop her own eyes
+before his bold, unquailing look. She wondered, with confusion and
+unseen blushes, how she would face him at their next meeting, and
+felt that she must not, could not, be the one to cause that
+meeting. Right surely had this fair castle, that had withstood
+many a long siege, fallen now at a single onslaught, and that but
+a sham onslaught. The haughty princess in her tower had not longed
+for the prince, but the prince had arrived, not to her rescue, but to
+the taming of her. And alas! the prince, whom she fondly thought her
+lover, was no more lover of her than of the picture of her female
+ancestor on his bedroom wall!
+
+She gave no thought to consequences, and, as for Jack Colden, she
+simply, by power of will, kept him out of her mind.
+
+It was three days before Peyton could walk about his room, and two
+days more before he felt sufficient confidence in his wounded leg to
+come down-stairs and take his meals with the household. And even then,
+refusing a crutch, he used a stick in moving about. During the five
+days when he kept his room, he was waited on alternately by Sam and
+Cuff, who served at his bath and brought his food; and occasionally
+Molly carried to him at dinner some belated delicacy or forgotten
+dish. Williams, too, visited him daily, and expressed a kind of
+professional satisfaction at the uninterrupted healing of the wound,
+which the steward treated with the mysterious applications known to
+home surgery. Williams lent his own clean linen to Harry, while
+Harry's underwent washing and mending at the hands of the maid. Old
+Valentine, who visited the house every day, the weather being cold and
+sometimes cloudy, but without rain, called at the sick chamber now
+and then, and filled it with tobacco smoke, homely philosophy, and
+rustic reminiscence. Harry had no other visitors. During these five
+days he saw not Elizabeth or Miss Sally, save from his window twice or
+thrice, at which times they were walking on the terrace. In daytime,
+when no artificial light was in the room to betray to some possible
+outsider the presence of a guest, he had the shutters opened of one of
+the two south windows and of one of the two west ones. Often he
+reclined near a window, pleasing his eyes with the view. Westward lay
+the terrace, the wide river, the leafy, cliffs, and fair rolling
+country beyond. His eye could take in also the deer paddock, which the
+hand of war had robbed of its inmates, and the great orchard northward
+overlooking the river. Through the south window he could see the
+little branch road and boat-landing, the old stone mill, the winding
+Neperan and its broad mill-pond, and the sloping, ravine-cut, wooded
+stretch of country, between the post-road on the left and the deep-set
+Hudson on the right. The spire of St. John's Church, among the
+yew-trees, with the few edifices grouped near it, broke gratefully the
+deserted aspect of things, at the left. The spacious scene, so richly
+filled by nature, had in its loneliness and repose a singular
+sweetness. Rarely was any one abroad. Only when the Hessians or
+Loyalist dragoons patrolled the post-road, or when some British
+sloop-of-war showed its white sails far down the river, was there sign
+of human life and conflict. The deserted look of things was in harmony
+with the spirit of a book with which Harry sweetened the long hours of
+his recovery. It was a book that Elizabeth had sent up for his
+amusement, called "The Man of Feeling," and there was something in the
+opening picture of the venerable mansion, with its air of melancholy,
+its languid stillness, its "single crow, perched on an old tree by the
+side of the gate," and its young lady passing between the trees with a
+book in her hand, that harmonized with his own sequestered state. He
+liked the tale better than the same author's later novel, "The Man of
+the World," which he had read a few years before. Every day he
+inquired about his hostess's health, and sent his compliments and
+thanks. He was glad she did not visit him in person, for such a visit
+might involve an allusion to their last previous interview, and he did
+not know in what manner he should make or treat such allusion. He felt
+it would be an awkward matter to get out of the situation of pretended
+adorer, and he was for putting that awkward matter off till the last
+possible moment.
+
+It was necessary for him to think of his return to the army. Duty and
+inclination required he should make that return as soon as could be.
+His first impulse had been to send word of his whereabouts and
+condition. But as Elizabeth had not offered a messenger, he was loath
+to ask for one. Moreover, the messenger might be intercepted by the
+enemy's patrols and induced by fear to betray the message. Then, too,
+even if the messenger should reach the American lines uncaught, a
+consequent attempt to convey a wounded man from the manor hall to the
+camp might attract the attention of the vigilant patrols, and risk not
+only Harry's own recapture, but also the loss of other men. Decidedly,
+the best course was to await the healing of his wound, and then to
+make his way alone, under cover of night, to the army. He knew that,
+whatever might occur, it was now Elizabeth's interest to protect him,
+for should she give him up, the disclosure that she had formerly
+shielded him would render her liable to suspicion and ridicule. He
+felt, too, from the manifestations he had seen of her will and of her
+ingenuity, that she was quite able to protect him. So he rested in
+security in the quiet old chamber, dreading only the task of taking
+back his love-making. Of that task, the difficulty would depend on
+Elizabeth's own conduct, which he could not foresee, and that in turn
+on her state of heart, which he did not exactly divine. He knew only
+that she had, in that critical moment of the troops' arrival, felt for
+him a tenderness that betokened love. Whether that feeling had
+flourished or declined, he could not, during the five days when they
+did not meet, be aware.
+
+It had not declined. She had gone on idealizing the confident rebel
+captain all the while. The fact that he was of the enemy added
+piquancy to the sentiments his image aroused. It lent, too, an
+additional poetic interest to the idea of their love. Was not Romeo of
+the enemies of Juliet's house? The fact of her being now his
+protector, by its oppositeness to the conventional situation, gave to
+their relation the charm of novelty, and also gratified her natural
+love of independence and domination. Yet that very love, in a woman,
+may afford its owner keen delight by receiving quick and confident
+opposition and conquest from a man, and such Elizabeth's had received
+from Peyton, both in the matter of the horse and in that of his
+successful wooing. But the greater her softness for him, the greater
+was her delicacy regarding him, and the more in conformity with the
+strictest propriety must be her conduct towards him. Her pride
+demanded this tribute of her love, in compensation for the latter's
+immense exactions on the former in the sudden yielding to his wooing.
+Moreover, she would not appear in anything short of perfection in his
+eyes. She would not make her company cheap to him. If she had been a
+quick conquest, up to the point of her first token of submission, she
+would be all the slower in the subsequent stages, so that the
+complete yielding should be no easier than ought to be that of one
+valued as she would have him value her. All this she felt rather than
+thought, and she acted on it punctiliously.
+
+She did not confide in her aunt, though that lady watched her closely
+and had her suspicions. Yet there was apparent so little warrant for
+these suspicions, save the protection of the rebel in itself, that
+Miss Sally often imagined Elizabeth had other reasons, reasons of
+policy, for the sudden change of intention that had resulted in that
+protection. Elizabeth's conduct was always so mystifying to everybody!
+And when this thought possessed Miss Sally, she underwent a pleasing
+agitation, which she in turn kept secret, and which attended the hope
+that perhaps the handsome captain might not be averse to her
+conversation. She had both read and observed that the taste of youth
+sometimes was for ripeness. She might atone, in a measure, for
+Elizabeth's disdain. She would have liked to visit him daily, with
+condolence and comfortings, but she could not do so without previous
+sanction of the mistress of the house, which sanction Elizabeth
+briefly but very peremptorily refused. Miss Sally thought it a cruelty
+that the prisoner should be deprived of what consolation her society
+might afford, and dwelt on this opinion until she became convinced he
+was actually pining for her presence. This made her poutish and
+reproachfully silent to Elizabeth, and sighful and whimsical to
+herself. The slightly strained feeling that arose between aunt and
+niece was quite acceptable to Elizabeth, as it gave her freedom for
+her own dreams, and prohibited any occasion for an expression of
+feelings or opinions of her own as to the captain. But Miss Sally's
+symptoms were observed by old Mr. Valentine, who, inferring their
+cause, underwent much unrest on account of them, became snappish and
+sarcastic towards the lady, watchful both of her and of Peyton, and
+moody towards the others in the house. It was the old man's
+disquietude regarding the state of Miss Sally's affections that
+brought him to the house every day. For one brief while he considered
+the advisability of transferring his attentions back from Miss Sally
+to the widow Babcock, who had possessed them first, but, when he
+tarried in the parsonage, his fears as to what might be going on in
+the manor-house made his stay in the former intolerable, and led him
+irresistibly to the latter.
+
+Meanwhile the wounded guest, so unconscious of the states of mind
+caused by him in the household, was the evoker of flutters in yet
+another female breast. The girl, Molly, had read toilsomely through
+"Pamela," and saw no reason why an equally attractive housemaid should
+not aspire to an equally high destiny on this side of the ocean. But,
+often as she artfully contrived that the black boy should forget some
+part of the guest's dinner, and timely as she planned her own visits
+with the missing portion, she found the officer heedless of her
+smiles, engrossed sometimes in his meal, sometimes in his book,
+sometimes in both. She conceived a loathing for that book, more than
+once resisted a temptation to make way with it, and, having one day
+stolen a look into it, thenceforth abominated the poor young lady of
+it, with all the undying bitterness of an unpreferred rival.
+
+Though Elizabeth and her aunt found each other reticent, they yet
+passed their time together, breakfasting early, then visiting the
+widow Babcock or some tenant, dining at noon, spending the early
+afternoon, the one at her book or embroidery, the other in a siesta
+before the fireplace, supping early, then preparing for the night by a
+brisk walk in the garden, or on the terrace, or to the orchard and
+back. Elizabeth had Williams provided with instructions as to his
+conduct in the event of a visit from King's troops, and, to make
+Peyton's security still less uncertain, she confined her walks to the
+immediate vicinity. The house itself was kept in a pretence of being
+closed, the shutters of the parlor being skilfully adjusted to admit
+light, and yet, from the road, appear fast.
+
+Thus Elizabeth, finding enjoyment in the very look and atmosphere of
+the old house, fulfilled quietly the purpose of her capricious visit,
+and at the same time cherished a dreamy pleasure such as she had not
+thought of finding in that visit.
+
+On the fifth day after Peyton's arrival, Williams announced that the
+captain would venture down-stairs on the morrow. The next morning
+Elizabeth waited in the east parlor to receive him. Whatever inward
+excitement she underwent, she was on the surface serene. She was
+dressed in her simplest, having purposely avoided any appearance of
+desiring to appear at her best. Her aunt, who stood with her, on the
+other side of the fireplace, was perceptibly flustered, being got up
+for the occasion, with ribbons in evidence and smiles ready for
+production on the instant. When the west door opened, and the awaited
+hero entered, pale but well groomed, using his cane in such fashion
+that he could carry himself erectly, Elizabeth greeted him with formal
+courtesy. Though her manner had the repose necessary to conceal her
+sweet agitation, an observant person might have noticed a deference, a
+kind of meekness, that was new in her demeanor towards men. Peyton,
+whose mien (though not his feeling) was a reflex of her own, was
+relieved at this appearance of indifference, and hoped it would
+continue. His mind being on this, the stately curtsey and profuse
+smirks of Miss Sally were quite lost on him.
+
+The three breakfasted together in the dining-room, a large and
+cheerful apartment whose front windows, looking on the lawn, were the
+middle features of the eastern facade of the house. The mass of
+decorative woodwork, and the fireplace in the north side of the room,
+added to its impression of comfort as well as to its beauty.
+Conversation at the breakfast was ceremonious and on the most
+indifferent subjects, despite the attempts of Miss Sally, who would
+have monopolized Peyton's attention, to inject a little cordial
+levity. After breakfast Elizabeth, to avoid the appearance of
+distinguishing the day, took her aunt off for the usual walk, which
+she purposely prolonged to unusual length, much to Miss Sally's
+annoyance. Peyton passed the morning in reading a new play that had
+made great talk in London the year before, namely, "The School for
+Scandal." It was one of the new books received by Colonel Philipse
+from London, by a recent English vessel,--plays being, in those days,
+good enough to be much read in book form,--and brought out from town
+by Elizabeth. The dinner was, as to the attitude of the participants
+towards one another, a repetition of the breakfast. In the afternoon,
+Peyton having expressed an intention of venturing outdoors for a
+little air, Elizabeth assigned Sam to attend him, and said that, as
+he had to traverse the south hall and stairs in going to his room, he
+might thereafter put to his own service the unused south door in
+leaving and entering the house. Harry strolled for a few minutes on
+the terrace, but his lameness made walking little pleasure, and he
+returned to the east parlor, where Elizabeth sat reading while her
+aunt was looking drowsily at the fire. Peyton took a chair at the
+right side of the fireplace, and mentally contrasted his present
+security with his peril in that place on a former occasion.
+
+The trampling of horses at a distance elicited from Elizabeth the
+words, "The Hessian patrol, on the Albany road, as usual, I suppose."
+But, the clatter increasing, she arose and looked through the narrow
+slit whereby light was admitted between the almost closed shutters.
+After a moment she said, in unconcealed alarm:
+
+"Oh, heaven! 'Tis a party of Lord Cathcart's officers! They said at
+King's Bridge they'd come one day to pay their respects. How can I
+keep them out?"
+
+Peyton arose, but remained by the fireplace, and said, "To keep them
+out, if they think themselves expected, would excite suspicion. I will
+go to my room."
+
+Elizabeth, meanwhile, had opened the window to draw the shutter
+close; but her trembling movement, assisted by a passing breeze, and
+by the perversity of inanimate things, caused the shutter to fly wide
+open.
+
+She turned towards Peyton, with signs of fright on her face. "Back!"
+she whispered. "They'll see you through the window. Into the
+closet,--the closet!" She motioned imperatively towards the pair of
+doors immediately beside him, west of the fireplace. Hearing the
+horses' footfalls near at hand, and perceiving, with her, that he
+would not have time to walk safely across the parlor to the hall, he
+opened one of the doors indicated by her, and stepped into the
+closet.
+
+In the instant before he closed the door after him, he noticed the
+stairs descending backward from the right side of the closet. He
+foresaw that the British officers would come into the parlor. If they
+should make a long stay, he might have to change his position during
+their presence. He might thus cause sufficient sound to attract
+attention. He would be in better case further away. Therefore, using
+his stick and feeling the route with his hand, he made his way down
+the steps to a landing, turned to the right, descended more steps, and
+found himself in a dark cellar. He had no sooner reached the last step
+than a burst of hearty greetings from above informed him the officers
+were in the parlor.
+
+This part of the cellar being damp, he set out in search of a more
+comfortable spot wherein to bestow himself the necessary while.
+Groping his way, and travelling with great labor, he at last came into
+a kind of corridor formed between two rolls of piled-up barrels. He
+proceeded along this passage until it was blocked by a barrel on the
+ground. On this he sat down, deciding it as good a staying-place as he
+might find. Leaning back, he discovered with his head what seemed to
+be a thick wooden partition close to the barrel. Changing his
+position, he bumped his head against an iron something that lay
+horizontally against the partition, and so violent was this collision
+that the iron something was moved from its place, a fact which he
+noted on the instant but immediately forgot in the sharpness of his
+pain.
+
+Having at last made himself comfortable, he sat waiting in the
+darkness, thinking to let some time pass before returning to the
+closet stairway. An hour or more had gone by, when he heard a door
+open, which he knew must be at the head of some other stairway to the
+cellar, and a jocund voice cry: "Damme, we'll be our own tapsters!
+Give me the candle, Mr. Williams, and if my nose doesn't pull me to
+the barrel in one minute, may it never whiff spirits again!" A moment
+later, quick footfalls sounded on the stairs, then candle-light
+disturbed the blackness, and Williams was heard saying, "This way,
+gentlemen, if you insist. The barrel is on the ground, straight
+ahead." Whereupon Peyton saw two merry young Englishmen enter the very
+passage at whose end he sat, one bearing the candle, both followed by
+the steward, who carried a spigot and a huge jug.
+
+Harry instantly divined the cause of this intrusion. The servants were
+busy preparing refreshments for the officers, and, in a spirit of
+gaiety, these two had volunteered to help Williams fetch the liquor
+which he, not knowing Harry's whereabouts, was about to draw from the
+barrel on which Harry sat.
+
+It was not Elizabeth who could save him from discovery now.
+
+The officers came groping towards him up the narrow passage.
+
+Before the candle-light reached him, he rose and got behind the
+barrel, there being barely room for his legs between it and the
+partition. He had, in dressing for the day, put on his scabbard and
+his broken sword. He now took his stick in his left hand, and drew his
+sword with his right. He set his teeth hard together, thought of
+nothing at all, or rather of everything at once, and waited.
+
+"Hear the rats," said one of the Englishmen. It was Peyton's stealthy
+movement he had heard.
+
+"Ay, sir, there's often a terrible scampering of 'em," said Williams.
+
+"Maybe I can pink a rat or two," said the officer without the candle,
+and drew his sword. Harry braced himself rapidly against the woodwork
+at his back. The candle-light touched the barrel.
+
+At that instant Harry felt the woodwork give way behind him, and fell
+on his back on the ground.
+
+"What's that?" cried the officer with the candle, standing still.
+
+"Tis the scampering of the rats, of course," said the other.
+
+Harry had apprehended, by this time, that the supposed wooden
+partition was in reality a door in the cellar wall. He now pushed it
+shut with his foot, remaining outside of it, then rose, and, feeling
+about him, discovered that his present place was in a narrow arched
+passage that ran, from the door in the cellar wall, he knew not how
+far. Recalling the bumping of his head, he inferred now that the iron
+something was a bolt, and that his blow had forced it from its too
+large socket in the stone wall.
+
+He proceeded onward in the dark passage for some distance, then
+stopped to listen. No sound coming from the door he had closed, he
+decided that the officers were satisfied the noise had been of the
+rats' making. He sheathed his broken sword, having retained that
+and his stick in his fall, and went forward, hoping to find a
+habitable place of waiting. Soon the passage widened into a kind of
+subterranean room, one side of which admitted light. Going to
+this side, Harry stopped short at the verge of a well, on whose
+circumference the subterranean chamber abutted. The light came from
+the well's top, which was about ten feet above the low roof of the
+underground room, the passage from the cellar being on a descent. In
+this artificial cave were wooden chests, casks, and covered
+earthen vessels, these contents proclaiming the place a secret
+storage-room designed for use in siege or in military occupation.
+Harry waited here a while that seemed half a day, then returned
+through the passage to the door, intending to return to the
+cellar. He listened at the door, found all quiet beyond, and made
+to push open the door. It would not move. From the feel of the
+resistance, he perceived that the bolt had been pushed home again--as
+indeed it had, by the steward, who had noticed it while tapping the
+barrel, and had imputed its being drawn to some former carelessness
+of his own.
+
+Peyton, finding himself thus barred into the subterranean regions, was
+in a quandary. Any alarm he might attempt, by shouting or pounding,
+might not be heard, or, if heard, might reach some tarrying British.
+In due time, Elizabeth would doubtless have him looked for in the
+closet and then in the cellar, but, on his not being found there,
+would suppose he had left the cellar by one of the other stairways.
+Thus he could little hope to be sought for in his prison. Williams
+might at any time have occasion to visit the secret storeroom, but, on
+the other hand, he might not have such occasion for weeks. Harry
+groped back to the cave, and sought some way of escape by the well,
+but found none.
+
+He then examined the cave more closely, and came finally on another
+passage than that by which he had entered. He followed this for what
+seemed an interminable length. At last, it closed up in front of him.
+He tested the barrier of raw earth with his hands, felt a great round
+stone projecting therefrom, pushed this stone in vain, then clasped it
+with both arms and pulled. It gave, and presently fell to the ground
+at his feet, leaving an aperture two feet across, which let in light.
+He crawled the short length of this, and breathed the open air in a
+small thicket on the sloping bank of the Hudson.[8] He crept to the
+thicket's edge, and saw, in the sunset light, the river before him; on
+the river, a British war-vessel; on the vessel, some naval officers,
+one of whom was looking, with languid preoccupation, straight at the
+thicket from which Harry gazed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE CONFESSION.
+
+
+"What d'ye spy, Tom?" called out another officer on the deck, to the
+one whose attitude most interested Harry.
+
+"I thought I made out some kind of craft steering through the bushes
+yonder," was the answer.
+
+"I see nothing."
+
+"Neither do I, now. 'Twasn't human craft, anyhow, so it doesn't
+signify," and the officers looked elsewhere.
+
+Harry lay low in the thicket, awaiting the departure of the vessel or
+the arrival of darkness. On the deck there was no sign of weighing
+anchor. As night came, the vessel's lights were slung. The sky was
+partly clear in the west, and stars appeared in that direction, but
+the east was overcast, so that the rising moon was hid. The atmosphere
+grew colder.
+
+When Harry could make out nothing of the vessel on the dark water,
+save the lights that glowed like low-placed stars, he crawled from the
+bushes and up the bank to the terrace. He then rose and proceeded,
+with the aid of his stick, aching from having so long maintained a
+cramped position, and from the suddenly increased cold. Before him, as
+he continued to ascend, rose the house, darkness outlined against
+darkness. No sound came from it, no window was lighted. This meant
+that the British officers had left, for their presence would have been
+marked by plenitude of light and by noise of merriment. Harry stopped
+on the terrace, and stood in doubt how to proceed. What had been
+thought of his disappearance? Where would he be supposed to have gone?
+Had provision been made for his possible return? Perhaps he should
+find a guiding light in some window on the other side of the house;
+perhaps a servant remained alert for his knock on the door. His only
+course was to investigate, unless he would undergo a night of much
+discomfort.
+
+As he was about to approach the house, he was checked by a sight so
+vaguely outlined that it might be rather of his imagination than of
+reality, and which added a momentary shiver of a keener sort than he
+already underwent from the weather. A dark cloaked and hooded figure
+stood by the balustrade that ran along the roof-top. As Peyton looked,
+his hand involuntarily clasping his sword-hilt, and the stories of the
+ghosts that haunted this old mansion shot through his mind, the figure
+seemed to descend through the very roof, as a stage ghost is lowered
+through a trap. He continued to stare at the spot where it had stood,
+but nothing reappeared against the backing of black cloud. Wondering
+much, Harry presently went on towards the house, turned the southwest
+corner, and skirted the south front as far as to the little porch in
+its middle. Intending to reconnoitre all sides of the house before he
+should try one of the doors, he was passing on, after a glance at the
+south door lost in the blacker shadows of the porch, when suddenly the
+fan-window over the door seemed to glow dimly with a wavering light.
+He placed his hand on one of the Grecian pillars of the porch, and
+watched. A moment later the door softly opened. A figure appeared,
+beyond the threshold, bearing a candle. The figure wore a cloak with a
+hood, but the hood was down.
+
+"All is safe," whispered a low voice. "The officers went hours ago. I
+knew you must have escaped from the house, and were hiding somewhere.
+I saw you a minute ago from the roof gallery."
+
+Peyton having entered, Elizabeth swiftly closed and locked the door
+behind him, handed him the candle with a low "Good night," and fled
+silently, ghostlike, up the stairs, disappearing quickly in the
+darkness.
+
+Harry made his way to his own room, as in a kind of dream. She herself
+had waited and watched for him! This, then, was the effect wrought in
+the proudest, most disdainful young creature of her sex, by that
+feeling which he had, by telling and acting a lie, awakened in her.
+The revelation set him thinking. How long might such a feeling last?
+What would be its effect on her after his departure? He had read, and
+heard, and seen, that, when these feelings were left to pine away
+slowly, the people possessing them pined also. And this was the return
+he was about to give his most hospitable hostess, the woman who had
+saved his life! Yet what was to be done? His life belonged to his
+country, his chosen career was war; he could not alter completely his
+destiny to save a woman some pining. After all, she _would_ get over
+it; yet it would make of her another woman, embitter her, change
+entirely the complexion of the world to her, and her own attitude
+towards it. He tried to comfort himself with the thought of her
+engagement to Colden, of which he had not learned until after the
+mischief had been done. But he recalled her manner towards Colden, and
+a remark of old Mr. Valentine's, whence he knew that the engagement
+was not, on her side, a love one, and was not inviolable. Yet it would
+be a crime to a woman of her pride, of her power of loving, to allow
+the deceit, his pretence of love, to go as far as marriage. A
+disclosure would come in time, and would bring her a bitter awakening.
+The falsehood, natural if not excusable in its circumstances, and
+broached without thought of ultimate consequence, must be stopped at
+once. He must leave her presence immediately, but, before going, must
+declare the truth. She must not be allowed to waste another day of her
+life on an illusion. Aside from the effect on her heart, of the
+continuance of the delusion, it would doubtless affect her outward
+circumstances, by leading her to break her engagement with Colden. An
+immediate discovery of the truth, moreover, by creating such a
+revulsion of feeling as would make her hate him, would leave her heart
+in a state for speedy healing. This disclosure would be a devilishly
+unpleasant thing to make, but a soldier and a gentleman must meet
+unpleasant duties unflinchingly.
+
+He lay a long time awake, disturbed by thoughts of the task before
+him. When he did sleep, it was to dream that the task was in progress,
+then that it was finished but had to be begun anew, then that
+countless obstacles arose in succession to hinder him in it. Dawn
+found him little refreshed in mind, but none the worse in body. He
+found, on arising, that he could walk without aid from the stick, and
+he required no help in dressing himself. Looking towards the river, he
+saw the British vessel heading for New York. But that sight gave him
+little comfort, thanks to the ordeal before him, in contemplating
+which he neglected to put on his sword and scabbard, and so descended
+to breakfast without them.
+
+That meal offered no opportunity for the disclosure, the aunt being
+present throughout. Immediately after breakfast, the two ladies went
+for their customary walk. While they were breasting the wind, between
+two rows of box in the garden, Miss Sally spoke of Major Colden's
+intention to return for Elizabeth at the end of a week, and said,
+"'Twill be a week this evening since you arrived. Is he to come for
+you to-day or to-morrow?"
+
+"I don't know," said Elizabeth, shortly.
+
+"But, my dear, you haven't prepared--"
+
+"I sha'n't go back to-day, that is certain. If Colden comes before
+to-morrow, he can wait for me,--or I may send him back without me, and
+stay as long as I wish."
+
+"But he will meet Captain Peyton--"
+
+"It can be easily arranged to keep him from knowing Captain Peyton is
+here. I shall look to that."
+
+Miss Sally sighed at the futility of her inquisitorial fishing. Not
+knowing Elizabeth's reason for saving the rebel captain, she had once
+or twice thought that the girl, in some inscrutable whim, intended to
+deliver him up, after all. She had tried frequently to fathom her
+niece's purposes, but had never got any satisfaction.
+
+"I suppose," she went on, desperately, "if you go back to town, you
+will leave the captain in Williams's charge."
+
+"If I go back before the captain leaves," said Elizabeth, thereby
+dashing her amiable aunt's secretly cherished hope of affording the
+wounded officer the pleasure of her own unalloyed society.
+
+Elizabeth really did not know what she would do. Her actions, on
+Colden's return, would depend on the prior actions of the captain. No
+one had spoken to Peyton of her intention to leave after a week's
+stay. She had thought such an announcement to him from her might seem
+to imply a hint that it was time he should resume his wooing. That he
+would resume it, in due course, she took for granted. Measuring his
+supposed feelings by her own real ones, she assumed that her loveless
+betrothal to another would not deter Peyton's further courtship. She
+believed he had divined the nature of that betrothal. Nor would he be
+hindered by the prospect of their being parted some while by the war.
+Engagements were broken, wars did not last forever, those who loved
+each other found ways to meet. So he would surely speak, before their
+parting, of what, since it filled her heart, must of course fill his.
+But she would show no forwardness in the matter. She therefore avoided
+him till dinner-time.
+
+At the table he abruptly announced that, as duty required he should
+rejoin the army at the first moment possible, and as he now felt
+capable of making the journey, he would depart that night.
+
+Miss Sally hid her startled emotions behind a glass of madeira, into
+which she coughed, chokingly. Molly, the maid, stopped short in her
+passage from the kitchen door to the table, and nearly dropped the
+pudding she was carrying. Elizabeth concealed her feelings, and told
+herself that his declaration must soon be forthcoming. She left it to
+him to contrive the necessary private interview.
+
+After dinner, he sat with the ladies before the fire in the east
+parlor, awaiting his opportunity with much hidden perturbation.
+Elizabeth feigned to read. At last, habit prevailing, her aunt fell
+asleep. Peyton hummed and hemmed, looked into the fire, made two or
+three strenuous swallows of nothing, and opened his mouth to speak. At
+that instant old Mr. Valentine came in, newly arrived from the Hill,
+and "whew"-ing at the cold. Peyton felt like one for whom a brief
+reprieve had been sent by heaven.
+
+All afternoon Mr. Valentine chattered of weather and news and old
+times. Peyton's feeling of relief was short-lasting; it was supplanted
+by a mighty regret that he had not been permitted to get the thing
+over. No second opportunity came of itself, nor could Peyton, who
+found his ingenuity for once quite paralyzed, force one. Supper was
+announced, and was partaken of by Harry, in fidgety abstraction; by
+Elizabeth, in expectant but outwardly placid silence; by Miss Sally,
+in futile smiling attempts to make something out of her last
+conversational chances with the handsome officer; and by Mr.
+Valentine, in sedulous attention to his appetite, which still had the
+vigor of youth.
+
+Almost as soon as the ladies had gone from the dining-room, Peyton
+rose and left the octogenarian in sole possession. In the parlor Harry
+found no one but Molly, who was lighting the candles.
+
+"What, Molly?" said he, feeling more and more nervous, and thinking to
+retain, by constant use of his voice, a good command of it for the
+dreaded interview. "The ladies not here? They left Mr. Valentine and
+me at the supper-table."
+
+"They are walking in the garden, sir. Miss Elizabeth likes to take the
+air every evening."
+
+"'Tis a chill air she takes this evening, I'm thinking," he said,
+standing before the fire and holding out his hands over the crackling
+logs.
+
+"A chill night for your journey," replied Molly. "I should think you'd
+wait for day, to travel."
+
+Peyton, unobservant of the wistful sigh by which the maid's speech was
+accompanied, replied, "Nay, for me, 'tis safest travelling at night. I
+must go through dangerous country to reach our lines."
+
+"It mayn't be as cold to-morrow night," persisted Molly.
+
+"My wound is well enough for me to go now."
+
+"'Twill be better still to-morrow."
+
+But Peyton, deep in his own preoccupation, neither deduced aught from
+the drift of her remarks nor saw the tender glances which attended
+them. While he was making some insignificant answer, the maid, in
+moving the candelabrum on the spinet, accidentally brushed therefrom
+his hat, which had been lying on it. She picked it up, in great
+confusion, and asked his pardon.
+
+"'Twas my fault in laying it there," said he, receiving it from her.
+"I'm careless with my things. I make no doubt, since I've been here,
+I've more than once given your mistress cause to wish me elsewhere."
+
+"La, sir," said Molly, "I don't think--_any_ one would wish you
+elsewhere!" Whereupon she left the room, abashed at her own audacity.
+
+"The devil!" thought Peyton. "I should feel better if some one did
+wish me elsewhere."
+
+As he continued gazing into the fire, and his task loomed more and
+more disagreeably before him, he suddenly bethought him that
+Elizabeth, in taking her evening walk, showed no disposition for a
+private meeting. Dwelling on that one circumstance, he thought for
+awhile he might have been wrong in supposing she loved him. But then
+the previous night's incident recurred to his mind. Nothing short of
+love could have induced such solicitude. But, then, as she sought no
+last interview, might he not be warranted in going away and leaving
+the disclosure to come gradually, implied by the absence of further
+word from him? Yet, she might be purposely avoiding the appearance of
+seeking an interview. The reasons calling for a prompt confession came
+back to him. While he was wavering between one dictate and another, in
+came Mr. Valentine, with a tobacco pipe.
+
+Like an inspiration, rose the idea of consulting the octogenarian. A
+man who cannot make up his own mind is justified in seeking counsel.
+Elizabeth could suffer no harm through Peyton's confiding in this sage
+old man, who was devoted to her and to her family. Mr. Valentine's
+very words on entering, which alluded to Peyton's pleasant visit as
+Elizabeth's guest, gave an opening for the subject concerned. A very
+few speeches led up to the matter, which Harry broached, after
+announcing that he took the old man for one experienced in matters of
+the heart, and receiving the admission that the old man _had_ enjoyed
+a share of the smiles of the sex. But if the captain had thought, in
+seeking advice, to find reason for avoiding his ugly task, he was
+disappointed. Old Valentine, though he had for some days feared a
+possible state of things between the captain and Miss Sally, had
+observed Elizabeth, and his vast experience had enabled him to
+interpret symptoms to which others had been blind. "She has acted
+towards you," he said to Peyton, "as she never acted towards another
+man. She's shown you a meekness, sir, a kind of timidity." And he
+agreed that, if Peyton should go away without an explanation, it would
+make her throw aside other expectations, and would, in the end, "cut
+her to the heart." Valentine hinted at regrettable things that had
+ensued from a jilting of which himself had once been guilty, and urged
+on Peyton an immediate unbosoming, adding, "She'll be so took aback
+and so full of wrath at you, she won't mind the loss of you. She'll
+abominate you and get over it at once."
+
+The idea came to Peyton of making the confession by letter, but this
+he promptly rejected as a coward's dodge. "It's a damned unpleasant
+duty, but that's the more reason I should face it myself."
+
+At that moment the front door of the east hall was heard to open.
+
+"It's Miss Elizabeth and her aunt," said Valentine, listening at the
+door.
+
+"Then I'll have the thing over at once, and be gone! Mr. Valentine, a
+last kindness,--keep the aunt out of the room."
+
+Before Valentine could answer, the ladies entered, their cheeks
+reddened by the weather. Elizabeth carried a small bunch of belated
+autumn flowers.
+
+"Well, I'm glad to come in out of the cold!" burst out Miss Sally,
+with a retrospective shudder. "Mr. Peyton, you've a bitter night for
+your going." She stood before the fire and smiled sympathetically at
+the captain.
+
+But Peyton was heedful of none but Elizabeth, who had laid her flowers
+on the spinet and was taking off her cloak. Peyton quickly, with an
+"Allow me, Miss Philipse," relieved her of the wrap, which in his
+abstraction he retained over his left arm while he continued to hold
+his hat in his other hand. After receiving a word of thanks, he added,
+"You've been gathering flowers," and stood before her in much
+embarrassment.
+
+"The last of the year, I think," said she. "The wind would have torn
+them off, if aunt Sally and I had not." And she took them up from the
+spinet to breath their odor.
+
+Meanwhile Mr. Valentine had been whispering to Miss Sally at the
+fireplace. As a result of his communications, whatever they were, the
+aunt first looked doubtful, then cast a wistful glance at Peyton, and
+then quietly left the room, followed by the old man, who carefully
+closed the door after him.
+
+While Elizabeth held the flowers to her nostrils, Peyton continued to
+stand looking at her, during an awkward pause. At length she replaced
+the nosegay on the spinet, and went to the fireplace, where she gazed
+at the writhing flames, and waited for him to speak.
+
+Still laden with the cloak and hat, he desperately began:
+
+"Miss Philipse, I--ahem--before I start on my walk to-night--"
+
+"Your walk?" she said, in slight surprise.
+
+"Yes,--back to our lines, above."
+
+"But you are not going to _walk_ back," she said, in a low tone. "You
+are to have the horse, Cato."
+
+Peyton stood startled. In a few moments he gulped down his feelings,
+and stammered:
+
+"Oh--indeed--Miss Philipse--I cannot think of depriving you--especially
+after the circumstances."
+
+She replied, with a gentle smile:
+
+"You took the horse when I refused him to you. Now will you not have
+him when I offer him to you? You must, captain! I'll not have so fine
+a horse go begging for a master. I'll not hear of your walking. On
+such a night, such a distance, through such a country!"
+
+"The devil!" thought Harry. "This makes it ten times harder!"
+
+Elizabeth now turned to face him directly. "Does not my cloak
+incommode you?" she said, amusedly. "You may put it down."
+
+"Oh, thank you, yes!" he said, feeling very red, and went to lay the
+cloak on the table, but in his confusion put down his own hat there,
+and kept the cloak over his arm. He then met her look recklessly, and
+blurted out:
+
+"The truth is, Miss Philipse, now that I am soon to leave, I have
+something to--to say to you." His boldness here forsook him, and he
+paused.
+
+"I know it," said Elizabeth, serenely, repressing all outward sign of
+her heart's blissful agitation.
+
+"You do?" quoth he, astonished.
+
+"Certainly," she answered, simply. "How could you leave without saying
+it?"
+
+Peyton had a moment's puzzlement. Then, "Without saying what?" he
+asked.
+
+"What you have to say," she replied, blushing, and lowering her eyes.
+
+"But what have I to say?" he persisted.
+
+She was silent a moment, then saw that she must help him out.
+
+"Don't you know? You were not at all tongue-tied when you said it the
+evening you came here."
+
+Peyton felt a gulf opening before him. "Good heaven," thought he, "she
+actually believes I am about to propose!"
+
+Now, or never, was the time for the plunge. He drew a full breath, and
+braced himself to make it.
+
+"But--ah--you see," said he, "the trouble is,--what I said then is
+not what I have to say now. You must understand, Miss Philipse, that I
+am devoted to a soldier's career. All my time, all my heart, my very
+life, belong to the service. Thus I am, in a manner, bound no less on
+my side, than you--I beg your pardon--"
+
+"What do you mean?" She spoke quietly, yet was the picture of
+open-eyed astonishment.
+
+"Cannot you see?" he faltered.
+
+"You mean"--her tone acquired resentment as her words came--"that I,
+too, am bound on _my_ side,--to Mr. Colden?"
+
+"I did not say so," he replied, abashed, cursing his heedless tongue.
+He would not, for much, have reminded her of any duty on her part.
+
+She regarded him for a moment in silence, while the clouds of
+indignation gathered. Then the storm broke.
+
+"You poltroon, I _do_ see! You wish to take back your declaration,
+because you are afraid of Colden's vengeance!"
+
+"Afraid? I afraid?" he echoed, mildly, surprised almost out of his
+voice at this unexpected inference.
+
+"Yes, you craven!" she cried, and seemed to tower above her common
+height, as she stood erect, tearless, fiery-eyed, and clarion-voiced.
+"Your cowardice outweighs your love! Go from my sight and from my
+father's house, you cautious lover, with your prudent scruples about
+the rights of your rival! Heavens, that I should have listened to such
+a coward! Go, I say! Spend no more time under this roof than you need
+to get your belongings from your room. Don't stop for farewells!
+Nobody wants them! Go,--and I'll thank you to leave my cloak behind
+you!"
+
+[Illustration: "'GO, I SAY!'"]
+
+Silenced and confounded by the force of her denunciation, he stupidly
+dropped the cloak to the floor where he stood, and stumbled from the
+room, as if swept away by the torrent of her wrath and scorn.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE PLAN OF RETALIATION.
+
+
+It was in the south hall that he found himself, having fled through
+the west door of the parlor, forgetful that his hat still remained on
+the table. He naturally continued his retreat up the stairs to his
+chamber. The only belongings that he had to get there were his broken
+sword, his scabbard, and belt. These he promptly buckled on, resolved
+to leave the house forthwith.
+
+Still tingling from the blow of her words, he yet felt a great relief
+that the task was so soon over, and that her speedy action had spared
+him the labor of the long explanation he had thought to make. As
+matters stood, they could not be improved. Her love had turned to
+hate, in the twinkling of an eye.
+
+And yet, how preposterously she had accounted for his conduct!
+Dwelling on his hint, though it was checked at its utterance, that she
+was already bound, she had assumed that he held out her engagement to
+Colden as a barrier to their love. And she believed, or pretended to
+believe, that his regard for that barrier arose from fear of inviting
+a rival's vengeance! As if he, who daily risked his life, could fear
+the vengeance of a man whom he had already once defeated with the
+sword! It was like a woman to alight first on the most absurd
+possibility the situation could imply. And if she knew the conjecture
+was absurd, she was the more guilty of affront in crying it out
+against him. He, in turn, was now moved to anger. He would not have
+false motives imputed to him. It would be useless to talk to her while
+her present mood continued. But he could write, and leave the letter
+where it would be found. Inasmuch as he had faced the worst storm his
+disclosure could have aroused, there was no cowardice in resorting to
+a letter with such explanations as could not be brought to her mind in
+any other form. Two days previously, he had requested writing
+materials in his room, for the sketching of a report of his being
+wounded, and these were still on a table by the window. He lighted
+candles, and sat down to write.
+
+When he had finished his document, sealed and addressed it, he laid it
+on the table, where it would attract the eye of a servant, and looked
+around for his hat. Presently he recalled that he had left it in the
+parlor. He first thought of seeking a servant, and sending for it,
+lest he might meet Elizabeth, should he again enter the parlor. But it
+would be better to face her, for a moment, than to give an order to a
+servant of a house whence he had been ordered out. And now, as he
+intended to go into the parlor, he would preferably leave the letter
+in that room, where it would perhaps reach her own eyes before any
+other's could fall on it. He therefore took up the letter, thrust it
+for the time in his belt, descended quietly to the south hall,
+cautiously opened the parlor door, peeped through the crack, saw with
+relief that only Miss Sally was in the room, threw the door wide, and
+strode quickly towards the table on which he thought he had left his
+hat.
+
+But, as he approached, he saw that the hat was not there.
+
+In the meantime, during the few minutes he had spent in his room,
+things had been occurring in this parlor. As soon as Peyton had left
+it, or had been carried out of it by the resistless current of
+Elizabeth's invective, the girl had turned her anger on herself, for
+having weakened to this man, made him her hero, indulged in those
+dreams! She could scarcely contain herself. Having mechanically picked
+up her cloak, where Peyton had let it fall, she evinced a sudden
+unendurable sense of her humiliation and folly, by hurling the cloak
+with violence across the room. At that moment old Mr. Valentine
+entered, placidly seeking his pipe, which he had left behind him.
+
+The octogenarian looked surprisedly at the cloak, then at Elizabeth,
+then mildly asked her if she had seen his pipe.
+
+"Oh, the cowardly wretch!" was Elizabeth's answer, her feelings
+forcing a release in speech.
+
+"What, me?" asked the old man, startled, not yet having thought to
+connect her words with his last interview with the American officer.
+He looked at her for a moment, but, receiving no satisfaction, calmly
+refilled, from a leather pouch, his pipe, which he had found on the
+mantel.
+
+Elizabeth's thoughts began to take more distinct shape, and, in order
+to formulate them the more accurately, she spoke them aloud to the old
+man, finding it an assistance to have a hearer, though she supposed
+him unable to understand.
+
+"Yet he wasn't a coward that evening he rode to attack the Hessians,--nor
+when he was wounded,--nor when he stood here waiting to be taken! He was
+no coward then, was he, Mr. Valentine?" Getting no answer, and
+irritated at the old man's owl-like immovability, she repeated, with
+vehemence, "Was he?"
+
+Mr. Valentine had, by this time, begun to put things together in his
+mind.
+
+"No. To be sure," he chirped, and then lighted his pipe with a small
+fagot from the fireplace, an operation that required a good deal of
+time.
+
+Elizabeth now spoke more as if to herself. "Perhaps, after all, I may
+be wrong! Yes, what a fool, to forget all the proofs of his courage!
+What a blind imbecile, to think him afraid! It must be that he acts
+from a delicate conception of honor. He would not encroach where
+another had the prior claim. He considers Colden in the matter. That's
+it, don't you think?"
+
+"Of course," said Valentine, blindly, not having paid attention to
+this last speech, and sitting down in his armchair.
+
+"I can understand now," she went on. "He did not know of my engagement
+that time he made love, when his life was at stake."
+
+"Then he's told you all about it?" said the old man, beginning to take
+some interest, now that he had provided for his own comfort.
+
+"About what?" asked Elizabeth, showing a woman's consistency, in being
+surprised that he seemed to know what she had been addressing him
+about.
+
+"About pretending he loved you,--to save his life," replied Mr.
+Valentine, innocently, considering that her supposed acquaintance with
+the whole secret made him free to discuss it with her.
+
+Elizabeth's astonishment, unexpected as it was by him, surprised the
+old man in turn, and also gave him something of a fright. So the two
+stared at each other.
+
+"Pretending he loved me!" she repeated, reflectively. "Pretending! To
+save his life! _Now I see!_" The effect of the revelation on her
+almost made Mr. Valentine jump out of his chair. "For only _I_ could
+save him!" she went on. "There was no other way! Oh, _how_ I have been
+fooled! I--tricked by a miserable rebel! Made a laughing-stock! Oh, to
+think he did not really love me, and that I--Oh, I shall choke! Send
+some one to me,--Molly, aunt Sally, any one! Go! Don't sit there
+gazing at me like an owl! Go away and send some one!"
+
+Mr. Valentine, glad of reason for an honorable retreat from this
+whirlwind that threatened soon to fill the whole room, departed with
+as much activity as he could command.
+
+"Oh, what shall I do? What shall I do?" Elizabeth asked of the air
+around her. "I must repay him for his duplicity. I shall never rest a
+moment till I do! What an easy dupe he must think me! Oh-h-h!"
+
+She brought her hand violently down on the table but fortunately
+struck something comparatively soft. In her fury, she clutched this
+something, raised it from the table, and saw what it was.
+
+"_His_ hat!" she cried, and made to throw it into the fire, but, with
+a woman's aim, sent it flying towards the door, which was at that
+instant opened by her aunt, who saved herself by dodging most
+undignifiedly.
+
+"What is it, my dear?" asked Miss Sally, in a voice of mingled
+wonderment and fear.
+
+"I'll pay him back, be sure of that!" replied Elizabeth, who was by
+this time a blazing-eyed, scarlet-faced embodiment of fury, and had
+thrown off all reserve.
+
+"Pay whom back?" tremblingly inquired Miss Sally, with vague
+apprehensions for the safety of old Mr. Valentine, who had so recently
+left her niece.
+
+"Your charming captain, your gentleman rebel, your gallant soldier,
+your admirable Peyton, hang him!" cried Elizabeth.
+
+"_My_ Peyton? I only wish he was!" sighed the aunt, surprised into the
+confession by Elizabeth's own outspokenness.
+
+"You're welcome to him, when I've had my revenge on him! Oh, aunt
+Sally, to think of it! He doesn't love me! He only pretended, so that
+I would save his life! But he shall see! I'll deliver him up to the
+troops, after all!"
+
+"Oh, no!" said Miss Sally, deprecatingly. Great as was the news
+conveyed to her by Elizabeth's speech, she comprehended it, and
+adjusted her mind to it, in an instant, her absence of outward
+demonstration being due to the very bigness of the revelation, to
+which any possible outside show of surprise would be inadequate and
+hence useless. Moreover, Elizabeth gave no time for manifestations.
+
+"No," the girl went on. "You are right. He's able-bodied now, and
+might be a match for all the servants. Besides, 'twould come out why I
+shielded him, and I should be the laugh o' the town. Oh, _how_ shall I
+pay him? How shall I make him _feel_--ah! I know! I'll give him six
+for half a dozen! I'll make _him_ love _me_, and then I'll cast him
+off and laugh at him!"
+
+She was suddenly as jubilant at having hit on the project as if she
+had already accomplished it.
+
+"Make him love you?" repeated her aunt, dubiously. Her aunt had her
+own reasons for doubting the possibility of such an achievement.
+
+"Perhaps you think I can't!" cried Elizabeth. "Wait and see! But,
+heavens! He's going away,--he won't come back,--perhaps he's gone! No,
+there's his hat!" She ran and picked it up from the corner of the
+doorway. "He won't go without his hat. He'll have to come here for it.
+He went to his room for his sword. He'll be here at any moment."
+
+And she paced the floor, holding the hat in one hand, and lapsing to
+the level of ordinary femininity as far as to adjust her hair with the
+other.
+
+"You'll have to make quick work of it, Elizabeth, dear," said the
+aunt, with gentle irony, "if he's going to-night."
+
+"I know, I know,--but I can't do it looking like this." She laid the
+hat on the table, in order to employ both hands in the arrangement of
+her hair. "If I only had on my satin gown! By the lord Harry, I have a
+mind--I will! When he comes in here, keep him till I return. Keep him
+as if your life depended on it." She went quickly towards the door of
+the east hall.
+
+"But, Elizabeth!" cried Miss Sally, appalled. "Wait! How--"
+
+"How?" echoed Elizabeth, turning near the door. "By hook or crook! You
+must think of a way! I have other things on my mind. Only keep him
+till I come back. If you let him go, I'll never speak to you again!
+And not a word to him of what I've told you! I sha'n't be long."
+
+"But what are you going to do?" asked the aunt, despairingly.
+
+"Going to arm myself for conquest! To put on my war-paint!" And the
+girl hastened through the doorway, crossed the hall, called Molly, and
+ran up-stairs to her room.
+
+Miss Sally stood in the parlor, a prey to mingled feelings. She did
+not dare refuse the task thrown on her by her imperative niece. Not
+only her niece's anger would be incurred by the refusal, but also the
+niece's insinuations that the aunt was not sufficiently clever for the
+task. However difficult, the thing must be attempted. And, which made
+matters worse, even if the attempt should succeed, it would be a
+rewardless one to Miss Sally. If she might detain the captain for
+herself, the effort would be worth making. The aunt sighed deeply,
+shook her head distressfully, and then, reverting to a keen sense of
+Elizabeth's rage and ridicule in the event of failure, looked wildly
+around for some suggestion of means to hold the officer. Her eye
+alighted on the hat.
+
+"He won't go without his hat, a night like this!" she thought. "I'll
+hide his hat."
+
+She forthwith possessed herself of it, and explored the room for a
+hiding-place. She decided on one of the little narrow closets in
+either side of the doorway to the east hall, and started towards it,
+holding the hat at her right side. Before she had come within four
+feet of the chosen place, she heard the door from the south hall being
+thrown open, and, casting a swift glance over her left shoulder, saw
+the captain step across the threshold. She choked back her sensations,
+and gave inward thanks that the hat was hidden from his sight by
+herself. Peyton walked briskly towards the table.
+
+Suddenly he stopped short, and turned his eyes from the table to Miss
+Sally, whose back was towards him.
+
+"Ah, Miss Williams," said he, politely but hastily, "I left my hat
+here somewhere."
+
+"Indeed?" said Miss Sally, amazed at her own unconsciousness, while
+she tried to moderate the beating of her heart. At the same moment,
+she turned and faced him, bringing the hat around behind her so that
+it should remain unseen.
+
+Peyton looked from her to the spinet, thence to the sofa, thence back
+to the table.
+
+"Yes, on the table, I thought. Perhaps--" He broke off here, and went
+to look on the mantel.
+
+Miss Sally, who had never thought the captain handsomer, and who
+smarted under the sense of being deterred, by her niece's purpose,
+from employing this opportunity to fascinate him on her own account,
+continued to turn so as to face him in his every change of place.
+
+"I don't see it anywhere," she said, with childlike innocence.
+
+Peyton searched the mantel, then looked at the chairs, and again
+brought his eyes to bear on Miss Sally. She blinked once or twice, but
+did not quail.
+
+"'Tis strange!" he said. "I'm sure I left it in this room."
+
+And he went again over all the ground he had already examined. Miss
+Sally utilized the times when his back was turned, in making a search
+of her own, the object of which was a safe place where she could
+quickly deposit the hat without attracting his attention.
+
+Peyton was doubly annoyed at this enforced delay in his departure,
+since Elizabeth might come into the parlor at any time, and the
+meeting occur which he had, for a moment, hoped to avoid.
+
+"Would you mind helping me look for it?" said he. "I'm in great haste
+to be gone. Do me the kindness, madam, will you not?"
+
+"Why, yes, with pleasure," she answered, thinking bitterly how
+transported she would be, in other circumstances, at such an
+opportunity of showing her readiness to oblige him.
+
+Her aid consisted in following him about, looking in each place where
+he had looked the moment before, and keeping the sought-for object
+close behind her.
+
+Suddenly he turned about, with such swiftness that she almost came
+into collision with him.
+
+"It must have fallen to the floor," said he.
+
+"Why, yes, we never thought of looking there, did we?" And she
+followed him through another tour of the room, turning her averted
+head from side to side in pretendedly ranging the floor with her
+eyes.
+
+"I know," he said, with the elation of a new conjecture. "It must be
+behind something!"
+
+Miss Sally gasped, but in an instant recovered herself sufficiently to
+say:
+
+"Of course. It surely _must_ be--behind something."
+
+Harry went and looked behind the spinet, then examined the small
+spaces between other objects and the wall. This search was longer than
+any he had made before, as some of the pieces of furniture had to be
+moved slightly out of position.
+
+Miss Sally felt her proximity to the object of this search becoming
+unendurable. She therefore profited by Peyton's present occupation to
+conduct pretended endeavors towards the closet west of the fireplace.
+She noiselessly opened one of the narrow doors, quickly tossed the hat
+inside, closed the door, and turned with ineffable relief towards
+Peyton.
+
+To her consternation she found him looking at her.
+
+"What are you doing there?" he asked.
+
+"Why,--looking in this closet," she stammered, guiltily.
+
+"Oh, no, it couldn't be in there," said Peyton, lightly. "But, yes.
+One of the servants might have laid it on the shelf." And he made for
+the closet.
+
+"Oh, no!"
+
+Miss Sally stood against the closet doors and held out her hands to
+ward him off.
+
+"No harm to look," said he, passing around her and putting his hand on
+the door.
+
+Miss Sally felt that, by remaining in the position of a physical
+obstacle to his opening the closet, she would betray all. Acting on
+the inspiration of the instant, she ran to the centre of the room, and
+cried:
+
+"Oh, come away! Come here!" and essayed a well-meant, but feeble and
+abortive, scream.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked Peyton, astonished.
+
+"Oh, I'm going to faint!" she said, feigning a sinkiness of the knees
+and a floppiness of the head.
+
+"Oh, pray don't faint!" cried Peyton, running to support her. "I
+haven't time. Let me call some one. Let me help you to the sofa."
+
+By this time he held her in his arms, and was thinking her another
+sort of burden than Tom Jones found Sophia, or Clarissa was to
+Roderick Random.
+
+The lady shrank with becoming and genuine modesty from the contact,
+gently repelled him with her hands, saying, "No, I'm better now,--but
+come," and took him by the arm to lead him further from the fatal
+closet.
+
+But Peyton immediately released his arm.
+
+"Ah, thank you for not fainting!" he said, with complete sincerity,
+and stalked directly back to the closet. Before she could think of a
+new device, he had opened the door, beheld the hat, and seized it in
+triumph. "By George, I was right! I bid you farewell, Miss Williams!"
+He very civilly saluted her with the hat, and turned towards the west
+door of the parlor.
+
+Must, then, all her previous ingenuity be wasted? After having so far
+exerted herself, must she suffer the ignominious consequences of
+failure?
+
+She ran to intercept him. Desperation gave her speed, and she reached
+the west door before he did. She closed it with a bang, and stood with
+her back against it. "No, no!" she cried. "You mustn't!"
+
+"Mustn't what?" asked Peyton, surprised as much by her distracted
+eyes, panting nostrils, and heaving bosom, as by her act itself.
+
+"Mustn't go out this way. Mustn't open this door," she answered,
+wildly.
+
+He scrutinized her features, as if to test a sudden suspicion of
+madness. In a moment he threw off this conjecture as unlikely.
+
+"But," said he, putting forth his hand to grasp the knob of the door.
+
+"You mustn't, I say!" she cried. "I can't help it! Don't blame me for
+it! Don't ask me to explain, but you must not go out this way!"
+
+She stood by her task now from a new motive, one that impelled more
+strongly than her fear of being reproached and derided by Elizabeth.
+Her own self-esteem was enlisted, and she was now determined not to
+incur her own reproach and derision. She perceived, too, with a
+sentimental woman's sense of the dramatic, that, though denied a drama
+of her own in which she might figure as heroine, here was, in
+another's drama, a scene entirely hers, and she was resolved to act it
+out with honor. Circumstances had not favored her with a romance, but
+here, in another's romance, was a chapter exclusively hers, a chapter,
+moreover, on whose proper termination the very continuation of the
+romance depended. So she would hold that door, at any cost.
+
+Peyton regarded her for another moment of silence.
+
+"Oh, well," said he, at last, "I can go the other way."
+
+And, to her dismay, he strode towards the door of the east hall. She
+could not possibly outrun him thither. Her heart sank. The killing
+sense of failure benumbed her body. He was already at the door,--was
+about to open it. At that instant he stepped back into the parlor. In
+through the doorway, that he was about to traverse, came Elizabeth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE CONQUEST.
+
+
+Miss Sally saw at a glance that her niece was dressed for conquest;
+then, with immense relief and supreme exultation, but with a feeling
+of exhaustion, knowing that her work was done, she silently left the
+room by the door she had guarded, closed it noiselessly behind her,
+and went up-stairs to restore her worked-out energies.
+
+Elizabeth wore a blue satin gown, the one evening dress she had, in
+the possibility of a candle-light visit from the officers at the
+outpost, brought with her from New York. Her bare forearms, and the
+white surface surrounding the base of her neck, were thus for the
+first time displayed to Peyton's view. A pair of slender gold
+bracelets on her wrists set off the smoothness of her rounded arms,
+but she wore no other jewelry. She had not had the time or the
+facilities to have her hair built high as a grenadier's cap, but she
+looked none the less commanding. She was, indeed, a radiant creature.
+Peyton, having never before seen her at her present advantage, opened
+wide his eyes and stared at her with a wonder whose openness was
+excused only by the suddenness of the dazzling apparition.
+
+She cast on him a momentary look of perfect indifference, as she might
+on any one that stood in her way; then walked lightly to the spinet,
+giving him a barely noticeable wide berth in passing, as if he were
+something with which it was probably desirable not to come in contact.
+Her slight deviation from a direct line of progress, though made
+inoffensively, struck him like a blow, yet did not interrupt, for more
+than an instant, his admiration. He stood dumbly looking after her, at
+her smooth and graceful movement, which had no sound but the rustling
+of skirts, her footfalls being noiseless in the satin slippers she
+wore.
+
+Peyton was not now as impatient as he had been to depart. In fact, he
+lost, in some measure, his sense of being in the act of departure.
+What he felt was an inclination to look longer on this so unexpected
+vision. She sat down at the spinet with her back towards him, and
+somehow conveyed in her attitude that she thought him no longer in the
+room. He felt a necessity for establishing the fact of his presence.
+
+"Pardon me for addressing you," he said, with a diffidence new to him,
+taking up the first pretext that came to mind, "but I fear your aunt
+requires looking to. She behaves strangely."
+
+"Oh," said Elizabeth, lightly, too wise to give him the importance of
+pretending not to hear him, "she is subject to queer spells at times.
+I thought you had gone."
+
+She began to play the spinet, very quietly and unobtrusively, with an
+absence of resentment, and with a seemingly unconscious indifference,
+that gave him a paralyzing sense of nothingness.
+
+Unpleasant as this feeling made his position, he felt the situation
+become one from which it would be extremely awkward to flee. For the
+first time since certain boyhood fits of bashfulness, he now
+realized the aptness of that oft-read expression, "rooted to the
+spot." That he should be thrown into this trance-like embarrassment,
+this powerlessness of motion, this feeling of a schoolboy first
+introduced to society, of a player caught by stage fright, was
+intolerable.
+
+When she had touched the keys gently a few times, he shook off
+something of the spell that bound him, and moved to a spot whence he
+could get a view of her face in profile. It had not an infinitesimal
+trace of the storm that had driven him from the room a short time
+before. It was entirely serene. There was on it no anger, no grief, no
+reproach of self or of another, no scorn. There was pride, but only
+the pride it normally wore; reserve, but only the reserve habitual to
+a high-born girl in the presence of any but her familiars. It was hard
+to believe her the woman who had been stirred to such tremendous wrath
+a few minutes ago, by the disclosure that she had been deceived, her
+love tricked and misplaced. Rather, it was hard to believe that the
+scene of wrath had ever occurred, that this woman had ever been so
+stirred by such cause, that she had ever loved him, that he had ever
+dared pretend love to her. The deception and the confession, with all
+they had elicited from her, seemed parts of a dream, of some fancy he
+had had, some romance he had read.
+
+As for Elizabeth, she knew not, thought not, whether, in bearing him
+hot resentment, she still loved him. She knew only that she craved
+revenge, and that the first step towards her desired end was to assume
+that indifference which so puzzled, interested, and confounded him. A
+weak or a stupid woman would have shown a sense of injury, with
+flashes of anger. An ordinarily clever woman would have affected
+disdain, would have sniffed and looked haughty, would have overdone
+her pretended contempt. It is true, Elizabeth had moved slightly out
+of her way to pass further from him, but she had done this with
+apparent thoughtlessness, as if the act were dictated by some inner
+sense of his belonging to an inferior race; not with a visible
+intention of showing repulsion. It is true she had assumed ignorance
+of his presence, but she had given him to attribute this to a belief
+that he had left the room. When his voice declared his whereabouts,
+she treated him just as she would have treated any other indifferent
+person who was _not quite_ her equal.
+
+Peyton felt more and more uncomfortable. Would she continue playing
+the spinet forever, so perfectly at ease, so content not to look at
+him again, so assuming it for granted that, the operation of
+leave-taking being considered over between hostess and guest, the
+guest might properly be gone any moment without further attention on
+either side?
+
+He began to fear that, if he did not soon speak, his voice would be
+beyond recovery. So, with a desperate resolve to recover his
+self-possession at a single _coup_, he blurted out, bunglingly:
+
+"'Tis the first time I have seen you in that gown, madam."
+
+Elizabeth, not ceasing to let her fingers ramble with soft touch over
+the keyboard, replied, carelessly:
+
+"I have not worn it in some time."
+
+Having found that he retained the power of speech, he proceeded to
+utter frankly his latest thought, concealing the slight bitterness of
+it with a pretence of playful, make-believe reproach:
+
+"'Tis not flattering to me, that you never wore it while I was your
+guest, yet put it on the moment you thought I had departed."
+
+She answered with good-humored lightness, "Why, sir, do you complain
+of not being flattered? I thought such complaints were made only by
+women, and only to their own hearts."
+
+"If by flattery," said he, "you mean merited compliment, there are
+women who can never have occasion to complain of not receiving it."
+
+"Indeed? When was that discovery made?"
+
+"A minute ago, madam."
+
+"Oh!" and she smiled with just such graciousness as a woman might show
+in accepting a compliment from a comparative stranger. "Thank you!"
+
+"When I think of it," said he, "it seems strange that you--ah--never
+took pains to--eh--to appear at your best--nay, I should say, as your
+real self!--before me."
+
+"Oh, you allude to my wearing this gown? Why, you must pardon my not
+having received you ceremoniously. _Your_ visit began unexpectedly."
+
+"Then somebody else is about to begin a visit that _is_ expected?"
+
+"Didn't you know? I thought all the house was aware Major Colden was
+to return in a week. He may be here to-night, though perhaps not till
+to-morrow."
+
+"Confound that man!" This to himself, and then, to her: "I was of the
+impression you did not love him."
+
+"Why, what gave you that impression?"
+
+"No matter. It seems I was wrong."
+
+"Oh, I don't say that,--or that you're right, either."
+
+"However," quoth he, with an inward sigh of resignation, "it is for
+_him_ that you are dressed as you never were for me!"
+
+She did not choose to ask what reason had existed for considering him
+in selecting her attire. It was better not to notice his presumption,
+and she became more absorbed in her music.
+
+Peyton strode up and down a few moments, then sat by the table, and
+rested his cheek on his hand, wearing a somewhat injured look.
+
+"Major Colden, eh?" he mused. "To think I should come upon him again!"
+He essayed to renew conversation. "I trust, Miss Philipse, when I am
+gone--" But Elizabeth was now oblivious of surroundings; the notes
+from the spinet became louder, and she began to hum the air in a low,
+agreeable voice. Peyton looked hopeless. Presently he stood up again,
+watching her.
+
+Elizabeth brought the piece to a lively finish, rose capriciously,
+took up the flowers she had laid on the spinet earlier in the evening,
+put them in her corsage, and made to readjust the bracelet on her
+right arm. In this attempt, she accidentally dropped the bracelet to
+the floor. Peyton ran to pick it up. But she quickly recovered it
+before he could reach it, put it on, walked to the table and sat down
+by it, removed the flowers from her bosom to the table, took up the
+volume of "The School for Scandal," and turned the leaves over as if
+in quest of a certain page.
+
+While she was looking at the book, Peyton took up the flowers.
+Elizabeth, as if thinking they were still where she had laid them, put
+out her hand to repossess them, keeping her eyes the while on the
+book. For a moment, her hand ranged the table in search, then she
+abandoned the attempt to regain them.
+
+Peyton held them out to her.
+
+"No, I thank you," she said, laying down the book, and went back to
+the spinet.
+
+"Ah, you give them to me!" cried Peyton, with sudden pleasure.
+
+"Not at all! I merely do not wish to have them now."
+
+"Oh," said he, thinking to make account by finding offence where none
+was really expressed, "has my touch contaminated them for you?"
+
+"How can you talk so absurdly?" And she resumed her seat at the
+spinet, and her playing.
+
+Peyton stood holding the flowers, looking at her, and presently
+heaved a deep sigh. This not moving her, he suddenly had an access of
+pride, brought himself together, and saying, with quick resolution, "I
+bid you good-night and good-by, madam," went rapidly towards the door
+of the east hall. But his resolution weakened when his hand touched
+the knob, and, to make pretext for further sight of her, he turned and
+went to go out the other door.
+
+Elizabeth had had a moment of alarm at his first sign of departure,
+but had not betrayed the feeling. Now when, from her seat at the
+spinet, she saw him actually crossing the threshold near her, she
+called out, gently, "A moment, captain."
+
+The pleased look on his face, as he turned towards her inquiringly,
+betrayed his gratification at being called back.
+
+"You are taking my flowers away," she said, in explanation.
+
+He plainly showed his disappointment. "Your pardon. My thoughtlessness.
+But you said you didn't wish to keep them." He laid them on the spinet.
+
+"I do not,--yet a woman must allow very few hands to carry off flowers
+of her gathering."
+
+She rose and took up the flowers and walked towards the fireplace.
+
+"Then you at least take them back from my hands," said Peyton.
+
+"Why, yes,--for this," and she tossed them into the fire.
+
+He looked at them as they withered in the blaze, then said, "Have you
+any objection to my carrying away the ashes, Miss Philipse?"
+
+She answered, considerately, "'Twill take you more time than you can
+lose, to gather them up."
+
+"Oh, I am in no haste."
+
+"Oh, then, I ask your pardon. A moment since, you were about to go."
+
+"But now I prefer to stay."
+
+"Indeed? May I ask the reason--but no matter."
+
+But he felt that a reason ought to be forthcoming. "Why, you know,
+because--" And here he thought of one. "I wish to stay to meet Major
+Colden, of whom you say I am afraid. I shall prove to you at least I
+am no coward. After what you have said to me this night, I must in
+honor wait to face him."
+
+"But it is late now. I don't think he will come till to-morrow."
+
+"Then I can wait till to-morrow."
+
+"But your duty calls you back to your own camp, now that your wound
+has healed."
+
+"I think my wound has undergone a slight relapse. You shall see, at
+least, I am not afraid of your champion."
+
+"If that is your only reason,--your desire to quarrel with Major
+Colden,--I cannot invite you to remain."
+
+"Well, then, to tell the truth, there _is_ another reason. When I
+said, a while since, I had never seen you in that gown, I used too
+many words. I should have said I had never really seen you at all."
+
+"Where were your eyes?" she asked, absently, seeming to take his words
+literally and to perceive no compliment.
+
+"I was in a kind of waking sleep."
+
+"It has been a time and place of hallucinations, I think. I, too, sir,
+have been, since I came here a week ago, under the strangest spell. A
+kind of light madness or witchery was over me, and made me act
+ridiculously, against my very will. A week ago, when you were
+disabled, I intended to give you up to the British,--as I should do
+now, if it would not be so troublesome--"
+
+"'Twould be troublesome to _me_, I assure you," he said, interrupting.
+
+"But at the last moment," she went on, "I did precisely the reverse of
+what I wished. Awhile ago, in this room, I seemed to be in the
+possession of some evil spirit, which made me say preposterous things.
+I can only remember some wild raving I indulged in, and some
+undeserved rudeness I displayed towards you. But, will you believe,
+the instant you left me, I recovered my right mind. I am like one
+returned from bedlam, cured, and you will pardon any incivility I may
+have done you in my peculiar state, I'm sure, since you speak of
+having been curiously afflicted yourself."
+
+"Then you mean," he faltered, "you did not really love me?"
+
+"Why, certainly I did not! How could you think I did? Something
+possessed my will. But, thank heaven, I am myself again. Why, sir, how
+could I? You know very little of me, sir, to think--Oh!" She covered
+her face with her hands. "What things must I have said and done, in my
+clouded state, to make you think that! You,--an enemy, a rebel, a
+person whose only possible interest to me arises from his enmity!"
+
+Dazzled as he was by her newly discovered beauty, the imposition on
+him was complete. He saw this covetable being now indifferent to him,
+out of his power to possess, likely soon to pass into the possession
+of another.
+
+"Pray try to forget awhile that enmity," he supplicated.
+
+"I shall try, and then you can have no interest for me at all."
+
+"Then don't try, I beg. I'd rather have an interest for you as an
+enemy than not at all."
+
+"Why, really, sir--" She seemed half puzzled, half amused.
+
+"Lord," quoth he, "how I have been deluded! I thought my love-making
+that night, feigned though it was, had wakened a response."
+
+"Love-making, do you say? Will you believe me, sir, I don't remember
+what passed here that night, save the unaccountable ending,--my making
+you my guest instead of their prisoner."
+
+"I wish you were pretending all this!"
+
+"Why, if 'twould make you happier that I were, I wish so, too."
+
+"How can you speak so lightly of such matters?"
+
+"What matters?"
+
+"Love, of course."
+
+"Why, do men alone, because they laugh at women for taking love
+seriously, have the right to take it lightly? And of what love am I
+speaking lightly,--the love you say you feigned for me, or the love
+you say you thought you had awakened in me?"
+
+"The love I vow I do _not_ feign for you! The love I wish I _could_
+awaken in you!"
+
+"Why, captain, what a change has come over you!"
+
+"Yes. I have risen from my sleep. If you, in waking from yours, put
+off love, I, in waking from mine, took on love!"
+
+She smiled, as with amusement. "A somewhat speedy taking on, I should
+say."
+
+"Love's born of a glance, _I_ say!"
+
+"Haven't I heard that before?" reflectively.
+
+"Aye, for I said it here when I did not mean it, and now I say it
+again when I do!"
+
+"And of what particular glance am I to suppose--"
+
+"Of the first glance I cast on you when you entered this room in that
+gown. Yes, born of a glance--"
+
+"Born of a gown, in that case, don't you mean?" derisively.
+
+"Of a gown, or a glance, or a what you wish."
+
+"I don't wish it should be born at all."
+
+"You don't wish I should love you?"
+
+"I don't wish you should love me or shouldn't love me. I don't wish
+you--anything. Why should I wish anything of one who is nothing to
+me?"
+
+"Nothing to you! I would you were to me what I am to you!"
+
+"What is that, pray?"
+
+"An adorer!"
+
+"You are a--very amusing gentleman."
+
+"You refuse me a glimpse of hope?"
+
+"You would like to have it as a trophy, I suppose. You men treasure
+the memories of your little conquests over foolish women, as an Indian
+treasures the scalps he takes."
+
+"Lord! which sex, I wonder, has the busier scalping-knife?"
+
+"I can't speak for all my sex. Some of us seek no scalps--"
+
+"You don't have to. I make you a present of mine. I fling it at your
+feet."
+
+"We seek no scalps, I say,--because we don't value them a finger-snap."
+And she gave a specimen of the kind of finger-snap she did not value
+them at.
+
+"In heaven's name," he said, "say what you do value, that I may strive
+to become like it! What do you value, I implore you, tell me?"
+
+"Oh,--my studies, for one thing,--my French and my music,--"
+
+"Could I but translate myself into French, or set myself to an air!"
+
+"Nay, I don't care for _comic_ songs!"
+
+"I see you like flowers. If I might die, and be buried in your garden,
+and grow up in the shape of a rose-bush--"
+
+"Or a cabbage!"
+
+"I fear you don't like that flower."
+
+"Better come up in the form of your own Virginia tobacco."
+
+"And be smoked by old Mr. Valentine? No, you don't like tobacco. Ah,
+Miss Philipse, this levity is far from the mood of my heart!"
+
+"Why do you indulge in it, then?"
+
+"I? Is it I who indulge in levity?"
+
+"Assuredly, _I_ do not!" Oh, woman's privilege of saying unabashedly
+the thing which is not!
+
+"No," said he, "for there's no levity in the coldness with which
+beauty views the wounds it makes."
+
+"I'm sure one is not compelled to offer oneself to its wounds."
+
+"No,--nor the moth to seek the flame."
+
+"La, now you are a moth,--a moment ago, a rose-bush,--"
+
+"And you are ten million roses, grown in the garden of heaven, and
+fashioned into one body there, by some celestial Praxiteles!"
+
+"Dear me, am I all that?"
+
+"Ay," he said, sadly, "and no more truly conscious of what it means to
+be all that, than any rose in any garden is conscious of what its
+beauty means!"
+
+"Perhaps," she said, softly, feeling for a moment almost tenderness
+enough to abandon her purpose, "more conscious than you think!"
+
+"Ah! Then you are not like common beauties,--as poor and dull within
+as they are rich and radiant without? You but pretend insensibility,
+to hide real feeling."
+
+"I did not say so," she answered, lightly, bracing herself again to
+her resolution.
+
+"But it is so, is it not?" he went on. "Your heart and mind are as
+roseate and delicate as your face? You can understand my praises and
+my feelings? You can value such love as mine aright, and know 'tis
+worthy some repayment?"
+
+But she was not again to be duped by low-spoken, fervid words, or by
+wistful, glowing eyes. She must be sure of him.
+
+"I know,--I recall now," she said, with little apparent interest; "you
+spoke of love a week ago, with no less eloquence and ardor."
+
+"More eloquence and ardor, I dare say, for then I did not feel love.
+Then my tongue was not tied by sense of a passion it could not hope to
+express one hundredth part of! And, even if my tongue had gift to tell
+my heart, I should not dare trust myself under the sway of my
+feelings. But I _do_ love you now,--I do,--I do!"
+
+"If now, why not before?"
+
+"Haven't I said I've been blind to you until to-night? At first I
+regarded you as only an enemy to be turned to my use in my peril.
+Having been fortunate in that, I gave myself to other thoughts. But,
+thinking my false love had drawn true love from you, I saw I could not
+in honor leave you under a false belief. But now the falsehood has
+become truth. A week ago, I avowed a pretended passion, to gain my
+life! Now, I declare a real one, to gain your love!"
+
+"What, you expect to take my love by storm, in reality, as you did, in
+appearance, a week ago?" She had risen from the music seat, and now
+stood with her back against the spinet, her hands behind her, her head
+turned slightly upward, facing him.
+
+"I don't expect," said he. "I only hope."
+
+"And what gives you reason to hope?"
+
+"My own love for you. Love elicits love, they say."
+
+"They say wrong, then. If that were true, there would be no unrequited
+lovers."
+
+"Ay, but such love as mine,--how can it so fill me to overflowing, and
+not infect you?"
+
+"Love is not an infectious disease. If it were, I should have no
+fear,--knowing myself love-proof."
+
+"I can't believe that,--for a woman with no spark in herself could not
+light so fierce a flame in me, by the mere meeting of our eyes."
+
+"If it should create in me such a disturbance as you seem to undergo,
+I shouldn't wish it to increase. But, I assure you, it isn't in me."
+
+"Pray think it is. Only imagine it is there, and soon it will be."
+
+She felt that the time was at hand to strike the blow.
+
+"If I could be perfectly sure you spoke in earnest," she said, seeming
+to search his countenance for testimony.
+
+"In earnest!" he echoed. "Great heavens, what evidence do you want? If
+there is an aspect of love I do not have, tell me, and I shall put it
+on."
+
+"Yes, you are experienced in putting on the _aspects_ of love."
+
+"Oh, you well know I have no reason now for declaring a love I don't
+feel. If you could be sure I spoke in earnest, you said,--what then?
+Tell me, and I shall find a way to convince you I _am_ in earnest."
+
+"Convince me first."
+
+"'Convince me,' you say. And I say, 'Be convinced.' By the Lord, never
+was so great a sceptic! Is not your sense of your own charms
+sufficient to convince you of their effect?"
+
+"Mere words!"
+
+"I'll prove my love by acts, then!"
+
+"By what acts?"
+
+"By fighting for you or suffering for you, dying for you or living for
+you, as you may command."
+
+"You can prove it thus. Say, 'Long live the King!'"
+
+He gazed at her a moment. "No," he said.
+
+"Say, 'Long live the King!'" She went to the door, and paused on the
+threshold, looking at him, as if to give him a last opportunity.
+
+"Long live the King--" he said.
+
+She came back from the door.
+
+"Of France!" he added.
+
+"No," she cried, and dictated, "'Long live the King of Great
+Britain!'"
+
+"Long live the King of Great Britain,--but not of America."
+
+"No! 'Long live George the Third, King of Great Britain and the
+American colonies!'"
+
+"Long live George the Third, King of Great Britain and--Ireland."
+
+"'And of the American colonies.' Say it! Say it all!"
+
+"Long live Elizabeth Philipse, queen of beauty in the United States of
+America!" he answered.
+
+"You don't love me," said she, and set her mind to finding some other
+means by which he might evince what she knew he would never
+demonstrate in the way she had demanded. And she resolved his
+humiliation should be all the greater for the delay. "You don't love
+me."
+
+"I do. I swear, on my knees."
+
+"Then _get_ on your knees!"
+
+"I do!" He dropped on one knee.
+
+"Both knees!"
+
+"Both." He suited action to word.
+
+"Bow lower."
+
+"I touch the floor." He did so, with his forehead. "Are you
+convinced?"
+
+"Yes." And she moved thoughtfully towards the door of the east hall.
+
+"Ah! Convinced that I love you madly?" In obedience to a gesture, he
+remained on his knees.
+
+"Perfectly convinced."
+
+"Then, the reward of which you hinted?"
+
+"Reward?"
+
+"You said, if you could be sure I spoke in earnest. Now you admit you
+are sure. What then?"
+
+She let her eyes rest on him a moment, without speaking, as he looked
+ardently and expectantly up at her from his kneeling attitude, while
+she took in breath, and then she flung her answer at him.
+
+"What then? This! That you are now more contemptible and ridiculous
+and utterly non-existent, to me, than you have formerly been! That,
+whatever I may have done which seemed in your behalf, was partly from
+the strange insanity of which I have spoken, and partly from the most
+meaningless caprice! That, if you remain here till to-morrow, you may
+see me in the arms of the man I really love, and that he may not be as
+careless of the fate of a vagabond rebel as I am. And now, Captain
+Crayton, or Dayton, or Peyton, or whatever you please, of somebody or
+other's light horse, go or stay, as you choose; you're as welcome as
+any other casual passer-by, for all the comical figure your impudence
+has made you cut! Learn modesty, sir, and you may fare better in your
+next love-making, if you do not aim too high! And that piece of advice
+is the reward I hinted at! Good night!"
+
+And she whirled from the room, slamming behind her the mahogany door,
+at which Peyton stared for some seconds, in blank amazement, too
+overwhelmed to speak or move or breathe or think.
+
+But gradually he came to life, slowly rose, stood for a moment
+thoughtful, fashioned his brows into a frown, drew his lips back hard,
+and muttered through his closed teeth:
+
+"I'll stay and fight that man, at least!"
+
+And he sat down by the table, to wait.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE CHALLENGE.
+
+
+A very few moments had elapsed, and Peyton still sat by the table, in
+a dogged study, when the door from the south hall was opened slightly,
+and if he had looked he might have seen a pair of eyes peeping through
+the aperture. But he did not look, either then or when, some seconds
+later, the door opened wide and Miss Sally bobbed gracefully in.
+
+It has been related how, after her brilliant but exhausting conduct of
+the important scene assigned her, she sought repose in her room.
+Looking out of her window presently, she saw something, of which she
+thought it advisable to inform Elizabeth. Therefore she came
+down-stairs. Did she listen at the door to the last part of that
+notable conversation? Ungallant thought, aroint thee! 'Tis well known
+women have little curiosity, and what little they have they would not,
+being of Miss Sally's station in life, descend to gratify by
+eavesdropping. Let it be assumed, therefore, that the much vaunted
+informant, feminine intuition, told Miss Sally of the end of the
+interview between her niece and the captain, both as to the time of
+that end and as to its nature.
+
+She entered, tremulous with a vast idea that had blazed suddenly on
+her mind. Now that Elizabeth was quite through with Peyton, now that
+Peyton must be low in his self-esteem for Elizabeth's humiliation of
+him, and therefore likely to be grateful for consolatory attentions,
+Miss Sally might resume her own hopes. But there was no time to be
+lost.
+
+"Your pardon, captain," she began, sweetly, with her most flattering
+smile. "I am looking for Miss Elizabeth."
+
+"She was here awhile ago," replied Peyton, glumly, not bringing his
+eyes within range of the smile. "She went that way. I trust you've
+recovered from your attack."
+
+"My attack?" inquiringly, with surprise.
+
+"The queer spell, I think Miss Philipse called it. She said you were
+subject to them."
+
+"Well, how does she dare--" She checked her tongue, lest she might
+betray the device for his detention. Something in his absent, careless
+way of associating her with a queer spell irritated her a little for
+the moment, and impelled her to retaliation. "I suppose that was not
+the only thing she said to you?" she added, ingenuously.
+
+"No,--she said other things." He rose and went to the fireplace,
+leaned against the mantel, and gazed pensively at the red embers.
+
+"They don't seem to have left you very cheerful," ventured Miss
+Sally.
+
+"Not so very damned cheerful!--I beg your pardon."
+
+Miss Sally's moment of resentment had passed. Now was the time to
+strike for herself. She thought she had hit on a clever plan of
+getting around to the matter.
+
+"Captain," said she, "you're a man of the world. I know it's
+presumptuous of me to ask it, but--if you would give me a word of
+advice--"
+
+Peyton did not take his look from the fire, or his thoughts from their
+dismal absorption. He answered, half-unconsciously:
+
+"Oh, certainly! Anything at all."
+
+"You are aware, of course," she went on, with smirking, rosy
+confusion, "that Mr. Valentine is a widower."
+
+"Indeed? Oh, yes, yes, I know."
+
+"Yes, a widower twice over."
+
+"How sad! He must feel twice the usual amount of grief."
+
+"Why,--I don't know exactly about that."
+
+"The poor man has my sympathy. Doubtless he is inconsolable." Peyton
+scarce knew what he was saying, or whom it was about.
+
+"Why, no," said Miss Sally, averting her eyes, with a smiling shyness,
+"not altogether inconsolable. That's just it."
+
+"Oh, is it?" said Peyton, obliviously.
+
+"You may have noticed that he spends a good deal of time here at
+present," she went on.
+
+"A good deal of time," he repeated. "There's doubtless some strong
+attraction."
+
+"Yes. Perhaps I oughtn't to say it, but there _is_ a strong
+attraction. In fact, he has proposed marriage to me, and now, as a man
+of the world to a woman of little experience, would you advise me to
+accept him?"
+
+And she looked at the disconsolate officer so sweetly, it seemed
+impossible he should do aught but say it would be throwing herself
+away to bestow on an old man charms of which younger and warmer eyes
+were sensible. But he answered only:
+
+"Certainly! An excellent match!"
+
+For a time Miss Sally was speechless, yet open-mouthed. And then, for
+the length of one brief but fiery tirade, she showed herself to be her
+niece's aunt:
+
+"Sir! The idea! I wouldn't have that old smoke-chimney if he were the
+last man on earth! I'd have given him his congé long ago, if it hadn't
+been that he might propose to my friend, the widow Babcock! I've only
+kept him on the string to prevent her getting him. When I want your
+advice, Captain Peyton, I'll ask for it! Excuse me, I must find
+Elizabeth. I've news for her."
+
+"News?" he echoed, stupidly.
+
+"Yes. From my chamber window awhile ago I saw some one riding this way
+on the post-road,--Major Colden!"
+
+And she swept out by the same door that had closed, a few minutes
+before, on Elizabeth.
+
+"Major Colden!" Peyton's teeth tightened, his eyes shot fire, his hand
+flew to his sword-hilt, as he spoke the name.
+
+He went to the window, the same window at which Elizabeth had looked
+out a week ago, and peered through the panes at the night.
+
+"Why, the ground is white," he said. "It has begun to snow."
+
+But, through the large flakes that fell thick and swiftly among the
+trees, he did not yet see any humankind approaching. His view of the
+branch road was, at some places, obstructed by tall shrubbery that
+rose high above the palings and the hedge.
+
+Yet through those flakes, assaulted by them in eyes and nostrils,
+invaded by them in ears and neck, humankind was riding. It was,
+indeed, Colden that Miss Sally had seen through a fortuitous opening,
+which gave, between the trees, a view of the most eminent point of the
+post-road southward. He was to conduct Elizabeth home the next day,
+but had availed himself of his opportunity to ride out to the
+manor-house that night, so as to have the few more hours in her
+society. He had this time taken an escort of two privates of his own
+regiment, but these men were not as well mounted as he, and, in his
+impatience, having seen the best their horses could do, and having
+passed King's Bridge, he had ridden ahead of them, leaving them to
+follow to the manor-house in their own speediest time. Thus it was
+that now he bore alone down from the post-road, his horse's feet
+making on the new-fallen snow no other sound than a soft crunching,
+scarce louder than its heavy breathing or its mouth-play on the bit,
+or the creak and clank of saddle, bridle, stirrups, pistols, and
+scabbard. His eyes dwelt eagerly on the manor-house, where awaited him
+light and warmth and wine, refuge from the pelting flakes, and, above
+all else, the joy-giving presence of Elizabeth. His breast expanded,
+he sighed already with relief; he approached the gate as a released
+soul, with admission ticket duly purchased by a deathbed repentance,
+might approach the gate of heaven.
+
+But Peyton, looking out on the white world, saw no one. He did not
+change his attitude when the door reopened and Elizabeth and her aunt
+came into the parlor, arm in arm.
+
+"You're sure 'twas he, aunt Sally?" Elizabeth had been saying.
+
+"Positive. He should be here now," Miss Sally had replied.
+
+Elizabeth cast a look of secret elation on the unheeding rebel
+captain, whose forehead was still against the window-pane. She saw a
+possible means of his still further degradation.
+
+Suddenly he took a quick step back from the window, impulsively
+renewed his grasp of his sword-hilt, and showed a face of resolute
+antagonism.
+
+Elizabeth knew from this that he had seen Colden. She gave a smile of
+pleasant anticipation.
+
+But Miss Sally had relapsed into her usual timid self. She held
+tightly to Elizabeth's arm.
+
+"Oh, dear!" she whispered. "Won't something happen when those two
+meet?"
+
+"I hope so!" said Elizabeth, placidly.
+
+"Why?" demanded Miss Sally, beginning to weaken at the knees.
+
+"If Colden sends him to the ground, in our presence, that will crown
+the fellow's humiliation."
+
+Five brisk knocks, in quick succession, were heard from the outside
+door of the east hall.
+
+Peyton walked across the parlor, turned, and stood facing the east
+hall door, the greater part of the room's length being between him and
+it. His hand remained on his sword. He paid no heed to Elizabeth, she
+paid none to him.
+
+"His knock!" she said, and called out through the east hall door:
+"'Tis Major Colden, Sam. Show him here at once." She then stepped back
+from the door, to a place whence she could see both it and Peyton. Her
+aunt clung to her arm all the while, and now whispered, "Oh,
+Elizabeth, I fear there will be trouble!"
+
+"If there is, it won't fall on your silly head," whispered Elizabeth,
+in reply.
+
+From the hall came the sound of the drawing of bolts. Peyton did not
+take his eyes from the door.
+
+A noise of footfalls, accompanied by clank of spurs and weapons, and
+in came Colden, his hat in his left hand, snow on his hat and
+shoulders, his cloak open, his sword and pistols visible, his right
+hand ungloved to clasp Elizabeth's.
+
+She received him with such a cordial smile as he had never before had
+from her.
+
+"Elizabeth!" he cried,--beheld only her, hastened to her, took her
+proffered hand, bent his head and kissed the fingers, raised his eyes
+with a grateful, joyous smile,--and saw Peyton standing motionless at
+the other side of the room. The smile vanished; a look of amazement
+and hatred came.
+
+"I wish you a very good evening, _Major_ Colden!"
+
+Peyton said this in a voice as hard and ironical as might have come
+from a brass statue.
+
+For the next few seconds the two men stood gazing at each other, the
+women gazing at the men. At last the Tory major found speech:
+
+"Elizabeth,--what does it mean? Why is this man here,--again?"
+
+"'Tis rather a long story, Jack, and you shall hear it all in time,"
+said Elizabeth, determined he should never hear the true story.
+
+Before she could continue, Colden suffered a start of alarm to possess
+him, and asked, quickly:
+
+"Are any of his troops here?"
+
+"No; he is quite alone," she answered.
+
+Colden at once took on height, arrogance, and formidableness.
+
+"Then why have not your servants made him a prisoner?" he asked.
+
+"Why," said she, "you being mentioned to-night, in his presence, he
+made some kind of boast of not fearing you, and I, divining how soon
+you would be here, thought fit his freedom with your name should best
+be paid for at _your_ hands, major."
+
+"Ay, major," put in Peyton, "and I have stayed to receive payment!"
+
+Colden thought for a short while. Then he said, "A moment, Elizabeth.
+Your pardon, Miss Williams," and drew Elizabeth aside, and spoke to
+her in a low tone: "We have only to temporize with him. Two of my men
+have attended me from my quarters. I had a better horse, and rode
+ahead, in my eagerness to see you. My two fellows will be here soon,
+and the business will be done."
+
+But such doing of the business did not suit Elizabeth's purpose. "I
+wish to humiliate the man," she answered Colden, inaudibly to the
+others; "to take down his upstart pride! 'Twould be no shame to him,
+to be made prisoner by numbers."
+
+"What, then?" asked Colden, dubiously.
+
+"Bring down the coxcomb, before us women, in an even match!"
+
+To prevent objections, she then abruptly went from Colden, and resumed
+her place at her aunt's side.
+
+Colden stood frowning, not half pleased at her hint. It occurred to
+him, as it did not to her, that the mere allegiance and favoring
+wishes of herself were not sufficient possessions to ensure victory in
+such a match as she meant. Elizabeth, accustomed to success, did not
+conceive it possible that the chosen agent of her own designs could
+fail. But the chosen agent had, in this case, wider powers of
+conception.
+
+All this time, Captain Peyton had stood as motionless as a figure in a
+painting. He now interrupted Colden's meditations with the gentle
+reminder:
+
+"I am waiting for my payment, Major Colden."
+
+Colden was not a man of much originality. So, in his instinctive
+endeavor to gain time, he bungled out the conventional reply, "You
+wish to seek a quarrel with me, sir?"
+
+"Seek a quarrel?" retorted Peyton. "Is not the quarrel here? Has not
+Miss Philipse spoken of an offence to your name, for which I ought to
+receive payment from you? Gad, she'd not have to speak twice to make
+_me_ draw!"
+
+Colden continued to be as conventional as a virtuous hero of a novel.
+"I do not fight in the presence of ladies, sir," said he.
+
+"Nor I," said Peyton. "Choose your own place, in the garden yonder.
+With snow on the ground, there's light enough."
+
+And Harry went quickly, almost to the door, near which he stopped to
+give Colden precedence.
+
+"Nay," put in Elizabeth, "we ladies can bear the sight of a sword-cut
+or two. Wait for us," and she would have gone to send for wraps, but
+that Colden raised his hand in token of refusal, saying:
+
+"Nay, Elizabeth. I will not consent."
+
+"Come, sir," said Peyton. "'Tis no use to oppose a lady's whim. But if
+you make haste, we may have it over before they can arrive on the
+ground."
+
+In handling his sword-hilt, Peyton had pulled the weapon a few inches
+out of the scabbard, and now, though he did not intend to draw while
+in the house, he unconsciously brought out the full length of what
+remained of the blade. For the time he had forgotten the sword was
+broken, and now he was reminded of it with some inward irritation.
+
+Meanwhile Colden was answering:
+
+"There's no regularity in such a meeting. Where are the seconds?"
+
+"I'll be your second, major," cried Elizabeth. "Aunt Sally, second
+Captain Peyton."
+
+"Ridiculous!" said the major.
+
+"Anything to bring you out," said Peyton, as desirous of avenging
+himself on Elizabeth, through her affianced, as she was to complete
+her own revenge through the same instrument. "I'll fight you with half
+a sword. I'd forgotten 'tis all I've left."
+
+"I would not take an advantage," said the New Yorker.
+
+"Then break your own sword, and make us equal," said the Virginian.
+
+"I value my weapon too much for that."
+
+Peyton smiled ironically. But he tried again.
+
+"Then I shall be less scrupulous," said he. "I _will_ take an
+advantage. The greater honor to you, if you defeat me. You take the
+broken sword, and lend me yours."
+
+He held out his hilt for exchange.
+
+Colden pretended to laugh, saying:
+
+"Am I a fool to put it in your power to murder me?"
+
+"_I'll_ tell you what, gentlemen," put in Elizabeth. "Use the swords
+above the chimney-place, yonder. They are equal."
+
+"Yes!" cried Peyton.
+
+But Colden said:
+
+"I will not so degrade myself as to cross swords, except on the
+battle-field, with one who is a rebel, a deserter, and no gentleman."
+
+Peyton turned to Elizabeth with a smile.
+
+"Then you see, madam," said he, "'tis no fault of mine if my affronts
+go unpunished, since this gentleman must keep his courage for the
+battle-field! Egad," he added, sacrificing truth for the sake of the
+taunt, "you Tories need all the courage there you can save up in a
+long time! I take my leave of this house!"
+
+[Illustration: "'I TAKE MY LEAVE OF THIS HOUSE!'"]
+
+He thrust his sword back into the scabbard, bowed rapidly and low,
+with a flourish of his hat, and went out by the same door Elizabeth
+had used in her own moment of triumph. He unbolted the outside door
+himself, before black Sam could come from the settle to serve him.
+Snowflakes rushed in at the open door. He plunged into them, swinging
+the door close after him. Out through the little portico he went, down
+the walk outside the very parlor window through which he had looked
+out awhile ago, but through which he did not now look in as he
+passed; through the gate, and up the branch road to the highway. He
+was possessed by a confusion of thoughts and feelings,--temporary and
+superficial elation at having put Elizabeth's preferred lover in so
+bad a light, wild ideas of some future crossing of her path, swift
+dreams of a future conquest of her in spite of all, a fierce desire
+for such action as would lead to that end. He was eager to rejoin the
+army now, to participate in the fighting that would bring about the
+humbling of her cause and make it the more in his power to master her.
+He heeded little the snow that impeded his steps as his boots sank
+into it, and which, in falling, blinded his eyes, tickled his face,
+and clung to his hair. The tumult of flakes was akin to that of his
+feelings, and he was in mood for encountering such opposition as the
+storm made to his progress.
+
+Arriving at the post-road, he turned and went northward. At his left
+lay the great lawn fronting the manor-house, and separated from the
+road by hedge and palings. He could see, across the snowy expanse,
+between the dark trunks and whitened branches of the trees, the long
+front of the manor-house, its roof and its porticoes already covered
+with snow, the light glowing in the one exposed window of the east
+parlor. As he quieted down within, he felt pleasantly towards the
+house, to which his week's half-solitary residence in it, with the
+comfort he had enjoyed there and the books he had read, had given him
+an attachment. He cast on it a last affectionate look, then breasted
+the weather onward, wondering what things the future might have in
+store for him.
+
+He had little fear of not reaching the American lines in safety. It
+was unlikely that any of the enemy's marauders would be out on such a
+night, and more unlikely that any regular military movement would be
+making on the neutral ground. He expected to meet no one on the road,
+but he would keep a sharp lookout in all directions as he went, and,
+in case of any human apparition, would take to the fields or the
+woods. But all the world, thought he, would stay within doors this
+white night.
+
+Sliding back a part of every step he took in the snow, he passed the
+boundary of the Philipse lawn, and that of such part of the grounds as
+included, with other appurtenances, the garden north of the house. He
+had come, at last, to a place where the fence at his left ended and
+the forest began. He had, a moment before, cast a long look backward
+to assure himself the road was empty behind him. He now trudged on,
+his eyes fixed ahead.
+
+From behind a low pine-tree, at the end of the fence, two dark figures
+glided up to the captain's rear, their steps noiseless in the snow.
+One of them caught both his forearms at the same instant, and pulled
+them back together, as with grips of iron. A second pair of hands
+placed a noose about his wrists, and quickly tightened it. Ere he
+could turn, his first assailant released the bound arms to the second,
+drew a pistol, and thrust the muzzle close to Peyton's cheek,
+whereupon the second man said:
+
+"Your pardon, captain. Come quietly, or you're a dead man!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE UNEXPECTED.
+
+
+Peyton's somewhat elate exit from the parlor was followed by a moment
+of silence and inertia on the part of the three who remained there.
+But Elizabeth's chagrin was speedily translated into anger against
+Major Colden.
+
+"Why didn't you fight him?" she demanded of that gentleman, who was
+flinching inwardly, but who maintained a pale and haughty exterior.
+
+"What was the use?" he replied. "He's reserved for the gallows. If my
+two men were here! Why not send your servants after him? Sam is a
+powerful fellow, and Williams is shrewd and strong."
+
+Elizabeth ignored Colden's reply, and answered her own question,
+thus:
+
+"It was because you remembered the time he disarmed you, three years
+ago."
+
+"You may think so, if you choose," he replied, in the patient manner
+of one who quietly endures unjust reproaches when self-defence is
+useless.
+
+"You will find refreshments in the dining-room," said Elizabeth,
+coldly. "Sam will show you to your room."
+
+"I would rather remain with you," he replied.
+
+"I would rather be alone with my aunt a while."
+
+A deep sigh expressed his dejecting sense of how futile it would be to
+oppose her.
+
+"As you will," he then said, and, bowing gravely, left the parlor.
+
+Elizabeth's feelings now burst out.
+
+"Oh," she exclaimed to her aunt, "what a chicken-hearted copy of a
+man! And he calls himself a soldier! I wonder where he found the
+spirit to volunteer!"
+
+"From you, my dear," replied Miss Sally. "Didn't you urge him to take
+a commission?"
+
+"And that rebel fellow had the best of it all through," Elizabeth went
+on. "I was to see him laid low by his rival, as my crowning revenge!
+How he swaggered out! with what a look of triumph in his eye!
+And--aunt Sally! He won't come back! I shall never see him again!"
+
+"Why, child, do you wish to?"
+
+"Of course not! But I can't have him go away with the laugh on his
+side! He made me ridiculous after my trying to stab him with my love
+for the other man. _Such_ another man! Oh, the rebel must come back!"
+
+"But he isn't likely to," said Miss Sally.
+
+"Oh, what shall I do?" wailed the niece.
+
+"Elizabeth, I'll wager you're still in love with him!"
+
+"I'm not! I hate him!--Well, what if I am? He loved me, I'm sure, the
+last time he said it. But, good heavens, he's going farther away every
+instant!"
+
+She clasped her hands, and, for once, looked at her aunt for help,
+like a distressed child on the verge of weeping.
+
+"Why don't you call him back?" said Miss Sally.
+
+"I? Not if I die for want of seeing him!--I know! I _will_ send the
+servants after him." And she started for the door, but stopped at her
+aunt's comment:
+
+"But that will be as bad as calling him yourself."
+
+"Not at all, you empty pate!" cried Elizabeth, who had become, in a
+moment, all action. "While he's going around by the road, Williams and
+Sam shall cut across the garden, lie in wait, and take him by
+surprise. He has no weapon but a broken sword, and they can make him
+prisoner. They shall bring him back here bound, and he'll think he's
+to be turned over to the British after all!"
+
+"But what then?"
+
+"Why, he shall be left alone here, well guarded, for half an hour,
+and then I'll happen in, give him an opportunity to make love again,
+and I can yield gracefully! Don't you see?"
+
+"Then you _do_ love him?" said the aunt.
+
+"I don't know. However, I don't love Jack Colden. Not a word to him,
+of this! I'm going to give orders to the men."
+
+As she entered the hall, she met Colden, who was coming from the
+dining-room with Mr. Valentine. The major had limited his refreshments
+to two glasses of brandy and water, swallowed in quick succession. Mr.
+Valentine, who was smoking his pipe, held Colden fraternally by the
+arm.
+
+"What, Elizabeth, are you still angry?" said Colden, stopping as she
+passed.
+
+"Excuse me, I have something to see to," said the girl, coolly,
+hurrying away from him.
+
+He made a slight movement to follow her, but old Valentine drew him
+into the parlor, saying:
+
+"Come, major, you'll see the lady enough after she's married to you. I
+was just going to say, the last lot of tobacco I got--"
+
+"Oh, damn your tobacco!" said the other, jerking his arm from the old
+man's tremulous grasp.
+
+"Damn my tobacco?" echoed Mr. Valentine, quite stupefied.
+
+"Yes. I've matters more important on my mind just now."
+
+"The deuce!" cried the old man. "What could be more important than
+tobacco?"
+
+And he stood looking into the fire, muttering to himself between
+furious puffs.
+
+Colden sought comfort of Miss Sally. "Was ever a woman as unreasonable
+as Elizabeth?" he said to her. "She'd have had me lower myself to meet
+that rebel vagabond as one gentleman meets another."
+
+But Miss Sally was not going to betray her own disappointment by
+showing a change from her oft-expressed opinion of the rebel
+captain,--particularly in the presence of Mr. Valentine. So she
+answered:
+
+"You met him so once, three years ago."
+
+"I had a less scrupulous sense of propriety then," replied Colden,
+raging inwardly.
+
+"But, as he's a rebel and deserter," pursued Miss Sally, "was it not
+your duty as a soldier to take him, just now?"
+
+"I'd have done so, had my men been here," growled the major.
+"Elizabeth ought to've had her servants hold him. I had half a mind to
+order them, in the King's name, but I never can bring myself to oppose
+her, she's so masterful! By George, though, I'll have him yet! My two
+fellows will soon come up. They shall give chase. He will leave tracks
+in the snow."
+
+Colden went to the window, and peered out as Peyton himself had done
+not long before. The flakes were coming down as thick as ever.
+
+"I don't see my rascals yet!" he muttered. "They've stopped at the
+tavern, I'll warrant."
+
+And he continued to gaze eagerly out, impatient that his men should
+arrive before the new-fallen snow should cover his enemy's tracks.
+
+Old Mr. Valentine, having exhausted his present stock of mutterings,
+now walked over to Miss Sally, who had sat down near the spinet.
+
+"Miss Williams," said he, "this is the first chance I've had to speak
+to you alone in a week."
+
+"But we're not alone," said Miss Sally, motioning her head towards
+Colden.
+
+"He's nobody," contemptuously replied the octogenarian. "A man that
+damns tobacco is nobody. So you may go ahead and speak out. What's
+your answer, ma'am?"
+
+"Oh, Mr. Valentine, not now! You must give me time."
+
+"That's what you said before," he complained.
+
+She had, indeed, said it before, scores of times.
+
+"Well, give me more time, then," she replied.
+
+"How much?" asked the old man, in a matter-of-fact way.
+
+"Oh, I don't know! Long enough for me to make up my mind."
+
+Thus far, this conversation had followed in the exact lines of many
+that had preceded it, but now Mr. Valentine made a departure from the
+customary form.
+
+"I think," said he, "if my other two wives had taken as long as you to
+make up their minds, I shouldn't have been twice a widower by now."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Valentine!" said Miss Sally, in a sweetly reproachful way.
+"Now you know--"
+
+But he cut her speech off short. "Very likely," said he. "I don't
+know. Well, take your time. Only please remember I haven't so very
+much time left! Better take me while I'm here to be had! Good night,
+ma'am!" And he went to the dining-room to fortify himself for his long
+homeward walk through the snow.
+
+In crossing the hall, he saw Cuff on the settle in Sam's place. In the
+dining-room he met Molly, who was clearing the table of the supper
+that Colden had disdained. He asked her the whereabouts of Williams,
+and she replied that the steward and Sam had gone out on some order of
+Miss Elizabeth's. Deciding to await Williams's return, the old man sat
+down before the dining-room fire, and was soon peacefully snoring.
+
+Elizabeth had gone up-stairs to watch from her darkened window the
+issue of the expedition of Williams and Sam, who had gone out by the
+kitchen, equipped respectively with rope and pistol. While they were
+in the immediate vicinity of the house, she could not see them from
+her elevation, but presently she beheld them glide swiftly across a
+white open space in the garden, cross a stile, and disappear among the
+trees and bushes between the garden and the post-road. Turning her
+eyes to the road itself, that lonely highway now called Broadway,[9]
+she made out a solitary figure toiling forward through the whirling
+whiteness,--and she gave a sigh, the deepest and longest with which
+her frame had ever trembled.
+
+Meanwhile Miss Sally remained in the parlor, thinking it best not to
+go to Elizabeth unless sent for; while Colden continued to stand at
+the window, showing his impatience for the arrival of his two soldiers
+in a tense contracting of the brow, in a restless shifting from foot
+to foot, and in intermittent stifled curses.
+
+As he kept his eyes on the place where the branch road left the
+highway, he did not see that part of the lawn walk which led from the
+garden. But suddenly a slight noise drew his look towards the portico
+before the east hall.
+
+"Who are these coming?" he cried, startling Miss Sally out of her
+musings and her chair.
+
+"Are they your men?" she asked, hastening to join him at the window.
+
+"No, mine are mounted," said he. "Why,--these are Williams and
+Sam,--and they are bringing,--yes, it is he! They're bringing him back
+a prisoner! She has done it, after all, without consulting me!" And he
+strode to the centre of the room, in the utmost elation.
+
+Miss Sally weakened at the imminent prospect of a meeting between the
+two enemies in the changed circumstances, and felt the need of her
+niece's support.
+
+"I must tell Elizabeth they have him," she said, and ran out to the
+east hall, and thence to the dining-room, just in time to avoid seeing
+Peyton led in through the outer door, which Cuff had opened at
+Williams's call.
+
+The steward and Sam conducted their prisoner immediately into the
+parlor. There Colden stood, with a rancorously jubilant smile, to
+receive him.
+
+Peyton's wrists were as Williams had tied them. He was without his
+hat, which had been knocked off in a brief struggle he had essayed
+against his captors in a moment when Sam had lowered the pistol. There
+was a little fresh snow on his hair, and more on his shoulders. The
+feet of his boots were cased with it. His left arm was held by
+Williams, who carried the broken sword, having taken it from the
+scabbard at the first opportunity. Peyton's other arm was grasped by
+the huge, bony left hand of Sam, who held the cocked pistol in his
+right. The two men walked with him to the centre of the parlor, and
+stopped.
+
+"By George," said he, turning his face towards Sam, with fire in his
+eyes, "had the snow not killed the sound of your sneaking footsteps
+till you'd caught my arms behind, I'd have done for the two of you!"
+
+"Good, Williams!" said Colden. "Place him on that chair, and leave him
+here with me. But stay in the hall on guard."
+
+"So Miss Elizabeth ordered us, sir," said Williams, dryly, and, with
+Sam, conducted Peyton to the chair, on which he sat willingly.
+
+"Of course she did," replied Colden. "Was it not at my suggestion?"
+
+Peyton looked sharply up at the major, who regarded him with the
+undisguised pleasure of hate about to be satisfied.
+
+Williams handed the broken sword to Colden, saying, "This was the only
+weapon he had, sir. We grabbed him before he could use it. We ran out
+behind him from the roadside, and he couldn't hear us for the snow."
+
+"Ay, or the pair of you couldn't have taken me!" said Peyton, with hot
+scorn and defiant gameness.
+
+Colden, with the piece of sword, motioned Williams to go from the
+room.
+
+"Leave the door ajar a little," he added, "so you can hear if I
+call."
+
+Peyton uttered a short laugh of derision at this piece of prudence.
+The steward and Sam withdrew to the hall, where Sam remained, while
+Williams went in search of Elizabeth for further orders. As soon as
+she had assured herself, by watching and listening, that Peyton was
+safe in the parlor, she had stolen quietly down-stairs to the
+dining-room, where she had met her aunt, with whom the steward now
+found her sitting. She told him to get the duck-gun, make sure it was
+loaded and primed, and to wait with Sam on the settle in the hall. She
+then requested her aunt to remain in the dining-room, silently
+returned to the hall, and took station by the door leading from the
+parlor,--the door which Williams, at Colden's command, had left
+slightly ajar. Her original plan, she felt, might have to be altered
+by reason of Colden's having obtruded his hand into the game, a
+possibility she had not, in roughly sketching that plan, taken into
+account. It was in order to have the guidance of circumstance, that
+she now put herself in the way of hearing, unseen, what might pass
+between the two men. Meanwhile, through the snow-storm, Colden's two
+soldiers, who had indeed tarried at the tavern for the heating up of
+their interiors, were blasphemously urging their sleepy horses towards
+the manor-house.
+
+In the parlor, the two enemies were facing each other, Peyton on his
+chair, his tied wrists behind him, Colden standing at some distance
+from him, holding the broken sword. As soon as they were alone, Peyton
+uttered another one-syllabled laugh, and said:
+
+"The hospitality of this house beats my recollection. One is always
+coming back to it."
+
+"You'll not come back the next time you leave it!" said Major Colden,
+his eyes glittering with gratified rancor.
+
+"And when shall that time be?" asked Peyton, airily.
+
+"As soon as two of my men arrive, whom I outrode on my way hither
+to-night. They attended me out of New York. I shall be generous and
+give them over to you, to attend you _into_ New York."
+
+"Thanks for the escort!"
+
+"'Tis the only kind you rebels ever have, when you enter New York,"
+sneered the major.
+
+"We shall enter it with an escort of our own choosing some day! And a
+sorry day that for you Tories and refugees, my dear gentleman!"
+
+"But if that day ever comes, _you'll_ have been rotting underground a
+long time,--and thanks to _me_, don't forget that!"
+
+"Thanks to _her_, you coward!" cried Peyton. "'Twas she that sent her
+servants after me! You didn't dare try taking me, alone!"
+
+"Bah!" said Colden, hotly, "I might have pistolled you here
+to-night"--and he placed his hand on the fire-arm in his belt--"but
+for the presence of the ladies!"
+
+"Was it the ladies' presence," retorted Peyton, contemptuously, "or
+the fact that you're a devilish bad shot?"
+
+Neither man heard the door moved farther open, or saw Elizabeth step
+through the aperture to the inner side of the threshold, where she
+stopped and watched. Peyton's back was towards her, and Colden's rage
+at the last words was too intense to permit his eyes to rove from its
+object.
+
+"Damn you!" cried the major. "I'd show you how bad a shot I am, but
+that I'd rather wait and see you on the gallows!"
+
+"Will _she_ come to see me there, I wonder?" said Peyton, half
+thoughtfully. "She ought to, for it's her work sends me there, not
+yours! 'Twill not be _your_ revenge when they string me up, my jolly
+friend!"
+
+Taunted beyond all self-control, the Tory yelled:
+
+"Not mine, eh? Then I'll have mine now, you dog!"
+
+With that, he strode forward and struck Harry a fierce blow across the
+face with the flat side of Harry's own broken sword.
+
+Harry merely blinked his eyes, and did not flinch. He turned pale,
+then red, and in a moment, first clearing his voice of a slight
+huskiness, said, quietly:
+
+"That blow I charge against you both,--the lady as well as you!"
+
+Colden had stepped back some distance after delivering the blow.
+Something in Harry's answer seemed to infuriate still further the
+devil awakened in the Tory's body, for he cried out:
+
+"The lady as well as me,--yes! And this, too!"
+
+And he advanced on Peyton, to strike a second time.
+
+"Stop! How dare you?"
+
+The cry was Elizabeth's. It startled Colden so that he loosened his
+hold of the broken sword before he could deliver the blow. At that
+instant, she caught his arm in her one hand, the sword-guard in her
+other. She tore the weapon from his grasp, and faced him with a
+countenance as furious as his own.
+
+"What do you mean?" he cried.
+
+For answer she struck him in the face with the flat of the sword, as
+he had struck Peyton. "You sneak!" she said.
+
+He recoiled, and stood staring, a ghastly image of bewilderment and
+consternation. After a moment he turned livid.
+
+"Ah! I see now!" he gasped. "You love him!"
+
+"Yes!" came the answer, prompt and decided.
+
+He gazed at her with such an expression as a painter of hell might
+put into the face of a lost soul, and he said, faintly, in a kind of
+articulate moan:
+
+"I might have known!"
+
+Suddenly there came from the outer night the exclamation, quick and
+distinct:
+
+"Whoa!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE BROKEN SWORD.
+
+
+The sound wrought a transformation in Colden. His face lighted up with
+malevolent joy.
+
+"You love too late!" he cried, to Elizabeth. "My men are there! They
+shall take him to New York a prisoner, at last!"
+
+"But not delivered up by me, thank God!" replied Elizabeth, while
+Peyton rose quickly from his chair, and Colden reeled like a drunken
+man to the window.
+
+She went behind Peyton, and, with the edge of the broken sword, hacked
+rather than cut through one of the outer windings that bound his
+wrists together, whereupon she speedily uncoiled the rope.
+
+"You were my prisoner. I set you free!" she said, dropped the rope to
+the floor, and handed him the broken sword.
+
+He took the weapon in his right hand, and imprisoned Elizabeth with
+his left arm.
+
+"I'm more your prisoner now than ever!" he said. "You've cut these
+bonds. Will you put others on me?"
+
+"Sometime,--if we can save your life!" she answered.
+
+Both turned their eyes towards Colden.
+
+The Tory officer had drawn his sword, and was motioning, in great
+excitement, to his soldiers outside.
+
+"This way, men!" he shouted. "To the front door! Damn the louts! Can't
+they understand?" He beat upon the window with his sword, knocking out
+panes of glass. "Come through that door, I say! Quick, curse you,
+there's a prisoner here, with a price for his taking! Ay, that's it!
+Some one in the hall there, open the front door to my men!"
+
+The sound now came of knocks bestowed on the outside door, and of
+Sam's heavy tread on the hall floor.
+
+"Williams! Sam!" shouted Elizabeth. "Don't let them in!"
+
+The heavy tread was heard to stop short. The knocking on the outer
+door was resumed.
+
+"Let them in, I say," roared Colden, too proud to go himself to the
+door. "I command it, in the name of the King!"
+
+"Obey your mistress," cried Peyton, to those in the hall. "I command
+it, in the name of Congress!"
+
+Colden was silent for a moment, then suddenly threw open the window
+and called out, "This way, men! Quick!"
+
+And he drew pistol, and stood ready with steel and ball to guard the
+window by which his men were to enter. A new, wild ferocity was on his
+face, a new, nervous hardness in his body, as if the latent resolution
+and strength which a prudent man keeps for a great contest, on which
+his all may depend, were at last aroused. In such a mood, the man who,
+governed by interest, may have seemed a coward all his life becomes
+for the once supremely formidable. At last he thinks the stake worth
+the play, at last the prize is worth the risk, and because it is so he
+will play and risk to the end, hazarding all, not yielding while he
+breathes. Having opened the theme which alone, of all themes, shall
+transform his irresolution into action, he will, Hamlet like, "fight
+upon this theme until" his "eyelids will no longer wag." So was Colden
+aroused, transfigured, as he stood doubly armed by the window, waiting
+for his men to clamber in.
+
+"What shall we do, dear?" said Elizabeth.
+
+"Fight!" replied Peyton, tightening at the same time his right palm
+around his broken sword, and his left around the hand she had let him
+take,--for she had moved from the embrace of his arm.
+
+"Ay, there are only two of them," she said, as two burly forms
+appeared in the open window, one behind the other.
+
+"There will be three of us, you'll find!" cried Colden. "This time
+I'll take a hand, if need be."
+
+"You must not stay here," said Peyton to Elizabeth, quickly. "Things
+will be flying loose in a moment!"
+
+"I won't leave you!" said she.
+
+"Go! I beg you, go!" he said, releasing her hand, and stepping back.
+
+Meanwhile, Colden's men bounded in through the window. Rough, sturdy
+fellows were they, who landed heavily on the parlor floor, and blinked
+at the light, drawing the while the breeches of their short muskets
+from beneath their coats. Their hats and shoulders were coated with
+snow.
+
+"Take that rebel alive, if you can!" ordered Colden. "He's meant to
+hang! Stun him with your musket-butts!"
+
+The men quickly reversed their weapons, and strode heavily towards
+Harry. To their surprise, before they could bring down their muskets,
+which required both hands of each to hold, Harry dashed forward
+between them, thinking to cut down Colden with his broken sword,
+possess himself of the latter's pistol, shoot one of the soldiers, and
+meet the other on less unequal terms. He saw a possibility of his
+leaping through the open window and fleeing on one of the soldiers'
+horses, but the idea was accompanied by the thought that Elizabeth
+might be made to suffer for his escape. Her safety now depended on his
+getting the mastery over his three would-be captors. So, ere the two
+astonished fellows could turn, Harry had leaped within sword's reach
+of his doubly armed enemy.
+
+But Colden was now as alert as rigid, and he opposed his officer's
+sword against Peyton's broken cavalry blade, guarding himself with
+unexpected swiftness, and giving back, for Harry's sweeping stroke, a
+thrust which only the quickest and most dexterous movement turned
+aside from entering the Virginian's lungs. As Harry stepped back for
+an instant out of his adversary's reach, the Tory raised his pistol.
+At the same moment the two soldiers, having turned about, rushed on
+Peyton from behind. He heard them coming, and half turned to face
+them. Their movement had for him one fortunate circumstance. It kept
+Colden from shooting, for his bullet might have struck one of his own
+men.
+
+Now Elizabeth had not been idle. At the moment when Harry had stepped
+back from her and bade her go, she had run to the door of the east
+hall, and called Williams and Sam. While Peyton had been engaging
+Colden near the window, the steward and the negro had entered the
+parlor, and she had excitedly ordered them to Peyton's aid. Williams
+still had the duck-gun, Sam the pistol. Thus it occurred that, as
+Peyton half turned from Colden towards the two soldiers, these
+last-named saw Williams and Sam rush in between them and their prey.
+Before Williams could bring his duck-gun to bear, he was struck down
+senseless by one of the musket blows first intended for Peyton.
+Another blow, and from another musket, had been aimed at Sam's woolly
+head, but the negro had put up his left hand and caught the descending
+weapon, and at the same time had discharged his pistol at the weapon's
+holder. But Williams, in falling, had knocked against the darky, and
+so disturbed his aim, and the ball flew wide. The man who had brought
+down Williams now struck Sam a terrible blow with the musket-club, on
+the temple, and the negro dropped like a felled ox.
+
+During this brief passage, Peyton had returned to close quarters with
+Colden. The latter, who had lowered his pistol when his men had last
+approached Peyton, and who had resumed the contest of swords unequal
+in size and kind, now raised the pistol a second time. But it was
+caught by the hands of Elizabeth, who had run around to his left, and
+who now, suddenly endowed with the strength of a tigress, wrenched it
+from him as she had wrenched the broken sword earlier in the evening.
+She tried to discharge the pistol at one of the two soldiers, as they,
+relieved of the brief interposition of Williams and Sam, were again
+taking position to bring down their muskets on Peyton's head while he
+continued at sword-work with Colden. But the pistol snapped without
+going off, whereupon Elizabeth hurled it in the face of the man at
+whom she had aimed. The blow disconcerted him so that his musket fell
+wide of Peyton, who at the same instant, having seen from the corner
+of his eye how he was menaced, leaped backward from under the other
+descending musket. Then, taking advantage of the moment when the
+muskets were down, he ran to the music seat before the spinet, and
+mounted upon it, thinking rightly that the infuriated major would
+follow him, and that he might the better execute a certain manoeuvre
+from the vantage of height. Colden indeed rushed after him, and thrust
+at him, Peyton sweeping the thrusts aside with pendulum-like swings of
+his own short weapon. His thought was to send the point that menaced
+him so astray that he might leap forward and cleave his enemy with a
+downward stroke before the Tory could recover his guard. But Colden
+pressed him so speedily that he was at last fain to step up from the
+music seat to the spinet, landing first on the keyboard, which sent
+out a frightened discord as he alighted on it. Finding the keys an
+uncertain footing, he took another step, and stood on the body of the
+instrument, so that Colden would be at the disadvantage of thrusting
+upwards. But Colden, seeming to tire a little after a few such
+thrusts, called to his men:
+
+"Shoot the dog in the legs!"
+
+Both men aimed at once. Elizabeth screamed. Peyton leaped down from
+his height to the little space behind the spinet projection, where he
+had hidden a week before. Here he found himself well placed, for here
+he could be approached on one side only,--unless his adversaries
+should follow his example and come at him from the top of the spinet.
+
+Colden attacked him with sword, at the open side, and shouted to his
+men:
+
+"One of you get on the spinet. The other crawl under. We have him
+now."
+
+Still guarding himself from his enemy's thrusts, Peyton heard one of
+the men leap from the music seat to the spinet, and the other advance
+creeping, doubtless with gun before him, under the instrument. Peyton
+sank to his knees, placed his shoulder under the back edge of the
+spinet's projection, and, warding off a downward movement of Colden's
+sword, turned the instrument over on its side, checking the creeping
+man under it, and throwing the other fellow to the floor some feet
+away. As the spinet fell, one of its legs, rising swiftly into the
+air, knocked Colden's blade upward, and the Tory leaped back lest
+Peyton might avail himself of the opening. But the spinet-leg itself
+hindered Peyton from doing so. Colden rushed forward again, thrusting
+as he did so. Peyton leaped aside, made a swift half-turn, and landed
+a stroke on Colden's sword-hand, making the Tory cry out and drop the
+sword. Harry put his foot on it and cried:
+
+"You're at my mercy! Beg quarter!"
+
+But the man who had been thrown from the top of the spinet now
+returned to the attack, coming around that end of the upset instrument
+which was opposite the end where Colden had menaced Harry. Seeing this
+new adversary, Harry retreated past Colden, in order to put himself in
+position. The soldier hastened after him, with upraised musket. At
+this moment, Peyton saw himself confronted by Elizabeth, who pulled
+open the door of the south hall. He stopped short to avoid running
+against her.
+
+"Save yourself!" she cried, and pushed him through the open doorway,
+flinging the door shut upon him, a movement which the pursuing
+soldier, stayed for a moment by collision with Colden, was not in time
+to prevent. Harry heard the key move in the lock, and knew that
+Elizabeth had turned it, and that he was safe in the south hall, with
+a minute of vantage which he might employ as he would.
+
+Elizabeth withdrew the key from the locked door, just as the pursuing
+soldier arrived at that door. The man, in his excitement, violently
+tried to open the door. Colden, who was wrapping a handkerchief around
+his wounded hand, shouted to the man:
+
+"You fool, she has the key! Take it from her!"
+
+"You shall kill me first!" she cried, and ran from the man towards the
+open window, stepping over the prostrate bodies of Sam and Williams as
+she went.
+
+"After her! She'll throw it into the snow!" cried Colden.
+
+This much Harry heard through the door, and heard also the heavy tread
+of the soldier's feet in pursuit of the girl. His mind imaged forth a
+momentary picture of the fellow's rough hands laid on the delicate
+arms of Elizabeth, of her body clasped by the man in a struggle, her
+white skin reddened by his grasp. The spectacle, imaginary and lasting
+but an instant, maddened Peyton beyond endurance, made him a giant, a
+Hercules. He threw himself against the door repeatedly, plied foot and
+body in heavy blows. Meanwhile Elizabeth had reached the window, and
+thrown the key far out on the snow-heaped lawn. She had no sooner done
+so than the man laid his clutch on her arm.
+
+"Fly, Peyton, for God's sake! For my sake!" she shouted.
+
+"You shall pay for aiding the enemy, if he does!" cried Colden. "Don't
+let her escape, Thompson!"
+
+At that instant the locked door gave way, and in burst Harry, having
+broken, to save Elizabeth from a rude contact, the barrier she had
+closed to save his life. That life, which he had once saved by
+callously assailing her heart, he now risked, that her body might not
+suffer the touch of an ungentle hand. So swift and sudden was his
+entrance, that he had crossed the room, and floored Elizabeth's
+captor, with a deep gash down the side of the head, ere Colden made a
+step towards him.
+
+The man who had been under the fallen spinet had now extricated
+himself, and regained his feet, and he and Colden rushed on Peyton at
+once. Elated by having so speedily wrought Elizabeth's release, and
+reduced the number of his able adversaries to two, Peyton bethought
+himself of a new plan. He fled through the deep doorway to the east
+hall, and took position on the staircase. He turned just in time to
+parry Colden's sword, which the major had picked up and made shift to
+hold in his wrapped-up, wounded hand. Harry saw that an opportune
+stroke might send the sword from his enemy's numb and weakening grasp,
+and his heart swelled with anticipated triumph, until he heard
+Colden's hoarse cry:
+
+"Shoot him, James, while I keep him occupied!"
+
+This order was now the more practicable from Harry's being on the
+stairs, above Colden, a great part of his body exposed to an aim that
+could not endanger his antagonist. Breathing heavily, his eyes afire
+with hatred, Colden repeated his attacks, while Harry saw the other's
+musket raised, the barrel looking him in the eyes. He leaped a step
+higher, swung his broken sword against the pendent chandelier,
+knocked the only burning candle from its socket, and threw the hall
+into darkness. A moment later the gun went off, giving an instant's
+red flame, a loud crack, and a smell of gunpowder smoke. Harry heard a
+swift singing near his right ear, and knew that he was untouched.
+
+Lest Colden's sword, thrust at random, might find him in the dark,
+Harry instantly bestrode the stair-rail, and dropped, outside the
+balustrade, to the floor of the hall. He grasped his half-sword in
+both hands, so as to put his whole weight behind it, and made a lunge
+in the direction of a muttered curse. The curse gave way to a roar of
+pain and rage, and Colden's second follower dropped, spurting blood in
+the darkness, his shoulder gashed horribly by the blunt end of
+Peyton's imperfect weapon. Harry now ran back to the parlor, to deal
+with Colden in the light, the latter's greater length of weapon giving
+a greater searching-power in the darkness. In the parlor Elizabeth
+stood waiting in suspense. Sam was sitting on the floor and staring
+stupidly at Williams, who was now awake and rubbing his head, and the
+Tory first fallen was still senseless. Harry had no sooner taken this
+scene in at a glance, than Colden was upon him.
+
+The major's eyes seemed to stand out like blazing carbuncles from the
+face of some deity of rage.
+
+"G--d d----n your soul!" he screamed, and thrust. The point went
+straight, and Elizabeth, seeing it protrude through the back of
+Harry's coat, near the left side of his body, uttered a low cry, and
+sank half-fainting to her knees. Colden shouted with triumphant
+laughter. "Die, you dog! And when you burn in hell, remember I sent
+you there!"
+
+But the evil joy suddenly faded out of Colden's face, for Harry
+Peyton, smiling, took a forward step, grasped near the hilt the sword
+that seemed to be sheathed in his own body, forced it from Colden's
+hand, and then drew it slowly from its lodgment. No blood discolored
+it, and none oozed from Harry's body.
+
+The Virginian's quick movement to escape the thrust had left only a
+part of his loose-fitting coat exposed, and Colden's sword had passed
+through it, leaving him unhurt. Colden's momentary appearance of
+victory had been the means of actual defeat.
+
+The Tory major saw his cup of revenge dashed from his lips, saw
+himself deprived of sword and sweetheart, neither chance left of
+living nor motive left for life. His rage collapsed; his hate burst
+like a bubble.
+
+"Kill me," he said, quietly, to Peyton.
+
+His look, innocent of any thought to draw compassion, quite disarmed
+Harry, who stood for a moment with moistening eyes and a kind of
+welling-up at the throat, then said, in a rather unsteady voice:
+
+"No, sir! God knows I've taken enough from you," and he looked at
+Elizabeth, who had risen and was standing near him. Softened by the
+triumphant outcome for her love, she, too, was suddenly sensible of
+the defeated man's unhappiness, and her eyes applauded and thanked
+Harry.
+
+"You've taken what I never had," said Colden, with a chastened kind of
+bitterness, "yet without which the life you give me back is
+worthless."
+
+"Make it worth something with this," and Peyton held Colden's sword
+out to him.
+
+"What! You will trust me with it?" said Colden, amazed and incredulous,
+taking the sword, but holding it limply.
+
+"Certainly, sir!"
+
+Colden was motionless a moment, then placed his arm high against the
+doorway, and buried his face against his arm, to hide the outlet of
+what various emotions were set loose by his enemy's display of pity
+and trust.
+
+Harry gently drew Elizabeth to him and kissed her. Yielding, she
+placed her arms around his neck, and held him for a moment in an
+embrace of her own offering. Then she withdrew from his clasp, and
+when Colden again faced them she had resumed that invisible veil which
+no man, not even the beloved, might pass through till she bade him.
+
+"You will find me worthy of your trust, sir," said Colden, brokenly,
+yet with a mixture of manly humility and honorable pride.[10]
+
+"I am so sure of that," said Harry, "that I confide to your care for a
+time what is dearest to me in the world. I ask you to accompany Miss
+Philipse to her home in New York, when it may suit her convenience,
+and to see that she suffer nothing for what has occurred here this
+night."
+
+"You are a generous enemy, sir," said Colden, his eyes moistening
+again. "One man in ten thousand would have done me the honor, the
+kindness, of that request!"
+
+"Why," said Harry, taking his enemy's hand, as if in token of
+farewell, "whatever be the ways of the knaves, respectable and
+otherwise, who are so cautious against tricks like their own, thank
+God it's not so rotten a world that a gentleman may not trust a
+gentleman, when he is sure he has found one!"
+
+Turning to Elizabeth, he said: "I beg you will leave this house at
+dawn, if you can. Williams and Sam, there, will be little the worse
+for their knocks, and can look after the fellows on the floor."
+
+"And you," she replied, "must go at once. You must not further risk
+your life by a moment's waiting. Cuff shall saddle Cato for you. I
+sha'n't rest till I feel that you are far on your way."
+
+He approached as if again to kiss her, but she held out her hand to
+stay him. He took the hand, bent over it, pressed it to his lips.
+
+"But,--" he said, in a tone as low as a whisper, "when--"
+
+"When the war is over," she answered, softly, "let Cato bring you
+back."
+
+
+
+
+NOTES.
+
+
+NOTE 1. (Page 41.)
+
+"The old county historian." Rev. Robert Bolton, born 1814, died 1877.
+His "History of the County of Westchester," especially the revised
+edition published in 1881, is a rich mine of "material." Among other
+works that have served the author of this narrative in a study of the
+period and place are Allison's "History of Yonkers," Cole's "History
+of Yonkers," Edsall's "History of Kingsbridge," Dawson's "Westchester
+County during the Revolution," Jones's "New York during the
+Revolution," Watson's "Annals of New York in the Olden Time," General
+Heath's "Memoirs," Thatcher's "Memoirs," Simcoe's "Military Journal,"
+Dunlap's "History of New York," and Mrs. Ellet's "Domestic History of
+the Revolution." For an excellent description of the border warfare on
+the "neutral ground," the reader should go to Irving's delightful
+"Chronicle of Wolfert's Roost." Cooper's novel, "The Spy," deals
+accurately with that subject, which is touched upon also in that good
+old standby, Lossing's "Pictorial Field-book of the Revolution."
+Philipse Manor-house has been carefully written of by Judge Atkins in
+a Yonkers newspaper, and less accurately by Mrs. Lamb in her "History
+of New York City," and Marian Harland in "Some Colonial Homesteads and
+Their Stories." Of general histories, Irving's "Life of Washington"
+treats most fully of things around New York during the British
+occupation, and these things are interestingly dealt with in local
+histories, such as the "History of Queens County," Stiles's "History
+of Brooklyn," Barber and Howe's "New Jersey Historical Collections,"
+etc., as well as in such special works as Onderdonk's "Revolutionary
+Incidents."
+
+
+NOTE 2. (Page 47.)
+
+Of Colonel Gist's escape, Bolton gives the following account: "The
+house was occupied by the handsome and accomplished widow of the Rev.
+Luke Babcock, and Miss Sarah Williams, a sister of Mrs. Frederick
+Philipse. To the former lady Colonel Gist was devotedly attached;
+consequently, when an opportunity afforded, he gladly moved his
+command into that vicinity. On the night preceding the attack, he had
+stationed his camp at the foot of Boar Hill, for the better purpose of
+paying a special visit to this lady. It is said that whilst engaged in
+urging his suit the enemy were quietly surrounding his quarters; he
+had barely received his final dismissal from Mrs. Babcock when he was
+startled by the firing of musketry.... It appears that all the roads
+and bridges had been well guarded by the enemy, except the one now
+called Warner's Bridge, and that Captain John Odell upon the first
+alarm led off his troops through the woods on the west side of the Saw
+Mill [River]. Here Colonel Gist joined them. In the meantime Mrs.
+Babcock, having stationed herself in one of the dormer windows of the
+parsonage, aided their escape whenever they appeared, by the waving of
+a white handkerchief."
+
+The British attack was under Lieutenant-Colonel Simcoe, whose journal
+shows that his force so far outnumbered Gist's that the latter's only
+sensible course was in flight. About the year 1840, trees cut down
+near the site of Gist's camp were found to contain balls buried six
+inches in the wood.
+
+
+NOTE 3. (Page 76.)
+
+The three generals arrived on the _Cerberus_, May 25th. All the
+histories say that they arrived "with reinforcements." It is true,
+troops were constantly arriving at Boston about that time, but none
+came immediately with the three generals. The _Connecticut Gazette_
+(published in New London) printed, early in June, this piece of news,
+brought by a gentleman who had been in Boston, May 28th: "Generals
+Burgoyne, Clinton, and Howe arrived at Boston last Friday in a
+man-of-war. No troops came with them. They brought over 25 horses." It
+is a wonder that Frothingham, in his admirably complete history of the
+siege of Boston, missed even this little circumstance. Probably
+everybody has read the incident thus related by Irving: "As the ships
+entered the harbor and the rebel camp was pointed out, Burgoyne could
+not restrain a burst of surprise and scorn. 'What!' cried he; 'ten
+thousand peasants keep five thousand King's troops shut up! Well, let
+us get in and we'll soon find elbow room!'" I don't think Irving
+relates anywhere the sequel, which is that when, after his surrender,
+Burgoyne marched with his conquered army into Cambridge, an old woman
+shouted from a window to the crowd of spectators, "Give him elbow
+room!" This story ought to be true, if it is not.
+
+
+NOTE 4. (Page 89.)
+
+It was in a letter under date of October 4, 1778, that Washington
+wrote: "What officer can bear the weight of prices that every
+necessary article is now got to? A rat in the shape of a horse is not
+to be bought for less than Ł200; a saddle under thirty or forty."
+
+
+NOTE 5. (Page 124.)
+
+Captain Cunningham was the British provost marshal, as everybody
+knows, whose name became a synonym for wanton cruelty in the treatment
+of war prisoners. He had come to New York before the Revolution, and
+had kept a riding school there. As soon as the war broke out he took
+the royal side. It was he who had in charge the summary execution of
+Nathan Hale. He would often amuse himself by striking his prisoners
+with his keys and by kicking over the baskets of food or vessels of
+soup brought for them by charitable women, who, he said, were the
+worst rebels in New York. He died miserably in England after the war.
+His career is briefly outlined in Sabine's "Loyalists." As to the
+manner in which Peyton, if caught, would have died, it must be
+remembered that in the American Revolution the rope served in many a
+case which, occurring in Europe or in one of our later wars, would
+have been disposed of with the bullet. Writing of General Charles Lee,
+John Fiske says: "There is no doubt that Sir William Howe looked upon
+him as a deserter, and was more than half inclined to hang him without
+ceremony." Then, as now, a deserter in time of war was liable to death
+if caught at any subsequent time, his case being worse than that of a
+spy, who was liable to death only if caught before getting back to his
+own lines. There was, by the way, much unceremonious hanging on the
+"neutral ground." Not far from the Van Cortlandt mansion there still
+stood, in Bolton's time, "a celebrated white oak, in the midst of a
+pretty glade, called the Cowboy Oak," from the fact that many of the
+Tory raiders had been suspended from its branches during the war of
+Revolution.
+
+
+NOTE 6. (Page 127.)
+
+I am not sure whether the saying, "The corpse of an enemy smells
+sweet," attributed to Charles IX. of France, in allusion to Coligny,
+is historical or was the invention of a romancer. It occurs in Dumas's
+"La Reine Margot."
+
+
+NOTE 7. (Page 136.)
+
+Mr. Valentine's unwillingness to lend aid was doubtless due to the
+frequency of such incidents as one that had occurred to his neighbor,
+Peter Post, in 1776. Post's estate occupied the site of the present
+town of Hastings. He gave information to Colonel Sheldon regarding the
+movements of some Hessians, and afterwards deceived the Hessians as to
+the whereabouts of Sheldon's own cavalry. Thereby, Sheldon's troop was
+enabled to surprise the Hessians, and defeat them in a short and
+bloody conflict. The Hessians' comrades later caught Post, stripped
+him, beat him to insensibility, and left him for dead. He recovered of
+his injuries. His house, a small stone one, became a tavern after the
+Revolution, and was a celebrated resort of cock-fighters and
+hard-drinkers. Not far north of Hastings is Dobbs Ferry, which was
+occupied by both armies alternately, during the Revolution. Further
+north is Sunnyside, Irving's house, elaborated from the original
+Wolfert's Roost, and beyond that are Tarrytown, where André was
+stopped and taken in charge, and Sleepy Hollow. Enchanted ground, all
+this, hallowed by history, legend, and romance.
+
+
+NOTE 8. (Page 179.)
+
+The secret passage or passages of Philipse Manor-house have not been
+neglected by writers of fiction, history, and magazine articles. The
+passage does not now exist, but there are numerous traces of it. The
+different writers do not agree in locating it. The author of an
+interesting story for children, "A Loyal Little Maid," has it that the
+passage was reached through an opening in the panelling of the
+dining-room, this opening concealed by a tall clock. I think Marian
+Harland says that a closet in one of the parlors or chambers connects
+with the secret passage. Both these assumptions are wrong. Mr. R. P.
+Getty has pointed out in the northwestern corner of the cellar what
+seems to have once been the entrance to the passage. One authority
+quotes a belief "that from the cellar there was a passage to a well
+now covered by Woodworth Avenue," and that this was to afford access
+to what may have been a storage vault. A man who was born in 1821 says
+that, when a boy, he saw, near the house, a dry cistern, from the
+bottom of which was an arched passage towards the Hudson, large enough
+for a man six feet tall to pass through. Judge Atkins says that the
+well was opposite the kitchen door, and had, at its western side,
+about ten feet deep, a chamber in which butter was kept. One writer
+locates an ice-house where Judge Atkins places this well, and says a
+subterranean arched way led northward as far as the present Wells
+Avenue. "The ice-house was formerly, it is said, a powder-magazine."
+Many years ago, the coachman of Judge Woodworth used to say he had
+"gone through an underground passage all the way from the manor-house
+to the Hudson River." Judge Atkins has written interesting legends of
+the manor-house, involving the secret passage and other features.
+
+
+NOTE 9. (Page 259.)
+
+"That lonely highway now called Broadway." A block of houses and
+another street now lie between that highway and the east front of the
+manor-house. The building is closely hemmed in by the sordid signs of
+progress. Ugly houses, in crowded blocks, cover all the great
+surrounding space that once was thick forest, fair orchards, gardens,
+fields, and pastoral rivulet. The Neperan or Saw Mill River flows,
+sluggish and scummy, under streets and houses. A visit to the
+manor-house, now, would spoil rather than improve one's impression of
+what the place looked like in the old days. Yet the house itself
+remains well preserved, for which all honor to the town of Yonkers.
+There is in our spacious America so much room for the present and the
+future, that a little ought to be kept for the past. It is well to be
+reminded, by a landmark here and there, of our brave youth as a
+people. A posterity, sure to value these landmarks more than this
+money-grabbing age does, will reproach us with the destruction we have
+already wrought. Worse still than the crime of obliterating all
+human-made relics of the past, is the vandalism of nature herself
+where nature is exceptionally beautiful. To rob millions of
+beauty-lovers, yet to live, of the Palisades of the Hudson, would
+bring upon us the amazement and execration of future centuries. This
+earth is an entailed estate, that each generation is in honor bound to
+hand down, undefaced, undiminished, to its successor. In order that a
+close-clutched wallet or two may wax a little fatter, shall we bring
+upon ourselves a cry of shame that would ring with increasing
+bitterness through the ages,--shall we invite the execration merited
+by such greed as could so outrage our fair earth, such stolid apathy
+as could stand by and see it done? Shall an alien or two, as hard of
+soul as the stone in which he traffics, mar the Hudson that Washington
+patrolled, rob countless eyes, yet unopened, of a joy; countless
+minds, yet to waken, of an inspiration; countless hearts, yet to beat,
+of a thrill of pride in the soil of their inheriting? Shall some
+future reader wonder why Irving, deeming it "an invaluable advantage
+to be born and brought up in the neighborhood of some grand and noble
+object in nature," should have thanked God he was born on the banks of
+the Hudson? I write this with the sound of the blowing up of Indian
+Head still echoing in my ears, and knowing nothing done by Government
+to protect the next fair Hudson headland from similar destruction.
+
+
+NOTE 10. (Page 281.)
+
+It is probable that Colden served with his brigade when it fought in
+the South in the last part of the war. He was afterwards lost at sea,
+leaving no heir. He was of a family prominent in New York affairs,
+both before the Revolution and afterwards, and which was intermarried
+with other New York families of equal prominence, as may be seen in
+the "New York Genealogical and Biographical Record," the "New England
+Genealogical and Historical Register," and similar publications. It is
+probable that Sabine means this Colden when he mentions a Captain
+Colden, of the First Battalion of New Jersey Volunteers. That he was a
+major, however, is certain, from the official British Army lists
+published in Hugh Gaines's "Universal Register" for the years of the
+Revolution.
+
+People curious about Harry Peyton's military record may consult
+Saffel's "Lists of American Officers," Heitman's "Manual," and a large
+work on "Virginia Genealogies," by H. E. Hayden, published at
+Wilkes-barre. To the reader who demands a happy ending, it need be no
+shock to learn that Peyton, having risen to the rank of major, was
+killed at Charleston, S. C., May 12, 1780. For a love story, it is a
+happy ending that occurs at the moment when the conquest and the
+submission are mutual, complete, and demonstrated. A love to be
+perfect, to have its sweetness unembittered, ought not to be subjected
+to the wear and tear of prolonged fellowship. So subjected, it may
+deepen and gain ultimate strength, but it will lose its intoxicating
+novelty, and become associated with pain as well as with pleasure. We
+may be sure that the love of Peyton and Elizabeth was to Harry a
+sweetener of life on many a night encampment, many a hard ride, in the
+campaign of 1779, and in the spring of 1780, and exalted him the
+better to meet his death on that day when Charleston fell to the
+British; and that to Elizabeth, while it receded into further memory,
+it kept its full beauty during the half century she lived faithful to
+it. Her sisters were married into the English nobility, gentry, and
+military, but Elizabeth died in Bath, England, in March, 1828,
+unmarried. Colonel Philipse had moved with his family to England when
+the British quitted New York in 1783. Many other Tories did likewise.
+Some went to England, but more to Canada, the greater part of which
+was then a wilderness. Many of the Tory officers got commissions in
+the English army.
+
+No Tory family did more for the King's cause in America, lost more,
+or got more in redress, than the De Lancey family, which had been
+foremost in the administration of royal government in the province
+of New York. It had great holdings of property in New York City,
+elsewhere on the island of Manhattan, and in various parts of
+Westchester County, notably in Westchester Township, where De
+Lancey's mills and a fine country mansion were a famous landmark
+"where gentle Bronx clear winding flows." The founder of the
+American family was a French Huguenot of noble descent. The family was
+represented in the British army and navy before the Revolution. One
+member of it, a young officer in the navy, at the breaking out of
+the war, resigned his commission rather than serve against the
+Colonies, but most of the other De Lancey men were differently
+minded. Oliver De Lancey, a member of the provincial council, was
+made a brigadier-general in the royal service, and raised three
+battalions of loyalists, known as "De Lancey's Battalions." Of
+these battalions, the Tory historian, Judge Jones, says: "Two served
+in Georgia and the Carolinas from the time the British army landed in
+Georgia until the final evacuation of Charleston." One of these,
+during this period, was commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Stephen De
+Lancey, the other by Colonel John Harris Cruger. The third battalion,
+during the whole war, was employed solely in protecting the
+wood-cutters upon Lloyd's Neck, Queens County, L. I. This General
+De Lancey's son, Oliver De Lancey, Junior, was educated in Europe,
+took service with the 17th Light Dragoons, was a captain when the
+Revolution began, a major in 1778, a lieutenant-colonel in 1781,
+and, on the death of Major André, adjutant-general of the British army
+in America. Returning to England, he became deputy adjutant-general of
+England; as a major-general, he was also colonel of the 17th Light
+Dragoons; was subsequently barrack-master general of the British
+Empire, lieutenant-general, and finally general. When he died he was
+nearly at the head of the English army list. This branch of the
+family became extinct when Sir William Heathcoate De Lancey, the
+quartermaster-general of Wellington's army, was killed at Waterloo.
+
+The James De Lancey who commanded the Westchester Light Horse was a
+nephew of the senior General Oliver De Lancey, and a cousin of the
+Major Colden of this narrative. His troop was not "a battalion in the
+brigade of his uncle," Bolton's statement that it was so being
+incorrect; its operations were limited to Westchester County. It
+raided and fought for the King untiringly, until it was almost
+entirely killed off, at the end of the war, by the persistent efforts
+of our troops to extirpate it.
+
+The members of this corps were called "Cowboys" because, in their duty
+of procuring supplies for the British army, they made free with the
+farmers' cattle. Like the other conspicuous Tories, this James De
+Lancey was attainted by the new State Government, and his property was
+confiscated. Local historians draw an effective picture of him
+departing alone from his estate by the Bronx, turning for a last look,
+from the back of his horse, at the fair mansion and broad lands that
+were to be his no more, and riding away with a heavy heart. He went,
+with many shipfuls of Tory emigrants, to Nova Scotia, and became a
+member of the council of that colony. His uncle went to England and
+died at his country house, Beverly, Yorkshire, in 1785. I allude to
+the case of this family, because it was typical of that of a great
+many families. The Tories of the American Revolution constitute a
+subject that has yet to be made much of. They were the progenitors of
+English-speaking Canada.
+
+The act of attainder that deprived the De Lanceys of their estates,
+deprived Colonel Philipse of his. It was passed by the New York
+legislature, October 22, 1779. The persons declared guilty of
+"adherence to the enemies of the State" were attainted, their estates
+real and personal confiscated, and themselves proscribed, the second
+section of the act declaring that "each and every one of them who
+shall at any time hereafter be found in any part of this State, shall
+be, and are hereby, adjudged and declared guilty of felony, and shall
+suffer death as in cases of felony, without benefit of clergy." Acts
+of similar import were passed in other States. Under this act,
+Philipse Manor-house was forfeited to the State about a year after the
+time of our narrative. The commissioners whose duty it was to dispose
+of confiscated property sold the house and mills, in 1785, to
+Cornelius P. Lowe. It underwent several transfers, but little change,
+becoming at length the property of Lemuel Wells, who held it a long
+time and, dying in 1842, left it to his nephew. The town of Yonkers
+grew up around it, and on May 1, 1868, purchased it for municipal use.
+The fewest possible alterations were made in it. These are mainly in
+the north wing, the part added by the second lord of the manor in
+1745. On the first floor, the partition between dining-room and
+kitchen was removed, and the whole space made into a court-room. On
+the second floor, the space formerly divided into five bedrooms was
+transformed into a council-chamber, the garret floor overhead being
+removed. The new city hall of Yonkers leaves the old manor-house less
+necessary for public purposes. May the old parlors, where the besilked
+and bepowdered gentry of the province used to dance the minuet before
+the change of things, not be given over to baser uses than they have
+already served.
+
+Allusion has been made, in different chapters of this narrative, to
+the Hessians who daily patrolled the roads in the vicinity of the
+manor-house. This duty often fell to Pruschank's yagers, the troop to
+which belonged Captain Rowe, whose love story is thus told by Bolton:
+"Captain Rowe appears to have been in the habit of making a daily tour
+from Kingsbridge, round by Miles Square. He was on his last tour of
+military duty, having already resigned his commission for the purpose
+of marrying the accomplished Elizabeth Fowler, of Harlem, when,
+passing with a company of light dragoons, he was suddenly fired upon
+by three Americans of the water guard of Captain Pray's company, who
+had ambuscaded themselves in the cedars. The captain fell from his
+horse, mortally wounded. The yagers instantly made prisoners of the
+undisciplined water guards, and a messenger was immediately despatched
+to Mrs. Babcock, then living below, in the parsonage, for a vehicle to
+remove the wounded officer. The use of her gig and horse was soon
+obtained, and a neighbor, Anthony Archer, pressed to drive. In this
+they conveyed the dying man to Colonel Van Cortlandt's. They appear to
+have taken the route of Tippett's Valley, as the party stopped at
+Frederick Post's to obtain a drink of water. In the meantime an
+express had been forwarded to Miss Fowler, his affianced bride, to
+hasten without delay to the side of her dying lover. On her arrival,
+accompanied by her mother, the expiring soldier had just strength
+enough left to articulate a few words, when he sank exhausted with the
+effort." The room in which he died is in the well-known mansion in Van
+Cortlandt Park.
+
+The incident of the horse, related in an early chapter, has a likeness
+to an adventure that befell one Thomas Leggett early in the
+Revolutionary war. He lived with his father on a farm near Morrisania,
+then in Westchester County, and was proud in the possession of a fine
+young mare. A party of British refugees took this animal, with other
+property. They had gone two miles with it, when, from behind a stone
+wall which they were passing, two Continental soldiers rose and fired
+at them. The man with the mare was shot dead. The animal immediately
+turned round and ran home, followed by the owner, who had dogged her
+captors at a distance in the hope of recovering her.
+
+
+
+
+ SELECTIONS FROM
+ L. C. PAGE AND COMPANY'S
+ LIST OF NEW FICTION.
+
+
+An Enemy to the King.
+
+From the Recently Discovered Memoirs of the Sieur de la Tournoire. By
+ROBERT NEILSON STEPHENS. Illustrated by H. De M. Young.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+An historical romance of the sixteenth century, describing the
+adventures of a young French nobleman at the Court of Henry IV., and
+on the field with Henry of Navarre.
+
+
+The Continental Dragoon.
+
+A Romance of Philipse Manor House, in 1778. By ROBERT NEILSON
+STEPHENS, author of "An Enemy to the King." Illustrated by H. C.
+Edwards.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+A stirring romance of the Revolution, the scene being laid in and
+around the old Philipse Manor House, near Yonkers, which at the time
+of the story was the central point of the so-called "neutral
+territory" between the two armies.
+
+
+Muriella; or, Le Selve.
+
+By OUIDA. Illustrated by M. B. Prendergast.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+This is the latest work from the pen of the brilliant author of "Under
+Two Flags," "Moths," etc., etc. It is the story of the love and
+sacrifice of a young peasant girl, told in the absorbing style
+peculiar to the author.
+
+
+The Road to Paris.
+
+By ROBERT NEILSON STEPHENS, author of "An Enemy to the King," "The
+Continental Dragoon," etc. Illustrated by H. C. Edwards. (In press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+An historical romance, being an account of the life of an American
+gentleman adventurer of Jacobite ancestry, whose family early settled
+in the colony of Pennsylvania. The scene shifts from the unsettled
+forests of the then West to Philadelphia, New York, London, Paris,
+and, in fact, wherever a love of adventure and a roving fancy can lead
+a soldier of fortune. The story is written in Mr. Stephens's best
+style, and is of absorbing interest.
+
+
+Rose ŕ Charlitte.
+
+An Acadien Romance. By MARSHALL SAUNDERS, author of "Beautiful Joe,"
+etc. Illustrated by H. De M. Young.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+In this novel, the scene of which is laid principally in the land of
+Evangeline, Marshall Saunders has made a departure from the style of
+her earlier successes. The historical and descriptive setting of the
+novel is accurate, the plot is well conceived and executed, the
+characters are drawn with a firm and delightful touch, and the
+fortunes of the heroine, Rose ŕ Charlitte, a descendant of an old
+Acadien family, will be followed with eagerness by the author's host
+of admirers.
+
+
+Bobbie McDuff.
+
+By CLINTON ROSS, author of "The Scarlet Coat," "Zuleika," etc.
+Illustrated by B. West Clinedinst.
+
+1 vol., large 16mo, cloth =$1.00=
+
+Clinton Ross is well known as one of the most promising of recent
+American writers of fiction, and in the description of the adventures
+of his latest hero, Bobbie McDuff, he has repeated his earlier
+successes. Mr. Ross has made good use of the wealth of material at his
+command. New York furnishes him the hero, sunny Italy a heroine, grim
+Russia the villain of the story, while the requirements of the
+exciting plot shift the scene from Paris to New York, and back again
+to a remote, almost feudal villa on the southern coast of Italy.
+
+
+In Kings' Houses.
+
+A Romance of the Reign of Queen Anne. By JULIA C. R. DORR, author of
+"A Cathedral Pilgrimage," etc. Illustrated by Frank T. Merrill.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+Mrs. Dorr's poems and travel sketches have earned for her a distinct
+place in American literature, and her romance, "In Kings' Houses," is
+written with all the charm of her earlier works. The story deals
+with one of the most romantic episodes in English history. Queen
+Anne, the last of the reigning Stuarts, is described with a strong,
+yet sympathetic touch, and the young Duke of Gloster, the "little
+lady," and the hero of the tale, Robin Sandys, are delightful
+characterizations.
+
+
+Sons of Adversity.
+
+A Romance of Queen Elizabeth's Time. By L. COPE CONFORD, author of
+"Captain Jacobus," etc. Illustrated by J. W. Kennedy.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+A tale of adventure on land and sea at the time when Protestant
+England and Catholic Spain were struggling for naval supremacy.
+Spanish conspiracies against the peace of good Queen Bess, a vivid
+description of the raise of the Spanish siege of Leyden by the
+combined Dutch and English forces, sea fights, the recovery of stolen
+treasure, are all skilfully woven elements in a plot of unusual
+strength.
+
+
+The Count of Nideck.
+
+From the French of Erckman-Chatrian, translated and adapted by RALPH
+BROWNING FISKE. Illustrated by Victor A. Searles.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+A romance of the Black Forest, woven around the mysterious legend of
+the Wehr Wolf. The plot has to do with the later German feudal times,
+is brisk in action, and moves spiritedly from start to finish. Mr.
+Fiske deserves a great deal of credit for the excellence of his work.
+No more interesting romance has appeared recently.
+
+
+The Making of a Saint.
+
+By W. SOMERSET MAUGHAM. Illustrated by Gilbert James.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+"The Making of a Saint" is a romance of Medićval Italy, the scene
+being laid in the 15th century. It relates the life of a young leader
+of Free Companions who, at the close of one of the many petty Italian
+wars, returns to his native city. There he becomes involved in its
+politics, intrigues, and feuds, and finally joins an uprising of the
+townspeople against their lord. None can resent the frankness and
+apparent brutality of the scenes through which the hero and his
+companions of both sexes are made to pass, and many will yield
+ungrudging praise to the author's vital handling of the truth. In the
+characters are mirrored the life of the Italy of their day. The book
+will confirm Mr. Maugham's reputation as a strong and original
+writer.
+
+
+Omar the Tentmaker.
+
+A Romance of Old Persia. By NATHAN HASKELL DOLE. Illustrated. (In
+press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+Mr. Dole's study of Persian literature and history admirably equips
+him to enter into the life and spirit of the time of the romance, and
+the hosts of admirers of the inimitable quatrains of Omar Khayyam,
+made famous by Fitzgerald, will be deeply interested in a tale based
+on authentic facts in the career of the famous Persian poet. The three
+chief characters are Omar Khayyam, Nizam-ul-Mulk, the generous and
+high-minded Vizier of the Tartar Sultan Malik Shah of Mero, and Hassan
+ibu Sabbah, the ambitious and revengeful founder of the sect of the
+Assassins. The scene is laid partly at Naishapur, in the Province of
+Khorasan, which about the period of the First Crusade was at its acme
+of civilization and refinement, and partly in the mountain fortress of
+Alamut, south of the Caspian Sea, where the Ismailians under Hassan
+established themselves towards the close of the 11th century. Human
+nature is always the same, and the passions of love and ambition, of
+religion and fanaticism, of friendship and jealousy, are admirably
+contrasted in the fortunes of these three able and remarkable
+characters as well as in those of the minor personages of the story.
+
+
+Captain Fracasse.
+
+A new translation from the French of Gotier. Illustrated by Victor A.
+Searles.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+This famous romance has been out of print for some time, and a new
+translation is sure to appeal to its many admirers, who have never yet
+had any edition worthy of the story.
+
+
+The Rejuvenation of Miss Semaphore.
+
+A farcical novel. By HAL GODFREY. Illustrated by Etheldred B. Barry.
+(In press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+A fanciful, laughable tale of two maiden sisters of uncertain age who
+are induced, by their natural longing for a return to youth and its
+blessings, to pay a large sum for a mystical water which possesses the
+value of setting backwards the hands of time. No more delightfully
+fresh and original book has appeared since "Vice Versa" charmed an
+amused world. It is well written, drawn to the life, and full of the
+most enjoyable humor.
+
+
+Midst the Wild Carpathians.
+
+By MAURUS JOKAI, author of "Black Diamonds," "The Lion of Janina,"
+etc. Authorized translation by R. Nisbet Bain. Illustrated. (In
+press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+A thrilling, historical, Hungarian novel, in which the extraordinary
+dramatic and descriptive powers of the great Magyar writer have full
+play. As a picture of feudal life in Hungary it has never been
+surpassed for fidelity and vividness. The translation is exceedingly
+well done.
+
+
+The Golden Dog.
+
+A Romance of Quebec. By WILLIAM KIRBY. New authorized edition.
+Illustrated by J. W. Kennedy.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+A powerful romance of love, intrigue, and adventure in the time of
+Louis XV. and Mme. de Pompadour, when the French colonies were making
+their great struggle to retain for an ungrateful court the fairest
+jewels in the colonial diadem of France.
+
+
+Bijli the Dancer.
+
+By JAMES BLYTHE PATTON. Illustrated by Horace Van Rinth. (In press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+A novel of Modern India. The fortunes of the heroine, an Indian Naucht
+girl, are told with a vigor, pathos, and a wealth of poetic sympathy
+that makes the book admirable from first to last.
+
+
+"To Arms!"
+
+Being Some Passages from the Early Life of Allan Oliphant, Chirurgeon,
+Written by Himself, and now Set Forth for the First Time. By ANDREW
+BALFOUR. Illustrated. (In press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+A romance dealing with an interesting phase of Scottish and English
+history, the Jacobite Insurrection of 1715, which will appeal strongly
+to the great number of admirers of historical fiction. The story is
+splendidly told, the magic circle which the author draws about the
+reader compelling a complete forgetfulness of prosaic nineteenth
+century life.
+
+
+Mere Folly.
+
+A novel. By MARIA LOUISE POOLE, author of "In a Dike Shanty," etc.
+Illustrated. (In press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+An extremely well-written story of modern life. The interest centres
+in the development of the character of the heroine, a New England
+girl, whose high-strung temperament is in constant revolt against the
+confining limitations of nineteenth century surroundings. The reader's
+interest is held to the end, and the book will take high rank among
+American psychological novels.
+
+
+A Hypocritical Romance and other stories.
+
+By CAROLINE TICKNOR. Illustrated by J. W. Kennedy.
+
+1 vol., large 16mo, cloth =$1.00=
+
+Miss Ticknor, well known as one of the most promising of the younger
+school of American writers, has never done better work than in the
+majority of these clever stories, written in a delightful comedy
+vein.
+
+
+Cross Trails.
+
+By VICTOR WAITE. Illustrated. (In press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+A Spanish-American novel of unusual interest, a brilliant, dashing,
+and stirring story, teeming with humanity and life. Mr. Waite is to be
+congratulated upon the strength with which he has drawn his
+characters.
+
+
+A Mad Madonna and other stories.
+
+By L. CLARKSON WHITELOCK, with eight half-tone illustrations.
+
+1 vol., large 16mo, cloth =$1.00=
+
+A half dozen remarkable psychological stories, delicate in color and
+conception. Each of the six has a touch of the supernatural, a quick
+suggestion, a vivid intensity, and a dreamy realism that is matchless
+in its forceful execution.
+
+
+On the Point.
+
+A Summer Idyl. By NATHAN HASKELL DOLE, author of "Not Angels Quite,"
+with dainty half-tone illustrations as chapter headings.
+
+1 vol., large 16mo, cloth =$1.00=
+
+A bright and clever story of a summer on the coast of Maine, fresh,
+breezy, and readable from the first to the last page. The narrative
+describes the summer outing of a Mr. Merrithew and his family. The
+characters are all honest, pleasant people, whom we are glad to know.
+We part from them with the same regret with which we leave a congenial
+party of friends.
+
+
+Cavalleria Rusticana; or, Under the Shadow of Etna.
+
+Translated from the Italian of Giovanni Verga, by NATHAN HASKELL DOLE.
+Illustrated by Etheldred B. Barry.
+
+1 vol., 16mo, cloth =$0.50=
+
+Giovanni Verga stands at present as unquestionably the most prominent
+of the Italian novelists. His supremacy in the domain of the short
+story and in the wider range of the romance is recognized both at home
+and abroad. The present volume contains a selection from the most
+dramatic and characteristic of his Sicilian tales. Verga is himself a
+native of Sicily, and his knowledge of that wonderful country, with
+its poetic and yet superstitious peasantry, is absolute. Such pathos,
+humor, variety, and dramatic quality are rarely met in a single
+volume.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONTINENTAL DRAGOON***
+
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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Continental Dragoon, by Robert Neilson Stephens</title>
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+<body>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Continental Dragoon, by Robert Neilson
+Stephens, Illustrated by H. C. Edwards</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: The Continental Dragoon</p>
+<p> A Love Story of Philipse Manor-House in 1778</p>
+<p>Author: Robert Neilson Stephens</p>
+<p>Release Date: December 3, 2009 [eBook #30589]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONTINENTAL DRAGOON***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h4>E-text prepared by David Edwards, Katherine Ward,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net/c/">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
+ from digital material generously made available by<br />
+ Internet Archive<br />
+ (<a href="http://www.archive.org">http://www.archive.org</a>)</h4>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;" cellpadding="10">
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ Note:
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive. See
+ <a href="http://www.archive.org/details/continentaldrago00stepiala">
+ http://www.archive.org/details/continentaldrago00stepiala</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_1' id='linki_1'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' title='' width='406' height='600' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class="center">
+<h1>The<br />
+Continental<br />
+Dragoon.</h1>
+<p class='larger padtop center'>by<br /><br />
+R. N. Stephens.</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class='adbox'>
+<p>Works of <br /><span class="larger">R. N. STEPHENS.</span></p>
+<hr class='mini' />
+<p>An Enemy to the King.<br />
+The Continental Dragoon.</p>
+<hr class='mini' />
+<p><span class="smaller"><i>In Press</i>:</span><br />
+The Road to Paris.</p>
+<p class='section'>L. C. PAGE AND COMPANY, Publishers,<br />
+<span class="smaller">(INCORPORATED)</span><br />
+196 Summer St., Boston, Mass.</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_2' id='linki_2'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/frontispiece.jpg' alt='' title='' width='317' height='500' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+&ldquo;<i>&lsquo;Take that rebel alive!&rsquo; ordered Colden.</i>&rdquo;<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smaller">Photogravure from original drawing by <br />H. C. Edwards.</span><br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class="center">
+<p class='padtop larger smcap'>THE<br />
+<span class="muchlarger">Continental Dragoon</span></p>
+<p><b>A Love Story of Philipse Manor-House<br />
+in 1778</b></p>
+<p class='larger'><span class='smcaplc'>BY</span>
+ROBERT NEILSON STEPHENS</p>
+<p><span class='smcap'>AUTHOR OF<br />
+&ldquo;AN ENEMY TO THE KING&rdquo;</span></p>
+<p class='padtop'><span class="smaller">Illustrated by</span><br />
+H. C. EDWARDS</p>
+<p class='smaller padtop'>&ldquo;Love&rsquo;s born of a glance, I say&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class='padtop'>BOSTON<br />
+L. C. PAGE AND COMPANY<br />
+<span class='smcaplc'>(INCORPORATED)</span><br />
+1898</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='smaller'><i>Copyright, 1898</i><br />
+<span class='smcap'>By L. C. Page and Company<br />
+(INCORPORATED)</span></p>
+<hr class='mini' />
+<p class='smaller'><i>Entered at Stationer&rsquo;s Hall, London</i></p>
+<p class='smaller smcaplc padtop'>FIFTH THOUSAND</p>
+<p class='smaller'><b>Colonial Press:</b><br />
+Electrotyped and Printed by C. H. Simonds &amp; Co.<br />
+Boston, U. S. A.</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Contents' style='margin:1em auto;'>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'><p class="smaller smcap">Chapter</p></td>
+ <td />
+ <td valign='top' align='right'><p class="smaller ralign smcap">Page</p></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>I.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Riders</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_I_THE_RIDERS'>11</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>II.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Manor-house</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_II_THE_MANORHOUSE'>32</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>III.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Sound of Galloping</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_III_THE_SOUND_OF_GALLOPING'>50</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>IV.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Continental Dragoon</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IV_THE_CONTINENTAL_DRAGOON'>65</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>V.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Black Horse</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_V_THE_BLACK_HORSE'>87</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VI.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The One Chance</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VI_THE_ONE_CHANCE'>116</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Flight of the Minutes</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VII_THE_FLIGHT_OF_THE_MINUTES'>140</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VIII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Secret Passage</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VIII_THE_SECRET_PASSAGE'>156</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>IX.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Confession</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IX_THE_CONFESSION'>180</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>X.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Plan of Retaliation</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_X_THE_PLAN_OF_RETALIATION'>197</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XI.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Conquest</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XI_THE_CONQUEST'>214</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Challenge</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XII_THE_CHALLENGE'>236</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Unexpected</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIII_THE_UNEXPECTED'>252</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIV.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Broken Sword</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIV_THE_BROKEN_SWORD'>267</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
+<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Illustrations' style='margin:1em auto;'>
+<col style='width:75%;' />
+<col style='width:25%;' />
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&ldquo;<span class='smcap'>&lsquo;Take that rebel alive!&rsquo; ordered Colden.</span>&rdquo;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_2'><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td />
+ <td />
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span class='smcap'>&ldquo;&lsquo;Give it to the Colonel.&rsquo;&rdquo;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_3'>82</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span class='smcap'>&ldquo;Leaned forward on the horse&rsquo;s neck.&rdquo;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_4'>111</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span class='smcap'>&ldquo;&lsquo;You are too late, Jack!&rsquo;&rdquo;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_5'>154</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span class='smcap'>&ldquo;&lsquo;Go, I say!&rsquo;&rdquo;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_6'>196</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span class='smcap'>&ldquo;&lsquo;I take my leave of this house!&rsquo;&rdquo;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_7'>248</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_I_THE_RIDERS' id='CHAPTER_I_THE_RIDERS'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+<h3>THE RIDERS.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcapq'><small>&ldquo;</small><span class='drop'>I</span><span class='dcap'> dare</span> say &rsquo;tis a wild, foolish, dangerous thing;
+but I do it, nevertheless! As for my reasons, they
+are the strongest. First, I wish to do it. Second,
+you&rsquo;ve all opposed my doing it. So there&rsquo;s an end
+of the matter!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was, of course, a woman that spoke,&mdash;moreover,
+a young one.</p>
+<p>And she added:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Drat the wind! Can&rsquo;t we ride faster? &rsquo;Twill
+be dark before we reach the manor-house. Get
+along, Cato!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was one of three on horseback, who went
+northward on the Albany post-road late in the afternoon
+of a gray, chill, blowy day in November, in the
+war-scourged year 1778. Beside the girl rode a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span>
+young gentleman, wrapped in a dark cloak. The
+third horse, which plodded a short distance in the
+rear, carried a small negro youth and two large portmanteaus.
+The three riders made a group that was,
+as far as could be seen from their view-point, alone
+on the highway.</p>
+<p>There were reasons why such a group, on that
+road at that time, was an unusual sight,&mdash;reasons
+familiar to any one who is well informed in the
+history of the Revolution. Unfortunately, most
+good Americans are better acquainted with the
+French Revolution than with our own, know more
+about the state of affairs in Rome during the reign
+of Nero than about the condition of things in New
+York City during the British occupation, and compensate
+for their knowledge of Scotch-English border
+warfare in remote times by their ignorance of the
+border warfare that ravaged the vicinity of the island
+of Manhattan, for six years, little more than a century
+ago.</p>
+<p>Our Revolutionary War had reached the respectable
+age of three and a half years. Lexington,
+Bunker Hill, Brooklyn, Harlem Heights, White
+Plains, Trenton, Princeton, the Brandywine, German-town,
+Bennington, Saratoga, and Monmouth&mdash;not
+to mention events in the South and in Canada and
+on the water&mdash;had taken their place in history.
+The army of the King of England had successively
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span>
+occupied Boston, New York, and Philadelphia; had
+been driven out of Boston by siege, and had left
+Philadelphia to return to the town more pivotal and
+nearer the sea,&mdash;New York. One British commander-in-chief
+had been recalled by the British ministry to
+explain why he had not crushed the rebellion, and
+one British major-general had surrendered an army,
+and was now back in England defending his course
+and pleading in Parliament the cause of the Americans,
+to whom he was still a prisoner on parole.
+Our Continental army&mdash;called Continental because,
+like the general Congress, it served the whole union
+of British-settled Colonies or States on this continent,
+and was thus distinguished from the militia, which
+served in each case its particular Colony or State
+only&mdash;had experienced both defeats and victories in
+encounters with the King&rsquo;s troops and his allies, German,
+Hessian, and American Tory. It had endured
+the winter at Valley Forge while the British had
+fed, drunk, gambled, danced, flirted, and wenched in
+Philadelphia. The French alliance had been sanctioned.
+Steuben, Lafayette, DeKalb, Pulaski, Kosciusko,
+Armand, and other Europeans, had taken
+service with us. One plot had been made in Congress
+and the army to supplant Washington in the
+chief command, and had failed. The treason of
+General Charles Lee had come to naught,&mdash;but was
+to wait for disclosure till many years after every person
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span>
+concerned should be graveyard dust. We had
+celebrated two anniversaries of the Fourth of July.
+The new free and independent States had organized
+local governments. The King&rsquo;s appointees still made
+a pretence of maintaining the royal provincial governments,
+but mostly abode under the protection of the
+King&rsquo;s troops in New York. There also many of
+those Americans in the North took refuge who distinctly
+professed loyalty to the King. New York
+was thus the chief lodging-place of all that embodied
+British sovereignty in America. Naturally the material
+tokens of British rule radiated from the town,
+covering all of the island of Manhattan, most of
+Long Island, and all of Staten Island, and retaining
+a clutch here and there on the mainland of New
+Jersey.</p>
+<p>It was the present object of Washington to keep
+those visible signs of English authority penned up
+within this circle around New York. The Continental
+posts, therefore, formed a vast arc, extending
+from the interior of New Jersey through Southeastern
+New York State to Long Island Sound and into
+Connecticut. This had been the situation since midsummer
+of 1778. It was but a detachment from our
+main army that had cooperated with the French fleet
+in the futile attempt to dislodge a British force from
+Newport in August of that year.</p>
+<p>The British commander-in-chief and most of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span>
+superior officers had their quarters in the best residences
+of New York. That town was packed snugly
+into the southern angle of the island of Manhattan,
+like a gift in the toe of a Christmas stocking. Southward,
+some of its finest houses looked across the
+Battery to the bay. Northward the town extended
+little beyond the common fields, of which the City
+Hall Square of 1898 is a reduced survival. The
+island of Manhattan&mdash;with its hills, woods, swamps,
+ponds, brooks, roads, farms, sightly estates, gardens,
+and orchards&mdash;was dotted with the cantonments
+and garrisoned forts of the British. The outposts
+were, largely, entrusted to bodies of Tory allies
+organized in this country. Thus was much of Long
+Island guarded by the three Loyalist battalions of
+General Oliver De Lancey, himself a native of New
+York. On Staten Island was quartered General
+Van Cortlandt Skinner&rsquo;s brigade of New Jersey Volunteers,
+a troop which seems to have had such difficulty
+in finding officers in its own State that it had
+to go to New York for many of them,&mdash;or was it
+that so many more rich New York Loyalists had to
+be provided with commissions than the New York
+Loyalist brigades required as officers?</p>
+<p>But the most important British posts were those
+which guarded the northern entrance to the island
+of Manhattan, where it was separated from the mainland
+by Spuyten Duyvel Kill, flowing westward into
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span>
+the Hudson, and the Harlem, flowing southward into
+the East River. King&rsquo;s Bridge and the Farmers&rsquo;
+Bridge, not far apart, joined the island to the main;
+and just before the Revolution a traveller might have
+made his choice of these two bridges, whether he
+wished to take the Boston road or the road to Albany.
+In 1778 the British &ldquo;barrier&rdquo; was King&rsquo;s
+Bridge, the northern one of the two, the watch-house
+being the tavern at the mainland end of the bridge.
+Not only the bridge, but the Hudson, the Spuyten
+Duyvel, and the Harlem, as well, were commanded
+by British forts on the island of Manhattan. Yet
+there were defences still further out. On the mainland
+was a line of forts extending from the Hudson,
+first eastward, then southward, to the East River.
+Further north, between the Albany road and the
+Hudson, was a camp of German and Hessian allies,
+foot and horse. Northeast, on Valentine&rsquo;s Hill,
+were the Seventy-first Highlanders. Near the
+mainland bank of the Harlem were the quarters of
+various troops of dragoons, most of them American
+Tory corps with English commanders, but one, at
+least, native to the soil, not only in rank and file, but
+in officers also,&mdash;and with no less dash and daring
+than by Tarleton, Simcoe, and the rest, was King
+George III. served by Captain James De Lancey,
+of the county of West Chester, with his &ldquo;cowboys,&rdquo;
+officially known as the West Chester Light Horse.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span></div>
+<p>Thus the outer northern lines of the British were
+just above King&rsquo;s Bridge. The principal camp of
+the Americans was far to the north. Each army
+was affected by conditions that called for a wide
+space of territory between the two forces, between
+the outer rim of the British circle, and the inner face
+of the American arc. Of this space the portion that
+lay bounded on the west by the Hudson, on the
+southeast by Long Island Sound, and cut in two by
+the southward-flowing Bronx, was the most interesting.
+It was called the Neutral Ground, and neutral
+it was in that it had the protection of neither side,
+while it was ravaged by both. Foraged by the two
+armies, under the approved rules of war, it underwent
+further a constant, irregular pillage by gangs
+of mounted rascals who claimed attachment, some
+to the British, some to the Americans, but were not
+owned by either. It was, too, overridden by the
+cavalry of both sides in attempts to surprise outposts,
+cut off supplies, and otherwise harass and
+sting. Unexpected forays by the rangers and dragoons
+from King&rsquo;s Bridge and the Harlem were reciprocated
+by sudden visitations of American horse
+and light infantry from the Greenburg Hills and
+thereabove. The Whig militia of the county also
+took a hand against British Tories and marauders.
+Of the residents, many Tories fled to New York,
+some Americans went to the interior of the country,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span>
+but numbers of each party held their ground, at risk
+of personal harm as well as of robbery. Many of
+the best houses were, at different times during the
+war, occupied as quarters by officers of either side.
+Little was raised on the farms save what the farmers
+could immediately use or easily conceal. The Hudson
+was watched by British war-vessels, while the
+Americans on their side patrolled it with whale-boats,
+long and canoe-like, swift and elusive. For the
+drama of partisan warfare, Nature had provided, in
+lower West Chester County,&mdash;picturesquely hilly,
+beautifully wooded, pleasantly watered, bounded in
+part by the matchless Hudson and the peerless
+Sound,&mdash;a setting unsurpassed.</p>
+<p>Thus was it that Miss Elizabeth Philipse, Major
+John Colden, and Miss Philipse&rsquo;s negro boy, Cuff,
+all riding northward on the Albany post-road, a few
+miles above King&rsquo;s Bridge, but still within territory
+patrolled daily by the King&rsquo;s troops, constituted, on
+that bleak November evening in 1778, a group unusual
+to the time and place.</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Twas a wettish wind, concerning which Miss
+Elizabeth expressed, in the imperative mood, her
+will that it be dratted,&mdash;a feminine wind, truly, as
+was clear from its unexpected flarings up and sudden
+calmings down, its illogical whiskings around and
+eccentric changes of direction. Now it swept down
+the slope from the east, as if it meant to bombard
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span>
+the travellers with all the brown leaves of the hillside.
+Now it assailed them from the north, as if to impede
+their journey; now rushed on them from the rear as
+if it had come up from New York to speed them on
+their way; now attacked them in the left flank, armed
+with a raw chill from the Hudson. It blew Miss
+Elizabeth&rsquo;s hair about and additionally reddened her
+cheeks. It caused the young Tory major to frown,
+for the protection of his eyes, and thus to look more
+and more unlike the happy man that Miss Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+accepted suitor ought to have appeared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I make no doubt I&rsquo;ve brought on me the anger
+of your whole family by lending myself to this.
+And yet I am as much against it as they are!&rdquo;
+So spake the major, in tones as glum as his looks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Twas a choice, then, between their anger and
+mine,&rdquo; said Miss Elizabeth, serenely. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t think
+I wouldn&rsquo;t have come, even if you had refused your
+escort. I&rsquo;d have made the trip alone with Cuff, that&rsquo;s
+all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall be blamed, none the less.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why? You couldn&rsquo;t have hindered me. If
+the excursion is as dangerous as they say it is, your
+company certainly does not add to my danger. It
+lessens it. So, as my safety is what they all clamor
+about, they ought to commend you for escorting me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If they were like ever to take that view, they
+would not all have refused you their own company.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20' name='page_20'></a>20</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;They refused because they neither supposed
+that I would come alone nor that Providence would
+send me an escort in the shape of a surly major on
+leave of absence from Staten Island! Come, Jack,
+you needn&rsquo;t tremble in dread of their wrath. By
+this time my amiable papa and my solicitous
+mamma and my anxious brothers and sisters are
+in such a state of mind about me that, when you
+return to-night and report I&rsquo;ve been safely consigned
+to Aunt Sally&rsquo;s care, they&rsquo;ll fairly worship you as a
+messenger of good news. So be as cheerful as the
+wind and the cold will let you. We are almost
+there. It seems an age since we passed Van Cortlandt&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Major Colden merely sighed and looked more
+dismal, as if knowing the futility of speech.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s the steeple!&rdquo; presently cried the girl,
+looking ahead. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll be at the parsonage in ten
+minutes, and safe in the manor-house in five more.
+Do look relieved, Jack! The journey&rsquo;s end is in
+sight, and we haven&rsquo;t had sight of a soldier this
+side of King&rsquo;s Bridge,&mdash;except Van Wrumb&rsquo;s Hessians
+across Tippett&rsquo;s Vale, and they are friends.
+Br-r-r-r! I&rsquo;ll have Williams make a fire in every
+room in the manor-house!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now while these three rode in seeming security
+from the south towards the church, parsonage, country
+tavern, and great manor-house that constituted
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span>
+the village then called, sometimes Lower Philipsburgh
+and sometimes Younker&rsquo;s, that same hill-varied,
+forest-set, stream-divided place was being
+approached afar from the north by a company of
+mounted troops riding as if the devil was after
+them. It was not the devil, but another body of
+cavalry, riding at equal speed, though at a great
+distance behind. The three people from New York
+as yet neither saw nor heard anything of these
+horsemen dashing down from the north. Yet the
+major&rsquo;s spirits sank lower and lower, as if he had
+an omen of coming evil.</p>
+<p>He was a handsome young man, Major John
+Colden, being not more than twenty-seven years
+old, and having the clearly outlined features best
+suited to that period of smooth-shaven faces. His
+dark eyes and his pensive expression were none the
+less effective for the white powder on his cued hair.
+A slightly petulant, uneasy look rather added to his
+countenance. He was of medium height and regular
+figure. He wore a civilian&rsquo;s cloak or outer coat
+over the uniform of his rank and corps, thus hiding
+also his sword and pistol. Other externals of his
+attire were riding-boots, gloves, and a three-cornered
+hat without a military cockade. He was mounted
+on a sorrel horse a little darker in hue than the
+animal ridden by Miss Elizabeth&rsquo;s black boy, Cuff,
+who wore the rich livery of the Philipses.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span></div>
+<p>The steed of Miss Elizabeth was a slender black,
+sensitive and responsive to her slightest command&mdash;a
+fit mount for this, the most imperious, though not
+the oldest, daughter of Colonel Frederick Philipse,
+third lord, under the bygone royal régime, of the
+manor of Philipsburgh in the Province of New York.
+They gave classic names to quadrupeds in those days
+and Addison&rsquo;s tragedy was highly respected, so Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+scholarly father had christened this horse
+Cato. Howsoever the others who loved her regarded
+her present jaunt, no opposition was shown
+by Cato. Obedient now as ever, the animal bore
+her zealously forward, be it to danger or to what
+she would.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth&rsquo;s resolve to revisit the manor hall on the
+Hudson, which had been left closed up in the steward&rsquo;s
+charge when the family had sought safety in
+their New York City residence in 1777, had sprung
+in part from a powerful longing for the country and
+in part from a dream which had reawakened strongly
+her love for the old house of her birth and of most
+of her girlhood. The peril of her resolve only increased
+her determination to carry it out. Her parents,
+brothers, and sisters stood aghast at the project,
+and refused in any way to countenance it. But there
+was no other will in the Philipse household able to
+cope with Elizabeth&rsquo;s. She held that the thing was
+most practicable and simple, inasmuch as the steward,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span>
+with the aid of two servants, kept the deserted house
+in a state of habitation, and as her mother&rsquo;s sister,
+Miss Sarah Williams, was living with the widow Babcock
+in the parsonage of Lower Philipsburgh and could
+transfer her abode to the manor-house for the time
+of Elizabeth&rsquo;s stay. Major Colden, an unloved lover,&mdash;for
+Elizabeth, accepting marriage as one of the
+inevitables, yet declared that she could never love
+any man, love being admittedly a weakness, and she
+not a weak person,&mdash;was ever watchful for the opportunity
+of ingratiating himself with the superb girl,
+and so fearful of displeasing her that he dared not
+refuse to ride with her. He was less able even than
+her own family to combat her purpose. One day
+some one had asked him why, since she called him
+Jack, and he was on the road to thirty years, while
+she was yet in her teens, he did not call her Betty
+or Bess, as all other Elizabeths were called in those
+days. He meditated a moment, then replied, &ldquo;I
+never heard any one, even in her own family, call
+her so. I can&rsquo;t imagine any one ever calling her by
+any more familiar name than Elizabeth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now it was not from her father that this regal
+young creature could have taken her resoluteness,
+though she may well have got from him some of the
+pride that went with it. There certainly must have
+been more pride than determination in Frederick
+Philipse, third lord of the manor, colonel in provincial
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24' name='page_24'></a>24</span>
+militia before the Revolution, graduate of King&rsquo;s
+College, churchman, benefactor, gentleman of literary
+tastes; amiable, courtly, and so fat that he and his
+handsome wife could not comfortably ride in the same
+coach at the same time. But there was surely as much
+determination as pride in this gentleman&rsquo;s great-grandfather,
+Vrederyck Flypse, descendant of a line of
+viscounts and keepers of the deer forests of Bohemia,
+Protestant victim of religious persecution in his own
+land, immigrant to New Amsterdam about 1650, and
+soon afterward the richest merchant in the province,
+dealer with the Indians, ship-owner in the East and
+West India trade, importer of slaves, leader in provincial
+politics and government, founder of Sleepy
+Hollow Church, probably a secret trafficker with
+Captain Kidd and other pirates, and owner by purchase
+of the territory that was erected by royal
+charter of William and Mary into the lordship and
+manor of Philipsburgh. The strength of will probably
+declined, while the pride throve, in transmission
+to Vrederyck&rsquo;s son, Philip, who sowed wild oats, and
+went to the Barbadoes for his health and married
+the daughter of the English governor of that island.
+Philip&rsquo;s son, Frederick, being born in a hot climate,
+and grandson of an English governor as well as of
+the great Flypse, would naturally have had great
+quantity of pride, whatever his stock of force, particularly
+as he became second lord of the manor at
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25' name='page_25'></a>25</span>
+the lordly age of four. And he could not easily have
+acquired humility in later life, as speaker of the provincial
+Assembly, Baron of the Exchequer, judge of
+the Supreme Court, or founder of St. John&rsquo;s Church,&mdash;towards
+which graceful edifice was the daughter of
+his son, the third lord, directing her horse this wintry
+autumn evening. As for this third lord, he had been
+removed by the new Government to Connecticut for
+favoring the English rule, but, having received permission
+to go to New York for a short time, had
+evinced his fondness for the sweet and soft things of
+life by breaking his parole and staying in the city,
+under the British protection, thus risking his vast
+estate and showing himself a gentleman of anything
+but the courage now displayed by his daughter.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth, therefore, must have derived her spirit,
+with a good measure of pride and a fair share (or
+more) of vanity, from her mother, though, thanks to
+that appreciation of personal comfort which comes
+with middle age, Madam Philipse&rsquo;s high-spiritedness
+would no longer have displayed itself in dangerous
+excursions, nor was it longer equal to a contest
+with the fresher energy of Elizabeth. She was the
+daughter of Charles Williams, once naval officer of
+the port of New York, and his wife, who had been
+Miss Sarah Olivier. Thus came Madam Philipse
+honestly by the description, &ldquo;imperious woman of
+fashion,&rdquo; in which local history preserves her memory.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26' name='page_26'></a>26</span>
+She was a widow of twenty-four when Colonel
+Philipse married her, she having been bereaved two
+years before of her first husband, Mr. Anthony Rutgers,
+the lawyer. She liked display, and her husband
+indulged her inclination without stint, receiving in
+repayment a good nursery-full of what used, in the
+good old days, to be called pledges of affection.
+Being the daughter of a royal office-holding Englishman,
+how could she have helped holding her head
+mighty high on receiving her elevation to the ladyship
+of Philipsburgh, and who shall blame her daughter
+and namesake, now within a stone&rsquo;s throw of St.
+John&rsquo;s parsonage and in full sight of the tree-bowered
+manorial home of her fathers, for holding hers, which
+was younger, a trifle higher?</p>
+<p>Not many high-held heads of this or any other day
+are or were finer than that of Elizabeth Philipse was
+in 1778, or are set on more graceful figures. For all
+her haughtiness, she was not a very large person,
+nor yet was she a small one. She was neither fragile
+nor too ample. Her carriage made her look taller
+than she was. She was of the brown-haired, blue-eyed
+type, but her eyes were not of unusual size or
+surpassing lucidity, being merely clear, honest, steady
+eyes, capable rather of fearless or disdainful attention
+than of swift flashes or coquettish glances. The precision
+with which her features were outlined did not
+lessen the interest that her face had from her pride,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span>
+spirit, independence, and intelligence. She was, moreover,
+an active, healthy creature, and if she commanded
+the dratting of the wind, it was not as much
+because she was chilled by it as because it blew her
+cloak and impeded her progress. In fine, she was a
+beauty; else this historian would never have taken
+the trouble of unearthing from many places and
+piecing together the details of this fateful incident,&mdash;for
+if any one supposes that the people of this
+narrative are mere fictions, he or she is radically in
+error. They lived and achieved, under the names
+they herein bear; were as actual as the places herein
+mentioned,&mdash;as any of the numerous patriotic Americans
+who daily visit the genealogical shelves of the
+public libraries can easily learn, if they will spare
+sufficient time from the laudable task of hunting
+down their own ancestors. If this story is called a
+romance, that term is used here only as it is oft applied
+to actual occurrences of a romantic character.
+So the Elizabeth Philipse who, before crossing the
+Neperan to approach the manor-house, stopped in
+front of the snug parsonage at the roadside and
+directed Cuff to knock at the door, was as real as
+was then the parsonage itself.</p>
+<p>Presently a face appeared furtively at one of the
+up-stairs windows. The eyes thereof, having dwelt
+for an instant on the mounted party shivering in the
+road, opened wide in amazement, and a minute later,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span>
+after a sound of key-turning and bolt-drawing, the
+door opened, and a good-looking lady appeared in
+the doorway, backed up by a servant and two pretty
+children who clung, half-curious, half-frightened, to
+the lady&rsquo;s skirts.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Miss Elizabeth! Is it possible&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Elizabeth cut the speech of the astonished
+lady short.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, my dear Mrs. Babcock,&mdash;and I know how
+dangerous, and all that! And, thank you, I&rsquo;ll not
+come in. I shall see you during the week. I&rsquo;m
+going to the manor-house to stay awhile, and I wish
+my aunt to stay there with me, if you can spare her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes,&mdash;of course,&mdash;but&mdash;here comes
+your aunt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Elizabeth, what in the world&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was a somewhat stately woman at first sight,
+was Elizabeth&rsquo;s mother&rsquo;s sister, Miss Sarah Williams;
+but on acquaintance soon conciliated and found to
+be not at all the formidable and haughty person she
+would have had people believe her; not too far gone
+in middle age, preserving, despite her spinsterhood,
+much of her bloom and many of those little roundnesses
+of contour which adorn but do not encumber.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t time to say what, aunt,&rdquo; broke in
+Elizabeth. &ldquo;I want to get to the manor-house
+before it is night. You are to stay with me there
+a week. So put on a wrap and come over as soon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span>
+as you can, to be in time for supper. I&rsquo;ll send a boy
+for you, if you like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, no, there&rsquo;s some one here will walk over
+with me, I dare say. But, la me, Elizabeth,&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I&rsquo;ll look for you in five minutes. Good
+night, Mrs. Babcock! I trust your little ones are
+well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And she rode off, followed by Colden and Cuff,
+leaving the two women in the parsonage doorway to
+exchange what conjectures and what ejaculations of
+wonderment the circumstances might require.</p>
+<p>Night was falling when the riders crossed the
+Neperan (then commonly known as the Saw Mill
+River) by the post-road bridge, and gazed more
+closely on the stone manor-house. Looking westward,
+from the main road, across the hedge and
+paling fence, they saw, first the vast lawn with its
+comely trees, then the long east front of the house,
+with its two little entrance-porches, the row of
+windows in each of its two stories, the dormer windows
+projecting from the sloping roof, the balustraded
+walk on the roof-top; at both ends the
+green and brown and yellow hints of what lay north
+of the house, between it and the forest, and west of
+the house, between it and the Hudson,&mdash;the box-hedged
+gardens, the terraces breaking the slope to
+the river, the deer paddock enclosed by high pickets,
+the great orchard. The Hudson was nearer to the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span>
+house then than now, and its lofty further bank,
+rich with growth of wood and leaf, was the backing
+for the westward view. To the east, which the
+riders put behind them in facing the manor-house,
+were the hills of the interior.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not a sign of light from the house, and the
+shutters all closed, as if it were a tomb! It looks
+as cold and empty as one. I&rsquo;ll soon make it warm
+and live enough inside at least!&rdquo; said Elizabeth, and
+turned westward from the highway into the short
+road that ran between the mansion and the north
+bank of the Neperan, by the grist-mill and the gate
+and the stables, down a picturesque descent to a
+landing where that stream entered the Hudson.</p>
+<p>She proceeded towards the gate, where, being near
+the southeast corner of the house, one could see
+that the south front was to the east front as the
+base to the upright of a capital L turned backward;
+that the south front resembled the east in all but
+in being shorter and having a single porched entrance,
+which was in its middle.</p>
+<p>As the party neared the gate, there arose far
+northward a sound of many horsemen approaching
+at a fast gallop. Elizabeth at once reined in, to
+listen. Major Colden and Cuff followed her example,
+both looking at her in apprehension. The
+galloping was on the Albany road, but presently
+deviated eastwardly, then decreased.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve turned up the road to Mile Square,
+whoever they are,&rdquo; said Elizabeth, and led the way
+on to the gate, which Cuff, dismounting, quickly
+opened, its fastening having been removed and not
+replaced. &ldquo;Lead your horse to the door, Cuff.
+Then take off the portmanteaus and knock, and
+tie the horses to the post.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She rode up to the southern door in the east
+front, and was there assisted to dismount by the
+major, while Cuff followed in obedience. Colden,
+as the sound of the distant galloping grew fainter
+and fainter, showed more relief than he might have
+felt had he known that a second troop was soon to
+come speeding down in the track of the first.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth, in haste to escape the wind, stepped
+into the little porch and stood impatiently before the
+dark, closed door of the house of her fathers.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_II_THE_MANORHOUSE' id='CHAPTER_II_THE_MANORHOUSE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+<h3>THE MANOR-HOUSE.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> stone mansion before which the travellers
+stood, awaiting answer to Cuff&rsquo;s loud knock on the
+heavy mahogany door, had already acquired antiquity
+and memories. It was then, as to all south
+of the porch which now sheltered the three visitors,
+ninety-six years old, and as to the rest of the eastern
+front thirty-three, so that its newest part was twice
+the age of Elizabeth herself.</p>
+<p>Her grandfather&rsquo;s grandfather, the first lord of
+the manor, built the southern portion in 1682, a
+date not far from that of the erection of his upper
+house, called Philipse Castle, at what is now Tarrytown,&mdash;but
+whether earlier or later, let the local
+historians dispute. This southern portion comprised
+the entire south front, its length running east and
+west, its width going back northward to, but not
+including, the large east entrance-hall, into which
+opened the southern door of the east front. The
+new part, attached to the original house as the
+upright to the short, broad base of the reversed L,
+was added by Elizabeth&rsquo;s grandfather, the second
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span>
+lord, in 1745. The addition, with the eastern section
+of the old part, was thereafter the most used
+portion, and the south front yielded in importance
+to the new east front. The two porched doors in
+the latter front matched each other, though the
+southern one gave entrance to the fine guests in silk
+and lace, ruffles and furbelows, who came up from
+New York and the other great mansions of the
+county to grace the frequent festivities of the Philipses;
+while the northern one led to the spacious
+kitchen where means were used to make the aforesaid
+guests feel that they had not arrived in vain.</p>
+<p>The original house, rectangular as to its main
+part, had two gables, and, against its rear or
+northern length, a pent-roofed wing, and probably a
+veranda, the last covering the space later taken by
+the east entrance-hall. The main original building,
+on its first floor, had (and has) a wide entrance-hall
+in its middle, with one large parlor on each side.
+The second floor, reached by staircase from the
+lower hall, duplicated the first, there being a middle
+hall and two great square chambers. Overhead,
+there was plentiful further room beneath the gable
+roof. Under the western room of the first floor was
+the earlier kitchen, which, before 1745, served in
+relation to the guests who entered by the southern
+door exactly as thereafter the new kitchen served in
+relation to those entering by the eastern door,&mdash;making
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span>
+them glad they had come, by horse or coach,
+over the long, bad, forest-bordered roads. Adjacent
+to the old kitchen was abundant cellarage for the
+stowing of many and diverse covetable things of
+the trading first lord&rsquo;s importation.</p>
+<p>The Neperan joined the Hudson in the midst
+of wilderness, where Indians and deer abounded,
+when Vrederyck Flypse caused the old part of the
+stone mansion to grow out of the green hill slope in
+1682. He planted a foundation two feet thick and
+thereupon raised walls whose thickness was twenty
+inches. He would have a residence wherein he
+might defy alike the savage elements, men and
+beasts. For the front end of his entrance-hall he
+imported a massive mahogany door made in 1681 in
+Holland,&mdash;a door in two parts, so that the upper half
+could be opened, while the lower half remained shut.
+The rear door of that hall was similarly made. Ponderous
+were the hinges and bolts, being ordinary
+blacksmith work. Solid were the panel mouldings.
+He brought Holland brick wherewith to
+trim the openings of doorways and windows. He
+laid the floor of his aforesaid kitchen with blue
+stone. The chimney breasts and hearthstones of
+his principal rooms were seven feet wide.</p>
+<p>Here, in feudal fashion, with many servants and
+slaves to do his bidding, and tenants to render him
+dues, sometimes dwelt Vrederyck Flypse, with his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span>
+second wife, Catherine Van Cortlandt, and the children
+left by his first wife, Margaret Hardenbrock;
+but sometimes some of the family lived in New York,
+and sometimes at the upper stone house, &ldquo;Castle
+Philipse,&rdquo; by the Pocantico, near Sleepy Hollow
+Church, of this Flypse&rsquo;s founding. He built mills
+near both his country-houses, and from the saw-mill
+near the lower one did the Neperan receive the name
+of Saw Mill River. He died in 1702, in his seventy-seventh
+year, and the bones of him lie in Sleepy Hollow
+Church.</p>
+<p>But even before the first lord went, did &ldquo;associations&rdquo;
+begin to attach to the old Dutch part of the
+mansion. Besides the leading families of the province,
+the traders,&mdash;Dutch and English,&mdash;and the
+men with whom he held counsel upon affairs temporal
+and spiritual, public and private, terrestrial and
+marine, he had for guests red Indians, and, there
+is every reason to believe, gentlemen who sailed the
+seas under what particular flag best promoted their
+immediate purposes, or under none at all. That old
+story never <i>would</i> down, to the effect that the adventurous
+Kidd levied not on the ships of Vrederyck
+Flypse. The little landing-place where Neperan
+joined Hudson, at which the Flypses stepped ashore
+when they came up from New York by sloop instead
+of by horse, was trodden surely by the feet of more
+than one eminent oceanic exponent of&mdash;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span></div>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<p class='cg'>&ldquo;The good old rule, the simple plan,<br />
+<span class='indent2'>&nbsp;</span>That they should take who have the power<br />
+And they should keep who can.&rdquo;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>A great merchant may have more than one way of
+doing business, and I would not undertake to account
+for every barrel and box that was unladen at that little
+landing. Nor would I be surprised to encounter
+sometime, among the ghosts of Philipse Manor Hall,
+that of the immortal Kidd himself, seated at dead of
+night, across the table from the first lord of the
+manor, before a blazing log in the seven-foot fireplace,
+drinking liquor too good for the church-founding
+lord to have questioned whence it came; and
+leaving the next day without an introduction to the
+family.</p>
+<p>This 1682 part of the house, in facing south, had
+the Albany road at its left, the Hudson at its right,
+and at its front the lane that ran by the Neperan,
+from the road to the river. Thus was the house for
+sixty-three years. When the first lord&rsquo;s grandson,
+Elizabeth&rsquo;s grandfather, in 1745 made the addition
+at the north, what was the east gable-end of the
+old house became part of the east front of the completed
+mansion. The east rooms of the old house
+were thus the southeast rooms of the completed
+mansion, and, being common to both fronts, gained
+by the change of relation, becoming the principal
+parlor and the principal chamber. The east parlor,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span>
+entered on the west from the old hall, was entered
+on the north from the new hall; and the new
+hall was almost a duplicate of the old, but its
+ceiling decorations and the mahogany balustrade of
+its stairway were the more elaborate. This stairway,
+like its fellow in the old hall, ascended, with two
+turns, to a hall in the second story. Besides the
+new halls, the addition included, on the first floor, a
+large dining-room and the great kitchen; on the
+second floor, five sleeping-chambers, and, in the
+space beneath the roof-tree, dormitories for servants
+and slaves. Elizabeth&rsquo;s grandfather gave the house
+the balustrade that crowns its roof from its northern
+to its southern, and thence to its western end. He
+had the interior elaborately finished. The old part
+and its decorations were Dutch, but now things in
+the province were growing less Dutch and more
+English,&mdash;like the Philipse name and blood themselves,&mdash;and
+so the new embellishments were English.
+The second lord imported marble mantels
+from England, had the walls beautifully wainscoted,
+adorned the ceilings richly with arabesque work in
+wood. He laid out, in the best English fashion, a
+lawn between the eastern front and the Albany post-road.
+He it was who married Joanna, daughter of
+Governor Anthony Brockholst, of a very ancient
+family of Lancashire, England; and who left provision
+for the founding of St. John&rsquo;s Church, across
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span>
+the Neperan from the manor-house, and for the
+endowment of the glebe thereof. And in his long
+time the manor-house flourished and grew venerable
+and multiplied its associations. He had five children:
+Frederick (Elizabeth&rsquo;s father), Philip, Susannah, Mary
+(the beauty, wooed of Washington in 1756, &rsquo;tis said,
+and later wed by Captain Roger Morris), and Margaret;
+and, at this manor-house alone, white servants
+thirty, and black servants twenty; and a numerous
+tenantry, happy because in many cases the yearly
+rent was but nominal, being three or four pounds or
+a pair of hens or a day&rsquo;s work,&mdash;for the Philipses,
+thanks to trade and to office-holding under the Crown,
+and to the beneficent rule whereby money multiplies
+itself, did not have to squeeze a living out of the
+tillers of their land. The lord of the manor held
+court leet and baron at the house of a tenant, and
+sometimes even inflicted capital punishment.</p>
+<p>In 1751, the second lord followed his grandfather
+to the family vault in Sleepy Hollow Church. With
+the accession of Elizabeth&rsquo;s father, then thirty-one
+years old, began the splendid period of the mansion;
+then the panorama of which it was both witness and
+setting wore its most diverse colors. The old contest
+between English and French on this continent
+was approaching its glorious climax. Whether they
+were French emissaries coming down from Quebec,
+by the Hudson or by horse, or English and colonial
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span>
+officers going up from New York in command of
+troops, they must needs stop and pay their respects
+to the lord of the manor of Philipsburgh, and drink
+his wine, and eat his venison, and flirt with his
+stunning sisters. Soldiers would go from New York
+by the post-road to Philipsburgh, and then embark
+at the little landing, to proceed up the Hudson, on
+the way to be scalped by the red allies of the French
+or mowed down by Montcalm&rsquo;s gunners before impregnable
+Ticonderoga. Many were the comings
+and goings of the scarlet coat and green. The
+Indian, too, was still sufficiently plentiful to contribute
+much to the environing picturesqueness. But,
+most of all, in those days, the mansion got its character
+from the festivities devised by its own inmates
+for the entertainment of the four hundred of that
+time.</p>
+<p>For Elizabeth&rsquo;s mother, of the same given name,
+was &ldquo;very fond of display,&rdquo; and in her day the family
+&ldquo;lived showily.&rdquo; Her husband (who was usually
+called Colonel Philipse, from his title in the militia, and
+rarely if ever called lord) had the house refurnished.
+It was he who had the princely terraces made on the
+slope between the mansion and the Hudson, and
+who had new gardens laid out and adorned with tall
+avenues of box and rarest fruit-trees and shrubs.
+Doubtless his deer, in their picketed enclosure, were
+a sore temptation to the country marksmen who
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span>
+passed that way. Lady, or Madam, or Mrs. Philipse,
+the colonel&rsquo;s wife, bedazzled the admiring inhabitants
+of West Chester County in many ways, but there is
+a difference between authorities as to whether it was
+she that used to drive four superb black horses over
+the bad roads of the county, or whether it was her
+mother-in-law, the second lord&rsquo;s wife. Certainly it
+was the latter that was killed by a fall from a carriage,
+and certainly both had fine horses and magnificent
+coaches, and drove over bad roads,&mdash;for all
+roads were bad in those days, even in Europe, save
+those the Romans left.</p>
+<p>Of all the gay and hospitable occasions that brought,
+through the mansion&rsquo;s wide doors, courtly gentlemen
+and high-and-mighty ladies, from their coaches, sleighs,
+horses, or Hudson sloops, perhaps none saw more feasting
+and richer display of ruffles and brocade than did
+the wedding of Mary Philipse and Captain Morris,
+seven years after the death of her father, and two after
+the marriage of her brother. It was on the afternoon
+of Sunday, Jan. 15, 1758. In the famous east parlor,
+which has had much mention and will have more in
+course of this narrative, was raised a crimson canopy
+emblazoned with the Philipse crest,&mdash;a crowned
+golden demi-lion rampant, upon a golden coronet.
+Though the weather was not severe, there was snow
+on the ground, and the guests began to drive up in
+sleighs, under the white trees, at two o&rsquo;clock. At
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span>
+three arrived the Rev. Henry Barclay, rector of
+Trinity, New York, and his assistant, Mr. Auchmuty.
+At half-past three the beauteous Mary (did so proud
+a heart-breaker blush, I wonder?) and the British
+captain stood under the crimson canopy and gold,
+and were united, &ldquo;in the presence of a brilliant
+assembly,&rdquo; says the old county historian.<a href='#Footnote_0001' class='fnanchor'>[1]</a> Miss Barclay,
+Miss Van Cortlandt, and Miss De Lancey were
+the bridesmaids, and the groomsmen were Mr. Heathcote
+(of the family of the lords of the manor of
+Scarsdale), Captain Kennedy (of Number One, Broadway),
+and Mr. Watts. No need to report here who
+were &ldquo;among those present.&rdquo; The wedding did not
+occur yesterday, and the guests will not be offended
+at the omission of their names; but one of them was
+Acting Governor De Lancey. Colonel Philipse&mdash;wearing
+the ancestral gold chain and jewelled badge
+of the keepers of the deer forests of Bohemia&mdash;gave
+the bride away, and with her went a good portion of
+the earth&rsquo;s surface, and much money, jewelry, and
+plate.</p>
+<p>After the wedding came the feast, and the guests&mdash;or
+most of them&mdash;stayed so late they were not
+sorry for the brilliant moonlight of the night that set
+in upon their feasting. And now the legend! In the
+midst of the feast, there appeared at the door of the
+banquet-hall a tall Indian, with a scarlet blanket
+close about him, and in solemn tones quoth he,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span>
+&ldquo;Your possessions shall pass from you when the
+eagle shall despoil the lion of his mane.&rdquo; Thereupon
+he disappeared, of course, as suddenly as he had
+come, and the way in which historians have treated
+this legend shows how little do historians apply to
+their work the experiences of their daily lives,&mdash;such
+an experience, for instance, as that of ignoring
+some begging Irishwoman&rsquo;s request for &ldquo;a few pennies
+in the Lord&rsquo;s name,&rdquo; and thereupon receiving a
+volley of hair-raising curses and baleful predictions.
+&rsquo;Tis easy to believe in the Indian and the prophecy
+of a passing of possessions, even though it was fulfilled;
+but the time-clause involving the eagle and
+the lion was doubtless added after the bird had
+despoiled the beast.</p>
+<p>It was years and years afterward, and when and
+because the eagle had decided to attempt the said
+despoiling, that there was a change of times at
+Philipse Manor Hall. Meanwhile had young Frederick,
+and Maria, and Elizabeth, and their brothers
+and sisters arrived on the scene. What could one
+have expected of the ease-loving, beauty-loving, book-loving,
+luxury-loving, garden-loving, and wide-girthed
+lord of the manor&mdash;connected by descent, kinship,
+and marriage with royal office-holding&mdash;but Toryism?
+In fact, nobody did expect else of him, for
+though he tried in 1775 to conceal his sympathy
+with the cause of the King, the powers in revolt
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span>
+inferred it, and took measures to deter him from
+actively aiding the British forces. His removal to
+Hartford, his return to the manor-house,&mdash;where he
+was for awhile, in the fall of 1776, at the time of
+the battle of White Plains,&mdash;his memorable business
+trip to New York, and his parole-breaking continuance
+there, heralded the end of the old régime
+in Philipse Manor Hall. The historians say that
+at that time of Colonel Philipse&rsquo;s last stay at the
+hall, Washington quartered there for awhile, and
+occupied the great southwestern chamber. Doubtless
+Washington did occupy that chamber once
+upon a time, but his itinerary and other circumstances
+are against its having been immediately
+before or immediately after the battle of White
+Plains. Some of the American officers were there
+about the time. As for the colonel&rsquo;s family, it did
+not abandon the house until 1777. With the occasions
+when, during the first months of Revolutionary
+activity in the county, use was sought of the
+secret closets and the underground passage thoughtfully
+provided by the earlier Philipses in days of risk
+from Indians, fear of Frenchmen, and dealings with
+pirates, this history has naught to do.</p>
+<p>In 1777, then, the family took a farewell view of
+the old house, and somewhat sadly, more resentfully,
+wended by familiar landmarks to New York,&mdash;to
+await there a joyous day of returning, when the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span>
+King&rsquo;s regiments should have scattered the rebels
+and hanged their leaders. John Williams, steward of
+the manor, was left to take care of the house against
+that day, with one white housemaid, who was of kin
+to him, and one black slave, a man. The outside shutters
+of the first story, the inside shutters above, were
+fastened tight; the bolts of the ponderous mahogany
+doors were strengthened, the stables and mills
+and outbuildings emptied and locked. Much that
+was precious in the house went with the family
+and horses and servants to New York. Yet be
+sure that proper means of subsistence for Williams
+and his two helpers were duly stowed away, for the
+faithful steward had to himself the discharge of that
+matter.</p>
+<p>So wholesale a departure went with much bustle,
+and it was not till he returned from seeing the numerous
+party off, and found himself alone with the
+maid and the slave in the great entrance-hall, which
+a few minutes before had been noisy with voices,
+that Williams felt to the heart the sudden loneliness
+of the place. The face of Molly, the maid,
+was white and ready for weeping, and there was a
+gravity on the chocolate visage of black Sam that
+gave the steward a distinctly tremulous moment.
+Perhaps he recalled the prediction of the Indian,
+and had a flash of second sight, and perceived that
+the third lord of the manor was to be the last.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span>
+Howbeit, he cleared his throat and set black Sam
+to laying in fire-wood as for a siege, and Molly to
+righting the disorder caused by the exodus; betook
+himself cellarward, and from a hidden place drew
+forth a bottle of an old vintage, and comforted his
+solitude. He was a snug, honest, discreet man of
+forty, was the steward, slim but powerful, looking
+his office, besides knowing and fulfilling it.</p>
+<p>But, as the months passed, he became used to
+the solitude, and the routine of life in the closed-up,
+memory-haunted old house took on a certain charm.
+The living was snug enough in what parts of the
+mansion the steward and his two servitors put to
+their own daily use. As for the other parts, the
+great dark rooms and entrance-halls, we may be
+sure that when the steward went the rounds, and
+especially after a visit to the wine-cellar, he found
+them not so empty, but peopled with the vague and
+shifting images of the many beings, young and old,
+who had filled the house with life in brighter days.
+Then, if ever, did noise of creaking stair or sound
+as of human breath, or, perchance, momentary vision
+of flitting face against the dark, betray the present
+ghost of some old-time habitué of the mansion.</p>
+<p>When the raiding and foraging and marauding
+began in the county, the manor-house was not molested.
+The partisan warfare had not yet reached
+its magnitude. After the battle of White Plains
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span>
+in 1776, the British had retained New York City,
+while the main American army, leaving a small
+force above, had gone to New Jersey. Late in
+1777, the British main army, leaving New York
+garrisoned, had departed to contest with the Americans
+for Philadelphia. Not until July, 1778, after
+Monmouth battle, did the British main army return
+to New York, and the American forces form the
+great arc, with their chief camp in upper West
+Chester County. Then was great increase of foray
+and pillage. The manor-house was of course exempt
+from harm at the hands of King&rsquo;s troops and
+Tory raiders, while it was protected from American
+regulars by Washington&rsquo;s policy against useless
+destruction, and from the marauding &ldquo;Skinners&rdquo;
+by its nearness to the British lines and by the solidity
+of its walls, doors, and shutters. Its gardens
+suffered, its picket fences and gate fastenings were
+tampered with, its orchards prematurely plucked.
+But its trees were spared by the British foragers,
+and the house itself was no longer in demand as
+officers&rsquo; quarters, being too near King&rsquo;s Bridge for
+safe American occupancy, but not sufficiently near
+for British. Hessians and Tories, though, patrolled
+the near-by roads, and sometimes Continental troops
+camped in the neighboring hills. In 1778, the
+American Colonel Gist, whose corps was then at
+the foot of Boar Hill, north of the manor-house, was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span>
+paying his court to the handsome widow Babcock,
+in the parsonage, when he was surprised by a force
+of yagers, rangers, and Loyalist light horse, and got
+away in the nick of time.<a href='#Footnote_0002' class='fnanchor'>[2]</a> The parsonage, unlike
+the manor-house, was often visited by officers on
+their way hither and thither, but I will not say it
+was for this reason that Miss Sally Williams, the
+sister of Colonel Philipse&rsquo;s wife, preferred living in
+the parsonage with the Babcocks rather than in the
+great deserted mansion.</p>
+<p>On a dark November afternoon, Williams had
+sent black Sam to the orchard for some winter
+apples, and the slave, after the fashion of his race,
+was taking his time over the errand. The shades
+of evening gathered while the steward was making
+his usual rounds within the mansion. Molly, whose
+housewifely instincts ever asserted themselves, had
+of her own accord made a dusting tour of the rooms
+and halls. She was on the first landing of the stairway
+in the east hall, just about to finish her task
+in the waning light admitted by the window over the
+landing and by the fanlight over the front door,
+when, as she applied her cloth to the mahogany balustrade,
+the door of the east parlor opened, and
+Williams came out of that dark apartment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lord, Molly!&rdquo; he said, a moment later, having
+started at suddenly beholding her. &ldquo;I thought
+you were a ghost! It&rsquo;s time to get supper, I think,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span>
+from the look of the day outside. I&rsquo;ll have to make
+a light.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From a closet in the side of the staircase he took
+a candle, flint, and tinder, talking the while to Molly,
+as she rubbed the balusters. Having produced a
+tiny candle-flame that did not light up half the
+hall, Williams started towards the dining-room, but
+stopped at a distant sound of galloping horses,
+which were evidently coming down the Albany road.
+The steward and the maid exchanged conjectures as
+to whether this meant a British patrol or &ldquo;Rebel&rdquo;
+dragoons, &ldquo;Skinners&rdquo; or Hessian yagers, Highlanders,
+or Loyalist light horse; and then observed
+from the sound that the horses had turned aside
+into the Mile Square road.</p>
+<p>But now came a new sound of horses, and though
+it was of only a few, and those walking, it gave
+Williams quite a start, for the footfalls were manifestly
+approaching the mansion. They as manifestly
+stopped before that very hill. And then came a
+sharp knock on the mahogany door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See who it is,&rdquo; whispered Molly.</p>
+<p>Williams hesitated. The knock was repeated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s there?&rdquo; called out Williams.</p>
+<p>There was an answer, but the words could not
+be made out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who?&rdquo; repeated Williams.</p>
+<p>This time the answer was clear enough.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s I, Williams! Don&rsquo;t keep me standing here
+in the wind all night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Miss Elizabeth!&rdquo; cried Molly; and Williams,
+in a kind of daze of astonishment, hastily
+unlocked, unbolted, and threw open the door.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_III_THE_SOUND_OF_GALLOPING' id='CHAPTER_III_THE_SOUND_OF_GALLOPING'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+<h3>THE SOUND OF GALLOPING.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>A rush</span> of wind came in from the outer gloom and
+almost blew out the candle. Williams held up his
+hand to protect the flame and stepped aside from
+before the doorway.</p>
+<p>The wind was promptly followed by Elizabeth,
+who strode in with the air that a king might show
+on reentering one of his palaces, still holding her
+whip in her gloved hand. Behind her came Colden,
+the picture of moody dejection. When Cuff had
+entered with the portmanteaus, Williams, seeing but
+three horses without, closed the door, locked it, and
+looked with inquiry and bewilderment at Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Br-r-r-r!&rdquo; she ejaculated. &ldquo;Light up my chamber,
+Molly, and have a fire in it; then make some
+hot tea, and get me something to eat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Elizabeth&rsquo;s impetuosity sent the open-mouthed
+maid flying up-stairs to execute the first part of the
+order, whereupon the mistress turned to the wondering
+steward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come to spend a week at the manor-house,
+Williams. Cuff, take those to my room.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span></div>
+<p>The black boy, with the portmanteaus, followed in
+the way Molly had taken, but with less rapidity.
+By this time Williams had recovered somewhat from
+his surprise, and regained his voice and something
+of his stewardly manner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I scarcely expected any of the family out from
+New York these times, miss. There&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose not!&rdquo; Elizabeth broke in. &ldquo;Have
+some one put away the horses, Williams, or they&rsquo;ll
+be shivering. It&rsquo;s mighty cold for the time of year.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go myself, ma&rsquo;am. There&rsquo;s only black Sam,
+you know, and he isn&rsquo;t back from the orchard. I
+sent him to get some apples.&rdquo; And the steward set
+the candlestick on the newel post of the stairway,
+and started for the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, let Cuff go,&rdquo; said Elizabeth, sitting down on
+a settle that stood with its back to the side of the
+staircase. &ldquo;You start a fire in the room next mine,
+for aunt Sally. She&rsquo;ll be over from the parsonage
+in a few minutes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Williams thereupon departed in quest of the
+stable key, inwardly devoured by a mighty curiosity
+as to the wherefore of Elizabeth&rsquo;s presence
+here in the company of none but her affianced,
+and also the wherefore of that gentleman&rsquo;s manifest
+depression of spirits. His curiosity was not
+lessened when the major called after him:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell Cuff he may feed my horse, but not take
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span>
+the saddle off. I must ride back to New York as
+soon as the beast is rested.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said Elizabeth to Colden, &ldquo;you may stay
+for a bite of supper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, thank you! I am not hungry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A glass of wine, then,&rdquo; said the girl, quite heedless
+of his tone; &ldquo;if there is any left in the house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No wine, I thank you!&rdquo; Colden stood motionless,
+too far back in the hall to receive much light
+from the feeble candle, like a shadowy statue of the
+sulks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As you will!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Whereupon Elizabeth, as if she had satisfied her
+conscience regarding what was due from her in the
+name of hospitality, rose, and opened the door to
+the east parlor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ugh! How dark and lonely the house is! No
+wonder aunt Sally chose to live at the parsonage.&rdquo;
+After one look into the dark apartment, she closed
+the door. &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ll warm up the place a bit.
+Sorry you can&rsquo;t stay with us, major.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is only you who send me away,&rdquo; said Colden,
+dismally and reproachfully. &ldquo;I could have got
+longer leave of absence. You let me escort you
+here, because no gentleman of your family will lend
+himself to your reckless caprice. And then, having
+no further present use for me, you send me about
+my business!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span></div>
+<p>Elizabeth, preferring to pace the hall until her
+chamber should be heated, and her aunt should
+arrive, was striking her cloak with her riding-whip
+at each step; not that the cloak needed dusting, but
+as a method of releasing surplus energy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I do have further present use for you,&rdquo; she
+said. &ldquo;You are going back to New York to inform
+my dear timid parents and sisters and brothers that
+I&rsquo;ve arrived here safe. They&rsquo;ll not sleep till you tell
+them so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One of your slaves might bear that news as
+well,&rdquo; quoth the major.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, are you not forever calling yourself my
+slave? Besides, my devotion to King George won&rsquo;t
+let me weaken his forces by holding one of his officers
+from duty longer than need be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Colden was not to be cheered by pleasantry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What a man you are! So cross at my sending
+you back that you&rsquo;ll neither eat nor drink before
+going. Pray don&rsquo;t pout, Colden. &rsquo;Tis foolish!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I dare say! A man in love does many foolish
+things!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The utterance of this great and universal truth
+had not time to receive comment from Elizabeth
+before Cuff reappeared, with the stable key; and at
+the same instant, a rather delicate, inoffensive knock
+was heard on the front door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That must be aunt Sally,&rdquo; said Elizabeth.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span>
+&ldquo;Let her in, Cuff. Then go and stable the horses.
+My poor Cato will freeze!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was indeed Miss Sarah Williams, and in a state
+of breathlessness. She had been running, perhaps
+to escape the unseemly embraces of the wind, which
+had taken great liberties with her skirts,&mdash;liberties
+no less shocking because of the darkness of the
+evening; for though De la Rochefoucauld has settled
+it that man&rsquo;s alleged courage takes a vacation when
+darkness deprives it of possible witnesses, no one will
+accuse an elderly maiden&rsquo;s modesty of a like eclipse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear child, what could have induced you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+were her first words to Elizabeth; but her attention
+was at that point distracted by seeing Cuff, outside
+the threshold, about to pull the door shut. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
+close the door yet, boy. Some one is coming.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cuff thereupon started on his task of stabling the
+three horses, leaving the door open. The flame of
+the candle on the newel post was blown this way
+and that by the in-rushing wind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s old Mr. Valentine,&rdquo; explained Miss Sally to
+Elizabeth. &ldquo;He offered to show me over from the
+parsonage, where he happened to be calling, so I
+didn&rsquo;t wait for Mrs. Babcock&rsquo;s boy&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You found Mr. Valentine pleasanter company,
+I suppose, aunty, dear,&rdquo; put in Elizabeth, who spared
+neither age nor dignity. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s a widower again,
+isn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span></div>
+<p>Miss Sally blushed most becomingly. Her plump
+cheeks looked none the worse for this modest suffusion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fie, child! He&rsquo;s eighty years old. Though, to
+be sure, the attentions of a man of his experience
+and judgment aren&rsquo;t to be considered lightly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Those were the days when well-bred people could&mdash;and
+often did, naturally and without effort&mdash;improvise
+grammatical sentences of more than twelve
+words, in the course of ordinary, every-day talk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We started from the parsonage together,&rdquo; went
+on Miss Sally, &ldquo;but I was so impatient I got ahead.
+He doesn&rsquo;t walk as briskly as he did twenty years
+ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yet briskly enough for his years did the octogenarian
+walk in through the little pillared portico a
+moment later. Such deliberation as his movements
+had might as well have been the mark of a proper
+self-esteem as the effect of age. He was a slender
+but wiry-looking old gentleman, was Matthias Valentine,
+of Valentine&rsquo;s Hill; in appearance a credit to
+the better class of countrymen of his time. His
+white hair was tied in a cue, as if he were himself a
+landowner instead of only a manorial tenant. Yet
+no common tenant was he. His father, a dragoon
+in the French service, had come down from Canada
+and settled on Philipse Manor, and Matthias had
+been proprietor of Valentine&rsquo;s Hill, renting from
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span>
+the Philipses in earlier days than any one could
+remember. His grandsons now occupied the Hill,
+and the old man was in the full enjoyment of the
+leisure he had won. His rather sharp countenance,
+lighted by honest gray eyes, was a mixture of good-humor,
+childlike ingenuousness, and innocent jocosity.
+The neatness of his hair, his carefully shaven
+face, and the whole condition of his brown cloth coat
+and breeches and worsted stockings, denoted a fastidiousness
+rarely at any time, and particularly in
+the good (or bad) old days, to be found in common
+with rustic life and old age. Did some of the dandyism
+of the French dragoon survive in the old Philipsburgh
+farmer?</p>
+<p>He carried a walking-stick in one hand, a lighted
+lantern in the other. After bowing to the people in
+the hall, he set down his lantern, closed the door
+and bolted it, then took up his lantern, blew out the
+flame thereof, and set it down again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whew!&rdquo; he puffed, after his exertion. &ldquo;Windy
+night, Miss Elizabeth! Windy night, Major Colden!
+Winter&rsquo;s going to set in airly this year. There
+ain&rsquo;t been sich a frosty November since &rsquo;64, when
+the river was froze over as fur down as Spuyten
+Duyvel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was in the old man&rsquo;s high-pitched voice a
+good deal of the squeak, but little of the quaver, of
+senility.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll stay to supper, I hope, Mr. Valentine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From Elizabeth this was a sufficient exhibition of
+graciousness. She then turned her back on the
+two men and began to tell her aunt of her arrangements.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thankee, ma&rsquo;am,&rdquo; said old Valentine, whose
+sight did not immediately acquaint him, in the dim
+candle-light, with Elizabeth&rsquo;s change of front; wherefore
+he continued, placidly addressing her back: &ldquo;I
+wouldn&rsquo;t mind a glass and a pipe with friend Williams
+afore trudging back to the Hill.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He then walked over to the disconsolate Colden,
+and, with a very gay-doggish expression, remarked
+in an undertone:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fine pair o&rsquo; girls yonder, major?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He had known Colden from the time of the latter&rsquo;s
+first boyhood visits to the manor, and could venture
+a little familiarity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Girls?&rdquo; blurted the major, startled out of his
+meditations.</p>
+<p>The old country beau chuckled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We all know what&rsquo;s betwixt you and the niece.
+How about the aunt and me taking a lesson from
+you two, eh?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Even the gloomy officer could not restrain a
+momentary smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, Mr. Valentine? Do you seriously think
+of marrying?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not? I&rsquo;ve been married afore, hain&rsquo;t I?
+What&rsquo;s to hinder?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, there&rsquo;s the matter of age.&rdquo; Colden rather
+enjoyed being inconsiderate of people&rsquo;s feelings.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, the lady is not so old,&rdquo; said the octogenarian,
+placidly, casting a judicial, but approving look at the
+commanding figure of Miss Sally.</p>
+<p>Then, as he had been for a considerable time on
+his legs, having walked over from the Hill to the
+parsonage that afternoon, and as at best his knees
+bent when he stood, he sat down on the settle by
+the staircase.</p>
+<p>Miss Sally, though she knew it useless to protest
+further against Elizabeth&rsquo;s caprice, nevertheless felt
+it her duty to do so, especially as Major Colden
+would probably carry to the family a report of her
+attitude towards that caprice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you ever hear of such rashness, major? A
+young girl like Elizabeth coming out here in time of
+war, when this neutral ground between the lines is
+overridden and foraged to death, and deluged with
+blood by friend as well as foe? La me! I can&rsquo;t
+understand her, if she <i>is</i> my sister&rsquo;s child.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, aunt Sally, <i>you</i> stay out here through it
+all,&rdquo; said Elizabeth, not as much to depreciate the
+dangers as to give her aunt an opportunity of posing
+as a very courageous person.</p>
+<p>Miss Sally promptly accepted the opportunity.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span>
+&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said she, with a mien of heroic self-sacrifice,
+&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t let poor Grace Babcock stay at the parsonage
+with nobody but her children; besides I&rsquo;m
+not Colonel Philipse&rsquo;s daughter, and who cares
+whether I&rsquo;m loyal to the King or not? But a girl
+like you isn&rsquo;t made for the dangers and privations
+we&rsquo;ve had to put up with out here since the King&rsquo;s
+troops have occupied New York, and Washington&rsquo;s
+rebel army has held the country above. I&rsquo;m surprised
+the family let her come, or that you&rsquo;d countenance
+it by coming with her, major.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We all opposed it,&rdquo; said Colden, with a sigh.
+&ldquo;But&mdash;you know Elizabeth!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Elizabeth herself with cheerful nonchalance,
+&ldquo;Elizabeth always has her way. I was
+hungry for a sight of the place, and the more the
+old house is in danger, the more I love it. I&rsquo;m here
+for a week, and that ends it. The place doesn&rsquo;t
+seem to have suffered any. They haven&rsquo;t even
+quartered troops here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not since the American officers stayed here in
+the fall o&rsquo; &rsquo;76,&rdquo; put in old Mr. Valentine, from the
+settle. &ldquo;I reckon you&rsquo;ll be safe enough here, Miss
+Elizabeth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course I shall. Why, our troops patrol all this
+part of the country, Lord Cathcart told us at King&rsquo;s
+Bridge, and <i>we</i> have naught to fear from them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, the British foragers won&rsquo;t dare treat Philipse
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span>
+Manor-house as they do the homes of some of
+their loyal friends,&rdquo; said Miss Sally, who was no less
+proud of her relationship with the Philipses, because
+it was by marriage and not by blood. &ldquo;But the horrible
+&rdquo;Skinners,&ldquo; who don&rsquo;t spare even the farms of
+their fellow rebels&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bah!&rdquo; said Elizabeth. &ldquo;The scum of the earth!
+Williams has weapons here, and with him and the
+servants I&rsquo;ll defend the place against all the rebel
+cut-throats in the county.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The major thought to make a last desperate
+attempt to dissuade Elizabeth from remaining.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all well enough,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but there are
+the rebel regulars, the dragoons. They&rsquo;ll be raiding
+down to our very lines, one of these days, if only in
+retaliation. You know how Lord Cornwallis&rsquo;s party
+under General Grey, over in Jersey, the other night,
+killed a lot of Baylor&rsquo;s cavalry,&mdash;Mrs. Washington&rsquo;s
+Light Horse, they called the troop. And the Hessians
+made a great foray on the rebel families this
+side the river.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; chirped old Valentine; &ldquo;but the American
+Colonel Butler, and their Major Lee, of Virginia, fell
+on the Hessian yagers &rsquo;tween Dobbs&rsquo;s Ferry and
+Tarrytown, and killed ever so many of &rsquo;em,&mdash;and I
+wasn&rsquo;t sorry for that, neither!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; said Colden, &ldquo;you belong to the opposition.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61' name='page_61'></a>61</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;m neither here nor there,&rdquo; replied the old
+man. &ldquo;But they say that there Major Lee, of Virginia,
+is the gallantest soldier in Washington&rsquo;s army.
+He&rsquo;d lead his men against the powers of Satan if
+Washington gave the word. Light Horse Harry,
+they call him,&mdash;and a fine dashing troop o&rsquo; light
+horse he commands.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No more dashing, I&rsquo;ll wager, than some of ours,&rdquo;
+said Elizabeth, whose mood for the moment permitted
+her to talk with reason and moderation;
+&ldquo;not even counting the Germans. And as for leaders,
+what do you say to Simcoe, of the Queen&rsquo;s
+Rangers, or Emmerick, or Tarleton, or&rdquo;&mdash;turning
+to Colden&mdash;&ldquo;your cousin James De Lancey, of this
+county, major?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The major, notwithstanding his Toryism, did not
+enter with enthusiasm into Elizabeth&rsquo;s admiration
+for these brave young cavalry leaders. Staten Island
+and East New Jersey had not offered him as great
+opportunities for distinction as they had had. It
+was, therefore, Miss Sally who next spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Heaven knows there are enough on either
+side to devastate the land and rob us of comfort and
+peace. One wakes in the middle of the night, at the
+clatter of horses riding by like the wind, and wonders
+whether it&rsquo;s friend or foe, and trembles till
+they&rsquo;re out of hearing, for fear the door is to be broken
+in or the house fired. And the sound of shots
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62' name='page_62'></a>62</span>
+in the night, and the distant glare of flames when
+some poor farmer&rsquo;s home is burned over his head!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; added Mr. Valentine, &ldquo;and all the cattle
+and crops go to the foragers, so it&rsquo;s no use raising
+any more than you can hide away for your own
+larder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Elizabeth was beginning to be bored, and saw
+nothing to gain from a continuation of these recitals.
+Doubtless, by this time, her room was lighted and
+warm. So, thoughtless of Colden, she mounted the
+first step of the stairway, and said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have no doubt Williams has contrived to hide
+away enough provisions for <i>our</i> use. So <i>I</i> sha&rsquo;n&rsquo;t
+suffer from hunger, and as for Lee&rsquo;s Light Horse,
+I defy them and all other rebels. Come, aunt
+Sally!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She had ascended as far as to the fourth step of
+the stairway, and Miss Sally was about to follow, when
+there was heard, above the wind&rsquo;s moaning, another
+sound of galloping horses. Like the previous similar
+sound, it came from the north.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth stopped and stood on the fourth step.
+Miss Sally raised her finger to bid silence. Colden&rsquo;s
+attitude became one of anxious attention, while he
+dropped his hat on the settle and drew his cloak close
+about him, so that it concealed his uniform, sword,
+and pistol. The galloping continued.</p>
+<p>When time came for it to turn off eastward, as it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span>
+would do should the riders take the road to Mile
+Square, it did not so. Instead, as the sound unmistakably
+indicated, it came on down the post-road.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hessians, perhaps!&rdquo; Miss Sally whispered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Or De Lancey&rsquo;s Cowboys,&rdquo; said Valentine, but
+not in a whisper.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth cast a sharp look at the old man, as if to
+show disapproval of his use of the Whigs&rsquo; nickname
+for De Lancey&rsquo;s troop. But the octogenarian did
+not quail.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re riding towards the manor-house,&rdquo; he
+added, a moment later.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let us hope they&rsquo;re friends,&rdquo; said Colden, in a
+tone low and slightly unsteady.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth disdained to whisper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe it is Lee&rsquo;s Light Horse,&rdquo; she said, in her
+usual voice, but ironically, addressing Valentine. &ldquo;In
+that case we should tremble for our lives, I suppose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whoever they are, they&rsquo;ve stopped before the
+house!&rdquo; said Miss Sally, in quite a tremble.</p>
+<p>There was a noise of horses pawing and snorting
+outside, of directions being given rapidly, and of two
+or three horses leaving the main band for another
+part of the grounds. Then was heard a quick, firm
+step on the porch floor, and in the same instant a
+sharp, loud knock on the door.</p>
+<p>No one in the hall moved; all looked at Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A very valiant knock!&rdquo; said she, with more
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64' name='page_64'></a>64</span>
+irony. &ldquo;It certainly <i>must</i> be Lee&rsquo;s Light Horse.
+Will you please open the door, Colden?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo; ejaculated Colden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said Elizabeth, turning on the stairway,
+so as to face the door; &ldquo;to show we&rsquo;re not
+afraid.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Jack Colden looked at her a moment demurringly,
+then went to the door, undid the fastenings, and
+threw it open, keeping his cloak close about him
+and immediately stepping back into the shadow.</p>
+<p>A handsome young officer strode in, as if &rsquo;twere
+a mighty gust of wind that sent him. He wore a
+uniform of blue with red facings,&mdash;a uniform that
+had seen service,&mdash;was booted and spurred, without
+greatcoat or cloak. A large pistol was in his belt,
+and his left hand rested on the hilt of a sword. He
+swept past Colden, not seeing him; came to a stop
+in the centre of the hall, and looked rapidly around
+from face to face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your servant, ladies and gentlemen!&rdquo; he said,
+with a swift bow and a flourish of his dragoon&rsquo;s hat.
+His eye rested on Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who are you?&rdquo; she demanded, coldly and imperiously,
+from the fourth step.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m Captain Peyton, of Lee&rsquo;s Light Horse,&rdquo;
+said he.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IV_THE_CONTINENTAL_DRAGOON' id='CHAPTER_IV_THE_CONTINENTAL_DRAGOON'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+<h3>THE CONTINENTAL DRAGOON.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> Peytons of Virginia were descended from a
+younger son of the Peytons of Pelham, England, of
+which family was Sir Edward Peyton, of Pelham,
+knight and baronet. Sir Edward&rsquo;s relative, the first
+American Peyton, settled in Westmoreland County.
+Within one generation the family had spread to Stafford
+County, and within another to Loudoun County
+also. Thus it befell that there was a Mr. Craven
+Peyton, of Loudoun County, justice of the peace,
+vestryman, and chief warden of Shelburne Parish.
+He was the father of nine sons and two daughters.
+One of the sons was Harry.</p>
+<p>This Harry grew up longing to be a soldier. Military
+glory was his ambition, as it had been Washington&rsquo;s;
+but not as a mere provincial would he be
+satisfied to excel. He would have a place as a regular
+officer, in an army of the first importance, on the
+fields of Europe. Before the Revolution, Americans
+were, like all colonials, very loyal to their English
+King. Therefore would Harry Peyton be content
+with naught less than a King&rsquo;s commission in the
+King&rsquo;s army.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span></div>
+<p>His father, glad to be guided in choosing a future
+for one of so many sons, sent Harry to London in
+1770, to see something of life, and so managed matters,
+through his English relations, that the boy was
+in 1772, at the age of nineteen, the possessor, by
+purchase, of an ensign&rsquo;s commission. He was soon
+sent to do garrison duty in Ireland, being enrolled
+with the Sixty-third Regiment of Foot.</p>
+<p>He had lived gaily enough during his two years
+in London, occupying lodgings, being patronized by
+his relations, seeing enough of society, card-tables,
+drums, routs, plays, prize-fights, and other diversions.
+He had made visits in the country and showed what
+he had learned in Virginia about cock-fighting, fox-hunting
+and shooting, and had taken lessons from
+London fencing-masters. A young gentleman from
+Virginia, if well off and &ldquo;well connected,&rdquo; could have
+a fine time in London in those days; and Harry
+Peyton had it.</p>
+<p>But he could never forget that he was a colonial.
+If he were treated by his English associates as an
+equal, or even at times with a particular consideration,
+there was always a kind of implication that he
+was an exception among colonials. Other colonial
+youths were similarly treated, and some of these
+were glad to be held as exceptions, and even joined
+in the derision of the colonials who were not. For
+these Harry Peyton had a mighty disgust and detestation.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span>
+He did not enjoy receiving as Harry Peyton
+a tolerance and kindness that would have been denied
+him as merely an American. And he sometimes
+could not avoid seeing that, even as Harry Peyton, he
+was regarded as compensating, by certain attractive
+qualities in the nature of amiability and sincerity, for
+occasional exhibitions of what the English rated as
+social impropriety and bad taste. Often, at the
+English lofty derision of colonials, at the English
+air of self-evident superiority, the English pretence
+of politely concealed shock or pain or offence at
+some infringement of a purely superficial conduct-code
+of their own arbitrary fabrication, he ground
+his teeth in silence; for in one respect, he had as
+good manners as the English had then, or have
+now,&mdash;when in Rome he did not resent or deride
+what the Romans did. He began to think that the
+lot of a self-respecting American among the English,
+even if he were himself made an exception of and
+well dealt with, was not the most enviable one. And,
+after he joined the army, he thought this more and
+more every day. But he would show them what a
+colonial could rise to! Yet that would prove nothing
+for his countrymen, as he would always, on his
+meritorious side, be deemed an exception.</p>
+<p>His military ambition, however, predominated, and
+he had no thought of leaving the King&rsquo;s service.</p>
+<p>The disagreement between the King and the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span>
+American Colonies grew, from &ldquo;a cloud no bigger
+than a man&rsquo;s hand,&rdquo; to something larger. But
+Harry heard little of it, and that entirely from the
+English point of view. He received but three or
+four letters a year from his own people, and the
+time had not come for his own people to write much
+more than bare facts. They were chary of opinions.
+Harry supposed that the new discontent in the Colonies,
+after the repeal of the Stamp Act and the
+withdrawal of the two regiments from Boston Town
+to Castle William, was but that of the perpetually
+restless, the habitual fomenters, the notoriety-seeking
+agitators, the mob, whose circumstances could
+not be made worse and might be improved by disturbances.
+Now the Americans, from being a subject
+of no interest to English people, a subject
+discussed only when some rare circumstance brought
+it up, became more talked of. Sometimes, when
+Americans were blamed for opposing taxes to support
+soldiery used for their own protection, Harry
+said that the Americans could protect themselves;
+that the English, in wresting Canada from the
+French, had sought rather English prestige and
+dominion than security for the colonials; that the
+flourishing of the Colonies was despite English
+neglect, not because of English fostering; that if
+the English had solicitude for America, it was for
+America as a market for their own trade. Thereupon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69' name='page_69'></a>69</span>
+his fellow officers would either laugh him out,
+as if he were too ignorant to be argued with, or
+freeze him out, as if he had committed some grave
+outrage on decorum. And Harry would rage inwardly,
+comparing his own ignorance and indecorousness
+with the knowledge and courtesy exemplified in the
+assertion of Doctor Johnson, when that great but
+narrow Englishman said, in 1769, of Americans,
+&ldquo;Sir, they are a race of convicts, and ought to
+be thankful for anything we allow them short of
+hanging.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There came to Harry, now and then, scraps of
+vague talk of uneasiness in Boston Town, whose port
+the British Parliament had closed, to punish the
+Yankees for riotously destroying tea on which there
+was a tax; of the concentration there of British
+troops from Halifax, Quebec, New York, the Jerseys,
+and other North American posts. But there was
+not, in Harry&rsquo;s little world of Irish garrison life, the
+slightest expectation of actual rebellion or even of a
+momentous local tumult in the American Colonies.</p>
+<p>Imagine, therefore, his feelings when, one morning
+late in March in 1775, he was told that, within
+a month&rsquo;s time, the Sixty-third, and other regiments,
+would embark at Cork for either Boston or New
+York!</p>
+<p>There could not be a new French or Spanish
+invasion. As for the Indians, never again would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70' name='page_70'></a>70</span>
+British regulars be sent against them. Was it,
+then, Harry&rsquo;s own countrymen that his regiment
+was going to fight?</p>
+<p>His comrades inferred the cause of his long face,
+and laughed. He would have no more fighting to
+do in America against the Americans than he had
+to do in Ireland against the Irish, or than an
+English officer in an English barrack town had to
+do against the English. The reinforcements were
+being sent only to overawe the lawless element.
+The mere sight of these reinforcements would obviate
+any occasion for their use. The regiment would
+merely do garrison duty in America instead of in
+Ireland or elsewhere.</p>
+<p>He had none to advise or enlighten him. What
+was there for him to do but sail with his regiment,
+awaiting disclosures or occurrences to guide? What
+misgivings he had, he kept to himself, though once
+on the voyage, as he looked from the rocking transport
+towards the west, he confided to Lieutenant
+Dalrymple his opinion that &rsquo;twas damned bad luck
+sent <i>his</i> regiment to America, of all places.</p>
+<p>When he landed in Boston, June 12th, he found,
+as he had expected, that the town was full of soldiers,
+encamped on the common and quartered
+elsewhere; but also, as he had not expected, that
+the troops were virtually confined to the town,
+which was fortified at the Neck; that the last
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span>
+time they had marched into the country, through
+Lexington to Concord, they had marched back
+again at a much faster gait, and left many score
+dead and wounded on the way; and that a host
+of New Englanders in arms were surrounding Boston!
+The news of April 19th had not reached Europe
+until after Harry had sailed, nor had it met
+his regiment on the ocean. When he heard it now,
+he could only become more grave and uneasy. But
+the British officers were scornful of their clodhopper
+besiegers. In due time this rabble should be
+scattered like chaff. But was it a mere rabble?
+Certainly. Were not the best people in Boston
+loyal to the King&rsquo;s government? Some of them,
+yes. But, as Harry went around with open eyes
+and ears, eager for information, he found that many
+of them were with the &ldquo;rabble.&rdquo; News was easy
+to be had. The citizens were allowed to pass the
+barrier on the Neck, if they did not carry arms or
+ammunition, and there was no strict discipline in
+the camp of New Englanders. Therefore Harry
+soon learned how Doctor Warren stood, and the
+Adamses, and Mr. John Hancock; and that a Congress,
+representing all the Colonies, was now sitting
+at Philadelphia, for the second time; and that in
+the Congress his own Virginia was served by such
+gentlemen as Mr. Richard Henry Lee, Mr. Patrick
+Henry, Mr. Thomas Jefferson, and Colonel Washington.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span>
+And the Virginians had shown as ready
+and firm a mind for revolt against the King&rsquo;s
+measures as the New Englanders had. Here, for
+once, the sympathies of trading Puritan and fox-hunting
+Virginian were one. Moreover, a Yankee
+was a fellow American, and, after five years of
+contact with English self-esteem, Harry warmed at
+the sight of a New Englander as he never would
+have done before he had left Virginia.</p>
+<p>But it did not conduce to peace of mind, in his
+case, to be convinced that the colonial remonstrance
+was neither local nor of the rabble. The more
+general and respectable it was, the more embarrassing
+was his own situation. Would it really
+come to war? With ill-concealed anxiety, he sought
+the opinion of this person and that.</p>
+<p>On the fourth day after his arrival, he went into
+a tavern in King Street with Lieutenant Massay, of
+the Thirty-fifth, Ensign Charleton, of the Fifth, and
+another young officer, and, while they were drinking,
+heard a loyalist tell what one Parker, leader
+of the Lexington rebels, said to his men on Lexington
+Common, on the morning of April 19th, when
+the King&rsquo;s troops came in sight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Stand your ground,&rsquo; says he. &lsquo;Don&rsquo;t fire till
+you&rsquo;re fired on, but if they mean to have a war, let
+it begin here!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And it began there!&rdquo; said Harry.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span></div>
+<p>The English officers stared at him, and laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, &rsquo;twas the Yankee idea of war,&rdquo; said one
+of them. &ldquo;Run for a stone wall, and, when the
+enemy&rsquo;s back is turned, blaze away. I&rsquo;d like to
+see a million of the clodhoppers compelled to stand
+up and face a line of grenadiers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, gimme ten companies of grenadiers,&rdquo; cried
+one, who had doubtless heard of General Gage&rsquo;s
+celebrated boast, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll go from one end of the
+damned country to the other, and drive &rsquo;em to their
+holes like foxes. Only &rsquo;tis better sport chasing
+handsome foxes in England than ill-dressed poltroons
+in Bumpkin-land.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re not all poltroons,&rdquo; said Harry, repressing
+his feelings the more easily through long
+practice. &ldquo;Some of them fought in the French
+war. There&rsquo;s Putnam, and Pomeroy, and Ward.
+I heard Lieutenant-Colonel Abercrombie, of the
+Twenty-second, say yesterday that Putnam&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cowards every one of &rsquo;em,&rdquo; broke in another.
+&ldquo;Cowards and louts. A lady told me t&rsquo;other day
+there ain&rsquo;t in all America a man whose coat sets in
+close at the back, except he&rsquo;s of the loyal party.
+Cowards and louts!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look here, damn you!&rdquo; cried Peyton. &ldquo;I want
+you to know I&rsquo;m American born, and my people are
+American, and I don&rsquo;t know whether they are of the
+loyal party or not!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, now, that&rsquo;s the worst of you Americans,&mdash;always
+will get personal! Of course, there are exceptions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then there are exceptions enough to make a
+rule themselves,&rdquo; said Harry. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m tired hearing
+you call these people cowards before you&rsquo;ve had a
+chance to see what they are. And you needn&rsquo;t wait
+for that, for I can tell you now they&rsquo;re not!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, well, perhaps not,&mdash;to you. Doubtless
+they&rsquo;re very dreadful,&mdash;to you. You don&rsquo;t seem to
+relish facing &rsquo;em, that&rsquo;s a fact! You&rsquo;ll be resigning
+your commission one o&rsquo; these days, I dare say, if it
+comes to blows with these terrible heroes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Harry saw everybody in the room looking at him
+with a grin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By the Lord,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;maybe I shall!&rdquo; and
+stalked hotly out of the place.</p>
+<p>His wrath increased as he walked. He noticed
+now, more than before, the confident, arrogant air
+of the redcoats who promenaded the streets; how
+they leered at the women, and made the citizens
+who passed turn out of the way. Forthwith, he
+went to his quarters, and wrote his resignation.</p>
+<p>When the ink was dry he folded up the document
+and put it in the pocket of his uniform coat. Then
+that last tavern speech recurred to him. &ldquo;If I resign
+now,&rdquo; he thought, &ldquo;they&rsquo;ll suppose it&rsquo;s because
+I really am afraid of fighting, not because the rebels
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span>
+are my countrymen.&rdquo; So he lapsed into a state of
+indecision,&mdash;a state resembling apathy, a half-dazed
+condition, a semi-somnolent waiting for events. But
+he kept his letter of resignation in his coat.</p>
+<p>At dawn the next morning, Saturday, June 17th,
+he was awakened by the booming of guns. He was
+soon up and out. It was a beautiful day. People
+were on the eminences and roofs, looking northward,
+across the mouth of the Charles, towards Charlestown
+and the hill beyond. On that hill were seen rough
+earthworks, six feet high, which had not been there
+the day before. The booming guns were those of
+the British man-of-war <i>Lively</i>, firing from the river
+at the new earthworks. Hence the earthworks
+were the doing of the rebels, having been raised
+during the night. Presently the <i>Lively</i> ceased its
+fire, but soon there was more booming, this time not
+only from the men-of-war, but also from the battery
+on Copp&rsquo;s Hill in Boston. After awhile Harry saw,
+from where he stood with many others on Beacon
+Hill, some of the rebels emerge from one part of the
+earthworks, as if to go away. One of these was
+knocked over by a cannon-ball. His comrades
+dragged his body behind the earthen wall. By and
+by a tall, strong-looking man appeared on top of the
+parapet, and walked leisurely along, apparently giving
+directions. Harry heard from a citizen, who had
+a field-glass, the words, &ldquo;Prescott, of Pepperell.&rdquo;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span>
+Other men were now visible on the parapet, superintending
+the workers behind. And now the booming
+of the guns was answered by disrespectful cheers
+from those same unseen workers.</p>
+<p>The morning grew hot. Harry heard that General
+Gage had called a council of war at the Province
+House; that Generals Howe, Clinton, Burgoyne,<a href='#Footnote_0003' class='fnanchor'>[3]</a>&mdash;these
+three having arrived in Boston about three
+weeks before Harry had,&mdash;Pigott, Grant, and the
+rest were now there in consultation. At length
+there was the half-expected tumult of drum and
+bugle; and Harry was summoned to obey, with
+his comrades, the order to parade. There was now
+much noise of officers galloping about, dragoons
+riding from their quarters, and rattling of gun-carriages.
+The booming from the batteries and vessels
+increased.</p>
+<p>At half-past eleven Harry found himself&mdash;for he
+was scarcely master of his acts that morning, his will
+having taken refuge in a kind of dormancy&mdash;on
+parade with two companies of his regiment, and he
+noticed in a dim way that other companies near were
+from other different regiments, all being supplied
+with ammunition, blankets, and provisions. When
+the sun was directly overhead and at its hottest, the
+order to march was given, and soon he was bearing
+the colors through the streets of Boston. The roar
+of the cannon now became deafening. Harry knew
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span>
+not whether the rebels were returning it from their
+hill works across the water or not. In time the
+troops reached the wharf. Barges were in waiting,
+and field-pieces were being moved into some of them.
+He could see now that all the firing was from the
+King&rsquo;s vessels and batteries. Mechanically he followed
+Lieutenant Dalrymple into a barge, which soon
+filled up with troops. The other barges were speedily
+brilliant with scarlet coats and glistening bayonets.
+Not far away the river was covered with smoke,
+through which flashed the fire of the belching artillery.
+A blue flag was waved from General Howe&rsquo;s
+barge, and the fleet moved across the river towards
+the hill where the rebels waited silently behind their
+piles of earth.</p>
+<p>At one o&rsquo;clock, Harry followed Lieutenant Dalrymple
+out of the barge to the northern shore of the
+river, at a point northeast of Charlestown village and
+east of the Yankees&rsquo; hill. There was no molestation
+from the rebels. The firing from the vessels and batteries
+protected the hillside and shore. The troops
+were promptly formed in three lines. Harry&rsquo;s place
+was in the left of the front line. Then there was long
+waiting. The barges went back to the Boston side.
+Was General Howe, who had command of the movements,
+sending for more troops? Many of the soldiers
+ate of their stock of provisions. Harry, in a
+kind of dream, looked westward up the hill towards
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span>
+the silent Yankee redoubt. It faced south, west,
+and east. The line of its eastern side was continued
+northward by a breastwork, and still beyond
+this, down the northern hillside to another river,
+ran a straggling rail fence, which was thatched
+with fresh-cut hay. What were the men doing behind
+those defences? What were they saying and
+thinking?</p>
+<p>The barges came back across the Charles from
+Boston, with more troops, but these were disembarked
+some distance southwest, nearer Charlestown.
+General Howe now made a short speech to the troops
+first landed. Then some flank guards were sent out
+and some cannon wheeled forward. The companies of
+the front line, with one of which was Harry, were
+now ordered to form into files and move straight
+ahead. They were to constitute the right wing of
+the attacking force, and to be led by General Howe
+himself. The four regiments composing the two rear
+lines moved forward and leftward, to form, with the
+troops newly landed, the left wing, which was to be
+under General Pigott. The cannonading from the
+river and from Boston continued.</p>
+<p>The companies with which was Harry advanced
+slowly, having to pass through high grass, over stone
+fences, under a roasting sun. These companies were
+moving towards the hay-thatched rail fence that straggled
+down the hillside from the breastwork north of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span>
+the redoubt. Harry had a vague sense that the left
+wing was ascending the southeastern side of the hill,
+towards the redoubt, at the same time. His eye
+caught the view at either side. Long files of scarlet
+coats, steel bayonets, grenadiers&rsquo; tall caps. He looked
+ahead. The stretch of green, grassy hillside, the
+hay-covered rail fence looking like a hedge-row, the
+rude breastwork, the blue sky. Suddenly there came
+from the rail fence the belching of field-pieces. Two
+grenadiers fell at the right of Harry. One moaned,
+the other was silent. Harry, shocked into a sense
+that war was begun between his King and his
+people, instantly resolved to strike no blow that
+day against his people. But this was no time for
+leaving the ranks. Mechanically he marched on.</p>
+<p>Heads appeared over the fence-rail, guns were
+rested on it, and there came from it some irregular
+flashes of musketry. Then Harry saw a man moving
+his head and arms, as if shouting and gesticulating.
+The musket flashes ceased. Harry did not know it
+then, but the man was Putnam, and he was commanding
+the Yankees to reserve their fire. The
+British files were now ordered to deploy into line,
+and fire. They did so as they advanced, firing
+in machine-like unison, as if on parade, but aiming
+high. Nearer and nearer, as Harry went forward,
+rose the fence ahead and the breastwork on the hill
+towards the left. Why did not the Yankees fire?
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span>
+Were they, indeed, paralyzed with fear at sight of the
+lines of the King&rsquo;s grenadiers?</p>
+<p>All at once blazed forth the answer,&mdash;such a
+volley of musketry, at close range, as British grenadiers
+had not faced before. Down went officers and
+men, in twos and threes and rows. Great gaps were
+cut in the scarlet lines. The broken columns returned
+the volley, but there came another. Harry
+found himself in the midst of quivering, writhing,
+yelling death. The British who were left,&mdash;startled,
+amazed,&mdash;turned and fled. As mechanically
+as he had come up, did Harry go back in the
+common movement. General Howe showed astonishment.
+The left wing, too, had been hurled back,
+down the hill, by death-dealing volleys. The rabble
+had held their rude works against the King&rsquo;s choice
+troops. Never had as many officers been killed or
+wounded in a single charge. There had not been
+such mowing down at Fontenoy or Montmorenci.
+These unmilitary Yankees actually aimed when they
+fired, each at some particular mark! Harry had
+heard them cheering, and had thought they were
+about to pursue the King&rsquo;s troops; they had evidently
+been ordered back.</p>
+<p>The troops re-formed by the shore. Orders came
+for another assault. Back again went Harry with
+the right wing, bearing the colors as before. He
+had secretly an exquisite heart-quickening elation
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span>
+at the success of his countrymen. If they should
+win the day, and hold this hill, and drive the King&rsquo;s
+troops from Boston! He knew, at last, on which
+side his heart was.</p>
+<p>There was more play of artillery during this
+second charge. Harry could see, too, that the village
+of Charlestown was on fire, sending flames,
+sparks, and smoke far towards the sky. It was
+not as easy to go to the charge this time, there
+were so many dead bodies in the way. But the
+soldiers stepped over them, and maintained the
+straightness of their lines. Again it seemed as if
+the rebels would never fire. Again, when the
+King&rsquo;s troops were but a few rods from them,
+came that flaming, low-aimed discharge. But the
+troops marched on, in the face of it, till the very
+officers who urged them forward fell before it; then
+they wavered, turned, and ran. Harry&rsquo;s joy, as he
+went with them, increased, and his hopes mounted.
+The left wing, too, had been thrown back a second
+time.</p>
+<p>There was a long wait, and the generals were seen
+consulting. At last a third charge was ordered.
+This time the greater part of the right wing was
+led up the hill against the breastwork. With this
+part was Harry. One more volley from the rebel defences
+met the King&rsquo;s troops. They wavered slightly,
+then sprang forward, ready for another. But another
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82' name='page_82'></a>82</span>
+came not. The rebels&rsquo; ammunition was giving out.
+Harry&rsquo;s heart fell. The British forced the breastwork,
+carrying him along. He found himself at the
+northern end of the redoubt. Some privates lifted
+him to the parapet; he and a sergeant mounted at
+the same time, and leaped together into the redoubt.
+They saw Lieutenant Richardson, of the Royal Irish
+Regiment, appear on the southern parapet, give a
+shout of triumph, and fall dead from a Yankee
+musket-ball. A whole rank that followed him
+was served likewise, but others surged over the
+parapet in their places. The rebels were defending
+mainly the southern parapet. Many were retreating
+by the rear passageway. Harry saw that
+the King&rsquo;s troops had won the redoubt. He took his
+resolution. He threw the colors to the sergeant,
+pulled off his coat, handed it to the same sergeant,
+shouting into the man&rsquo;s ear, &ldquo;Give it to
+the colonel, with the letter in the pocket;&rdquo; picked
+up a dead man&rsquo;s musket, and ran to the aid of a
+tall, powerful rebel who was parrying with a sword
+the bayonets of three British privates. The tramp
+of the retreating rebels, invading British, and hand-to-hand
+fighters raised a blinding dust. Harry and
+the tall American, gaining a breathing moment,
+strode together with long steps, guarding their
+flank and rear, to the passageway and out of it;
+and then fought their course between two divisions
+of British, which had turned the outer corners
+of the redoubt. There was no firing here, so closely
+mingled were British and rebels, the former too
+exhausted to use forcibly their bayonets. So Harry
+retreated, beside the tall man, with the rebels. A
+British cheer behind him told the result of the day;
+but Harry cared little. His mind was at ease; he
+was on the right side at last.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_3' id='linki_3'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/i001.jpg' alt='' title='' width='323' height='500' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;GIVE IT TO THE COLONEL.&rsquo;&rdquo;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span></div>
+<p>Thus did young Mr. Peyton serve on both sides in
+the same battle, being with each in the time of its
+defeat, striking no blow against his country, yet
+deserting not the King&rsquo;s army till the moment of
+its victory. His act was indeed desertion, desertion
+to the enemy, and in time of action; for, though
+his resignation was written, it was not only unaccepted,
+but even undelivered. Thus did he render
+himself liable, under the laws of war, to an ignominious
+death should he ever fall into the hands of the
+King&rsquo;s troops.</p>
+<p>During the flight to Cambridge, Harry was separated
+from the tall man with whom he had come
+from the redoubt, but soon saw him again, this time
+directing the retreat, and learned that he was Colonel
+Prescott, of Pepperell. Some of the rebels discussed
+Harry freely in his own hearing, inferring from his
+attire that he was of the British, and wondering why
+he was not a prisoner. Harry asked to be taken to
+the commander, and at Cambridge a coatless, bare-headed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span>
+captain led him to General Ward, of the Massachusetts
+force. That veteran militiaman heard
+his story, gave it credit, and, with no thought that
+he might be a spy, invited him to remain at the
+camp as a volunteer. Harry obtained a suit of blue
+clothes, and quartered in one of the Harvard College
+buildings. In a few days news came that the Congress
+at Philadelphia had resolved to organize a
+Continental army, of which the New England force
+at Cambridge was to be the present nucleus; that a
+general-in-chief would soon arrive to take command,
+and that the general-in-chief appointed was a Virginian,&mdash;Colonel
+Washington. Harry was jubilant.</p>
+<p>Early in July the new general arrived, and Harry
+paid his respects to him in the house of the college
+president. General Washington advised the boy to
+send another letter of resignation, then to go home
+and join the troops that his own State would soon be
+raising. On hearing Harry&rsquo;s story, Washington had
+given a momentary smile and a look at Major-General
+Charles Lee, who had but recently published his
+resignation of his half-pay as a retired British officer,
+and who did not know yet whether that resignation
+would be accepted or himself considered a deserter.</p>
+<p>Peyton sent a new letter of resignation to Boston,
+then procured a horse, and started to ride to Virginia.
+Six days later he was in New York. In a
+coffee-house where he was dining, he struck up an
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span>
+acquaintance with three young gentlemen of the
+city, and told his name and story. One of the three&mdash;a
+dark-eyed man&mdash;thereupon changed manner
+and said he had no time for a rascally turncoat.
+Harry, in hot resentment, replied that he would
+teach a damned Tory some manners. So the four
+went out of the town to Nicholas Bayard&rsquo;s woods,
+where, after a few passes with rapiers, the dark-eyed
+gentleman was disarmed, and admitted, with no
+good grace, that Harry was the better fencer. Harry
+left New York that afternoon, having learned that
+his antagonist was Mr. John Colden, son of the postmaster
+of New York. His grandfather had been
+lieutenant-governor.</p>
+<p>Harry had for some time thought he would prefer
+the cavalry, and he was determined, if possible, to
+gratify that preference in entering the military service
+of his own country. On arriving home he
+found his people strongly sympathizing with the
+revolt. But it was not until June, 1776, that Virginia
+raised a troop of horse. On the 18th of that
+month Harry was commissioned a cornet thereof.
+After some service he found himself, March 31,
+1777, cornet in the First Continental Dragoons.
+The next fall, in a skirmish after the battle of
+Brandywine, he was recognized by British officers as
+the former ensign of the Sixty-third. In the following
+spring, thanks to his activity during the British
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span>
+occupation of Philadelphia, he was made captain-lieutenant
+in Harry Lee&rsquo;s battalion of light dragoons.
+After the battle of Monmouth he was promoted,
+July 2, 1778, to the rank of captain. In the early
+fall of that year he was busy in partisan warfare
+between the lines of the two armies.</p>
+<p>And thus it came that he was pursuing a troop
+of Hessians down the New York and Albany post-road
+on a certain cold November evening. Eager
+on the chase, he was resolved to come up with them
+if it could be, though he should have to ride within
+gunshot of King&rsquo;s Bridge itself. Suddenly his horse
+gave out. He had the saddle taken from the dead
+animal and given to one of his men to bear while he
+himself mounted in front of a sergeant, for he was
+loath to spare a man. Approaching Philipse Manor-house,
+the party saw a boy leading horses into a
+stable. Captain Peyton ordered some of his men to
+patrol the road, and with the rest he went on to the
+manor-house lawn.</p>
+<p>Here he gave further directions, dismounted,
+knocked at the door, and was admitted to the hall
+where were Miss Elizabeth Philipse, Major Colden,
+Miss Sally Williams, and old Matthias Valentine;
+and, on Elizabeth&rsquo;s demand, announced his name and
+rank.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_V_THE_BLACK_HORSE' id='CHAPTER_V_THE_BLACK_HORSE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+<h3>THE BLACK HORSE.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Thanks</span> to the dimness, to his uniform, and to his
+swift entrance, Peyton had not been recognized by
+Major Colden until he had given his name. That
+name had on the major the effect of an apparition,
+and he stepped back into the dark corner of the hall,
+drawing his cloak yet closer about him. This alarm
+and movement were not noticed by the others, as
+Peyton was the object of every gaze but his own,
+which was fixed on Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you want?&rdquo; her voice rang out, while
+she frowned from her place on the staircase, in cold
+resentment. Her aunt, meanwhile, made the newcomer
+a tremulous curtsey.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I want to see the person in charge of this house,
+and I want a horse,&rdquo; replied Peyton, with more
+promptitude than gentleness, yet with strict civility.
+Elizabeth&rsquo;s manner would have nettled even a colder
+man.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth did not keep him waiting for an answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am at present mistress of this house, and I am
+neither selling horses nor giving them!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span></div>
+<p>Peyton stared up at her in wonderment.</p>
+<p>The candle-flame struggled against the wind, turning
+this way and that, and made the vague shadows
+of the people and of the slender balusters dance on
+floor and wall. From without came the sound of
+Peyton&rsquo;s horses pawing, and of his men speaking
+to one another in low tones.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your pardon, madam,&rdquo; said Peyton, &ldquo;but a horse
+I must have. The service I am on permits no delay&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doubt not!&rdquo; broke in Elizabeth. &ldquo;The Hessians
+are probably chasing you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On the contrary, I am chasing the Hessians.
+At Boar Hill, yonder, my horse gave out. &rsquo;Tis important
+my troops lose no time. Passing here, we
+saw horses being led into your stable. I ordered
+one of my men to take the best of your beasts,
+and put my saddle on it,&mdash;and he is now doing
+so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How dare you, sir!&rdquo; and Elizabeth came quickly
+to the foot of the stairs, a picture of regal, flaming
+wrath.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, madam,&rdquo; said Peyton, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis for the service
+of the army. I require the horse, and I have come
+here to pay for it&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is not for sale&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That makes no difference. You know the custom
+of war.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;The custom of robbery!&rdquo; cried Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>Captain Peyton reddened.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Robbery is not the custom of Harry Lee&rsquo;s dragoons,
+madam,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;whatever be the practice
+of the wretched &lsquo;Skinners&rsquo; or of De Lancey&rsquo;s Tory
+Cowboys. I shall pay you as you choose,&mdash;with a
+receipt to present at the quartermaster&rsquo;s office, or
+with Continental bills.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Continental rubbish!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And, indeed, Elizabeth was not far from the
+truth in the appellation so contemptuously hurled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You prefer that, do you?&rdquo; said Peyton, unruffled;
+whereupon he took from within his waistcoat
+a long, thick pocketbook, and from that a number
+of bills; which must have been for high amounts,
+for he rapidly counted out only a score or two of
+them, repocketing the rest, and at that time, thereabouts,
+&ldquo;a rat in shape of a horse,&rdquo; as Washington
+himself had complained a month before, was &ldquo;not to
+be bought for less than Ł200.&rdquo;<a href='#Footnote_0004' class='fnanchor'>[4]</a> Peyton handed her
+the bills he had counted out. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a fair price,
+then,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;allowing for depreciation. The
+current rate is five to one,&mdash;I allow six.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Elizabeth looked disdainfully at the proffered bills,
+and made no move to take them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pah!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t touch your
+wretched Continental trash. I wouldn&rsquo;t let one
+of my black women put her hair up in it. Money,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span>
+do you call it? I wouldn&rsquo;t give a shilling of the
+King for a houseful of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I beg your pardon,&rdquo; said Peyton, cheerfully.
+&ldquo;Since July in &rsquo;76 there has been no king in
+America. I leave the bills, madam.&rdquo; He laid them
+on the newel post, beside the candlestick. &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis all
+I can do, and more than many a man would do, seeing
+that Colonel Philipse, the owner of this place, is
+no friend to the American cause, and may fairly be
+levied on as an enemy&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Colonel Philipse is my father!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I&rsquo;m glad I&rsquo;ve been punctilious in the matter,&rdquo;
+said Peyton, but without any increase of deference.
+&ldquo;Egad, I think I&rsquo;ve been as scrupulous as the
+commander-in-chief himself!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The commander-in-chief!&rdquo; echoed Elizabeth.
+&ldquo;Sir Henry Clinton pays in gold.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I meant <i>our</i> commander-in-chief,&rdquo; with a suavity
+most irritating.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Washington!&rdquo; said Elizabeth, scornfully,
+with a slight emphasis on the &ldquo;Mr.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His Excellency, General Washington.&rdquo; Peyton
+spoke as one would in gently correcting a child who
+was impolite. Then he added, &ldquo;I think the horse
+is now ready; so I bid you good evening!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he strode towards the door.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth was now fully awake to the certainty
+that one of the horses would indeed be taken. At
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span>
+Peyton&rsquo;s movement she ran to the door, reaching it
+before he did, and looked out. What she saw, transformed
+her into a very fury.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, this outrage!&rdquo; she cried, facing about and
+addressing those in the hall. &ldquo;It is my Cato they
+are leading out! My Cato! Under my very eyes!
+I forbid it! He shall not go! Where are Cuff and
+the servants? Why don&rsquo;t they prevent? And you,
+Jack?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She turned to Colden for the first time since Peyton&rsquo;s
+arrival.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My troop would make short work of any who
+interfered, madam,&rdquo; said Peyton, warningly, still
+looking at Elizabeth only.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that I should have to endure this!&rdquo; she
+said. &ldquo;Oh, if I had but a company of soldiers at
+my back, you dog of a rebel!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And she paced the hall in a great passion. Passing
+the newel post, she noticed the Continental bills.
+She took these up, violently tore them across, and
+threw the pieces about the hall, as one tosses corn
+about a chicken-yard.</p>
+<p>Major Colden had been having a most uncomfortable
+five minutes. As a Tory officer, he was in close
+peril of being made prisoner by this Continental captain
+and the latter&rsquo;s troop outside, and this peril was
+none the less since he had so adversely criticised
+Peyton in the talk which had led to the duel in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span>
+Bayard&rsquo;s woods. He had not put himself on
+friendly terms with Peyton after that affair. There
+was still no reason for any other feeling towards him,
+on Peyton&rsquo;s part, than resentment. Now Jack Colden
+had no relish for imprisonment at the hands of
+the despised rebels. Moreover, he had no wish that
+Elizabeth should learn of his former defeat by Peyton.
+He had kept the meeting in Bayard&rsquo;s woods a
+secret, thanks to Peyton&rsquo;s having quitted New York
+immediately after it, and to the relation of dependence
+in which the two only witnesses stood to him.
+Thus it was that he had remained well out of view
+during Elizabeth&rsquo;s sharp interview with Peyton, being
+unwilling alike to be known as a Tory officer, and to
+be recognized by Peyton. His civilian&rsquo;s cloak hid
+his uniform and weapons; the dimness of the candle-light
+screened his face.</p>
+<p>But matters had reached a point where he could
+not, without appearing a coward, refrain longer from
+taking a hand. He stepped forward from the dark
+remoteness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said he to Peyton, politely, &ldquo;I know the
+custom of war. But since a horse must be taken,
+you will find one of mine in the stable. Will you
+not take it instead of this lady&rsquo;s?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton had been scrutinizing Colden&rsquo;s features.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Colden, if I remember,&rdquo; he said, when the
+major had finished.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You remember right,&rdquo; said Colden, with a bow,
+concealing behind a not too well assumed quietude
+what inward tremors the situation caused him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you are doubtless now an officer in some
+Tory corps?&rdquo; said Peyton, quickly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir, I am neutral,&rdquo; replied Colden, rather
+huskily, with an instant&rsquo;s glance of warning at Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gad!&rdquo; said Peyton, with a smile, still closely
+surveying the major. &ldquo;From your sentiments the
+time I met you in New York in &rsquo;75, I should have
+thought you&rsquo;d take up arms for the King.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was before the Declaration of Independence,&rdquo;
+said Colden, in a tone scarcely more than
+audible. &ldquo;I have modified my opinions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They were strong enough then,&rdquo; Peyton went
+on. &ldquo;You remember how you upheld them with a
+rapier in Bayard&rsquo;s woods?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I remember,&rdquo; said Colden, faintly, first reddening,
+then taking on a pale and sickly look, as if a prey to
+hidden chagrin and rage.</p>
+<p>It seemed as if his tormentor intended to torture
+him interminably. Peyton, who knew that one of
+his men would come for him as soon as the horse
+should be saddled and bridled, remained facing the
+unhappy major, wearing that frank half-smile which,
+from the triumphant to the crestfallen, seems so
+insolent and is so maddening.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve often thought,&rdquo; said Peyton, &ldquo;I deserved
+small credit for getting the better of you that day.
+I had taken lessons from London fencing-masters.&rdquo;
+(Consider that the woman whom Colden loved was
+looking on, and that this was all news to her, and
+imagine how he raged beneath the outer calmness he
+had, for safety&rsquo;s sake, to wear.) &ldquo;&rsquo;Twas no hard
+thing to disarm you, and I&rsquo;m not sorry you&rsquo;re neutral
+now. For if you wore British or Tory uniform,
+&rsquo;twould be my duty to put you again at disadvantage,
+by taking you prisoner.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The face of one of Peyton&rsquo;s men now appeared in
+the doorway. Peyton nodded to him, then continued
+to address the major.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As for your request, my traps are now on the
+other horse, and there is not time to change. I
+must ride at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stepped quickly to the door, and on the
+threshold turned to bow.</p>
+<p>Then cried Elizabeth:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May you ride to your destruction, for your
+impudence, you bandit!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, madam! I shall ride where I
+must! Farewell! My horse is waiting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And in an instant he was gone, having closed the
+door after him with a bang.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>His</i> horse! The highwayman!&rdquo; quoth Elizabeth.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Give the gentleman his due,&rdquo; said Miss Sally, in
+a way both mollified and mollifying. &ldquo;He paid for
+it with those.&rdquo; She indicated the strewn fragments
+of the Continental bills on the floor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Forward! Get up!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was the voice of Captain Peyton outside. The
+horses were heard riding away from the lawn.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth opened the door and looked out. Her
+aunt accompanied her. Old Valentine gazed with a
+sagely deploring expression at the torn-up bills on
+the floor. Colden stood where he had been, lest by
+some chance the enemy might return and discover
+his relief from straint.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; cried Elizabeth, at the door, as the light
+horsemen filed out the gate and up the branch road
+towards the highway, &ldquo;to see the miserable rebel
+mounted on my Cato!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He looks well on him,&rdquo; said her aunt.</p>
+<p>It was a brief flow of light from the fresh-risen
+moon, between wind-driven clouds, that enabled Miss
+Sally to make this observation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Looks well! The tatterdemalion!&rdquo; And Elizabeth
+came from the door, as if loathing further sight
+of him.</p>
+<p>But Miss Sally continued to look after the riders,
+as their dark forms were borne rapidly towards
+the post-road. &ldquo;Nay, I think he is quite handsome.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Pah! You think every man is handsome!&rdquo; said
+the niece, curtly.</p>
+<p>Miss Sally turned from the door, quite shocked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Elizabeth, you know I&rsquo;m the least susceptible
+of women!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Old Mr. Valentine nodded sadly, as much as to
+say, &ldquo;I know that, all too well!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As the racing clouds now rushed over the moon,
+and the horsemen&rsquo;s figures, having become more and
+more blurred, were lost in the blackness, Miss Sally
+closed and bolted the door. The horses were faintly
+heard coming to a halt, at about the junction of the
+branch road with the highway, then moving on again
+rapidly, not further towards the south, as might have
+been expected, but back northward, and finally towards
+the east. Meanwhile Elizabeth stood in the hall,
+her rage none the less that its object was no longer
+present to have it wreaked on him. Such hate, such
+passionate craving for revenge, had never theretofore
+been awakened in her. And when she realized the
+unlikelihood of any opportunity for satisfaction, she
+was exasperated to the limit of self-control.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you had only had some troops here!&rdquo; she
+said to Colden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it! May the rascal perish for finding me
+at such a disadvantage! &rsquo;Twas my choice between
+denying my colors and becoming his prisoner.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This brought back to Elizabeth&rsquo;s mind the talk
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span>
+between Colden and Peyton, which her feelings had
+for the time driven from her thoughts. But now a
+natural curiosity asserted itself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So you knew the fellow before?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I met him in &rsquo;75,&rdquo; said Colden, blurting awkwardly
+into the explanation that he knew had to
+be made, though little was his stomach for it. &ldquo;He
+was passing through New York from Boston to
+his home in Virginia, after he had deserted from
+the King&rsquo;s army&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Deserted?&rdquo; Elizabeth opened wide her eyes.</p>
+<p>Colden briefly outlined, as far as was desirable,
+what he knew of Peyton&rsquo;s story.</p>
+<p>It was Miss Sally who then said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he disarmed you in a duel?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He had practised under London fencing-masters,
+as he but now admitted,&rdquo; replied Colden, grumpily.
+&ldquo;He made no secret of his desertion; and in a coffee-house
+discussion I said it was a dastardly act.
+So we&mdash;fought. Since then I&rsquo;ve met officers of
+the regiment he left. Such a thing was never
+known before,&mdash;the desertion of an officer of the
+Sixty-third,&mdash;and General Grant, its colonel, has
+the word of Sir Henry Clinton that this fellow shall
+hang if they ever catch him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I hope my horse will carry him into their
+hands!&rdquo; said Elizabeth, heartily. &ldquo;My poor Cato!
+I shall never see him again!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98' name='page_98'></a>98</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;We may get him back some day,&rdquo; said Colden,
+for want of aught better to say.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you can do that, John Colden, and have this
+rebel hanged who dared treat me so&mdash;&rdquo; Elizabeth
+paused, and her look dwelt on the major&rsquo;s face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I think I shall almost be really in love
+with you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Colden sighed. &ldquo;A rare promise from one&rsquo;s
+betrothed!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Heavens, Jack!&rdquo; said Elizabeth, now diverted
+from the thought of her horse. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t I do the
+best I can to love you? I&rsquo;m sure I come as near
+loving you as loving anybody. What more can I do
+than that, and promising my hand? Don&rsquo;t look dismal,
+major, I pray,&mdash;and now make haste back to
+New York.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can I go and leave you exposed to the
+chance of another visit from some troop of rebels?&rdquo;
+pleaded Colden, in a kind of peevish despair, taking
+up his hat from the settle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that fellow showed no disposition to injure
+<i>me</i>!&rdquo; she answered, reassuringly. &ldquo;Trust me to
+take care of myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But promise that if there&rsquo;s any sign of danger,
+you will fly to New York.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That will depend on the circumstances. I may
+be safer in this house than on the road.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99' name='page_99'></a>99</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Then, at least, you will have guns fired, and also
+send a man to one of our outposts for help?&rdquo; There
+was no pretence in the young man&rsquo;s solicitude.
+Such a bride as Elizabeth Philipse was not to be
+found every day. The thought of losing her was
+poignant misery to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To which one?&rdquo; she asked. &ldquo;The Hessian
+camp by Tippett&rsquo;s Brook, or the Highlanders&rsquo;, at
+Valentine&rsquo;s Hill?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Colden, meditating. &ldquo;Those may be
+withdrawn if the weather is bad. Send to the barrier
+at King&rsquo;s Bridge,&mdash;but if your man meets one
+of our patrols or pickets on the way, so much the
+better. Good-by! I shall see your father to-night,
+and then rejoin my regiment on Staten Island.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He took her hand, bent over it, and kissed it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be careful you don&rsquo;t fall in with those rebel
+dragoons,&rdquo; said Elizabeth, lightly, as his lips dwelt
+on her fingers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No danger of that,&rdquo; put in old Valentine, from
+the settle, for the moment ceasing to chew an imaginary
+cud. &ldquo;They took the road to Mile Square.&rdquo;
+The octogenarian&rsquo;s hearing was better than his sight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall notify our officers below that this rebel
+force is out,&rdquo; said Colden, &ldquo;and our dragoons may
+cut it off somewhere. Farewell, then! I shall return
+for you in a week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In a week,&rdquo; repeated Elizabeth, indifferently.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100' name='page_100'></a>100</span></div>
+<p>He kissed her hand again, bowed to Miss Sally,
+and hastened from the hall, closing the door behind
+him. Once outside, he made his way to the stables,
+where he knew that Cuff, not having returned to
+Elizabeth, must still be.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s little reward you give that gentleman&rsquo;s
+devotion, Elizabeth,&rdquo; said Miss Sally, when he had
+gone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, am I not going to give him myself? Come,
+aunty, don&rsquo;t preach on that old topic. My parents
+wish me to be married to Jack Colden, and I
+have consented, being an obedient child,&mdash;in some
+things.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;More obedient to your own whims than to anything
+else,&rdquo; was Miss Sally&rsquo;s comment.</p>
+<p>The sound of Colden&rsquo;s horse departing brought
+to the amiable aunt the thought of a previous departure.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That fine young rebel captain!&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;If
+our troops take him they&rsquo;ll hang him! Gracious!
+As if there were so many handsome young men that
+any could be spared! Why can&rsquo;t they hang the old
+and ugly ones instead?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Valentine suspended his chewing long enough
+to bestow on Miss Sally a look of vague suspicion.</p>
+<p>The door, which had not been locked or bolted
+after Colden&rsquo;s going, was suddenly flung open to
+admit Cuff. The negro boy had been thrown by
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101' name='page_101'></a>101</span>
+the dragoons&rsquo; visit into an almost comatose condition
+of fright, from which the orders of Colden had
+but now sufficiently restored him to enable his venturing
+out of the stable. He now stood trembling
+in fear of Elizabeth&rsquo;s reproof, stammering out a wild
+protestation of his inability to save the horse by
+force, and of his inefficacious attempts to save him
+by prayer.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth cut him short with the remark, intended
+rather for her own satisfaction than for aught else,
+that one thing was to be hoped,&mdash;the chance of
+war might pay back the impertinent rebel who had
+stolen the horse. She then gave orders that the
+hall and the east parlor be lighted up.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For the proper reception,&rdquo; she added to her
+aunt, &ldquo;of the next handsome rebel captain who may
+condescend to honor us with a visit. Mr. Valentine,
+wait in the parlor till supper is ready. I&rsquo;ll have a
+fire made there. Come, aunt Sally, we&rsquo;ll discuss
+over a cup of tea the charms of your pretty rebel
+captain and his agreeable way of relieving ladies of
+their favorite horses. I&rsquo;ll warrant he&rsquo;ll look handsomer
+than ever, on the gallows, when our soldiers
+catch him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And she went blithely up the stairs, which at the
+first landing turned rightward to a second landing,
+and thence rightward again to the upper hall. The
+darkness was interrupted by a narrow stream of light
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span>
+from a slightly open doorway in the north side of
+this upper hall. This was the doorway to her own
+room, and when she crossed the threshold she saw
+a bright blaze in the fireplace, lights in a candelabrum,
+cups and saucers on a table, and Molly bringing
+in a steaming teapot from the next room, which,
+being northward, was nearer the kitchen stairs.
+This next room, too, was lighted up. Solid wooden
+shutters, inside the windows of both chambers, kept
+the light from being seen without, and the wind from
+being felt within.</p>
+<p>As Elizabeth was looking around her room, smiling
+affectionately on its many well-remembered and
+long-neglected objects, there was a sudden distant
+detonation. Molly looked up inquiringly, but Elizabeth
+directed her to place the tea things, find fresh
+candles, if any were left in the house, and help Cuff
+put them on the chandelier in the lower hall, and
+then get supper. As Molly left the room, Miss
+Sally entered it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Elizabeth! Oh, child! There&rsquo;s firing beyond
+Locust Hill. It&rsquo;s on the Mile Square road, Mr.
+Valentine says,&mdash;cavalry pistols and rangers&rsquo; muskets.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Valentine has a fine ear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He says the rebel light horse must have met the
+Hessians! There &rsquo;tis again!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sit down, aunt, and have a dish of tea. Ah-h!
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span>
+This is comfortable! Delicious! Let them kill one
+another as they please, beyond Locust Hill; let the
+wind race up the Hudson and the Albany road as
+it likes,&mdash;we&rsquo;re snugly housed!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Williams, who had, from the upper hall, safely
+overheard Captain Peyton&rsquo;s intrusion, and had not
+seen occasion for his own interference, now came
+in from the next room, which he had been making
+ready for Miss Sally, and received Elizabeth&rsquo;s orders
+concerning the east parlor.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, what of Harry Peyton and his troop?</p>
+<p>Riding up the little tree-lined road towards the
+highway, they saw dark forms of other riders
+standing at the point of junction. These were the
+men whom Peyton had directed to patrol the road.
+They now told him that, by the account of a belated
+farmer whom they had halted, the Hessians had
+turned from the highway into the Mile Square road.
+Peyton immediately led his men to that road. Thus,
+as old Valentine said, that part of the highway between
+the manor-house and King&rsquo;s Bridge remained
+clear of these rebel dragoons, and Major Colden
+stood in no danger of meeting them on his return to
+New York. The major, nevertheless, did not spare
+his horse as he pursued his lonely way through the
+windy darkness. When he arrived at King&rsquo;s Bridge
+he was glad to give his horse another rest, and to
+accept an invitation to a bottle and a game in the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104' name='page_104'></a>104</span>
+tavern where the British commanding officer was
+quartered.</p>
+<p>The Hessians had not gone far on the Mile Square
+road, when their leader called a halt and consulted
+with his subordinate officer. They were now near
+Mile Square, where the Tory captain, James De
+Lancey, kept a recruiting station all the year round,
+and Valentine&rsquo;s Hill, where there was a regiment of
+Highlanders. Their own security was thus assured,
+but they might do more than come off in safety,&mdash;they
+might strike a parting blow at their pursuers.
+A plan was quickly formed. A messenger was
+despatched to Mile Square to request a small reinforcement.
+The troop then turned back towards the highway,
+having planned for either one of two possibilities.
+The first was that the rebel dragoons, not thinking
+the Hessians had turned into the Mile Square road,
+would ride on down the highway. In that case, the
+Hessians would follow them, having become in their
+turn the pursuers, and would fall upon their rear.
+The noise of firearms would alarm the Hessian camp
+by Tippett&rsquo;s Brook, below, and the rebels would thus
+be caught between two forces. The second possibility
+was that the Americans would follow into the
+Mile Square road. When the sound of their horses
+soon told that this was the reality, the Hessians
+promptly prepared to meet it.</p>
+<p>The force divided into two parts. The foremost
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105' name='page_105'></a>105</span>
+blocked the road, near a turning, so as to remain
+unseen by the approaching rebels until almost the
+moment of collision. The second force stayed some
+rods behind the first, forming in two lines, one along
+each side of the road. As to each force, some were
+armed with sabres and cavalry pistols, but most,
+being mounted yagers of Van Wrumb&rsquo;s battalion,
+with rifles.</p>
+<p>As for the little detachment of Lee&rsquo;s Light Horse
+that was now galloping along the Mile Square road,
+under Harry Peyton&rsquo;s command, the arms were
+mainly broadswords and pistols, but some of the men
+had rifles or light muskets.</p>
+<p>The troop went forward at a gallop against the
+wind, there being just sufficient light for keen eyes
+to make out the road ahead. Harry Peyton was
+inwardly deploring the loss of time at Philipse Manor-house,
+and fearing that the prey would reach its
+covert, when suddenly the moon appeared in a cloud-rift,
+the troops passed a turn in the road, and there
+stood a line of Hessians barring the way.</p>
+<p>Ere Peyton could give an order, came one loud,
+flaming, whistling discharge from that living barrier.
+Harry&rsquo;s horse&mdash;Elizabeth Philipse&rsquo;s Cato&mdash;reared,
+as did others of his troop. Some of the men came
+to a quick stop, others were borne forward by the
+impetus of their former speed, but soon reined in for
+orders. No man fell, though one groaned, and two
+cursed.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106' name='page_106'></a>106</span></div>
+<p>Harry got his horse under control, drew his broadsword
+with his right hand, his pistol with his left,&mdash;which
+held also the rein,&mdash;and ordered his men to
+charge, to fire at the moment of contact, then to cut,
+slash, and club. So the little troop, the well and the
+wounded alike, dashed forward.</p>
+<p>But the line of Hessians, as soon as they had fired,
+turned and fled, passing between the two lines of the
+second force, and stopping at some further distance
+to reform and reload. The second force, being thus
+cleared by the first, wheeled quickly into the road,
+and formed a second barrier against Peyton&rsquo;s oncoming
+troop.</p>
+<p>Peyton&rsquo;s men, intoxicated by the powder-smell that
+filled their nostrils as they passed through the smoke
+of the Hessians&rsquo; first volley, bore down on this second
+barrier with furious force. They were the best
+riders in the world, and many a one of them held his
+broadsword aloft in one hand, his pistol raised in
+the other, the rein loose on his horse&rsquo;s neck; while
+those with long-barrelled weapons aimed them on the
+gallop.</p>
+<p>The Hessians and Peyton&rsquo;s foremost men fired at
+the same moment. The Hessians had not time to
+turn and flee, for the Americans, unchecked by this
+second greeting of fire, came on at headlong speed.
+&ldquo;At &rsquo;em, boys!&rdquo; yelled Peyton, discharging his pistol
+at a tall yager, who fell sidewise from his horse
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span>
+with a fierce German oath. The light horse men
+dashed between the Hessians&rsquo; steeds, and there was
+hewing and hacking.</p>
+<p>A Hessian officer struck with a sabre at Peyton&rsquo;s
+left arm, but only knocked the pistol from his hand.
+Peyton then found himself threatened on the right
+by a trooper, and slashed at him with broadsword.
+The blow went home, but the sword&rsquo;s end became
+entangled somehow with the breast bones of the victim.
+A yager, thinking to deprive Peyton of the
+sword, brought down a musket-butt heavily on it.
+But Peyton&rsquo;s grip was firm, and the sword snapped
+in two, the hilt in his hand, the point in its human
+sheath. At that instant Peyton felt a keen smart in
+his left leg. It came from a second sabre blow
+aimed by the Hessian officer, who might have followed
+it with a third, but that he was now attacked
+elsewhere. Peyton had no sooner clapped his hand
+to his wounded leg than he was stunned by a blow
+from the rifle-butt of the yager who had previously
+struck the sword. Harry fell forward on the horse&rsquo;s
+neck, which he grasped madly with both arms, still
+holding the broken sword in his right hand; and
+lapsed from a full sense of the tumult, the plunging
+and shrieking horses, the yelling and cursing men,
+the whirr and clash of swords, and the thuds of
+rifle-blows, into blind, red, aching, smarting half-consciousness.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span></div>
+<p>When he was again aware of things, he was still
+clasping the horse&rsquo;s neck, and was being borne alone
+he knew not whither. His head ached, and his left
+leg was at every movement a seat of the sharpest
+pain. He was dizzy, faint, bleeding,&mdash;and too
+weak to raise himself from his position. He could
+not hear any noise of fighting, but that might have
+been drowned by the singing in his ears. He tried
+to sit up and look around, but the effort so increased
+his pain and so drew on his nigh-fled strength, that
+he fell forward on the horse&rsquo;s neck, exhausted and
+half-insensible. The horse, which had merely turned
+and run from the conflict at the moment of Peyton&rsquo;s
+loss of sense, galloped on.</p>
+<p>Clouds had darkened the moon in time to prevent
+their captain&rsquo;s unintentional defection from being
+seen by his troops. They had, therefore, fought
+on against such antagonists as, in the darkness, they
+could keep located. The moon reappeared, and
+showed many of the Hessians making for the wooded
+hill near by, and some fleeing to the force that had
+re-formed further on the road. Some of the Americans
+charged this force, which thereupon fired a volley
+and fled, having the more time therefor inasmuch
+as the charging dragoons did not this time possess
+their former speed and impetus. The dragoons, in
+disorder and without a leader, came to a halt. Becoming
+aware of Peyton&rsquo;s absence, they sought in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span>
+vain the scene of recent conflict. It was soon inferred
+that he had been wounded, and, therefore of
+no further use in the combat, had retreated to a safe
+resting-place. It was decided useless to follow the
+enemy further towards the near British posts, whence
+the Hessians might be reinforced,&mdash;as they would
+have been, had they held the ground longer. So,
+having had much the better of the fight, the surviving
+dragoons galloped back towards the post-road,
+expecting to come upon their captain, wounded, by
+the wayside, at any moment. He might, indeed, to
+make sure of safe refuge, ride as far towards the
+American lines as the wound he must have received
+would allow him to do.</p>
+<p>Such were the doings, on the windy night, beyond
+Locust Hill, while Elizabeth Philipse and her aunt
+sat drinking tea by candle-light before a sputtering
+wood fire. Elizabeth having set the example, the
+others in the house went about their business, despite
+the firing so plainly heard. Black Sam had,
+after Elizabeth&rsquo;s arrival, returned from the orchard,
+whither he had gone late in the day, lest he might
+attract the attention of some dodging whale-boat or
+skulking Whig to the few remaining apples. He
+had been let in at a rear door by Williams, who had
+repressed him during the visit of the American
+dragoons,&mdash;for Sam was a sturdy, bold fellow, of
+different kidney from the dapper, citified Cuff. At
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span>
+Williams&rsquo;s order he had made a roaring fire in the
+east parlor, to the great comfort of old Mr. Valentine,
+and was now putting the dining-room into a
+similar state of warmth and light. Williams was
+setting out provisions for Molly presently to cook;
+and the maid herself was, with Cuff&rsquo;s assistance, replenishing
+the hall chandelier with fresh candles.</p>
+<p>The sound of firing had put Elizabeth&rsquo;s black boy
+into a tremulous and white-eyed state. When Molly,
+who stood on the settle while he handed the candles
+up to her, assured him that the firing was t&rsquo;other
+side of Locust Hill, that the bullets would not penetrate
+the mahogany door, and that anyhow only one
+bullet in a hundred ever hit any one, Cuff affrightedly
+observed &rsquo;twas just that one bullet he was afraid of;
+and when, at the third discharge, Molly dropped a
+candle on his woolly head, he fell prostrate, howling
+that he was shot. Molly convinced him after awhile
+that he was alive, but he averred he had actually had
+a glimpse of the harps and the golden streets, though
+the prospect of soon possessing them had rather
+appalled him, as indeed it does many good people
+who are so sure of heaven and so fond of it. He
+had been reassured but a short time, when he had
+new cause for terror. Again a horse was heard
+galloping up to the house. It stopped before the
+door and gave a loud whinny.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_4' id='linki_4'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111' name='page_111'></a>111</span>
+<img src='images/i002.jpg' alt='' title='' width='324' height='500' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+&ldquo;LEANED FORWARD ON THE HORSE&rsquo;S NECK.&rdquo;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p>Molly exchanged with Cuff a look of mingled wonder,
+delight, and doubt; then ran and opened the
+front door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;It is! It&rsquo;s Miss Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+horse! It&rsquo;s Cato!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cuff ran to the threshold in great joy, but suddenly
+stopped short.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dey&rsquo;s a soldier on hees back,&rdquo; he whispered.</p>
+<p>So Molly had noticed,&mdash;but a soldier who made
+no demonstration, a soldier who leaned forward on
+the horse&rsquo;s neck and clutched its mane, holding at the
+same time in one hand a broken sword, and who
+tried to sit up, but only emitted a groan of pain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s wounded, that&rsquo;s it,&rdquo; said Molly. &ldquo;Go and
+help the poor soldier in, Cuff. Don&rsquo;t you see he&rsquo;s
+injured? He can&rsquo;t hurt you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Molly enforced her commands with such physical
+persuasions that Cuff, ere he well knew what he was
+about, was helping Peyton from the horse. The
+captain, revived by a supreme effort, leaned on the
+boy&rsquo;s shoulder and came limping and lurching across
+the porch into the hall. Molly then went to his
+assistance, and with this additional aid he reached
+the settle, on which he dropped, weak, pale, and
+panting. He took a sitting posture, gasped his
+thanks to Molly, and, noticing the blood from his leg
+wound, called damnation on the Hessian officer&rsquo;s
+sword. Presently he asked for a drink of water.</p>
+<p>At Molly&rsquo;s bidding the negro boy hastened for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112' name='page_112'></a>112</span>
+water, and also to inform his mistress of the arrival.
+Elizabeth, hearing the news, rose with an exclamation;
+but, taking thought, sat down again, and, with
+a pretence of composure, finished her cup of tea.
+Cuff returned with a glass of water to the hall,
+where Molly was listening to Peyton&rsquo;s objurgations
+on his condition. The captain took the glass eagerly,
+and was about to drink, when a footstep was
+heard on the stairs. He turned his head and saw
+Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s my respects, madam,&rdquo; quoth he, and
+drank off the water.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth came down-stairs and took a position
+where she could look Peyton well over. He watched
+her with some wonderment. When she was quite
+ready she spoke:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So, it is, indeed, the man who stole my horse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pardon. I think your horse has stolen <i>me</i>! It
+made me an intruder here quite against my will, I
+assure you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will doubtless not honor us by remaining?&rdquo;
+There was more seriousness of curiosity in this question
+than Elizabeth betrayed or Peyton perceived.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What can I do? I can neither ride nor walk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But your men will probably come for you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think any saw the horse bear me from
+the fight. The field was in smoke and darkness.
+My troops must have pursued the enemy. They&rsquo;ll
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span>
+think me killed or made prisoner. If they return
+this way, however, I can have them stop and take
+me along.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you expect that, in repayment of your
+treatment of me awhile ago&mdash;&rdquo; Elizabeth paused.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madam, you should allow for the exigencies of
+war! Yet, if you wish to turn me out&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Elizabeth interrupted him:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So it is true that, if you fell into the hands of
+the British, they would hang you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Doubtless! But you shouldn&rsquo;t blame <i>me</i> for
+what <i>they&rsquo;d</i> do. And how did you know?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Help this gentleman into the east parlor,&rdquo; said
+Elizabeth, abruptly, to Cuff.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; cried Peyton, his face lighting up with
+quick gratitude. &ldquo;Madam, you then make me your
+guest?&rdquo; He thrust forward his head, forgetful of
+his condition.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My guest?&rdquo; rang out Elizabeth&rsquo;s voice in answer.
+&ldquo;You insolent rebel, I intend to hand you
+over to the British!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a brief silence. Each gazed at the other.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will not&mdash;do that?&rdquo; said Peyton, in a voice
+little above a whisper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait and see!&rdquo; And she stood regarding him
+with elation.</p>
+<p>He stared at her in blank consternation.</p>
+<p>Again, the sound of the trample of many horses.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; cried Peyton, joyfully. &ldquo;My men returning!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He rose to go to the door, but his wounded leg
+gave way, and he staggered to the staircase, and
+leaned against the balustrade.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth&rsquo;s look of gratification faded. She ran
+to the door, fastened it with bolt and key, and stood
+with her back against it.</p>
+<p>The sound, first distant as if in the Mile Square
+road, was now manifestly in the highway. Would it
+come southward, towards the house, or go northward,
+decreasing?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are my men!&rdquo; cried Peyton to Cuff.
+&ldquo;Call them! They&rsquo;ll pass without knowing I am
+here. Call them, I say! Quick! They&rsquo;ll be out of
+hearing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Silence!&rdquo; said Elizabeth to Cuff, in a low tone,
+and stood listening.</p>
+<p>Peyton made another attempt to move, but realized
+his inability. &rsquo;Twas all he could do to support
+himself against the balustrade.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My God, they&rsquo;ve gone by!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll
+return to our lines, leaving me behind.&rdquo; And he
+shouted, &ldquo;Carrington!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The voice rang for a moment in the remoteness of
+the hall above. Then complete silence within. All
+in the hall remained motionless, listening. The
+sound of the horses came fainter and fainter.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Carrington! Help! I&rsquo;m in the manor-house,&mdash;a
+prisoner!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A look of despair came over his face. On Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+the suspense gave way to a smile of triumph.</p>
+<p>The sound of the horses died away.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VI_THE_ONE_CHANCE' id='CHAPTER_VI_THE_ONE_CHANCE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+<h3>THE ONE CHANCE.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Peyton</span> staggered back to the settle and sank
+down on it, exhausted. Elizabeth, hearing black
+Sam moving about in the dining-room, which was
+directly north of the hall, bade Molly summon him.
+When he appeared, she ordered him and Cuff to
+carry the settle, with the wounded man on it, into
+the east parlor, and to place the man on the sofa
+there. She then told Molly to hasten the supper,
+and to send Williams to her up-stairs, and thereupon
+rejoined her excited aunt above. When Williams
+attended her, she gave him commands regarding the
+prisoner.</p>
+<p>Peyton was thus carried through the deep doorway
+in the south side of the hall into the east parlor,
+which was now exceedingly habitable with fire
+roaring and candles lighted. In the east and south
+sides of this richly ornamented room were deeply
+embrasured windows, with low seats. In the west
+side was a mahogany door opening from the old or
+south hall. In the north side, which was adorned
+with wooden pillars and other carved woodwork, was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span>
+the door through which Peyton had been carried;
+west of that, the decorated chimney-breast with its
+English mantel and fireplace, and further west a
+pair of doors opening from a closet, whence a winding
+staircase descended cellarward. The ceiling was
+rich with fanciful arabesque woodwork. Set in the
+chimney-breast, over the mantel, was an oblong mirror.
+The wainscoting, pillars, and other woodwork
+were of a creamy white. But Peyton had no eye for
+details at the moment. He noticed only that his
+entrance disturbed the slumbers of the old gentleman&mdash;Matthias
+Valentine&mdash;who had been sleeping
+in a great armchair by the fire, and who now blinked
+in wonderment.</p>
+<p>The negroes put down the settle and lifted Peyton
+to a sofa that stood against the western side of the
+room, between a spinet and the northern wall. At
+Peyton&rsquo;s pantomimic request they then moved the sofa
+to a place near the fire, and then, taking the settle
+along, marched out of the room, back to the hall,
+closing the door as they went.</p>
+<p>Peyton, too pain-racked and exhausted to speak,
+lay back on the sofa, with closed eyes. Old Valentine
+stared at him a few moments; then, curious both
+as to this unexpected advent and as to the proximity
+of supper, rose and hobbled from the parlor and
+across the hall to the dining-room. For some time
+Peyton was left alone. He opened his eyes, studied
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span>
+the flying figures on the ceiling, the portraits on the
+walls, the carpet,&mdash;Philipse Manor-house, like the
+best English houses of the time, had carpet on its
+floors,&mdash;the carving of the mantel, the clock and
+candelabrum thereupon, the crossed rapiers thereabove,
+the curves of the imported furniture. His
+twinges and aches were so many and so diverse that
+he made no attempt to locate them separately. He
+could feel that the left leg of his breeches was
+soaked with blood.</p>
+<p>Finally the door opened, and in came Williams
+and Cuff, the former with shears and bands of linen,
+the latter with a basin of water. Williams, whom
+Peyton had not before seen, scrutinized him critically,
+and forthwith proceeded to expose, examine,
+wash, and bind up the wounded leg, while Cuff stood
+by and played the rôle of surgeon&rsquo;s assistant. Peyton
+speedily perceived on the steward&rsquo;s part a reliable
+acquaintance with the art of dressing cuts, and therefore
+submitted without a word to his operations.
+Williams was equally silent, breaking his reticence
+only now and then to utter some monosyllabic command
+to Cuff.</p>
+<p>When the wound was dressed, Williams put the
+patient&rsquo;s disturbed attire to rights, and adjusted his
+hair. Peyton, with a feeling of some relief, made to
+stretch the wounded leg, but a sharp twinge cut the
+movement short.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You should make a good surgeon,&rdquo; Peyton said
+at last, &ldquo;you tie so damnably tight a bandage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve bound up many a wound, sir,&rdquo; said Williams;
+&ldquo;and some far worse than yours. &rsquo;Tis not a dangerous
+cut, yours, though &rsquo;twill be irritating while it
+lasts. You won&rsquo;t walk for a day or two.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s remarkable your mistress has so much
+trouble taken with me, when she intends to deliver
+me to the British.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton had inferred the steward&rsquo;s place in the
+house, from his appearance and manner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, sir,&rdquo; said Williams, &ldquo;we couldn&rsquo;t have you
+bleeding over the floor and furniture. Besides, I
+suppose she wants to hand you over in good condition.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see! No bedraggled remnant of a man, but a
+complete, clean, and comfortable candidate for Cunningham&rsquo;s
+gallows!&rdquo; Peyton here forgot his wound
+and attempted to sit upright, but quickly fell back
+with a grimace and a groan.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Better lie still, sir,&rdquo; counselled Williams, sagely.
+&ldquo;If you need any one, you are to call Cuff. He will
+be in waiting in that hall, sir.&rdquo; And the steward
+pointed towards the east hall. &ldquo;There will be no use
+trying to get away. I doubt if you could walk half
+across the room without fainting. And if you could
+get out of the house, you&rsquo;d find black Sam on guard,
+with his duck-gun,&mdash;and Sam doesn&rsquo;t miss once in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span>
+a hundred times with that duck-gun. Bring those
+things, Cuff.&rdquo; Williams indicated Peyton&rsquo;s hat,
+remnant of sword, and scabbard, which had been
+placed on the armchair by the fireside.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Leave my sword!&rdquo; commanded Peyton.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t, sir!&rdquo; said Williams, affably. &ldquo;Miss Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+orders were to take it away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Williams thereupon went from the room, crossed
+the east hall, and entered the dining-room, to report
+to Elizabeth, who now sat at supper with Miss Sally
+and Mr. Valentine.</p>
+<p>Cuff, with basin of water in one hand, took up the
+hat, sword, and scabbard, with the other.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miss Elizabeth!&rdquo; mused Peyton. &ldquo;Queen Elizabeth,
+I should say, in this house. Gad, to be a girl&rsquo;s
+prisoner, tied down to a sofa by so small a cut!&rdquo;
+Hereupon he addressed Cuff, who was about to
+depart: &ldquo;Where is your mistress?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the dining-room, eating supper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And Mr. Colden, whom I saw in that hall about
+an hour ago, when I bought the horse?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Major Colden rode back to New York.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Major</i> Colden! Major of what?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;New Juzzey Vollingteers, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What? Then he is in the King&rsquo;s service, after
+all? And when I was here with my troops he said
+he was neutral. I&rsquo;ll never take a Tory&rsquo;s word
+again.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Am you like to hab de chance, sir?&rdquo; queried
+Cuff, with a grin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What! You taunt me with my situation?&rdquo; And
+Harry&rsquo;s head shot up from the sofa as he made to
+rise and chastise the boy; but he could not stand
+on his leg, and so remained sitting, propped on his
+right arm, panting and glaring at the negro.</p>
+<p>Cuff, whose whiteness of teeth had shown in his
+moment of mirth, now displayed much whiteness of
+eye in his alarm at Peyton&rsquo;s movement, and glided to
+the door. As he went out to the hall, he passed
+Molly, who was coming into the parlor with a bowl
+of broth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hah!&rdquo; ejaculated Peyton as she came towards
+him. &ldquo;They would feed the animal for the slaughter,
+eh?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Molly curtseyed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Please, sir, it wa&rsquo;n&rsquo;t they sent this. I brought it
+of my own accord, sir, though with Miss Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+permission.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! so Miss Elizabeth <i>did</i> give her permission,
+then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir. At least, she said it didn&rsquo;t matter, if I
+wished to.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you did wish to? Well, you&rsquo;re a good girl,
+and I thank you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Whereupon Peyton took the bowl and sipped of
+the broth with relish.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, sir,&rdquo; said Molly, who then moved a
+small light chair from its place by the wall to a spot
+beside the sofa and within Peyton&rsquo;s reach. &ldquo;You
+can set the bowl on this,&rdquo; she added. &ldquo;I must go
+back to the kitchen.&rdquo; And, after another curtsey,
+she was gone.</p>
+<p>The broth revived Peyton, and with all his pain
+and fatigue he had some sense of comfort. The
+handsome, well warmed, well lighted parlor, so
+richly furnished, so well protected from the wind
+and weather by the solid shutters outside its four
+small-paned windows, was certainly a snug corner
+of the world. So far seemed all this from stress
+and war, that Peyton lost his strong realization of the
+fate that Elizabeth&rsquo;s threat promised him. Appreciation
+of his surroundings drove away other thoughts
+and feelings. That he should be taken and hanged
+was an idea so remote from his present situation, it
+seemed rather like a dream than an imminent reality.
+There surely would be a way of his getting hence in
+safety. And he imbibed mouthful after mouthful of
+the warm broth.</p>
+<p>Presently old Mr. Valentine reappeared, from the
+east hall, looking none the less comfortable for the
+supper he had eaten. A long pipe was in his hand,
+and, that he might absorb smoke and liquor at the
+same time, he had brought with him from the table,
+where the two ladies remained, a vast mug of hot
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span>
+rum punch of Williams&rsquo;s brewing. He now set the
+mug on the mantel, lighted his pipe with a brand
+from the fire, repossessed himself of the mug, and
+sat down in the armchair, with a sigh of huge satisfaction.
+It mattered not that this was the parlor of
+Philipse Manor-house,&mdash;for Mr. Valentine, in his
+innocent way, indulged himself freely in the privileges
+and presumptions of old age.</p>
+<p>Peyton, after staring for some time with curiosity
+at the smoky old gentleman, who rapidly grew smokier,
+at last raised the bowl of broth for a last gulp,
+saying, cheerily:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To your very good health, sir!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, sir!&rdquo; said the old man, complacently,
+not making any movement to reciprocate.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What! won&rsquo;t you drink to mine?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Twould be a waste of words to drink the health
+of a man that&rsquo;s going to be hanged,&rdquo; replied Valentine,
+who at supper had heard the ladies discuss
+Peyton&rsquo;s intended fate. He thereupon sent a cloud
+of smoke ceiling-ward for the flying cherubs to rest on.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The devil! You <i>are</i> economical!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of words, maybe, not of liquor.&rdquo; The octogenarian
+quaffed deeply from the mug. &ldquo;They say
+hanging is an easy death,&rdquo; he went on, being in loquacious
+mood. &ldquo;I never saw but one man hanged.
+He didn&rsquo;t seem to enjoy it.&rdquo; Mr. Valentine puffed
+slowly, inwardly dwelling on the recollection.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, didn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo; said Peyton.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, he took it most unpleasant like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you come in here to cheer me up in my last
+hours?&rdquo; queried Harry, putting the empty bowl on
+the chair by the sofa.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied the other, ingenuously. &ldquo;I came
+in for a smoke while the ladies stayed at the table.&rdquo;
+He then went back to a subject that seemed to have
+attractions for him. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know how hanging will
+go with you. Cunningham will do the work.<a href='#Footnote_0005' class='fnanchor'>[5]</a> They
+say he makes it as disagreeable as may be. I&rsquo;d come
+and see you hanged, but it won&rsquo;t be possible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I suppose I shall have to excuse you,&rdquo; said
+Peyton, with resignation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; The old man had finished his punch and
+set down his mug, and he now yawned with a completeness
+that revealed vastly more of red toothless
+mouth than one might have calculated his face could
+contain. &ldquo;Some take it easier than others,&rdquo; he
+went on. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s harder with young men like you.&rdquo;
+Again he opened his jaws in a gape as whole-souled
+as that of a house-dog before a kitchen fire. &ldquo;It
+must be disagreeable to have a rope tightened around
+your neck. I don&rsquo;t know.&rdquo; He thrust his pipe-stem
+absently between his lips, closed his eyes, mumbled
+absently, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; and in a few moments was
+asleep, his pipe hanging from his mouth, his hands
+folded in his lap.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;A cheerful companion for a man in my situation,&rdquo;
+thought Peyton. His mind had been brought
+back to the future. When would this resolute and
+vengeful Miss Elizabeth fulfil her threat? How
+would she proceed about it? Had she already taken
+measures towards his conveyance to the British lines?
+Should she delay until he should be able to walk,
+there would be two words about the matter. Meanwhile,
+he must wait for developments. It was useless
+to rack his brain with conjectures. His sense
+of present comfort gradually resumed sway, and he
+placed his head again on the sofa pillow and closed
+his eyes.</p>
+<p>He was conscious for a time of nothing but his
+deadened pain, his inward comfort, the breathing of
+old Mr. Valentine, the intermittent raging of the
+wind without, and the steady ticking of the clock on
+the mantel,&mdash;which delicately framed timepiece had
+been started within the hour by Sam, who knew
+Miss Elizabeth&rsquo;s will for having all things in running
+order. Peyton&rsquo;s drowsiness wrapped him closer and
+closer. Presently he was remotely aware of the
+opening of the door, the tread of light feet on the
+floor, the swish of skirts. But he had now reached
+that lethargic point which involves total indifference
+to outer things, and he did not even open his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Asleep,&rdquo; said Elizabeth, for it was she who had
+entered with her aunt.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span></div>
+<p>Harry recognized the voice, and knew that he was
+the subject of her remark; but his feeling towards
+his contemptuous captor was not such as to make
+him take the trouble of setting her right. Therefore,
+he kept his eyes closed, having a kind of satisfaction
+in her being mistaken.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How handsome!&rdquo; whispered Miss Sally, who
+beamed more bigly and benignly after supper than
+before.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which one, aunty?&rdquo; said Elizabeth, looking
+from Peyton to old Valentine.</p>
+<p>Her aunt deigned to this levity only a look of
+hopeless reproof.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth sat down on the music-seat before the
+spinet, and became serious,&mdash;or, more accurately,
+businesslike.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On second thought,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;it won&rsquo;t do to
+keep him here waiting for one of our patrols to pass
+this way. In the meantime some of the rebels might
+come into the neighborhood and stop here. He
+must be delivered to the British this very night!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton gave no outward sign of the momentary
+heart stoppage he felt within.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said the aunt, speaking low, and in some
+alarm, &ldquo;&rsquo;twould require Williams and both the blacks
+to take him, and we should be left alone in the
+house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I sha&rsquo;n&rsquo;t send him to the troops,&rdquo; said Elizabeth,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span>
+in her usual tone, not caring whether or not the
+prisoner should be disturbed,&mdash;for in his powerlessness
+he could not oppose her plans if he did know
+them, and in her disdain she had no consideration
+for his feelings. &ldquo;The troops shall come for him.
+Black Sam shall go to the watch-house at King&rsquo;s
+Bridge with word that there&rsquo;s an important rebel
+prisoner held here, to be had for the taking.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will the troops at King&rsquo;s Bridge heed the story
+of a black man?&rdquo; Aunt Sally seemed desirous of
+interposing objections to immediate action.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Their officer will heed a written message from
+me,&rdquo; said the niece. &ldquo;Most of the officers know
+me, and those at King&rsquo;s Bridge are aware I came
+here to-day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thereupon she called in Cuff, and sent him off
+for Williams, with orders that the steward should
+bring her pen, ink, paper, and wax.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Elizabeth!&rdquo; cried Miss Sally, looking at the
+floor. &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s some of the poor fellow&rsquo;s blood on
+the carpet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind. The blood of an enemy is a sight
+easily tolerated,&rdquo; said the girl, probably unaware
+how nearly she had duplicated a famous utterance of
+a certain King of France, whose remark had borne
+reference to another sense than that of sight.<a href='#Footnote_0006' class='fnanchor'>[6]</a></p>
+<p>Williams soon came in with the writing materials,
+and placed them, at Elizabeth&rsquo;s direction, on a table
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span>
+that stood between the two eastern windows, and on
+which was a lighted candelabrum. Elizabeth sat
+down at the table, her back towards the fireplace
+and Peyton.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish you to send black Sam to me,&rdquo; said she
+to the steward, &ldquo;and to take his place on guard with
+the gun till he returns from an errand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Williams departed, and Elizabeth began to make
+the quill fly over the paper, her aunt looking on from
+beside the table. Peyton opened his eyes and looked
+at them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It does seem a pity,&rdquo; said Miss Sally at last.
+&ldquo;Such a pretty gentleman,&mdash;such a gallant soldier!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gentleman?&rdquo; echoed Elizabeth, writing on.
+&ldquo;The fellow is not a gentleman! Nor a gallant
+soldier!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton rose to a sitting posture as if stung by a
+hornet, but was instantly reminded of his wound.
+But neither Elizabeth nor her aunt saw or heard his
+movement. The girl, unaware that he was awake,
+continued:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does a gentleman or a gallant soldier desert the
+army of his king to join that of his king&rsquo;s enemies?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Quick came the answer,&mdash;not from aunt Sally,
+but from Peyton on the sofa.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A gallant soldier has the right to choose his
+side, and a gentleman need not fight against his
+country!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span></div>
+<p>Elizabeth did not suffer herself to appear startled
+at this sudden breaking in. Having finished her
+note, she quietly folded it, and addressed it, while
+she said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A gallant soldier, having once chosen his side,
+will be loyal to it; and a gentleman never bore the
+odious title of deserter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A gentleman can afford to wear any title that is
+redeemed by a glorious cause and an extraordinary
+danger. When I took service with the King&rsquo;s army
+in England, I never dreamt that army would be sent
+against the King&rsquo;s own colonies; and not till I
+arrived in Boston did I know the true character of
+this revolt. We thought we were coming over
+merely to quell a lawless Boston rabble. I gave
+in my resignation&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But did not wait for it to be accepted,&rdquo; interrupted
+Elizabeth, quietly, as she applied to the folded
+paper the wax softened by the flame of a candle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I <i>was</i> a little hasty,&rdquo; said Harry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The rebel army was the proper place for such
+fellows,&rdquo; said Elizabeth. &ldquo;No true British officer
+would be guilty of such a deed!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Probably not! It required exceptional courage!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton knew, as well as any, that the British
+were brave enough; but he was in mood for sharp
+retort.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is not the reason,&rdquo; said Elizabeth, coldly,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span>
+refusing to show wrath. &ldquo;Your enemies hold such
+acts as yours in detestation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not serving in this war for the approbation
+of my enemies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this moment black Sam came in. Elizabeth
+handed him the letter, and said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are to take my horse Cato, and ride with
+this message to the British barrier at King&rsquo;s Bridge.
+It is for the officer in command there. When the
+sentries challenge you, show this, and say it is of the
+greatest consequence and must be delivered at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Miss Elizabeth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The commander,&rdquo; she went on, &ldquo;will probably
+send here a body of troops at once, to convey this
+prisoner within the lines. You are to return with
+them. If no time is lost, and they send mounted
+troops, you should be back in an hour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton could hardly repress a start.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An hour at most, miss, if nothing stops,&rdquo; said
+the negro.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If any officer of my acquaintance is in command,&rdquo;
+said Elizabeth, &ldquo;there will be no delay. Cuff shall
+let the troops in, through that hall, as soon as they
+arrive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Whereupon the black man, a stalwart and courageous
+specimen of his race, went rapidly from the
+room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One hour!&rdquo; murmured Peyton, looking at the
+clock.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span></div>
+<p>Molly, the maid, now reappeared, carrying carefully
+in one hand a cup, from which a thin steam ascended.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is&rsquo;t now, Molly?&rdquo; inquired Elizabeth,
+rising from her chair.</p>
+<p>Molly blushed and was much confused. &ldquo;Tea,
+ma&rsquo;am, if you please! I thought, maybe, you&rsquo;d
+allow the gentleman&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said Elizabeth. &ldquo;Be the good
+Samaritan if you like, child. His tea-drinking days
+will soon be over. Come, aunt Sally, we shall be in
+better company elsewhere.&rdquo; And she returned to
+the dining-room, not deigning her prisoner another
+look.</p>
+<p>Miss Sally followed, but her feelings required confiding
+in some one, and before she went she whispered
+to the embarrassed maid, &ldquo;Oh, Molly, to think
+so sweet a young gentleman should be completely
+wasted!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Molly heaved a sigh, and then approached the
+young gentleman himself, with whom she was now
+alone, saving the presence of the slumbering Valentine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So your name is Molly? And you&rsquo;ve brought
+me tea this time?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir,&mdash;if you please, sir.&rdquo; She took up the
+bowl from the chair and placed the cup in its stead.
+&ldquo;I put sugar in this, sir, but if you&rsquo;d rather&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d rather have it just as you&rsquo;ve made it, Molly,&rdquo;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span>
+he said, in a singularly gentle, unsteady tone. He
+raised the cup, and sipped. &ldquo;Delicious, Molly!&mdash;Hah!
+Your mistress thinks my tea-drinking days
+will soon be over.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m very sorry, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So am I.&rdquo; He held the cup in his left hand,
+supporting his upright body with his right arm, and
+looked rather at vacancy than at the maid. &ldquo;Never
+to drink tea again,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;or wine or spirits, for
+that matter! To close your eyes on this fine world!
+Never again to ride after the hounds, or sing, or
+laugh, or chuck a pretty girl under the chin!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And here, having set down the cup, he chucked
+Molly herself under the chin, pretending a gaiety he
+did not feel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never again,&rdquo; he went on, &ldquo;to lead a charge
+against the enemies of our liberty; not to live to see
+this fight out, the King&rsquo;s regiments driven from the
+land, the States take their place among the free
+nations of the world! <i>By God, Molly, I don&rsquo;t want
+to die yet!</i>&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was not the fear of death, it was the love of
+life, and what life might have in reserve, that moved
+him; and it now asserted itself in him with a force
+tenfold greater than ever before. Death,&mdash;or, rather,
+the ceasing of life,&mdash;as he viewed it now, when he
+was like to meet it without company, with prescribed
+preliminaries, in an ignominious mode, was a far
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span>
+other thing than as viewed in the exaltation of battle,
+when a man chances it hot-headed, uplifted,
+thrilled, in gallant comradeship, to his own fate
+rendered careless by a sense of his nothingness in
+comparison with the whole vast drama. Moreover,
+in going blithely to possible death in open fight, one
+accomplishes something for his cause; not so, going
+unwillingly to certain death on an enemy&rsquo;s gallows.
+It was, too, an exasperating thought that he should die
+to gratify the vengeful whim of an insolent Tory girl.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will it really come to that?&rdquo; asked Molly, in a
+frightened tone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As surely as I fall into British hands!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton remembered the case of General Charles
+Lee, whose resignation of half-pay had not been acknowledged;
+who was, when captured by the British,
+long in danger of hanging, and who was finally rated
+as an ordinary war prisoner only for Washington&rsquo;s
+threat to retaliate on five Hessian field officers. If
+a major-general, whose desertion, even if admitted,
+was from half-pay only, would have been hanged
+without ceremony but for General Howe&rsquo;s fear of a
+&ldquo;law scrape,&rdquo; and had been saved from shipment to
+England for trial, only by the King&rsquo;s fear that Washington&rsquo;s
+retaliation would disaffect the Hessian allies,
+for what could a mere captain look, who had come
+over from the enemy in action, and whose punishment
+would entail no official retaliation?</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;And your mistress expects a troop of British
+soldiers here in an hour to take me! Damn it, if I
+could only walk!&rdquo; And he looked rapidly around
+the room, in a kind of distraction, as if seeking some
+means of escape. Realizing the futility of this, he
+sighed dismally, and drank the remainder of the tea.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You couldn&rsquo;t get away from the house, sir,&rdquo; said
+Molly. &ldquo;Williams is watching outside.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d take a chance if I could only run!&rdquo; Peyton
+muttered. He had no fear that Molly would betray
+him. &ldquo;If there were some hiding-place I might
+crawl to! But the troops would search every cranny
+about the house.&rdquo; He turned to Molly suddenly,
+seeing, in his desperate state and his lack of time,
+but one hope. &ldquo;I wonder, could Williams be bribed
+to spirit me away?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Molly&rsquo;s manner underwent a slight chill.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;He&rsquo;d die before he&rsquo;d disobey
+Miss Elizabeth. We all would, sir. I&rsquo;m very
+sorry, indeed, sir.&rdquo; Whereupon, taking up the
+empty bowl and teacup, she hastened from the
+room.</p>
+<p>Peyton sat listening to the clock-ticks. He moved
+his right leg so that the foot rested on the floor, then
+tried to move the left one after it, using his hand to
+guide it. With great pains and greater pain, he
+finally got the left foot beside the right. He then
+undertook to stand, but the effort cost him such
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span>
+physical agony as could not be borne for any length
+of time. He fell back with a groan to the sofa, convinced
+that the wounded leg was not only, for the
+time, useless itself, but also an impediment to whatever
+service the other leg might have rendered alone.
+But he remained sitting up, his right foot on the
+floor.</p>
+<p>Suddenly there was a raucous sound from old Mr.
+Valentine. He had at last begun to snore. But
+this infliction brought its own remedy, for when his
+jaws opened wider his tobacco pipe fell from his
+mouth and struck his folded hands. He awoke with
+a start, and blinked wonderingly at Peyton, whose
+face, turned towards the old man, still wore the look
+of disapproval evoked by the momentary snoring.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Still here, eh?&rdquo; piped Mr. Valentine. &ldquo;I dreamt
+you were being hanged to the fireplace, like a pig to
+be smoked. I was quite upset over it! Such a fine
+young gentleman, and one of Harry Lee&rsquo;s officers,
+too!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the old man shook his head deploringly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then why don&rsquo;t you help me out of this?&rdquo; demanded
+Peyton, whose impulse was for grasping at
+straws, for he thought of black Sam urging Cato
+through the wind towards King&rsquo;s Bridge at a
+gallop.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t possible,&rdquo; said Valentine, phlegmatically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it were, would you?&rdquo; asked Harry, a spark of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span>
+hope igniting from the appearance that the old man
+was, at least, not antagonistic to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes,&rdquo; began the octogenarian, placidly.</p>
+<p>Harry&rsquo;s heart bounded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If,&rdquo; the old man went on, &ldquo;I could without
+lending aid to the King&rsquo;s enemies. But you see I
+couldn&rsquo;t. I won&rsquo;t lend aid to neither side&rsquo;s enemies.<a href='#Footnote_0007' class='fnanchor'>[7]</a>
+I don&rsquo;t want to die afore my time.&rdquo; And he gazed
+complacently at the fire.</p>
+<p>Peyton knew the hopeless immovability of selfish
+old age.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;God!&rdquo; he muttered, in despair. &ldquo;Is there no
+one I can turn to?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s none within hearing would dare go
+against the orders of Miss Elizabeth,&rdquo; said Mr.
+Valentine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miss Elizabeth evidently rules with a firm hand,&rdquo;
+said Peyton, bitterly. &ldquo;Her word&mdash;&rdquo; He stopped
+suddenly, as if struck by a new thought. &ldquo;If I
+could but move <i>her</i>! If I could make her change
+her mind!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You couldn&rsquo;t. No one ever could, and as for a
+rebel soldier&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She has a heart of iron, that girl!&rdquo; broke in
+Peyton. &ldquo;The cruelty of a savage!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Valentine took on a sincerely deprecating
+look. &ldquo;Oh, you mustn&rsquo;t abuse Miss Elizabeth,&rdquo;
+said he. &ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t cruelty, it&rsquo;s only proper pride.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137' name='page_137'></a>137</span>
+And she isn&rsquo;t hard. She has the kindest heart,&mdash;to
+those she&rsquo;s fond of.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To those she&rsquo;s fond of,&rdquo; repeated Harry, mechanically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the old man; &ldquo;her people, her horses,
+her dogs and cats, and even her servants and slaves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tender creature, who has a heart for a dog and
+not for a man!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The old man&rsquo;s loyalty to three generations of
+Philipses made him a stubborn defender, and he
+answered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;d have no less a heart for a man if she
+loved him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If she loved him!&rdquo; echoed Peyton, and began to
+think.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, and a thousand times more heart, loving
+him as a woman loves a man.&rdquo; Mr. Valentine
+spoke knowingly, as one acquainted by enviable
+experience with the measure of such love.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As a woman loves a man!&rdquo; repeated Peyton.
+Suddenly he turned to Valentine. &ldquo;Tell me, does
+she love any man so, now?&rdquo; Peyton did not know
+the relation in which Elizabeth and Major Colden
+stood to each other.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t say she <i>loves</i> one,&rdquo; replied Valentine,
+judicially, &ldquo;though&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Peyton had heard enough.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By heaven, I&rsquo;ll try it!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Such
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138' name='page_138'></a>138</span>
+miracles have happened! And I have almost an
+hour!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Old Valentine blinked at him, with stupid lack of
+perception. &ldquo;What is it, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall try it!&rdquo; was Peyton&rsquo;s unenlightening
+answer. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s one chance. And you can help
+me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The devil I can!&rdquo; replied Valentine, rising
+from his chair in some annoyance. &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t lend
+aid, I tell you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It won&rsquo;t be &lsquo;lending aid.&rsquo; All I beg is that you
+ask Miss Elizabeth to see me alone at once,&mdash;and
+that you&rsquo;ll forget all I&rsquo;ve said to you. Don&rsquo;t stand
+staring! For Christ&rsquo;s sake, go and ask her to come
+in! Don&rsquo;t you know? Only an hour,&mdash;less than
+that, now!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But she mayn&rsquo;t come here for the asking,&rdquo;
+objected the old man, somewhat dazed by Peyton&rsquo;s
+petulance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She <i>must</i> come here!&rdquo; cried Harry. &ldquo;Induce
+her, beg her, entice her! Tell her I have a last
+request to make of my jailer,&mdash;no, excite her curiosity;
+tell her I have a confession to make, a plot to
+disclose,&mdash;anything! In heaven&rsquo;s name, go and
+send her here!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was easier to comply with so light a request
+than to remain recipient of such torrent-like importunity.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll try, sir,&rdquo; said the peace-loving old
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span>
+man, &ldquo;but I have no hope,&rdquo; and he hobbled from
+the room. He left the door open as he went, and
+Harry, tortured by impatience, heard him shuffling
+over the hall floor to the dining-room.</p>
+<p>Peyton&rsquo;s mind was in a whirl. He glanced at the
+clock. These were his thoughts:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fifty minutes! To make a woman love me!
+A proud woman, vain and wilful, who hates our
+cause, who detests me! To make her love me!
+How shall I begin? Keep your wits now, Harry,
+my son,&mdash;&rsquo;tis for your life! How to begin? Why
+doesn&rsquo;t she come? Damn the clock, how loud it
+ticks! I feel each tick. No, &rsquo;tis my heart I feel.
+My God, <i>will</i> she not come? And the time is
+going&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sir, what is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He looked from the clock to the doorway, where
+stood Elizabeth.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VII_THE_FLIGHT_OF_THE_MINUTES' id='CHAPTER_VII_THE_FLIGHT_OF_THE_MINUTES'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+<h3>THE FLIGHT OF THE MINUTES.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> silence of her entrance was from her having,
+a few minutes earlier, exchanged her riding-boots
+for satin slippers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;I thank you for coming, madam,&rdquo; said
+Peyton, feeling the necessity of a prompt reply to
+her imperious look of inquiry, yet without a practicable
+idea in his head. &ldquo;I had&mdash;that is&mdash;a request
+to make.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was trembling violently, not from fear, but
+from that kind of agitation which often precedes the
+undertaking of a critical task, as when a suppliant
+awaits an important interview, or an actor assumes
+for the first time a new part.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Valentine said a confession,&rdquo; said Elizabeth,
+holding him in a coldly resentful gaze.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes, a confession,&rdquo; said he, hopelessly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A plot to disclose,&rdquo; she added, with sharp impatience.
+&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You shall hear,&rdquo; he began, in gloomy desperation,
+without the faintest knowledge of how he should
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span>
+finish. &ldquo;I&mdash;ah&mdash;it is this&mdash;&rdquo; His wandering
+glance fell on the table and the writing materials she
+had left there. &ldquo;I wish to write a letter&mdash;a last
+letter&mdash;to a friend.&rdquo; The vague general outline of
+a project arose in his mind.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth was inclined to be as laconic as implacable.
+&ldquo;Write it,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;There are pen and
+ink.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I can&rsquo;t write in this position,&rdquo; said Peyton,
+quickly, lest she might leave the room. &ldquo;I fear I
+can&rsquo;t even hold a pen. Will you not write for
+me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I? Secretary to a horse-thieving rebel!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a last request, madam. A last request is
+sacred,&mdash;even an enemy&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will send in some one to write for you.&rdquo; And
+she turned to go.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But this letter will contain secrets.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Secrets?&rdquo; The very word is a charm to a woman.
+Elizabeth&rsquo;s curiosity was touched but slightly,
+yet sufficiently to stay her steps for the moment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Peyton, lowering his tone and speaking
+quickly, &ldquo;secrets not for every ear. Secrets of the
+heart, madam,&mdash;secrets so delicate that, to convey
+them truly, I need the aid of more than common tact
+and understanding.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He watched her eagerly, and tried to repress the
+signs of his anxiety.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span></div>
+<p>Elizabeth considered for a moment, then went to
+the table and sat down by it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said she, regarding him with angry suspicion,
+&ldquo;the confession,&mdash;the plot?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, madam,&rdquo; said he, his heart hammering
+forcefully, &ldquo;do you think I may communicate them
+to you directly? The letter shall relate them, too,
+and if the person who holds the pen for me pays
+heed to the letter&rsquo;s contents, is it my fault?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I understand,&rdquo; said the woman, entrapped, and
+she dipped the quill into the ink.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The letter,&rdquo; began Peyton, slowly, hesitating for
+ideas, and glancing at the clock, yet not retaining a
+sense of where the hands were, &ldquo;is to Mr. Bryan
+Fairfax&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo; she interrupted. &ldquo;Kinsman to Lord
+Fairfax, of Virginia?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s but one Mr. Bryan Fairfax,&rdquo; said Peyton,
+acquiring confidence from his preliminary expedient
+to overcome prejudice, &ldquo;and, though he&rsquo;s on the side
+of King George in feeling, yet he&rsquo;s my friend,&mdash;a
+circumstance that should convince even you I&rsquo;m not
+scum o&rsquo; the earth, rebel though you call me. He&rsquo;s
+the friend of Washington, too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poh! Who is your Washington? My aunt
+Mary rejected him, and married his rival in this very
+room!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And a good thing Washington didn&rsquo;t marry
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span>
+her!&rdquo; said Peyton, gallantly. &ldquo;She&rsquo;d have tried
+to turn him Tory, and the ladies of this family are
+not to be resisted.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go on with your letter,&rdquo; said Elizabeth, chillingly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Mr. Bryan Fairfax,&rsquo;&rdquo; dictated Peyton, steadying
+his voice with an effort, &ldquo;&lsquo;Towlston Hall, Fairfax
+County, Virginia. My dear Fairfax: If ever these
+reach you, &rsquo;twill be from out a captivity destined,
+probably, to end soon in that which all dread, yet to
+which all must come; a captivity, nevertheless,
+sweetened by the divinest presence that ever bore
+the name of woman&mdash;&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Elizabeth stopped writing, and looked up, with an
+astonishment so all-possessing that it left no room
+even for indignation.</p>
+<p>Peyton, his eyes astray in the preoccupation of
+composition, did not notice her look, but, as if moved
+by enthusiasm, rose on his right leg and stood, his
+hands placed on the back of the light chair by the
+sofa, the chair&rsquo;s front being turned from him. He
+went on, with an affectation of repressed rapture:
+&ldquo;&lsquo;&rsquo;Twere worth even death to be for a short hour
+the prisoner of so superb&mdash;&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir, what are you saying?&rdquo; And Elizabeth
+dropped the pen, and stood up, regarding him with
+freezing resentment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My thoughts, madam,&rdquo; said he, humbly, meeting
+her gaze.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;How dare you jest with me?&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Jest? Does a man jest in the face of his own
+death?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Twas a jest to bid me write such lies!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lies? &rsquo;Fore gad, the mirror yonder will not
+call them lies!&rdquo; He indicated the oblong glass set
+in above the mantel. &ldquo;If there is lying, &rsquo;tis my eyes
+that lie! &rsquo;Tis only what they tell me, that my lips
+report.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Keeping his left foot slightly raised from the floor,
+he pushed the chair a little towards her, and himself
+followed it, resting his weight partly on its back,
+while he hopped with his right foot. But Elizabeth
+stayed him with a gesture of much imperiousness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What has such rubbish to do with your confession
+and your plot?&rdquo; she demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can you not see?&rdquo; And he now let some
+of his real agitation appear, that it might serve as
+the lover&rsquo;s perturbation which it would be well to
+display.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My confession is of the instant yielding of my
+heart to the charms of a goddess.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In those days lovers, real or pretended, still talked
+of goddesses, flames, darts, and such.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who desired your heart to yield to anything?&rdquo;
+was Miss Elizabeth&rsquo;s sharply spoken reply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beauty <i>commanded</i> it, madam!&rdquo; said he, bowing
+low over his chair-back.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;So, then, there was no plot?&rdquo; Her eyes flashed
+with indignation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A plot, yes!&rdquo; He glanced sidewise at the
+clock, and drew self-reliance from the very situation,
+which began to intoxicate him. &ldquo;<i>My</i> plot, to attract
+you hither, by that message, that I might console
+myself for my fate by the joy of seeing you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The joy of seeing me!&rdquo; She spoke with incredulity
+and contempt.</p>
+<p>A glad boldness had come over Peyton. He felt
+himself masterful, as one feels who is drunk with
+wine; yet, unlike such a one, he had command of
+mind and body.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, joy,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;joy none the less that you
+are disdainful! Pride is the attribute of queens,
+and tenderness is not the only mood in which a
+woman may conquer. Heaven! You can so discomfit
+a man with your frowns, <i>what</i> might you do
+with your smile!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He felt now that he could dissimulate to fool the
+very devil.</p>
+<p>But Elizabeth, though interested as one may be in
+an oddity, seemed not otherwise impressed. &rsquo;Twas
+something, however, that she remained in the room
+to answer:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not know what I have done with my frown,
+nor what I might do with my smile, but, whatever it
+be, <i>you</i> are not like to see!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;That I know,&rdquo; said Peyton, and added, at a reckless
+venture, &ldquo;and am consoled, when I consider that
+no other man has seen!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you know that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your smile is not for any common man, and I&rsquo;ll
+wager your heart is as whole as your beauty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She looked at him for a moment of silence, then:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot imagine why you say all this,&rdquo; quoth
+she, in real puzzlement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis an easing to the tortured heart to reveal
+itself,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;as one would fain uncover an
+inner wound, though there be no hope of cure. I
+can go the calmer to my doom for having at least
+given outlet in words to the flame kindled in a
+moment within me. My doom! Yes, and none so
+unwelcome, either, if by it I escape a lifetime of vain
+longing!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your talk is incomprehensible, sir. If you are
+serious, it must be that your head is turned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My head is turned, doubtless, but by you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was now assuming the low, quick, nervous
+utterance that is often associated with intense repressed
+feeling; and his words were accompanied by
+his best possible counterfeit of the burning, piercing,
+distraught gaze of passion. Though he acted a part,
+it was not with the cold-blooded art of a mimic who
+simulates by rule; it was with the animation due to
+imagining himself actually swayed by the feeling he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span>
+would feign. While he <i>knew</i> his emotion to be fictitious,
+he <i>felt</i> it as if it were real, and his consequent
+actions were the same as if real it were.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure the act was not intentional with me,&rdquo;
+said Elizabeth. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d best leave you, lest you grow
+worse.&rdquo; And she moved towards the door.</p>
+<p>Peyton had rapid work of it, pushing the chair
+before him and hopping after it, so as to intercept
+her. In the excitement of the moment, he lost his
+mastery of himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you must not go! Hear me, I beg! Good
+God, only a half hour left!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A half hour?&rdquo; repeated Elizabeth, inquiringly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I mean,&rdquo; said Peyton, recovering his wits, &ldquo;a
+half hour till the troops may be here for me,&mdash;only
+a half hour until I must leave your house forever!
+Do not let me be deprived of the sight of you for
+those last minutes! Tis so short a time, yet &rsquo;tis all
+my life!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The man is mad, I think!&rdquo; She spoke as if
+to herself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mad!&rdquo; he echoed. &ldquo;Yes, some do call it a madness&mdash;the
+love that&rsquo;s born of a glance, and lasts till
+death!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Love!&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis impossible you should
+come to love me, in so short a time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis born of a glance, I tell you!&rdquo; he cried.
+&ldquo;What is it, if not love, that makes me forget my
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span>
+coming death, see only you, hear only you, think of
+only you? Why do I not spend this time, this last
+hour, in pleading for my life, in begging you to hide
+me and send the troops away without me when they
+come? They would take your word, and you are a
+woman, and women are moved by pleading. Why,
+then, do I not, in the brief time I have left, beg for
+my life? Because my passion blinds me to all else,
+because I would use every moment in pouring out
+my heart to you, because my feelings must have outlet
+in words, because it is more than life or death to
+me that you should know I love you!&mdash;God, how
+fast that clock goes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She had stood in wonderment, under the spell of
+his vehemence. Now, as he leaned towards her,
+over the chair-back, his breath coming rapidly, his
+eyes luminous, she seemed for a moment abashed,
+softened, subdued. But she put to flight his momentary
+hope by starting again for the doorway, with a
+low-spoken, &ldquo;I must go!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But he thrust his chair in her way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, don&rsquo;t go!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You may hear my
+avowal with propriety. My people are as good as
+any in Virginia.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She stood regarding him with a look of scrutiny.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are a rebel against your king,&rdquo; she said,
+but not harshly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is not the King soon to have his revenge?
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span>
+And is that a reason why you should leave me
+now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You deserted your first colors.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Twas in extraordinary circumstances, and in the
+right cause. And is that a reason why you&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You took my horse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But paid you for it, and you have your horse
+again. Abuse me, madam, but do not go from me.
+Call me rebel, deserter, robber, what you will, but
+remain with me. Denunciation from your lips is
+sweeter than praise from others. Chastise me,
+strike me, trample on me,&mdash;I shall worship you
+none the less!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He inclined his body further forward over the
+chair-back, and thus was very near her. She put
+out her hand to repel him. He moved back with
+humility, but took her hand and kissed it, with an
+appearance of passion qualified by reverence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How dare you touch my hand?&rdquo; And she
+quickly drew it from him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A poor wretch who loves, and is soon to die,
+dares much!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You seem resigned to dying,&rdquo; she remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have I not said &rsquo;tis better than living with a
+hopeless passion?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And yet death,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;<i>that</i> kind of a
+death is not pleasant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not afraid of it,&rdquo; said he, wondering how the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span>
+minutes were running, yet not daring the loss of
+time to look. &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis not in consigning me to the
+enemy that you have your revenge on me, &rsquo;tis in
+making me vainly love you. I receive the greater
+hurt from your beauty, not from the British provost-marshal!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bravado!&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Time will show,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you are so strong a man that you can endure
+the one hurt so calmly, why are you not a little
+stronger,&mdash;strong enough to ignore this other hurt,&mdash;this
+<i>love</i>-wound, as you call it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She blushed furiously, and much against her will,
+at the mere word, &ldquo;love-wound.&rdquo; Her mood now
+seemed to be one of pretended incredulity, and yet
+of a vague unwillingness that the man should be so
+weak to her charms.</p>
+<p>Peyton conceived that a change of play might aid
+his game.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By heaven,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;I will! &rsquo;Tis a weakness,
+as you imply! I shall close my heart, vanquish my
+feelings! No word more of love! I defy your
+beauty, your proud face, your splendid eyes! I
+shall die free of your image. Go where you will,
+madam. It sha&rsquo;n&rsquo;t be a puling lover that the British
+hang. A snap o&rsquo; the finger for your all-conquering
+charms!&mdash;why do you not leave me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What! Do you order me from my own parlor?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151' name='page_151'></a>151</span></div>
+<p>Hope accelerated Peyton&rsquo;s heart at this, but he
+feigned indifference.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go or stay,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;&rsquo;tis nothing to me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You rebel, you speak like that to me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her speech rang with genuine anger, and of a
+little hotter quality than he had thought to raise.</p>
+<p>He was about to answer, when suddenly a sound,
+far and faint, reached his ear. &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t that&mdash;do you
+hear&mdash;&rdquo; he said, huskily, and turning cold.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Horses?&rdquo; said Elizabeth. &ldquo;Yes,&mdash;on the road
+from King&rsquo;s Bridge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She went to one of the eastern windows, opened
+the sash, unfastened the shutter without, and let in
+a rush of cold air. Then she closed the sash and
+looked out through the small panes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it&mdash;&rdquo; said Peyton, quietly, with as much
+steadiness as he could command, &ldquo;I wonder&mdash;can
+it be&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A troop of rangers!&rdquo; said Elizabeth. &ldquo;And
+Sam is with them!&rdquo; She closed the shutter, and
+turned to Peyton, her face still glowing with the resentment
+elicited by the cavalier attitude he had
+assumed before this alarm. &ldquo;Go or stay, &rsquo;tis nothing
+to you, you said! The last insult, Sir Rebel
+Captain!&rdquo; and she made for the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t go! You mustn&rsquo;t go!&rdquo; was the
+only speech he could summon. But she was already
+passing him. He snatched a kerchief from her dress,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152' name='page_152'></a>152</span>
+and dropped it on the floor. She did not observe
+his act. &ldquo;Pardon me!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Your kerchief!
+You&rsquo;ve dropped it, don&rsquo;t you see?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She turned and saw it on the floor.</p>
+<p>Peyton quickly stepped from behind his chair,
+stooped and picked up the kerchief, kissed it, and
+handed it to her, then staggered to his former support,
+showing in his face and by a groan the pain
+caused him by his movement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your wound!&rdquo; said Elizabeth, standing still.
+&ldquo;You shouldn&rsquo;t have stooped!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Harry&rsquo;s pain and consequent weakness, added to
+his consciousness of the rapidly approaching enemy,
+who had already turned in from the main road,
+gave him a pallor that would have claimed the
+attention of a less compassionate woman even than
+Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No matter!&rdquo; he murmured, feebly. Then, as if
+about to swoon, he threw his head back, lost his hold
+of the chair-back, and staggered to the spinet. Leaning
+on this, he gasped, &ldquo;My cravat! I feel as if I
+were choking!&rdquo; and made some futile effort with his
+hand to unfasten the neck-cloth. &ldquo;Would you,&rdquo; he
+panted, &ldquo;may I beg&mdash;loosen it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She went to his side, undid the cravat, and otherwise
+relieved his neck of its confinement. She could
+not but meet his gaze as she did so. It was a gaze
+of eager, adoring eyes. He feebly smiled his thanks,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153' name='page_153'></a>153</span>
+and spoke, between short breaths, the words, &ldquo;The
+hour&mdash;I love you&mdash;yes, the troops!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The horses were clattering up towards the house.</p>
+<p>A voice of command was heard through the
+window.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Halt! Guard the windows and the rear, you
+four!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Colden&rsquo;s voice!&rdquo; exclaimed Peyton.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth was somewhat startled. &ldquo;He must
+have been still at King&rsquo;s Bridge when Sam arrived,&rdquo;
+said she.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He must be a close friend,&rdquo; said Peyton.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is my affianced husband.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton staggered, as if shot, around the projection
+of the spinet, and came to a rest in the small space
+between that projection and the west wall of the
+room. &ldquo;Her affianced! Then it&rsquo;s all up with me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The outside door was heard to open. Elizabeth
+turned her back towards the spinet and Peyton, and
+faced the door to the hall. That, too, was flung
+wide. Peyton dropped on his right knee, behind the
+spinet, leaning forward and stretching his wounded
+leg out behind him, just as Colden rushed in at the
+head of six of the Queen&rsquo;s Rangers, who were armed
+with short muskets. The major stopped short at
+sight of Elizabeth, and the rangers stood behind him,
+just within the door. Peyton was hidden by the
+spinet.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154' name='page_154'></a>154</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is the rebel, Elizabeth?&rdquo; cried Colden.</p>
+<p>She met his gaze straight, and spoke calmly, with
+a barely perceptible tremor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are too late, Jack! The prisoner has eluded
+me. Look for him on the road to Tarrytown,&mdash;and
+be quick about it, for God&rsquo;s sake!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Colden drew back aghast, thrown from the height
+of triumph to the depth of chagrin. Peyton, fearing
+lest the one joyous bound of his heart might have
+betrayed him, remained perfectly still, knowing that
+if any movement should take Elizabeth from between
+the soldiers and the projection of the spinet, or if the
+soldiers should enter further and chance to look under
+the spinet, he would be seen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you understand?&rdquo; said Elizabeth, assuming
+one impatience to conceal another. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s
+no time to lose! &rsquo;Twas the rebel Peyton! He&rsquo;s
+afoot!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The road to Tarrytown, you say?&rdquo; replied Colden,
+gathering back his faculties.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, to Tarrytown! Why do you wait?&rdquo; Her
+vehemence of tone sufficed to cover the growing
+insupportability of her situation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To the road again, men!&rdquo; Colden ordered. &ldquo;Till
+we meet, Elizabeth!&rdquo; And he hastened, with the
+rangers, from the place.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_5' id='linki_5'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/i003.jpg' alt='' title='' width='324' height='500' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;YOU ARE TOO LATE, JACK!&rsquo;&rdquo;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p>Peyton and Elizabeth remained motionless till the
+sound of the horses was afar. Then Elizabeth called
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155' name='page_155'></a>155</span>
+Williams, who, as she had supposed, had come into
+the hall with the rangers. He now entered the
+parlor. Elizabeth, whose back was still towards Peyton,
+who had risen and was leaning on the spinet,
+addressed the steward in a low, embarrassed tone, as
+if ashamed of the weakness newly come over her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Williams, this gentleman will remain in the
+house till his wound is healed. His presence is to
+be a secret in the household. He will occupy the
+southwestern chamber.&rdquo; She then turned and spoke,
+in a constrained manner, to Peyton, not meeting his
+look. &ldquo;It is the room your General Washington had
+when he was my father&rsquo;s guest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With an effort, she raised her eyes to his, but
+shyly dropped them again. He bowed his thanks
+gravely, rather shamefaced at the success of his
+deception. A moment later, Elizabeth, with averted
+glance, walked quickly from the room.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156' name='page_156'></a>156</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VIII_THE_SECRET_PASSAGE' id='CHAPTER_VIII_THE_SECRET_PASSAGE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+<h3>THE SECRET PASSAGE.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> steward immediately set about preparing the
+designated chamber for occupancy, so that Peyton,
+on being carried up to it a few minutes later, found
+it warm and lighted. It was a large, square, panelled
+apartment, in which the fireplace of 1682 remained
+unchanged, a wide, deep, square opening, faced with
+Dutch tile, of which there were countless pieces,
+each piece having a picture of some Scriptural incident.
+Into this fireplace, where a log was burning
+crisply, Peyton gazed languidly as he lay on the bed,
+his clothes having been removed by black Sam, who
+had been assigned to attend him, and who now lay
+in the wide hall without. Williams had taken another
+look at the wound, and expressed a favorable
+opinion of its condition. A lighted candle was placed
+within Peyton&rsquo;s reach, on a table by the bedside.
+Williams had brought him, at Elizabeth&rsquo;s orders,
+part of what remained from the general supper.
+The captain felt decidedly comfortable.</p>
+<p>He supposed that Colden, after abandoning the
+false chase, would make another call at the house,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157' name='page_157'></a>157</span>
+but he inferred from Elizabeth&rsquo;s previous conduct
+that she could and would send the Tory major and
+the rangers back to King&rsquo;s Bridge without opportunity
+of discovering her guest. And, indeed, Elizabeth
+had so provided. On returning to the dining-room
+from her fateful interview with Peyton, she
+had answered the astonished and inquisitive looks of
+Miss Sally and Mr. Valentine, by saying, in an abrupt
+and reserved manner, &ldquo;For important reasons I have
+chosen not to give the prisoner up. He will stay in
+the house for a time, and nobody is to know he is
+here. Please remember, Mr. Valentine.&rdquo; The old
+man tried to recall Peyton&rsquo;s words in asking him to
+send Elizabeth to the parlor, and made a mental
+effort to put this and that together; failing in which,
+he decided to repeat nothing of Peyton&rsquo;s conversation,
+lest it might in some way appear that he had
+&ldquo;lent aid.&rdquo; He now lighted his lantern, and sallied
+forth on his long walk homeward over the windswept
+roads. Elizabeth, who, much to the dismay
+of her aunt&rsquo;s curiosity, had not broken silence save
+to give orders to the servants, now charged Williams
+to stay up till Colden should return, and to
+inform him that all were abed, that there was no
+news of the escaped prisoner, and that she desired
+the major to hasten to New York and relieve her
+family&rsquo;s anxiety. This command the steward executed
+about midnight, with the result that the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158' name='page_158'></a>158</span>
+major, utterly tired out and sadly disappointed, rode
+away from the manor-house a third time that night,
+more disgruntled than on either of the two previous
+occasions. By this time the house was dark and
+silent, Elizabeth and her aunt having long retired,
+the latter with a remark concerning the effect of late
+hours on the complexion, a hope that Mr. Valentine
+would not fall into a puddle on the way home, and
+a curiosity as to how the rebel captain fared.</p>
+<p>The rebel captain, afar in his spacious chamber,
+was mentally in a state of felicity. As he ceased to
+remember the conquered, abashed look Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+face had last worn, he ceased to feel ashamed of
+having deceived her. Her earlier manner recurred
+to his mind, and he jubilated inwardly over having
+got the better of this arrogant and vengeful young
+creature. Even had she been otherwise, and had
+his life depended on tricking her with a pretence
+of love, he would have valued his life far above her
+feelings, and would not have hesitated to practise
+on her a falsehood that many a gentleman has
+practised on many a maid for no higher purpose
+than for the sport or for the testing of his powers,
+and often for no other purpose than the maid&rsquo;s
+undoing in more than her feelings. How much
+less, then, need he consider her feelings when he
+regarded her as an enemy in war, of whom it
+was his right to take all possible advantage for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159' name='page_159'></a>159</span>
+the saving of his own or any other American soldier&rsquo;s
+life! These thoughts came only at those
+moments when it occurred to him that his act
+might need justification. But if he thought he
+was entitled to avail himself of these excuses, he
+deceived himself, for no such considerations had
+been in his mind before or during his act. He
+had proceeded on the impulse of self-preservation
+alone, with no further thought as to the effect on
+her feelings than the hope that her feelings would
+be moved in his behalf. He had been totally selfish
+in the matter, and yet, while it is true he had not
+stopped to reason whether the act was morally
+justifiable or not, he had <i>felt</i> that her attitude
+warranted his deception, or, rather, he had not
+felt that the deception was a discreditable act, as
+he might have felt had her attitude been kindlier.
+Even had he possessed any previous scruples about
+that act, he would have overcome them. As it
+was, the scruples came only when he thought of
+that new, chastened, subdued look on her face.
+Only then did he feel that his trick might be debatable,
+as to whether it became a gentleman.
+Only then did he take the trouble to seek justifiable
+circumstances. Only then did he have a dim
+sense of what might be the feelings of a girl
+suddenly stormed into love. He had never been
+sufficiently in love to know how serious a feeling&mdash;serious
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160' name='page_160'></a>160</span>
+in its tremendous potency for joy or
+pain&mdash;love is. In Virginia, in London, and in
+Ireland, he had indulged himself in such little
+flirtations, such amours of an hour, as helped make
+up a young gentleman&rsquo;s amusements. But he had
+long been, as he was now, heart-free, and, though
+it occurred to him that, in this girl, so great a
+change of mien must arise from a pronounced
+change of heart, he had no thought that her new
+mood could have deep root or long life. So, less
+from what thoughts he did have on the subject
+than from his absence of thought thereon, he lapsed
+into peace of mind, and went to sleep, rejoicing in
+his security and trusting it would last. Her face
+did not appear in his dreams. He had not retained
+a strong or accurate impression of that face. His
+mind had been too full of other things, even while
+enacting his impromptu love-scene, to make note
+of her beauty. He had been sensible, of course,
+that she was beautiful, but there had not been
+time or circumstance for flirtation. He had not
+for an instant viewed her as a possible object of
+conquest for its own sake. She had been to him
+only an enemy, in the shape of a beautiful young
+girl, and of whom it had become necessary to make
+use. And so his dreams that night were made up
+of wild cavalry charges, rides through the wind,
+and painful crushings and tearings of his leg.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161' name='page_161'></a>161</span></div>
+<p>Elizabeth&rsquo;s thoughts were in a whirl, her feelings
+beyond analysis. She was sensible mainly of a
+wholly novel and vast pleasure at the adoration so
+impetuously expressed for her by this audacious
+stranger, of a pride in his masterful way, of applause
+for that very manner which she had rebuked
+as insolence. Was this love at last? Undoubtedly;
+for she had read all the romances and plays and
+poems, and, if this feeling of hers were a thing other
+than the love they all described, they would have
+described such a feeling also. Because she had never
+felt its soft touch before, she had thought herself
+exempt from it. But now that it had found lodgment
+in her, she knew it at once, from the very fact
+that in a flash she understood all the romances and
+plays and poems that had before interested her but
+as mere tales, whose motives had seemed arbitrary
+and insufficient. Now they all took reality and
+reason. She knew at last why Hero threw herself
+into the Hellespont after Leander, why all that commotion
+was caused by Helen of Troy, why Oriana
+took such trouble for Mirabel, why Juliet died on
+Romeo&rsquo;s body, why Miss Richland paid Honeywood&rsquo;s
+debts. The moon, rushing through a cleft
+in the clouds (she had opened one of the shutters on
+putting out the candles), had for her a sudden beauty
+which accounted for the fine things the poets had
+said of it and love together. Yes, because it opened
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162' name='page_162'></a>162</span>
+on her world of romance a magic window, letting in
+a wondrous light, waking that world to throbbing
+life, clothing it with indescribable charm, she knew
+the name of the key that had unlocked her own
+heart. Now she knew them all,&mdash;the heroes, the
+fairy princes, the knights errant; perceived that
+they were real and live, recognized their traits and
+manners, their very faces, in that bold, free, strong
+young rebel; he was Orlando, and Lovelace, and
+Prince Charming, and &AElig;neas, and Tom Jones, and
+King Harry the Fifth, and young Marlowe, and even
+Captain Macheath (she had read forbidden books
+guilelessly, in course of reading everything at hand),
+and Roderick Random, and Captain Plume, and all
+the conquering, gallant, fine young fellows, at the
+absurd weakness of whose sweethearts she had
+marvelled beyond measure. She understood that
+weakness now, and knew, too, why those sweethearts
+had, in the first delicious hours of their weakness,
+trembled and dropped their eyes before those
+young gentlemen. For, as she mentally beheld his
+image, she felt her own cheeks glow, and in imagination
+was fain to drop her own eyes before his bold,
+unquailing look. She wondered, with confusion and
+unseen blushes, how she would face him at their
+next meeting, and felt that she must not, could not,
+be the one to cause that meeting. Right surely had
+this fair castle, that had withstood many a long siege,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163' name='page_163'></a>163</span>
+fallen now at a single onslaught, and that but a sham
+onslaught. The haughty princess in her tower had
+not longed for the prince, but the prince had arrived,
+not to her rescue, but to the taming of her. And
+alas! the prince, whom she fondly thought her lover,
+was no more lover of her than of the picture of her
+female ancestor on his bedroom wall!</p>
+<p>She gave no thought to consequences, and, as for
+Jack Colden, she simply, by power of will, kept him
+out of her mind.</p>
+<p>It was three days before Peyton could walk about
+his room, and two days more before he felt sufficient
+confidence in his wounded leg to come down-stairs
+and take his meals with the household. And even
+then, refusing a crutch, he used a stick in moving
+about. During the five days when he kept his room,
+he was waited on alternately by Sam and Cuff, who
+served at his bath and brought his food; and occasionally
+Molly carried to him at dinner some belated
+delicacy or forgotten dish. Williams, too, visited
+him daily, and expressed a kind of professional satisfaction
+at the uninterrupted healing of the wound,
+which the steward treated with the mysterious applications
+known to home surgery. Williams lent his
+own clean linen to Harry, while Harry&rsquo;s underwent
+washing and mending at the hands of the maid.
+Old Valentine, who visited the house every day, the
+weather being cold and sometimes cloudy, but without
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164' name='page_164'></a>164</span>
+rain, called at the sick chamber now and then,
+and filled it with tobacco smoke, homely philosophy,
+and rustic reminiscence. Harry had no other visitors.
+During these five days he saw not Elizabeth
+or Miss Sally, save from his window twice or thrice,
+at which times they were walking on the terrace.
+In daytime, when no artificial light was in the room
+to betray to some possible outsider the presence of
+a guest, he had the shutters opened of one of the
+two south windows and of one of the two west ones.
+Often he reclined near a window, pleasing his eyes
+with the view. Westward lay the terrace, the wide
+river, the leafy, cliffs, and fair rolling country beyond.
+His eye could take in also the deer paddock, which
+the hand of war had robbed of its inmates, and
+the great orchard northward overlooking the river.
+Through the south window he could see the little
+branch road and boat-landing, the old stone mill, the
+winding Neperan and its broad mill-pond, and the
+sloping, ravine-cut, wooded stretch of country, between
+the post-road on the left and the deep-set
+Hudson on the right. The spire of St. John&rsquo;s
+Church, among the yew-trees, with the few edifices
+grouped near it, broke gratefully the deserted aspect
+of things, at the left. The spacious scene, so richly
+filled by nature, had in its loneliness and repose a
+singular sweetness. Rarely was any one abroad.
+Only when the Hessians or Loyalist dragoons patrolled
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165' name='page_165'></a>165</span>
+the post-road, or when some British sloop-of-war
+showed its white sails far down the river, was
+there sign of human life and conflict. The deserted
+look of things was in harmony with the spirit of a
+book with which Harry sweetened the long hours
+of his recovery. It was a book that Elizabeth had
+sent up for his amusement, called &ldquo;The Man of Feeling,&rdquo;
+and there was something in the opening picture
+of the venerable mansion, with its air of melancholy,
+its languid stillness, its &ldquo;single crow, perched on an
+old tree by the side of the gate,&rdquo; and its young lady
+passing between the trees with a book in her hand,
+that harmonized with his own sequestered state. He
+liked the tale better than the same author&rsquo;s later
+novel, &ldquo;The Man of the World,&rdquo; which he had read
+a few years before. Every day he inquired about his
+hostess&rsquo;s health, and sent his compliments and thanks.
+He was glad she did not visit him in person, for such
+a visit might involve an allusion to their last previous
+interview, and he did not know in what manner
+he should make or treat such allusion. He felt it
+would be an awkward matter to get out of the
+situation of pretended adorer, and he was for putting
+that awkward matter off till the last possible
+moment.</p>
+<p>It was necessary for him to think of his return to
+the army. Duty and inclination required he should
+make that return as soon as could be. His first impulse
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166' name='page_166'></a>166</span>
+had been to send word of his whereabouts and
+condition. But as Elizabeth had not offered a messenger,
+he was loath to ask for one. Moreover, the
+messenger might be intercepted by the enemy&rsquo;s
+patrols and induced by fear to betray the message.
+Then, too, even if the messenger should reach the
+American lines uncaught, a consequent attempt to
+convey a wounded man from the manor hall to the
+camp might attract the attention of the vigilant
+patrols, and risk not only Harry&rsquo;s own recapture, but
+also the loss of other men. Decidedly, the best
+course was to await the healing of his wound, and
+then to make his way alone, under cover of night,
+to the army. He knew that, whatever might occur,
+it was now Elizabeth&rsquo;s interest to protect him, for
+should she give him up, the disclosure that she
+had formerly shielded him would render her liable to
+suspicion and ridicule. He felt, too, from the manifestations
+he had seen of her will and of her ingenuity,
+that she was quite able to protect him. So he
+rested in security in the quiet old chamber, dreading
+only the task of taking back his love-making. Of
+that task, the difficulty would depend on Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+own conduct, which he could not foresee, and that in
+turn on her state of heart, which he did not exactly
+divine. He knew only that she had, in that critical
+moment of the troops&rsquo; arrival, felt for him a tenderness
+that betokened love. Whether that feeling had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167' name='page_167'></a>167</span>
+flourished or declined, he could not, during the five
+days when they did not meet, be aware.</p>
+<p>It had not declined. She had gone on idealizing
+the confident rebel captain all the while. The fact
+that he was of the enemy added piquancy to the sentiments
+his image aroused. It lent, too, an additional
+poetic interest to the idea of their love. Was not
+Romeo of the enemies of Juliet&rsquo;s house? The fact
+of her being now his protector, by its oppositeness
+to the conventional situation, gave to their relation
+the charm of novelty, and also gratified her natural
+love of independence and domination. Yet that
+very love, in a woman, may afford its owner keen
+delight by receiving quick and confident opposition
+and conquest from a man, and such Elizabeth&rsquo;s had
+received from Peyton, both in the matter of the
+horse and in that of his successful wooing. But
+the greater her softness for him, the greater was her
+delicacy regarding him, and the more in conformity
+with the strictest propriety must be her conduct
+towards him. Her pride demanded this tribute of
+her love, in compensation for the latter&rsquo;s immense
+exactions on the former in the sudden yielding to his
+wooing. Moreover, she would not appear in anything
+short of perfection in his eyes. She would
+not make her company cheap to him. If she had
+been a quick conquest, up to the point of her first
+token of submission, she would be all the slower in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168' name='page_168'></a>168</span>
+the subsequent stages, so that the complete yielding
+should be no easier than ought to be that of one
+valued as she would have him value her. All this
+she felt rather than thought, and she acted on it
+punctiliously.</p>
+<p>She did not confide in her aunt, though that lady
+watched her closely and had her suspicions. Yet
+there was apparent so little warrant for these suspicions,
+save the protection of the rebel in itself, that
+Miss Sally often imagined Elizabeth had other reasons,
+reasons of policy, for the sudden change of
+intention that had resulted in that protection. Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+conduct was always so mystifying to everybody!
+And when this thought possessed Miss Sally, she
+underwent a pleasing agitation, which she in turn
+kept secret, and which attended the hope that perhaps
+the handsome captain might not be averse to
+her conversation. She had both read and observed
+that the taste of youth sometimes was for ripeness.
+She might atone, in a measure, for Elizabeth&rsquo;s disdain.
+She would have liked to visit him daily, with
+condolence and comfortings, but she could not do
+so without previous sanction of the mistress of the
+house, which sanction Elizabeth briefly but very
+peremptorily refused. Miss Sally thought it a cruelty
+that the prisoner should be deprived of what
+consolation her society might afford, and dwelt on
+this opinion until she became convinced he was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169' name='page_169'></a>169</span>
+actually pining for her presence. This made her
+poutish and reproachfully silent to Elizabeth, and
+sighful and whimsical to herself. The slightly
+strained feeling that arose between aunt and niece
+was quite acceptable to Elizabeth, as it gave her
+freedom for her own dreams, and prohibited any
+occasion for an expression of feelings or opinions of
+her own as to the captain. But Miss Sally&rsquo;s symptoms
+were observed by old Mr. Valentine, who,
+inferring their cause, underwent much unrest on
+account of them, became snappish and sarcastic
+towards the lady, watchful both of her and of
+Peyton, and moody towards the others in the house.
+It was the old man&rsquo;s disquietude regarding the state
+of Miss Sally&rsquo;s affections that brought him to the
+house every day. For one brief while he considered
+the advisability of transferring his attentions back
+from Miss Sally to the widow Babcock, who had
+possessed them first, but, when he tarried in the parsonage,
+his fears as to what might be going on in the
+manor-house made his stay in the former intolerable,
+and led him irresistibly to the latter.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the wounded guest, so unconscious
+of the states of mind caused by him in the household,
+was the evoker of flutters in yet another female
+breast. The girl, Molly, had read toilsomely through
+&ldquo;Pamela,&rdquo; and saw no reason why an equally attractive
+housemaid should not aspire to an equally high
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170' name='page_170'></a>170</span>
+destiny on this side of the ocean. But, often as she
+artfully contrived that the black boy should forget
+some part of the guest&rsquo;s dinner, and timely as she
+planned her own visits with the missing portion,
+she found the officer heedless of her smiles, engrossed
+sometimes in his meal, sometimes in his
+book, sometimes in both. She conceived a loathing
+for that book, more than once resisted a temptation
+to make way with it, and, having one day stolen a
+look into it, thenceforth abominated the poor young
+lady of it, with all the undying bitterness of an
+unpreferred rival.</p>
+<p>Though Elizabeth and her aunt found each other
+reticent, they yet passed their time together, breakfasting
+early, then visiting the widow Babcock or
+some tenant, dining at noon, spending the early
+afternoon, the one at her book or embroidery, the
+other in a siesta before the fireplace, supping early,
+then preparing for the night by a brisk walk in the
+garden, or on the terrace, or to the orchard and back.
+Elizabeth had Williams provided with instructions as
+to his conduct in the event of a visit from King&rsquo;s
+troops, and, to make Peyton&rsquo;s security still less
+uncertain, she confined her walks to the immediate
+vicinity. The house itself was kept in a pretence
+of being closed, the shutters of the parlor being skilfully
+adjusted to admit light, and yet, from the road,
+appear fast.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171' name='page_171'></a>171</span></div>
+<p>Thus Elizabeth, finding enjoyment in the very
+look and atmosphere of the old house, fulfilled
+quietly the purpose of her capricious visit, and at
+the same time cherished a dreamy pleasure such
+as she had not thought of finding in that visit.</p>
+<p>On the fifth day after Peyton&rsquo;s arrival, Williams
+announced that the captain would venture down-stairs
+on the morrow. The next morning Elizabeth
+waited in the east parlor to receive him. Whatever
+inward excitement she underwent, she was on the
+surface serene. She was dressed in her simplest,
+having purposely avoided any appearance of desiring
+to appear at her best. Her aunt, who stood with her,
+on the other side of the fireplace, was perceptibly
+flustered, being got up for the occasion, with ribbons
+in evidence and smiles ready for production
+on the instant. When the west door opened, and
+the awaited hero entered, pale but well groomed,
+using his cane in such fashion that he could carry
+himself erectly, Elizabeth greeted him with formal
+courtesy. Though her manner had the repose
+necessary to conceal her sweet agitation, an observant
+person might have noticed a deference, a kind
+of meekness, that was new in her demeanor towards
+men. Peyton, whose mien (though not his feeling)
+was a reflex of her own, was relieved at this appearance
+of indifference, and hoped it would continue.
+His mind being on this, the stately curtsey and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172' name='page_172'></a>172</span>
+profuse smirks of Miss Sally were quite lost on
+him.</p>
+<p>The three breakfasted together in the dining-room,
+a large and cheerful apartment whose front
+windows, looking on the lawn, were the middle
+features of the eastern facade of the house. The
+mass of decorative woodwork, and the fireplace in
+the north side of the room, added to its impression
+of comfort as well as to its beauty. Conversation
+at the breakfast was ceremonious and on the most
+indifferent subjects, despite the attempts of Miss
+Sally, who would have monopolized Peyton&rsquo;s attention,
+to inject a little cordial levity. After breakfast
+Elizabeth, to avoid the appearance of distinguishing
+the day, took her aunt off for the usual walk, which
+she purposely prolonged to unusual length, much to
+Miss Sally&rsquo;s annoyance. Peyton passed the morning
+in reading a new play that had made great talk
+in London the year before, namely, &ldquo;The School
+for Scandal.&rdquo; It was one of the new books received
+by Colonel Philipse from London, by a recent
+English vessel,&mdash;plays being, in those days, good
+enough to be much read in book form,&mdash;and
+brought out from town by Elizabeth. The dinner
+was, as to the attitude of the participants towards
+one another, a repetition of the breakfast. In the
+afternoon, Peyton having expressed an intention of
+venturing outdoors for a little air, Elizabeth assigned
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173' name='page_173'></a>173</span>
+Sam to attend him, and said that, as he had
+to traverse the south hall and stairs in going to his
+room, he might thereafter put to his own service
+the unused south door in leaving and entering the
+house. Harry strolled for a few minutes on the
+terrace, but his lameness made walking little pleasure,
+and he returned to the east parlor, where
+Elizabeth sat reading while her aunt was looking
+drowsily at the fire. Peyton took a chair at the
+right side of the fireplace, and mentally contrasted
+his present security with his peril in that place on
+a former occasion.</p>
+<p>The trampling of horses at a distance elicited
+from Elizabeth the words, &ldquo;The Hessian patrol, on
+the Albany road, as usual, I suppose.&rdquo; But, the
+clatter increasing, she arose and looked through
+the narrow slit whereby light was admitted between
+the almost closed shutters. After a moment she
+said, in unconcealed alarm:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, heaven! &rsquo;Tis a party of Lord Cathcart&rsquo;s
+officers! They said at King&rsquo;s Bridge they&rsquo;d come
+one day to pay their respects. How can I keep
+them out?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton arose, but remained by the fireplace, and
+said, &ldquo;To keep them out, if they think themselves
+expected, would excite suspicion. I will go to my
+room.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Elizabeth, meanwhile, had opened the window to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174' name='page_174'></a>174</span>
+draw the shutter close; but her trembling movement,
+assisted by a passing breeze, and by the
+perversity of inanimate things, caused the shutter
+to fly wide open.</p>
+<p>She turned towards Peyton, with signs of fright
+on her face. &ldquo;Back!&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll
+see you through the window. Into the closet,&mdash;the
+closet!&rdquo; She motioned imperatively towards
+the pair of doors immediately beside him, west
+of the fireplace. Hearing the horses&rsquo; footfalls near
+at hand, and perceiving, with her, that he would
+not have time to walk safely across the parlor to
+the hall, he opened one of the doors indicated by
+her, and stepped into the closet.</p>
+<p>In the instant before he closed the door after him,
+he noticed the stairs descending backward from the
+right side of the closet. He foresaw that the British
+officers would come into the parlor. If they should
+make a long stay, he might have to change his position
+during their presence. He might thus cause
+sufficient sound to attract attention. He would be
+in better case further away. Therefore, using his
+stick and feeling the route with his hand, he made
+his way down the steps to a landing, turned to the
+right, descended more steps, and found himself in
+a dark cellar. He had no sooner reached the last
+step than a burst of hearty greetings from above
+informed him the officers were in the parlor.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175' name='page_175'></a>175</span></div>
+<p>This part of the cellar being damp, he set out in
+search of a more comfortable spot wherein to bestow
+himself the necessary while. Groping his way, and
+travelling with great labor, he at last came into a
+kind of corridor formed between two rolls of piled-up
+barrels. He proceeded along this passage until
+it was blocked by a barrel on the ground. On this
+he sat down, deciding it as good a staying-place
+as he might find. Leaning back, he discovered with
+his head what seemed to be a thick wooden partition
+close to the barrel. Changing his position, he
+bumped his head against an iron something that lay
+horizontally against the partition, and so violent was
+this collision that the iron something was moved
+from its place, a fact which he noted on the instant
+but immediately forgot in the sharpness of his pain.</p>
+<p>Having at last made himself comfortable, he sat
+waiting in the darkness, thinking to let some time
+pass before returning to the closet stairway. An
+hour or more had gone by, when he heard a door
+open, which he knew must be at the head of some
+other stairway to the cellar, and a jocund voice cry:
+&ldquo;Damme, we&rsquo;ll be our own tapsters! Give me the
+candle, Mr. Williams, and if my nose doesn&rsquo;t pull me
+to the barrel in one minute, may it never whiff spirits
+again!&rdquo; A moment later, quick footfalls sounded
+on the stairs, then candle-light disturbed the blackness,
+and Williams was heard saying, &ldquo;This way,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176' name='page_176'></a>176</span>
+gentlemen, if you insist. The barrel is on the
+ground, straight ahead.&rdquo; Whereupon Peyton saw
+two merry young Englishmen enter the very passage
+at whose end he sat, one bearing the candle, both
+followed by the steward, who carried a spigot and a
+huge jug.</p>
+<p>Harry instantly divined the cause of this intrusion.
+The servants were busy preparing refreshments for
+the officers, and, in a spirit of gaiety, these two
+had volunteered to help Williams fetch the liquor
+which he, not knowing Harry&rsquo;s whereabouts, was
+about to draw from the barrel on which Harry sat.</p>
+<p>It was not Elizabeth who could save him from
+discovery now.</p>
+<p>The officers came groping towards him up the
+narrow passage.</p>
+<p>Before the candle-light reached him, he rose and
+got behind the barrel, there being barely room for
+his legs between it and the partition. He had, in
+dressing for the day, put on his scabbard and his
+broken sword. He now took his stick in his left
+hand, and drew his sword with his right. He set
+his teeth hard together, thought of nothing at all, or
+rather of everything at once, and waited.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hear the rats,&rdquo; said one of the Englishmen. It
+was Peyton&rsquo;s stealthy movement he had heard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, sir, there&rsquo;s often a terrible scampering of
+&rsquo;em,&rdquo; said Williams.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177' name='page_177'></a>177</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe I can pink a rat or two,&rdquo; said the officer
+without the candle, and drew his sword. Harry
+braced himself rapidly against the woodwork at his
+back. The candle-light touched the barrel.</p>
+<p>At that instant Harry felt the woodwork give way
+behind him, and fell on his back on the ground.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo; cried the officer with the candle,
+standing still.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tis the scampering of the rats, of course,&rdquo; said
+the other.</p>
+<p>Harry had apprehended, by this time, that the
+supposed wooden partition was in reality a door in
+the cellar wall. He now pushed it shut with his
+foot, remaining outside of it, then rose, and, feeling
+about him, discovered that his present place was in a
+narrow arched passage that ran, from the door in
+the cellar wall, he knew not how far. Recalling the
+bumping of his head, he inferred now that the iron
+something was a bolt, and that his blow had forced
+it from its too large socket in the stone wall.</p>
+<p>He proceeded onward in the dark passage for
+some distance, then stopped to listen. No sound
+coming from the door he had closed, he decided that
+the officers were satisfied the noise had been of the
+rats&rsquo; making. He sheathed his broken sword, having
+retained that and his stick in his fall, and went
+forward, hoping to find a habitable place of waiting.
+Soon the passage widened into a kind of subterranean
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178' name='page_178'></a>178</span>
+room, one side of which admitted light. Going to
+this side, Harry stopped short at the verge of a well,
+on whose circumference the subterranean chamber
+abutted. The light came from the well&rsquo;s top, which
+was about ten feet above the low roof of the underground
+room, the passage from the cellar being
+on a descent. In this artificial cave were wooden
+chests, casks, and covered earthen vessels, these contents
+proclaiming the place a secret storage-room
+designed for use in siege or in military occupation.
+Harry waited here a while that seemed half a day,
+then returned through the passage to the door, intending
+to return to the cellar. He listened at the
+door, found all quiet beyond, and made to push open
+the door. It would not move. From the feel of
+the resistance, he perceived that the bolt had been
+pushed home again&mdash;as indeed it had, by the steward,
+who had noticed it while tapping the barrel, and
+had imputed its being drawn to some former carelessness
+of his own.</p>
+<p>Peyton, finding himself thus barred into the subterranean
+regions, was in a quandary. Any alarm
+he might attempt, by shouting or pounding, might
+not be heard, or, if heard, might reach some tarrying
+British. In due time, Elizabeth would doubtless
+have him looked for in the closet and then in the
+cellar, but, on his not being found there, would suppose
+he had left the cellar by one of the other stairways.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179' name='page_179'></a>179</span>
+Thus he could little hope to be sought for
+in his prison. Williams might at any time have
+occasion to visit the secret storeroom, but, on the
+other hand, he might not have such occasion for
+weeks. Harry groped back to the cave, and sought
+some way of escape by the well, but found none.</p>
+<p>He then examined the cave more closely, and
+came finally on another passage than that by which
+he had entered. He followed this for what seemed
+an interminable length. At last, it closed up in
+front of him. He tested the barrier of raw earth
+with his hands, felt a great round stone projecting
+therefrom, pushed this stone in vain, then clasped it
+with both arms and pulled. It gave, and presently
+fell to the ground at his feet, leaving an aperture
+two feet across, which let in light. He crawled the
+short length of this, and breathed the open air in a
+small thicket on the sloping bank of the Hudson.<a href='#Footnote_0008' class='fnanchor'>[8]</a>
+He crept to the thicket&rsquo;s edge, and saw, in the sunset
+light, the river before him; on the river, a
+British war-vessel; on the vessel, some naval officers,
+one of whom was looking, with languid preoccupation,
+straight at the thicket from which Harry
+gazed.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180' name='page_180'></a>180</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IX_THE_CONFESSION' id='CHAPTER_IX_THE_CONFESSION'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+<h3>THE CONFESSION.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcapq'><small>&ldquo;</small><span class='drop'>W</span><span class='dcap'>hat</span> d&rsquo;ye spy, Tom?&rdquo; called out another officer
+on the deck, to the one whose attitude most
+interested Harry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought I made out some kind of craft steering
+through the bushes yonder,&rdquo; was the answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Neither do I, now. &rsquo;Twasn&rsquo;t human craft, anyhow,
+so it doesn&rsquo;t signify,&rdquo; and the officers looked
+elsewhere.</p>
+<p>Harry lay low in the thicket, awaiting the departure
+of the vessel or the arrival of darkness. On
+the deck there was no sign of weighing anchor.
+As night came, the vessel&rsquo;s lights were slung. The
+sky was partly clear in the west, and stars appeared
+in that direction, but the east was overcast,
+so that the rising moon was hid. The atmosphere
+grew colder.</p>
+<p>When Harry could make out nothing of the vessel
+on the dark water, save the lights that glowed like
+low-placed stars, he crawled from the bushes and up
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181' name='page_181'></a>181</span>
+the bank to the terrace. He then rose and proceeded,
+with the aid of his stick, aching from having
+so long maintained a cramped position, and from the
+suddenly increased cold. Before him, as he continued
+to ascend, rose the house, darkness outlined
+against darkness. No sound came from it, no window
+was lighted. This meant that the British
+officers had left, for their presence would have been
+marked by plenitude of light and by noise of merriment.
+Harry stopped on the terrace, and stood in
+doubt how to proceed. What had been thought of
+his disappearance? Where would he be supposed
+to have gone? Had provision been made for his
+possible return? Perhaps he should find a guiding
+light in some window on the other side of the house;
+perhaps a servant remained alert for his knock on
+the door. His only course was to investigate, unless
+he would undergo a night of much discomfort.</p>
+<p>As he was about to approach the house, he was
+checked by a sight so vaguely outlined that it might
+be rather of his imagination than of reality, and
+which added a momentary shiver of a keener sort
+than he already underwent from the weather. A
+dark cloaked and hooded figure stood by the balustrade
+that ran along the roof-top. As Peyton looked,
+his hand involuntarily clasping his sword-hilt, and the
+stories of the ghosts that haunted this old mansion
+shot through his mind, the figure seemed to descend
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182' name='page_182'></a>182</span>
+through the very roof, as a stage ghost is lowered
+through a trap. He continued to stare at the spot
+where it had stood, but nothing reappeared against
+the backing of black cloud. Wondering much, Harry
+presently went on towards the house, turned the
+southwest corner, and skirted the south front as
+far as to the little porch in its middle. Intending
+to reconnoitre all sides of the house before he should
+try one of the doors, he was passing on, after a
+glance at the south door lost in the blacker shadows
+of the porch, when suddenly the fan-window over
+the door seemed to glow dimly with a wavering light.
+He placed his hand on one of the Grecian pillars of
+the porch, and watched. A moment later the door
+softly opened. A figure appeared, beyond the threshold,
+bearing a candle. The figure wore a cloak with
+a hood, but the hood was down.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All is safe,&rdquo; whispered a low voice. &ldquo;The officers
+went hours ago. I knew you must have escaped
+from the house, and were hiding somewhere. I saw
+you a minute ago from the roof gallery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton having entered, Elizabeth swiftly closed
+and locked the door behind him, handed him the
+candle with a low &ldquo;Good night,&rdquo; and fled silently,
+ghostlike, up the stairs, disappearing quickly in the
+darkness.</p>
+<p>Harry made his way to his own room, as in a kind
+of dream. She herself had waited and watched for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183' name='page_183'></a>183</span>
+him! This, then, was the effect wrought in the
+proudest, most disdainful young creature of her sex,
+by that feeling which he had, by telling and acting
+a lie, awakened in her. The revelation set him
+thinking. How long might such a feeling last?
+What would be its effect on her after his departure?
+He had read, and heard, and seen, that, when these
+feelings were left to pine away slowly, the people
+possessing them pined also. And this was the return
+he was about to give his most hospitable hostess, the
+woman who had saved his life! Yet what was to be
+done? His life belonged to his country, his chosen
+career was war; he could not alter completely his
+destiny to save a woman some pining. After all, she
+<i>would</i> get over it; yet it would make of her another
+woman, embitter her, change entirely the complexion
+of the world to her, and her own attitude towards it.
+He tried to comfort himself with the thought of her
+engagement to Colden, of which he had not learned
+until after the mischief had been done. But he recalled
+her manner towards Colden, and a remark of
+old Mr. Valentine&rsquo;s, whence he knew that the engagement
+was not, on her side, a love one, and was not
+inviolable. Yet it would be a crime to a woman of
+her pride, of her power of loving, to allow the deceit,
+his pretence of love, to go as far as marriage. A disclosure
+would come in time, and would bring her
+a bitter awakening. The falsehood, natural if not
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184' name='page_184'></a>184</span>
+excusable in its circumstances, and broached without
+thought of ultimate consequence, must be stopped at
+once. He must leave her presence immediately, but,
+before going, must declare the truth. She must not
+be allowed to waste another day of her life on an
+illusion. Aside from the effect on her heart, of the
+continuance of the delusion, it would doubtless affect
+her outward circumstances, by leading her to break
+her engagement with Colden. An immediate discovery
+of the truth, moreover, by creating such a
+revulsion of feeling as would make her hate him,
+would leave her heart in a state for speedy healing.
+This disclosure would be a devilishly unpleasant
+thing to make, but a soldier and a gentleman must
+meet unpleasant duties unflinchingly.</p>
+<p>He lay a long time awake, disturbed by thoughts
+of the task before him. When he did sleep, it was
+to dream that the task was in progress, then that it
+was finished but had to be begun anew, then that
+countless obstacles arose in succession to hinder
+him in it. Dawn found him little refreshed in mind,
+but none the worse in body. He found, on arising,
+that he could walk without aid from the stick, and
+he required no help in dressing himself. Looking
+towards the river, he saw the British vessel heading
+for New York. But that sight gave him little comfort,
+thanks to the ordeal before him, in contemplating
+which he neglected to put on his sword
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185' name='page_185'></a>185</span>
+and scabbard, and so descended to breakfast without
+them.</p>
+<p>That meal offered no opportunity for the disclosure,
+the aunt being present throughout. Immediately
+after breakfast, the two ladies went for
+their customary walk. While they were breasting
+the wind, between two rows of box in the garden,
+Miss Sally spoke of Major Colden&rsquo;s intention to
+return for Elizabeth at the end of a week, and said,
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Twill be a week this evening since you arrived.
+Is he to come for you to-day or to-morrow?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Elizabeth, shortly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, my dear, you haven&rsquo;t prepared&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I sha&rsquo;n&rsquo;t go back to-day, that is certain. If
+Colden comes before to-morrow, he can wait for
+me,&mdash;or I may send him back without me, and
+stay as long as I wish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But he will meet Captain Peyton&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It can be easily arranged to keep him from
+knowing Captain Peyton is here. I shall look to
+that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Miss Sally sighed at the futility of her inquisitorial
+fishing. Not knowing Elizabeth&rsquo;s reason for saving
+the rebel captain, she had once or twice thought
+that the girl, in some inscrutable whim, intended to
+deliver him up, after all. She had tried frequently
+to fathom her niece&rsquo;s purposes, but had never got
+any satisfaction.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186' name='page_186'></a>186</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; she went on, desperately, &ldquo;if you go
+back to town, you will leave the captain in Williams&rsquo;s
+charge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I go back before the captain leaves,&rdquo; said
+Elizabeth, thereby dashing her amiable aunt&rsquo;s secretly
+cherished hope of affording the wounded
+officer the pleasure of her own unalloyed society.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth really did not know what she would do.
+Her actions, on Colden&rsquo;s return, would depend on
+the prior actions of the captain. No one had spoken
+to Peyton of her intention to leave after a week&rsquo;s
+stay. She had thought such an announcement to
+him from her might seem to imply a hint that it was
+time he should resume his wooing. That he would
+resume it, in due course, she took for granted.
+Measuring his supposed feelings by her own real
+ones, she assumed that her loveless betrothal to
+another would not deter Peyton&rsquo;s further courtship.
+She believed he had divined the nature of that betrothal.
+Nor would he be hindered by the prospect
+of their being parted some while by the war. Engagements
+were broken, wars did not last forever,
+those who loved each other found ways to meet.
+So he would surely speak, before their parting, of
+what, since it filled her heart, must of course fill
+his. But she would show no forwardness in the
+matter. She therefore avoided him till dinner-time.</p>
+<p>At the table he abruptly announced that, as duty
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187' name='page_187'></a>187</span>
+required he should rejoin the army at the first
+moment possible, and as he now felt capable of
+making the journey, he would depart that night.</p>
+<p>Miss Sally hid her startled emotions behind a
+glass of madeira, into which she coughed, chokingly.
+Molly, the maid, stopped short in her passage from
+the kitchen door to the table, and nearly dropped
+the pudding she was carrying. Elizabeth concealed
+her feelings, and told herself that his declaration
+must soon be forthcoming. She left it to him to
+contrive the necessary private interview.</p>
+<p>After dinner, he sat with the ladies before the
+fire in the east parlor, awaiting his opportunity
+with much hidden perturbation. Elizabeth feigned
+to read. At last, habit prevailing, her aunt fell
+asleep. Peyton hummed and hemmed, looked into
+the fire, made two or three strenuous swallows of
+nothing, and opened his mouth to speak. At that
+instant old Mr. Valentine came in, newly arrived
+from the Hill, and &ldquo;whew&rdquo;-ing at the cold. Peyton
+felt like one for whom a brief reprieve had been sent
+by heaven.</p>
+<p>All afternoon Mr. Valentine chattered of weather
+and news and old times. Peyton&rsquo;s feeling of relief
+was short-lasting; it was supplanted by a mighty
+regret that he had not been permitted to get the
+thing over. No second opportunity came of itself,
+nor could Peyton, who found his ingenuity for once
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188' name='page_188'></a>188</span>
+quite paralyzed, force one. Supper was announced,
+and was partaken of by Harry, in fidgety abstraction;
+by Elizabeth, in expectant but outwardly placid
+silence; by Miss Sally, in futile smiling attempts
+to make something out of her last conversational
+chances with the handsome officer; and by Mr.
+Valentine, in sedulous attention to his appetite, which
+still had the vigor of youth.</p>
+<p>Almost as soon as the ladies had gone from the
+dining-room, Peyton rose and left the octogenarian
+in sole possession. In the parlor Harry found no
+one but Molly, who was lighting the candles.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, Molly?&rdquo; said he, feeling more and more
+nervous, and thinking to retain, by constant use of
+his voice, a good command of it for the dreaded
+interview. &ldquo;The ladies not here? They left Mr.
+Valentine and me at the supper-table.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are walking in the garden, sir. Miss Elizabeth
+likes to take the air every evening.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis a chill air she takes this evening, I&rsquo;m
+thinking,&rdquo; he said, standing before the fire and holding
+out his hands over the crackling logs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A chill night for your journey,&rdquo; replied Molly.
+&ldquo;I should think you&rsquo;d wait for day, to travel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton, unobservant of the wistful sigh by which
+the maid&rsquo;s speech was accompanied, replied, &ldquo;Nay,
+for me, &rsquo;tis safest travelling at night. I must go
+through dangerous country to reach our lines.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189' name='page_189'></a>189</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;It mayn&rsquo;t be as cold to-morrow night,&rdquo; persisted
+Molly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My wound is well enough for me to go now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Twill be better still to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Peyton, deep in his own preoccupation,
+neither deduced aught from the drift of her remarks
+nor saw the tender glances which attended them.
+While he was making some insignificant answer, the
+maid, in moving the candelabrum on the spinet, accidentally
+brushed therefrom his hat, which had been
+lying on it. She picked it up, in great confusion,
+and asked his pardon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Twas my fault in laying it there,&rdquo; said he,
+receiving it from her. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m careless with my
+things. I make no doubt, since I&rsquo;ve been here, I&rsquo;ve
+more than once given your mistress cause to wish
+me elsewhere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;La, sir,&rdquo; said Molly, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think&mdash;<i>any</i> one
+would wish you elsewhere!&rdquo; Whereupon she left the
+room, abashed at her own audacity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The devil!&rdquo; thought Peyton. &ldquo;I should feel
+better if some one did wish me elsewhere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he continued gazing into the fire, and his task
+loomed more and more disagreeably before him, he
+suddenly bethought him that Elizabeth, in taking her
+evening walk, showed no disposition for a private
+meeting. Dwelling on that one circumstance, he
+thought for awhile he might have been wrong in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190' name='page_190'></a>190</span>
+supposing she loved him. But then the previous
+night&rsquo;s incident recurred to his mind. Nothing
+short of love could have induced such solicitude.
+But, then, as she sought no last interview, might he
+not be warranted in going away and leaving the disclosure
+to come gradually, implied by the absence
+of further word from him? Yet, she might be purposely
+avoiding the appearance of seeking an interview.
+The reasons calling for a prompt confession
+came back to him. While he was wavering between
+one dictate and another, in came Mr. Valentine, with
+a tobacco pipe.</p>
+<p>Like an inspiration, rose the idea of consulting the
+octogenarian. A man who cannot make up his own
+mind is justified in seeking counsel. Elizabeth could
+suffer no harm through Peyton&rsquo;s confiding in this
+sage old man, who was devoted to her and to her
+family. Mr. Valentine&rsquo;s very words on entering,
+which alluded to Peyton&rsquo;s pleasant visit as Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+guest, gave an opening for the subject concerned.
+A very few speeches led up to the matter,
+which Harry broached, after announcing that he took
+the old man for one experienced in matters of the
+heart, and receiving the admission that the old man
+<i>had</i> enjoyed a share of the smiles of the sex. But
+if the captain had thought, in seeking advice, to find
+reason for avoiding his ugly task, he was disappointed.
+Old Valentine, though he had for some
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191' name='page_191'></a>191</span>
+days feared a possible state of things between the
+captain and Miss Sally, had observed Elizabeth, and
+his vast experience had enabled him to interpret
+symptoms to which others had been blind. &ldquo;She
+has acted towards you,&rdquo; he said to Peyton, &ldquo;as she
+never acted towards another man. She&rsquo;s shown you
+a meekness, sir, a kind of timidity.&rdquo; And he agreed
+that, if Peyton should go away without an explanation,
+it would make her throw aside other expectations,
+and would, in the end, &ldquo;cut her to the heart.&rdquo;
+Valentine hinted at regrettable things that had ensued
+from a jilting of which himself had once
+been guilty, and urged on Peyton an immediate
+unbosoming, adding, &ldquo;She&rsquo;ll be so took aback and
+so full of wrath at you, she won&rsquo;t mind the loss of
+you. She&rsquo;ll abominate you and get over it at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The idea came to Peyton of making the confession
+by letter, but this he promptly rejected as a coward&rsquo;s
+dodge. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a damned unpleasant duty, but that&rsquo;s
+the more reason I should face it myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At that moment the front door of the east hall
+was heard to open.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Miss Elizabeth and her aunt,&rdquo; said Valentine,
+listening at the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I&rsquo;ll have the thing over at once, and be
+gone! Mr. Valentine, a last kindness,&mdash;keep the
+aunt out of the room.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before Valentine could answer, the ladies entered,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192' name='page_192'></a>192</span>
+their cheeks reddened by the weather. Elizabeth
+carried a small bunch of belated autumn flowers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m glad to come in out of the cold!&rdquo;
+burst out Miss Sally, with a retrospective shudder.
+&ldquo;Mr. Peyton, you&rsquo;ve a bitter night for your going.&rdquo;
+She stood before the fire and smiled sympathetically
+at the captain.</p>
+<p>But Peyton was heedful of none but Elizabeth,
+who had laid her flowers on the spinet and was
+taking off her cloak. Peyton quickly, with an &ldquo;Allow
+me, Miss Philipse,&rdquo; relieved her of the wrap, which
+in his abstraction he retained over his left arm while
+he continued to hold his hat in his other hand.
+After receiving a word of thanks, he added, &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve
+been gathering flowers,&rdquo; and stood before her in
+much embarrassment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The last of the year, I think,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;The
+wind would have torn them off, if aunt Sally and I
+had not.&rdquo; And she took them up from the spinet
+to breath their odor.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Mr. Valentine had been whispering
+to Miss Sally at the fireplace. As a result of his
+communications, whatever they were, the aunt first
+looked doubtful, then cast a wistful glance at Peyton,
+and then quietly left the room, followed by the
+old man, who carefully closed the door after him.</p>
+<p>While Elizabeth held the flowers to her nostrils,
+Peyton continued to stand looking at her, during an
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193' name='page_193'></a>193</span>
+awkward pause. At length she replaced the nosegay
+on the spinet, and went to the fireplace, where she
+gazed at the writhing flames, and waited for him to
+speak.</p>
+<p>Still laden with the cloak and hat, he desperately
+began:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miss Philipse, I&mdash;ahem&mdash;before I start on my
+walk to-night&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your walk?&rdquo; she said, in slight surprise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&mdash;back to our lines, above.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you are not going to <i>walk</i> back,&rdquo; she said,
+in a low tone. &ldquo;You are to have the horse, Cato.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton stood startled. In a few moments he
+gulped down his feelings, and stammered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh&mdash;indeed&mdash;Miss Philipse&mdash;I cannot think of
+depriving you&mdash;especially after the circumstances.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She replied, with a gentle smile:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You took the horse when I refused him to you.
+Now will you not have him when I offer him to you?
+You must, captain! I&rsquo;ll not have so fine a horse go
+begging for a master. I&rsquo;ll not hear of your walking.
+On such a night, such a distance, through such a
+country!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The devil!&rdquo; thought Harry. &ldquo;This makes it
+ten times harder!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Elizabeth now turned to face him directly. &ldquo;Does
+not my cloak incommode you?&rdquo; she said, amusedly.
+&ldquo;You may put it down.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194' name='page_194'></a>194</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, thank you, yes!&rdquo; he said, feeling very red,
+and went to lay the cloak on the table, but in his
+confusion put down his own hat there, and kept the
+cloak over his arm. He then met her look recklessly,
+and blurted out:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The truth is, Miss Philipse, now that I am soon
+to leave, I have something to&mdash;to say to you.&rdquo; His
+boldness here forsook him, and he paused.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it,&rdquo; said Elizabeth, serenely, repressing
+all outward sign of her heart&rsquo;s blissful agitation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do?&rdquo; quoth he, astonished.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; she answered, simply. &ldquo;How could
+you leave without saying it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton had a moment&rsquo;s puzzlement. Then, &ldquo;Without
+saying what?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What you have to say,&rdquo; she replied, blushing,
+and lowering her eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what have I to say?&rdquo; he persisted.</p>
+<p>She was silent a moment, then saw that she must
+help him out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you know? You were not at all tongue-tied
+when you said it the evening you came here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton felt a gulf opening before him. &ldquo;Good
+heaven,&rdquo; thought he, &ldquo;she actually believes I am
+about to propose!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now, or never, was the time for the plunge. He
+drew a full breath, and braced himself to make it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;ah&mdash;you see,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;the trouble is,&mdash;what
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195' name='page_195'></a>195</span>
+I said then is not what I have to say now.
+You must understand, Miss Philipse, that I am
+devoted to a soldier&rsquo;s career. All my time, all my
+heart, my very life, belong to the service. Thus I
+am, in a manner, bound no less on my side, than
+you&mdash;I beg your pardon&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; She spoke quietly, yet
+was the picture of open-eyed astonishment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cannot you see?&rdquo; he faltered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mean&rdquo;&mdash;her tone acquired resentment as
+her words came&mdash;&ldquo;that I, too, am bound on <i>my</i>
+side,&mdash;to Mr. Colden?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did not say so,&rdquo; he replied, abashed, cursing
+his heedless tongue. He would not, for much, have
+reminded her of any duty on her part.</p>
+<p>She regarded him for a moment in silence, while
+the clouds of indignation gathered. Then the storm
+broke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You poltroon, I <i>do</i> see! You wish to take back
+your declaration, because you are afraid of Colden&rsquo;s
+vengeance!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Afraid? I afraid?&rdquo; he echoed, mildly, surprised
+almost out of his voice at this unexpected inference.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, you craven!&rdquo; she cried, and seemed to
+tower above her common height, as she stood erect,
+tearless, fiery-eyed, and clarion-voiced. &ldquo;Your cowardice
+outweighs your love! Go from my sight and
+from my father&rsquo;s house, you cautious lover, with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196' name='page_196'></a>196</span>
+your prudent scruples about the rights of your rival!
+Heavens, that I should have listened to such a coward!
+Go, I say! Spend no more time under this
+roof than you need to get your belongings from
+your room. Don&rsquo;t stop for farewells! Nobody
+wants them! Go,&mdash;and I&rsquo;ll thank you to leave my
+cloak behind you!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_6' id='linki_6'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/i004.jpg' alt='' title='' width='325' height='500' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;GO, I SAY!&rsquo;&rdquo;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p>Silenced and confounded by the force of her denunciation,
+he stupidly dropped the cloak to the
+floor where he stood, and stumbled from the room,
+as if swept away by the torrent of her wrath and
+scorn.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197' name='page_197'></a>197</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_X_THE_PLAN_OF_RETALIATION' id='CHAPTER_X_THE_PLAN_OF_RETALIATION'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+<h3>THE PLAN OF RETALIATION.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>It</span> was in the south hall that he found himself,
+having fled through the west door of the parlor, forgetful
+that his hat still remained on the table. He
+naturally continued his retreat up the stairs to his
+chamber. The only belongings that he had to get
+there were his broken sword, his scabbard, and belt.
+These he promptly buckled on, resolved to leave the
+house forthwith.</p>
+<p>Still tingling from the blow of her words, he yet
+felt a great relief that the task was so soon over,
+and that her speedy action had spared him the labor
+of the long explanation he had thought to make.
+As matters stood, they could not be improved. Her
+love had turned to hate, in the twinkling of an eye.</p>
+<p>And yet, how preposterously she had accounted
+for his conduct! Dwelling on his hint, though it
+was checked at its utterance, that she was already
+bound, she had assumed that he held out her engagement
+to Colden as a barrier to their love. And
+she believed, or pretended to believe, that his regard
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198' name='page_198'></a>198</span>
+for that barrier arose from fear of inviting a rival&rsquo;s
+vengeance! As if he, who daily risked his life,
+could fear the vengeance of a man whom he had
+already once defeated with the sword! It was like
+a woman to alight first on the most absurd possibility
+the situation could imply. And if she knew the
+conjecture was absurd, she was the more guilty of
+affront in crying it out against him. He, in turn,
+was now moved to anger. He would not have false
+motives imputed to him. It would be useless to
+talk to her while her present mood continued. But
+he could write, and leave the letter where it would
+be found. Inasmuch as he had faced the worst
+storm his disclosure could have aroused, there was
+no cowardice in resorting to a letter with such explanations
+as could not be brought to her mind in any
+other form. Two days previously, he had requested
+writing materials in his room, for the sketching of
+a report of his being wounded, and these were still
+on a table by the window. He lighted candles, and
+sat down to write.</p>
+<p>When he had finished his document, sealed and
+addressed it, he laid it on the table, where it would
+attract the eye of a servant, and looked around for
+his hat. Presently he recalled that he had left it in
+the parlor. He first thought of seeking a servant,
+and sending for it, lest he might meet Elizabeth,
+should he again enter the parlor. But it would be
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199' name='page_199'></a>199</span>
+better to face her, for a moment, than to give an
+order to a servant of a house whence he had been
+ordered out. And now, as he intended to go into
+the parlor, he would preferably leave the letter in
+that room, where it would perhaps reach her own
+eyes before any other&rsquo;s could fall on it. He therefore
+took up the letter, thrust it for the time in his belt,
+descended quietly to the south hall, cautiously opened
+the parlor door, peeped through the crack, saw with
+relief that only Miss Sally was in the room, threw
+the door wide, and strode quickly towards the table
+on which he thought he had left his hat.</p>
+<p>But, as he approached, he saw that the hat was
+not there.</p>
+<p>In the meantime, during the few minutes he had
+spent in his room, things had been occurring in this
+parlor. As soon as Peyton had left it, or had been
+carried out of it by the resistless current of Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+invective, the girl had turned her anger on
+herself, for having weakened to this man, made him
+her hero, indulged in those dreams! She could
+scarcely contain herself. Having mechanically picked
+up her cloak, where Peyton had let it fall, she evinced
+a sudden unendurable sense of her humiliation and
+folly, by hurling the cloak with violence across the
+room. At that moment old Mr. Valentine entered,
+placidly seeking his pipe, which he had left behind
+him.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200' name='page_200'></a>200</span></div>
+<p>The octogenarian looked surprisedly at the cloak,
+then at Elizabeth, then mildly asked her if she had
+seen his pipe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, the cowardly wretch!&rdquo; was Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+answer, her feelings forcing a release in speech.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, me?&rdquo; asked the old man, startled, not
+yet having thought to connect her words with his
+last interview with the American officer. He looked
+at her for a moment, but, receiving no satisfaction,
+calmly refilled, from a leather pouch, his pipe, which
+he had found on the mantel.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth&rsquo;s thoughts began to take more distinct
+shape, and, in order to formulate them the more
+accurately, she spoke them aloud to the old man,
+finding it an assistance to have a hearer, though she
+supposed him unable to understand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yet he wasn&rsquo;t a coward that evening he rode to
+attack the Hessians,&mdash;nor when he was wounded,&mdash;nor
+when he stood here waiting to be taken! He
+was no coward then, was he, Mr. Valentine?&rdquo; Getting
+no answer, and irritated at the old man&rsquo;s owl-like
+immovability, she repeated, with vehemence,
+&ldquo;Was he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Valentine had, by this time, begun to put
+things together in his mind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. To be sure,&rdquo; he chirped, and then lighted
+his pipe with a small fagot from the fireplace, an
+operation that required a good deal of time.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201' name='page_201'></a>201</span></div>
+<p>Elizabeth now spoke more as if to herself. &ldquo;Perhaps,
+after all, I may be wrong! Yes, what a fool,
+to forget all the proofs of his courage! What a blind
+imbecile, to think him afraid! It must be that
+he acts from a delicate conception of honor. He
+would not encroach where another had the prior
+claim. He considers Colden in the matter. That&rsquo;s
+it, don&rsquo;t you think?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said Valentine, blindly, not having
+paid attention to this last speech, and sitting down
+in his armchair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can understand now,&rdquo; she went on. &ldquo;He did
+not know of my engagement that time he made love,
+when his life was at stake.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then he&rsquo;s told you all about it?&rdquo; said the old
+man, beginning to take some interest, now that he
+had provided for his own comfort.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;About what?&rdquo; asked Elizabeth, showing a
+woman&rsquo;s consistency, in being surprised that he
+seemed to know what she had been addressing
+him about.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;About pretending he loved you,&mdash;to save his
+life,&rdquo; replied Mr. Valentine, innocently, considering
+that her supposed acquaintance with the
+whole secret made him free to discuss it with
+her.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth&rsquo;s astonishment, unexpected as it was by
+him, surprised the old man in turn, and also gave
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202' name='page_202'></a>202</span>
+him something of a fright. So the two stared at
+each other.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pretending he loved me!&rdquo; she repeated, reflectively.
+&ldquo;Pretending! To save his life! <i>Now I
+see!</i>&rdquo; The effect of the revelation on her almost
+made Mr. Valentine jump out of his chair. &ldquo;For
+only <i>I</i> could save him!&rdquo; she went on. &ldquo;There was
+no other way! Oh, <i>how</i> I have been fooled! I&mdash;tricked
+by a miserable rebel! Made a laughing-stock!
+Oh, to think he did not really love me, and
+that I&mdash;Oh, I shall choke! Send some one to
+me,&mdash;Molly, aunt Sally, any one! Go! Don&rsquo;t sit
+there gazing at me like an owl! Go away and send
+some one!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Valentine, glad of reason for an honorable
+retreat from this whirlwind that threatened soon to
+fill the whole room, departed with as much activity
+as he could command.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, what shall I do? What shall I do?&rdquo;
+Elizabeth asked of the air around her. &ldquo;I must
+repay him for his duplicity. I shall never rest a
+moment till I do! What an easy dupe he must
+think me! Oh-h-h!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She brought her hand violently down on the
+table but fortunately struck something comparatively
+soft. In her fury, she clutched this something,
+raised it from the table, and saw what it
+was.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203' name='page_203'></a>203</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>His</i> hat!&rdquo; she cried, and made to throw it into
+the fire, but, with a woman&rsquo;s aim, sent it flying
+towards the door, which was at that instant opened
+by her aunt, who saved herself by dodging most
+undignifiedly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it, my dear?&rdquo; asked Miss Sally, in a
+voice of mingled wonderment and fear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll pay him back, be sure of that!&rdquo; replied
+Elizabeth, who was by this time a blazing-eyed,
+scarlet-faced embodiment of fury, and had thrown
+off all reserve.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pay whom back?&rdquo; tremblingly inquired Miss
+Sally, with vague apprehensions for the safety of
+old Mr. Valentine, who had so recently left her
+niece.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your charming captain, your gentleman rebel,
+your gallant soldier, your admirable Peyton, hang
+him!&rdquo; cried Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>My</i> Peyton? I only wish he was!&rdquo; sighed the
+aunt, surprised into the confession by Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+own outspokenness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re welcome to him, when I&rsquo;ve had my revenge
+on him! Oh, aunt Sally, to think of it!
+He doesn&rsquo;t love me! He only pretended, so that
+I would save his life! But he shall see! I&rsquo;ll deliver
+him up to the troops, after all!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; said Miss Sally, deprecatingly. Great
+as was the news conveyed to her by Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204' name='page_204'></a>204</span>
+speech, she comprehended it, and adjusted her
+mind to it, in an instant, her absence of outward
+demonstration being due to the very bigness of the
+revelation, to which any possible outside show of
+surprise would be inadequate and hence useless.
+Moreover, Elizabeth gave no time for manifestations.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; the girl went on. &ldquo;You are right. He&rsquo;s
+able-bodied now, and might be a match for all the
+servants. Besides, &rsquo;twould come out why I shielded
+him, and I should be the laugh o&rsquo; the town. Oh,
+<i>how</i> shall I pay him? How shall I make him <i>feel</i>&mdash;ah!
+I know! I&rsquo;ll give him six for half a dozen!
+I&rsquo;ll make <i>him</i> love <i>me</i>, and then I&rsquo;ll cast him off and
+laugh at him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was suddenly as jubilant at having hit on the
+project as if she had already accomplished it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Make him love you?&rdquo; repeated her aunt, dubiously.
+Her aunt had her own reasons for doubting
+the possibility of such an achievement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps you think I can&rsquo;t!&rdquo; cried Elizabeth.
+&ldquo;Wait and see! But, heavens! He&rsquo;s going away,&mdash;he
+won&rsquo;t come back,&mdash;perhaps he&rsquo;s gone! No,
+there&rsquo;s his hat!&rdquo; She ran and picked it up from
+the corner of the doorway. &ldquo;He won&rsquo;t go without
+his hat. He&rsquo;ll have to come here for it. He went
+to his room for his sword. He&rsquo;ll be here at any
+moment.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205' name='page_205'></a>205</span></div>
+<p>And she paced the floor, holding the hat in one
+hand, and lapsing to the level of ordinary femininity
+as far as to adjust her hair with the other.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have to make quick work of it, Elizabeth,
+dear,&rdquo; said the aunt, with gentle irony, &ldquo;if he&rsquo;s going
+to-night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know, I know,&mdash;but I can&rsquo;t do it looking like
+this.&rdquo; She laid the hat on the table, in order to
+employ both hands in the arrangement of her hair.
+&ldquo;If I only had on my satin gown! By the lord
+Harry, I have a mind&mdash;I will! When he comes in
+here, keep him till I return. Keep him as if your
+life depended on it.&rdquo; She went quickly towards the
+door of the east hall.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, Elizabeth!&rdquo; cried Miss Sally, appalled.
+&ldquo;Wait! How&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How?&rdquo; echoed Elizabeth, turning near the door.
+&ldquo;By hook or crook! You must think of a way! I
+have other things on my mind. Only keep him till
+I come back. If you let him go, I&rsquo;ll never speak to
+you again! And not a word to him of what I&rsquo;ve
+told you! I sha&rsquo;n&rsquo;t be long.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what are you going to do?&rdquo; asked the
+aunt, despairingly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Going to arm myself for conquest! To put on
+my war-paint!&rdquo; And the girl hastened through the
+doorway, crossed the hall, called Molly, and ran up-stairs
+to her room.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206' name='page_206'></a>206</span></div>
+<p>Miss Sally stood in the parlor, a prey to mingled
+feelings. She did not dare refuse the task thrown
+on her by her imperative niece. Not only her
+niece&rsquo;s anger would be incurred by the refusal, but
+also the niece&rsquo;s insinuations that the aunt was not
+sufficiently clever for the task. However difficult,
+the thing must be attempted. And, which made
+matters worse, even if the attempt should succeed,
+it would be a rewardless one to Miss Sally. If
+she might detain the captain for herself, the effort
+would be worth making. The aunt sighed deeply,
+shook her head distressfully, and then, reverting
+to a keen sense of Elizabeth&rsquo;s rage and ridicule in
+the event of failure, looked wildly around for some
+suggestion of means to hold the officer. Her eye
+alighted on the hat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t go without his hat, a night like this!&rdquo;
+she thought. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll hide his hat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She forthwith possessed herself of it, and explored
+the room for a hiding-place. She decided on one
+of the little narrow closets in either side of the doorway
+to the east hall, and started towards it, holding
+the hat at her right side. Before she had come
+within four feet of the chosen place, she heard the
+door from the south hall being thrown open, and,
+casting a swift glance over her left shoulder, saw the
+captain step across the threshold. She choked back
+her sensations, and gave inward thanks that the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207' name='page_207'></a>207</span>
+hat was hidden from his sight by herself. Peyton
+walked briskly towards the table.</p>
+<p>Suddenly he stopped short, and turned his eyes
+from the table to Miss Sally, whose back was
+towards him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Miss Williams,&rdquo; said he, politely but hastily,
+&ldquo;I left my hat here somewhere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed?&rdquo; said Miss Sally, amazed at her own
+unconsciousness, while she tried to moderate the
+beating of her heart. At the same moment, she
+turned and faced him, bringing the hat around
+behind her so that it should remain unseen.</p>
+<p>Peyton looked from her to the spinet, thence to
+the sofa, thence back to the table.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, on the table, I thought. Perhaps&mdash;&rdquo;
+He broke off here, and went to look on the
+mantel.</p>
+<p>Miss Sally, who had never thought the captain
+handsomer, and who smarted under the sense of being
+deterred, by her niece&rsquo;s purpose, from employing
+this opportunity to fascinate him on her own account,
+continued to turn so as to face him in his every
+change of place.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see it anywhere,&rdquo; she said, with childlike
+innocence.</p>
+<p>Peyton searched the mantel, then looked at the
+chairs, and again brought his eyes to bear on Miss
+Sally. She blinked once or twice, but did not quail.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208' name='page_208'></a>208</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis strange!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I left it in
+this room.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he went again over all the ground he had
+already examined. Miss Sally utilized the times
+when his back was turned, in making a search of her
+own, the object of which was a safe place where she
+could quickly deposit the hat without attracting his
+attention.</p>
+<p>Peyton was doubly annoyed at this enforced delay
+in his departure, since Elizabeth might come into
+the parlor at any time, and the meeting occur which
+he had, for a moment, hoped to avoid.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would you mind helping me look for it?&rdquo; said
+he. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m in great haste to be gone. Do me the
+kindness, madam, will you not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes, with pleasure,&rdquo; she answered, thinking
+bitterly how transported she would be, in other
+circumstances, at such an opportunity of showing her
+readiness to oblige him.</p>
+<p>Her aid consisted in following him about, looking
+in each place where he had looked the moment before,
+and keeping the sought-for object close behind
+her.</p>
+<p>Suddenly he turned about, with such swiftness
+that she almost came into collision with him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It must have fallen to the floor,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes, we never thought of looking there,
+did we?&rdquo; And she followed him through another
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209' name='page_209'></a>209</span>
+tour of the room, turning her averted head from side
+to side in pretendedly ranging the floor with her
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; he said, with the elation of a new conjecture.
+&ldquo;It must be behind something!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Miss Sally gasped, but in an instant recovered
+herself sufficiently to say:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course. It surely <i>must</i> be&mdash;behind something.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Harry went and looked behind the spinet, then
+examined the small spaces between other objects and
+the wall. This search was longer than any he had
+made before, as some of the pieces of furniture
+had to be moved slightly out of position.</p>
+<p>Miss Sally felt her proximity to the object of
+this search becoming unendurable. She therefore
+profited by Peyton&rsquo;s present occupation to conduct
+pretended endeavors towards the closet west of
+the fireplace. She noiselessly opened one of the
+narrow doors, quickly tossed the hat inside, closed
+the door, and turned with ineffable relief towards
+Peyton.</p>
+<p>To her consternation she found him looking at
+her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are you doing there?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&mdash;looking in this closet,&rdquo; she stammered,
+guiltily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, it couldn&rsquo;t be in there,&rdquo; said Peyton,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210' name='page_210'></a>210</span>
+lightly. &ldquo;But, yes. One of the servants might
+have laid it on the shelf.&rdquo; And he made for the
+closet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Miss Sally stood against the closet doors and held
+out her hands to ward him off.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No harm to look,&rdquo; said he, passing around her
+and putting his hand on the door.</p>
+<p>Miss Sally felt that, by remaining in the position
+of a physical obstacle to his opening the closet, she
+would betray all. Acting on the inspiration of the
+instant, she ran to the centre of the room, and
+cried:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, come away! Come here!&rdquo; and essayed a
+well-meant, but feeble and abortive, scream.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter?&rdquo; asked Peyton, astonished.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;m going to faint!&rdquo; she said, feigning
+a sinkiness of the knees and a floppiness of the
+head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, pray don&rsquo;t faint!&rdquo; cried Peyton, running to
+support her. &ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t time. Let me call some
+one. Let me help you to the sofa.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By this time he held her in his arms, and was
+thinking her another sort of burden than Tom
+Jones found Sophia, or Clarissa was to Roderick
+Random.</p>
+<p>The lady shrank with becoming and genuine
+modesty from the contact, gently repelled him with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211' name='page_211'></a>211</span>
+her hands, saying, &ldquo;No, I&rsquo;m better now,&mdash;but
+come,&rdquo; and took him by the arm to lead him
+further from the fatal closet.</p>
+<p>But Peyton immediately released his arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, thank you for not fainting!&rdquo; he said, with
+complete sincerity, and stalked directly back to the
+closet. Before she could think of a new device, he
+had opened the door, beheld the hat, and seized it in
+triumph. &ldquo;By George, I was right! I bid you
+farewell, Miss Williams!&rdquo; He very civilly saluted
+her with the hat, and turned towards the west door
+of the parlor.</p>
+<p>Must, then, all her previous ingenuity be wasted?
+After having so far exerted herself, must she suffer
+the ignominious consequences of failure?</p>
+<p>She ran to intercept him. Desperation gave her
+speed, and she reached the west door before he
+did. She closed it with a bang, and stood with
+her back against it. &ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;You
+mustn&rsquo;t!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mustn&rsquo;t what?&rdquo; asked Peyton, surprised as
+much by her distracted eyes, panting nostrils, and
+heaving bosom, as by her act itself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mustn&rsquo;t go out this way. Mustn&rsquo;t open this
+door,&rdquo; she answered, wildly.</p>
+<p>He scrutinized her features, as if to test a sudden
+suspicion of madness. In a moment he threw off
+this conjecture as unlikely.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212' name='page_212'></a>212</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said he, putting forth his hand to grasp
+the knob of the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t, I say!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t help
+it! Don&rsquo;t blame me for it! Don&rsquo;t ask me to explain,
+but you must not go out this way!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She stood by her task now from a new motive,
+one that impelled more strongly than her fear of
+being reproached and derided by Elizabeth. Her
+own self-esteem was enlisted, and she was now
+determined not to incur her own reproach and
+derision. She perceived, too, with a sentimental
+woman&rsquo;s sense of the dramatic, that, though denied
+a drama of her own in which she might figure as
+heroine, here was, in another&rsquo;s drama, a scene entirely
+hers, and she was resolved to act it out with
+honor. Circumstances had not favored her with a
+romance, but here, in another&rsquo;s romance, was a chapter
+exclusively hers, a chapter, moreover, on whose
+proper termination the very continuation of the
+romance depended. So she would hold that door,
+at any cost.</p>
+<p>Peyton regarded her for another moment of
+silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, well,&rdquo; said he, at last, &ldquo;I can go the other
+way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And, to her dismay, he strode towards the door
+of the east hall. She could not possibly outrun
+him thither. Her heart sank. The killing sense
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213' name='page_213'></a>213</span>
+of failure benumbed her body. He was already at
+the door,&mdash;was about to open it. At that instant
+he stepped back into the parlor. In through the
+doorway, that he was about to traverse, came Elizabeth.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214' name='page_214'></a>214</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XI_THE_CONQUEST' id='CHAPTER_XI_THE_CONQUEST'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+<h3>THE CONQUEST.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Miss Sally</span> saw at a glance that her niece was
+dressed for conquest; then, with immense relief and
+supreme exultation, but with a feeling of exhaustion,
+knowing that her work was done, she silently left
+the room by the door she had guarded, closed it
+noiselessly behind her, and went up-stairs to restore
+her worked-out energies.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth wore a blue satin gown, the one evening
+dress she had, in the possibility of a candle-light
+visit from the officers at the outpost, brought
+with her from New York. Her bare forearms, and
+the white surface surrounding the base of her
+neck, were thus for the first time displayed to
+Peyton&rsquo;s view. A pair of slender gold bracelets
+on her wrists set off the smoothness of her rounded
+arms, but she wore no other jewelry. She had
+not had the time or the facilities to have her
+hair built high as a grenadier&rsquo;s cap, but she looked
+none the less commanding. She was, indeed, a
+radiant creature. Peyton, having never before seen
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215' name='page_215'></a>215</span>
+her at her present advantage, opened wide his eyes
+and stared at her with a wonder whose openness
+was excused only by the suddenness of the dazzling
+apparition.</p>
+<p>She cast on him a momentary look of perfect
+indifference, as she might on any one that stood in
+her way; then walked lightly to the spinet, giving
+him a barely noticeable wide berth in passing, as
+if he were something with which it was probably
+desirable not to come in contact. Her slight deviation
+from a direct line of progress, though made
+inoffensively, struck him like a blow, yet did not
+interrupt, for more than an instant, his admiration.
+He stood dumbly looking after her, at her smooth
+and graceful movement, which had no sound but the
+rustling of skirts, her footfalls being noiseless in
+the satin slippers she wore.</p>
+<p>Peyton was not now as impatient as he had been
+to depart. In fact, he lost, in some measure, his
+sense of being in the act of departure. What he
+felt was an inclination to look longer on this so unexpected
+vision. She sat down at the spinet with
+her back towards him, and somehow conveyed in her
+attitude that she thought him no longer in the room.
+He felt a necessity for establishing the fact of his
+presence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pardon me for addressing you,&rdquo; he said, with a
+diffidence new to him, taking up the first pretext
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216' name='page_216'></a>216</span>
+that came to mind, &ldquo;but I fear your aunt requires
+looking to. She behaves strangely.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said Elizabeth, lightly, too wise to give him
+the importance of pretending not to hear him, &ldquo;she
+is subject to queer spells at times. I thought you
+had gone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She began to play the spinet, very quietly and
+unobtrusively, with an absence of resentment, and
+with a seemingly unconscious indifference, that gave
+him a paralyzing sense of nothingness.</p>
+<p>Unpleasant as this feeling made his position, he
+felt the situation become one from which it would be
+extremely awkward to flee. For the first time since
+certain boyhood fits of bashfulness, he now realized
+the aptness of that oft-read expression, &ldquo;rooted to
+the spot.&rdquo; That he should be thrown into this
+trance-like embarrassment, this powerlessness of
+motion, this feeling of a schoolboy first introduced
+to society, of a player caught by stage fright, was
+intolerable.</p>
+<p>When she had touched the keys gently a few
+times, he shook off something of the spell that
+bound him, and moved to a spot whence he could
+get a view of her face in profile. It had not an
+infinitesimal trace of the storm that had driven him
+from the room a short time before. It was entirely
+serene. There was on it no anger, no grief, no
+reproach of self or of another, no scorn. There was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217' name='page_217'></a>217</span>
+pride, but only the pride it normally wore; reserve,
+but only the reserve habitual to a high-born girl in
+the presence of any but her familiars. It was hard
+to believe her the woman who had been stirred to
+such tremendous wrath a few minutes ago, by the
+disclosure that she had been deceived, her love
+tricked and misplaced. Rather, it was hard to believe
+that the scene of wrath had ever occurred, that
+this woman had ever been so stirred by such cause,
+that she had ever loved him, that he had ever dared
+pretend love to her. The deception and the confession,
+with all they had elicited from her, seemed
+parts of a dream, of some fancy he had had, some
+romance he had read.</p>
+<p>As for Elizabeth, she knew not, thought not,
+whether, in bearing him hot resentment, she still
+loved him. She knew only that she craved revenge,
+and that the first step towards her desired end
+was to assume that indifference which so puzzled,
+interested, and confounded him. A weak or a stupid
+woman would have shown a sense of injury, with
+flashes of anger. An ordinarily clever woman would
+have affected disdain, would have sniffed and looked
+haughty, would have overdone her pretended contempt.
+It is true, Elizabeth had moved slightly out
+of her way to pass further from him, but she had
+done this with apparent thoughtlessness, as if the
+act were dictated by some inner sense of his belonging
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218' name='page_218'></a>218</span>
+to an inferior race; not with a visible intention
+of showing repulsion. It is true she had assumed
+ignorance of his presence, but she had given him to
+attribute this to a belief that he had left the room.
+When his voice declared his whereabouts, she treated
+him just as she would have treated any other indifferent
+person who was <i>not quite</i> her equal.</p>
+<p>Peyton felt more and more uncomfortable. Would
+she continue playing the spinet forever, so perfectly
+at ease, so content not to look at him again, so
+assuming it for granted that, the operation of leave-taking
+being considered over between hostess and
+guest, the guest might properly be gone any moment
+without further attention on either side?</p>
+<p>He began to fear that, if he did not soon speak,
+his voice would be beyond recovery. So, with a
+desperate resolve to recover his self-possession at
+a single <i>coup</i>, he blurted out, bunglingly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis the first time I have seen you in that gown,
+madam.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Elizabeth, not ceasing to let her fingers ramble
+with soft touch over the keyboard, replied, carelessly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have not worn it in some time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Having found that he retained the power of speech,
+he proceeded to utter frankly his latest thought, concealing
+the slight bitterness of it with a pretence of
+playful, make-believe reproach:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis not flattering to me, that you never wore it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219' name='page_219'></a>219</span>
+while I was your guest, yet put it on the moment
+you thought I had departed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She answered with good-humored lightness, &ldquo;Why,
+sir, do you complain of not being flattered? I
+thought such complaints were made only by women,
+and only to their own hearts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If by flattery,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you mean merited compliment,
+there are women who can never have occasion
+to complain of not receiving it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed? When was that discovery made?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A minute ago, madam.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; and she smiled with just such graciousness
+as a woman might show in accepting a compliment
+from a comparative stranger. &ldquo;Thank you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When I think of it,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;it seems strange
+that you&mdash;ah&mdash;never took pains to&mdash;eh&mdash;to appear
+at your best&mdash;nay, I should say, as your real
+self!&mdash;before me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, you allude to my wearing this gown? Why,
+you must pardon my not having received you ceremoniously.
+<i>Your</i> visit began unexpectedly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then somebody else is about to begin a visit
+that <i>is</i> expected?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t you know? I thought all the house was
+aware Major Colden was to return in a week. He
+may be here to-night, though perhaps not till to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Confound that man!&rdquo; This to himself, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220' name='page_220'></a>220</span>
+then, to her: &ldquo;I was of the impression you did not
+love him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, what gave you that impression?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No matter. It seems I was wrong.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t say that,&mdash;or that you&rsquo;re right,
+either.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;However,&rdquo; quoth he, with an inward sigh of
+resignation, &ldquo;it is for <i>him</i> that you are dressed as
+you never were for me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She did not choose to ask what reason had existed
+for considering him in selecting her attire. It was
+better not to notice his presumption, and she became
+more absorbed in her music.</p>
+<p>Peyton strode up and down a few moments, then
+sat by the table, and rested his cheek on his hand,
+wearing a somewhat injured look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Major Colden, eh?&rdquo; he mused. &ldquo;To think I
+should come upon him again!&rdquo; He essayed to
+renew conversation. &ldquo;I trust, Miss Philipse, when
+I am gone&mdash;&rdquo; But Elizabeth was now oblivious of
+surroundings; the notes from the spinet became
+louder, and she began to hum the air in a low,
+agreeable voice. Peyton looked hopeless. Presently
+he stood up again, watching her.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth brought the piece to a lively finish, rose
+capriciously, took up the flowers she had laid on the
+spinet earlier in the evening, put them in her corsage,
+and made to readjust the bracelet on her right
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221' name='page_221'></a>221</span>
+arm. In this attempt, she accidentally dropped the
+bracelet to the floor. Peyton ran to pick it up.
+But she quickly recovered it before he could reach
+it, put it on, walked to the table and sat down by it,
+removed the flowers from her bosom to the table,
+took up the volume of &ldquo;The School for Scandal,&rdquo;
+and turned the leaves over as if in quest of a certain
+page.</p>
+<p>While she was looking at the book, Peyton took
+up the flowers. Elizabeth, as if thinking they were
+still where she had laid them, put out her hand to
+repossess them, keeping her eyes the while on the
+book. For a moment, her hand ranged the table in
+search, then she abandoned the attempt to regain
+them.</p>
+<p>Peyton held them out to her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I thank you,&rdquo; she said, laying down the
+book, and went back to the spinet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, you give them to me!&rdquo; cried Peyton, with
+sudden pleasure.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not at all! I merely do not wish to have them
+now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said he, thinking to make account by finding
+offence where none was really expressed, &ldquo;has
+my touch contaminated them for you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can you talk so absurdly?&rdquo; And she resumed
+her seat at the spinet, and her playing.</p>
+<p>Peyton stood holding the flowers, looking at her,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222' name='page_222'></a>222</span>
+and presently heaved a deep sigh. This not moving
+her, he suddenly had an access of pride, brought
+himself together, and saying, with quick resolution,
+&ldquo;I bid you good-night and good-by, madam,&rdquo; went
+rapidly towards the door of the east hall. But his
+resolution weakened when his hand touched the
+knob, and, to make pretext for further sight of her,
+he turned and went to go out the other door.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth had had a moment of alarm at his first
+sign of departure, but had not betrayed the feeling.
+Now when, from her seat at the spinet, she saw him
+actually crossing the threshold near her, she called
+out, gently, &ldquo;A moment, captain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The pleased look on his face, as he turned towards
+her inquiringly, betrayed his gratification at being
+called back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are taking my flowers away,&rdquo; she said, in
+explanation.</p>
+<p>He plainly showed his disappointment. &ldquo;Your
+pardon. My thoughtlessness. But you said you
+didn&rsquo;t wish to keep them.&rdquo; He laid them on the
+spinet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not,&mdash;yet a woman must allow very few
+hands to carry off flowers of her gathering.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She rose and took up the flowers and walked
+towards the fireplace.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you at least take them back from my
+hands,&rdquo; said Peyton.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223' name='page_223'></a>223</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes,&mdash;for this,&rdquo; and she tossed them into
+the fire.</p>
+<p>He looked at them as they withered in the blaze,
+then said, &ldquo;Have you any objection to my carrying
+away the ashes, Miss Philipse?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She answered, considerately, &ldquo;&rsquo;Twill take you more
+time than you can lose, to gather them up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I am in no haste.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, then, I ask your pardon. A moment since,
+you were about to go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But now I prefer to stay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed? May I ask the reason&mdash;but no matter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But he felt that a reason ought to be forthcoming.
+&ldquo;Why, you know, because&mdash;&rdquo; And here he
+thought of one. &ldquo;I wish to stay to meet Major
+Colden, of whom you say I am afraid. I shall prove
+to you at least I am no coward. After what you
+have said to me this night, I must in honor wait to
+face him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But it is late now. I don&rsquo;t think he will come
+till to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I can wait till to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But your duty calls you back to your own camp,
+now that your wound has healed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think my wound has undergone a slight relapse.
+You shall see, at least, I am not afraid of
+your champion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If that is your only reason,&mdash;your desire to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224' name='page_224'></a>224</span>
+quarrel with Major Colden,&mdash;I cannot invite you
+to remain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then, to tell the truth, there <i>is</i> another
+reason. When I said, a while since, I had never
+seen you in that gown, I used too many words. I
+should have said I had never really seen you at all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where were your eyes?&rdquo; she asked, absently,
+seeming to take his words literally and to perceive
+no compliment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was in a kind of waking sleep.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It has been a time and place of hallucinations, I
+think. I, too, sir, have been, since I came here a
+week ago, under the strangest spell. A kind of light
+madness or witchery was over me, and made me act
+ridiculously, against my very will. A week ago,
+when you were disabled, I intended to give you up
+to the British,&mdash;as I should do now, if it would not
+be so troublesome&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Twould be troublesome to <i>me</i>, I assure you,&rdquo; he
+said, interrupting.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But at the last moment,&rdquo; she went on, &ldquo;I did
+precisely the reverse of what I wished. Awhile
+ago, in this room, I seemed to be in the possession
+of some evil spirit, which made me say preposterous
+things. I can only remember some wild raving I
+indulged in, and some undeserved rudeness I displayed
+towards you. But, will you believe, the instant
+you left me, I recovered my right mind. I am
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225' name='page_225'></a>225</span>
+like one returned from bedlam, cured, and you will
+pardon any incivility I may have done you in my
+peculiar state, I&rsquo;m sure, since you speak of having
+been curiously afflicted yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you mean,&rdquo; he faltered, &ldquo;you did not
+really love me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, certainly I did not! How could you think
+I did? Something possessed my will. But, thank
+heaven, I am myself again. Why, sir, how could I?
+You know very little of me, sir, to think&mdash;Oh!&rdquo;
+She covered her face with her hands. &ldquo;What things
+must I have said and done, in my clouded state,
+to make you think that! You,&mdash;an enemy, a rebel,
+a person whose only possible interest to me arises
+from his enmity!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dazzled as he was by her newly discovered beauty,
+the imposition on him was complete. He saw this
+covetable being now indifferent to him, out of his
+power to possess, likely soon to pass into the possession
+of another.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pray try to forget awhile that enmity,&rdquo; he
+supplicated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall try, and then you can have no interest
+for me at all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then don&rsquo;t try, I beg. I&rsquo;d rather have an interest
+for you as an enemy than not at all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, really, sir&mdash;&rdquo; She seemed half puzzled,
+half amused.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226' name='page_226'></a>226</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;how I have been deluded!
+I thought my love-making that night, feigned though
+it was, had wakened a response.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Love-making, do you say? Will you believe me,
+sir, I don&rsquo;t remember what passed here that night,
+save the unaccountable ending,&mdash;my making you
+my guest instead of their prisoner.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish you were pretending all this!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, if &rsquo;twould make you happier that I were,
+I wish so, too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can you speak so lightly of such matters?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What matters?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Love, of course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, do men alone, because they laugh at
+women for taking love seriously, have the right
+to take it lightly? And of what love am I speaking
+lightly,&mdash;the love you say you feigned for me,
+or the love you say you thought you had awakened
+in me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The love I vow I do <i>not</i> feign for you! The
+love I wish I <i>could</i> awaken in you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, captain, what a change has come over
+you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. I have risen from my sleep. If you, in
+waking from yours, put off love, I, in waking from
+mine, took on love!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She smiled, as with amusement. &ldquo;A somewhat
+speedy taking on, I should say.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227' name='page_227'></a>227</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Love&rsquo;s born of a glance, <i>I</i> say!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t I heard that before?&rdquo; reflectively.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aye, for I said it here when I did not mean it,
+and now I say it again when I do!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And of what particular glance am I to suppose&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of the first glance I cast on you when you
+entered this room in that gown. Yes, born of a
+glance&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Born of a gown, in that case, don&rsquo;t you mean?&rdquo;
+derisively.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of a gown, or a glance, or a what you wish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t wish it should be born at all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t wish I should love you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t wish you should love me or shouldn&rsquo;t
+love me. I don&rsquo;t wish you&mdash;anything. Why
+should I wish anything of one who is nothing to
+me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing to you! I would you were to me what
+I am to you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is that, pray?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An adorer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are a&mdash;very amusing gentleman.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You refuse me a glimpse of hope?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You would like to have it as a trophy, I suppose.
+You men treasure the memories of your little conquests
+over foolish women, as an Indian treasures
+the scalps he takes.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228' name='page_228'></a>228</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Lord! which sex, I wonder, has the busier
+scalping-knife?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t speak for all my sex. Some of us seek
+no scalps&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t have to. I make you a present of
+mine. I fling it at your feet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We seek no scalps, I say,&mdash;because we don&rsquo;t
+value them a finger-snap.&rdquo; And she gave a specimen
+of the kind of finger-snap she did not value
+them at.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In heaven&rsquo;s name,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;say what you do
+value, that I may strive to become like it! What
+do you value, I implore you, tell me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&mdash;my studies, for one thing,&mdash;my French
+and my music,&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Could I but translate myself into French, or set
+myself to an air!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, I don&rsquo;t care for <i>comic</i> songs!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see you like flowers. If I might die, and be
+buried in your garden, and grow up in the shape of
+a rose-bush&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Or a cabbage!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I fear you don&rsquo;t like that flower.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Better come up in the form of your own Virginia
+tobacco.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And be smoked by old Mr. Valentine? No, you
+don&rsquo;t like tobacco. Ah, Miss Philipse, this levity is
+far from the mood of my heart!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229' name='page_229'></a>229</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Why do you indulge in it, then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I? Is it I who indulge in levity?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Assuredly, <i>I</i> do not!&rdquo; Oh, woman&rsquo;s privilege
+of saying unabashedly the thing which is not!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;for there&rsquo;s no levity in the coldness
+with which beauty views the wounds it makes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure one is not compelled to offer oneself to
+its wounds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&mdash;nor the moth to seek the flame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;La, now you are a moth,&mdash;a moment ago, a
+rose-bush,&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you are ten million roses, grown in the garden
+of heaven, and fashioned into one body there, by
+some celestial Praxiteles!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear me, am I all that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; he said, sadly, &ldquo;and no more truly conscious
+of what it means to be all that, than any rose
+in any garden is conscious of what its beauty means!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; she said, softly, feeling for a moment
+almost tenderness enough to abandon her purpose,
+&ldquo;more conscious than you think!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! Then you are not like common beauties,&mdash;as
+poor and dull within as they are rich and radiant
+without? You but pretend insensibility, to hide real
+feeling.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did not say so,&rdquo; she answered, lightly, bracing
+herself again to her resolution.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But it is so, is it not?&rdquo; he went on. &ldquo;Your
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230' name='page_230'></a>230</span>
+heart and mind are as roseate and delicate as your
+face? You can understand my praises and my feelings?
+You can value such love as mine aright, and
+know &rsquo;tis worthy some repayment?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But she was not again to be duped by low-spoken,
+fervid words, or by wistful, glowing eyes. She must
+be sure of him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&mdash;I recall now,&rdquo; she said, with little apparent
+interest; &ldquo;you spoke of love a week ago,
+with no less eloquence and ardor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;More eloquence and ardor, I dare say, for then I
+did not feel love. Then my tongue was not tied by
+sense of a passion it could not hope to express one
+hundredth part of! And, even if my tongue had gift
+to tell my heart, I should not dare trust myself
+under the sway of my feelings. But I <i>do</i> love you
+now,&mdash;I do,&mdash;I do!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If now, why not before?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t I said I&rsquo;ve been blind to you until
+to-night? At first I regarded you as only an
+enemy to be turned to my use in my peril. Having
+been fortunate in that, I gave myself to other
+thoughts. But, thinking my false love had drawn
+true love from you, I saw I could not in honor leave
+you under a false belief. But now the falsehood has
+become truth. A week ago, I avowed a pretended
+passion, to gain my life! Now, I declare a real one,
+to gain your love!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231' name='page_231'></a>231</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;What, you expect to take my love by storm, in
+reality, as you did, in appearance, a week ago?&rdquo;
+She had risen from the music seat, and now stood
+with her back against the spinet, her hands behind
+her, her head turned slightly upward, facing him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t expect,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I only hope.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what gives you reason to hope?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My own love for you. Love elicits love, they
+say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They say wrong, then. If that were true, there
+would be no unrequited lovers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, but such love as mine,&mdash;how can it so fill
+me to overflowing, and not infect you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Love is not an infectious disease. If it were, I
+should have no fear,&mdash;knowing myself love-proof.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t believe that,&mdash;for a woman with no
+spark in herself could not light so fierce a flame in
+me, by the mere meeting of our eyes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it should create in me such a disturbance as
+you seem to undergo, I shouldn&rsquo;t wish it to increase.
+But, I assure you, it isn&rsquo;t in me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pray think it is. Only imagine it is there, and
+soon it will be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She felt that the time was at hand to strike the
+blow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I could be perfectly sure you spoke in earnest,&rdquo;
+she said, seeming to search his countenance
+for testimony.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232' name='page_232'></a>232</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;In earnest!&rdquo; he echoed. &ldquo;Great heavens, what
+evidence do you want? If there is an aspect of love
+I do not have, tell me, and I shall put it on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, you are experienced in putting on the
+<i>aspects</i> of love.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, you well know I have no reason now for
+declaring a love I don&rsquo;t feel. If you could be sure
+I spoke in earnest, you said,&mdash;what then? Tell
+me, and I shall find a way to convince you I <i>am</i> in
+earnest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Convince me first.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Convince me,&rsquo; you say. And I say, &lsquo;Be convinced.&rsquo;
+By the Lord, never was so great a sceptic!
+Is not your sense of your own charms sufficient to
+convince you of their effect?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mere words!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll prove my love by acts, then!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By what acts?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By fighting for you or suffering for you, dying
+for you or living for you, as you may command.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can prove it thus. Say, &lsquo;Long live the
+King!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He gazed at her a moment. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say, &lsquo;Long live the King!&rsquo;&rdquo; She went to the
+door, and paused on the threshold, looking at him,
+as if to give him a last opportunity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Long live the King&mdash;&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233' name='page_233'></a>233</span></div>
+<p>She came back from the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of France!&rdquo; he added.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she cried, and dictated, &ldquo;&lsquo;Long live the
+King of Great Britain!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Long live the King of Great Britain,&mdash;but not
+of America.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No! &lsquo;Long live George the Third, King of
+Great Britain and the American colonies!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Long live George the Third, King of Great
+Britain and&mdash;Ireland.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;And of the American colonies.&rsquo; Say it! Say
+it all!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Long live Elizabeth Philipse, queen of beauty in
+the United States of America!&rdquo; he answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t love me,&rdquo; said she, and set her mind
+to finding some other means by which he might
+evince what she knew he would never demonstrate
+in the way she had demanded. And she resolved
+his humiliation should be all the greater for the
+delay. &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t love me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do. I swear, on my knees.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then <i>get</i> on your knees!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do!&rdquo; He dropped on one knee.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Both knees!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Both.&rdquo; He suited action to word.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bow lower.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I touch the floor.&rdquo; He did so, with his forehead.
+&ldquo;Are you convinced?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234' name='page_234'></a>234</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; And she moved thoughtfully towards
+the door of the east hall.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! Convinced that I love you madly?&rdquo; In
+obedience to a gesture, he remained on his knees.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perfectly convinced.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then, the reward of which you hinted?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Reward?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You said, if you could be sure I spoke in earnest.
+Now you admit you are sure. What then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She let her eyes rest on him a moment, without
+speaking, as he looked ardently and expectantly up
+at her from his kneeling attitude, while she took in
+breath, and then she flung her answer at him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What then? This! That you are now more
+contemptible and ridiculous and utterly non-existent,
+to me, than you have formerly been! That, whatever
+I may have done which seemed in your behalf, was
+partly from the strange insanity of which I have
+spoken, and partly from the most meaningless caprice!
+That, if you remain here till to-morrow, you
+may see me in the arms of the man I really love,
+and that he may not be as careless of the fate of
+a vagabond rebel as I am. And now, Captain Crayton,
+or Dayton, or Peyton, or whatever you please,
+of somebody or other&rsquo;s light horse, go or stay, as
+you choose; you&rsquo;re as welcome as any other casual
+passer-by, for all the comical figure your impudence
+has made you cut! Learn modesty, sir, and you
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235' name='page_235'></a>235</span>
+may fare better in your next love-making, if you do
+not aim too high! And that piece of advice is the
+reward I hinted at! Good night!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And she whirled from the room, slamming behind
+her the mahogany door, at which Peyton stared for
+some seconds, in blank amazement, too overwhelmed
+to speak or move or breathe or think.</p>
+<p>But gradually he came to life, slowly rose, stood
+for a moment thoughtful, fashioned his brows into a
+frown, drew his lips back hard, and muttered through
+his closed teeth:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll stay and fight that man, at least!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he sat down by the table, to wait.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236' name='page_236'></a>236</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XII_THE_CHALLENGE' id='CHAPTER_XII_THE_CHALLENGE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+<h3>THE CHALLENGE.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>A very</span> few moments had elapsed, and Peyton
+still sat by the table, in a dogged study, when the
+door from the south hall was opened slightly, and
+if he had looked he might have seen a pair of eyes
+peeping through the aperture. But he did not look,
+either then or when, some seconds later, the door
+opened wide and Miss Sally bobbed gracefully in.</p>
+<p>It has been related how, after her brilliant but
+exhausting conduct of the important scene assigned
+her, she sought repose in her room. Looking out
+of her window presently, she saw something, of
+which she thought it advisable to inform Elizabeth.
+Therefore she came down-stairs. Did she listen at
+the door to the last part of that notable conversation?
+Ungallant thought, aroint thee! &rsquo;Tis well
+known women have little curiosity, and what little
+they have they would not, being of Miss Sally&rsquo;s
+station in life, descend to gratify by eavesdropping.
+Let it be assumed, therefore, that the much vaunted
+informant, feminine intuition, told Miss Sally of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237' name='page_237'></a>237</span>
+end of the interview between her niece and the captain,
+both as to the time of that end and as to its
+nature.</p>
+<p>She entered, tremulous with a vast idea that had
+blazed suddenly on her mind. Now that Elizabeth
+was quite through with Peyton, now that Peyton
+must be low in his self-esteem for Elizabeth&rsquo;s humiliation
+of him, and therefore likely to be grateful for
+consolatory attentions, Miss Sally might resume her
+own hopes. But there was no time to be lost.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your pardon, captain,&rdquo; she began, sweetly, with
+her most flattering smile. &ldquo;I am looking for Miss
+Elizabeth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She was here awhile ago,&rdquo; replied Peyton, glumly,
+not bringing his eyes within range of the smile.
+&ldquo;She went that way. I trust you&rsquo;ve recovered
+from your attack.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My attack?&rdquo; inquiringly, with surprise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The queer spell, I think Miss Philipse called it.
+She said you were subject to them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, how does she dare&mdash;&rdquo; She checked
+her tongue, lest she might betray the device for his
+detention. Something in his absent, careless way of
+associating her with a queer spell irritated her a
+little for the moment, and impelled her to retaliation.
+&ldquo;I suppose that was not the only thing she said to
+you?&rdquo; she added, ingenuously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&mdash;she said other things.&rdquo; He rose and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238' name='page_238'></a>238</span>
+went to the fireplace, leaned against the mantel,
+and gazed pensively at the red embers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They don&rsquo;t seem to have left you very cheerful,&rdquo;
+ventured Miss Sally.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not so very damned cheerful!&mdash;I beg your
+pardon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Miss Sally&rsquo;s moment of resentment had passed.
+Now was the time to strike for herself. She thought
+she had hit on a clever plan of getting around to the
+matter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Captain,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;you&rsquo;re a man of the world.
+I know it&rsquo;s presumptuous of me to ask it, but&mdash;if
+you would give me a word of advice&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton did not take his look from the fire, or his
+thoughts from their dismal absorption. He answered,
+half-unconsciously:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, certainly! Anything at all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are aware, of course,&rdquo; she went on, with
+smirking, rosy confusion, &ldquo;that Mr. Valentine is a
+widower.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed? Oh, yes, yes, I know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, a widower twice over.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How sad! He must feel twice the usual amount
+of grief.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&mdash;I don&rsquo;t know exactly about that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The poor man has my sympathy. Doubtless he
+is inconsolable.&rdquo; Peyton scarce knew what he was
+saying, or whom it was about.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239' name='page_239'></a>239</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, no,&rdquo; said Miss Sally, averting her eyes,
+with a smiling shyness, &ldquo;not altogether inconsolable.
+That&rsquo;s just it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, is it?&rdquo; said Peyton, obliviously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You may have noticed that he spends a good
+deal of time here at present,&rdquo; she went on.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A good deal of time,&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s
+doubtless some strong attraction.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Perhaps I oughtn&rsquo;t to say it, but there <i>is</i>
+a strong attraction. In fact, he has proposed marriage
+to me, and now, as a man of the world to a
+woman of little experience, would you advise me to
+accept him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And she looked at the disconsolate officer so
+sweetly, it seemed impossible he should do aught
+but say it would be throwing herself away to bestow
+on an old man charms of which younger and warmer
+eyes were sensible. But he answered only:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly! An excellent match!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For a time Miss Sally was speechless, yet open-mouthed.
+And then, for the length of one brief but
+fiery tirade, she showed herself to be her niece&rsquo;s aunt:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir! The idea! I wouldn&rsquo;t have that old
+smoke-chimney if he were the last man on earth!
+I&rsquo;d have given him his congé long ago, if it hadn&rsquo;t
+been that he might propose to my friend, the widow
+Babcock! I&rsquo;ve only kept him on the string to prevent
+her getting him. When I want your advice,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240' name='page_240'></a>240</span>
+Captain Peyton, I&rsquo;ll ask for it! Excuse me, I must
+find Elizabeth. I&rsquo;ve news for her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;News?&rdquo; he echoed, stupidly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. From my chamber window awhile ago I
+saw some one riding this way on the post-road,&mdash;Major
+Colden!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And she swept out by the same door that had
+closed, a few minutes before, on Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Major Colden!&rdquo; Peyton&rsquo;s teeth tightened, his
+eyes shot fire, his hand flew to his sword-hilt, as he
+spoke the name.</p>
+<p>He went to the window, the same window at
+which Elizabeth had looked out a week ago, and
+peered through the panes at the night.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, the ground is white,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It has
+begun to snow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But, through the large flakes that fell thick and
+swiftly among the trees, he did not yet see any
+humankind approaching. His view of the branch
+road was, at some places, obstructed by tall shrubbery
+that rose high above the palings and the hedge.</p>
+<p>Yet through those flakes, assaulted by them in
+eyes and nostrils, invaded by them in ears and neck,
+humankind was riding. It was, indeed, Colden
+that Miss Sally had seen through a fortuitous
+opening, which gave, between the trees, a view of the
+most eminent point of the post-road southward. He
+was to conduct Elizabeth home the next day, but
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241' name='page_241'></a>241</span>
+had availed himself of his opportunity to ride out to
+the manor-house that night, so as to have the few
+more hours in her society. He had this time taken
+an escort of two privates of his own regiment, but
+these men were not as well mounted as he, and, in
+his impatience, having seen the best their horses
+could do, and having passed King&rsquo;s Bridge, he had
+ridden ahead of them, leaving them to follow to
+the manor-house in their own speediest time. Thus
+it was that now he bore alone down from the post-road,
+his horse&rsquo;s feet making on the new-fallen snow
+no other sound than a soft crunching, scarce louder
+than its heavy breathing or its mouth-play on the
+bit, or the creak and clank of saddle, bridle, stirrups,
+pistols, and scabbard. His eyes dwelt eagerly on
+the manor-house, where awaited him light and
+warmth and wine, refuge from the pelting flakes,
+and, above all else, the joy-giving presence of Elizabeth.
+His breast expanded, he sighed already with
+relief; he approached the gate as a released soul,
+with admission ticket duly purchased by a deathbed
+repentance, might approach the gate of heaven.</p>
+<p>But Peyton, looking out on the white world, saw
+no one. He did not change his attitude when the
+door reopened and Elizabeth and her aunt came into
+the parlor, arm in arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re sure &rsquo;twas he, aunt Sally?&rdquo; Elizabeth had
+been saying.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242' name='page_242'></a>242</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Positive. He should be here now,&rdquo; Miss Sally
+had replied.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth cast a look of secret elation on the
+unheeding rebel captain, whose forehead was still
+against the window-pane. She saw a possible means
+of his still further degradation.</p>
+<p>Suddenly he took a quick step back from the
+window, impulsively renewed his grasp of his sword-hilt,
+and showed a face of resolute antagonism.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth knew from this that he had seen Colden.
+She gave a smile of pleasant anticipation.</p>
+<p>But Miss Sally had relapsed into her usual timid
+self. She held tightly to Elizabeth&rsquo;s arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, dear!&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Won&rsquo;t something
+happen when those two meet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope so!&rdquo; said Elizabeth, placidly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; demanded Miss Sally, beginning to
+weaken at the knees.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If Colden sends him to the ground, in our presence,
+that will crown the fellow&rsquo;s humiliation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Five brisk knocks, in quick succession, were heard
+from the outside door of the east hall.</p>
+<p>Peyton walked across the parlor, turned, and stood
+facing the east hall door, the greater part of the
+room&rsquo;s length being between him and it. His hand
+remained on his sword. He paid no heed to Elizabeth,
+she paid none to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His knock!&rdquo; she said, and called out through
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243' name='page_243'></a>243</span>
+the east hall door: &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis Major Colden, Sam. Show
+him here at once.&rdquo; She then stepped back from the
+door, to a place whence she could see both it and
+Peyton. Her aunt clung to her arm all the while,
+and now whispered, &ldquo;Oh, Elizabeth, I fear there will
+be trouble!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If there is, it won&rsquo;t fall on your silly head,&rdquo;
+whispered Elizabeth, in reply.</p>
+<p>From the hall came the sound of the drawing
+of bolts. Peyton did not take his eyes from the
+door.</p>
+<p>A noise of footfalls, accompanied by clank of
+spurs and weapons, and in came Colden, his hat
+in his left hand, snow on his hat and shoulders, his
+cloak open, his sword and pistols visible, his right
+hand ungloved to clasp Elizabeth&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>She received him with such a cordial smile as he
+had never before had from her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Elizabeth!&rdquo; he cried,&mdash;beheld only her, hastened
+to her, took her proffered hand, bent his head
+and kissed the fingers, raised his eyes with a grateful,
+joyous smile,&mdash;and saw Peyton standing motionless
+at the other side of the room. The smile
+vanished; a look of amazement and hatred came.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish you a very good evening, <i>Major</i> Colden!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton said this in a voice as hard and ironical
+as might have come from a brass statue.</p>
+<p>For the next few seconds the two men stood
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_244' name='page_244'></a>244</span>
+gazing at each other, the women gazing at the men.
+At last the Tory major found speech:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Elizabeth,&mdash;what does it mean? Why is this
+man here,&mdash;again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis rather a long story, Jack, and you shall hear
+it all in time,&rdquo; said Elizabeth, determined he should
+never hear the true story.</p>
+<p>Before she could continue, Colden suffered a start
+of alarm to possess him, and asked, quickly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are any of his troops here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; he is quite alone,&rdquo; she answered.</p>
+<p>Colden at once took on height, arrogance, and
+formidableness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then why have not your servants made him
+a prisoner?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;you being mentioned to-night,
+in his presence, he made some kind of boast of not
+fearing you, and I, divining how soon you would be
+here, thought fit his freedom with your name should
+best be paid for at <i>your</i> hands, major.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, major,&rdquo; put in Peyton, &ldquo;and I have stayed
+to receive payment!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Colden thought for a short while. Then he said,
+&ldquo;A moment, Elizabeth. Your pardon, Miss Williams,&rdquo;
+and drew Elizabeth aside, and spoke to her
+in a low tone: &ldquo;We have only to temporize with
+him. Two of my men have attended me from my
+quarters. I had a better horse, and rode ahead, in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245' name='page_245'></a>245</span>
+my eagerness to see you. My two fellows will be
+here soon, and the business will be done.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But such doing of the business did not suit Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+purpose. &ldquo;I wish to humiliate the man,&rdquo;
+she answered Colden, inaudibly to the others; &ldquo;to
+take down his upstart pride! &rsquo;Twould be no shame
+to him, to be made prisoner by numbers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, then?&rdquo; asked Colden, dubiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bring down the coxcomb, before us women, in
+an even match!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To prevent objections, she then abruptly went
+from Colden, and resumed her place at her aunt&rsquo;s
+side.</p>
+<p>Colden stood frowning, not half pleased at her
+hint. It occurred to him, as it did not to her, that
+the mere allegiance and favoring wishes of herself
+were not sufficient possessions to ensure victory in
+such a match as she meant. Elizabeth, accustomed
+to success, did not conceive it possible that the
+chosen agent of her own designs could fail. But
+the chosen agent had, in this case, wider powers
+of conception.</p>
+<p>All this time, Captain Peyton had stood as
+motionless as a figure in a painting. He now interrupted
+Colden&rsquo;s meditations with the gentle
+reminder:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am waiting for my payment, Major Colden.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Colden was not a man of much originality. So,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246' name='page_246'></a>246</span>
+in his instinctive endeavor to gain time, he bungled
+out the conventional reply, &ldquo;You wish to seek a
+quarrel with me, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Seek a quarrel?&rdquo; retorted Peyton. &ldquo;Is not the
+quarrel here? Has not Miss Philipse spoken of an
+offence to your name, for which I ought to receive
+payment from you? Gad, she&rsquo;d not have to speak
+twice to make <i>me</i> draw!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Colden continued to be as conventional as a virtuous
+hero of a novel. &ldquo;I do not fight in the
+presence of ladies, sir,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor I,&rdquo; said Peyton. &ldquo;Choose your own place,
+in the garden yonder. With snow on the ground,
+there&rsquo;s light enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Harry went quickly, almost to the door, near
+which he stopped to give Colden precedence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; put in Elizabeth, &ldquo;we ladies can bear the
+sight of a sword-cut or two. Wait for us,&rdquo; and
+she would have gone to send for wraps, but that
+Colden raised his hand in token of refusal, saying:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, Elizabeth. I will not consent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, sir,&rdquo; said Peyton. &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis no use to oppose
+a lady&rsquo;s whim. But if you make haste, we
+may have it over before they can arrive on the
+ground.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In handling his sword-hilt, Peyton had pulled the
+weapon a few inches out of the scabbard, and now,
+though he did not intend to draw while in the house,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247' name='page_247'></a>247</span>
+he unconsciously brought out the full length of what
+remained of the blade. For the time he had forgotten
+the sword was broken, and now he was
+reminded of it with some inward irritation.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Colden was answering:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no regularity in such a meeting. Where
+are the seconds?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be your second, major,&rdquo; cried Elizabeth.
+&ldquo;Aunt Sally, second Captain Peyton.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ridiculous!&rdquo; said the major.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Anything to bring you out,&rdquo; said Peyton, as
+desirous of avenging himself on Elizabeth, through
+her affianced, as she was to complete her own
+revenge through the same instrument. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll fight
+you with half a sword. I&rsquo;d forgotten &rsquo;tis all I&rsquo;ve
+left.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would not take an advantage,&rdquo; said the New
+Yorker.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then break your own sword, and make us
+equal,&rdquo; said the Virginian.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I value my weapon too much for that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton smiled ironically. But he tried again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I shall be less scrupulous,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I
+<i>will</i> take an advantage. The greater honor to you,
+if you defeat me. You take the broken sword, and
+lend me yours.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He held out his hilt for exchange.</p>
+<p>Colden pretended to laugh, saying:</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248' name='page_248'></a>248</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Am I a fool to put it in your power to murder
+me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>I&rsquo;ll</i> tell you what, gentlemen,&rdquo; put in Elizabeth.
+&ldquo;Use the swords above the chimney-place, yonder.
+They are equal.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; cried Peyton.</p>
+<p>But Colden said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will not so degrade myself as to cross swords,
+except on the battle-field, with one who is a rebel, a
+deserter, and no gentleman.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton turned to Elizabeth with a smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you see, madam,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis no fault of
+mine if my affronts go unpunished, since this gentleman
+must keep his courage for the battle-field!
+Egad,&rdquo; he added, sacrificing truth for the sake of
+the taunt, &ldquo;you Tories need all the courage there
+you can save up in a long time! I take my leave of
+this house!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_7' id='linki_7'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/i005.jpg' alt='' title='' width='323' height='500' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;I TAKE MY LEAVE OF THIS HOUSE!&rsquo;&rdquo;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p>He thrust his sword back into the scabbard, bowed
+rapidly and low, with a flourish of his hat, and went
+out by the same door Elizabeth had used in her own
+moment of triumph. He unbolted the outside door
+himself, before black Sam could come from the settle
+to serve him. Snowflakes rushed in at the open
+door. He plunged into them, swinging the door
+close after him. Out through the little portico he
+went, down the walk outside the very parlor window
+through which he had looked out awhile ago,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249' name='page_249'></a>249</span>
+but through which he did not now look in as he
+passed; through the gate, and up the branch road to
+the highway. He was possessed by a confusion of
+thoughts and feelings,&mdash;temporary and superficial
+elation at having put Elizabeth&rsquo;s preferred lover in
+so bad a light, wild ideas of some future crossing of
+her path, swift dreams of a future conquest of her
+in spite of all, a fierce desire for such action as
+would lead to that end. He was eager to rejoin the
+army now, to participate in the fighting that would
+bring about the humbling of her cause and make it
+the more in his power to master her. He heeded
+little the snow that impeded his steps as his boots
+sank into it, and which, in falling, blinded his eyes,
+tickled his face, and clung to his hair. The tumult
+of flakes was akin to that of his feelings, and he
+was in mood for encountering such opposition as the
+storm made to his progress.</p>
+<p>Arriving at the post-road, he turned and went
+northward. At his left lay the great lawn fronting
+the manor-house, and separated from the road by
+hedge and palings. He could see, across the snowy
+expanse, between the dark trunks and whitened
+branches of the trees, the long front of the manor-house,
+its roof and its porticoes already covered with
+snow, the light glowing in the one exposed window
+of the east parlor. As he quieted down within, he
+felt pleasantly towards the house, to which his week&rsquo;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250' name='page_250'></a>250</span>
+half-solitary residence in it, with the comfort he had
+enjoyed there and the books he had read, had given
+him an attachment. He cast on it a last affectionate
+look, then breasted the weather onward, wondering
+what things the future might have in store for
+him.</p>
+<p>He had little fear of not reaching the American
+lines in safety. It was unlikely that any of the enemy&rsquo;s
+marauders would be out on such a night, and
+more unlikely that any regular military movement
+would be making on the neutral ground. He expected
+to meet no one on the road, but he would
+keep a sharp lookout in all directions as he went,
+and, in case of any human apparition, would take to
+the fields or the woods. But all the world, thought
+he, would stay within doors this white night.</p>
+<p>Sliding back a part of every step he took in the
+snow, he passed the boundary of the Philipse lawn,
+and that of such part of the grounds as included,
+with other appurtenances, the garden north of the
+house. He had come, at last, to a place where the
+fence at his left ended and the forest began. He
+had, a moment before, cast a long look backward
+to assure himself the road was empty behind him.
+He now trudged on, his eyes fixed ahead.</p>
+<p>From behind a low pine-tree, at the end of the
+fence, two dark figures glided up to the captain&rsquo;s
+rear, their steps noiseless in the snow. One of them
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251' name='page_251'></a>251</span>
+caught both his forearms at the same instant, and
+pulled them back together, as with grips of iron. A
+second pair of hands placed a noose about his wrists,
+and quickly tightened it. Ere he could turn, his
+first assailant released the bound arms to the second,
+drew a pistol, and thrust the muzzle close to Peyton&rsquo;s
+cheek, whereupon the second man said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your pardon, captain. Come quietly, or you&rsquo;re
+a dead man!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252' name='page_252'></a>252</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIII_THE_UNEXPECTED' id='CHAPTER_XIII_THE_UNEXPECTED'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+<h3>THE UNEXPECTED.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Peyton&rsquo;s</span> somewhat elate exit from the parlor was
+followed by a moment of silence and inertia on the
+part of the three who remained there. But Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+chagrin was speedily translated into anger
+against Major Colden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you fight him?&rdquo; she demanded of
+that gentleman, who was flinching inwardly, but who
+maintained a pale and haughty exterior.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was the use?&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s reserved
+for the gallows. If my two men were
+here! Why not send your servants after him?
+Sam is a powerful fellow, and Williams is shrewd
+and strong.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Elizabeth ignored Colden&rsquo;s reply, and answered
+her own question, thus:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was because you remembered the time he
+disarmed you, three years ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You may think so, if you choose,&rdquo; he replied, in
+the patient manner of one who quietly endures unjust
+reproaches when self-defence is useless.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253' name='page_253'></a>253</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You will find refreshments in the dining-room,&rdquo;
+said Elizabeth, coldly. &ldquo;Sam will show you to your
+room.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would rather remain with you,&rdquo; he replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would rather be alone with my aunt a while.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A deep sigh expressed his dejecting sense of how
+futile it would be to oppose her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As you will,&rdquo; he then said, and, bowing gravely,
+left the parlor.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth&rsquo;s feelings now burst out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; she exclaimed to her aunt, &ldquo;what a chicken-hearted
+copy of a man! And he calls himself
+a soldier! I wonder where he found the spirit to
+volunteer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From you, my dear,&rdquo; replied Miss Sally. &ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t
+you urge him to take a commission?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that rebel fellow had the best of it all
+through,&rdquo; Elizabeth went on. &ldquo;I was to see him
+laid low by his rival, as my crowning revenge!
+How he swaggered out! with what a look of triumph
+in his eye! And&mdash;aunt Sally! He won&rsquo;t
+come back! I shall never see him again!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, child, do you wish to?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course not! But I can&rsquo;t have him go away
+with the laugh on his side! He made me ridiculous
+after my trying to stab him with my love for the
+other man. <i>Such</i> another man! Oh, the rebel
+must come back!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254' name='page_254'></a>254</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But he isn&rsquo;t likely to,&rdquo; said Miss Sally.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, what shall I do?&rdquo; wailed the niece.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Elizabeth, I&rsquo;ll wager you&rsquo;re still in love with
+him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not! I hate him!&mdash;Well, what if I am?
+He loved me, I&rsquo;m sure, the last time he said it.
+But, good heavens, he&rsquo;s going farther away every
+instant!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She clasped her hands, and, for once, looked at
+her aunt for help, like a distressed child on the verge
+of weeping.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you call him back?&rdquo; said Miss
+Sally.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I? Not if I die for want of seeing him!&mdash;I
+know! I <i>will</i> send the servants after him.&rdquo; And
+she started for the door, but stopped at her aunt&rsquo;s
+comment:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But that will be as bad as calling him yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not at all, you empty pate!&rdquo; cried Elizabeth,
+who had become, in a moment, all action. &ldquo;While
+he&rsquo;s going around by the road, Williams and Sam
+shall cut across the garden, lie in wait, and take him
+by surprise. He has no weapon but a broken sword,
+and they can make him prisoner. They shall bring
+him back here bound, and he&rsquo;ll think he&rsquo;s to be turned
+over to the British after all!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, he shall be left alone here, well guarded, for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255' name='page_255'></a>255</span>
+half an hour, and then I&rsquo;ll happen in, give him an
+opportunity to make love again, and I can yield
+gracefully! Don&rsquo;t you see?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you <i>do</i> love him?&rdquo; said the aunt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. However, I don&rsquo;t love Jack Colden.
+Not a word to him, of this! I&rsquo;m going to give
+orders to the men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As she entered the hall, she met Colden, who was
+coming from the dining-room with Mr. Valentine.
+The major had limited his refreshments to two
+glasses of brandy and water, swallowed in quick succession.
+Mr. Valentine, who was smoking his pipe,
+held Colden fraternally by the arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, Elizabeth, are you still angry?&rdquo; said Colden,
+stopping as she passed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Excuse me, I have something to see to,&rdquo; said the
+girl, coolly, hurrying away from him.</p>
+<p>He made a slight movement to follow her, but old
+Valentine drew him into the parlor, saying:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, major, you&rsquo;ll see the lady enough after
+she&rsquo;s married to you. I was just going to say, the
+last lot of tobacco I got&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, damn your tobacco!&rdquo; said the other, jerking
+his arm from the old man&rsquo;s tremulous grasp.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Damn my tobacco?&rdquo; echoed Mr. Valentine, quite
+stupefied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. I&rsquo;ve matters more important on my mind
+just now.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256' name='page_256'></a>256</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;The deuce!&rdquo; cried the old man. &ldquo;What could
+be more important than tobacco?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he stood looking into the fire, muttering to
+himself between furious puffs.</p>
+<p>Colden sought comfort of Miss Sally. &ldquo;Was ever
+a woman as unreasonable as Elizabeth?&rdquo; he said to
+her. &ldquo;She&rsquo;d have had me lower myself to meet that
+rebel vagabond as one gentleman meets another.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Miss Sally was not going to betray her own
+disappointment by showing a change from her oft-expressed
+opinion of the rebel captain,&mdash;particularly
+in the presence of Mr. Valentine. So she
+answered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You met him so once, three years ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had a less scrupulous sense of propriety then,&rdquo;
+replied Colden, raging inwardly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, as he&rsquo;s a rebel and deserter,&rdquo; pursued Miss
+Sally, &ldquo;was it not your duty as a soldier to take him,
+just now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d have done so, had my men been here,&rdquo;
+growled the major. &ldquo;Elizabeth ought to&rsquo;ve had
+her servants hold him. I had half a mind to order
+them, in the King&rsquo;s name, but I never can bring myself
+to oppose her, she&rsquo;s so masterful! By George,
+though, I&rsquo;ll have him yet! My two fellows will soon
+come up. They shall give chase. He will leave
+tracks in the snow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Colden went to the window, and peered out as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257' name='page_257'></a>257</span>
+Peyton himself had done not long before. The
+flakes were coming down as thick as ever.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see my rascals yet!&rdquo; he muttered.
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve stopped at the tavern, I&rsquo;ll warrant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he continued to gaze eagerly out, impatient
+that his men should arrive before the new-fallen snow
+should cover his enemy&rsquo;s tracks.</p>
+<p>Old Mr. Valentine, having exhausted his present
+stock of mutterings, now walked over to Miss Sally,
+who had sat down near the spinet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miss Williams,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;this is the first chance
+I&rsquo;ve had to speak to you alone in a week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But we&rsquo;re not alone,&rdquo; said Miss Sally, motioning
+her head towards Colden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s nobody,&rdquo; contemptuously replied the octogenarian.
+&ldquo;A man that damns tobacco is nobody.
+So you may go ahead and speak out. What&rsquo;s your
+answer, ma&rsquo;am?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Valentine, not now! You must give
+me time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what you said before,&rdquo; he complained.</p>
+<p>She had, indeed, said it before, scores of times.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, give me more time, then,&rdquo; she replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How much?&rdquo; asked the old man, in a matter-of-fact
+way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t know! Long enough for me to
+make up my mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus far, this conversation had followed in the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258' name='page_258'></a>258</span>
+exact lines of many that had preceded it, but now
+Mr. Valentine made a departure from the customary
+form.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;if my other two wives had
+taken as long as you to make up their minds, I
+shouldn&rsquo;t have been twice a widower by now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Valentine!&rdquo; said Miss Sally, in a sweetly
+reproachful way. &ldquo;Now you know&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But he cut her speech off short. &ldquo;Very likely,&rdquo;
+said he. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. Well, take your time.
+Only please remember I haven&rsquo;t so very much time
+left! Better take me while I&rsquo;m here to be had!
+Good night, ma&rsquo;am!&rdquo; And he went to the dining-room
+to fortify himself for his long homeward walk
+through the snow.</p>
+<p>In crossing the hall, he saw Cuff on the settle in
+Sam&rsquo;s place. In the dining-room he met Molly, who
+was clearing the table of the supper that Colden had
+disdained. He asked her the whereabouts of Williams,
+and she replied that the steward and Sam had
+gone out on some order of Miss Elizabeth&rsquo;s. Deciding
+to await Williams&rsquo;s return, the old man sat down
+before the dining-room fire, and was soon peacefully
+snoring.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth had gone up-stairs to watch from her
+darkened window the issue of the expedition of
+Williams and Sam, who had gone out by the kitchen,
+equipped respectively with rope and pistol. While
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259' name='page_259'></a>259</span>
+they were in the immediate vicinity of the house, she
+could not see them from her elevation, but presently
+she beheld them glide swiftly across a white open
+space in the garden, cross a stile, and disappear
+among the trees and bushes between the garden
+and the post-road. Turning her eyes to the road
+itself, that lonely highway now called Broadway,<a href='#Footnote_0009' class='fnanchor'>[9]</a> she
+made out a solitary figure toiling forward through
+the whirling whiteness,&mdash;and she gave a sigh, the
+deepest and longest with which her frame had ever
+trembled.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Miss Sally remained in the parlor,
+thinking it best not to go to Elizabeth unless sent
+for; while Colden continued to stand at the window,
+showing his impatience for the arrival of his two
+soldiers in a tense contracting of the brow, in a
+restless shifting from foot to foot, and in intermittent
+stifled curses.</p>
+<p>As he kept his eyes on the place where the branch
+road left the highway, he did not see that part of the
+lawn walk which led from the garden. But suddenly
+a slight noise drew his look towards the portico
+before the east hall.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who are these coming?&rdquo; he cried, startling
+Miss Sally out of her musings and her chair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are they your men?&rdquo; she asked, hastening to
+join him at the window.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, mine are mounted,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Why,&mdash;these
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260' name='page_260'></a>260</span>
+are Williams and Sam,&mdash;and they are bringing,&mdash;yes,
+it is he! They&rsquo;re bringing him back
+a prisoner! She has done it, after all, without
+consulting me!&rdquo; And he strode to the centre of
+the room, in the utmost elation.</p>
+<p>Miss Sally weakened at the imminent prospect of
+a meeting between the two enemies in the changed
+circumstances, and felt the need of her niece&rsquo;s support.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I must tell Elizabeth they have him,&rdquo; she said,
+and ran out to the east hall, and thence to the dining-room,
+just in time to avoid seeing Peyton led in
+through the outer door, which Cuff had opened at
+Williams&rsquo;s call.</p>
+<p>The steward and Sam conducted their prisoner
+immediately into the parlor. There Colden stood,
+with a rancorously jubilant smile, to receive him.</p>
+<p>Peyton&rsquo;s wrists were as Williams had tied them.
+He was without his hat, which had been knocked off
+in a brief struggle he had essayed against his captors
+in a moment when Sam had lowered the pistol.
+There was a little fresh snow on his hair, and more
+on his shoulders. The feet of his boots were cased
+with it. His left arm was held by Williams, who
+carried the broken sword, having taken it from the
+scabbard at the first opportunity. Peyton&rsquo;s other
+arm was grasped by the huge, bony left hand of
+Sam, who held the cocked pistol in his right. The
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261' name='page_261'></a>261</span>
+two men walked with him to the centre of the parlor,
+and stopped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By George,&rdquo; said he, turning his face towards
+Sam, with fire in his eyes, &ldquo;had the snow not killed
+the sound of your sneaking footsteps till you&rsquo;d caught
+my arms behind, I&rsquo;d have done for the two of you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good, Williams!&rdquo; said Colden. &ldquo;Place him on
+that chair, and leave him here with me. But stay
+in the hall on guard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So Miss Elizabeth ordered us, sir,&rdquo; said Williams,
+dryly, and, with Sam, conducted Peyton to
+the chair, on which he sat willingly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course she did,&rdquo; replied Colden. &ldquo;Was it
+not at my suggestion?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peyton looked sharply up at the major, who regarded
+him with the undisguised pleasure of hate
+about to be satisfied.</p>
+<p>Williams handed the broken sword to Colden,
+saying, &ldquo;This was the only weapon he had, sir.
+We grabbed him before he could use it. We ran
+out behind him from the roadside, and he couldn&rsquo;t
+hear us for the snow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, or the pair of you couldn&rsquo;t have taken me!&rdquo;
+said Peyton, with hot scorn and defiant gameness.</p>
+<p>Colden, with the piece of sword, motioned Williams
+to go from the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Leave the door ajar a little,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;so you
+can hear if I call.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262' name='page_262'></a>262</span></div>
+<p>Peyton uttered a short laugh of derision at this
+piece of prudence. The steward and Sam withdrew
+to the hall, where Sam remained, while Williams
+went in search of Elizabeth for further orders. As
+soon as she had assured herself, by watching and
+listening, that Peyton was safe in the parlor, she
+had stolen quietly down-stairs to the dining-room,
+where she had met her aunt, with whom the steward
+now found her sitting. She told him to get the
+duck-gun, make sure it was loaded and primed, and
+to wait with Sam on the settle in the hall. She
+then requested her aunt to remain in the dining-room,
+silently returned to the hall, and took station
+by the door leading from the parlor,&mdash;the door
+which Williams, at Colden&rsquo;s command, had left
+slightly ajar. Her original plan, she felt, might
+have to be altered by reason of Colden&rsquo;s having
+obtruded his hand into the game, a possibility she
+had not, in roughly sketching that plan, taken into
+account. It was in order to have the guidance of
+circumstance, that she now put herself in the way
+of hearing, unseen, what might pass between the
+two men. Meanwhile, through the snow-storm,
+Colden&rsquo;s two soldiers, who had indeed tarried at
+the tavern for the heating up of their interiors,
+were blasphemously urging their sleepy horses
+towards the manor-house.</p>
+<p>In the parlor, the two enemies were facing each
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263' name='page_263'></a>263</span>
+other, Peyton on his chair, his tied wrists behind
+him, Colden standing at some distance from him,
+holding the broken sword. As soon as they were
+alone, Peyton uttered another one-syllabled laugh,
+and said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The hospitality of this house beats my recollection.
+One is always coming back to it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll not come back the next time you leave
+it!&rdquo; said Major Colden, his eyes glittering with
+gratified rancor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And when shall that time be?&rdquo; asked Peyton,
+airily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As soon as two of my men arrive, whom I outrode
+on my way hither to-night. They attended me
+out of New York. I shall be generous and give
+them over to you, to attend you <i>into</i> New York.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thanks for the escort!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis the only kind you rebels ever have, when
+you enter New York,&rdquo; sneered the major.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We shall enter it with an escort of our own
+choosing some day! And a sorry day that for
+you Tories and refugees, my dear gentleman!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if that day ever comes, <i>you&rsquo;ll</i> have been
+rotting underground a long time,&mdash;and thanks to
+<i>me</i>, don&rsquo;t forget that!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thanks to <i>her</i>, you coward!&rdquo; cried Peyton.
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Twas she that sent her servants after me! You
+didn&rsquo;t dare try taking me, alone!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264' name='page_264'></a>264</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Bah!&rdquo; said Colden, hotly, &ldquo;I might have pistolled
+you here to-night&rdquo;&mdash;and he placed his hand
+on the fire-arm in his belt&mdash;&ldquo;but for the presence
+of the ladies!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was it the ladies&rsquo; presence,&rdquo; retorted Peyton,
+contemptuously, &ldquo;or the fact that you&rsquo;re a devilish
+bad shot?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Neither man heard the door moved farther open,
+or saw Elizabeth step through the aperture to the
+inner side of the threshold, where she stopped and
+watched. Peyton&rsquo;s back was towards her, and Colden&rsquo;s
+rage at the last words was too intense to
+permit his eyes to rove from its object.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Damn you!&rdquo; cried the major. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d show you
+how bad a shot I am, but that I&rsquo;d rather wait and
+see you on the gallows!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will <i>she</i> come to see me there, I wonder?&rdquo; said
+Peyton, half thoughtfully. &ldquo;She ought to, for it&rsquo;s
+her work sends me there, not yours! &rsquo;Twill not
+be <i>your</i> revenge when they string me up, my jolly
+friend!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Taunted beyond all self-control, the Tory yelled:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not mine, eh? Then I&rsquo;ll have mine now, you
+dog!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With that, he strode forward and struck Harry
+a fierce blow across the face with the flat side of
+Harry&rsquo;s own broken sword.</p>
+<p>Harry merely blinked his eyes, and did not flinch.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265' name='page_265'></a>265</span>
+He turned pale, then red, and in a moment, first
+clearing his voice of a slight huskiness, said, quietly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That blow I charge against you both,&mdash;the lady
+as well as you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Colden had stepped back some distance after
+delivering the blow. Something in Harry&rsquo;s answer
+seemed to infuriate still further the devil awakened
+in the Tory&rsquo;s body, for he cried out:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The lady as well as me,&mdash;yes! And this, too!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he advanced on Peyton, to strike a second
+time.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stop! How dare you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The cry was Elizabeth&rsquo;s. It startled Colden so
+that he loosened his hold of the broken sword before
+he could deliver the blow. At that instant, she
+caught his arm in her one hand, the sword-guard in
+her other. She tore the weapon from his grasp, and
+faced him with a countenance as furious as his own.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; he cried.</p>
+<p>For answer she struck him in the face with the
+flat of the sword, as he had struck Peyton. &ldquo;You
+sneak!&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>He recoiled, and stood staring, a ghastly image of
+bewilderment and consternation. After a moment
+he turned livid.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! I see now!&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;You love him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; came the answer, prompt and decided.</p>
+<p>He gazed at her with such an expression as a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266' name='page_266'></a>266</span>
+painter of hell might put into the face of a lost soul,
+and he said, faintly, in a kind of articulate moan:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I might have known!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Suddenly there came from the outer night the
+exclamation, quick and distinct:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whoa!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267' name='page_267'></a>267</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIV_THE_BROKEN_SWORD' id='CHAPTER_XIV_THE_BROKEN_SWORD'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+<h3>THE BROKEN SWORD.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> sound wrought a transformation in Colden.
+His face lighted up with malevolent joy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You love too late!&rdquo; he cried, to Elizabeth. &ldquo;My
+men are there! They shall take him to New York
+a prisoner, at last!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But not delivered up by me, thank God!&rdquo; replied
+Elizabeth, while Peyton rose quickly from his chair,
+and Colden reeled like a drunken man to the window.</p>
+<p>She went behind Peyton, and, with the edge of
+the broken sword, hacked rather than cut through
+one of the outer windings that bound his wrists
+together, whereupon she speedily uncoiled the rope.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were my prisoner. I set you free!&rdquo; she
+said, dropped the rope to the floor, and handed him
+the broken sword.</p>
+<p>He took the weapon in his right hand, and imprisoned
+Elizabeth with his left arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m more your prisoner now than ever!&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve cut these bonds. Will you put
+others on me?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_268' name='page_268'></a>268</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Sometime,&mdash;if we can save your life!&rdquo; she
+answered.</p>
+<p>Both turned their eyes towards Colden.</p>
+<p>The Tory officer had drawn his sword, and was
+motioning, in great excitement, to his soldiers outside.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This way, men!&rdquo; he shouted. &ldquo;To the front
+door! Damn the louts! Can&rsquo;t they understand?&rdquo;
+He beat upon the window with his sword, knocking
+out panes of glass. &ldquo;Come through that door, I say!
+Quick, curse you, there&rsquo;s a prisoner here, with a
+price for his taking! Ay, that&rsquo;s it! Some one in
+the hall there, open the front door to my men!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The sound now came of knocks bestowed on the
+outside door, and of Sam&rsquo;s heavy tread on the hall
+floor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Williams! Sam!&rdquo; shouted Elizabeth. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
+let them in!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The heavy tread was heard to stop short. The
+knocking on the outer door was resumed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let them in, I say,&rdquo; roared Colden, too proud
+to go himself to the door. &ldquo;I command it, in the
+name of the King!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Obey your mistress,&rdquo; cried Peyton, to those in
+the hall. &ldquo;I command it, in the name of Congress!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Colden was silent for a moment, then suddenly
+threw open the window and called out, &ldquo;This way,
+men! Quick!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he drew pistol, and stood ready with steel
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269' name='page_269'></a>269</span>
+and ball to guard the window by which his men were
+to enter. A new, wild ferocity was on his face, a
+new, nervous hardness in his body, as if the latent
+resolution and strength which a prudent man keeps
+for a great contest, on which his all may depend,
+were at last aroused. In such a mood, the man
+who, governed by interest, may have seemed a coward
+all his life becomes for the once supremely formidable.
+At last he thinks the stake worth the
+play, at last the prize is worth the risk, and because
+it is so he will play and risk to the end, hazarding
+all, not yielding while he breathes. Having opened
+the theme which alone, of all themes, shall transform
+his irresolution into action, he will, Hamlet like,
+&ldquo;fight upon this theme until&rdquo; his &ldquo;eyelids will no
+longer wag.&rdquo; So was Colden aroused, transfigured,
+as he stood doubly armed by the window, waiting
+for his men to clamber in.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What shall we do, dear?&rdquo; said Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fight!&rdquo; replied Peyton, tightening at the same
+time his right palm around his broken sword, and
+his left around the hand she had let him take,&mdash;for
+she had moved from the embrace of his arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, there are only two of them,&rdquo; she said, as
+two burly forms appeared in the open window, one
+behind the other.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There will be three of us, you&rsquo;ll find!&rdquo; cried
+Colden. &ldquo;This time I&rsquo;ll take a hand, if need be.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270' name='page_270'></a>270</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You must not stay here,&rdquo; said Peyton to Elizabeth,
+quickly. &ldquo;Things will be flying loose in a
+moment!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t leave you!&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go! I beg you, go!&rdquo; he said, releasing her
+hand, and stepping back.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, Colden&rsquo;s men bounded in through the
+window. Rough, sturdy fellows were they, who
+landed heavily on the parlor floor, and blinked at the
+light, drawing the while the breeches of their short
+muskets from beneath their coats. Their hats and
+shoulders were coated with snow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take that rebel alive, if you can!&rdquo; ordered Colden.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s meant to hang! Stun him with your
+musket-butts!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The men quickly reversed their weapons, and
+strode heavily towards Harry. To their surprise,
+before they could bring down their muskets, which
+required both hands of each to hold, Harry dashed
+forward between them, thinking to cut down Colden
+with his broken sword, possess himself of the latter&rsquo;s
+pistol, shoot one of the soldiers, and meet the other
+on less unequal terms. He saw a possibility of his
+leaping through the open window and fleeing on one
+of the soldiers&rsquo; horses, but the idea was accompanied
+by the thought that Elizabeth might be made to
+suffer for his escape. Her safety now depended
+on his getting the mastery over his three would-be
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271' name='page_271'></a>271</span>
+captors. So, ere the two astonished fellows could
+turn, Harry had leaped within sword&rsquo;s reach of his
+doubly armed enemy.</p>
+<p>But Colden was now as alert as rigid, and he
+opposed his officer&rsquo;s sword against Peyton&rsquo;s broken
+cavalry blade, guarding himself with unexpected swiftness,
+and giving back, for Harry&rsquo;s sweeping stroke,
+a thrust which only the quickest and most dexterous
+movement turned aside from entering the Virginian&rsquo;s
+lungs. As Harry stepped back for an instant out of
+his adversary&rsquo;s reach, the Tory raised his pistol. At
+the same moment the two soldiers, having turned
+about, rushed on Peyton from behind. He heard
+them coming, and half turned to face them. Their
+movement had for him one fortunate circumstance.
+It kept Colden from shooting, for his bullet might
+have struck one of his own men.</p>
+<p>Now Elizabeth had not been idle. At the moment
+when Harry had stepped back from her and
+bade her go, she had run to the door of the east
+hall, and called Williams and Sam. While Peyton
+had been engaging Colden near the window, the
+steward and the negro had entered the parlor, and
+she had excitedly ordered them to Peyton&rsquo;s aid.
+Williams still had the duck-gun, Sam the pistol.
+Thus it occurred that, as Peyton half turned from
+Colden towards the two soldiers, these last-named
+saw Williams and Sam rush in between them and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272' name='page_272'></a>272</span>
+their prey. Before Williams could bring his duck-gun
+to bear, he was struck down senseless by one of
+the musket blows first intended for Peyton. Another
+blow, and from another musket, had been
+aimed at Sam&rsquo;s woolly head, but the negro had
+put up his left hand and caught the descending
+weapon, and at the same time had discharged his
+pistol at the weapon&rsquo;s holder. But Williams, in falling,
+had knocked against the darky, and so disturbed
+his aim, and the ball flew wide. The man
+who had brought down Williams now struck Sam a
+terrible blow with the musket-club, on the temple,
+and the negro dropped like a felled ox.</p>
+<p>During this brief passage, Peyton had returned to
+close quarters with Colden. The latter, who had
+lowered his pistol when his men had last approached
+Peyton, and who had resumed the contest of swords
+unequal in size and kind, now raised the pistol a
+second time. But it was caught by the hands of
+Elizabeth, who had run around to his left, and who
+now, suddenly endowed with the strength of a
+tigress, wrenched it from him as she had wrenched
+the broken sword earlier in the evening. She tried
+to discharge the pistol at one of the two soldiers,
+as they, relieved of the brief interposition of Williams
+and Sam, were again taking position to bring
+down their muskets on Peyton&rsquo;s head while he continued
+at sword-work with Colden. But the pistol
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273' name='page_273'></a>273</span>
+snapped without going off, whereupon Elizabeth
+hurled it in the face of the man at whom she had
+aimed. The blow disconcerted him so that his musket
+fell wide of Peyton, who at the same instant, having
+seen from the corner of his eye how he was menaced,
+leaped backward from under the other descending
+musket. Then, taking advantage of the moment
+when the muskets were down, he ran to the music
+seat before the spinet, and mounted upon it, thinking
+rightly that the infuriated major would follow him,
+and that he might the better execute a certain
+man&oelig;uvre from the vantage of height. Colden
+indeed rushed after him, and thrust at him, Peyton
+sweeping the thrusts aside with pendulum-like swings
+of his own short weapon. His thought was to send
+the point that menaced him so astray that he might
+leap forward and cleave his enemy with a downward
+stroke before the Tory could recover his guard. But
+Colden pressed him so speedily that he was at last
+fain to step up from the music seat to the spinet,
+landing first on the keyboard, which sent out a
+frightened discord as he alighted on it. Finding
+the keys an uncertain footing, he took another step,
+and stood on the body of the instrument, so that
+Colden would be at the disadvantage of thrusting
+upwards. But Colden, seeming to tire a little after
+a few such thrusts, called to his men:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shoot the dog in the legs!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274' name='page_274'></a>274</span></div>
+<p>Both men aimed at once. Elizabeth screamed.
+Peyton leaped down from his height to the little
+space behind the spinet projection, where he had
+hidden a week before. Here he found himself well
+placed, for here he could be approached on one side
+only,&mdash;unless his adversaries should follow his example
+and come at him from the top of the spinet.</p>
+<p>Colden attacked him with sword, at the open side,
+and shouted to his men:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One of you get on the spinet. The other crawl
+under. We have him now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Still guarding himself from his enemy&rsquo;s thrusts,
+Peyton heard one of the men leap from the music
+seat to the spinet, and the other advance creeping,
+doubtless with gun before him, under the instrument.
+Peyton sank to his knees, placed his shoulder under
+the back edge of the spinet&rsquo;s projection, and, warding
+off a downward movement of Colden&rsquo;s sword,
+turned the instrument over on its side, checking the
+creeping man under it, and throwing the other fellow
+to the floor some feet away. As the spinet fell,
+one of its legs, rising swiftly into the air, knocked
+Colden&rsquo;s blade upward, and the Tory leaped back
+lest Peyton might avail himself of the opening. But
+the spinet-leg itself hindered Peyton from doing
+so. Colden rushed forward again, thrusting as he
+did so. Peyton leaped aside, made a swift half-turn,
+and landed a stroke on Colden&rsquo;s sword-hand, making
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275' name='page_275'></a>275</span>
+the Tory cry out and drop the sword. Harry put
+his foot on it and cried:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re at my mercy! Beg quarter!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the man who had been thrown from the top
+of the spinet now returned to the attack, coming
+around that end of the upset instrument which was
+opposite the end where Colden had menaced Harry.
+Seeing this new adversary, Harry retreated past
+Colden, in order to put himself in position. The
+soldier hastened after him, with upraised musket.
+At this moment, Peyton saw himself confronted by
+Elizabeth, who pulled open the door of the south
+hall. He stopped short to avoid running against
+her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Save yourself!&rdquo; she cried, and pushed him
+through the open doorway, flinging the door shut
+upon him, a movement which the pursuing soldier,
+stayed for a moment by collision with Colden, was
+not in time to prevent. Harry heard the key move
+in the lock, and knew that Elizabeth had turned it,
+and that he was safe in the south hall, with a minute
+of vantage which he might employ as he would.</p>
+<p>Elizabeth withdrew the key from the locked door,
+just as the pursuing soldier arrived at that door.
+The man, in his excitement, violently tried to open
+the door. Colden, who was wrapping a handkerchief
+around his wounded hand, shouted to the man:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You fool, she has the key! Take it from her!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276' name='page_276'></a>276</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You shall kill me first!&rdquo; she cried, and ran from
+the man towards the open window, stepping over the
+prostrate bodies of Sam and Williams as she went.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;After her! She&rsquo;ll throw it into the snow!&rdquo; cried
+Colden.</p>
+<p>This much Harry heard through the door, and
+heard also the heavy tread of the soldier&rsquo;s feet in
+pursuit of the girl. His mind imaged forth a momentary
+picture of the fellow&rsquo;s rough hands laid on the
+delicate arms of Elizabeth, of her body clasped by
+the man in a struggle, her white skin reddened by
+his grasp. The spectacle, imaginary and lasting but
+an instant, maddened Peyton beyond endurance, made
+him a giant, a Hercules. He threw himself against
+the door repeatedly, plied foot and body in heavy
+blows. Meanwhile Elizabeth had reached the window,
+and thrown the key far out on the snow-heaped
+lawn. She had no sooner done so than the man laid
+his clutch on her arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fly, Peyton, for God&rsquo;s sake! For my sake!&rdquo;
+she shouted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You shall pay for aiding the enemy, if he does!&rdquo;
+cried Colden. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let her escape, Thompson!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At that instant the locked door gave way, and in
+burst Harry, having broken, to save Elizabeth from
+a rude contact, the barrier she had closed to save his
+life. That life, which he had once saved by callously
+assailing her heart, he now risked, that her body
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277' name='page_277'></a>277</span>
+might not suffer the touch of an ungentle hand. So
+swift and sudden was his entrance, that he had
+crossed the room, and floored Elizabeth&rsquo;s captor, with
+a deep gash down the side of the head, ere Colden
+made a step towards him.</p>
+<p>The man who had been under the fallen spinet
+had now extricated himself, and regained his feet,
+and he and Colden rushed on Peyton at once.
+Elated by having so speedily wrought Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+release, and reduced the number of his able adversaries
+to two, Peyton bethought himself of a new
+plan. He fled through the deep doorway to the east
+hall, and took position on the staircase. He turned
+just in time to parry Colden&rsquo;s sword, which the
+major had picked up and made shift to hold in his
+wrapped-up, wounded hand. Harry saw that an
+opportune stroke might send the sword from his
+enemy&rsquo;s numb and weakening grasp, and his heart
+swelled with anticipated triumph, until he heard
+Colden&rsquo;s hoarse cry:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shoot him, James, while I keep him occupied!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This order was now the more practicable from
+Harry&rsquo;s being on the stairs, above Colden, a great
+part of his body exposed to an aim that could not
+endanger his antagonist. Breathing heavily, his eyes
+afire with hatred, Colden repeated his attacks, while
+Harry saw the other&rsquo;s musket raised, the barrel looking
+him in the eyes. He leaped a step higher, swung
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278' name='page_278'></a>278</span>
+his broken sword against the pendent chandelier,
+knocked the only burning candle from its socket,
+and threw the hall into darkness. A moment later
+the gun went off, giving an instant&rsquo;s red flame, a
+loud crack, and a smell of gunpowder smoke.
+Harry heard a swift singing near his right ear,
+and knew that he was untouched.</p>
+<p>Lest Colden&rsquo;s sword, thrust at random, might find
+him in the dark, Harry instantly bestrode the stair-rail,
+and dropped, outside the balustrade, to the floor
+of the hall. He grasped his half-sword in both
+hands, so as to put his whole weight behind it, and
+made a lunge in the direction of a muttered curse.
+The curse gave way to a roar of pain and rage, and
+Colden&rsquo;s second follower dropped, spurting blood in
+the darkness, his shoulder gashed horribly by the
+blunt end of Peyton&rsquo;s imperfect weapon. Harry
+now ran back to the parlor, to deal with Colden in
+the light, the latter&rsquo;s greater length of weapon giving
+a greater searching-power in the darkness. In the
+parlor Elizabeth stood waiting in suspense. Sam was
+sitting on the floor and staring stupidly at Williams,
+who was now awake and rubbing his head, and the
+Tory first fallen was still senseless. Harry had no
+sooner taken this scene in at a glance, than Colden
+was upon him.</p>
+<p>The major&rsquo;s eyes seemed to stand out like blazing
+carbuncles from the face of some deity of rage.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279' name='page_279'></a>279</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;G&mdash;d d&mdash;n your soul!&rdquo; he screamed, and thrust.
+The point went straight, and Elizabeth, seeing it
+protrude through the back of Harry&rsquo;s coat, near the
+left side of his body, uttered a low cry, and sank
+half-fainting to her knees. Colden shouted with
+triumphant laughter. &ldquo;Die, you dog! And when
+you burn in hell, remember I sent you there!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the evil joy suddenly faded out of Colden&rsquo;s
+face, for Harry Peyton, smiling, took a forward step,
+grasped near the hilt the sword that seemed to be
+sheathed in his own body, forced it from Colden&rsquo;s
+hand, and then drew it slowly from its lodgment.
+No blood discolored it, and none oozed from Harry&rsquo;s
+body.</p>
+<p>The Virginian&rsquo;s quick movement to escape the
+thrust had left only a part of his loose-fitting coat
+exposed, and Colden&rsquo;s sword had passed through it,
+leaving him unhurt. Colden&rsquo;s momentary appearance
+of victory had been the means of actual
+defeat.</p>
+<p>The Tory major saw his cup of revenge dashed
+from his lips, saw himself deprived of sword and
+sweetheart, neither chance left of living nor motive
+left for life. His rage collapsed; his hate burst like
+a bubble.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Kill me,&rdquo; he said, quietly, to Peyton.</p>
+<p>His look, innocent of any thought to draw compassion,
+quite disarmed Harry, who stood for a moment
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280' name='page_280'></a>280</span>
+with moistening eyes and a kind of welling-up at the
+throat, then said, in a rather unsteady voice:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir! God knows I&rsquo;ve taken enough from
+you,&rdquo; and he looked at Elizabeth, who had risen and
+was standing near him. Softened by the triumphant
+outcome for her love, she, too, was suddenly sensible
+of the defeated man&rsquo;s unhappiness, and her eyes
+applauded and thanked Harry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve taken what I never had,&rdquo; said Colden,
+with a chastened kind of bitterness, &ldquo;yet without
+which the life you give me back is worthless.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Make it worth something with this,&rdquo; and Peyton
+held Colden&rsquo;s sword out to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What! You will trust me with it?&rdquo; said Colden,
+amazed and incredulous, taking the sword, but
+holding it limply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly, sir!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Colden was motionless a moment, then placed his
+arm high against the doorway, and buried his face
+against his arm, to hide the outlet of what various
+emotions were set loose by his enemy&rsquo;s display of
+pity and trust.</p>
+<p>Harry gently drew Elizabeth to him and kissed
+her. Yielding, she placed her arms around his neck,
+and held him for a moment in an embrace of her
+own offering. Then she withdrew from his clasp,
+and when Colden again faced them she had resumed
+that invisible veil which no man, not even
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281' name='page_281'></a>281</span>
+the beloved, might pass through till she bade
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will find me worthy of your trust, sir,&rdquo; said
+Colden, brokenly, yet with a mixture of manly humility
+and honorable pride.<a href='#Footnote_0010' class='fnanchor'>[10]</a></p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am so sure of that,&rdquo; said Harry, &ldquo;that I confide
+to your care for a time what is dearest to me in
+the world. I ask you to accompany Miss Philipse to
+her home in New York, when it may suit her convenience,
+and to see that she suffer nothing for what
+has occurred here this night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are a generous enemy, sir,&rdquo; said Colden, his
+eyes moistening again. &ldquo;One man in ten thousand
+would have done me the honor, the kindness, of that
+request!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said Harry, taking his enemy&rsquo;s hand, as
+if in token of farewell, &ldquo;whatever be the ways of the
+knaves, respectable and otherwise, who are so cautious
+against tricks like their own, thank God it&rsquo;s
+not so rotten a world that a gentleman may not
+trust a gentleman, when he is sure he has found
+one!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Turning to Elizabeth, he said: &ldquo;I beg you will
+leave this house at dawn, if you can. Williams and
+Sam, there, will be little the worse for their knocks,
+and can look after the fellows on the floor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;must go at once. You
+must not further risk your life by a moment&rsquo;s waiting.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_282' name='page_282'></a>282</span>
+Cuff shall saddle Cato for you. I sha&rsquo;n&rsquo;t rest
+till I feel that you are far on your way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He approached as if again to kiss her, but she
+held out her hand to stay him. He took the hand,
+bent over it, pressed it to his lips.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&mdash;&rdquo; he said, in a tone as low as a whisper,
+&ldquo;when&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When the war is over,&rdquo; she answered, softly,
+&ldquo;let Cato bring you back.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_283' name='page_283'></a>283</span></div>
+<h2>NOTES.</h2>
+<h3><span class='smcap'><a name='Footnote_0001' id='Footnote_0001'></a>Note 1.</span> (Page <a href='#page_41'>41</a>.)</h3>
+<p>&ldquo;The old county historian.&rdquo; Rev. Robert Bolton,
+born 1814, died 1877. His &ldquo;History of the County of
+Westchester,&rdquo; especially the revised edition published
+in 1881, is a rich mine of &ldquo;material.&rdquo; Among other
+works that have served the author of this narrative in
+a study of the period and place are Allison&rsquo;s &ldquo;History
+of Yonkers,&rdquo; Cole&rsquo;s &ldquo;History of Yonkers,&rdquo; Edsall&rsquo;s &ldquo;History
+of Kingsbridge,&rdquo; Dawson&rsquo;s &ldquo;Westchester County
+during the Revolution,&rdquo; Jones&rsquo;s &ldquo;New York during the
+Revolution,&rdquo; Watson&rsquo;s &ldquo;Annals of New York in the
+Olden Time,&rdquo; General Heath&rsquo;s &ldquo;Memoirs,&rdquo; Thatcher&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Memoirs,&rdquo; Simcoe&rsquo;s &ldquo;Military Journal,&rdquo; Dunlap&rsquo;s &ldquo;History
+of New York,&rdquo; and Mrs. Ellet&rsquo;s &ldquo;Domestic History
+of the Revolution.&rdquo; For an excellent description of the
+border warfare on the &ldquo;neutral ground,&rdquo; the reader should
+go to Irving&rsquo;s delightful &ldquo;Chronicle of Wolfert&rsquo;s Roost.&rdquo;
+Cooper&rsquo;s novel, &ldquo;The Spy,&rdquo; deals accurately with that subject,
+which is touched upon also in that good old standby,
+Lossing&rsquo;s &ldquo;Pictorial Field-book of the Revolution.&rdquo; Philipse
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_284' name='page_284'></a>284</span>
+Manor-house has been carefully written of by Judge
+Atkins in a Yonkers newspaper, and less accurately by
+Mrs. Lamb in her &ldquo;History of New York City,&rdquo; and
+Marian Harland in &ldquo;Some Colonial Homesteads and
+Their Stories.&rdquo; Of general histories, Irving&rsquo;s &ldquo;Life of
+Washington&rdquo; treats most fully of things around New York
+during the British occupation, and these things are
+interestingly dealt with in local histories, such as the
+&ldquo;History of Queens County,&rdquo; Stiles&rsquo;s &ldquo;History of
+Brooklyn,&rdquo; Barber and Howe&rsquo;s &ldquo;New Jersey Historical
+Collections,&rdquo; etc., as well as in such special works as
+Onderdonk&rsquo;s &ldquo;Revolutionary Incidents.&rdquo;</p>
+<h3><span class='smcap'><a name='Footnote_0002' id='Footnote_0002'></a>Note 2.</span> (Page <a href='#page_47'>47</a>.)</h3>
+<p>Of Colonel Gist&rsquo;s escape, Bolton gives the following
+account: &ldquo;The house was occupied by the handsome
+and accomplished widow of the Rev. Luke Babcock, and
+Miss Sarah Williams, a sister of Mrs. Frederick Philipse.
+To the former lady Colonel Gist was devotedly attached;
+consequently, when an opportunity afforded, he gladly
+moved his command into that vicinity. On the night
+preceding the attack, he had stationed his camp at the
+foot of Boar Hill, for the better purpose of paying a special
+visit to this lady. It is said that whilst engaged in
+urging his suit the enemy were quietly surrounding his
+quarters; he had barely received his final dismissal from
+Mrs. Babcock when he was startled by the firing of musketry....
+It appears that all the roads and bridges had
+been well guarded by the enemy, except the one now
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_285' name='page_285'></a>285</span>
+called Warner&rsquo;s Bridge, and that Captain John Odell
+upon the first alarm led off his troops through the woods
+on the west side of the Saw Mill [River]. Here Colonel
+Gist joined them. In the meantime Mrs. Babcock, having
+stationed herself in one of the dormer windows of the
+parsonage, aided their escape whenever they appeared,
+by the waving of a white handkerchief.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The British attack was under Lieutenant-Colonel Simcoe,
+whose journal shows that his force so far outnumbered
+Gist&rsquo;s that the latter&rsquo;s only sensible course was in
+flight. About the year 1840, trees cut down near the site
+of Gist&rsquo;s camp were found to contain balls buried six
+inches in the wood.</p>
+<h3><span class='smcap'><a name='Footnote_0003' id='Footnote_0003'></a>Note 3.</span> (Page <a href='#page_76'>76</a>.)</h3>
+<p>The three generals arrived on the <i>Cerberus</i>, May 25th.
+All the histories say that they arrived &ldquo;with reinforcements.&rdquo;
+It is true, troops were constantly arriving at
+Boston about that time, but none came immediately with
+the three generals. The <i>Connecticut Gazette</i> (published in
+New London) printed, early in June, this piece of news,
+brought by a gentleman who had been in Boston, May
+28th: &ldquo;Generals Burgoyne, Clinton, and Howe arrived at
+Boston last Friday in a man-of-war. No troops came
+with them. They brought over 25 horses.&rdquo; It is a wonder
+that Frothingham, in his admirably complete history
+of the siege of Boston, missed even this little circumstance.
+Probably everybody has read the incident thus
+related by Irving: &ldquo;As the ships entered the harbor and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_286' name='page_286'></a>286</span>
+the rebel camp was pointed out, Burgoyne could not restrain
+a burst of surprise and scorn. &lsquo;What!&rsquo; cried he;
+&lsquo;ten thousand peasants keep five thousand King&rsquo;s troops
+shut up! Well, let us get in and we&rsquo;ll soon find elbow
+room!&rsquo;&rdquo; I don&rsquo;t think Irving relates anywhere the sequel,
+which is that when, after his surrender, Burgoyne
+marched with his conquered army into Cambridge, an old
+woman shouted from a window to the crowd of spectators,
+&ldquo;Give him elbow room!&rdquo; This story ought to be true, if
+it is not.</p>
+<h3><span class='smcap'><a name='Footnote_0004' id='Footnote_0004'></a>Note 4.</span> (Page <a href='#page_89'>89</a>.)</h3>
+<p>It was in a letter under date of October 4, 1778, that
+Washington wrote: &ldquo;What officer can bear the weight of
+prices that every necessary article is now got to? A rat
+in the shape of a horse is not to be bought for less than
+Ł200; a saddle under thirty or forty.&rdquo;</p>
+<h3><span class='smcap'><a name='Footnote_0005' id='Footnote_0005'></a>Note 5.</span> (Page <a href='#page_124'>124</a>.)</h3>
+<p>Captain Cunningham was the British provost marshal,
+as everybody knows, whose name became a synonym for
+wanton cruelty in the treatment of war prisoners. He
+had come to New York before the Revolution, and had
+kept a riding school there. As soon as the war broke out
+he took the royal side. It was he who had in charge the
+summary execution of Nathan Hale. He would often
+amuse himself by striking his prisoners with his keys and
+by kicking over the baskets of food or vessels of soup
+brought for them by charitable women, who, he said,
+were the worst rebels in New York. He died miserably
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_287' name='page_287'></a>287</span>
+in England after the war. His career is briefly outlined
+in Sabine&rsquo;s &ldquo;Loyalists.&rdquo; As to the manner in which
+Peyton, if caught, would have died, it must be remembered
+that in the American Revolution the rope served in
+many a case which, occurring in Europe or in one of our
+later wars, would have been disposed of with the bullet.
+Writing of General Charles Lee, John Fiske says: &ldquo;There
+is no doubt that Sir William Howe looked upon him as a
+deserter, and was more than half inclined to hang him
+without ceremony.&rdquo; Then, as now, a deserter in time of
+war was liable to death if caught at any subsequent time,
+his case being worse than that of a spy, who was liable to
+death only if caught before getting back to his own lines.
+There was, by the way, much unceremonious hanging on
+the &ldquo;neutral ground.&rdquo; Not far from the Van Cortlandt
+mansion there still stood, in Bolton&rsquo;s time, &ldquo;a celebrated
+white oak, in the midst of a pretty glade, called the Cowboy
+Oak,&rdquo; from the fact that many of the Tory raiders
+had been suspended from its branches during the war of
+Revolution.</p>
+<h3><span class='smcap'><a name='Footnote_0006' id='Footnote_0006'></a>Note 6.</span> (Page <a href='#page_127'>127</a>.)</h3>
+<p>I am not sure whether the saying, &ldquo;The corpse of an
+enemy smells sweet,&rdquo; attributed to Charles IX. of France,
+in allusion to Coligny, is historical or was the invention
+of a romancer. It occurs in Dumas&rsquo;s &ldquo;La Reine Margot.&rdquo;</p>
+<h3><span class='smcap'><a name='Footnote_0007' id='Footnote_0007'></a>Note 7.</span> (Page <a href='#page_136'>136</a>.)</h3>
+<p>Mr. Valentine&rsquo;s unwillingness to lend aid was doubtless
+due to the frequency of such incidents as one that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_288' name='page_288'></a>288</span>
+had occurred to his neighbor, Peter Post, in 1776. Post&rsquo;s
+estate occupied the site of the present town of Hastings.
+He gave information to Colonel Sheldon regarding the
+movements of some Hessians, and afterwards deceived
+the Hessians as to the whereabouts of Sheldon&rsquo;s own
+cavalry. Thereby, Sheldon&rsquo;s troop was enabled to surprise
+the Hessians, and defeat them in a short and bloody
+conflict. The Hessians&rsquo; comrades later caught Post,
+stripped him, beat him to insensibility, and left him for
+dead. He recovered of his injuries. His house, a small
+stone one, became a tavern after the Revolution, and was
+a celebrated resort of cock-fighters and hard-drinkers.
+Not far north of Hastings is Dobbs Ferry, which was
+occupied by both armies alternately, during the Revolution.
+Further north is Sunnyside, Irving&rsquo;s house, elaborated
+from the original Wolfert&rsquo;s Roost, and beyond that
+are Tarrytown, where André was stopped and taken in
+charge, and Sleepy Hollow. Enchanted ground, all this,
+hallowed by history, legend, and romance.</p>
+<h3><span class='smcap'><a name='Footnote_0008' id='Footnote_0008'></a>Note 8.</span> (Page <a href='#page_179'>179</a>.)</h3>
+<p>The secret passage or passages of Philipse Manor-house
+have not been neglected by writers of fiction,
+history, and magazine articles. The passage does not
+now exist, but there are numerous traces of it. The
+different writers do not agree in locating it. The author
+of an interesting story for children, &ldquo;A Loyal Little
+Maid,&rdquo; has it that the passage was reached through an
+opening in the panelling of the dining-room, this opening
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_289' name='page_289'></a>289</span>
+concealed by a tall clock. I think Marian Harland
+says that a closet in one of the parlors or chambers
+connects with the secret passage. Both these assumptions
+are wrong. Mr. R. P. Getty has pointed out in the
+northwestern corner of the cellar what seems to have
+once been the entrance to the passage. One authority
+quotes a belief &ldquo;that from the cellar there was a passage
+to a well now covered by Woodworth Avenue,&rdquo; and that
+this was to afford access to what may have been a storage
+vault. A man who was born in 1821 says that, when a
+boy, he saw, near the house, a dry cistern, from the
+bottom of which was an arched passage towards the
+Hudson, large enough for a man six feet tall to pass
+through. Judge Atkins says that the well was opposite
+the kitchen door, and had, at its western side, about ten
+feet deep, a chamber in which butter was kept. One
+writer locates an ice-house where Judge Atkins places
+this well, and says a subterranean arched way led northward
+as far as the present Wells Avenue. &ldquo;The ice-house
+was formerly, it is said, a powder-magazine.&rdquo;
+Many years ago, the coachman of Judge Woodworth
+used to say he had &ldquo;gone through an underground passage
+all the way from the manor-house to the Hudson
+River.&rdquo; Judge Atkins has written interesting legends of
+the manor-house, involving the secret passage and other
+features.</p>
+<h3><span class='smcap'><a name='Footnote_0009' id='Footnote_0009'></a>Note 9.</span> (Page <a href='#page_259'>259</a>.)</h3>
+<p>&ldquo;That lonely highway now called Broadway.&rdquo; A
+block of houses and another street now lie between that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_290' name='page_290'></a>290</span>
+highway and the east front of the manor-house. The
+building is closely hemmed in by the sordid signs of
+progress. Ugly houses, in crowded blocks, cover all the
+great surrounding space that once was thick forest, fair
+orchards, gardens, fields, and pastoral rivulet. The
+Neperan or Saw Mill River flows, sluggish and scummy,
+under streets and houses. A visit to the manor-house,
+now, would spoil rather than improve one&rsquo;s impression
+of what the place looked like in the old days. Yet the
+house itself remains well preserved, for which all honor
+to the town of Yonkers. There is in our spacious
+America so much room for the present and the future,
+that a little ought to be kept for the past. It is well to
+be reminded, by a landmark here and there, of our brave
+youth as a people. A posterity, sure to value these
+landmarks more than this money-grabbing age does,
+will reproach us with the destruction we have already
+wrought. Worse still than the crime of obliterating all
+human-made relics of the past, is the vandalism of nature
+herself where nature is exceptionally beautiful. To rob
+millions of beauty-lovers, yet to live, of the Palisades of the
+Hudson, would bring upon us the amazement and execration
+of future centuries. This earth is an entailed estate,
+that each generation is in honor bound to hand down,
+undefaced, undiminished, to its successor. In order that
+a close-clutched wallet or two may wax a little fatter,
+shall we bring upon ourselves a cry of shame that would
+ring with increasing bitterness through the ages,&mdash;shall
+we invite the execration merited by such greed as could
+so outrage our fair earth, such stolid apathy as could
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_291' name='page_291'></a>291</span>
+stand by and see it done? Shall an alien or two, as
+hard of soul as the stone in which he traffics, mar the
+Hudson that Washington patrolled, rob countless eyes,
+yet unopened, of a joy; countless minds, yet to waken, of
+an inspiration; countless hearts, yet to beat, of a thrill
+of pride in the soil of their inheriting? Shall some future
+reader wonder why Irving, deeming it &ldquo;an invaluable
+advantage to be born and brought up in the neighborhood
+of some grand and noble object in nature,&rdquo; should
+have thanked God he was born on the banks of the
+Hudson? I write this with the sound of the blowing up
+of Indian Head still echoing in my ears, and knowing
+nothing done by Government to protect the next fair
+Hudson headland from similar destruction.</p>
+<h3><span class='smcap'><a name='Footnote_0010' id='Footnote_0010'></a>Note 10.</span> (Page <a href='#page_281'>281</a>.)</h3>
+<p>It is probable that Colden served with his brigade
+when it fought in the South in the last part of the war.
+He was afterwards lost at sea, leaving no heir. He was
+of a family prominent in New York affairs, both before
+the Revolution and afterwards, and which was intermarried
+with other New York families of equal prominence,
+as may be seen in the &ldquo;New York Genealogical and Biographical
+Record,&rdquo; the &ldquo;New England Genealogical and
+Historical Register,&rdquo; and similar publications. It is probable
+that Sabine means this Colden when he mentions a
+Captain Colden, of the First Battalion of New Jersey
+Volunteers. That he was a major, however, is certain,
+from the official British Army lists published in Hugh
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_292' name='page_292'></a>292</span>
+Gaines&rsquo;s &ldquo;Universal Register&rdquo; for the years of the Revolution.</p>
+<p>People curious about Harry Peyton&rsquo;s military record
+may consult Saffel&rsquo;s &ldquo;Lists of American Officers,&rdquo;
+Heitman&rsquo;s &ldquo;Manual,&rdquo; and a large work on &ldquo;Virginia
+Genealogies,&rdquo; by H. E. Hayden, published at Wilkes-barre.
+To the reader who demands a happy ending, it
+need be no shock to learn that Peyton, having risen to
+the rank of major, was killed at Charleston, S. C., May
+12, 1780. For a love story, it is a happy ending that
+occurs at the moment when the conquest and the submission
+are mutual, complete, and demonstrated. A
+love to be perfect, to have its sweetness unembittered,
+ought not to be subjected to the wear and tear of prolonged
+fellowship. So subjected, it may deepen and gain
+ultimate strength, but it will lose its intoxicating novelty,
+and become associated with pain as well as with pleasure.
+We may be sure that the love of Peyton and Elizabeth
+was to Harry a sweetener of life on many a night encampment,
+many a hard ride, in the campaign of 1779, and
+in the spring of 1780, and exalted him the better to meet
+his death on that day when Charleston fell to the British;
+and that to Elizabeth, while it receded into further memory,
+it kept its full beauty during the half century she
+lived faithful to it. Her sisters were married into the
+English nobility, gentry, and military, but Elizabeth died
+in Bath, England, in March, 1828, unmarried. Colonel
+Philipse had moved with his family to England when the
+British quitted New York in 1783. Many other Tories
+did likewise. Some went to England, but more to Canada,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_293' name='page_293'></a>293</span>
+the greater part of which was then a wilderness. Many
+of the Tory officers got commissions in the English
+army.</p>
+<p>No Tory family did more for the King&rsquo;s cause in
+America, lost more, or got more in redress, than the De
+Lancey family, which had been foremost in the administration
+of royal government in the province of New York.
+It had great holdings of property in New York City, elsewhere
+on the island of Manhattan, and in various parts
+of Westchester County, notably in Westchester Township,
+where De Lancey&rsquo;s mills and a fine country mansion were
+a famous landmark &ldquo;where gentle Bronx clear winding
+flows.&rdquo; The founder of the American family was a
+French Huguenot of noble descent. The family was
+represented in the British army and navy before the Revolution.
+One member of it, a young officer in the navy,
+at the breaking out of the war, resigned his commission
+rather than serve against the Colonies, but most of the
+other De Lancey men were differently minded. Oliver
+De Lancey, a member of the provincial council, was made
+a brigadier-general in the royal service, and raised three
+battalions of loyalists, known as &ldquo;De Lancey&rsquo;s Battalions.&rdquo;
+Of these battalions, the Tory historian, Judge
+Jones, says: &ldquo;Two served in Georgia and the Carolinas
+from the time the British army landed in Georgia until the
+final evacuation of Charleston.&rdquo; One of these, during this
+period, was commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Stephen
+De Lancey, the other by Colonel John Harris Cruger.
+The third battalion, during the whole war, was employed
+solely in protecting the wood-cutters upon Lloyd&rsquo;s Neck,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_294' name='page_294'></a>294</span>
+Queens County, L. I. This General De Lancey&rsquo;s son,
+Oliver De Lancey, Junior, was educated in Europe, took
+service with the 17th Light Dragoons, was a captain when
+the Revolution began, a major in 1778, a lieutenant-colonel
+in 1781, and, on the death of Major André,
+adjutant-general of the British army in America. Returning
+to England, he became deputy adjutant-general of
+England; as a major-general, he was also colonel of the
+17th Light Dragoons; was subsequently barrack-master
+general of the British Empire, lieutenant-general, and
+finally general. When he died he was nearly at the head
+of the English army list. This branch of the family
+became extinct when Sir William Heathcoate De Lancey,
+the quartermaster-general of Wellington&rsquo;s army, was
+killed at Waterloo.</p>
+<p>The James De Lancey who commanded the Westchester
+Light Horse was a nephew of the senior General Oliver
+De Lancey, and a cousin of the Major Colden of this narrative.
+His troop was not &ldquo;a battalion in the brigade of
+his uncle,&rdquo; Bolton&rsquo;s statement that it was so being incorrect;
+its operations were limited to Westchester County.
+It raided and fought for the King untiringly, until it was
+almost entirely killed off, at the end of the war, by the
+persistent efforts of our troops to extirpate it.</p>
+<p>The members of this corps were called &ldquo;Cowboys&rdquo;
+because, in their duty of procuring supplies for the
+British army, they made free with the farmers&rsquo; cattle.
+Like the other conspicuous Tories, this James De Lancey
+was attainted by the new State Government, and his property
+was confiscated. Local historians draw an effective
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_295' name='page_295'></a>295</span>
+picture of him departing alone from his estate by the
+Bronx, turning for a last look, from the back of his horse,
+at the fair mansion and broad lands that were to be his
+no more, and riding away with a heavy heart. He went,
+with many shipfuls of Tory emigrants, to Nova Scotia,
+and became a member of the council of that colony.
+His uncle went to England and died at his country house,
+Beverly, Yorkshire, in 1785. I allude to the case of this
+family, because it was typical of that of a great many
+families. The Tories of the American Revolution constitute
+a subject that has yet to be made much of. They
+were the progenitors of English-speaking Canada.</p>
+<p>The act of attainder that deprived the De Lanceys of
+their estates, deprived Colonel Philipse of his. It was
+passed by the New York legislature, October 22, 1779. The
+persons declared guilty of &ldquo;adherence to the enemies of
+the State&rdquo; were attainted, their estates real and personal
+confiscated, and themselves proscribed, the second section
+of the act declaring that &ldquo;each and every one of
+them who shall at any time hereafter be found in any
+part of this State, shall be, and are hereby, adjudged and
+declared guilty of felony, and shall suffer death as in
+cases of felony, without benefit of clergy.&rdquo; Acts of similar
+import were passed in other States. Under this act,
+Philipse Manor-house was forfeited to the State about
+a year after the time of our narrative. The commissioners
+whose duty it was to dispose of confiscated property
+sold the house and mills, in 1785, to Cornelius P.
+Lowe. It underwent several transfers, but little change,
+becoming at length the property of Lemuel Wells, who
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_296' name='page_296'></a>296</span>
+held it a long time and, dying in 1842, left it to his
+nephew. The town of Yonkers grew up around it, and
+on May 1, 1868, purchased it for municipal use. The
+fewest possible alterations were made in it. These are
+mainly in the north wing, the part added by the second
+lord of the manor in 1745. On the first floor, the partition
+between dining-room and kitchen was removed,
+and the whole space made into a court-room. On the
+second floor, the space formerly divided into five bedrooms
+was transformed into a council-chamber, the garret
+floor overhead being removed. The new city hall of
+Yonkers leaves the old manor-house less necessary for
+public purposes. May the old parlors, where the besilked
+and bepowdered gentry of the province used to dance the
+minuet before the change of things, not be given over to
+baser uses than they have already served.</p>
+<p>Allusion has been made, in different chapters of this
+narrative, to the Hessians who daily patrolled the roads
+in the vicinity of the manor-house. This duty often fell
+to Pruschank&rsquo;s yagers, the troop to which belonged Captain
+Rowe, whose love story is thus told by Bolton:
+&ldquo;Captain Rowe appears to have been in the habit of
+making a daily tour from Kingsbridge, round by Miles
+Square. He was on his last tour of military duty, having
+already resigned his commission for the purpose of
+marrying the accomplished Elizabeth Fowler, of Harlem,
+when, passing with a company of light dragoons, he was
+suddenly fired upon by three Americans of the water
+guard of Captain Pray&rsquo;s company, who had ambuscaded
+themselves in the cedars. The captain fell from his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_297' name='page_297'></a>297</span>
+horse, mortally wounded. The yagers instantly made
+prisoners of the undisciplined water guards, and a messenger
+was immediately despatched to Mrs. Babcock,
+then living below, in the parsonage, for a vehicle to remove
+the wounded officer. The use of her gig and horse
+was soon obtained, and a neighbor, Anthony Archer,
+pressed to drive. In this they conveyed the dying man
+to Colonel Van Cortlandt&rsquo;s. They appear to have taken
+the route of Tippett&rsquo;s Valley, as the party stopped at
+Frederick Post&rsquo;s to obtain a drink of water. In the
+meantime an express had been forwarded to Miss Fowler,
+his affianced bride, to hasten without delay to the side of
+her dying lover. On her arrival, accompanied by her
+mother, the expiring soldier had just strength enough
+left to articulate a few words, when he sank exhausted
+with the effort.&rdquo; The room in which he died is in the
+well-known mansion in Van Cortlandt Park.</p>
+<p>The incident of the horse, related in an early chapter,
+has a likeness to an adventure that befell one Thomas
+Leggett early in the Revolutionary war. He lived with
+his father on a farm near Morrisania, then in Westchester
+County, and was proud in the possession of a fine young
+mare. A party of British refugees took this animal, with
+other property. They had gone two miles with it, when,
+from behind a stone wall which they were passing, two
+Continental soldiers rose and fired at them. The man
+with the mare was shot dead. The animal immediately
+turned round and ran home, followed by the owner, who
+had dogged her captors at a distance in the hope of
+recovering her.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><i>SELECTIONS FROM<br />
+L. C. PAGE AND COMPANY&rsquo;S<br />
+LIST OF NEW FICTION.</i></h2>
+<p class='adbook'>An Enemy to the King.</p>
+<p>From the Recently Discovered Memoirs of the
+Sieur de la Tournoire. By <span class='smcap'>Robert Neilson Stephens</span>.
+Illustrated by H. De M. Young.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.25</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>An historical romance of the sixteenth century, describing
+the adventures of a young French nobleman at the Court of
+Henry IV., and on the field with Henry of Navarre.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>The Continental Dragoon.</p>
+<p>A Romance of Philipse Manor House, in 1778.
+By <span class='smcap'>Robert Neilson Stephens</span>, author of &ldquo;An Enemy
+to the King.&rdquo; Illustrated by H. C. Edwards.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.50</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>A stirring romance of the Revolution, the scene being laid in
+and around the old Philipse Manor House, near Yonkers, which
+at the time of the story was the central point of the so-called
+&ldquo;neutral territory&rdquo; between the two armies.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>Muriella; or, Le Selve.</p>
+<p>By <span class='smcap'>Ouida</span>. Illustrated by M. B. Prendergast.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.25</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>This is the latest work from the pen of the brilliant author of
+&ldquo;Under Two Flags,&rdquo; &ldquo;Moths,&rdquo; etc., etc. It is the story of the
+love and sacrifice of a young peasant girl, told in the absorbing
+style peculiar to the author.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>The Road to Paris.</p>
+<p>By <span class='smcap'>Robert Neilson Stephens</span>, author of &ldquo;An
+Enemy to the King,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Continental Dragoon,&rdquo;
+etc. Illustrated by H. C. Edwards. (In press.)</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.50</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>An historical romance, being an account of the life of an
+American gentleman adventurer of Jacobite ancestry, whose
+family early settled in the colony of Pennsylvania. The scene
+shifts from the unsettled forests of the then West to Philadelphia,
+New York, London, Paris, and, in fact, wherever a love of
+adventure and a roving fancy can lead a soldier of fortune.
+The story is written in Mr. Stephens&rsquo;s best style, and is of
+absorbing interest.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>Rose ŕ Charlitte.</p>
+<p>An Acadien Romance. By <span class='smcap'>Marshall Saunders</span>,
+author of &ldquo;Beautiful Joe,&rdquo; etc. Illustrated by H.
+De M. Young.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.50</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>In this novel, the scene of which is laid principally in the land
+of Evangeline, Marshall Saunders has made a departure from
+the style of her earlier successes. The historical and descriptive
+setting of the novel is accurate, the plot is well conceived
+and executed, the characters are drawn with a firm and delightful
+touch, and the fortunes of the heroine, Rose ŕ Charlitte, a
+descendant of an old Acadien family, will be followed with
+eagerness by the author&rsquo;s host of admirers.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>Bobbie McDuff.</p>
+<p>By <span class='smcap'>Clinton Ross</span>, author of &ldquo;The Scarlet Coat,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Zuleika,&rdquo; etc. Illustrated by B. West Clinedinst.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., large 16mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.00</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Clinton Ross is well known as one of the most promising of
+recent American writers of fiction, and in the description of the
+adventures of his latest hero, Bobbie McDuff, he has repeated
+his earlier successes. Mr. Ross has made good use of the
+wealth of material at his command. New York furnishes him
+the hero, sunny Italy a heroine, grim Russia the villain of the
+story, while the requirements of the exciting plot shift the scene
+from Paris to New York, and back again to a remote, almost
+feudal villa on the southern coast of Italy.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>In Kings&rsquo; Houses.</p>
+<p>A Romance of the Reign of Queen Anne. By
+<span class='smcap'>Julia C. R. Dorr</span>, author of &ldquo;A Cathedral Pilgrimage,&rdquo;
+etc. Illustrated by Frank T. Merrill.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.50</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Mrs. Dorr&rsquo;s poems and travel sketches have earned for her a
+distinct place in American literature, and her romance, &ldquo;In
+Kings&rsquo; Houses,&rdquo; is written with all the charm of her earlier
+works. The story deals with one of the most romantic episodes
+in English history. Queen Anne, the last of the reigning
+Stuarts, is described with a strong, yet sympathetic touch, and
+the young Duke of Gloster, the &ldquo;little lady,&rdquo; and the hero of
+the tale, Robin Sandys, are delightful characterizations.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>Sons of Adversity.</p>
+<p>A Romance of Queen Elizabeth&rsquo;s Time. By <span class='smcap'>L.
+Cope Conford</span>, author of &ldquo;Captain Jacobus,&rdquo; etc.
+Illustrated by J. W. Kennedy.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.25</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>A tale of adventure on land and sea at the time when Protestant
+England and Catholic Spain were struggling for naval
+supremacy. Spanish conspiracies against the peace of good
+Queen Bess, a vivid description of the raise of the Spanish
+siege of Leyden by the combined Dutch and English forces,
+sea fights, the recovery of stolen treasure, are all skilfully woven
+elements in a plot of unusual strength.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>The Count of Nideck.</p>
+<p>From the French of Erckman-Chatrian, translated
+and adapted by <span class='smcap'>Ralph Browning Fiske</span>. Illustrated
+by Victor A. Searles.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.25</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>A romance of the Black Forest, woven around the mysterious
+legend of the Wehr Wolf. The plot has to do with the later
+German feudal times, is brisk in action, and moves spiritedly
+from start to finish. Mr. Fiske deserves a great deal of credit
+for the excellence of his work. No more interesting romance
+has appeared recently.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>The Making of a Saint.</p>
+<p>By <span class='smcap'>W. Somerset Maugham</span>. Illustrated by Gilbert
+James.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.50</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;The Making of a Saint&rdquo; is a romance of Medi&aelig;val Italy, the
+scene being laid in the 15th century. It relates the life of a
+young leader of Free Companions who, at the close of one of
+the many petty Italian wars, returns to his native city. There
+he becomes involved in its politics, intrigues, and feuds, and
+finally joins an uprising of the townspeople against their lord.
+None can resent the frankness and apparent brutality of the
+scenes through which the hero and his companions of both
+sexes are made to pass, and many will yield ungrudging praise
+to the author&rsquo;s vital handling of the truth. In the characters
+are mirrored the life of the Italy of their day. The book will
+confirm Mr. Maugham&rsquo;s reputation as a strong and original
+writer.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>Omar the Tentmaker.</p>
+<p>A Romance of Old Persia. By <span class='smcap'>Nathan Haskell
+Dole</span>. Illustrated. (In press.)</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.50</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Mr. Dole&rsquo;s study of Persian literature and history admirably
+equips him to enter into the life and spirit of the time of the
+romance, and the hosts of admirers of the inimitable quatrains
+of Omar Khayyam, made famous by Fitzgerald, will be deeply
+interested in a tale based on authentic facts in the career of the
+famous Persian poet. The three chief characters are Omar
+Khayyam, Nizam-ul-Mulk, the generous and high-minded Vizier
+of the Tartar Sultan Malik Shah of Mero, and Hassan ibu
+Sabbah, the ambitious and revengeful founder of the sect of
+the Assassins. The scene is laid partly at Naishapur, in the
+Province of Khorasan, which about the period of the First
+Crusade was at its acme of civilization and refinement, and
+partly in the mountain fortress of Alamut, south of the Caspian
+Sea, where the Ismailians under Hassan established themselves
+towards the close of the 11th century. Human nature is
+always the same, and the passions of love and ambition, of
+religion and fanaticism, of friendship and jealousy, are admirably
+contrasted in the fortunes of these three able and remarkable
+characters as well as in those of the minor personages of
+the story.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>Captain Fracasse.</p>
+<p>A new translation from the French of Gotier. Illustrated
+by Victor A. Searles.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.25</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>This famous romance has been out of print for some time,
+and a new translation is sure to appeal to its many admirers,
+who have never yet had any edition worthy of the story.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>The Rejuvenation of Miss Semaphore.</p>
+<p>A farcical novel. By <span class='smcap'>Hal Godfrey</span>. Illustrated
+by Etheldred B. Barry. (In press.)</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.25</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>A fanciful, laughable tale of two maiden sisters of uncertain
+age who are induced, by their natural longing for a return to
+youth and its blessings, to pay a large sum for a mystical water
+which possesses the value of setting backwards the hands of
+time. No more delightfully fresh and original book has appeared
+since &ldquo;Vice Versa&rdquo; charmed an amused world. It is
+well written, drawn to the life, and full of the most enjoyable
+humor.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>Midst the Wild Carpathians.</p>
+<p>By <span class='smcap'>Maurus Jokai</span>, author of &ldquo;Black Diamonds,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;The Lion of Janina,&rdquo; etc. Authorized translation
+by R. Nisbet Bain. Illustrated. (In press.)</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.25</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>A thrilling, historical, Hungarian novel, in which the extraordinary
+dramatic and descriptive powers of the great Magyar
+writer have full play. As a picture of feudal life in Hungary it
+has never been surpassed for fidelity and vividness. The translation
+is exceedingly well done.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>The Golden Dog.</p>
+<p>A Romance of Quebec. By <span class='smcap'>William Kirby</span>. New
+authorized edition. Illustrated by J. W. Kennedy.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.25</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>A powerful romance of love, intrigue, and adventure in the
+time of Louis XV. and Mme. de Pompadour, when the French
+colonies were making their great struggle to retain for an ungrateful
+court the fairest jewels in the colonial diadem of
+France.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>Bijli the Dancer.</p>
+<p>By <span class='smcap'>James Blythe Patton</span>. Illustrated by Horace
+Van Rinth. (In press.)</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.50</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>A novel of Modern India. The fortunes of the heroine,
+an Indian Naucht girl, are told with a vigor, pathos, and a
+wealth of poetic sympathy that makes the book admirable from
+first to last.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>&ldquo;To Arms!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Being Some Passages from the Early Life of Allan
+Oliphant, Chirurgeon, Written by Himself, and now
+Set Forth for the First Time. By <span class='smcap'>Andrew Balfour</span>.
+Illustrated. (In press.)</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.50</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>A romance dealing with an interesting phase of Scottish and
+English history, the Jacobite Insurrection of 1715, which will
+appeal strongly to the great number of admirers of historical
+fiction. The story is splendidly told, the magic circle which
+the author draws about the reader compelling a complete
+forgetfulness of prosaic nineteenth century life.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>Mere Folly.</p>
+<p>A novel. By <span class='smcap'>Maria Louise Poole</span>, author of &ldquo;In a
+Dike Shanty,&rdquo; etc. Illustrated. (In press.)</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.25</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>An extremely well-written story of modern life. The interest
+centres in the development of the character of the heroine, a
+New England girl, whose high-strung temperament is in constant
+revolt against the confining limitations of nineteenth
+century surroundings. The reader&rsquo;s interest is held to the end,
+and the book will take high rank among American psychological
+novels.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>A Hypocritical Romance <span style="font-weight: normal">and other
+stories.</span></p>
+<p>By <span class='smcap'>Caroline Ticknor</span>. Illustrated by J. W. Kennedy.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., large 16mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.00</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Miss Ticknor, well known as one of the most promising of
+the younger school of American writers, has never done better
+work than in the majority of these clever stories, written in a
+delightful comedy vein.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>Cross Trails.</p>
+<p>By <span class='smcap'>Victor Waite</span>. Illustrated. (In press.)</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., library 12mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.50</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>A Spanish-American novel of unusual interest, a brilliant,
+dashing, and stirring story, teeming with humanity and life.
+Mr. Waite is to be congratulated upon the strength with which
+he has drawn his characters.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>A Mad Madonna <span style="font-weight: normal">and other stories.</span></p>
+<p>By <span class='smcap'>L. Clarkson Whitelock</span>, with eight half-tone
+illustrations.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., large 16mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.00</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>A half dozen remarkable psychological stories, delicate in
+color and conception. Each of the six has a touch of the supernatural,
+a quick suggestion, a vivid intensity, and a dreamy
+realism that is matchless in its forceful execution.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>On the Point.</p>
+<p>A Summer Idyl. By <span class='smcap'>Nathan Haskell Dole</span>, author
+of &ldquo;Not Angels Quite,&rdquo; with dainty half-tone
+illustrations as chapter headings.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., large 16mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$1.00</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>A bright and clever story of a summer on the coast of Maine,
+fresh, breezy, and readable from the first to the last page.
+The narrative describes the summer outing of a Mr. Merrithew
+and his family. The characters are all honest, pleasant people,
+whom we are glad to know. We part from them with the
+same regret with which we leave a congenial party of friends.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p class='adbook'>Cavalleria Rusticana; or, Under the
+Shadow of Etna.</p>
+<p>Translated from the Italian of Giovanni Verga, by
+<span class='smcap'>Nathan Haskell Dole</span>. Illustrated by Etheldred
+B. Barry.</p>
+<p class='adprice'>1 vol., 16mo, cloth <span class="ralign"><b>$0.50</b></span></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Giovanni Verga stands at present as unquestionably the
+most prominent of the Italian novelists. His supremacy in
+the domain of the short story and in the wider range of the
+romance is recognized both at home and abroad. The present
+volume contains a selection from the most dramatic and characteristic
+of his Sicilian tales. Verga is himself a native of
+Sicily, and his knowledge of that wonderful country, with its
+poetic and yet superstitious peasantry, is absolute. Such
+pathos, humor, variety, and dramatic quality are rarely met
+in a single volume.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class="trnote">
+<p><b>Transcriber's note:</b></p>
+<p>Hyphenation has been made consistent.</p>
+<p>Archaic and variable spellings are preserved.</p>
+<p>The author&rsquo;s punctuation style is preserved, except quotation
+marks, which have been standardized.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONTINENTAL DRAGOON***</p>
+<p>******* This file should be named 30589-h.txt or 30589-h.zip *******</p>
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@@ -0,0 +1,8288 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Continental Dragoon, by Robert Neilson
+Stephens, Illustrated by H. C. Edwards
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Continental Dragoon
+ A Love Story of Philipse Manor-House in 1778
+
+
+Author: Robert Neilson Stephens
+
+
+
+Release Date: December 3, 2009 [eBook #30589]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONTINENTAL DRAGOON***
+
+
+E-text prepared by David Edwards, Katherine Ward, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from
+digital material generously made available by Internet Archive
+(http://www.archive.org)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 30589-h.htm or 30589-h.zip:
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30589/30589-h/30589-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/30589/30589-h.zip)
+
+
+ Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive. See
+ http://www.archive.org/details/continentaldrago00stepiala
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ Hyphenation has been made consistent.
+
+ Archaic and variable spellings are preserved.
+
+ The author's punctuation style is preserved, except quotation
+ marks, which have been standardized.
+
+ Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
+
+ Text in bold face is enclosed by equal signs (=bold=).
+
+
+
+
+
+THE CONTINENTAL DRAGOON.
+
+by
+
+R. N. STEPHENS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Works of R. N. STEPHENS.
+
+An Enemy to the King.
+The Continental Dragoon.
+
+_In Press_:
+The Road to Paris.
+
+L. C. PAGE AND COMPANY, Publishers,
+(INCORPORATED)
+196 Summer St., Boston, Mass.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "_'Take that rebel alive!' ordered Colden._"
+
+Photogravure from original drawing by H. C. Edwards.]
+
+
+THE CONTINENTAL DRAGOON
+
+A Love Story of Philipse Manor-House in 1778
+
+by
+
+ROBERT NEILSON STEPHENS
+
+Author of
+"An Enemy to the King"
+
+Illustrated by H. C. Edwards
+
+"Love's born of a glance, I say"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Boston
+L. C. Page and Company
+(Incorporated)
+1898
+
+Copyright, 1898
+By L. C. Page and Company
+(Incorporated)
+
+Entered at Stationer's Hall, London
+
+FIFTH THOUSAND
+
+Colonial Press:
+Electrotyped and Printed by C. H. Simonds & Co.
+Boston, U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ Chapter Page
+ I. The Riders 11
+ II. The Manor-house 32
+ III. The Sound of Galloping 50
+ IV. The Continental Dragoon 65
+ V. The Black Horse 87
+ VI. The One Chance 116
+ VII. The Flight of the Minutes 140
+ VIII. The Secret Passage 156
+ IX. The Confession 180
+ X. The Plan of Retaliation 197
+ XI. The Conquest 214
+ XII. The Challenge 236
+ XIII. The Unexpected 252
+ XIV. The Broken Sword 267
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+ "'Take that rebel alive!' ordered Colden." Frontispiece
+
+ "'Give it to the Colonel.'" 82
+ "Leaned forward on the horse's neck." 111
+ "'You are too late, Jack!'" 154
+ "'Go, I say!'" 196
+ "'I take my leave of this house!'" 248
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE RIDERS.
+
+
+"I dare say 'tis a wild, foolish, dangerous thing; but I do it,
+nevertheless! As for my reasons, they are the strongest. First, I wish
+to do it. Second, you've all opposed my doing it. So there's an end of
+the matter!"
+
+It was, of course, a woman that spoke,--moreover, a young one.
+
+And she added:
+
+"Drat the wind! Can't we ride faster? 'Twill be dark before we reach
+the manor-house. Get along, Cato!"
+
+She was one of three on horseback, who went northward on the Albany
+post-road late in the afternoon of a gray, chill, blowy day in
+November, in the war-scourged year 1778. Beside the girl rode a young
+gentleman, wrapped in a dark cloak. The third horse, which plodded a
+short distance in the rear, carried a small negro youth and two large
+portmanteaus. The three riders made a group that was, as far as could
+be seen from their view-point, alone on the highway.
+
+There were reasons why such a group, on that road at that time, was an
+unusual sight,--reasons familiar to any one who is well informed in
+the history of the Revolution. Unfortunately, most good Americans are
+better acquainted with the French Revolution than with our own, know
+more about the state of affairs in Rome during the reign of Nero than
+about the condition of things in New York City during the British
+occupation, and compensate for their knowledge of Scotch-English
+border warfare in remote times by their ignorance of the border
+warfare that ravaged the vicinity of the island of Manhattan, for six
+years, little more than a century ago.
+
+Our Revolutionary War had reached the respectable age of three and a
+half years. Lexington, Bunker Hill, Brooklyn, Harlem Heights, White
+Plains, Trenton, Princeton, the Brandywine, German-town, Bennington,
+Saratoga, and Monmouth--not to mention events in the South and in
+Canada and on the water--had taken their place in history. The army of
+the King of England had successively occupied Boston, New York, and
+Philadelphia; had been driven out of Boston by siege, and had left
+Philadelphia to return to the town more pivotal and nearer the
+sea,--New York. One British commander-in-chief had been recalled by
+the British ministry to explain why he had not crushed the rebellion,
+and one British major-general had surrendered an army, and was now
+back in England defending his course and pleading in Parliament the
+cause of the Americans, to whom he was still a prisoner on parole. Our
+Continental army--called Continental because, like the general
+Congress, it served the whole union of British-settled Colonies or
+States on this continent, and was thus distinguished from the militia,
+which served in each case its particular Colony or State only--had
+experienced both defeats and victories in encounters with the King's
+troops and his allies, German, Hessian, and American Tory. It had
+endured the winter at Valley Forge while the British had fed, drunk,
+gambled, danced, flirted, and wenched in Philadelphia. The French
+alliance had been sanctioned. Steuben, Lafayette, DeKalb, Pulaski,
+Kosciusko, Armand, and other Europeans, had taken service with us. One
+plot had been made in Congress and the army to supplant Washington in
+the chief command, and had failed. The treason of General Charles Lee
+had come to naught,--but was to wait for disclosure till many years
+after every person concerned should be graveyard dust. We had
+celebrated two anniversaries of the Fourth of July. The new free and
+independent States had organized local governments. The King's
+appointees still made a pretence of maintaining the royal provincial
+governments, but mostly abode under the protection of the King's
+troops in New York. There also many of those Americans in the North
+took refuge who distinctly professed loyalty to the King. New York was
+thus the chief lodging-place of all that embodied British sovereignty
+in America. Naturally the material tokens of British rule radiated
+from the town, covering all of the island of Manhattan, most of Long
+Island, and all of Staten Island, and retaining a clutch here and
+there on the mainland of New Jersey.
+
+It was the present object of Washington to keep those visible signs of
+English authority penned up within this circle around New York. The
+Continental posts, therefore, formed a vast arc, extending from the
+interior of New Jersey through Southeastern New York State to Long
+Island Sound and into Connecticut. This had been the situation since
+midsummer of 1778. It was but a detachment from our main army that had
+cooperated with the French fleet in the futile attempt to dislodge a
+British force from Newport in August of that year.
+
+The British commander-in-chief and most of the superior officers had
+their quarters in the best residences of New York. That town was
+packed snugly into the southern angle of the island of Manhattan, like
+a gift in the toe of a Christmas stocking. Southward, some of its
+finest houses looked across the Battery to the bay. Northward the town
+extended little beyond the common fields, of which the City Hall
+Square of 1898 is a reduced survival. The island of Manhattan--with
+its hills, woods, swamps, ponds, brooks, roads, farms, sightly
+estates, gardens, and orchards--was dotted with the cantonments and
+garrisoned forts of the British. The outposts were, largely, entrusted
+to bodies of Tory allies organized in this country. Thus was much of
+Long Island guarded by the three Loyalist battalions of General Oliver
+De Lancey, himself a native of New York. On Staten Island was
+quartered General Van Cortlandt Skinner's brigade of New Jersey
+Volunteers, a troop which seems to have had such difficulty in finding
+officers in its own State that it had to go to New York for many of
+them,--or was it that so many more rich New York Loyalists had to be
+provided with commissions than the New York Loyalist brigades required
+as officers?
+
+But the most important British posts were those which guarded the
+northern entrance to the island of Manhattan, where it was separated
+from the mainland by Spuyten Duyvel Kill, flowing westward into the
+Hudson, and the Harlem, flowing southward into the East River. King's
+Bridge and the Farmers' Bridge, not far apart, joined the island to
+the main; and just before the Revolution a traveller might have made
+his choice of these two bridges, whether he wished to take the Boston
+road or the road to Albany. In 1778 the British "barrier" was King's
+Bridge, the northern one of the two, the watch-house being the tavern
+at the mainland end of the bridge. Not only the bridge, but the
+Hudson, the Spuyten Duyvel, and the Harlem, as well, were commanded by
+British forts on the island of Manhattan. Yet there were defences
+still further out. On the mainland was a line of forts extending from
+the Hudson, first eastward, then southward, to the East River. Further
+north, between the Albany road and the Hudson, was a camp of German
+and Hessian allies, foot and horse. Northeast, on Valentine's Hill,
+were the Seventy-first Highlanders. Near the mainland bank of the
+Harlem were the quarters of various troops of dragoons, most of them
+American Tory corps with English commanders, but one, at least, native
+to the soil, not only in rank and file, but in officers also,--and
+with no less dash and daring than by Tarleton, Simcoe, and the rest,
+was King George III. served by Captain James De Lancey, of the county
+of West Chester, with his "cowboys," officially known as the West
+Chester Light Horse.
+
+Thus the outer northern lines of the British were just above King's
+Bridge. The principal camp of the Americans was far to the north. Each
+army was affected by conditions that called for a wide space of
+territory between the two forces, between the outer rim of the British
+circle, and the inner face of the American arc. Of this space the
+portion that lay bounded on the west by the Hudson, on the southeast
+by Long Island Sound, and cut in two by the southward-flowing Bronx,
+was the most interesting. It was called the Neutral Ground, and
+neutral it was in that it had the protection of neither side, while it
+was ravaged by both. Foraged by the two armies, under the approved
+rules of war, it underwent further a constant, irregular pillage by
+gangs of mounted rascals who claimed attachment, some to the British,
+some to the Americans, but were not owned by either. It was, too,
+overridden by the cavalry of both sides in attempts to surprise
+outposts, cut off supplies, and otherwise harass and sting. Unexpected
+forays by the rangers and dragoons from King's Bridge and the Harlem
+were reciprocated by sudden visitations of American horse and light
+infantry from the Greenburg Hills and thereabove. The Whig militia of
+the county also took a hand against British Tories and marauders. Of
+the residents, many Tories fled to New York, some Americans went to
+the interior of the country, but numbers of each party held their
+ground, at risk of personal harm as well as of robbery. Many of the
+best houses were, at different times during the war, occupied as
+quarters by officers of either side. Little was raised on the farms
+save what the farmers could immediately use or easily conceal. The
+Hudson was watched by British war-vessels, while the Americans on
+their side patrolled it with whale-boats, long and canoe-like, swift
+and elusive. For the drama of partisan warfare, Nature had provided,
+in lower West Chester County,--picturesquely hilly, beautifully
+wooded, pleasantly watered, bounded in part by the matchless Hudson
+and the peerless Sound,--a setting unsurpassed.
+
+Thus was it that Miss Elizabeth Philipse, Major John Colden, and Miss
+Philipse's negro boy, Cuff, all riding northward on the Albany
+post-road, a few miles above King's Bridge, but still within territory
+patrolled daily by the King's troops, constituted, on that bleak
+November evening in 1778, a group unusual to the time and place.
+
+'Twas a wettish wind, concerning which Miss Elizabeth expressed, in
+the imperative mood, her will that it be dratted,--a feminine wind,
+truly, as was clear from its unexpected flarings up and sudden
+calmings down, its illogical whiskings around and eccentric changes of
+direction. Now it swept down the slope from the east, as if it meant
+to bombard the travellers with all the brown leaves of the hillside.
+Now it assailed them from the north, as if to impede their journey;
+now rushed on them from the rear as if it had come up from New York to
+speed them on their way; now attacked them in the left flank, armed
+with a raw chill from the Hudson. It blew Miss Elizabeth's hair about
+and additionally reddened her cheeks. It caused the young Tory major
+to frown, for the protection of his eyes, and thus to look more and
+more unlike the happy man that Miss Elizabeth's accepted suitor ought
+to have appeared.
+
+"I make no doubt I've brought on me the anger of your whole family by
+lending myself to this. And yet I am as much against it as they are!"
+So spake the major, in tones as glum as his looks.
+
+"'Twas a choice, then, between their anger and mine," said Miss
+Elizabeth, serenely. "Don't think I wouldn't have come, even if you
+had refused your escort. I'd have made the trip alone with Cuff,
+that's all."
+
+"I shall be blamed, none the less."
+
+"Why? You couldn't have hindered me. If the excursion is as dangerous
+as they say it is, your company certainly does not add to my danger.
+It lessens it. So, as my safety is what they all clamor about, they
+ought to commend you for escorting me."
+
+"If they were like ever to take that view, they would not all have
+refused you their own company."
+
+"They refused because they neither supposed that I would come alone
+nor that Providence would send me an escort in the shape of a surly
+major on leave of absence from Staten Island! Come, Jack, you needn't
+tremble in dread of their wrath. By this time my amiable papa and my
+solicitous mamma and my anxious brothers and sisters are in such a
+state of mind about me that, when you return to-night and report I've
+been safely consigned to Aunt Sally's care, they'll fairly worship you
+as a messenger of good news. So be as cheerful as the wind and the
+cold will let you. We are almost there. It seems an age since we
+passed Van Cortlandt's."
+
+Major Colden merely sighed and looked more dismal, as if knowing the
+futility of speech.
+
+"There's the steeple!" presently cried the girl, looking ahead. "We'll
+be at the parsonage in ten minutes, and safe in the manor-house in
+five more. Do look relieved, Jack! The journey's end is in sight, and
+we haven't had sight of a soldier this side of King's Bridge,--except
+Van Wrumb's Hessians across Tippett's Vale, and they are friends.
+Br-r-r-r! I'll have Williams make a fire in every room in the
+manor-house!"
+
+Now while these three rode in seeming security from the south towards
+the church, parsonage, country tavern, and great manor-house that
+constituted the village then called, sometimes Lower Philipsburgh and
+sometimes Younker's, that same hill-varied, forest-set, stream-divided
+place was being approached afar from the north by a company of mounted
+troops riding as if the devil was after them. It was not the devil,
+but another body of cavalry, riding at equal speed, though at a great
+distance behind. The three people from New York as yet neither saw nor
+heard anything of these horsemen dashing down from the north. Yet the
+major's spirits sank lower and lower, as if he had an omen of coming
+evil.
+
+He was a handsome young man, Major John Colden, being not more than
+twenty-seven years old, and having the clearly outlined features best
+suited to that period of smooth-shaven faces. His dark eyes and his
+pensive expression were none the less effective for the white powder
+on his cued hair. A slightly petulant, uneasy look rather added to his
+countenance. He was of medium height and regular figure. He wore a
+civilian's cloak or outer coat over the uniform of his rank and corps,
+thus hiding also his sword and pistol. Other externals of his attire
+were riding-boots, gloves, and a three-cornered hat without a military
+cockade. He was mounted on a sorrel horse a little darker in hue than
+the animal ridden by Miss Elizabeth's black boy, Cuff, who wore the
+rich livery of the Philipses.
+
+The steed of Miss Elizabeth was a slender black, sensitive and
+responsive to her slightest command--a fit mount for this, the most
+imperious, though not the oldest, daughter of Colonel Frederick
+Philipse, third lord, under the bygone royal regime, of the manor of
+Philipsburgh in the Province of New York. They gave classic names to
+quadrupeds in those days and Addison's tragedy was highly respected,
+so Elizabeth's scholarly father had christened this horse Cato.
+Howsoever the others who loved her regarded her present jaunt, no
+opposition was shown by Cato. Obedient now as ever, the animal bore
+her zealously forward, be it to danger or to what she would.
+
+Elizabeth's resolve to revisit the manor hall on the Hudson, which had
+been left closed up in the steward's charge when the family had sought
+safety in their New York City residence in 1777, had sprung in part
+from a powerful longing for the country and in part from a dream which
+had reawakened strongly her love for the old house of her birth and of
+most of her girlhood. The peril of her resolve only increased her
+determination to carry it out. Her parents, brothers, and sisters
+stood aghast at the project, and refused in any way to countenance it.
+But there was no other will in the Philipse household able to cope
+with Elizabeth's. She held that the thing was most practicable and
+simple, inasmuch as the steward, with the aid of two servants, kept
+the deserted house in a state of habitation, and as her mother's
+sister, Miss Sarah Williams, was living with the widow Babcock in the
+parsonage of Lower Philipsburgh and could transfer her abode to the
+manor-house for the time of Elizabeth's stay. Major Colden, an unloved
+lover,--for Elizabeth, accepting marriage as one of the inevitables,
+yet declared that she could never love any man, love being admittedly
+a weakness, and she not a weak person,--was ever watchful for the
+opportunity of ingratiating himself with the superb girl, and so
+fearful of displeasing her that he dared not refuse to ride with her.
+He was less able even than her own family to combat her purpose. One
+day some one had asked him why, since she called him Jack, and he was
+on the road to thirty years, while she was yet in her teens, he did
+not call her Betty or Bess, as all other Elizabeths were called in
+those days. He meditated a moment, then replied, "I never heard any
+one, even in her own family, call her so. I can't imagine any one ever
+calling her by any more familiar name than Elizabeth."
+
+Now it was not from her father that this regal young creature could
+have taken her resoluteness, though she may well have got from him
+some of the pride that went with it. There certainly must have been
+more pride than determination in Frederick Philipse, third lord of the
+manor, colonel in provincial militia before the Revolution, graduate
+of King's College, churchman, benefactor, gentleman of literary
+tastes; amiable, courtly, and so fat that he and his handsome wife
+could not comfortably ride in the same coach at the same time. But
+there was surely as much determination as pride in this gentleman's
+great-grandfather, Vrederyck Flypse, descendant of a line of viscounts
+and keepers of the deer forests of Bohemia, Protestant victim of
+religious persecution in his own land, immigrant to New Amsterdam
+about 1650, and soon afterward the richest merchant in the province,
+dealer with the Indians, ship-owner in the East and West India trade,
+importer of slaves, leader in provincial politics and government,
+founder of Sleepy Hollow Church, probably a secret trafficker with
+Captain Kidd and other pirates, and owner by purchase of the territory
+that was erected by royal charter of William and Mary into the
+lordship and manor of Philipsburgh. The strength of will probably
+declined, while the pride throve, in transmission to Vrederyck's son,
+Philip, who sowed wild oats, and went to the Barbadoes for his health
+and married the daughter of the English governor of that island.
+Philip's son, Frederick, being born in a hot climate, and grandson of
+an English governor as well as of the great Flypse, would naturally
+have had great quantity of pride, whatever his stock of force,
+particularly as he became second lord of the manor at the lordly age
+of four. And he could not easily have acquired humility in later life,
+as speaker of the provincial Assembly, Baron of the Exchequer, judge
+of the Supreme Court, or founder of St. John's Church,--towards which
+graceful edifice was the daughter of his son, the third lord,
+directing her horse this wintry autumn evening. As for this third
+lord, he had been removed by the new Government to Connecticut for
+favoring the English rule, but, having received permission to go to
+New York for a short time, had evinced his fondness for the sweet and
+soft things of life by breaking his parole and staying in the city,
+under the British protection, thus risking his vast estate and showing
+himself a gentleman of anything but the courage now displayed by his
+daughter.
+
+Elizabeth, therefore, must have derived her spirit, with a good
+measure of pride and a fair share (or more) of vanity, from her
+mother, though, thanks to that appreciation of personal comfort which
+comes with middle age, Madam Philipse's high-spiritedness would no
+longer have displayed itself in dangerous excursions, nor was it
+longer equal to a contest with the fresher energy of Elizabeth. She
+was the daughter of Charles Williams, once naval officer of the port
+of New York, and his wife, who had been Miss Sarah Olivier. Thus came
+Madam Philipse honestly by the description, "imperious woman of
+fashion," in which local history preserves her memory. She was a
+widow of twenty-four when Colonel Philipse married her, she having
+been bereaved two years before of her first husband, Mr. Anthony
+Rutgers, the lawyer. She liked display, and her husband indulged her
+inclination without stint, receiving in repayment a good nursery-full
+of what used, in the good old days, to be called pledges of affection.
+Being the daughter of a royal office-holding Englishman, how could she
+have helped holding her head mighty high on receiving her elevation to
+the ladyship of Philipsburgh, and who shall blame her daughter and
+namesake, now within a stone's throw of St. John's parsonage and in
+full sight of the tree-bowered manorial home of her fathers, for
+holding hers, which was younger, a trifle higher?
+
+Not many high-held heads of this or any other day are or were finer
+than that of Elizabeth Philipse was in 1778, or are set on more
+graceful figures. For all her haughtiness, she was not a very large
+person, nor yet was she a small one. She was neither fragile nor too
+ample. Her carriage made her look taller than she was. She was of the
+brown-haired, blue-eyed type, but her eyes were not of unusual size or
+surpassing lucidity, being merely clear, honest, steady eyes, capable
+rather of fearless or disdainful attention than of swift flashes or
+coquettish glances. The precision with which her features were
+outlined did not lessen the interest that her face had from her
+pride, spirit, independence, and intelligence. She was, moreover, an
+active, healthy creature, and if she commanded the dratting of the
+wind, it was not as much because she was chilled by it as because it
+blew her cloak and impeded her progress. In fine, she was a beauty;
+else this historian would never have taken the trouble of unearthing
+from many places and piecing together the details of this fateful
+incident,--for if any one supposes that the people of this narrative
+are mere fictions, he or she is radically in error. They lived and
+achieved, under the names they herein bear; were as actual as the
+places herein mentioned,--as any of the numerous patriotic Americans
+who daily visit the genealogical shelves of the public libraries can
+easily learn, if they will spare sufficient time from the laudable
+task of hunting down their own ancestors. If this story is called a
+romance, that term is used here only as it is oft applied to actual
+occurrences of a romantic character. So the Elizabeth Philipse who,
+before crossing the Neperan to approach the manor-house, stopped in
+front of the snug parsonage at the roadside and directed Cuff to knock
+at the door, was as real as was then the parsonage itself.
+
+Presently a face appeared furtively at one of the up-stairs windows.
+The eyes thereof, having dwelt for an instant on the mounted party
+shivering in the road, opened wide in amazement, and a minute later,
+after a sound of key-turning and bolt-drawing, the door opened, and a
+good-looking lady appeared in the doorway, backed up by a servant and
+two pretty children who clung, half-curious, half-frightened, to the
+lady's skirts.
+
+"Why, Miss Elizabeth! Is it possible--"
+
+But Elizabeth cut the speech of the astonished lady short.
+
+"Yes, my dear Mrs. Babcock,--and I know how dangerous, and all that!
+And, thank you, I'll not come in. I shall see you during the week. I'm
+going to the manor-house to stay awhile, and I wish my aunt to stay
+there with me, if you can spare her."
+
+"Why, yes,--of course,--but--here comes your aunt."
+
+"Why, Elizabeth, what in the world--"
+
+She was a somewhat stately woman at first sight, was Elizabeth's
+mother's sister, Miss Sarah Williams; but on acquaintance soon
+conciliated and found to be not at all the formidable and haughty
+person she would have had people believe her; not too far gone in
+middle age, preserving, despite her spinsterhood, much of her bloom
+and many of those little roundnesses of contour which adorn but do not
+encumber.
+
+"I haven't time to say what, aunt," broke in Elizabeth. "I want to get
+to the manor-house before it is night. You are to stay with me there a
+week. So put on a wrap and come over as soon as you can, to be in
+time for supper. I'll send a boy for you, if you like."
+
+"Why, no, there's some one here will walk over with me, I dare say.
+But, la me, Elizabeth,--"
+
+"Then I'll look for you in five minutes. Good night, Mrs. Babcock! I
+trust your little ones are well."
+
+And she rode off, followed by Colden and Cuff, leaving the two women
+in the parsonage doorway to exchange what conjectures and what
+ejaculations of wonderment the circumstances might require.
+
+Night was falling when the riders crossed the Neperan (then commonly
+known as the Saw Mill River) by the post-road bridge, and gazed more
+closely on the stone manor-house. Looking westward, from the main
+road, across the hedge and paling fence, they saw, first the vast lawn
+with its comely trees, then the long east front of the house, with its
+two little entrance-porches, the row of windows in each of its two
+stories, the dormer windows projecting from the sloping roof, the
+balustraded walk on the roof-top; at both ends the green and brown and
+yellow hints of what lay north of the house, between it and the
+forest, and west of the house, between it and the Hudson,--the
+box-hedged gardens, the terraces breaking the slope to the river, the
+deer paddock enclosed by high pickets, the great orchard. The Hudson
+was nearer to the house then than now, and its lofty further bank,
+rich with growth of wood and leaf, was the backing for the westward
+view. To the east, which the riders put behind them in facing the
+manor-house, were the hills of the interior.
+
+"Not a sign of light from the house, and the shutters all closed, as
+if it were a tomb! It looks as cold and empty as one. I'll soon make
+it warm and live enough inside at least!" said Elizabeth, and turned
+westward from the highway into the short road that ran between the
+mansion and the north bank of the Neperan, by the grist-mill and the
+gate and the stables, down a picturesque descent to a landing where
+that stream entered the Hudson.
+
+She proceeded towards the gate, where, being near the southeast corner
+of the house, one could see that the south front was to the east front
+as the base to the upright of a capital L turned backward; that the
+south front resembled the east in all but in being shorter and having
+a single porched entrance, which was in its middle.
+
+As the party neared the gate, there arose far northward a sound of
+many horsemen approaching at a fast gallop. Elizabeth at once reined
+in, to listen. Major Colden and Cuff followed her example, both
+looking at her in apprehension. The galloping was on the Albany road,
+but presently deviated eastwardly, then decreased.
+
+"They've turned up the road to Mile Square, whoever they are," said
+Elizabeth, and led the way on to the gate, which Cuff, dismounting,
+quickly opened, its fastening having been removed and not replaced.
+"Lead your horse to the door, Cuff. Then take off the portmanteaus and
+knock, and tie the horses to the post."
+
+She rode up to the southern door in the east front, and was there
+assisted to dismount by the major, while Cuff followed in obedience.
+Colden, as the sound of the distant galloping grew fainter and
+fainter, showed more relief than he might have felt had he known that
+a second troop was soon to come speeding down in the track of the
+first.
+
+Elizabeth, in haste to escape the wind, stepped into the little porch
+and stood impatiently before the dark, closed door of the house of her
+fathers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE MANOR-HOUSE.
+
+
+The stone mansion before which the travellers stood, awaiting answer
+to Cuff's loud knock on the heavy mahogany door, had already acquired
+antiquity and memories. It was then, as to all south of the porch
+which now sheltered the three visitors, ninety-six years old, and as
+to the rest of the eastern front thirty-three, so that its newest part
+was twice the age of Elizabeth herself.
+
+Her grandfather's grandfather, the first lord of the manor, built
+the southern portion in 1682, a date not far from that of the
+erection of his upper house, called Philipse Castle, at what is now
+Tarrytown,--but whether earlier or later, let the local historians
+dispute. This southern portion comprised the entire south front, its
+length running east and west, its width going back northward to, but
+not including, the large east entrance-hall, into which opened the
+southern door of the east front. The new part, attached to the
+original house as the upright to the short, broad base of the
+reversed L, was added by Elizabeth's grandfather, the second lord, in
+1745. The addition, with the eastern section of the old part, was
+thereafter the most used portion, and the south front yielded in
+importance to the new east front. The two porched doors in the latter
+front matched each other, though the southern one gave entrance to the
+fine guests in silk and lace, ruffles and furbelows, who came up
+from New York and the other great mansions of the county to grace
+the frequent festivities of the Philipses; while the northern one led
+to the spacious kitchen where means were used to make the aforesaid
+guests feel that they had not arrived in vain.
+
+The original house, rectangular as to its main part, had two gables,
+and, against its rear or northern length, a pent-roofed wing, and
+probably a veranda, the last covering the space later taken by the
+east entrance-hall. The main original building, on its first floor,
+had (and has) a wide entrance-hall in its middle, with one large
+parlor on each side. The second floor, reached by staircase from the
+lower hall, duplicated the first, there being a middle hall and two
+great square chambers. Overhead, there was plentiful further room
+beneath the gable roof. Under the western room of the first floor
+was the earlier kitchen, which, before 1745, served in relation to
+the guests who entered by the southern door exactly as thereafter
+the new kitchen served in relation to those entering by the eastern
+door,--making them glad they had come, by horse or coach, over the
+long, bad, forest-bordered roads. Adjacent to the old kitchen was
+abundant cellarage for the stowing of many and diverse covetable
+things of the trading first lord's importation.
+
+The Neperan joined the Hudson in the midst of wilderness, where
+Indians and deer abounded, when Vrederyck Flypse caused the old part
+of the stone mansion to grow out of the green hill slope in 1682. He
+planted a foundation two feet thick and thereupon raised walls whose
+thickness was twenty inches. He would have a residence wherein he
+might defy alike the savage elements, men and beasts. For the front
+end of his entrance-hall he imported a massive mahogany door made in
+1681 in Holland,--a door in two parts, so that the upper half could be
+opened, while the lower half remained shut. The rear door of that hall
+was similarly made. Ponderous were the hinges and bolts, being
+ordinary blacksmith work. Solid were the panel mouldings. He brought
+Holland brick wherewith to trim the openings of doorways and windows.
+He laid the floor of his aforesaid kitchen with blue stone. The
+chimney breasts and hearthstones of his principal rooms were seven
+feet wide.
+
+Here, in feudal fashion, with many servants and slaves to do his
+bidding, and tenants to render him dues, sometimes dwelt Vrederyck
+Flypse, with his second wife, Catherine Van Cortlandt, and the
+children left by his first wife, Margaret Hardenbrock; but sometimes
+some of the family lived in New York, and sometimes at the upper
+stone house, "Castle Philipse," by the Pocantico, near Sleepy Hollow
+Church, of this Flypse's founding. He built mills near both his
+country-houses, and from the saw-mill near the lower one did the
+Neperan receive the name of Saw Mill River. He died in 1702, in his
+seventy-seventh year, and the bones of him lie in Sleepy Hollow
+Church.
+
+But even before the first lord went, did "associations" begin to
+attach to the old Dutch part of the mansion. Besides the leading
+families of the province, the traders,--Dutch and English,--and the
+men with whom he held counsel upon affairs temporal and spiritual,
+public and private, terrestrial and marine, he had for guests red
+Indians, and, there is every reason to believe, gentlemen who sailed
+the seas under what particular flag best promoted their immediate
+purposes, or under none at all. That old story never _would_ down, to
+the effect that the adventurous Kidd levied not on the ships of
+Vrederyck Flypse. The little landing-place where Neperan joined
+Hudson, at which the Flypses stepped ashore when they came up from New
+York by sloop instead of by horse, was trodden surely by the feet of
+more than one eminent oceanic exponent of--
+
+ "The good old rule, the simple plan,
+ That they should take who have the power
+ And they should keep who can."
+
+A great merchant may have more than one way of doing business, and I
+would not undertake to account for every barrel and box that was
+unladen at that little landing. Nor would I be surprised to encounter
+sometime, among the ghosts of Philipse Manor Hall, that of the
+immortal Kidd himself, seated at dead of night, across the table from
+the first lord of the manor, before a blazing log in the seven-foot
+fireplace, drinking liquor too good for the church-founding lord to
+have questioned whence it came; and leaving the next day without an
+introduction to the family.
+
+This 1682 part of the house, in facing south, had the Albany road at
+its left, the Hudson at its right, and at its front the lane that ran
+by the Neperan, from the road to the river. Thus was the house for
+sixty-three years. When the first lord's grandson, Elizabeth's
+grandfather, in 1745 made the addition at the north, what was the east
+gable-end of the old house became part of the east front of the
+completed mansion. The east rooms of the old house were thus the
+southeast rooms of the completed mansion, and, being common to both
+fronts, gained by the change of relation, becoming the principal
+parlor and the principal chamber. The east parlor, entered on the
+west from the old hall, was entered on the north from the new hall;
+and the new hall was almost a duplicate of the old, but its ceiling
+decorations and the mahogany balustrade of its stairway were the more
+elaborate. This stairway, like its fellow in the old hall, ascended,
+with two turns, to a hall in the second story. Besides the new halls,
+the addition included, on the first floor, a large dining-room and the
+great kitchen; on the second floor, five sleeping-chambers, and, in
+the space beneath the roof-tree, dormitories for servants and slaves.
+Elizabeth's grandfather gave the house the balustrade that crowns its
+roof from its northern to its southern, and thence to its western end.
+He had the interior elaborately finished. The old part and its
+decorations were Dutch, but now things in the province were growing
+less Dutch and more English,--like the Philipse name and blood
+themselves,--and so the new embellishments were English. The second
+lord imported marble mantels from England, had the walls beautifully
+wainscoted, adorned the ceilings richly with arabesque work in wood.
+He laid out, in the best English fashion, a lawn between the eastern
+front and the Albany post-road. He it was who married Joanna, daughter
+of Governor Anthony Brockholst, of a very ancient family of
+Lancashire, England; and who left provision for the founding of St.
+John's Church, across the Neperan from the manor-house, and for the
+endowment of the glebe thereof. And in his long time the manor-house
+flourished and grew venerable and multiplied its associations. He had
+five children: Frederick (Elizabeth's father), Philip, Susannah, Mary
+(the beauty, wooed of Washington in 1756, 'tis said, and later wed by
+Captain Roger Morris), and Margaret; and, at this manor-house alone,
+white servants thirty, and black servants twenty; and a numerous
+tenantry, happy because in many cases the yearly rent was but nominal,
+being three or four pounds or a pair of hens or a day's work,--for the
+Philipses, thanks to trade and to office-holding under the Crown, and
+to the beneficent rule whereby money multiplies itself, did not have
+to squeeze a living out of the tillers of their land. The lord of the
+manor held court leet and baron at the house of a tenant, and
+sometimes even inflicted capital punishment.
+
+In 1751, the second lord followed his grandfather to the family vault
+in Sleepy Hollow Church. With the accession of Elizabeth's father,
+then thirty-one years old, began the splendid period of the mansion;
+then the panorama of which it was both witness and setting wore its
+most diverse colors. The old contest between English and French on
+this continent was approaching its glorious climax. Whether they were
+French emissaries coming down from Quebec, by the Hudson or by horse,
+or English and colonial officers going up from New York in command of
+troops, they must needs stop and pay their respects to the lord of the
+manor of Philipsburgh, and drink his wine, and eat his venison, and
+flirt with his stunning sisters. Soldiers would go from New York by
+the post-road to Philipsburgh, and then embark at the little landing,
+to proceed up the Hudson, on the way to be scalped by the red allies
+of the French or mowed down by Montcalm's gunners before impregnable
+Ticonderoga. Many were the comings and goings of the scarlet coat and
+green. The Indian, too, was still sufficiently plentiful to contribute
+much to the environing picturesqueness. But, most of all, in those
+days, the mansion got its character from the festivities devised by
+its own inmates for the entertainment of the four hundred of that
+time.
+
+For Elizabeth's mother, of the same given name, was "very fond of
+display," and in her day the family "lived showily." Her husband (who
+was usually called Colonel Philipse, from his title in the militia,
+and rarely if ever called lord) had the house refurnished. It was he
+who had the princely terraces made on the slope between the mansion
+and the Hudson, and who had new gardens laid out and adorned with tall
+avenues of box and rarest fruit-trees and shrubs. Doubtless his deer,
+in their picketed enclosure, were a sore temptation to the country
+marksmen who passed that way. Lady, or Madam, or Mrs. Philipse, the
+colonel's wife, bedazzled the admiring inhabitants of West Chester
+County in many ways, but there is a difference between authorities as
+to whether it was she that used to drive four superb black horses over
+the bad roads of the county, or whether it was her mother-in-law, the
+second lord's wife. Certainly it was the latter that was killed by a
+fall from a carriage, and certainly both had fine horses and
+magnificent coaches, and drove over bad roads,--for all roads were bad
+in those days, even in Europe, save those the Romans left.
+
+Of all the gay and hospitable occasions that brought, through the
+mansion's wide doors, courtly gentlemen and high-and-mighty ladies,
+from their coaches, sleighs, horses, or Hudson sloops, perhaps none
+saw more feasting and richer display of ruffles and brocade than did
+the wedding of Mary Philipse and Captain Morris, seven years after the
+death of her father, and two after the marriage of her brother. It was
+on the afternoon of Sunday, Jan. 15, 1758. In the famous east parlor,
+which has had much mention and will have more in course of this
+narrative, was raised a crimson canopy emblazoned with the Philipse
+crest,--a crowned golden demi-lion rampant, upon a golden coronet.
+Though the weather was not severe, there was snow on the ground, and
+the guests began to drive up in sleighs, under the white trees, at two
+o'clock. At three arrived the Rev. Henry Barclay, rector of Trinity,
+New York, and his assistant, Mr. Auchmuty. At half-past three the
+beauteous Mary (did so proud a heart-breaker blush, I wonder?) and the
+British captain stood under the crimson canopy and gold, and were
+united, "in the presence of a brilliant assembly," says the old county
+historian.[1] Miss Barclay, Miss Van Cortlandt, and Miss De Lancey
+were the bridesmaids, and the groomsmen were Mr. Heathcote (of the
+family of the lords of the manor of Scarsdale), Captain Kennedy (of
+Number One, Broadway), and Mr. Watts. No need to report here who were
+"among those present." The wedding did not occur yesterday, and the
+guests will not be offended at the omission of their names; but one of
+them was Acting Governor De Lancey. Colonel Philipse--wearing the
+ancestral gold chain and jewelled badge of the keepers of the deer
+forests of Bohemia--gave the bride away, and with her went a good
+portion of the earth's surface, and much money, jewelry, and plate.
+
+After the wedding came the feast, and the guests--or most of
+them--stayed so late they were not sorry for the brilliant moonlight
+of the night that set in upon their feasting. And now the legend! In
+the midst of the feast, there appeared at the door of the banquet-hall
+a tall Indian, with a scarlet blanket close about him, and in solemn
+tones quoth he, "Your possessions shall pass from you when the eagle
+shall despoil the lion of his mane." Thereupon he disappeared, of
+course, as suddenly as he had come, and the way in which historians
+have treated this legend shows how little do historians apply to their
+work the experiences of their daily lives,--such an experience, for
+instance, as that of ignoring some begging Irishwoman's request for "a
+few pennies in the Lord's name," and thereupon receiving a volley of
+hair-raising curses and baleful predictions. 'Tis easy to believe in
+the Indian and the prophecy of a passing of possessions, even though
+it was fulfilled; but the time-clause involving the eagle and the lion
+was doubtless added after the bird had despoiled the beast.
+
+It was years and years afterward, and when and because the eagle had
+decided to attempt the said despoiling, that there was a change of
+times at Philipse Manor Hall. Meanwhile had young Frederick, and
+Maria, and Elizabeth, and their brothers and sisters arrived on the
+scene. What could one have expected of the ease-loving, beauty-loving,
+book-loving, luxury-loving, garden-loving, and wide-girthed lord of
+the manor--connected by descent, kinship, and marriage with royal
+office-holding--but Toryism? In fact, nobody did expect else of him,
+for though he tried in 1775 to conceal his sympathy with the cause of
+the King, the powers in revolt inferred it, and took measures to
+deter him from actively aiding the British forces. His removal to
+Hartford, his return to the manor-house,--where he was for awhile, in
+the fall of 1776, at the time of the battle of White Plains,--his
+memorable business trip to New York, and his parole-breaking
+continuance there, heralded the end of the old regime in Philipse
+Manor Hall. The historians say that at that time of Colonel Philipse's
+last stay at the hall, Washington quartered there for awhile, and
+occupied the great southwestern chamber. Doubtless Washington did
+occupy that chamber once upon a time, but his itinerary and other
+circumstances are against its having been immediately before or
+immediately after the battle of White Plains. Some of the American
+officers were there about the time. As for the colonel's family, it
+did not abandon the house until 1777. With the occasions when, during
+the first months of Revolutionary activity in the county, use was
+sought of the secret closets and the underground passage thoughtfully
+provided by the earlier Philipses in days of risk from Indians, fear
+of Frenchmen, and dealings with pirates, this history has naught to
+do.
+
+In 1777, then, the family took a farewell view of the old house, and
+somewhat sadly, more resentfully, wended by familiar landmarks to New
+York,--to await there a joyous day of returning, when the King's
+regiments should have scattered the rebels and hanged their leaders.
+John Williams, steward of the manor, was left to take care of the
+house against that day, with one white housemaid, who was of kin to
+him, and one black slave, a man. The outside shutters of the first
+story, the inside shutters above, were fastened tight; the bolts of
+the ponderous mahogany doors were strengthened, the stables and mills
+and outbuildings emptied and locked. Much that was precious in the
+house went with the family and horses and servants to New York. Yet be
+sure that proper means of subsistence for Williams and his two helpers
+were duly stowed away, for the faithful steward had to himself the
+discharge of that matter.
+
+So wholesale a departure went with much bustle, and it was not till he
+returned from seeing the numerous party off, and found himself alone
+with the maid and the slave in the great entrance-hall, which a few
+minutes before had been noisy with voices, that Williams felt to the
+heart the sudden loneliness of the place. The face of Molly, the maid,
+was white and ready for weeping, and there was a gravity on the
+chocolate visage of black Sam that gave the steward a distinctly
+tremulous moment. Perhaps he recalled the prediction of the Indian,
+and had a flash of second sight, and perceived that the third lord of
+the manor was to be the last. Howbeit, he cleared his throat and set
+black Sam to laying in fire-wood as for a siege, and Molly to righting
+the disorder caused by the exodus; betook himself cellarward, and from
+a hidden place drew forth a bottle of an old vintage, and comforted
+his solitude. He was a snug, honest, discreet man of forty, was the
+steward, slim but powerful, looking his office, besides knowing and
+fulfilling it.
+
+But, as the months passed, he became used to the solitude, and the
+routine of life in the closed-up, memory-haunted old house took on a
+certain charm. The living was snug enough in what parts of the mansion
+the steward and his two servitors put to their own daily use. As for
+the other parts, the great dark rooms and entrance-halls, we may be
+sure that when the steward went the rounds, and especially after a
+visit to the wine-cellar, he found them not so empty, but peopled with
+the vague and shifting images of the many beings, young and old, who
+had filled the house with life in brighter days. Then, if ever, did
+noise of creaking stair or sound as of human breath, or, perchance,
+momentary vision of flitting face against the dark, betray the present
+ghost of some old-time habitue of the mansion.
+
+When the raiding and foraging and marauding began in the county, the
+manor-house was not molested. The partisan warfare had not yet reached
+its magnitude. After the battle of White Plains in 1776, the British
+had retained New York City, while the main American army, leaving a
+small force above, had gone to New Jersey. Late in 1777, the British
+main army, leaving New York garrisoned, had departed to contest with
+the Americans for Philadelphia. Not until July, 1778, after Monmouth
+battle, did the British main army return to New York, and the American
+forces form the great arc, with their chief camp in upper West Chester
+County. Then was great increase of foray and pillage. The manor-house
+was of course exempt from harm at the hands of King's troops and Tory
+raiders, while it was protected from American regulars by Washington's
+policy against useless destruction, and from the marauding "Skinners"
+by its nearness to the British lines and by the solidity of its walls,
+doors, and shutters. Its gardens suffered, its picket fences and gate
+fastenings were tampered with, its orchards prematurely plucked. But
+its trees were spared by the British foragers, and the house itself
+was no longer in demand as officers' quarters, being too near King's
+Bridge for safe American occupancy, but not sufficiently near for
+British. Hessians and Tories, though, patrolled the near-by roads, and
+sometimes Continental troops camped in the neighboring hills. In 1778,
+the American Colonel Gist, whose corps was then at the foot of Boar
+Hill, north of the manor-house, was paying his court to the handsome
+widow Babcock, in the parsonage, when he was surprised by a force of
+yagers, rangers, and Loyalist light horse, and got away in the nick of
+time.[2] The parsonage, unlike the manor-house, was often visited by
+officers on their way hither and thither, but I will not say it was
+for this reason that Miss Sally Williams, the sister of Colonel
+Philipse's wife, preferred living in the parsonage with the Babcocks
+rather than in the great deserted mansion.
+
+On a dark November afternoon, Williams had sent black Sam to the
+orchard for some winter apples, and the slave, after the fashion of
+his race, was taking his time over the errand. The shades of evening
+gathered while the steward was making his usual rounds within the
+mansion. Molly, whose housewifely instincts ever asserted themselves,
+had of her own accord made a dusting tour of the rooms and halls. She
+was on the first landing of the stairway in the east hall, just about
+to finish her task in the waning light admitted by the window over the
+landing and by the fanlight over the front door, when, as she applied
+her cloth to the mahogany balustrade, the door of the east parlor
+opened, and Williams came out of that dark apartment.
+
+"Lord, Molly!" he said, a moment later, having started at suddenly
+beholding her. "I thought you were a ghost! It's time to get supper, I
+think, from the look of the day outside. I'll have to make a light."
+
+From a closet in the side of the staircase he took a candle, flint,
+and tinder, talking the while to Molly, as she rubbed the balusters.
+Having produced a tiny candle-flame that did not light up half the
+hall, Williams started towards the dining-room, but stopped at a
+distant sound of galloping horses, which were evidently coming down
+the Albany road. The steward and the maid exchanged conjectures as to
+whether this meant a British patrol or "Rebel" dragoons, "Skinners" or
+Hessian yagers, Highlanders, or Loyalist light horse; and then
+observed from the sound that the horses had turned aside into the Mile
+Square road.
+
+But now came a new sound of horses, and though it was of only a few,
+and those walking, it gave Williams quite a start, for the footfalls
+were manifestly approaching the mansion. They as manifestly stopped
+before that very hill. And then came a sharp knock on the mahogany
+door.
+
+"See who it is," whispered Molly.
+
+Williams hesitated. The knock was repeated.
+
+"Who's there?" called out Williams.
+
+There was an answer, but the words could not be made out.
+
+"Who?" repeated Williams.
+
+This time the answer was clear enough.
+
+"It's I, Williams! Don't keep me standing here in the wind all
+night."
+
+"It's Miss Elizabeth!" cried Molly; and Williams, in a kind of daze of
+astonishment, hastily unlocked, unbolted, and threw open the door.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE SOUND OF GALLOPING.
+
+
+A rush of wind came in from the outer gloom and almost blew out the
+candle. Williams held up his hand to protect the flame and stepped
+aside from before the doorway.
+
+The wind was promptly followed by Elizabeth, who strode in with
+the air that a king might show on reentering one of his palaces,
+still holding her whip in her gloved hand. Behind her came Colden,
+the picture of moody dejection. When Cuff had entered with the
+portmanteaus, Williams, seeing but three horses without, closed
+the door, locked it, and looked with inquiry and bewilderment at
+Elizabeth.
+
+"Br-r-r-r!" she ejaculated. "Light up my chamber, Molly, and have a
+fire in it; then make some hot tea, and get me something to eat."
+
+Elizabeth's impetuosity sent the open-mouthed maid flying up-stairs to
+execute the first part of the order, whereupon the mistress turned to
+the wondering steward.
+
+"I've come to spend a week at the manor-house, Williams. Cuff, take
+those to my room."
+
+The black boy, with the portmanteaus, followed in the way Molly had
+taken, but with less rapidity. By this time Williams had recovered
+somewhat from his surprise, and regained his voice and something of
+his stewardly manner.
+
+"I scarcely expected any of the family out from New York these times,
+miss. There----"
+
+"I suppose not!" Elizabeth broke in. "Have some one put away the
+horses, Williams, or they'll be shivering. It's mighty cold for the
+time of year."
+
+"I'll go myself, ma'am. There's only black Sam, you know, and he isn't
+back from the orchard. I sent him to get some apples." And the steward
+set the candlestick on the newel post of the stairway, and started for
+the door.
+
+"No, let Cuff go," said Elizabeth, sitting down on a settle that stood
+with its back to the side of the staircase. "You start a fire in the
+room next mine, for aunt Sally. She'll be over from the parsonage in a
+few minutes."
+
+Williams thereupon departed in quest of the stable key, inwardly
+devoured by a mighty curiosity as to the wherefore of Elizabeth's
+presence here in the company of none but her affianced, and also the
+wherefore of that gentleman's manifest depression of spirits. His
+curiosity was not lessened when the major called after him:
+
+"Tell Cuff he may feed my horse, but not take the saddle off. I must
+ride back to New York as soon as the beast is rested."
+
+"Why," said Elizabeth to Colden, "you may stay for a bite of supper."
+
+"No, thank you! I am not hungry."
+
+"A glass of wine, then," said the girl, quite heedless of his tone;
+"if there is any left in the house."
+
+"No wine, I thank you!" Colden stood motionless, too far back in the
+hall to receive much light from the feeble candle, like a shadowy
+statue of the sulks.
+
+"As you will!"
+
+Whereupon Elizabeth, as if she had satisfied her conscience regarding
+what was due from her in the name of hospitality, rose, and opened the
+door to the east parlor.
+
+"Ugh! How dark and lonely the house is! No wonder aunt Sally chose to
+live at the parsonage." After one look into the dark apartment, she
+closed the door. "Well, I'll warm up the place a bit. Sorry you can't
+stay with us, major."
+
+"It is only you who send me away," said Colden, dismally and
+reproachfully. "I could have got longer leave of absence. You let me
+escort you here, because no gentleman of your family will lend himself
+to your reckless caprice. And then, having no further present use for
+me, you send me about my business!"
+
+Elizabeth, preferring to pace the hall until her chamber should be
+heated, and her aunt should arrive, was striking her cloak with her
+riding-whip at each step; not that the cloak needed dusting, but as a
+method of releasing surplus energy.
+
+"But I do have further present use for you," she said. "You are going
+back to New York to inform my dear timid parents and sisters and
+brothers that I've arrived here safe. They'll not sleep till you tell
+them so."
+
+"One of your slaves might bear that news as well," quoth the major.
+
+"Well, are you not forever calling yourself my slave? Besides, my
+devotion to King George won't let me weaken his forces by holding one
+of his officers from duty longer than need be."
+
+But Colden was not to be cheered by pleasantry.
+
+"What a man you are! So cross at my sending you back that you'll
+neither eat nor drink before going. Pray don't pout, Colden. 'Tis
+foolish!"
+
+"I dare say! A man in love does many foolish things!"
+
+The utterance of this great and universal truth had not time to
+receive comment from Elizabeth before Cuff reappeared, with the stable
+key; and at the same instant, a rather delicate, inoffensive knock was
+heard on the front door.
+
+"That must be aunt Sally," said Elizabeth. "Let her in, Cuff. Then go
+and stable the horses. My poor Cato will freeze!"
+
+It was indeed Miss Sarah Williams, and in a state of breathlessness.
+She had been running, perhaps to escape the unseemly embraces of the
+wind, which had taken great liberties with her skirts,--liberties no
+less shocking because of the darkness of the evening; for though De la
+Rochefoucauld has settled it that man's alleged courage takes a
+vacation when darkness deprives it of possible witnesses, no one will
+accuse an elderly maiden's modesty of a like eclipse.
+
+"My dear child, what could have induced you----" were her first words
+to Elizabeth; but her attention was at that point distracted by seeing
+Cuff, outside the threshold, about to pull the door shut. "Don't close
+the door yet, boy. Some one is coming."
+
+Cuff thereupon started on his task of stabling the three horses,
+leaving the door open. The flame of the candle on the newel post was
+blown this way and that by the in-rushing wind.
+
+"It's old Mr. Valentine," explained Miss Sally to Elizabeth. "He
+offered to show me over from the parsonage, where he happened to be
+calling, so I didn't wait for Mrs. Babcock's boy----"
+
+"You found Mr. Valentine pleasanter company, I suppose, aunty, dear,"
+put in Elizabeth, who spared neither age nor dignity. "He's a widower
+again, isn't he?"
+
+Miss Sally blushed most becomingly. Her plump cheeks looked none the
+worse for this modest suffusion.
+
+"Fie, child! He's eighty years old. Though, to be sure, the attentions
+of a man of his experience and judgment aren't to be considered
+lightly."
+
+Those were the days when well-bred people could--and often did,
+naturally and without effort--improvise grammatical sentences of more
+than twelve words, in the course of ordinary, every-day talk.
+
+"We started from the parsonage together," went on Miss Sally, "but I
+was so impatient I got ahead. He doesn't walk as briskly as he did
+twenty years ago."
+
+Yet briskly enough for his years did the octogenarian walk in through
+the little pillared portico a moment later. Such deliberation as his
+movements had might as well have been the mark of a proper self-esteem
+as the effect of age. He was a slender but wiry-looking old gentleman,
+was Matthias Valentine, of Valentine's Hill; in appearance a credit to
+the better class of countrymen of his time. His white hair was tied in
+a cue, as if he were himself a landowner instead of only a manorial
+tenant. Yet no common tenant was he. His father, a dragoon in the
+French service, had come down from Canada and settled on Philipse
+Manor, and Matthias had been proprietor of Valentine's Hill, renting
+from the Philipses in earlier days than any one could remember. His
+grandsons now occupied the Hill, and the old man was in the full
+enjoyment of the leisure he had won. His rather sharp countenance,
+lighted by honest gray eyes, was a mixture of good-humor, childlike
+ingenuousness, and innocent jocosity. The neatness of his hair, his
+carefully shaven face, and the whole condition of his brown cloth coat
+and breeches and worsted stockings, denoted a fastidiousness rarely at
+any time, and particularly in the good (or bad) old days, to be found
+in common with rustic life and old age. Did some of the dandyism of
+the French dragoon survive in the old Philipsburgh farmer?
+
+He carried a walking-stick in one hand, a lighted lantern in the
+other. After bowing to the people in the hall, he set down his
+lantern, closed the door and bolted it, then took up his lantern, blew
+out the flame thereof, and set it down again.
+
+"Whew!" he puffed, after his exertion. "Windy night, Miss Elizabeth!
+Windy night, Major Colden! Winter's going to set in airly this year.
+There ain't been sich a frosty November since '64, when the river was
+froze over as fur down as Spuyten Duyvel."
+
+There was in the old man's high-pitched voice a good deal of the
+squeak, but little of the quaver, of senility.
+
+"You'll stay to supper, I hope, Mr. Valentine."
+
+From Elizabeth this was a sufficient exhibition of graciousness. She
+then turned her back on the two men and began to tell her aunt of her
+arrangements.
+
+"Thankee, ma'am," said old Valentine, whose sight did not immediately
+acquaint him, in the dim candle-light, with Elizabeth's change of
+front; wherefore he continued, placidly addressing her back: "I
+wouldn't mind a glass and a pipe with friend Williams afore trudging
+back to the Hill."
+
+He then walked over to the disconsolate Colden, and, with a very
+gay-doggish expression, remarked in an undertone:
+
+"Fine pair o' girls yonder, major?"
+
+He had known Colden from the time of the latter's first boyhood visits
+to the manor, and could venture a little familiarity.
+
+"Girls?" blurted the major, startled out of his meditations.
+
+The old country beau chuckled.
+
+"We all know what's betwixt you and the niece. How about the aunt and
+me taking a lesson from you two, eh?"
+
+Even the gloomy officer could not restrain a momentary smile.
+
+"What, Mr. Valentine? Do you seriously think of marrying?"
+
+"Why not? I've been married afore, hain't I? What's to hinder?"
+
+"Why, there's the matter of age." Colden rather enjoyed being
+inconsiderate of people's feelings.
+
+"Oh, the lady is not so old," said the octogenarian, placidly, casting
+a judicial, but approving look at the commanding figure of Miss
+Sally.
+
+Then, as he had been for a considerable time on his legs, having
+walked over from the Hill to the parsonage that afternoon, and as at
+best his knees bent when he stood, he sat down on the settle by the
+staircase.
+
+Miss Sally, though she knew it useless to protest further against
+Elizabeth's caprice, nevertheless felt it her duty to do so,
+especially as Major Colden would probably carry to the family a report
+of her attitude towards that caprice.
+
+"Did you ever hear of such rashness, major? A young girl like
+Elizabeth coming out here in time of war, when this neutral ground
+between the lines is overridden and foraged to death, and deluged with
+blood by friend as well as foe? La me! I can't understand her, if she
+_is_ my sister's child."
+
+"Why, aunt Sally, _you_ stay out here through it all," said Elizabeth,
+not as much to depreciate the dangers as to give her aunt an
+opportunity of posing as a very courageous person.
+
+Miss Sally promptly accepted the opportunity. "Oh," said she, with a
+mien of heroic self-sacrifice, "I couldn't let poor Grace Babcock stay
+at the parsonage with nobody but her children; besides I'm not Colonel
+Philipse's daughter, and who cares whether I'm loyal to the King or
+not? But a girl like you isn't made for the dangers and privations
+we've had to put up with out here since the King's troops have
+occupied New York, and Washington's rebel army has held the country
+above. I'm surprised the family let her come, or that you'd
+countenance it by coming with her, major."
+
+"We all opposed it," said Colden, with a sigh. "But--you know
+Elizabeth!"
+
+"Yes," said Elizabeth herself with cheerful nonchalance, "Elizabeth
+always has her way. I was hungry for a sight of the place, and the
+more the old house is in danger, the more I love it. I'm here for a
+week, and that ends it. The place doesn't seem to have suffered any.
+They haven't even quartered troops here."
+
+"Not since the American officers stayed here in the fall o' '76," put
+in old Mr. Valentine, from the settle. "I reckon you'll be safe enough
+here, Miss Elizabeth."
+
+"Of course I shall. Why, our troops patrol all this part of the
+country, Lord Cathcart told us at King's Bridge, and _we_ have naught
+to fear from them."
+
+"No, the British foragers won't dare treat Philipse Manor-house as
+they do the homes of some of their loyal friends," said Miss Sally,
+who was no less proud of her relationship with the Philipses, because
+it was by marriage and not by blood. "But the horrible "Skinners," who
+don't spare even the farms of their fellow rebels--"
+
+"Bah!" said Elizabeth. "The scum of the earth! Williams has weapons
+here, and with him and the servants I'll defend the place against all
+the rebel cut-throats in the county."
+
+The major thought to make a last desperate attempt to dissuade
+Elizabeth from remaining.
+
+"That's all well enough," said he; "but there are the rebel regulars,
+the dragoons. They'll be raiding down to our very lines, one of these
+days, if only in retaliation. You know how Lord Cornwallis's party
+under General Grey, over in Jersey, the other night, killed a lot of
+Baylor's cavalry,--Mrs. Washington's Light Horse, they called the
+troop. And the Hessians made a great foray on the rebel families this
+side the river."
+
+"Ay," chirped old Valentine; "but the American Colonel Butler, and
+their Major Lee, of Virginia, fell on the Hessian yagers 'tween
+Dobbs's Ferry and Tarrytown, and killed ever so many of 'em,--and I
+wasn't sorry for that, neither!"
+
+"Oho!" said Colden, "you belong to the opposition."
+
+"Oh, I'm neither here nor there," replied the old man. "But they say
+that there Major Lee, of Virginia, is the gallantest soldier in
+Washington's army. He'd lead his men against the powers of Satan if
+Washington gave the word. Light Horse Harry, they call him,--and a
+fine dashing troop o' light horse he commands."
+
+"No more dashing, I'll wager, than some of ours," said Elizabeth,
+whose mood for the moment permitted her to talk with reason and
+moderation; "not even counting the Germans. And as for leaders, what
+do you say to Simcoe, of the Queen's Rangers, or Emmerick, or
+Tarleton, or"--turning to Colden--"your cousin James De Lancey, of
+this county, major?"
+
+The major, notwithstanding his Toryism, did not enter with enthusiasm
+into Elizabeth's admiration for these brave young cavalry leaders.
+Staten Island and East New Jersey had not offered him as great
+opportunities for distinction as they had had. It was, therefore, Miss
+Sally who next spoke.
+
+"Well, Heaven knows there are enough on either side to devastate the
+land and rob us of comfort and peace. One wakes in the middle of the
+night, at the clatter of horses riding by like the wind, and wonders
+whether it's friend or foe, and trembles till they're out of hearing,
+for fear the door is to be broken in or the house fired. And the sound
+of shots in the night, and the distant glare of flames when some poor
+farmer's home is burned over his head!"
+
+"Ay," added Mr. Valentine, "and all the cattle and crops go to the
+foragers, so it's no use raising any more than you can hide away for
+your own larder."
+
+Elizabeth was beginning to be bored, and saw nothing to gain from a
+continuation of these recitals. Doubtless, by this time, her room was
+lighted and warm. So, thoughtless of Colden, she mounted the first
+step of the stairway, and said:
+
+"I have no doubt Williams has contrived to hide away enough provisions
+for _our_ use. So _I_ sha'n't suffer from hunger, and as for Lee's
+Light Horse, I defy them and all other rebels. Come, aunt Sally!"
+
+She had ascended as far as to the fourth step of the stairway, and
+Miss Sally was about to follow, when there was heard, above the wind's
+moaning, another sound of galloping horses. Like the previous similar
+sound, it came from the north.
+
+Elizabeth stopped and stood on the fourth step. Miss Sally raised her
+finger to bid silence. Colden's attitude became one of anxious
+attention, while he dropped his hat on the settle and drew his cloak
+close about him, so that it concealed his uniform, sword, and pistol.
+The galloping continued.
+
+When time came for it to turn off eastward, as it would do should the
+riders take the road to Mile Square, it did not so. Instead, as the
+sound unmistakably indicated, it came on down the post-road.
+
+"Hessians, perhaps!" Miss Sally whispered.
+
+"Or De Lancey's Cowboys," said Valentine, but not in a whisper.
+
+Elizabeth cast a sharp look at the old man, as if to show disapproval
+of his use of the Whigs' nickname for De Lancey's troop. But the
+octogenarian did not quail.
+
+"They're riding towards the manor-house," he added, a moment later.
+
+"Let us hope they're friends," said Colden, in a tone low and slightly
+unsteady.
+
+Elizabeth disdained to whisper.
+
+"Maybe it is Lee's Light Horse," she said, in her usual voice, but
+ironically, addressing Valentine. "In that case we should tremble for
+our lives, I suppose."
+
+"Whoever they are, they've stopped before the house!" said Miss Sally,
+in quite a tremble.
+
+There was a noise of horses pawing and snorting outside, of directions
+being given rapidly, and of two or three horses leaving the main band
+for another part of the grounds. Then was heard a quick, firm step on
+the porch floor, and in the same instant a sharp, loud knock on the
+door.
+
+No one in the hall moved; all looked at Elizabeth.
+
+"A very valiant knock!" said she, with more irony. "It certainly
+_must_ be Lee's Light Horse. Will you please open the door, Colden?"
+
+"What?" ejaculated Colden.
+
+"Certainly," said Elizabeth, turning on the stairway, so as to face
+the door; "to show we're not afraid."
+
+Jack Colden looked at her a moment demurringly, then went to the door,
+undid the fastenings, and threw it open, keeping his cloak close about
+him and immediately stepping back into the shadow.
+
+A handsome young officer strode in, as if 'twere a mighty gust of wind
+that sent him. He wore a uniform of blue with red facings,--a uniform
+that had seen service,--was booted and spurred, without greatcoat or
+cloak. A large pistol was in his belt, and his left hand rested on the
+hilt of a sword. He swept past Colden, not seeing him; came to a stop
+in the centre of the hall, and looked rapidly around from face to
+face.
+
+"Your servant, ladies and gentlemen!" he said, with a swift bow and a
+flourish of his dragoon's hat. His eye rested on Elizabeth.
+
+"Who are you?" she demanded, coldly and imperiously, from the fourth
+step.
+
+"I'm Captain Peyton, of Lee's Light Horse," said he.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE CONTINENTAL DRAGOON.
+
+
+The Peytons of Virginia were descended from a younger son of the
+Peytons of Pelham, England, of which family was Sir Edward Peyton, of
+Pelham, knight and baronet. Sir Edward's relative, the first American
+Peyton, settled in Westmoreland County. Within one generation the
+family had spread to Stafford County, and within another to Loudoun
+County also. Thus it befell that there was a Mr. Craven Peyton, of
+Loudoun County, justice of the peace, vestryman, and chief warden of
+Shelburne Parish. He was the father of nine sons and two daughters.
+One of the sons was Harry.
+
+This Harry grew up longing to be a soldier. Military glory was his
+ambition, as it had been Washington's; but not as a mere provincial
+would he be satisfied to excel. He would have a place as a regular
+officer, in an army of the first importance, on the fields of Europe.
+Before the Revolution, Americans were, like all colonials, very loyal
+to their English King. Therefore would Harry Peyton be content with
+naught less than a King's commission in the King's army.
+
+His father, glad to be guided in choosing a future for one of so many
+sons, sent Harry to London in 1770, to see something of life, and so
+managed matters, through his English relations, that the boy was in
+1772, at the age of nineteen, the possessor, by purchase, of an
+ensign's commission. He was soon sent to do garrison duty in Ireland,
+being enrolled with the Sixty-third Regiment of Foot.
+
+He had lived gaily enough during his two years in London, occupying
+lodgings, being patronized by his relations, seeing enough of society,
+card-tables, drums, routs, plays, prize-fights, and other diversions.
+He had made visits in the country and showed what he had learned in
+Virginia about cock-fighting, fox-hunting and shooting, and had taken
+lessons from London fencing-masters. A young gentleman from Virginia,
+if well off and "well connected," could have a fine time in London in
+those days; and Harry Peyton had it.
+
+But he could never forget that he was a colonial. If he were
+treated by his English associates as an equal, or even at times
+with a particular consideration, there was always a kind of
+implication that he was an exception among colonials. Other
+colonial youths were similarly treated, and some of these were glad
+to be held as exceptions, and even joined in the derision of the
+colonials who were not. For these Harry Peyton had a mighty disgust
+and detestation. He did not enjoy receiving as Harry Peyton a
+tolerance and kindness that would have been denied him as merely an
+American. And he sometimes could not avoid seeing that, even as
+Harry Peyton, he was regarded as compensating, by certain attractive
+qualities in the nature of amiability and sincerity, for occasional
+exhibitions of what the English rated as social impropriety and
+bad taste. Often, at the English lofty derision of colonials, at
+the English air of self-evident superiority, the English pretence of
+politely concealed shock or pain or offence at some infringement of a
+purely superficial conduct-code of their own arbitrary fabrication,
+he ground his teeth in silence; for in one respect, he had as good
+manners as the English had then, or have now,--when in Rome he did
+not resent or deride what the Romans did. He began to think that the
+lot of a self-respecting American among the English, even if he
+were himself made an exception of and well dealt with, was not the
+most enviable one. And, after he joined the army, he thought this
+more and more every day. But he would show them what a colonial
+could rise to! Yet that would prove nothing for his countrymen, as
+he would always, on his meritorious side, be deemed an exception.
+
+His military ambition, however, predominated, and he had no thought of
+leaving the King's service.
+
+The disagreement between the King and the American Colonies grew,
+from "a cloud no bigger than a man's hand," to something larger.
+But Harry heard little of it, and that entirely from the English
+point of view. He received but three or four letters a year from
+his own people, and the time had not come for his own people to write
+much more than bare facts. They were chary of opinions. Harry
+supposed that the new discontent in the Colonies, after the repeal of
+the Stamp Act and the withdrawal of the two regiments from Boston
+Town to Castle William, was but that of the perpetually restless,
+the habitual fomenters, the notoriety-seeking agitators, the mob,
+whose circumstances could not be made worse and might be improved by
+disturbances. Now the Americans, from being a subject of no
+interest to English people, a subject discussed only when some rare
+circumstance brought it up, became more talked of. Sometimes, when
+Americans were blamed for opposing taxes to support soldiery used
+for their own protection, Harry said that the Americans could protect
+themselves; that the English, in wresting Canada from the French,
+had sought rather English prestige and dominion than security for the
+colonials; that the flourishing of the Colonies was despite English
+neglect, not because of English fostering; that if the English had
+solicitude for America, it was for America as a market for their own
+trade. Thereupon his fellow officers would either laugh him out,
+as if he were too ignorant to be argued with, or freeze him out,
+as if he had committed some grave outrage on decorum. And Harry would
+rage inwardly, comparing his own ignorance and indecorousness with the
+knowledge and courtesy exemplified in the assertion of Doctor Johnson,
+when that great but narrow Englishman said, in 1769, of Americans,
+"Sir, they are a race of convicts, and ought to be thankful for
+anything we allow them short of hanging."
+
+There came to Harry, now and then, scraps of vague talk of uneasiness
+in Boston Town, whose port the British Parliament had closed, to
+punish the Yankees for riotously destroying tea on which there was a
+tax; of the concentration there of British troops from Halifax,
+Quebec, New York, the Jerseys, and other North American posts. But
+there was not, in Harry's little world of Irish garrison life, the
+slightest expectation of actual rebellion or even of a momentous local
+tumult in the American Colonies.
+
+Imagine, therefore, his feelings when, one morning late in March in
+1775, he was told that, within a month's time, the Sixty-third, and
+other regiments, would embark at Cork for either Boston or New York!
+
+There could not be a new French or Spanish invasion. As for the
+Indians, never again would British regulars be sent against them. Was
+it, then, Harry's own countrymen that his regiment was going to
+fight?
+
+His comrades inferred the cause of his long face, and laughed. He
+would have no more fighting to do in America against the Americans
+than he had to do in Ireland against the Irish, or than an English
+officer in an English barrack town had to do against the English. The
+reinforcements were being sent only to overawe the lawless element.
+The mere sight of these reinforcements would obviate any occasion for
+their use. The regiment would merely do garrison duty in America
+instead of in Ireland or elsewhere.
+
+He had none to advise or enlighten him. What was there for him to do
+but sail with his regiment, awaiting disclosures or occurrences to
+guide? What misgivings he had, he kept to himself, though once on the
+voyage, as he looked from the rocking transport towards the west, he
+confided to Lieutenant Dalrymple his opinion that 'twas damned bad
+luck sent _his_ regiment to America, of all places.
+
+When he landed in Boston, June 12th, he found, as he had expected,
+that the town was full of soldiers, encamped on the common and
+quartered elsewhere; but also, as he had not expected, that the troops
+were virtually confined to the town, which was fortified at the Neck;
+that the last time they had marched into the country, through
+Lexington to Concord, they had marched back again at a much faster
+gait, and left many score dead and wounded on the way; and that a host
+of New Englanders in arms were surrounding Boston! The news of April
+19th had not reached Europe until after Harry had sailed, nor had it
+met his regiment on the ocean. When he heard it now, he could only
+become more grave and uneasy. But the British officers were scornful
+of their clodhopper besiegers. In due time this rabble should be
+scattered like chaff. But was it a mere rabble? Certainly. Were not
+the best people in Boston loyal to the King's government? Some of
+them, yes. But, as Harry went around with open eyes and ears, eager
+for information, he found that many of them were with the "rabble."
+News was easy to be had. The citizens were allowed to pass the barrier
+on the Neck, if they did not carry arms or ammunition, and there was
+no strict discipline in the camp of New Englanders. Therefore Harry
+soon learned how Doctor Warren stood, and the Adamses, and Mr. John
+Hancock; and that a Congress, representing all the Colonies, was now
+sitting at Philadelphia, for the second time; and that in the Congress
+his own Virginia was served by such gentlemen as Mr. Richard Henry
+Lee, Mr. Patrick Henry, Mr. Thomas Jefferson, and Colonel Washington.
+And the Virginians had shown as ready and firm a mind for revolt
+against the King's measures as the New Englanders had. Here, for once,
+the sympathies of trading Puritan and fox-hunting Virginian were one.
+Moreover, a Yankee was a fellow American, and, after five years of
+contact with English self-esteem, Harry warmed at the sight of a New
+Englander as he never would have done before he had left Virginia.
+
+But it did not conduce to peace of mind, in his case, to be convinced
+that the colonial remonstrance was neither local nor of the rabble.
+The more general and respectable it was, the more embarrassing was his
+own situation. Would it really come to war? With ill-concealed
+anxiety, he sought the opinion of this person and that.
+
+On the fourth day after his arrival, he went into a tavern in King
+Street with Lieutenant Massay, of the Thirty-fifth, Ensign Charleton,
+of the Fifth, and another young officer, and, while they were
+drinking, heard a loyalist tell what one Parker, leader of the
+Lexington rebels, said to his men on Lexington Common, on the morning
+of April 19th, when the King's troops came in sight.
+
+"'Stand your ground,' says he. 'Don't fire till you're fired on, but
+if they mean to have a war, let it begin here!'"
+
+"And it began there!" said Harry.
+
+The English officers stared at him, and laughed.
+
+"Ay, 'twas the Yankee idea of war," said one of them. "Run for a stone
+wall, and, when the enemy's back is turned, blaze away. I'd like to
+see a million of the clodhoppers compelled to stand up and face a line
+of grenadiers."
+
+"Ay, gimme ten companies of grenadiers," cried one, who had doubtless
+heard of General Gage's celebrated boast, "and I'll go from one end of
+the damned country to the other, and drive 'em to their holes like
+foxes. Only 'tis better sport chasing handsome foxes in England than
+ill-dressed poltroons in Bumpkin-land."
+
+"They're not all poltroons," said Harry, repressing his feelings the
+more easily through long practice. "Some of them fought in the French
+war. There's Putnam, and Pomeroy, and Ward. I heard Lieutenant-Colonel
+Abercrombie, of the Twenty-second, say yesterday that Putnam--"
+
+"Cowards every one of 'em," broke in another. "Cowards and louts. A
+lady told me t'other day there ain't in all America a man whose coat
+sets in close at the back, except he's of the loyal party. Cowards and
+louts!"
+
+"Look here, damn you!" cried Peyton. "I want you to know I'm American
+born, and my people are American, and I don't know whether they are of
+the loyal party or not!"
+
+"Oh, now, that's the worst of you Americans,--always will get
+personal! Of course, there are exceptions."
+
+"Then there are exceptions enough to make a rule themselves," said
+Harry. "I'm tired hearing you call these people cowards before you've
+had a chance to see what they are. And you needn't wait for that, for
+I can tell you now they're not!"
+
+"Well, well, perhaps not,--to you. Doubtless they're very dreadful,--to
+you. You don't seem to relish facing 'em, that's a fact! You'll be
+resigning your commission one o' these days, I dare say, if it comes to
+blows with these terrible heroes!"
+
+Harry saw everybody in the room looking at him with a grin.
+
+"By the Lord," said he, "maybe I shall!" and stalked hotly out of the
+place.
+
+His wrath increased as he walked. He noticed now, more than before,
+the confident, arrogant air of the redcoats who promenaded the
+streets; how they leered at the women, and made the citizens who
+passed turn out of the way. Forthwith, he went to his quarters, and
+wrote his resignation.
+
+When the ink was dry he folded up the document and put it in the
+pocket of his uniform coat. Then that last tavern speech recurred to
+him. "If I resign now," he thought, "they'll suppose it's because I
+really am afraid of fighting, not because the rebels are my
+countrymen." So he lapsed into a state of indecision,--a state
+resembling apathy, a half-dazed condition, a semi-somnolent waiting
+for events. But he kept his letter of resignation in his coat.
+
+At dawn the next morning, Saturday, June 17th, he was awakened by the
+booming of guns. He was soon up and out. It was a beautiful day.
+People were on the eminences and roofs, looking northward, across the
+mouth of the Charles, towards Charlestown and the hill beyond. On that
+hill were seen rough earthworks, six feet high, which had not been
+there the day before. The booming guns were those of the British
+man-of-war _Lively_, firing from the river at the new earthworks.
+Hence the earthworks were the doing of the rebels, having been raised
+during the night. Presently the _Lively_ ceased its fire, but soon
+there was more booming, this time not only from the men-of-war, but
+also from the battery on Copp's Hill in Boston. After awhile Harry
+saw, from where he stood with many others on Beacon Hill, some of the
+rebels emerge from one part of the earthworks, as if to go away. One
+of these was knocked over by a cannon-ball. His comrades dragged his
+body behind the earthen wall. By and by a tall, strong-looking man
+appeared on top of the parapet, and walked leisurely along, apparently
+giving directions. Harry heard from a citizen, who had a field-glass,
+the words, "Prescott, of Pepperell." Other men were now visible on
+the parapet, superintending the workers behind. And now the booming of
+the guns was answered by disrespectful cheers from those same unseen
+workers.
+
+The morning grew hot. Harry heard that General Gage had called a
+council of war at the Province House; that Generals Howe, Clinton,
+Burgoyne,[3]--these three having arrived in Boston about three weeks
+before Harry had,--Pigott, Grant, and the rest were now there in
+consultation. At length there was the half-expected tumult of drum and
+bugle; and Harry was summoned to obey, with his comrades, the order to
+parade. There was now much noise of officers galloping about, dragoons
+riding from their quarters, and rattling of gun-carriages. The booming
+from the batteries and vessels increased.
+
+At half-past eleven Harry found himself--for he was scarcely master of
+his acts that morning, his will having taken refuge in a kind of
+dormancy--on parade with two companies of his regiment, and he noticed
+in a dim way that other companies near were from other different
+regiments, all being supplied with ammunition, blankets, and
+provisions. When the sun was directly overhead and at its hottest, the
+order to march was given, and soon he was bearing the colors through
+the streets of Boston. The roar of the cannon now became deafening.
+Harry knew not whether the rebels were returning it from their hill
+works across the water or not. In time the troops reached the wharf.
+Barges were in waiting, and field-pieces were being moved into some of
+them. He could see now that all the firing was from the King's vessels
+and batteries. Mechanically he followed Lieutenant Dalrymple into a
+barge, which soon filled up with troops. The other barges were
+speedily brilliant with scarlet coats and glistening bayonets. Not far
+away the river was covered with smoke, through which flashed the fire
+of the belching artillery. A blue flag was waved from General Howe's
+barge, and the fleet moved across the river towards the hill where the
+rebels waited silently behind their piles of earth.
+
+At one o'clock, Harry followed Lieutenant Dalrymple out of the barge
+to the northern shore of the river, at a point northeast of
+Charlestown village and east of the Yankees' hill. There was no
+molestation from the rebels. The firing from the vessels and batteries
+protected the hillside and shore. The troops were promptly formed in
+three lines. Harry's place was in the left of the front line. Then
+there was long waiting. The barges went back to the Boston side. Was
+General Howe, who had command of the movements, sending for more
+troops? Many of the soldiers ate of their stock of provisions. Harry,
+in a kind of dream, looked westward up the hill towards the silent
+Yankee redoubt. It faced south, west, and east. The line of its
+eastern side was continued northward by a breastwork, and still beyond
+this, down the northern hillside to another river, ran a straggling
+rail fence, which was thatched with fresh-cut hay. What were the men
+doing behind those defences? What were they saying and thinking?
+
+The barges came back across the Charles from Boston, with more
+troops, but these were disembarked some distance southwest, nearer
+Charlestown. General Howe now made a short speech to the troops
+first landed. Then some flank guards were sent out and some cannon
+wheeled forward. The companies of the front line, with one of which
+was Harry, were now ordered to form into files and move straight
+ahead. They were to constitute the right wing of the attacking
+force, and to be led by General Howe himself. The four regiments
+composing the two rear lines moved forward and leftward, to form, with
+the troops newly landed, the left wing, which was to be under General
+Pigott. The cannonading from the river and from Boston continued.
+
+The companies with which was Harry advanced slowly, having to pass
+through high grass, over stone fences, under a roasting sun. These
+companies were moving towards the hay-thatched rail fence that
+straggled down the hillside from the breastwork north of the redoubt.
+Harry had a vague sense that the left wing was ascending the
+southeastern side of the hill, towards the redoubt, at the same time.
+His eye caught the view at either side. Long files of scarlet coats,
+steel bayonets, grenadiers' tall caps. He looked ahead. The stretch of
+green, grassy hillside, the hay-covered rail fence looking like a
+hedge-row, the rude breastwork, the blue sky. Suddenly there came from
+the rail fence the belching of field-pieces. Two grenadiers fell at
+the right of Harry. One moaned, the other was silent. Harry, shocked
+into a sense that war was begun between his King and his people,
+instantly resolved to strike no blow that day against his people. But
+this was no time for leaving the ranks. Mechanically he marched on.
+
+Heads appeared over the fence-rail, guns were rested on it, and there
+came from it some irregular flashes of musketry. Then Harry saw a man
+moving his head and arms, as if shouting and gesticulating. The musket
+flashes ceased. Harry did not know it then, but the man was Putnam,
+and he was commanding the Yankees to reserve their fire. The British
+files were now ordered to deploy into line, and fire. They did so as
+they advanced, firing in machine-like unison, as if on parade, but
+aiming high. Nearer and nearer, as Harry went forward, rose the fence
+ahead and the breastwork on the hill towards the left. Why did not the
+Yankees fire? Were they, indeed, paralyzed with fear at sight of the
+lines of the King's grenadiers?
+
+All at once blazed forth the answer,--such a volley of musketry, at
+close range, as British grenadiers had not faced before. Down went
+officers and men, in twos and threes and rows. Great gaps were cut in
+the scarlet lines. The broken columns returned the volley, but there
+came another. Harry found himself in the midst of quivering, writhing,
+yelling death. The British who were left,--startled, amazed,--turned
+and fled. As mechanically as he had come up, did Harry go back in the
+common movement. General Howe showed astonishment. The left wing, too,
+had been hurled back, down the hill, by death-dealing volleys. The
+rabble had held their rude works against the King's choice troops.
+Never had as many officers been killed or wounded in a single charge.
+There had not been such mowing down at Fontenoy or Montmorenci. These
+unmilitary Yankees actually aimed when they fired, each at some
+particular mark! Harry had heard them cheering, and had thought they
+were about to pursue the King's troops; they had evidently been
+ordered back.
+
+The troops re-formed by the shore. Orders came for another assault.
+Back again went Harry with the right wing, bearing the colors as
+before. He had secretly an exquisite heart-quickening elation at the
+success of his countrymen. If they should win the day, and hold this
+hill, and drive the King's troops from Boston! He knew, at last, on
+which side his heart was.
+
+There was more play of artillery during this second charge. Harry
+could see, too, that the village of Charlestown was on fire, sending
+flames, sparks, and smoke far towards the sky. It was not as easy to
+go to the charge this time, there were so many dead bodies in the way.
+But the soldiers stepped over them, and maintained the straightness of
+their lines. Again it seemed as if the rebels would never fire. Again,
+when the King's troops were but a few rods from them, came that
+flaming, low-aimed discharge. But the troops marched on, in the face
+of it, till the very officers who urged them forward fell before it;
+then they wavered, turned, and ran. Harry's joy, as he went with them,
+increased, and his hopes mounted. The left wing, too, had been thrown
+back a second time.
+
+There was a long wait, and the generals were seen consulting. At last
+a third charge was ordered. This time the greater part of the right
+wing was led up the hill against the breastwork. With this part was
+Harry. One more volley from the rebel defences met the King's troops.
+They wavered slightly, then sprang forward, ready for another. But
+another came not. The rebels' ammunition was giving out. Harry's
+heart fell. The British forced the breastwork, carrying him along. He
+found himself at the northern end of the redoubt. Some privates lifted
+him to the parapet; he and a sergeant mounted at the same time, and
+leaped together into the redoubt. They saw Lieutenant Richardson, of
+the Royal Irish Regiment, appear on the southern parapet, give a shout
+of triumph, and fall dead from a Yankee musket-ball. A whole rank that
+followed him was served likewise, but others surged over the parapet
+in their places. The rebels were defending mainly the southern
+parapet. Many were retreating by the rear passageway. Harry saw that
+the King's troops had won the redoubt. He took his resolution. He
+threw the colors to the sergeant, pulled off his coat, handed it to
+the same sergeant, shouting into the man's ear, "Give it to the
+colonel, with the letter in the pocket;" picked up a dead man's
+musket, and ran to the aid of a tall, powerful rebel who was parrying
+with a sword the bayonets of three British privates. The tramp of the
+retreating rebels, invading British, and hand-to-hand fighters raised
+a blinding dust. Harry and the tall American, gaining a breathing
+moment, strode together with long steps, guarding their flank and
+rear, to the passageway and out of it; and then fought their course
+between two divisions of British, which had turned the outer corners
+of the redoubt. There was no firing here, so closely mingled were
+British and rebels, the former too exhausted to use forcibly their
+bayonets. So Harry retreated, beside the tall man, with the rebels. A
+British cheer behind him told the result of the day; but Harry cared
+little. His mind was at ease; he was on the right side at last.
+
+[Illustration: "'GIVE IT TO THE COLONEL.'"]
+
+Thus did young Mr. Peyton serve on both sides in the same battle,
+being with each in the time of its defeat, striking no blow against
+his country, yet deserting not the King's army till the moment of its
+victory. His act was indeed desertion, desertion to the enemy, and in
+time of action; for, though his resignation was written, it was not
+only unaccepted, but even undelivered. Thus did he render himself
+liable, under the laws of war, to an ignominious death should he ever
+fall into the hands of the King's troops.
+
+During the flight to Cambridge, Harry was separated from the tall man
+with whom he had come from the redoubt, but soon saw him again, this
+time directing the retreat, and learned that he was Colonel Prescott,
+of Pepperell. Some of the rebels discussed Harry freely in his own
+hearing, inferring from his attire that he was of the British, and
+wondering why he was not a prisoner. Harry asked to be taken to the
+commander, and at Cambridge a coatless, bare-headed captain led him
+to General Ward, of the Massachusetts force. That veteran militiaman
+heard his story, gave it credit, and, with no thought that he might be
+a spy, invited him to remain at the camp as a volunteer. Harry
+obtained a suit of blue clothes, and quartered in one of the Harvard
+College buildings. In a few days news came that the Congress at
+Philadelphia had resolved to organize a Continental army, of which the
+New England force at Cambridge was to be the present nucleus; that a
+general-in-chief would soon arrive to take command, and that the
+general-in-chief appointed was a Virginian,--Colonel Washington. Harry
+was jubilant.
+
+Early in July the new general arrived, and Harry paid his respects to
+him in the house of the college president. General Washington advised
+the boy to send another letter of resignation, then to go home and
+join the troops that his own State would soon be raising. On hearing
+Harry's story, Washington had given a momentary smile and a look at
+Major-General Charles Lee, who had but recently published his
+resignation of his half-pay as a retired British officer, and who did
+not know yet whether that resignation would be accepted or himself
+considered a deserter.
+
+Peyton sent a new letter of resignation to Boston, then procured a
+horse, and started to ride to Virginia. Six days later he was in New
+York. In a coffee-house where he was dining, he struck up an
+acquaintance with three young gentlemen of the city, and told his name
+and story. One of the three--a dark-eyed man--thereupon changed manner
+and said he had no time for a rascally turncoat. Harry, in hot
+resentment, replied that he would teach a damned Tory some manners. So
+the four went out of the town to Nicholas Bayard's woods, where, after
+a few passes with rapiers, the dark-eyed gentleman was disarmed, and
+admitted, with no good grace, that Harry was the better fencer. Harry
+left New York that afternoon, having learned that his antagonist was
+Mr. John Colden, son of the postmaster of New York. His grandfather
+had been lieutenant-governor.
+
+Harry had for some time thought he would prefer the cavalry, and
+he was determined, if possible, to gratify that preference in
+entering the military service of his own country. On arriving home
+he found his people strongly sympathizing with the revolt. But it was
+not until June, 1776, that Virginia raised a troop of horse. On the
+18th of that month Harry was commissioned a cornet thereof. After
+some service he found himself, March 31, 1777, cornet in the First
+Continental Dragoons. The next fall, in a skirmish after the battle
+of Brandywine, he was recognized by British officers as the former
+ensign of the Sixty-third. In the following spring, thanks to his
+activity during the British occupation of Philadelphia, he was made
+captain-lieutenant in Harry Lee's battalion of light dragoons. After
+the battle of Monmouth he was promoted, July 2, 1778, to the rank of
+captain. In the early fall of that year he was busy in partisan
+warfare between the lines of the two armies.
+
+And thus it came that he was pursuing a troop of Hessians down the New
+York and Albany post-road on a certain cold November evening. Eager on
+the chase, he was resolved to come up with them if it could be, though
+he should have to ride within gunshot of King's Bridge itself.
+Suddenly his horse gave out. He had the saddle taken from the dead
+animal and given to one of his men to bear while he himself mounted in
+front of a sergeant, for he was loath to spare a man. Approaching
+Philipse Manor-house, the party saw a boy leading horses into a
+stable. Captain Peyton ordered some of his men to patrol the road, and
+with the rest he went on to the manor-house lawn.
+
+Here he gave further directions, dismounted, knocked at the door, and
+was admitted to the hall where were Miss Elizabeth Philipse, Major
+Colden, Miss Sally Williams, and old Matthias Valentine; and, on
+Elizabeth's demand, announced his name and rank.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE BLACK HORSE.
+
+
+Thanks to the dimness, to his uniform, and to his swift entrance,
+Peyton had not been recognized by Major Colden until he had given his
+name. That name had on the major the effect of an apparition, and he
+stepped back into the dark corner of the hall, drawing his cloak yet
+closer about him. This alarm and movement were not noticed by the
+others, as Peyton was the object of every gaze but his own, which was
+fixed on Elizabeth.
+
+"What do you want?" her voice rang out, while she frowned from her
+place on the staircase, in cold resentment. Her aunt, meanwhile, made
+the newcomer a tremulous curtsey.
+
+"I want to see the person in charge of this house, and I want a
+horse," replied Peyton, with more promptitude than gentleness, yet
+with strict civility. Elizabeth's manner would have nettled even a
+colder man.
+
+Elizabeth did not keep him waiting for an answer.
+
+"I am at present mistress of this house, and I am neither selling
+horses nor giving them!"
+
+Peyton stared up at her in wonderment.
+
+The candle-flame struggled against the wind, turning this way and
+that, and made the vague shadows of the people and of the slender
+balusters dance on floor and wall. From without came the sound of
+Peyton's horses pawing, and of his men speaking to one another in low
+tones.
+
+"Your pardon, madam," said Peyton, "but a horse I must have. The
+service I am on permits no delay--"
+
+"I doubt not!" broke in Elizabeth. "The Hessians are probably chasing
+you."
+
+"On the contrary, I am chasing the Hessians. At Boar Hill, yonder, my
+horse gave out. 'Tis important my troops lose no time. Passing here,
+we saw horses being led into your stable. I ordered one of my men to
+take the best of your beasts, and put my saddle on it,--and he is now
+doing so."
+
+"How dare you, sir!" and Elizabeth came quickly to the foot of the
+stairs, a picture of regal, flaming wrath.
+
+"Why, madam," said Peyton, "'tis for the service of the army. I
+require the horse, and I have come here to pay for it--"
+
+"It is not for sale--"
+
+"That makes no difference. You know the custom of war."
+
+"The custom of robbery!" cried Elizabeth.
+
+Captain Peyton reddened.
+
+"Robbery is not the custom of Harry Lee's dragoons, madam," said he,
+"whatever be the practice of the wretched 'Skinners' or of De Lancey's
+Tory Cowboys. I shall pay you as you choose,--with a receipt to
+present at the quartermaster's office, or with Continental bills."
+
+"Continental rubbish!"
+
+And, indeed, Elizabeth was not far from the truth in the appellation
+so contemptuously hurled.
+
+"You prefer that, do you?" said Peyton, unruffled; whereupon he took
+from within his waistcoat a long, thick pocketbook, and from that a
+number of bills; which must have been for high amounts, for he rapidly
+counted out only a score or two of them, repocketing the rest, and at
+that time, thereabouts, "a rat in shape of a horse," as Washington
+himself had complained a month before, was "not to be bought for less
+than L200."[4] Peyton handed her the bills he had counted out.
+"There's a fair price, then," said he; "allowing for depreciation. The
+current rate is five to one,--I allow six."
+
+Elizabeth looked disdainfully at the proffered bills, and made no move
+to take them.
+
+"Pah!" she cried. "I wouldn't touch your wretched Continental trash. I
+wouldn't let one of my black women put her hair up in it. Money, do
+you call it? I wouldn't give a shilling of the King for a houseful of
+it."
+
+"I beg your pardon," said Peyton, cheerfully. "Since July in '76 there
+has been no king in America. I leave the bills, madam." He laid them
+on the newel post, beside the candlestick. "'Tis all I can do, and
+more than many a man would do, seeing that Colonel Philipse, the owner
+of this place, is no friend to the American cause, and may fairly be
+levied on as an enemy--"
+
+"Colonel Philipse is my father!"
+
+"Then I'm glad I've been punctilious in the matter," said Peyton, but
+without any increase of deference. "Egad, I think I've been as
+scrupulous as the commander-in-chief himself!"
+
+"The commander-in-chief!" echoed Elizabeth. "Sir Henry Clinton pays in
+gold."
+
+"I meant _our_ commander-in-chief," with a suavity most irritating.
+
+"Mr. Washington!" said Elizabeth, scornfully, with a slight emphasis
+on the "Mr."
+
+"His Excellency, General Washington." Peyton spoke as one would in
+gently correcting a child who was impolite. Then he added, "I think
+the horse is now ready; so I bid you good evening!"
+
+And he strode towards the door.
+
+Elizabeth was now fully awake to the certainty that one of the horses
+would indeed be taken. At Peyton's movement she ran to the door,
+reaching it before he did, and looked out. What she saw, transformed
+her into a very fury.
+
+"Oh, this outrage!" she cried, facing about and addressing those in
+the hall. "It is my Cato they are leading out! My Cato! Under my very
+eyes! I forbid it! He shall not go! Where are Cuff and the servants?
+Why don't they prevent? And you, Jack?"
+
+She turned to Colden for the first time since Peyton's arrival.
+
+"My troop would make short work of any who interfered, madam," said
+Peyton, warningly, still looking at Elizabeth only.
+
+"Oh, that I should have to endure this!" she said. "Oh, if I had but a
+company of soldiers at my back, you dog of a rebel!"
+
+And she paced the hall in a great passion. Passing the newel post, she
+noticed the Continental bills. She took these up, violently tore them
+across, and threw the pieces about the hall, as one tosses corn about
+a chicken-yard.
+
+Major Colden had been having a most uncomfortable five minutes. As a
+Tory officer, he was in close peril of being made prisoner by this
+Continental captain and the latter's troop outside, and this peril was
+none the less since he had so adversely criticised Peyton in the talk
+which had led to the duel in Bayard's woods. He had not put himself
+on friendly terms with Peyton after that affair. There was still no
+reason for any other feeling towards him, on Peyton's part, than
+resentment. Now Jack Colden had no relish for imprisonment at the
+hands of the despised rebels. Moreover, he had no wish that Elizabeth
+should learn of his former defeat by Peyton. He had kept the meeting
+in Bayard's woods a secret, thanks to Peyton's having quitted New York
+immediately after it, and to the relation of dependence in which the
+two only witnesses stood to him. Thus it was that he had remained well
+out of view during Elizabeth's sharp interview with Peyton, being
+unwilling alike to be known as a Tory officer, and to be recognized by
+Peyton. His civilian's cloak hid his uniform and weapons; the dimness
+of the candle-light screened his face.
+
+But matters had reached a point where he could not, without appearing
+a coward, refrain longer from taking a hand. He stepped forward from
+the dark remoteness.
+
+"Sir," said he to Peyton, politely, "I know the custom of war. But
+since a horse must be taken, you will find one of mine in the stable.
+Will you not take it instead of this lady's?"
+
+Peyton had been scrutinizing Colden's features.
+
+"Mr. Colden, if I remember," he said, when the major had finished.
+
+"You remember right," said Colden, with a bow, concealing behind a not
+too well assumed quietude what inward tremors the situation caused
+him.
+
+"And you are doubtless now an officer in some Tory corps?" said
+Peyton, quickly.
+
+"No, sir, I am neutral," replied Colden, rather huskily, with an
+instant's glance of warning at Elizabeth.
+
+"Gad!" said Peyton, with a smile, still closely surveying the major.
+"From your sentiments the time I met you in New York in '75, I should
+have thought you'd take up arms for the King."
+
+"That was before the Declaration of Independence," said Colden, in a
+tone scarcely more than audible. "I have modified my opinions."
+
+"They were strong enough then," Peyton went on. "You remember how you
+upheld them with a rapier in Bayard's woods?"
+
+"I remember," said Colden, faintly, first reddening, then taking on a
+pale and sickly look, as if a prey to hidden chagrin and rage.
+
+It seemed as if his tormentor intended to torture him interminably.
+Peyton, who knew that one of his men would come for him as soon as the
+horse should be saddled and bridled, remained facing the unhappy
+major, wearing that frank half-smile which, from the triumphant to the
+crestfallen, seems so insolent and is so maddening.
+
+"I've often thought," said Peyton, "I deserved small credit for
+getting the better of you that day. I had taken lessons from London
+fencing-masters." (Consider that the woman whom Colden loved was
+looking on, and that this was all news to her, and imagine how he
+raged beneath the outer calmness he had, for safety's sake, to wear.)
+"'Twas no hard thing to disarm you, and I'm not sorry you're neutral
+now. For if you wore British or Tory uniform, 'twould be my duty to
+put you again at disadvantage, by taking you prisoner."
+
+The face of one of Peyton's men now appeared in the doorway. Peyton
+nodded to him, then continued to address the major.
+
+"As for your request, my traps are now on the other horse, and there
+is not time to change. I must ride at once."
+
+He stepped quickly to the door, and on the threshold turned to bow.
+
+Then cried Elizabeth:
+
+"May you ride to your destruction, for your impudence, you bandit!"
+
+"Thank you, madam! I shall ride where I must! Farewell! My horse is
+waiting."
+
+And in an instant he was gone, having closed the door after him with a
+bang.
+
+"_His_ horse! The highwayman!" quoth Elizabeth.
+
+"Give the gentleman his due," said Miss Sally, in a way both mollified
+and mollifying. "He paid for it with those." She indicated the strewn
+fragments of the Continental bills on the floor.
+
+"Forward! Get up!"
+
+It was the voice of Captain Peyton outside. The horses were heard
+riding away from the lawn.
+
+Elizabeth opened the door and looked out. Her aunt accompanied her.
+Old Valentine gazed with a sagely deploring expression at the torn-up
+bills on the floor. Colden stood where he had been, lest by some
+chance the enemy might return and discover his relief from straint.
+
+"Oh," cried Elizabeth, at the door, as the light horsemen filed out
+the gate and up the branch road towards the highway, "to see the
+miserable rebel mounted on my Cato!"
+
+"He looks well on him," said her aunt.
+
+It was a brief flow of light from the fresh-risen moon, between
+wind-driven clouds, that enabled Miss Sally to make this observation.
+
+"Looks well! The tatterdemalion!" And Elizabeth came from the door, as
+if loathing further sight of him.
+
+But Miss Sally continued to look after the riders, as their dark forms
+were borne rapidly towards the post-road. "Nay, I think he is quite
+handsome."
+
+"Pah! You think every man is handsome!" said the niece, curtly.
+
+Miss Sally turned from the door, quite shocked.
+
+"Why, Elizabeth, you know I'm the least susceptible of women!"
+
+Old Mr. Valentine nodded sadly, as much as to say, "I know that, all
+too well!"
+
+As the racing clouds now rushed over the moon, and the horsemen's
+figures, having become more and more blurred, were lost in the
+blackness, Miss Sally closed and bolted the door. The horses were
+faintly heard coming to a halt, at about the junction of the branch
+road with the highway, then moving on again rapidly, not further
+towards the south, as might have been expected, but back northward,
+and finally towards the east. Meanwhile Elizabeth stood in the hall,
+her rage none the less that its object was no longer present to have
+it wreaked on him. Such hate, such passionate craving for revenge, had
+never theretofore been awakened in her. And when she realized the
+unlikelihood of any opportunity for satisfaction, she was exasperated
+to the limit of self-control.
+
+"If you had only had some troops here!" she said to Colden.
+
+"I know it! May the rascal perish for finding me at such a disadvantage!
+'Twas my choice between denying my colors and becoming his prisoner."
+
+This brought back to Elizabeth's mind the talk between Colden and
+Peyton, which her feelings had for the time driven from her thoughts.
+But now a natural curiosity asserted itself.
+
+"So you knew the fellow before?"
+
+"I met him in '75," said Colden, blurting awkwardly into the
+explanation that he knew had to be made, though little was his stomach
+for it. "He was passing through New York from Boston to his home in
+Virginia, after he had deserted from the King's army--"
+
+"Deserted?" Elizabeth opened wide her eyes.
+
+Colden briefly outlined, as far as was desirable, what he knew of
+Peyton's story.
+
+It was Miss Sally who then said:
+
+"And he disarmed you in a duel?"
+
+"He had practised under London fencing-masters, as he but now
+admitted," replied Colden, grumpily. "He made no secret of his
+desertion; and in a coffee-house discussion I said it was a dastardly
+act. So we--fought. Since then I've met officers of the regiment he
+left. Such a thing was never known before,--the desertion of an
+officer of the Sixty-third,--and General Grant, its colonel, has the
+word of Sir Henry Clinton that this fellow shall hang if they ever
+catch him."
+
+"Then I hope my horse will carry him into their hands!" said
+Elizabeth, heartily. "My poor Cato! I shall never see him again!"
+
+"We may get him back some day," said Colden, for want of aught better
+to say.
+
+"If you can do that, John Colden, and have this rebel hanged who dared
+treat me so--" Elizabeth paused, and her look dwelt on the major's
+face.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Then I think I shall almost be really in love with you!"
+
+But Colden sighed. "A rare promise from one's betrothed!"
+
+"Heavens, Jack!" said Elizabeth, now diverted from the thought of her
+horse. "Don't I do the best I can to love you? I'm sure I come as near
+loving you as loving anybody. What more can I do than that, and
+promising my hand? Don't look dismal, major, I pray,--and now make
+haste back to New York."
+
+"How can I go and leave you exposed to the chance of another visit
+from some troop of rebels?" pleaded Colden, in a kind of peevish
+despair, taking up his hat from the settle.
+
+"Oh, that fellow showed no disposition to injure _me_!" she answered,
+reassuringly. "Trust me to take care of myself."
+
+"But promise that if there's any sign of danger, you will fly to New
+York."
+
+"That will depend on the circumstances. I may be safer in this house
+than on the road."
+
+"Then, at least, you will have guns fired, and also send a man to one
+of our outposts for help?" There was no pretence in the young man's
+solicitude. Such a bride as Elizabeth Philipse was not to be found
+every day. The thought of losing her was poignant misery to him.
+
+"To which one?" she asked. "The Hessian camp by Tippett's Brook, or
+the Highlanders', at Valentine's Hill?"
+
+"No," said Colden, meditating. "Those may be withdrawn if the weather
+is bad. Send to the barrier at King's Bridge,--but if your man meets
+one of our patrols or pickets on the way, so much the better. Good-by!
+I shall see your father to-night, and then rejoin my regiment on
+Staten Island."
+
+He took her hand, bent over it, and kissed it.
+
+"Be careful you don't fall in with those rebel dragoons," said
+Elizabeth, lightly, as his lips dwelt on her fingers.
+
+"No danger of that," put in old Valentine, from the settle, for the
+moment ceasing to chew an imaginary cud. "They took the road to Mile
+Square." The octogenarian's hearing was better than his sight.
+
+"I shall notify our officers below that this rebel force is out," said
+Colden, "and our dragoons may cut it off somewhere. Farewell, then! I
+shall return for you in a week."
+
+"In a week," repeated Elizabeth, indifferently.
+
+He kissed her hand again, bowed to Miss Sally, and hastened from the
+hall, closing the door behind him. Once outside, he made his way to
+the stables, where he knew that Cuff, not having returned to
+Elizabeth, must still be.
+
+"It's little reward you give that gentleman's devotion, Elizabeth,"
+said Miss Sally, when he had gone.
+
+"Why, am I not going to give him myself? Come, aunty, don't preach on
+that old topic. My parents wish me to be married to Jack Colden, and I
+have consented, being an obedient child,--in some things."
+
+"More obedient to your own whims than to anything else," was Miss
+Sally's comment.
+
+The sound of Colden's horse departing brought to the amiable aunt the
+thought of a previous departure.
+
+"That fine young rebel captain!" said she. "If our troops take him
+they'll hang him! Gracious! As if there were so many handsome young
+men that any could be spared! Why can't they hang the old and ugly
+ones instead?"
+
+Mr. Valentine suspended his chewing long enough to bestow on Miss
+Sally a look of vague suspicion.
+
+The door, which had not been locked or bolted after Colden's going,
+was suddenly flung open to admit Cuff. The negro boy had been thrown
+by the dragoons' visit into an almost comatose condition of fright,
+from which the orders of Colden had but now sufficiently restored him
+to enable his venturing out of the stable. He now stood trembling in
+fear of Elizabeth's reproof, stammering out a wild protestation of his
+inability to save the horse by force, and of his inefficacious
+attempts to save him by prayer.
+
+Elizabeth cut him short with the remark, intended rather for her own
+satisfaction than for aught else, that one thing was to be hoped,--the
+chance of war might pay back the impertinent rebel who had stolen the
+horse. She then gave orders that the hall and the east parlor be
+lighted up.
+
+"For the proper reception," she added to her aunt, "of the next
+handsome rebel captain who may condescend to honor us with a visit.
+Mr. Valentine, wait in the parlor till supper is ready. I'll have a
+fire made there. Come, aunt Sally, we'll discuss over a cup of tea the
+charms of your pretty rebel captain and his agreeable way of relieving
+ladies of their favorite horses. I'll warrant he'll look handsomer
+than ever, on the gallows, when our soldiers catch him."
+
+And she went blithely up the stairs, which at the first landing turned
+rightward to a second landing, and thence rightward again to the upper
+hall. The darkness was interrupted by a narrow stream of light from a
+slightly open doorway in the north side of this upper hall. This was
+the doorway to her own room, and when she crossed the threshold she
+saw a bright blaze in the fireplace, lights in a candelabrum, cups and
+saucers on a table, and Molly bringing in a steaming teapot from the
+next room, which, being northward, was nearer the kitchen stairs. This
+next room, too, was lighted up. Solid wooden shutters, inside the
+windows of both chambers, kept the light from being seen without, and
+the wind from being felt within.
+
+As Elizabeth was looking around her room, smiling affectionately on
+its many well-remembered and long-neglected objects, there was a
+sudden distant detonation. Molly looked up inquiringly, but Elizabeth
+directed her to place the tea things, find fresh candles, if any were
+left in the house, and help Cuff put them on the chandelier in the
+lower hall, and then get supper. As Molly left the room, Miss Sally
+entered it.
+
+"Elizabeth! Oh, child! There's firing beyond Locust Hill. It's on the
+Mile Square road, Mr. Valentine says,--cavalry pistols and rangers'
+muskets."
+
+"Mr. Valentine has a fine ear."
+
+"He says the rebel light horse must have met the Hessians! There 'tis
+again!"
+
+"Sit down, aunt, and have a dish of tea. Ah-h! This is comfortable!
+Delicious! Let them kill one another as they please, beyond Locust
+Hill; let the wind race up the Hudson and the Albany road as it
+likes,--we're snugly housed!"
+
+Williams, who had, from the upper hall, safely overheard Captain
+Peyton's intrusion, and had not seen occasion for his own interference,
+now came in from the next room, which he had been making ready for Miss
+Sally, and received Elizabeth's orders concerning the east parlor.
+
+Meanwhile, what of Harry Peyton and his troop?
+
+Riding up the little tree-lined road towards the highway, they saw
+dark forms of other riders standing at the point of junction. These
+were the men whom Peyton had directed to patrol the road. They now
+told him that, by the account of a belated farmer whom they had
+halted, the Hessians had turned from the highway into the Mile Square
+road. Peyton immediately led his men to that road. Thus, as old
+Valentine said, that part of the highway between the manor-house and
+King's Bridge remained clear of these rebel dragoons, and Major Colden
+stood in no danger of meeting them on his return to New York. The
+major, nevertheless, did not spare his horse as he pursued his lonely
+way through the windy darkness. When he arrived at King's Bridge he
+was glad to give his horse another rest, and to accept an invitation
+to a bottle and a game in the tavern where the British commanding
+officer was quartered.
+
+The Hessians had not gone far on the Mile Square road, when their
+leader called a halt and consulted with his subordinate officer. They
+were now near Mile Square, where the Tory captain, James De Lancey,
+kept a recruiting station all the year round, and Valentine's Hill,
+where there was a regiment of Highlanders. Their own security was
+thus assured, but they might do more than come off in safety,--they
+might strike a parting blow at their pursuers. A plan was quickly
+formed. A messenger was despatched to Mile Square to request a small
+reinforcement. The troop then turned back towards the highway, having
+planned for either one of two possibilities. The first was that the
+rebel dragoons, not thinking the Hessians had turned into the Mile
+Square road, would ride on down the highway. In that case, the
+Hessians would follow them, having become in their turn the
+pursuers, and would fall upon their rear. The noise of firearms would
+alarm the Hessian camp by Tippett's Brook, below, and the rebels
+would thus be caught between two forces. The second possibility was
+that the Americans would follow into the Mile Square road. When the
+sound of their horses soon told that this was the reality, the
+Hessians promptly prepared to meet it.
+
+The force divided into two parts. The foremost blocked the road, near
+a turning, so as to remain unseen by the approaching rebels until
+almost the moment of collision. The second force stayed some rods
+behind the first, forming in two lines, one along each side of the
+road. As to each force, some were armed with sabres and cavalry
+pistols, but most, being mounted yagers of Van Wrumb's battalion, with
+rifles.
+
+As for the little detachment of Lee's Light Horse that was now
+galloping along the Mile Square road, under Harry Peyton's command,
+the arms were mainly broadswords and pistols, but some of the men had
+rifles or light muskets.
+
+The troop went forward at a gallop against the wind, there being
+just sufficient light for keen eyes to make out the road ahead.
+Harry Peyton was inwardly deploring the loss of time at Philipse
+Manor-house, and fearing that the prey would reach its covert, when
+suddenly the moon appeared in a cloud-rift, the troops passed a turn
+in the road, and there stood a line of Hessians barring the way.
+
+Ere Peyton could give an order, came one loud, flaming, whistling
+discharge from that living barrier. Harry's horse--Elizabeth
+Philipse's Cato--reared, as did others of his troop. Some of the men
+came to a quick stop, others were borne forward by the impetus of
+their former speed, but soon reined in for orders. No man fell, though
+one groaned, and two cursed.
+
+Harry got his horse under control, drew his broadsword with his right
+hand, his pistol with his left,--which held also the rein,--and
+ordered his men to charge, to fire at the moment of contact, then to
+cut, slash, and club. So the little troop, the well and the wounded
+alike, dashed forward.
+
+But the line of Hessians, as soon as they had fired, turned and fled,
+passing between the two lines of the second force, and stopping at
+some further distance to reform and reload. The second force, being
+thus cleared by the first, wheeled quickly into the road, and formed a
+second barrier against Peyton's oncoming troop.
+
+Peyton's men, intoxicated by the powder-smell that filled their
+nostrils as they passed through the smoke of the Hessians' first
+volley, bore down on this second barrier with furious force. They were
+the best riders in the world, and many a one of them held his
+broadsword aloft in one hand, his pistol raised in the other, the rein
+loose on his horse's neck; while those with long-barrelled weapons
+aimed them on the gallop.
+
+The Hessians and Peyton's foremost men fired at the same moment. The
+Hessians had not time to turn and flee, for the Americans, unchecked
+by this second greeting of fire, came on at headlong speed. "At 'em,
+boys!" yelled Peyton, discharging his pistol at a tall yager, who fell
+sidewise from his horse with a fierce German oath. The light horse
+men dashed between the Hessians' steeds, and there was hewing and
+hacking.
+
+A Hessian officer struck with a sabre at Peyton's left arm, but only
+knocked the pistol from his hand. Peyton then found himself threatened
+on the right by a trooper, and slashed at him with broadsword. The
+blow went home, but the sword's end became entangled somehow with the
+breast bones of the victim. A yager, thinking to deprive Peyton of the
+sword, brought down a musket-butt heavily on it. But Peyton's grip was
+firm, and the sword snapped in two, the hilt in his hand, the point in
+its human sheath. At that instant Peyton felt a keen smart in his left
+leg. It came from a second sabre blow aimed by the Hessian officer,
+who might have followed it with a third, but that he was now attacked
+elsewhere. Peyton had no sooner clapped his hand to his wounded leg
+than he was stunned by a blow from the rifle-butt of the yager who had
+previously struck the sword. Harry fell forward on the horse's neck,
+which he grasped madly with both arms, still holding the broken sword
+in his right hand; and lapsed from a full sense of the tumult, the
+plunging and shrieking horses, the yelling and cursing men, the whirr
+and clash of swords, and the thuds of rifle-blows, into blind, red,
+aching, smarting half-consciousness.
+
+When he was again aware of things, he was still clasping the horse's
+neck, and was being borne alone he knew not whither. His head ached,
+and his left leg was at every movement a seat of the sharpest pain. He
+was dizzy, faint, bleeding,--and too weak to raise himself from his
+position. He could not hear any noise of fighting, but that might have
+been drowned by the singing in his ears. He tried to sit up and look
+around, but the effort so increased his pain and so drew on his
+nigh-fled strength, that he fell forward on the horse's neck,
+exhausted and half-insensible. The horse, which had merely turned and
+run from the conflict at the moment of Peyton's loss of sense,
+galloped on.
+
+Clouds had darkened the moon in time to prevent their captain's
+unintentional defection from being seen by his troops. They had,
+therefore, fought on against such antagonists as, in the darkness,
+they could keep located. The moon reappeared, and showed many of the
+Hessians making for the wooded hill near by, and some fleeing to the
+force that had re-formed further on the road. Some of the Americans
+charged this force, which thereupon fired a volley and fled, having
+the more time therefor inasmuch as the charging dragoons did not this
+time possess their former speed and impetus. The dragoons, in disorder
+and without a leader, came to a halt. Becoming aware of Peyton's
+absence, they sought in vain the scene of recent conflict. It was
+soon inferred that he had been wounded, and, therefore of no further
+use in the combat, had retreated to a safe resting-place. It was
+decided useless to follow the enemy further towards the near British
+posts, whence the Hessians might be reinforced,--as they would have
+been, had they held the ground longer. So, having had much the better
+of the fight, the surviving dragoons galloped back towards the
+post-road, expecting to come upon their captain, wounded, by the
+wayside, at any moment. He might, indeed, to make sure of safe refuge,
+ride as far towards the American lines as the wound he must have
+received would allow him to do.
+
+Such were the doings, on the windy night, beyond Locust Hill, while
+Elizabeth Philipse and her aunt sat drinking tea by candle-light
+before a sputtering wood fire. Elizabeth having set the example, the
+others in the house went about their business, despite the firing so
+plainly heard. Black Sam had, after Elizabeth's arrival, returned from
+the orchard, whither he had gone late in the day, lest he might
+attract the attention of some dodging whale-boat or skulking Whig to
+the few remaining apples. He had been let in at a rear door by
+Williams, who had repressed him during the visit of the American
+dragoons,--for Sam was a sturdy, bold fellow, of different kidney from
+the dapper, citified Cuff. At Williams's order he had made a roaring
+fire in the east parlor, to the great comfort of old Mr. Valentine,
+and was now putting the dining-room into a similar state of warmth and
+light. Williams was setting out provisions for Molly presently to
+cook; and the maid herself was, with Cuff's assistance, replenishing
+the hall chandelier with fresh candles.
+
+The sound of firing had put Elizabeth's black boy into a tremulous and
+white-eyed state. When Molly, who stood on the settle while he handed
+the candles up to her, assured him that the firing was t'other side of
+Locust Hill, that the bullets would not penetrate the mahogany door,
+and that anyhow only one bullet in a hundred ever hit any one, Cuff
+affrightedly observed 'twas just that one bullet he was afraid of; and
+when, at the third discharge, Molly dropped a candle on his woolly
+head, he fell prostrate, howling that he was shot. Molly convinced him
+after awhile that he was alive, but he averred he had actually had a
+glimpse of the harps and the golden streets, though the prospect of
+soon possessing them had rather appalled him, as indeed it does many
+good people who are so sure of heaven and so fond of it. He had been
+reassured but a short time, when he had new cause for terror. Again a
+horse was heard galloping up to the house. It stopped before the door
+and gave a loud whinny.
+
+[Illustration: "LEANED FORWARD ON THE HORSE'S NECK."]
+
+Molly exchanged with Cuff a look of mingled wonder, delight, and
+doubt; then ran and opened the front door.
+
+"Yes!" she cried. "It is! It's Miss Elizabeth's horse! It's Cato!"
+
+Cuff ran to the threshold in great joy, but suddenly stopped short.
+
+"Dey's a soldier on hees back," he whispered.
+
+So Molly had noticed,--but a soldier who made no demonstration, a
+soldier who leaned forward on the horse's neck and clutched its mane,
+holding at the same time in one hand a broken sword, and who tried to
+sit up, but only emitted a groan of pain.
+
+"He's wounded, that's it," said Molly. "Go and help the poor soldier
+in, Cuff. Don't you see he's injured? He can't hurt you."
+
+Molly enforced her commands with such physical persuasions that Cuff,
+ere he well knew what he was about, was helping Peyton from the horse.
+The captain, revived by a supreme effort, leaned on the boy's shoulder
+and came limping and lurching across the porch into the hall. Molly
+then went to his assistance, and with this additional aid he reached
+the settle, on which he dropped, weak, pale, and panting. He took a
+sitting posture, gasped his thanks to Molly, and, noticing the blood
+from his leg wound, called damnation on the Hessian officer's sword.
+Presently he asked for a drink of water.
+
+At Molly's bidding the negro boy hastened for water, and also to
+inform his mistress of the arrival. Elizabeth, hearing the news, rose
+with an exclamation; but, taking thought, sat down again, and, with a
+pretence of composure, finished her cup of tea. Cuff returned with a
+glass of water to the hall, where Molly was listening to Peyton's
+objurgations on his condition. The captain took the glass eagerly, and
+was about to drink, when a footstep was heard on the stairs. He turned
+his head and saw Elizabeth.
+
+"Here's my respects, madam," quoth he, and drank off the water.
+
+Elizabeth came down-stairs and took a position where she could look
+Peyton well over. He watched her with some wonderment. When she was
+quite ready she spoke:
+
+"So, it is, indeed, the man who stole my horse."
+
+"Pardon. I think your horse has stolen _me_! It made me an intruder
+here quite against my will, I assure you."
+
+"You will doubtless not honor us by remaining?" There was more
+seriousness of curiosity in this question than Elizabeth betrayed or
+Peyton perceived.
+
+"What can I do? I can neither ride nor walk."
+
+"But your men will probably come for you?"
+
+"I don't think any saw the horse bear me from the fight. The field was
+in smoke and darkness. My troops must have pursued the enemy. They'll
+think me killed or made prisoner. If they return this way, however, I
+can have them stop and take me along."
+
+"Then you expect that, in repayment of your treatment of me awhile
+ago--" Elizabeth paused.
+
+"Madam, you should allow for the exigencies of war! Yet, if you wish
+to turn me out--"
+
+Elizabeth interrupted him:
+
+"So it is true that, if you fell into the hands of the British, they
+would hang you?"
+
+"Doubtless! But you shouldn't blame _me_ for what _they'd_ do. And how
+did you know?"
+
+"Help this gentleman into the east parlor," said Elizabeth, abruptly,
+to Cuff.
+
+"Ah!" cried Peyton, his face lighting up with quick gratitude. "Madam,
+you then make me your guest?" He thrust forward his head, forgetful of
+his condition.
+
+"My guest?" rang out Elizabeth's voice in answer. "You insolent rebel,
+I intend to hand you over to the British!"
+
+There was a brief silence. Each gazed at the other.
+
+"You will not--do that?" said Peyton, in a voice little above a
+whisper.
+
+"Wait and see!" And she stood regarding him with elation.
+
+He stared at her in blank consternation.
+
+Again, the sound of the trample of many horses.
+
+"Ah!" cried Peyton, joyfully. "My men returning!"
+
+He rose to go to the door, but his wounded leg gave way, and he
+staggered to the staircase, and leaned against the balustrade.
+
+Elizabeth's look of gratification faded. She ran to the door, fastened
+it with bolt and key, and stood with her back against it.
+
+The sound, first distant as if in the Mile Square road, was now
+manifestly in the highway. Would it come southward, towards the house,
+or go northward, decreasing?
+
+"They are my men!" cried Peyton to Cuff. "Call them! They'll pass
+without knowing I am here. Call them, I say! Quick! They'll be out of
+hearing."
+
+"Silence!" said Elizabeth to Cuff, in a low tone, and stood
+listening.
+
+Peyton made another attempt to move, but realized his inability. 'Twas
+all he could do to support himself against the balustrade.
+
+"My God, they've gone by!" he cried. "They'll return to our lines,
+leaving me behind." And he shouted, "Carrington!"
+
+The voice rang for a moment in the remoteness of the hall above. Then
+complete silence within. All in the hall remained motionless,
+listening. The sound of the horses came fainter and fainter.
+
+"Carrington! Help! I'm in the manor-house,--a prisoner!"
+
+A look of despair came over his face. On Elizabeth's the suspense gave
+way to a smile of triumph.
+
+The sound of the horses died away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE ONE CHANCE.
+
+
+Peyton staggered back to the settle and sank down on it, exhausted.
+Elizabeth, hearing black Sam moving about in the dining-room, which
+was directly north of the hall, bade Molly summon him. When he
+appeared, she ordered him and Cuff to carry the settle, with the
+wounded man on it, into the east parlor, and to place the man on the
+sofa there. She then told Molly to hasten the supper, and to send
+Williams to her up-stairs, and thereupon rejoined her excited aunt
+above. When Williams attended her, she gave him commands regarding the
+prisoner.
+
+Peyton was thus carried through the deep doorway in the south side of
+the hall into the east parlor, which was now exceedingly habitable
+with fire roaring and candles lighted. In the east and south sides of
+this richly ornamented room were deeply embrasured windows, with low
+seats. In the west side was a mahogany door opening from the old or
+south hall. In the north side, which was adorned with wooden pillars
+and other carved woodwork, was the door through which Peyton had been
+carried; west of that, the decorated chimney-breast with its English
+mantel and fireplace, and further west a pair of doors opening from a
+closet, whence a winding staircase descended cellarward. The ceiling
+was rich with fanciful arabesque woodwork. Set in the chimney-breast,
+over the mantel, was an oblong mirror. The wainscoting, pillars, and
+other woodwork were of a creamy white. But Peyton had no eye for
+details at the moment. He noticed only that his entrance disturbed the
+slumbers of the old gentleman--Matthias Valentine--who had been
+sleeping in a great armchair by the fire, and who now blinked in
+wonderment.
+
+The negroes put down the settle and lifted Peyton to a sofa that stood
+against the western side of the room, between a spinet and the
+northern wall. At Peyton's pantomimic request they then moved the sofa
+to a place near the fire, and then, taking the settle along, marched
+out of the room, back to the hall, closing the door as they went.
+
+Peyton, too pain-racked and exhausted to speak, lay back on the sofa,
+with closed eyes. Old Valentine stared at him a few moments; then,
+curious both as to this unexpected advent and as to the proximity of
+supper, rose and hobbled from the parlor and across the hall to the
+dining-room. For some time Peyton was left alone. He opened his eyes,
+studied the flying figures on the ceiling, the portraits on the
+walls, the carpet,--Philipse Manor-house, like the best English houses
+of the time, had carpet on its floors,--the carving of the mantel, the
+clock and candelabrum thereupon, the crossed rapiers thereabove, the
+curves of the imported furniture. His twinges and aches were so many
+and so diverse that he made no attempt to locate them separately. He
+could feel that the left leg of his breeches was soaked with blood.
+
+Finally the door opened, and in came Williams and Cuff, the former
+with shears and bands of linen, the latter with a basin of water.
+Williams, whom Peyton had not before seen, scrutinized him critically,
+and forthwith proceeded to expose, examine, wash, and bind up the
+wounded leg, while Cuff stood by and played the role of surgeon's
+assistant. Peyton speedily perceived on the steward's part a reliable
+acquaintance with the art of dressing cuts, and therefore submitted
+without a word to his operations. Williams was equally silent,
+breaking his reticence only now and then to utter some monosyllabic
+command to Cuff.
+
+When the wound was dressed, Williams put the patient's disturbed
+attire to rights, and adjusted his hair. Peyton, with a feeling of
+some relief, made to stretch the wounded leg, but a sharp twinge cut
+the movement short.
+
+"You should make a good surgeon," Peyton said at last, "you tie so
+damnably tight a bandage."
+
+"I've bound up many a wound, sir," said Williams; "and some far worse
+than yours. 'Tis not a dangerous cut, yours, though 'twill be
+irritating while it lasts. You won't walk for a day or two."
+
+"It's remarkable your mistress has so much trouble taken with me, when
+she intends to deliver me to the British."
+
+Peyton had inferred the steward's place in the house, from his
+appearance and manner.
+
+"Why, sir," said Williams, "we couldn't have you bleeding over the
+floor and furniture. Besides, I suppose she wants to hand you over in
+good condition."
+
+"I see! No bedraggled remnant of a man, but a complete, clean, and
+comfortable candidate for Cunningham's gallows!" Peyton here forgot
+his wound and attempted to sit upright, but quickly fell back with a
+grimace and a groan.
+
+"Better lie still, sir," counselled Williams, sagely. "If you need any
+one, you are to call Cuff. He will be in waiting in that hall, sir."
+And the steward pointed towards the east hall. "There will be no use
+trying to get away. I doubt if you could walk half across the room
+without fainting. And if you could get out of the house, you'd find
+black Sam on guard, with his duck-gun,--and Sam doesn't miss once in
+a hundred times with that duck-gun. Bring those things, Cuff."
+Williams indicated Peyton's hat, remnant of sword, and scabbard, which
+had been placed on the armchair by the fireside.
+
+"Leave my sword!" commanded Peyton.
+
+"Can't, sir!" said Williams, affably. "Miss Elizabeth's orders were to
+take it away."
+
+Williams thereupon went from the room, crossed the east hall, and
+entered the dining-room, to report to Elizabeth, who now sat at supper
+with Miss Sally and Mr. Valentine.
+
+Cuff, with basin of water in one hand, took up the hat, sword, and
+scabbard, with the other.
+
+"Miss Elizabeth!" mused Peyton. "Queen Elizabeth, I should say, in
+this house. Gad, to be a girl's prisoner, tied down to a sofa by so
+small a cut!" Hereupon he addressed Cuff, who was about to depart:
+"Where is your mistress?"
+
+"In the dining-room, eating supper."
+
+"And Mr. Colden, whom I saw in that hall about an hour ago, when I
+bought the horse?"
+
+"Major Colden rode back to New York."
+
+"_Major_ Colden! Major of what?"
+
+"New Juzzey Vollingteers, sir."
+
+"What? Then he is in the King's service, after all? And when I was
+here with my troops he said he was neutral. I'll never take a Tory's
+word again."
+
+"Am you like to hab de chance, sir?" queried Cuff, with a grin.
+
+"What! You taunt me with my situation?" And Harry's head shot up from
+the sofa as he made to rise and chastise the boy; but he could not
+stand on his leg, and so remained sitting, propped on his right arm,
+panting and glaring at the negro.
+
+Cuff, whose whiteness of teeth had shown in his moment of mirth, now
+displayed much whiteness of eye in his alarm at Peyton's movement, and
+glided to the door. As he went out to the hall, he passed Molly, who
+was coming into the parlor with a bowl of broth.
+
+"Hah!" ejaculated Peyton as she came towards him. "They would feed the
+animal for the slaughter, eh?"
+
+Molly curtseyed.
+
+"Please, sir, it wa'n't they sent this. I brought it of my own accord,
+sir, though with Miss Elizabeth's permission."
+
+"Oh! so Miss Elizabeth _did_ give her permission, then?"
+
+"Yes, sir. At least, she said it didn't matter, if I wished to."
+
+"And you did wish to? Well, you're a good girl, and I thank you."
+
+Whereupon Peyton took the bowl and sipped of the broth with relish.
+
+"Thank you, sir," said Molly, who then moved a small light chair from
+its place by the wall to a spot beside the sofa and within Peyton's
+reach. "You can set the bowl on this," she added. "I must go back to
+the kitchen." And, after another curtsey, she was gone.
+
+The broth revived Peyton, and with all his pain and fatigue he had
+some sense of comfort. The handsome, well warmed, well lighted parlor,
+so richly furnished, so well protected from the wind and weather by
+the solid shutters outside its four small-paned windows, was certainly
+a snug corner of the world. So far seemed all this from stress and
+war, that Peyton lost his strong realization of the fate that
+Elizabeth's threat promised him. Appreciation of his surroundings
+drove away other thoughts and feelings. That he should be taken and
+hanged was an idea so remote from his present situation, it seemed
+rather like a dream than an imminent reality. There surely would be a
+way of his getting hence in safety. And he imbibed mouthful after
+mouthful of the warm broth.
+
+Presently old Mr. Valentine reappeared, from the east hall, looking
+none the less comfortable for the supper he had eaten. A long pipe was
+in his hand, and, that he might absorb smoke and liquor at the same
+time, he had brought with him from the table, where the two ladies
+remained, a vast mug of hot rum punch of Williams's brewing. He now
+set the mug on the mantel, lighted his pipe with a brand from the
+fire, repossessed himself of the mug, and sat down in the armchair,
+with a sigh of huge satisfaction. It mattered not that this was the
+parlor of Philipse Manor-house,--for Mr. Valentine, in his innocent
+way, indulged himself freely in the privileges and presumptions of old
+age.
+
+Peyton, after staring for some time with curiosity at the smoky old
+gentleman, who rapidly grew smokier, at last raised the bowl of broth
+for a last gulp, saying, cheerily:
+
+"To your very good health, sir!"
+
+"Thank you, sir!" said the old man, complacently, not making any
+movement to reciprocate.
+
+"What! won't you drink to mine?"
+
+"'Twould be a waste of words to drink the health of a man that's going
+to be hanged," replied Valentine, who at supper had heard the ladies
+discuss Peyton's intended fate. He thereupon sent a cloud of smoke
+ceiling-ward for the flying cherubs to rest on.
+
+"The devil! You _are_ economical!"
+
+"Of words, maybe, not of liquor." The octogenarian quaffed deeply from
+the mug. "They say hanging is an easy death," he went on, being in
+loquacious mood. "I never saw but one man hanged. He didn't seem to
+enjoy it." Mr. Valentine puffed slowly, inwardly dwelling on the
+recollection.
+
+"Oh, didn't he?" said Peyton.
+
+"No, he took it most unpleasant like."
+
+"Did you come in here to cheer me up in my last hours?" queried Harry,
+putting the empty bowl on the chair by the sofa.
+
+"No," replied the other, ingenuously. "I came in for a smoke while the
+ladies stayed at the table." He then went back to a subject that
+seemed to have attractions for him. "I don't know how hanging will go
+with you. Cunningham will do the work.[5] They say he makes it as
+disagreeable as may be. I'd come and see you hanged, but it won't be
+possible."
+
+"Then I suppose I shall have to excuse you," said Peyton, with
+resignation.
+
+"Yes." The old man had finished his punch and set down his mug, and he
+now yawned with a completeness that revealed vastly more of red
+toothless mouth than one might have calculated his face could contain.
+"Some take it easier than others," he went on. "It's harder with young
+men like you." Again he opened his jaws in a gape as whole-souled as
+that of a house-dog before a kitchen fire. "It must be disagreeable to
+have a rope tightened around your neck. I don't know." He thrust his
+pipe-stem absently between his lips, closed his eyes, mumbled
+absently, "I don't know," and in a few moments was asleep, his pipe
+hanging from his mouth, his hands folded in his lap.
+
+"A cheerful companion for a man in my situation," thought Peyton. His
+mind had been brought back to the future. When would this resolute and
+vengeful Miss Elizabeth fulfil her threat? How would she proceed about
+it? Had she already taken measures towards his conveyance to the
+British lines? Should she delay until he should be able to walk, there
+would be two words about the matter. Meanwhile, he must wait for
+developments. It was useless to rack his brain with conjectures. His
+sense of present comfort gradually resumed sway, and he placed his
+head again on the sofa pillow and closed his eyes.
+
+He was conscious for a time of nothing but his deadened pain, his
+inward comfort, the breathing of old Mr. Valentine, the intermittent
+raging of the wind without, and the steady ticking of the clock on the
+mantel,--which delicately framed timepiece had been started within the
+hour by Sam, who knew Miss Elizabeth's will for having all things in
+running order. Peyton's drowsiness wrapped him closer and closer.
+Presently he was remotely aware of the opening of the door, the tread
+of light feet on the floor, the swish of skirts. But he had now
+reached that lethargic point which involves total indifference to
+outer things, and he did not even open his eyes.
+
+"Asleep," said Elizabeth, for it was she who had entered with her
+aunt.
+
+Harry recognized the voice, and knew that he was the subject of her
+remark; but his feeling towards his contemptuous captor was not such
+as to make him take the trouble of setting her right. Therefore, he
+kept his eyes closed, having a kind of satisfaction in her being
+mistaken.
+
+"How handsome!" whispered Miss Sally, who beamed more bigly and
+benignly after supper than before.
+
+"Which one, aunty?" said Elizabeth, looking from Peyton to old
+Valentine.
+
+Her aunt deigned to this levity only a look of hopeless reproof.
+
+Elizabeth sat down on the music-seat before the spinet, and became
+serious,--or, more accurately, businesslike.
+
+"On second thought," said she, "it won't do to keep him here waiting
+for one of our patrols to pass this way. In the meantime some of the
+rebels might come into the neighborhood and stop here. He must be
+delivered to the British this very night!"
+
+Peyton gave no outward sign of the momentary heart stoppage he felt
+within.
+
+"Why," said the aunt, speaking low, and in some alarm, "'twould
+require Williams and both the blacks to take him, and we should be
+left alone in the house."
+
+"I sha'n't send him to the troops," said Elizabeth, in her usual
+tone, not caring whether or not the prisoner should be disturbed,--for
+in his powerlessness he could not oppose her plans if he did know
+them, and in her disdain she had no consideration for his feelings.
+"The troops shall come for him. Black Sam shall go to the watch-house
+at King's Bridge with word that there's an important rebel prisoner
+held here, to be had for the taking."
+
+"Will the troops at King's Bridge heed the story of a black man?" Aunt
+Sally seemed desirous of interposing objections to immediate action.
+
+"Their officer will heed a written message from me," said the niece.
+"Most of the officers know me, and those at King's Bridge are aware I
+came here to-day."
+
+Thereupon she called in Cuff, and sent him off for Williams, with
+orders that the steward should bring her pen, ink, paper, and wax.
+
+"Oh, Elizabeth!" cried Miss Sally, looking at the floor. "Here's some
+of the poor fellow's blood on the carpet."
+
+"Never mind. The blood of an enemy is a sight easily tolerated," said
+the girl, probably unaware how nearly she had duplicated a famous
+utterance of a certain King of France, whose remark had borne
+reference to another sense than that of sight.[6]
+
+Williams soon came in with the writing materials, and placed them, at
+Elizabeth's direction, on a table that stood between the two eastern
+windows, and on which was a lighted candelabrum. Elizabeth sat down at
+the table, her back towards the fireplace and Peyton.
+
+"I wish you to send black Sam to me," said she to the steward, "and to
+take his place on guard with the gun till he returns from an errand."
+
+Williams departed, and Elizabeth began to make the quill fly over the
+paper, her aunt looking on from beside the table. Peyton opened his
+eyes and looked at them.
+
+"It does seem a pity," said Miss Sally at last. "Such a pretty
+gentleman,--such a gallant soldier!"
+
+"Gentleman?" echoed Elizabeth, writing on. "The fellow is not a
+gentleman! Nor a gallant soldier!"
+
+Peyton rose to a sitting posture as if stung by a hornet, but was
+instantly reminded of his wound. But neither Elizabeth nor her aunt
+saw or heard his movement. The girl, unaware that he was awake,
+continued:
+
+"Does a gentleman or a gallant soldier desert the army of his king to
+join that of his king's enemies?"
+
+Quick came the answer,--not from aunt Sally, but from Peyton on the
+sofa.
+
+"A gallant soldier has the right to choose his side, and a gentleman
+need not fight against his country!"
+
+Elizabeth did not suffer herself to appear startled at this sudden
+breaking in. Having finished her note, she quietly folded it, and
+addressed it, while she said:
+
+"A gallant soldier, having once chosen his side, will be loyal to it;
+and a gentleman never bore the odious title of deserter."
+
+"A gentleman can afford to wear any title that is redeemed by a
+glorious cause and an extraordinary danger. When I took service
+with the King's army in England, I never dreamt that army would be
+sent against the King's own colonies; and not till I arrived in
+Boston did I know the true character of this revolt. We thought we
+were coming over merely to quell a lawless Boston rabble. I gave in
+my resignation--"
+
+"But did not wait for it to be accepted," interrupted Elizabeth,
+quietly, as she applied to the folded paper the wax softened by the
+flame of a candle.
+
+"I _was_ a little hasty," said Harry.
+
+"The rebel army was the proper place for such fellows," said
+Elizabeth. "No true British officer would be guilty of such a deed!"
+
+"Probably not! It required exceptional courage!"
+
+Peyton knew, as well as any, that the British were brave enough; but
+he was in mood for sharp retort.
+
+"That is not the reason," said Elizabeth, coldly, refusing to show
+wrath. "Your enemies hold such acts as yours in detestation."
+
+"I am not serving in this war for the approbation of my enemies."
+
+At this moment black Sam came in. Elizabeth handed him the letter, and
+said:
+
+"You are to take my horse Cato, and ride with this message to the
+British barrier at King's Bridge. It is for the officer in command
+there. When the sentries challenge you, show this, and say it is of
+the greatest consequence and must be delivered at once."
+
+"Yes, Miss Elizabeth."
+
+"The commander," she went on, "will probably send here a body of
+troops at once, to convey this prisoner within the lines. You are to
+return with them. If no time is lost, and they send mounted troops,
+you should be back in an hour."
+
+Peyton could hardly repress a start.
+
+"An hour at most, miss, if nothing stops," said the negro.
+
+"If any officer of my acquaintance is in command," said Elizabeth,
+"there will be no delay. Cuff shall let the troops in, through that
+hall, as soon as they arrive."
+
+Whereupon the black man, a stalwart and courageous specimen of his
+race, went rapidly from the room.
+
+"One hour!" murmured Peyton, looking at the clock.
+
+Molly, the maid, now reappeared, carrying carefully in one hand a cup,
+from which a thin steam ascended.
+
+"What is't now, Molly?" inquired Elizabeth, rising from her chair.
+
+Molly blushed and was much confused. "Tea, ma'am, if you please! I
+thought, maybe, you'd allow the gentleman--"
+
+"Very well," said Elizabeth. "Be the good Samaritan if you like,
+child. His tea-drinking days will soon be over. Come, aunt Sally, we
+shall be in better company elsewhere." And she returned to the
+dining-room, not deigning her prisoner another look.
+
+Miss Sally followed, but her feelings required confiding in some one,
+and before she went she whispered to the embarrassed maid, "Oh, Molly,
+to think so sweet a young gentleman should be completely wasted!"
+
+Molly heaved a sigh, and then approached the young gentleman himself,
+with whom she was now alone, saving the presence of the slumbering
+Valentine.
+
+"So your name is Molly? And you've brought me tea this time?"
+
+"Yes, sir,--if you please, sir." She took up the bowl from the chair
+and placed the cup in its stead. "I put sugar in this, sir, but if
+you'd rather--"
+
+"I'd rather have it just as you've made it, Molly," he said, in a
+singularly gentle, unsteady tone. He raised the cup, and sipped.
+"Delicious, Molly!--Hah! Your mistress thinks my tea-drinking days
+will soon be over."
+
+"I'm very sorry, sir."
+
+"So am I." He held the cup in his left hand, supporting his upright
+body with his right arm, and looked rather at vacancy than at the
+maid. "Never to drink tea again," he said, "or wine or spirits, for
+that matter! To close your eyes on this fine world! Never again to
+ride after the hounds, or sing, or laugh, or chuck a pretty girl under
+the chin!"
+
+And here, having set down the cup, he chucked Molly herself under the
+chin, pretending a gaiety he did not feel.
+
+"Never again," he went on, "to lead a charge against the enemies of
+our liberty; not to live to see this fight out, the King's regiments
+driven from the land, the States take their place among the free
+nations of the world! _By God, Molly, I don't want to die yet!_"
+
+It was not the fear of death, it was the love of life, and what life
+might have in reserve, that moved him; and it now asserted itself in
+him with a force tenfold greater than ever before. Death,--or, rather,
+the ceasing of life,--as he viewed it now, when he was like to meet it
+without company, with prescribed preliminaries, in an ignominious
+mode, was a far other thing than as viewed in the exaltation of
+battle, when a man chances it hot-headed, uplifted, thrilled, in
+gallant comradeship, to his own fate rendered careless by a sense of
+his nothingness in comparison with the whole vast drama. Moreover, in
+going blithely to possible death in open fight, one accomplishes
+something for his cause; not so, going unwillingly to certain death on
+an enemy's gallows. It was, too, an exasperating thought that he
+should die to gratify the vengeful whim of an insolent Tory girl.
+
+"Will it really come to that?" asked Molly, in a frightened tone.
+
+"As surely as I fall into British hands!"
+
+Peyton remembered the case of General Charles Lee, whose resignation
+of half-pay had not been acknowledged; who was, when captured by the
+British, long in danger of hanging, and who was finally rated as an
+ordinary war prisoner only for Washington's threat to retaliate on
+five Hessian field officers. If a major-general, whose desertion, even
+if admitted, was from half-pay only, would have been hanged without
+ceremony but for General Howe's fear of a "law scrape," and had been
+saved from shipment to England for trial, only by the King's fear that
+Washington's retaliation would disaffect the Hessian allies, for what
+could a mere captain look, who had come over from the enemy in action,
+and whose punishment would entail no official retaliation?
+
+"And your mistress expects a troop of British soldiers here in an hour
+to take me! Damn it, if I could only walk!" And he looked rapidly
+around the room, in a kind of distraction, as if seeking some means of
+escape. Realizing the futility of this, he sighed dismally, and drank
+the remainder of the tea.
+
+"You couldn't get away from the house, sir," said Molly. "Williams is
+watching outside."
+
+"I'd take a chance if I could only run!" Peyton muttered. He had no
+fear that Molly would betray him. "If there were some hiding-place I
+might crawl to! But the troops would search every cranny about the
+house." He turned to Molly suddenly, seeing, in his desperate state
+and his lack of time, but one hope. "I wonder, could Williams be
+bribed to spirit me away?"
+
+Molly's manner underwent a slight chill.
+
+"Oh, no," said she. "He'd die before he'd disobey Miss Elizabeth. We
+all would, sir. I'm very sorry, indeed, sir." Whereupon, taking up the
+empty bowl and teacup, she hastened from the room.
+
+Peyton sat listening to the clock-ticks. He moved his right leg so
+that the foot rested on the floor, then tried to move the left one
+after it, using his hand to guide it. With great pains and greater
+pain, he finally got the left foot beside the right. He then undertook
+to stand, but the effort cost him such physical agony as could not be
+borne for any length of time. He fell back with a groan to the sofa,
+convinced that the wounded leg was not only, for the time, useless
+itself, but also an impediment to whatever service the other leg might
+have rendered alone. But he remained sitting up, his right foot on the
+floor.
+
+Suddenly there was a raucous sound from old Mr. Valentine. He had at
+last begun to snore. But this infliction brought its own remedy, for
+when his jaws opened wider his tobacco pipe fell from his mouth and
+struck his folded hands. He awoke with a start, and blinked
+wonderingly at Peyton, whose face, turned towards the old man, still
+wore the look of disapproval evoked by the momentary snoring.
+
+"Still here, eh?" piped Mr. Valentine. "I dreamt you were being hanged
+to the fireplace, like a pig to be smoked. I was quite upset over it!
+Such a fine young gentleman, and one of Harry Lee's officers, too!"
+
+And the old man shook his head deploringly.
+
+"Then why don't you help me out of this?" demanded Peyton, whose
+impulse was for grasping at straws, for he thought of black Sam urging
+Cato through the wind towards King's Bridge at a gallop.
+
+"It ain't possible," said Valentine, phlegmatically.
+
+"If it were, would you?" asked Harry, a spark of hope igniting from
+the appearance that the old man was, at least, not antagonistic to
+him.
+
+"Why, yes," began the octogenarian, placidly.
+
+Harry's heart bounded.
+
+"If," the old man went on, "I could without lending aid to the King's
+enemies. But you see I couldn't. I won't lend aid to neither side's
+enemies.[7] I don't want to die afore my time." And he gazed
+complacently at the fire.
+
+Peyton knew the hopeless immovability of selfish old age.
+
+"God!" he muttered, in despair. "Is there no one I can turn to?"
+
+"There's none within hearing would dare go against the orders of Miss
+Elizabeth," said Mr. Valentine.
+
+"Miss Elizabeth evidently rules with a firm hand," said Peyton,
+bitterly. "Her word--" He stopped suddenly, as if struck by a new
+thought. "If I could but move _her_! If I could make her change her
+mind!"
+
+"You couldn't. No one ever could, and as for a rebel soldier--"
+
+"She has a heart of iron, that girl!" broke in Peyton. "The cruelty of
+a savage!"
+
+Mr. Valentine took on a sincerely deprecating look. "Oh, you mustn't
+abuse Miss Elizabeth," said he. "It ain't cruelty, it's only proper
+pride. And she isn't hard. She has the kindest heart,--to those she's
+fond of."
+
+"To those she's fond of," repeated Harry, mechanically.
+
+"Yes," said the old man; "her people, her horses, her dogs and cats,
+and even her servants and slaves."
+
+"Tender creature, who has a heart for a dog and not for a man!"
+
+The old man's loyalty to three generations of Philipses made him a
+stubborn defender, and he answered:
+
+"She'd have no less a heart for a man if she loved him."
+
+"If she loved him!" echoed Peyton, and began to think.
+
+"Ay, and a thousand times more heart, loving him as a woman loves a
+man." Mr. Valentine spoke knowingly, as one acquainted by enviable
+experience with the measure of such love.
+
+"As a woman loves a man!" repeated Peyton. Suddenly he turned to
+Valentine. "Tell me, does she love any man so, now?" Peyton did not
+know the relation in which Elizabeth and Major Colden stood to each
+other.
+
+"I can't say she _loves_ one," replied Valentine, judicially,
+"though--"
+
+But Peyton had heard enough.
+
+"By heaven, I'll try it!" he cried. "Such miracles have happened! And
+I have almost an hour!"
+
+Old Valentine blinked at him, with stupid lack of perception. "What is
+it, sir?"
+
+"I shall try it!" was Peyton's unenlightening answer. "There's one
+chance. And you can help me!"
+
+"The devil I can!" replied Valentine, rising from his chair in some
+annoyance. "I won't lend aid, I tell you!"
+
+"It won't be 'lending aid.' All I beg is that you ask Miss Elizabeth
+to see me alone at once,--and that you'll forget all I've said to you.
+Don't stand staring! For Christ's sake, go and ask her to come in!
+Don't you know? Only an hour,--less than that, now!"
+
+"But she mayn't come here for the asking," objected the old man,
+somewhat dazed by Peyton's petulance.
+
+"She _must_ come here!" cried Harry. "Induce her, beg her, entice
+her! Tell her I have a last request to make of my jailer,--no,
+excite her curiosity; tell her I have a confession to make, a plot
+to disclose,--anything! In heaven's name, go and send her here!"
+
+It was easier to comply with so light a request than to remain
+recipient of such torrent-like importunity. "I'll try, sir," said
+the peace-loving old man, "but I have no hope," and he hobbled
+from the room. He left the door open as he went, and Harry, tortured
+by impatience, heard him shuffling over the hall floor to the
+dining-room.
+
+Peyton's mind was in a whirl. He glanced at the clock. These were his
+thoughts:
+
+"Fifty minutes! To make a woman love me! A proud woman, vain and
+wilful, who hates our cause, who detests me! To make her love me! How
+shall I begin? Keep your wits now, Harry, my son,--'tis for your life!
+How to begin? Why doesn't she come? Damn the clock, how loud it ticks!
+I feel each tick. No, 'tis my heart I feel. My God, _will_ she not
+come? And the time is going--"
+
+"Well, sir, what is it?"
+
+He looked from the clock to the doorway, where stood Elizabeth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE FLIGHT OF THE MINUTES.
+
+
+The silence of her entrance was from her having, a few minutes
+earlier, exchanged her riding-boots for satin slippers.
+
+"I--I thank you for coming, madam," said Peyton, feeling the necessity
+of a prompt reply to her imperious look of inquiry, yet without a
+practicable idea in his head. "I had--that is--a request to make."
+
+He was trembling violently, not from fear, but from that kind of
+agitation which often precedes the undertaking of a critical task, as
+when a suppliant awaits an important interview, or an actor assumes
+for the first time a new part.
+
+"Mr. Valentine said a confession," said Elizabeth, holding him in a
+coldly resentful gaze.
+
+"Why, yes, a confession," said he, hopelessly.
+
+"A plot to disclose," she added, with sharp impatience. "What is it?"
+
+"You shall hear," he began, in gloomy desperation, without the
+faintest knowledge of how he should finish. "I--ah--it is this--" His
+wandering glance fell on the table and the writing materials she had
+left there. "I wish to write a letter--a last letter--to a friend."
+The vague general outline of a project arose in his mind.
+
+Elizabeth was inclined to be as laconic as implacable. "Write it,"
+said she. "There are pen and ink."
+
+"But I can't write in this position," said Peyton, quickly, lest she
+might leave the room. "I fear I can't even hold a pen. Will you not
+write for me?"
+
+"I? Secretary to a horse-thieving rebel!"
+
+"It is a last request, madam. A last request is sacred,--even an
+enemy's."
+
+"I will send in some one to write for you." And she turned to go.
+
+"But this letter will contain secrets."
+
+"Secrets?" The very word is a charm to a woman. Elizabeth's curiosity
+was touched but slightly, yet sufficiently to stay her steps for the
+moment.
+
+"Ay," said Peyton, lowering his tone and speaking quickly, "secrets
+not for every ear. Secrets of the heart, madam,--secrets so delicate
+that, to convey them truly, I need the aid of more than common tact
+and understanding."
+
+He watched her eagerly, and tried to repress the signs of his
+anxiety.
+
+Elizabeth considered for a moment, then went to the table and sat down
+by it.
+
+"But," said she, regarding him with angry suspicion, "the confession,--the
+plot?"
+
+"Why, madam," said he, his heart hammering forcefully, "do you think I
+may communicate them to you directly? The letter shall relate them,
+too, and if the person who holds the pen for me pays heed to the
+letter's contents, is it my fault?"
+
+"I understand," said the woman, entrapped, and she dipped the quill
+into the ink.
+
+"The letter," began Peyton, slowly, hesitating for ideas, and glancing
+at the clock, yet not retaining a sense of where the hands were, "is
+to Mr. Bryan Fairfax--"
+
+"What?" she interrupted. "Kinsman to Lord Fairfax, of Virginia?"
+
+"There's but one Mr. Bryan Fairfax," said Peyton, acquiring confidence
+from his preliminary expedient to overcome prejudice, "and, though
+he's on the side of King George in feeling, yet he's my friend,--a
+circumstance that should convince even you I'm not scum o' the earth,
+rebel though you call me. He's the friend of Washington, too."
+
+"Poh! Who is your Washington? My aunt Mary rejected him, and married
+his rival in this very room!"
+
+"And a good thing Washington didn't marry her!" said Peyton,
+gallantly. "She'd have tried to turn him Tory, and the ladies of this
+family are not to be resisted."
+
+"Go on with your letter," said Elizabeth, chillingly.
+
+"'Mr. Bryan Fairfax,'" dictated Peyton, steadying his voice with an
+effort, "'Towlston Hall, Fairfax County, Virginia. My dear Fairfax: If
+ever these reach you, 'twill be from out a captivity destined,
+probably, to end soon in that which all dread, yet to which all must
+come; a captivity, nevertheless, sweetened by the divinest presence
+that ever bore the name of woman--'"
+
+Elizabeth stopped writing, and looked up, with an astonishment so
+all-possessing that it left no room even for indignation.
+
+Peyton, his eyes astray in the preoccupation of composition, did not
+notice her look, but, as if moved by enthusiasm, rose on his right leg
+and stood, his hands placed on the back of the light chair by the
+sofa, the chair's front being turned from him. He went on, with an
+affectation of repressed rapture: "''Twere worth even death to be for
+a short hour the prisoner of so superb--'"
+
+"Sir, what are you saying?" And Elizabeth dropped the pen, and stood
+up, regarding him with freezing resentment.
+
+"My thoughts, madam," said he, humbly, meeting her gaze.
+
+"How dare you jest with me?" said she.
+
+"Jest? Does a man jest in the face of his own death?"
+
+"'Twas a jest to bid me write such lies!"
+
+"Lies? 'Fore gad, the mirror yonder will not call them lies!" He
+indicated the oblong glass set in above the mantel. "If there is
+lying, 'tis my eyes that lie! 'Tis only what they tell me, that my
+lips report."
+
+Keeping his left foot slightly raised from the floor, he pushed the
+chair a little towards her, and himself followed it, resting his
+weight partly on its back, while he hopped with his right foot. But
+Elizabeth stayed him with a gesture of much imperiousness.
+
+"What has such rubbish to do with your confession and your plot?" she
+demanded.
+
+"Can you not see?" And he now let some of his real agitation appear,
+that it might serve as the lover's perturbation which it would be well
+to display.
+
+"My confession is of the instant yielding of my heart to the charms of
+a goddess."
+
+In those days lovers, real or pretended, still talked of goddesses,
+flames, darts, and such.
+
+"Who desired your heart to yield to anything?" was Miss Elizabeth's
+sharply spoken reply.
+
+"Beauty _commanded_ it, madam!" said he, bowing low over his
+chair-back.
+
+"So, then, there was no plot?" Her eyes flashed with indignation.
+
+"A plot, yes!" He glanced sidewise at the clock, and drew self-reliance
+from the very situation, which began to intoxicate him. "_My_ plot, to
+attract you hither, by that message, that I might console myself for
+my fate by the joy of seeing you!"
+
+"The joy of seeing me!" She spoke with incredulity and contempt.
+
+A glad boldness had come over Peyton. He felt himself masterful, as
+one feels who is drunk with wine; yet, unlike such a one, he had
+command of mind and body.
+
+"Ay, joy," said he, "joy none the less that you are disdainful! Pride
+is the attribute of queens, and tenderness is not the only mood in
+which a woman may conquer. Heaven! You can so discomfit a man with
+your frowns, _what_ might you do with your smile!"
+
+He felt now that he could dissimulate to fool the very devil.
+
+But Elizabeth, though interested as one may be in an oddity, seemed
+not otherwise impressed. 'Twas something, however, that she remained
+in the room to answer:
+
+"I do not know what I have done with my frown, nor what I might do
+with my smile, but, whatever it be, _you_ are not like to see!"
+
+"That I know," said Peyton, and added, at a reckless venture, "and am
+consoled, when I consider that no other man has seen!"
+
+"How do you know that?"
+
+"Your smile is not for any common man, and I'll wager your heart is as
+whole as your beauty."
+
+She looked at him for a moment of silence, then:
+
+"I cannot imagine why you say all this," quoth she, in real
+puzzlement.
+
+"'Tis an easing to the tortured heart to reveal itself," he answered,
+"as one would fain uncover an inner wound, though there be no hope of
+cure. I can go the calmer to my doom for having at least given outlet
+in words to the flame kindled in a moment within me. My doom! Yes, and
+none so unwelcome, either, if by it I escape a lifetime of vain
+longing!"
+
+"Your talk is incomprehensible, sir. If you are serious, it must be
+that your head is turned."
+
+"My head is turned, doubtless, but by you!"
+
+He was now assuming the low, quick, nervous utterance that is often
+associated with intense repressed feeling; and his words were
+accompanied by his best possible counterfeit of the burning, piercing,
+distraught gaze of passion. Though he acted a part, it was not with
+the cold-blooded art of a mimic who simulates by rule; it was with the
+animation due to imagining himself actually swayed by the feeling he
+would feign. While he _knew_ his emotion to be fictitious, he _felt_
+it as if it were real, and his consequent actions were the same as if
+real it were.
+
+"I'm sure the act was not intentional with me," said Elizabeth. "I'd
+best leave you, lest you grow worse." And she moved towards the door.
+
+Peyton had rapid work of it, pushing the chair before him and hopping
+after it, so as to intercept her. In the excitement of the moment, he
+lost his mastery of himself.
+
+"But you must not go! Hear me, I beg! Good God, only a half hour
+left!"
+
+"A half hour?" repeated Elizabeth, inquiringly.
+
+"I mean," said Peyton, recovering his wits, "a half hour till the
+troops may be here for me,--only a half hour until I must leave your
+house forever! Do not let me be deprived of the sight of you for those
+last minutes! Tis so short a time, yet 'tis all my life!"
+
+"The man is mad, I think!" She spoke as if to herself.
+
+"Mad!" he echoed. "Yes, some do call it a madness--the love that's
+born of a glance, and lasts till death!"
+
+"Love!" said she. "'Tis impossible you should come to love me, in so
+short a time."
+
+"'Tis born of a glance, I tell you!" he cried. "What is it, if not
+love, that makes me forget my coming death, see only you, hear only
+you, think of only you? Why do I not spend this time, this last hour,
+in pleading for my life, in begging you to hide me and send the troops
+away without me when they come? They would take your word, and you are
+a woman, and women are moved by pleading. Why, then, do I not, in the
+brief time I have left, beg for my life? Because my passion blinds me
+to all else, because I would use every moment in pouring out my heart
+to you, because my feelings must have outlet in words, because it is
+more than life or death to me that you should know I love you!--God,
+how fast that clock goes!"
+
+She had stood in wonderment, under the spell of his vehemence. Now, as
+he leaned towards her, over the chair-back, his breath coming rapidly,
+his eyes luminous, she seemed for a moment abashed, softened, subdued.
+But she put to flight his momentary hope by starting again for the
+doorway, with a low-spoken, "I must go!"
+
+But he thrust his chair in her way.
+
+"Nay, don't go!" he said. "You may hear my avowal with propriety. My
+people are as good as any in Virginia."
+
+She stood regarding him with a look of scrutiny.
+
+"You are a rebel against your king," she said, but not harshly.
+
+"Is not the King soon to have his revenge? And is that a reason why
+you should leave me now?"
+
+"You deserted your first colors."
+
+"'Twas in extraordinary circumstances, and in the right cause. And is
+that a reason why you--"
+
+"You took my horse."
+
+"But paid you for it, and you have your horse again. Abuse me, madam,
+but do not go from me. Call me rebel, deserter, robber, what you will,
+but remain with me. Denunciation from your lips is sweeter than praise
+from others. Chastise me, strike me, trample on me,--I shall worship
+you none the less!"
+
+He inclined his body further forward over the chair-back, and thus was
+very near her. She put out her hand to repel him. He moved back with
+humility, but took her hand and kissed it, with an appearance of
+passion qualified by reverence.
+
+"How dare you touch my hand?" And she quickly drew it from him.
+
+"A poor wretch who loves, and is soon to die, dares much!"
+
+"You seem resigned to dying," she remarked.
+
+"Have I not said 'tis better than living with a hopeless passion?"
+
+"And yet death," she said, "_that_ kind of a death is not pleasant."
+
+"I'm not afraid of it," said he, wondering how the minutes were
+running, yet not daring the loss of time to look. "'Tis not in
+consigning me to the enemy that you have your revenge on me, 'tis in
+making me vainly love you. I receive the greater hurt from your
+beauty, not from the British provost-marshal!"
+
+"Bravado!" said she.
+
+"Time will show," said he.
+
+"If you are so strong a man that you can endure the one hurt so
+calmly, why are you not a little stronger,--strong enough to ignore
+this other hurt,--this _love_-wound, as you call it?"
+
+She blushed furiously, and much against her will, at the mere word,
+"love-wound." Her mood now seemed to be one of pretended incredulity,
+and yet of a vague unwillingness that the man should be so weak to her
+charms.
+
+Peyton conceived that a change of play might aid his game.
+
+"By heaven," he cried, "I will! 'Tis a weakness, as you imply! I shall
+close my heart, vanquish my feelings! No word more of love! I defy
+your beauty, your proud face, your splendid eyes! I shall die free of
+your image. Go where you will, madam. It sha'n't be a puling lover
+that the British hang. A snap o' the finger for your all-conquering
+charms!--why do you not leave me?"
+
+"What! Do you order me from my own parlor?"
+
+Hope accelerated Peyton's heart at this, but he feigned indifference.
+
+"Go or stay," he said; "'tis nothing to me!"
+
+"You rebel, you speak like that to me!"
+
+Her speech rang with genuine anger, and of a little hotter quality
+than he had thought to raise.
+
+He was about to answer, when suddenly a sound, far and faint, reached
+his ear. "Isn't that--do you hear--" he said, huskily, and turning
+cold.
+
+"Horses?" said Elizabeth. "Yes,--on the road from King's Bridge."
+
+She went to one of the eastern windows, opened the sash, unfastened
+the shutter without, and let in a rush of cold air. Then she closed
+the sash and looked out through the small panes.
+
+"Is it--" said Peyton, quietly, with as much steadiness as he could
+command, "I wonder--can it be--"
+
+"A troop of rangers!" said Elizabeth. "And Sam is with them!" She
+closed the shutter, and turned to Peyton, her face still glowing with
+the resentment elicited by the cavalier attitude he had assumed before
+this alarm. "Go or stay, 'tis nothing to you, you said! The last
+insult, Sir Rebel Captain!" and she made for the door.
+
+"You mustn't go! You mustn't go!" was the only speech he could summon.
+But she was already passing him. He snatched a kerchief from her
+dress, and dropped it on the floor. She did not observe his act.
+"Pardon me!" he cried. "Your kerchief! You've dropped it, don't you
+see?"
+
+She turned and saw it on the floor.
+
+Peyton quickly stepped from behind his chair, stooped and picked up
+the kerchief, kissed it, and handed it to her, then staggered to his
+former support, showing in his face and by a groan the pain caused him
+by his movement.
+
+"Your wound!" said Elizabeth, standing still. "You shouldn't have
+stooped!"
+
+Harry's pain and consequent weakness, added to his consciousness of
+the rapidly approaching enemy, who had already turned in from the main
+road, gave him a pallor that would have claimed the attention of a
+less compassionate woman even than Elizabeth.
+
+"No matter!" he murmured, feebly. Then, as if about to swoon, he threw
+his head back, lost his hold of the chair-back, and staggered to the
+spinet. Leaning on this, he gasped, "My cravat! I feel as if I were
+choking!" and made some futile effort with his hand to unfasten the
+neck-cloth. "Would you," he panted, "may I beg--loosen it?"
+
+She went to his side, undid the cravat, and otherwise relieved his
+neck of its confinement. She could not but meet his gaze as she did
+so. It was a gaze of eager, adoring eyes. He feebly smiled his
+thanks, and spoke, between short breaths, the words, "The hour--I
+love you--yes, the troops!"
+
+The horses were clattering up towards the house.
+
+A voice of command was heard through the window.
+
+"Halt! Guard the windows and the rear, you four!"
+
+"Colden's voice!" exclaimed Peyton.
+
+Elizabeth was somewhat startled. "He must have been still at King's
+Bridge when Sam arrived," said she.
+
+"He must be a close friend," said Peyton.
+
+"He is my affianced husband."
+
+Peyton staggered, as if shot, around the projection of the spinet, and
+came to a rest in the small space between that projection and the west
+wall of the room. "Her affianced! Then it's all up with me!"
+
+The outside door was heard to open. Elizabeth turned her back towards
+the spinet and Peyton, and faced the door to the hall. That, too, was
+flung wide. Peyton dropped on his right knee, behind the spinet,
+leaning forward and stretching his wounded leg out behind him, just as
+Colden rushed in at the head of six of the Queen's Rangers, who were
+armed with short muskets. The major stopped short at sight of
+Elizabeth, and the rangers stood behind him, just within the door.
+Peyton was hidden by the spinet.
+
+"Where is the rebel, Elizabeth?" cried Colden.
+
+She met his gaze straight, and spoke calmly, with a barely perceptible
+tremor.
+
+"You are too late, Jack! The prisoner has eluded me. Look for him on
+the road to Tarrytown,--and be quick about it, for God's sake!"
+
+Colden drew back aghast, thrown from the height of triumph to the
+depth of chagrin. Peyton, fearing lest the one joyous bound of his
+heart might have betrayed him, remained perfectly still, knowing that
+if any movement should take Elizabeth from between the soldiers and
+the projection of the spinet, or if the soldiers should enter further
+and chance to look under the spinet, he would be seen.
+
+"Don't you understand?" said Elizabeth, assuming one impatience to
+conceal another. "There's no time to lose! 'Twas the rebel Peyton!
+He's afoot!"
+
+"The road to Tarrytown, you say?" replied Colden, gathering back his
+faculties.
+
+"Yes, to Tarrytown! Why do you wait?" Her vehemence of tone sufficed
+to cover the growing insupportability of her situation.
+
+"To the road again, men!" Colden ordered. "Till we meet, Elizabeth!"
+And he hastened, with the rangers, from the place.
+
+[Illustration: "'YOU ARE TOO LATE, JACK!'"]
+
+Peyton and Elizabeth remained motionless till the sound of the horses
+was afar. Then Elizabeth called Williams, who, as she had supposed,
+had come into the hall with the rangers. He now entered the parlor.
+Elizabeth, whose back was still towards Peyton, who had risen and was
+leaning on the spinet, addressed the steward in a low, embarrassed
+tone, as if ashamed of the weakness newly come over her.
+
+"Williams, this gentleman will remain in the house till his wound is
+healed. His presence is to be a secret in the household. He will
+occupy the southwestern chamber." She then turned and spoke, in a
+constrained manner, to Peyton, not meeting his look. "It is the room
+your General Washington had when he was my father's guest."
+
+With an effort, she raised her eyes to his, but shyly dropped them
+again. He bowed his thanks gravely, rather shamefaced at the success
+of his deception. A moment later, Elizabeth, with averted glance,
+walked quickly from the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE SECRET PASSAGE.
+
+
+The steward immediately set about preparing the designated chamber for
+occupancy, so that Peyton, on being carried up to it a few minutes
+later, found it warm and lighted. It was a large, square, panelled
+apartment, in which the fireplace of 1682 remained unchanged, a wide,
+deep, square opening, faced with Dutch tile, of which there were
+countless pieces, each piece having a picture of some Scriptural
+incident. Into this fireplace, where a log was burning crisply, Peyton
+gazed languidly as he lay on the bed, his clothes having been removed
+by black Sam, who had been assigned to attend him, and who now lay in
+the wide hall without. Williams had taken another look at the wound,
+and expressed a favorable opinion of its condition. A lighted candle
+was placed within Peyton's reach, on a table by the bedside. Williams
+had brought him, at Elizabeth's orders, part of what remained from the
+general supper. The captain felt decidedly comfortable.
+
+He supposed that Colden, after abandoning the false chase, would make
+another call at the house, but he inferred from Elizabeth's previous
+conduct that she could and would send the Tory major and the rangers
+back to King's Bridge without opportunity of discovering her guest.
+And, indeed, Elizabeth had so provided. On returning to the
+dining-room from her fateful interview with Peyton, she had answered
+the astonished and inquisitive looks of Miss Sally and Mr. Valentine,
+by saying, in an abrupt and reserved manner, "For important reasons I
+have chosen not to give the prisoner up. He will stay in the house for
+a time, and nobody is to know he is here. Please remember, Mr.
+Valentine." The old man tried to recall Peyton's words in asking him
+to send Elizabeth to the parlor, and made a mental effort to put this
+and that together; failing in which, he decided to repeat nothing of
+Peyton's conversation, lest it might in some way appear that he had
+"lent aid." He now lighted his lantern, and sallied forth on his long
+walk homeward over the windswept roads. Elizabeth, who, much to the
+dismay of her aunt's curiosity, had not broken silence save to give
+orders to the servants, now charged Williams to stay up till Colden
+should return, and to inform him that all were abed, that there was no
+news of the escaped prisoner, and that she desired the major to hasten
+to New York and relieve her family's anxiety. This command the steward
+executed about midnight, with the result that the major, utterly
+tired out and sadly disappointed, rode away from the manor-house a
+third time that night, more disgruntled than on either of the two
+previous occasions. By this time the house was dark and silent,
+Elizabeth and her aunt having long retired, the latter with a remark
+concerning the effect of late hours on the complexion, a hope that Mr.
+Valentine would not fall into a puddle on the way home, and a
+curiosity as to how the rebel captain fared.
+
+The rebel captain, afar in his spacious chamber, was mentally in a
+state of felicity. As he ceased to remember the conquered, abashed
+look Elizabeth's face had last worn, he ceased to feel ashamed of
+having deceived her. Her earlier manner recurred to his mind, and he
+jubilated inwardly over having got the better of this arrogant and
+vengeful young creature. Even had she been otherwise, and had his life
+depended on tricking her with a pretence of love, he would have valued
+his life far above her feelings, and would not have hesitated to
+practise on her a falsehood that many a gentleman has practised on
+many a maid for no higher purpose than for the sport or for the
+testing of his powers, and often for no other purpose than the maid's
+undoing in more than her feelings. How much less, then, need he
+consider her feelings when he regarded her as an enemy in war, of whom
+it was his right to take all possible advantage for the saving of his
+own or any other American soldier's life! These thoughts came only at
+those moments when it occurred to him that his act might need
+justification. But if he thought he was entitled to avail himself of
+these excuses, he deceived himself, for no such considerations had
+been in his mind before or during his act. He had proceeded on the
+impulse of self-preservation alone, with no further thought as to the
+effect on her feelings than the hope that her feelings would be moved
+in his behalf. He had been totally selfish in the matter, and yet,
+while it is true he had not stopped to reason whether the act was
+morally justifiable or not, he had _felt_ that her attitude warranted
+his deception, or, rather, he had not felt that the deception was a
+discreditable act, as he might have felt had her attitude been
+kindlier. Even had he possessed any previous scruples about that act,
+he would have overcome them. As it was, the scruples came only when he
+thought of that new, chastened, subdued look on her face. Only then
+did he feel that his trick might be debatable, as to whether it became
+a gentleman. Only then did he take the trouble to seek justifiable
+circumstances. Only then did he have a dim sense of what might be the
+feelings of a girl suddenly stormed into love. He had never been
+sufficiently in love to know how serious a feeling--serious in its
+tremendous potency for joy or pain--love is. In Virginia, in London,
+and in Ireland, he had indulged himself in such little flirtations,
+such amours of an hour, as helped make up a young gentleman's
+amusements. But he had long been, as he was now, heart-free, and,
+though it occurred to him that, in this girl, so great a change of
+mien must arise from a pronounced change of heart, he had no thought
+that her new mood could have deep root or long life. So, less from
+what thoughts he did have on the subject than from his absence of
+thought thereon, he lapsed into peace of mind, and went to sleep,
+rejoicing in his security and trusting it would last. Her face did not
+appear in his dreams. He had not retained a strong or accurate
+impression of that face. His mind had been too full of other things,
+even while enacting his impromptu love-scene, to make note of her
+beauty. He had been sensible, of course, that she was beautiful, but
+there had not been time or circumstance for flirtation. He had not for
+an instant viewed her as a possible object of conquest for its own
+sake. She had been to him only an enemy, in the shape of a beautiful
+young girl, and of whom it had become necessary to make use. And so
+his dreams that night were made up of wild cavalry charges, rides
+through the wind, and painful crushings and tearings of his leg.
+
+Elizabeth's thoughts were in a whirl, her feelings beyond analysis.
+She was sensible mainly of a wholly novel and vast pleasure at the
+adoration so impetuously expressed for her by this audacious
+stranger, of a pride in his masterful way, of applause for that very
+manner which she had rebuked as insolence. Was this love at last?
+Undoubtedly; for she had read all the romances and plays and poems,
+and, if this feeling of hers were a thing other than the love they
+all described, they would have described such a feeling also.
+Because she had never felt its soft touch before, she had thought
+herself exempt from it. But now that it had found lodgment in her,
+she knew it at once, from the very fact that in a flash she
+understood all the romances and plays and poems that had before
+interested her but as mere tales, whose motives had seemed arbitrary
+and insufficient. Now they all took reality and reason. She knew at
+last why Hero threw herself into the Hellespont after Leander, why
+all that commotion was caused by Helen of Troy, why Oriana took
+such trouble for Mirabel, why Juliet died on Romeo's body, why Miss
+Richland paid Honeywood's debts. The moon, rushing through a cleft
+in the clouds (she had opened one of the shutters on putting out the
+candles), had for her a sudden beauty which accounted for the fine
+things the poets had said of it and love together. Yes, because it
+opened on her world of romance a magic window, letting in a wondrous
+light, waking that world to throbbing life, clothing it with
+indescribable charm, she knew the name of the key that had unlocked
+her own heart. Now she knew them all,--the heroes, the fairy princes,
+the knights errant; perceived that they were real and live,
+recognized their traits and manners, their very faces, in that
+bold, free, strong young rebel; he was Orlando, and Lovelace, and
+Prince Charming, and AEneas, and Tom Jones, and King Harry the Fifth,
+and young Marlowe, and even Captain Macheath (she had read forbidden
+books guilelessly, in course of reading everything at hand), and
+Roderick Random, and Captain Plume, and all the conquering, gallant,
+fine young fellows, at the absurd weakness of whose sweethearts she
+had marvelled beyond measure. She understood that weakness now, and
+knew, too, why those sweethearts had, in the first delicious hours
+of their weakness, trembled and dropped their eyes before those young
+gentlemen. For, as she mentally beheld his image, she felt her own
+cheeks glow, and in imagination was fain to drop her own eyes
+before his bold, unquailing look. She wondered, with confusion and
+unseen blushes, how she would face him at their next meeting, and
+felt that she must not, could not, be the one to cause that
+meeting. Right surely had this fair castle, that had withstood
+many a long siege, fallen now at a single onslaught, and that but
+a sham onslaught. The haughty princess in her tower had not longed
+for the prince, but the prince had arrived, not to her rescue, but to
+the taming of her. And alas! the prince, whom she fondly thought her
+lover, was no more lover of her than of the picture of her female
+ancestor on his bedroom wall!
+
+She gave no thought to consequences, and, as for Jack Colden, she
+simply, by power of will, kept him out of her mind.
+
+It was three days before Peyton could walk about his room, and two
+days more before he felt sufficient confidence in his wounded leg to
+come down-stairs and take his meals with the household. And even then,
+refusing a crutch, he used a stick in moving about. During the five
+days when he kept his room, he was waited on alternately by Sam and
+Cuff, who served at his bath and brought his food; and occasionally
+Molly carried to him at dinner some belated delicacy or forgotten
+dish. Williams, too, visited him daily, and expressed a kind of
+professional satisfaction at the uninterrupted healing of the wound,
+which the steward treated with the mysterious applications known to
+home surgery. Williams lent his own clean linen to Harry, while
+Harry's underwent washing and mending at the hands of the maid. Old
+Valentine, who visited the house every day, the weather being cold and
+sometimes cloudy, but without rain, called at the sick chamber now
+and then, and filled it with tobacco smoke, homely philosophy, and
+rustic reminiscence. Harry had no other visitors. During these five
+days he saw not Elizabeth or Miss Sally, save from his window twice or
+thrice, at which times they were walking on the terrace. In daytime,
+when no artificial light was in the room to betray to some possible
+outsider the presence of a guest, he had the shutters opened of one of
+the two south windows and of one of the two west ones. Often he
+reclined near a window, pleasing his eyes with the view. Westward lay
+the terrace, the wide river, the leafy, cliffs, and fair rolling
+country beyond. His eye could take in also the deer paddock, which the
+hand of war had robbed of its inmates, and the great orchard northward
+overlooking the river. Through the south window he could see the
+little branch road and boat-landing, the old stone mill, the winding
+Neperan and its broad mill-pond, and the sloping, ravine-cut, wooded
+stretch of country, between the post-road on the left and the deep-set
+Hudson on the right. The spire of St. John's Church, among the
+yew-trees, with the few edifices grouped near it, broke gratefully the
+deserted aspect of things, at the left. The spacious scene, so richly
+filled by nature, had in its loneliness and repose a singular
+sweetness. Rarely was any one abroad. Only when the Hessians or
+Loyalist dragoons patrolled the post-road, or when some British
+sloop-of-war showed its white sails far down the river, was there sign
+of human life and conflict. The deserted look of things was in harmony
+with the spirit of a book with which Harry sweetened the long hours of
+his recovery. It was a book that Elizabeth had sent up for his
+amusement, called "The Man of Feeling," and there was something in the
+opening picture of the venerable mansion, with its air of melancholy,
+its languid stillness, its "single crow, perched on an old tree by the
+side of the gate," and its young lady passing between the trees with a
+book in her hand, that harmonized with his own sequestered state. He
+liked the tale better than the same author's later novel, "The Man of
+the World," which he had read a few years before. Every day he
+inquired about his hostess's health, and sent his compliments and
+thanks. He was glad she did not visit him in person, for such a visit
+might involve an allusion to their last previous interview, and he did
+not know in what manner he should make or treat such allusion. He felt
+it would be an awkward matter to get out of the situation of pretended
+adorer, and he was for putting that awkward matter off till the last
+possible moment.
+
+It was necessary for him to think of his return to the army. Duty and
+inclination required he should make that return as soon as could be.
+His first impulse had been to send word of his whereabouts and
+condition. But as Elizabeth had not offered a messenger, he was loath
+to ask for one. Moreover, the messenger might be intercepted by the
+enemy's patrols and induced by fear to betray the message. Then, too,
+even if the messenger should reach the American lines uncaught, a
+consequent attempt to convey a wounded man from the manor hall to the
+camp might attract the attention of the vigilant patrols, and risk not
+only Harry's own recapture, but also the loss of other men. Decidedly,
+the best course was to await the healing of his wound, and then to
+make his way alone, under cover of night, to the army. He knew that,
+whatever might occur, it was now Elizabeth's interest to protect him,
+for should she give him up, the disclosure that she had formerly
+shielded him would render her liable to suspicion and ridicule. He
+felt, too, from the manifestations he had seen of her will and of her
+ingenuity, that she was quite able to protect him. So he rested in
+security in the quiet old chamber, dreading only the task of taking
+back his love-making. Of that task, the difficulty would depend on
+Elizabeth's own conduct, which he could not foresee, and that in turn
+on her state of heart, which he did not exactly divine. He knew only
+that she had, in that critical moment of the troops' arrival, felt for
+him a tenderness that betokened love. Whether that feeling had
+flourished or declined, he could not, during the five days when they
+did not meet, be aware.
+
+It had not declined. She had gone on idealizing the confident rebel
+captain all the while. The fact that he was of the enemy added
+piquancy to the sentiments his image aroused. It lent, too, an
+additional poetic interest to the idea of their love. Was not Romeo of
+the enemies of Juliet's house? The fact of her being now his
+protector, by its oppositeness to the conventional situation, gave to
+their relation the charm of novelty, and also gratified her natural
+love of independence and domination. Yet that very love, in a woman,
+may afford its owner keen delight by receiving quick and confident
+opposition and conquest from a man, and such Elizabeth's had received
+from Peyton, both in the matter of the horse and in that of his
+successful wooing. But the greater her softness for him, the greater
+was her delicacy regarding him, and the more in conformity with the
+strictest propriety must be her conduct towards him. Her pride
+demanded this tribute of her love, in compensation for the latter's
+immense exactions on the former in the sudden yielding to his wooing.
+Moreover, she would not appear in anything short of perfection in his
+eyes. She would not make her company cheap to him. If she had been a
+quick conquest, up to the point of her first token of submission, she
+would be all the slower in the subsequent stages, so that the
+complete yielding should be no easier than ought to be that of one
+valued as she would have him value her. All this she felt rather than
+thought, and she acted on it punctiliously.
+
+She did not confide in her aunt, though that lady watched her closely
+and had her suspicions. Yet there was apparent so little warrant for
+these suspicions, save the protection of the rebel in itself, that
+Miss Sally often imagined Elizabeth had other reasons, reasons of
+policy, for the sudden change of intention that had resulted in that
+protection. Elizabeth's conduct was always so mystifying to everybody!
+And when this thought possessed Miss Sally, she underwent a pleasing
+agitation, which she in turn kept secret, and which attended the hope
+that perhaps the handsome captain might not be averse to her
+conversation. She had both read and observed that the taste of youth
+sometimes was for ripeness. She might atone, in a measure, for
+Elizabeth's disdain. She would have liked to visit him daily, with
+condolence and comfortings, but she could not do so without previous
+sanction of the mistress of the house, which sanction Elizabeth
+briefly but very peremptorily refused. Miss Sally thought it a cruelty
+that the prisoner should be deprived of what consolation her society
+might afford, and dwelt on this opinion until she became convinced he
+was actually pining for her presence. This made her poutish and
+reproachfully silent to Elizabeth, and sighful and whimsical to
+herself. The slightly strained feeling that arose between aunt and
+niece was quite acceptable to Elizabeth, as it gave her freedom for
+her own dreams, and prohibited any occasion for an expression of
+feelings or opinions of her own as to the captain. But Miss Sally's
+symptoms were observed by old Mr. Valentine, who, inferring their
+cause, underwent much unrest on account of them, became snappish and
+sarcastic towards the lady, watchful both of her and of Peyton, and
+moody towards the others in the house. It was the old man's
+disquietude regarding the state of Miss Sally's affections that
+brought him to the house every day. For one brief while he considered
+the advisability of transferring his attentions back from Miss Sally
+to the widow Babcock, who had possessed them first, but, when he
+tarried in the parsonage, his fears as to what might be going on in
+the manor-house made his stay in the former intolerable, and led him
+irresistibly to the latter.
+
+Meanwhile the wounded guest, so unconscious of the states of mind
+caused by him in the household, was the evoker of flutters in yet
+another female breast. The girl, Molly, had read toilsomely through
+"Pamela," and saw no reason why an equally attractive housemaid should
+not aspire to an equally high destiny on this side of the ocean. But,
+often as she artfully contrived that the black boy should forget some
+part of the guest's dinner, and timely as she planned her own visits
+with the missing portion, she found the officer heedless of her
+smiles, engrossed sometimes in his meal, sometimes in his book,
+sometimes in both. She conceived a loathing for that book, more than
+once resisted a temptation to make way with it, and, having one day
+stolen a look into it, thenceforth abominated the poor young lady of
+it, with all the undying bitterness of an unpreferred rival.
+
+Though Elizabeth and her aunt found each other reticent, they yet
+passed their time together, breakfasting early, then visiting the
+widow Babcock or some tenant, dining at noon, spending the early
+afternoon, the one at her book or embroidery, the other in a siesta
+before the fireplace, supping early, then preparing for the night by a
+brisk walk in the garden, or on the terrace, or to the orchard and
+back. Elizabeth had Williams provided with instructions as to his
+conduct in the event of a visit from King's troops, and, to make
+Peyton's security still less uncertain, she confined her walks to the
+immediate vicinity. The house itself was kept in a pretence of being
+closed, the shutters of the parlor being skilfully adjusted to admit
+light, and yet, from the road, appear fast.
+
+Thus Elizabeth, finding enjoyment in the very look and atmosphere of
+the old house, fulfilled quietly the purpose of her capricious visit,
+and at the same time cherished a dreamy pleasure such as she had not
+thought of finding in that visit.
+
+On the fifth day after Peyton's arrival, Williams announced that the
+captain would venture down-stairs on the morrow. The next morning
+Elizabeth waited in the east parlor to receive him. Whatever inward
+excitement she underwent, she was on the surface serene. She was
+dressed in her simplest, having purposely avoided any appearance of
+desiring to appear at her best. Her aunt, who stood with her, on the
+other side of the fireplace, was perceptibly flustered, being got up
+for the occasion, with ribbons in evidence and smiles ready for
+production on the instant. When the west door opened, and the awaited
+hero entered, pale but well groomed, using his cane in such fashion
+that he could carry himself erectly, Elizabeth greeted him with formal
+courtesy. Though her manner had the repose necessary to conceal her
+sweet agitation, an observant person might have noticed a deference, a
+kind of meekness, that was new in her demeanor towards men. Peyton,
+whose mien (though not his feeling) was a reflex of her own, was
+relieved at this appearance of indifference, and hoped it would
+continue. His mind being on this, the stately curtsey and profuse
+smirks of Miss Sally were quite lost on him.
+
+The three breakfasted together in the dining-room, a large and
+cheerful apartment whose front windows, looking on the lawn, were the
+middle features of the eastern facade of the house. The mass of
+decorative woodwork, and the fireplace in the north side of the room,
+added to its impression of comfort as well as to its beauty.
+Conversation at the breakfast was ceremonious and on the most
+indifferent subjects, despite the attempts of Miss Sally, who would
+have monopolized Peyton's attention, to inject a little cordial
+levity. After breakfast Elizabeth, to avoid the appearance of
+distinguishing the day, took her aunt off for the usual walk, which
+she purposely prolonged to unusual length, much to Miss Sally's
+annoyance. Peyton passed the morning in reading a new play that had
+made great talk in London the year before, namely, "The School for
+Scandal." It was one of the new books received by Colonel Philipse
+from London, by a recent English vessel,--plays being, in those days,
+good enough to be much read in book form,--and brought out from town
+by Elizabeth. The dinner was, as to the attitude of the participants
+towards one another, a repetition of the breakfast. In the afternoon,
+Peyton having expressed an intention of venturing outdoors for a
+little air, Elizabeth assigned Sam to attend him, and said that, as
+he had to traverse the south hall and stairs in going to his room, he
+might thereafter put to his own service the unused south door in
+leaving and entering the house. Harry strolled for a few minutes on
+the terrace, but his lameness made walking little pleasure, and he
+returned to the east parlor, where Elizabeth sat reading while her
+aunt was looking drowsily at the fire. Peyton took a chair at the
+right side of the fireplace, and mentally contrasted his present
+security with his peril in that place on a former occasion.
+
+The trampling of horses at a distance elicited from Elizabeth the
+words, "The Hessian patrol, on the Albany road, as usual, I suppose."
+But, the clatter increasing, she arose and looked through the narrow
+slit whereby light was admitted between the almost closed shutters.
+After a moment she said, in unconcealed alarm:
+
+"Oh, heaven! 'Tis a party of Lord Cathcart's officers! They said at
+King's Bridge they'd come one day to pay their respects. How can I
+keep them out?"
+
+Peyton arose, but remained by the fireplace, and said, "To keep them
+out, if they think themselves expected, would excite suspicion. I will
+go to my room."
+
+Elizabeth, meanwhile, had opened the window to draw the shutter
+close; but her trembling movement, assisted by a passing breeze, and
+by the perversity of inanimate things, caused the shutter to fly wide
+open.
+
+She turned towards Peyton, with signs of fright on her face. "Back!"
+she whispered. "They'll see you through the window. Into the
+closet,--the closet!" She motioned imperatively towards the pair of
+doors immediately beside him, west of the fireplace. Hearing the
+horses' footfalls near at hand, and perceiving, with her, that he
+would not have time to walk safely across the parlor to the hall, he
+opened one of the doors indicated by her, and stepped into the
+closet.
+
+In the instant before he closed the door after him, he noticed the
+stairs descending backward from the right side of the closet. He
+foresaw that the British officers would come into the parlor. If they
+should make a long stay, he might have to change his position during
+their presence. He might thus cause sufficient sound to attract
+attention. He would be in better case further away. Therefore, using
+his stick and feeling the route with his hand, he made his way down
+the steps to a landing, turned to the right, descended more steps, and
+found himself in a dark cellar. He had no sooner reached the last step
+than a burst of hearty greetings from above informed him the officers
+were in the parlor.
+
+This part of the cellar being damp, he set out in search of a more
+comfortable spot wherein to bestow himself the necessary while.
+Groping his way, and travelling with great labor, he at last came into
+a kind of corridor formed between two rolls of piled-up barrels. He
+proceeded along this passage until it was blocked by a barrel on the
+ground. On this he sat down, deciding it as good a staying-place as he
+might find. Leaning back, he discovered with his head what seemed to
+be a thick wooden partition close to the barrel. Changing his
+position, he bumped his head against an iron something that lay
+horizontally against the partition, and so violent was this collision
+that the iron something was moved from its place, a fact which he
+noted on the instant but immediately forgot in the sharpness of his
+pain.
+
+Having at last made himself comfortable, he sat waiting in the
+darkness, thinking to let some time pass before returning to the
+closet stairway. An hour or more had gone by, when he heard a door
+open, which he knew must be at the head of some other stairway to the
+cellar, and a jocund voice cry: "Damme, we'll be our own tapsters!
+Give me the candle, Mr. Williams, and if my nose doesn't pull me to
+the barrel in one minute, may it never whiff spirits again!" A moment
+later, quick footfalls sounded on the stairs, then candle-light
+disturbed the blackness, and Williams was heard saying, "This way,
+gentlemen, if you insist. The barrel is on the ground, straight
+ahead." Whereupon Peyton saw two merry young Englishmen enter the very
+passage at whose end he sat, one bearing the candle, both followed by
+the steward, who carried a spigot and a huge jug.
+
+Harry instantly divined the cause of this intrusion. The servants were
+busy preparing refreshments for the officers, and, in a spirit of
+gaiety, these two had volunteered to help Williams fetch the liquor
+which he, not knowing Harry's whereabouts, was about to draw from the
+barrel on which Harry sat.
+
+It was not Elizabeth who could save him from discovery now.
+
+The officers came groping towards him up the narrow passage.
+
+Before the candle-light reached him, he rose and got behind the
+barrel, there being barely room for his legs between it and the
+partition. He had, in dressing for the day, put on his scabbard and
+his broken sword. He now took his stick in his left hand, and drew his
+sword with his right. He set his teeth hard together, thought of
+nothing at all, or rather of everything at once, and waited.
+
+"Hear the rats," said one of the Englishmen. It was Peyton's stealthy
+movement he had heard.
+
+"Ay, sir, there's often a terrible scampering of 'em," said Williams.
+
+"Maybe I can pink a rat or two," said the officer without the candle,
+and drew his sword. Harry braced himself rapidly against the woodwork
+at his back. The candle-light touched the barrel.
+
+At that instant Harry felt the woodwork give way behind him, and fell
+on his back on the ground.
+
+"What's that?" cried the officer with the candle, standing still.
+
+"Tis the scampering of the rats, of course," said the other.
+
+Harry had apprehended, by this time, that the supposed wooden
+partition was in reality a door in the cellar wall. He now pushed it
+shut with his foot, remaining outside of it, then rose, and, feeling
+about him, discovered that his present place was in a narrow arched
+passage that ran, from the door in the cellar wall, he knew not how
+far. Recalling the bumping of his head, he inferred now that the iron
+something was a bolt, and that his blow had forced it from its too
+large socket in the stone wall.
+
+He proceeded onward in the dark passage for some distance, then
+stopped to listen. No sound coming from the door he had closed, he
+decided that the officers were satisfied the noise had been of the
+rats' making. He sheathed his broken sword, having retained that
+and his stick in his fall, and went forward, hoping to find a
+habitable place of waiting. Soon the passage widened into a kind of
+subterranean room, one side of which admitted light. Going to
+this side, Harry stopped short at the verge of a well, on whose
+circumference the subterranean chamber abutted. The light came from
+the well's top, which was about ten feet above the low roof of the
+underground room, the passage from the cellar being on a descent. In
+this artificial cave were wooden chests, casks, and covered
+earthen vessels, these contents proclaiming the place a secret
+storage-room designed for use in siege or in military occupation.
+Harry waited here a while that seemed half a day, then returned
+through the passage to the door, intending to return to the
+cellar. He listened at the door, found all quiet beyond, and made
+to push open the door. It would not move. From the feel of the
+resistance, he perceived that the bolt had been pushed home again--as
+indeed it had, by the steward, who had noticed it while tapping the
+barrel, and had imputed its being drawn to some former carelessness
+of his own.
+
+Peyton, finding himself thus barred into the subterranean regions, was
+in a quandary. Any alarm he might attempt, by shouting or pounding,
+might not be heard, or, if heard, might reach some tarrying British.
+In due time, Elizabeth would doubtless have him looked for in the
+closet and then in the cellar, but, on his not being found there,
+would suppose he had left the cellar by one of the other stairways.
+Thus he could little hope to be sought for in his prison. Williams
+might at any time have occasion to visit the secret storeroom, but, on
+the other hand, he might not have such occasion for weeks. Harry
+groped back to the cave, and sought some way of escape by the well,
+but found none.
+
+He then examined the cave more closely, and came finally on another
+passage than that by which he had entered. He followed this for what
+seemed an interminable length. At last, it closed up in front of him.
+He tested the barrier of raw earth with his hands, felt a great round
+stone projecting therefrom, pushed this stone in vain, then clasped it
+with both arms and pulled. It gave, and presently fell to the ground
+at his feet, leaving an aperture two feet across, which let in light.
+He crawled the short length of this, and breathed the open air in a
+small thicket on the sloping bank of the Hudson.[8] He crept to the
+thicket's edge, and saw, in the sunset light, the river before him; on
+the river, a British war-vessel; on the vessel, some naval officers,
+one of whom was looking, with languid preoccupation, straight at the
+thicket from which Harry gazed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE CONFESSION.
+
+
+"What d'ye spy, Tom?" called out another officer on the deck, to the
+one whose attitude most interested Harry.
+
+"I thought I made out some kind of craft steering through the bushes
+yonder," was the answer.
+
+"I see nothing."
+
+"Neither do I, now. 'Twasn't human craft, anyhow, so it doesn't
+signify," and the officers looked elsewhere.
+
+Harry lay low in the thicket, awaiting the departure of the vessel or
+the arrival of darkness. On the deck there was no sign of weighing
+anchor. As night came, the vessel's lights were slung. The sky was
+partly clear in the west, and stars appeared in that direction, but
+the east was overcast, so that the rising moon was hid. The atmosphere
+grew colder.
+
+When Harry could make out nothing of the vessel on the dark water,
+save the lights that glowed like low-placed stars, he crawled from the
+bushes and up the bank to the terrace. He then rose and proceeded,
+with the aid of his stick, aching from having so long maintained a
+cramped position, and from the suddenly increased cold. Before him, as
+he continued to ascend, rose the house, darkness outlined against
+darkness. No sound came from it, no window was lighted. This meant
+that the British officers had left, for their presence would have been
+marked by plenitude of light and by noise of merriment. Harry stopped
+on the terrace, and stood in doubt how to proceed. What had been
+thought of his disappearance? Where would he be supposed to have gone?
+Had provision been made for his possible return? Perhaps he should
+find a guiding light in some window on the other side of the house;
+perhaps a servant remained alert for his knock on the door. His only
+course was to investigate, unless he would undergo a night of much
+discomfort.
+
+As he was about to approach the house, he was checked by a sight so
+vaguely outlined that it might be rather of his imagination than of
+reality, and which added a momentary shiver of a keener sort than he
+already underwent from the weather. A dark cloaked and hooded figure
+stood by the balustrade that ran along the roof-top. As Peyton looked,
+his hand involuntarily clasping his sword-hilt, and the stories of the
+ghosts that haunted this old mansion shot through his mind, the figure
+seemed to descend through the very roof, as a stage ghost is lowered
+through a trap. He continued to stare at the spot where it had stood,
+but nothing reappeared against the backing of black cloud. Wondering
+much, Harry presently went on towards the house, turned the southwest
+corner, and skirted the south front as far as to the little porch in
+its middle. Intending to reconnoitre all sides of the house before he
+should try one of the doors, he was passing on, after a glance at the
+south door lost in the blacker shadows of the porch, when suddenly the
+fan-window over the door seemed to glow dimly with a wavering light.
+He placed his hand on one of the Grecian pillars of the porch, and
+watched. A moment later the door softly opened. A figure appeared,
+beyond the threshold, bearing a candle. The figure wore a cloak with a
+hood, but the hood was down.
+
+"All is safe," whispered a low voice. "The officers went hours ago. I
+knew you must have escaped from the house, and were hiding somewhere.
+I saw you a minute ago from the roof gallery."
+
+Peyton having entered, Elizabeth swiftly closed and locked the door
+behind him, handed him the candle with a low "Good night," and fled
+silently, ghostlike, up the stairs, disappearing quickly in the
+darkness.
+
+Harry made his way to his own room, as in a kind of dream. She herself
+had waited and watched for him! This, then, was the effect wrought in
+the proudest, most disdainful young creature of her sex, by that
+feeling which he had, by telling and acting a lie, awakened in her.
+The revelation set him thinking. How long might such a feeling last?
+What would be its effect on her after his departure? He had read, and
+heard, and seen, that, when these feelings were left to pine away
+slowly, the people possessing them pined also. And this was the return
+he was about to give his most hospitable hostess, the woman who had
+saved his life! Yet what was to be done? His life belonged to his
+country, his chosen career was war; he could not alter completely his
+destiny to save a woman some pining. After all, she _would_ get over
+it; yet it would make of her another woman, embitter her, change
+entirely the complexion of the world to her, and her own attitude
+towards it. He tried to comfort himself with the thought of her
+engagement to Colden, of which he had not learned until after the
+mischief had been done. But he recalled her manner towards Colden, and
+a remark of old Mr. Valentine's, whence he knew that the engagement
+was not, on her side, a love one, and was not inviolable. Yet it would
+be a crime to a woman of her pride, of her power of loving, to allow
+the deceit, his pretence of love, to go as far as marriage. A
+disclosure would come in time, and would bring her a bitter awakening.
+The falsehood, natural if not excusable in its circumstances, and
+broached without thought of ultimate consequence, must be stopped at
+once. He must leave her presence immediately, but, before going, must
+declare the truth. She must not be allowed to waste another day of her
+life on an illusion. Aside from the effect on her heart, of the
+continuance of the delusion, it would doubtless affect her outward
+circumstances, by leading her to break her engagement with Colden. An
+immediate discovery of the truth, moreover, by creating such a
+revulsion of feeling as would make her hate him, would leave her heart
+in a state for speedy healing. This disclosure would be a devilishly
+unpleasant thing to make, but a soldier and a gentleman must meet
+unpleasant duties unflinchingly.
+
+He lay a long time awake, disturbed by thoughts of the task before
+him. When he did sleep, it was to dream that the task was in progress,
+then that it was finished but had to be begun anew, then that
+countless obstacles arose in succession to hinder him in it. Dawn
+found him little refreshed in mind, but none the worse in body. He
+found, on arising, that he could walk without aid from the stick, and
+he required no help in dressing himself. Looking towards the river, he
+saw the British vessel heading for New York. But that sight gave him
+little comfort, thanks to the ordeal before him, in contemplating
+which he neglected to put on his sword and scabbard, and so descended
+to breakfast without them.
+
+That meal offered no opportunity for the disclosure, the aunt being
+present throughout. Immediately after breakfast, the two ladies went
+for their customary walk. While they were breasting the wind, between
+two rows of box in the garden, Miss Sally spoke of Major Colden's
+intention to return for Elizabeth at the end of a week, and said,
+"'Twill be a week this evening since you arrived. Is he to come for
+you to-day or to-morrow?"
+
+"I don't know," said Elizabeth, shortly.
+
+"But, my dear, you haven't prepared--"
+
+"I sha'n't go back to-day, that is certain. If Colden comes before
+to-morrow, he can wait for me,--or I may send him back without me, and
+stay as long as I wish."
+
+"But he will meet Captain Peyton--"
+
+"It can be easily arranged to keep him from knowing Captain Peyton is
+here. I shall look to that."
+
+Miss Sally sighed at the futility of her inquisitorial fishing. Not
+knowing Elizabeth's reason for saving the rebel captain, she had once
+or twice thought that the girl, in some inscrutable whim, intended to
+deliver him up, after all. She had tried frequently to fathom her
+niece's purposes, but had never got any satisfaction.
+
+"I suppose," she went on, desperately, "if you go back to town, you
+will leave the captain in Williams's charge."
+
+"If I go back before the captain leaves," said Elizabeth, thereby
+dashing her amiable aunt's secretly cherished hope of affording the
+wounded officer the pleasure of her own unalloyed society.
+
+Elizabeth really did not know what she would do. Her actions, on
+Colden's return, would depend on the prior actions of the captain. No
+one had spoken to Peyton of her intention to leave after a week's
+stay. She had thought such an announcement to him from her might seem
+to imply a hint that it was time he should resume his wooing. That he
+would resume it, in due course, she took for granted. Measuring his
+supposed feelings by her own real ones, she assumed that her loveless
+betrothal to another would not deter Peyton's further courtship. She
+believed he had divined the nature of that betrothal. Nor would he be
+hindered by the prospect of their being parted some while by the war.
+Engagements were broken, wars did not last forever, those who loved
+each other found ways to meet. So he would surely speak, before their
+parting, of what, since it filled her heart, must of course fill his.
+But she would show no forwardness in the matter. She therefore avoided
+him till dinner-time.
+
+At the table he abruptly announced that, as duty required he should
+rejoin the army at the first moment possible, and as he now felt
+capable of making the journey, he would depart that night.
+
+Miss Sally hid her startled emotions behind a glass of madeira, into
+which she coughed, chokingly. Molly, the maid, stopped short in her
+passage from the kitchen door to the table, and nearly dropped the
+pudding she was carrying. Elizabeth concealed her feelings, and told
+herself that his declaration must soon be forthcoming. She left it to
+him to contrive the necessary private interview.
+
+After dinner, he sat with the ladies before the fire in the east
+parlor, awaiting his opportunity with much hidden perturbation.
+Elizabeth feigned to read. At last, habit prevailing, her aunt fell
+asleep. Peyton hummed and hemmed, looked into the fire, made two or
+three strenuous swallows of nothing, and opened his mouth to speak. At
+that instant old Mr. Valentine came in, newly arrived from the Hill,
+and "whew"-ing at the cold. Peyton felt like one for whom a brief
+reprieve had been sent by heaven.
+
+All afternoon Mr. Valentine chattered of weather and news and old
+times. Peyton's feeling of relief was short-lasting; it was supplanted
+by a mighty regret that he had not been permitted to get the thing
+over. No second opportunity came of itself, nor could Peyton, who
+found his ingenuity for once quite paralyzed, force one. Supper was
+announced, and was partaken of by Harry, in fidgety abstraction; by
+Elizabeth, in expectant but outwardly placid silence; by Miss Sally,
+in futile smiling attempts to make something out of her last
+conversational chances with the handsome officer; and by Mr.
+Valentine, in sedulous attention to his appetite, which still had the
+vigor of youth.
+
+Almost as soon as the ladies had gone from the dining-room, Peyton
+rose and left the octogenarian in sole possession. In the parlor Harry
+found no one but Molly, who was lighting the candles.
+
+"What, Molly?" said he, feeling more and more nervous, and thinking to
+retain, by constant use of his voice, a good command of it for the
+dreaded interview. "The ladies not here? They left Mr. Valentine and
+me at the supper-table."
+
+"They are walking in the garden, sir. Miss Elizabeth likes to take the
+air every evening."
+
+"'Tis a chill air she takes this evening, I'm thinking," he said,
+standing before the fire and holding out his hands over the crackling
+logs.
+
+"A chill night for your journey," replied Molly. "I should think you'd
+wait for day, to travel."
+
+Peyton, unobservant of the wistful sigh by which the maid's speech was
+accompanied, replied, "Nay, for me, 'tis safest travelling at night. I
+must go through dangerous country to reach our lines."
+
+"It mayn't be as cold to-morrow night," persisted Molly.
+
+"My wound is well enough for me to go now."
+
+"'Twill be better still to-morrow."
+
+But Peyton, deep in his own preoccupation, neither deduced aught from
+the drift of her remarks nor saw the tender glances which attended
+them. While he was making some insignificant answer, the maid, in
+moving the candelabrum on the spinet, accidentally brushed therefrom
+his hat, which had been lying on it. She picked it up, in great
+confusion, and asked his pardon.
+
+"'Twas my fault in laying it there," said he, receiving it from her.
+"I'm careless with my things. I make no doubt, since I've been here,
+I've more than once given your mistress cause to wish me elsewhere."
+
+"La, sir," said Molly, "I don't think--_any_ one would wish you
+elsewhere!" Whereupon she left the room, abashed at her own audacity.
+
+"The devil!" thought Peyton. "I should feel better if some one did
+wish me elsewhere."
+
+As he continued gazing into the fire, and his task loomed more and
+more disagreeably before him, he suddenly bethought him that
+Elizabeth, in taking her evening walk, showed no disposition for a
+private meeting. Dwelling on that one circumstance, he thought for
+awhile he might have been wrong in supposing she loved him. But then
+the previous night's incident recurred to his mind. Nothing short of
+love could have induced such solicitude. But, then, as she sought no
+last interview, might he not be warranted in going away and leaving
+the disclosure to come gradually, implied by the absence of further
+word from him? Yet, she might be purposely avoiding the appearance of
+seeking an interview. The reasons calling for a prompt confession came
+back to him. While he was wavering between one dictate and another, in
+came Mr. Valentine, with a tobacco pipe.
+
+Like an inspiration, rose the idea of consulting the octogenarian. A
+man who cannot make up his own mind is justified in seeking counsel.
+Elizabeth could suffer no harm through Peyton's confiding in this sage
+old man, who was devoted to her and to her family. Mr. Valentine's
+very words on entering, which alluded to Peyton's pleasant visit as
+Elizabeth's guest, gave an opening for the subject concerned. A very
+few speeches led up to the matter, which Harry broached, after
+announcing that he took the old man for one experienced in matters of
+the heart, and receiving the admission that the old man _had_ enjoyed
+a share of the smiles of the sex. But if the captain had thought, in
+seeking advice, to find reason for avoiding his ugly task, he was
+disappointed. Old Valentine, though he had for some days feared a
+possible state of things between the captain and Miss Sally, had
+observed Elizabeth, and his vast experience had enabled him to
+interpret symptoms to which others had been blind. "She has acted
+towards you," he said to Peyton, "as she never acted towards another
+man. She's shown you a meekness, sir, a kind of timidity." And he
+agreed that, if Peyton should go away without an explanation, it would
+make her throw aside other expectations, and would, in the end, "cut
+her to the heart." Valentine hinted at regrettable things that had
+ensued from a jilting of which himself had once been guilty, and urged
+on Peyton an immediate unbosoming, adding, "She'll be so took aback
+and so full of wrath at you, she won't mind the loss of you. She'll
+abominate you and get over it at once."
+
+The idea came to Peyton of making the confession by letter, but this
+he promptly rejected as a coward's dodge. "It's a damned unpleasant
+duty, but that's the more reason I should face it myself."
+
+At that moment the front door of the east hall was heard to open.
+
+"It's Miss Elizabeth and her aunt," said Valentine, listening at the
+door.
+
+"Then I'll have the thing over at once, and be gone! Mr. Valentine, a
+last kindness,--keep the aunt out of the room."
+
+Before Valentine could answer, the ladies entered, their cheeks
+reddened by the weather. Elizabeth carried a small bunch of belated
+autumn flowers.
+
+"Well, I'm glad to come in out of the cold!" burst out Miss Sally,
+with a retrospective shudder. "Mr. Peyton, you've a bitter night for
+your going." She stood before the fire and smiled sympathetically at
+the captain.
+
+But Peyton was heedful of none but Elizabeth, who had laid her flowers
+on the spinet and was taking off her cloak. Peyton quickly, with an
+"Allow me, Miss Philipse," relieved her of the wrap, which in his
+abstraction he retained over his left arm while he continued to hold
+his hat in his other hand. After receiving a word of thanks, he added,
+"You've been gathering flowers," and stood before her in much
+embarrassment.
+
+"The last of the year, I think," said she. "The wind would have torn
+them off, if aunt Sally and I had not." And she took them up from the
+spinet to breath their odor.
+
+Meanwhile Mr. Valentine had been whispering to Miss Sally at the
+fireplace. As a result of his communications, whatever they were, the
+aunt first looked doubtful, then cast a wistful glance at Peyton, and
+then quietly left the room, followed by the old man, who carefully
+closed the door after him.
+
+While Elizabeth held the flowers to her nostrils, Peyton continued to
+stand looking at her, during an awkward pause. At length she replaced
+the nosegay on the spinet, and went to the fireplace, where she gazed
+at the writhing flames, and waited for him to speak.
+
+Still laden with the cloak and hat, he desperately began:
+
+"Miss Philipse, I--ahem--before I start on my walk to-night--"
+
+"Your walk?" she said, in slight surprise.
+
+"Yes,--back to our lines, above."
+
+"But you are not going to _walk_ back," she said, in a low tone. "You
+are to have the horse, Cato."
+
+Peyton stood startled. In a few moments he gulped down his feelings,
+and stammered:
+
+"Oh--indeed--Miss Philipse--I cannot think of depriving you--especially
+after the circumstances."
+
+She replied, with a gentle smile:
+
+"You took the horse when I refused him to you. Now will you not have
+him when I offer him to you? You must, captain! I'll not have so fine
+a horse go begging for a master. I'll not hear of your walking. On
+such a night, such a distance, through such a country!"
+
+"The devil!" thought Harry. "This makes it ten times harder!"
+
+Elizabeth now turned to face him directly. "Does not my cloak
+incommode you?" she said, amusedly. "You may put it down."
+
+"Oh, thank you, yes!" he said, feeling very red, and went to lay the
+cloak on the table, but in his confusion put down his own hat there,
+and kept the cloak over his arm. He then met her look recklessly, and
+blurted out:
+
+"The truth is, Miss Philipse, now that I am soon to leave, I have
+something to--to say to you." His boldness here forsook him, and he
+paused.
+
+"I know it," said Elizabeth, serenely, repressing all outward sign of
+her heart's blissful agitation.
+
+"You do?" quoth he, astonished.
+
+"Certainly," she answered, simply. "How could you leave without saying
+it?"
+
+Peyton had a moment's puzzlement. Then, "Without saying what?" he
+asked.
+
+"What you have to say," she replied, blushing, and lowering her eyes.
+
+"But what have I to say?" he persisted.
+
+She was silent a moment, then saw that she must help him out.
+
+"Don't you know? You were not at all tongue-tied when you said it the
+evening you came here."
+
+Peyton felt a gulf opening before him. "Good heaven," thought he, "she
+actually believes I am about to propose!"
+
+Now, or never, was the time for the plunge. He drew a full breath, and
+braced himself to make it.
+
+"But--ah--you see," said he, "the trouble is,--what I said then is
+not what I have to say now. You must understand, Miss Philipse, that I
+am devoted to a soldier's career. All my time, all my heart, my very
+life, belong to the service. Thus I am, in a manner, bound no less on
+my side, than you--I beg your pardon--"
+
+"What do you mean?" She spoke quietly, yet was the picture of
+open-eyed astonishment.
+
+"Cannot you see?" he faltered.
+
+"You mean"--her tone acquired resentment as her words came--"that I,
+too, am bound on _my_ side,--to Mr. Colden?"
+
+"I did not say so," he replied, abashed, cursing his heedless tongue.
+He would not, for much, have reminded her of any duty on her part.
+
+She regarded him for a moment in silence, while the clouds of
+indignation gathered. Then the storm broke.
+
+"You poltroon, I _do_ see! You wish to take back your declaration,
+because you are afraid of Colden's vengeance!"
+
+"Afraid? I afraid?" he echoed, mildly, surprised almost out of his
+voice at this unexpected inference.
+
+"Yes, you craven!" she cried, and seemed to tower above her common
+height, as she stood erect, tearless, fiery-eyed, and clarion-voiced.
+"Your cowardice outweighs your love! Go from my sight and from my
+father's house, you cautious lover, with your prudent scruples about
+the rights of your rival! Heavens, that I should have listened to such
+a coward! Go, I say! Spend no more time under this roof than you need
+to get your belongings from your room. Don't stop for farewells!
+Nobody wants them! Go,--and I'll thank you to leave my cloak behind
+you!"
+
+[Illustration: "'GO, I SAY!'"]
+
+Silenced and confounded by the force of her denunciation, he stupidly
+dropped the cloak to the floor where he stood, and stumbled from the
+room, as if swept away by the torrent of her wrath and scorn.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE PLAN OF RETALIATION.
+
+
+It was in the south hall that he found himself, having fled through
+the west door of the parlor, forgetful that his hat still remained on
+the table. He naturally continued his retreat up the stairs to his
+chamber. The only belongings that he had to get there were his broken
+sword, his scabbard, and belt. These he promptly buckled on, resolved
+to leave the house forthwith.
+
+Still tingling from the blow of her words, he yet felt a great relief
+that the task was so soon over, and that her speedy action had spared
+him the labor of the long explanation he had thought to make. As
+matters stood, they could not be improved. Her love had turned to
+hate, in the twinkling of an eye.
+
+And yet, how preposterously she had accounted for his conduct!
+Dwelling on his hint, though it was checked at its utterance, that she
+was already bound, she had assumed that he held out her engagement to
+Colden as a barrier to their love. And she believed, or pretended to
+believe, that his regard for that barrier arose from fear of inviting
+a rival's vengeance! As if he, who daily risked his life, could fear
+the vengeance of a man whom he had already once defeated with the
+sword! It was like a woman to alight first on the most absurd
+possibility the situation could imply. And if she knew the conjecture
+was absurd, she was the more guilty of affront in crying it out
+against him. He, in turn, was now moved to anger. He would not have
+false motives imputed to him. It would be useless to talk to her while
+her present mood continued. But he could write, and leave the letter
+where it would be found. Inasmuch as he had faced the worst storm his
+disclosure could have aroused, there was no cowardice in resorting to
+a letter with such explanations as could not be brought to her mind in
+any other form. Two days previously, he had requested writing
+materials in his room, for the sketching of a report of his being
+wounded, and these were still on a table by the window. He lighted
+candles, and sat down to write.
+
+When he had finished his document, sealed and addressed it, he laid it
+on the table, where it would attract the eye of a servant, and looked
+around for his hat. Presently he recalled that he had left it in the
+parlor. He first thought of seeking a servant, and sending for it,
+lest he might meet Elizabeth, should he again enter the parlor. But it
+would be better to face her, for a moment, than to give an order to a
+servant of a house whence he had been ordered out. And now, as he
+intended to go into the parlor, he would preferably leave the letter
+in that room, where it would perhaps reach her own eyes before any
+other's could fall on it. He therefore took up the letter, thrust it
+for the time in his belt, descended quietly to the south hall,
+cautiously opened the parlor door, peeped through the crack, saw with
+relief that only Miss Sally was in the room, threw the door wide, and
+strode quickly towards the table on which he thought he had left his
+hat.
+
+But, as he approached, he saw that the hat was not there.
+
+In the meantime, during the few minutes he had spent in his room,
+things had been occurring in this parlor. As soon as Peyton had left
+it, or had been carried out of it by the resistless current of
+Elizabeth's invective, the girl had turned her anger on herself, for
+having weakened to this man, made him her hero, indulged in those
+dreams! She could scarcely contain herself. Having mechanically picked
+up her cloak, where Peyton had let it fall, she evinced a sudden
+unendurable sense of her humiliation and folly, by hurling the cloak
+with violence across the room. At that moment old Mr. Valentine
+entered, placidly seeking his pipe, which he had left behind him.
+
+The octogenarian looked surprisedly at the cloak, then at Elizabeth,
+then mildly asked her if she had seen his pipe.
+
+"Oh, the cowardly wretch!" was Elizabeth's answer, her feelings
+forcing a release in speech.
+
+"What, me?" asked the old man, startled, not yet having thought to
+connect her words with his last interview with the American officer.
+He looked at her for a moment, but, receiving no satisfaction, calmly
+refilled, from a leather pouch, his pipe, which he had found on the
+mantel.
+
+Elizabeth's thoughts began to take more distinct shape, and, in order
+to formulate them the more accurately, she spoke them aloud to the old
+man, finding it an assistance to have a hearer, though she supposed
+him unable to understand.
+
+"Yet he wasn't a coward that evening he rode to attack the Hessians,--nor
+when he was wounded,--nor when he stood here waiting to be taken! He was
+no coward then, was he, Mr. Valentine?" Getting no answer, and
+irritated at the old man's owl-like immovability, she repeated, with
+vehemence, "Was he?"
+
+Mr. Valentine had, by this time, begun to put things together in his
+mind.
+
+"No. To be sure," he chirped, and then lighted his pipe with a small
+fagot from the fireplace, an operation that required a good deal of
+time.
+
+Elizabeth now spoke more as if to herself. "Perhaps, after all, I may
+be wrong! Yes, what a fool, to forget all the proofs of his courage!
+What a blind imbecile, to think him afraid! It must be that he acts
+from a delicate conception of honor. He would not encroach where
+another had the prior claim. He considers Colden in the matter. That's
+it, don't you think?"
+
+"Of course," said Valentine, blindly, not having paid attention to
+this last speech, and sitting down in his armchair.
+
+"I can understand now," she went on. "He did not know of my engagement
+that time he made love, when his life was at stake."
+
+"Then he's told you all about it?" said the old man, beginning to take
+some interest, now that he had provided for his own comfort.
+
+"About what?" asked Elizabeth, showing a woman's consistency, in being
+surprised that he seemed to know what she had been addressing him
+about.
+
+"About pretending he loved you,--to save his life," replied Mr.
+Valentine, innocently, considering that her supposed acquaintance with
+the whole secret made him free to discuss it with her.
+
+Elizabeth's astonishment, unexpected as it was by him, surprised the
+old man in turn, and also gave him something of a fright. So the two
+stared at each other.
+
+"Pretending he loved me!" she repeated, reflectively. "Pretending! To
+save his life! _Now I see!_" The effect of the revelation on her
+almost made Mr. Valentine jump out of his chair. "For only _I_ could
+save him!" she went on. "There was no other way! Oh, _how_ I have been
+fooled! I--tricked by a miserable rebel! Made a laughing-stock! Oh, to
+think he did not really love me, and that I--Oh, I shall choke! Send
+some one to me,--Molly, aunt Sally, any one! Go! Don't sit there
+gazing at me like an owl! Go away and send some one!"
+
+Mr. Valentine, glad of reason for an honorable retreat from this
+whirlwind that threatened soon to fill the whole room, departed with
+as much activity as he could command.
+
+"Oh, what shall I do? What shall I do?" Elizabeth asked of the air
+around her. "I must repay him for his duplicity. I shall never rest a
+moment till I do! What an easy dupe he must think me! Oh-h-h!"
+
+She brought her hand violently down on the table but fortunately
+struck something comparatively soft. In her fury, she clutched this
+something, raised it from the table, and saw what it was.
+
+"_His_ hat!" she cried, and made to throw it into the fire, but, with
+a woman's aim, sent it flying towards the door, which was at that
+instant opened by her aunt, who saved herself by dodging most
+undignifiedly.
+
+"What is it, my dear?" asked Miss Sally, in a voice of mingled
+wonderment and fear.
+
+"I'll pay him back, be sure of that!" replied Elizabeth, who was by
+this time a blazing-eyed, scarlet-faced embodiment of fury, and had
+thrown off all reserve.
+
+"Pay whom back?" tremblingly inquired Miss Sally, with vague
+apprehensions for the safety of old Mr. Valentine, who had so recently
+left her niece.
+
+"Your charming captain, your gentleman rebel, your gallant soldier,
+your admirable Peyton, hang him!" cried Elizabeth.
+
+"_My_ Peyton? I only wish he was!" sighed the aunt, surprised into the
+confession by Elizabeth's own outspokenness.
+
+"You're welcome to him, when I've had my revenge on him! Oh, aunt
+Sally, to think of it! He doesn't love me! He only pretended, so that
+I would save his life! But he shall see! I'll deliver him up to the
+troops, after all!"
+
+"Oh, no!" said Miss Sally, deprecatingly. Great as was the news
+conveyed to her by Elizabeth's speech, she comprehended it, and
+adjusted her mind to it, in an instant, her absence of outward
+demonstration being due to the very bigness of the revelation, to
+which any possible outside show of surprise would be inadequate and
+hence useless. Moreover, Elizabeth gave no time for manifestations.
+
+"No," the girl went on. "You are right. He's able-bodied now, and
+might be a match for all the servants. Besides, 'twould come out why I
+shielded him, and I should be the laugh o' the town. Oh, _how_ shall I
+pay him? How shall I make him _feel_--ah! I know! I'll give him six
+for half a dozen! I'll make _him_ love _me_, and then I'll cast him
+off and laugh at him!"
+
+She was suddenly as jubilant at having hit on the project as if she
+had already accomplished it.
+
+"Make him love you?" repeated her aunt, dubiously. Her aunt had her
+own reasons for doubting the possibility of such an achievement.
+
+"Perhaps you think I can't!" cried Elizabeth. "Wait and see! But,
+heavens! He's going away,--he won't come back,--perhaps he's gone! No,
+there's his hat!" She ran and picked it up from the corner of the
+doorway. "He won't go without his hat. He'll have to come here for it.
+He went to his room for his sword. He'll be here at any moment."
+
+And she paced the floor, holding the hat in one hand, and lapsing to
+the level of ordinary femininity as far as to adjust her hair with the
+other.
+
+"You'll have to make quick work of it, Elizabeth, dear," said the
+aunt, with gentle irony, "if he's going to-night."
+
+"I know, I know,--but I can't do it looking like this." She laid the
+hat on the table, in order to employ both hands in the arrangement of
+her hair. "If I only had on my satin gown! By the lord Harry, I have a
+mind--I will! When he comes in here, keep him till I return. Keep him
+as if your life depended on it." She went quickly towards the door of
+the east hall.
+
+"But, Elizabeth!" cried Miss Sally, appalled. "Wait! How--"
+
+"How?" echoed Elizabeth, turning near the door. "By hook or crook! You
+must think of a way! I have other things on my mind. Only keep him
+till I come back. If you let him go, I'll never speak to you again!
+And not a word to him of what I've told you! I sha'n't be long."
+
+"But what are you going to do?" asked the aunt, despairingly.
+
+"Going to arm myself for conquest! To put on my war-paint!" And the
+girl hastened through the doorway, crossed the hall, called Molly, and
+ran up-stairs to her room.
+
+Miss Sally stood in the parlor, a prey to mingled feelings. She did
+not dare refuse the task thrown on her by her imperative niece. Not
+only her niece's anger would be incurred by the refusal, but also the
+niece's insinuations that the aunt was not sufficiently clever for the
+task. However difficult, the thing must be attempted. And, which made
+matters worse, even if the attempt should succeed, it would be a
+rewardless one to Miss Sally. If she might detain the captain for
+herself, the effort would be worth making. The aunt sighed deeply,
+shook her head distressfully, and then, reverting to a keen sense of
+Elizabeth's rage and ridicule in the event of failure, looked wildly
+around for some suggestion of means to hold the officer. Her eye
+alighted on the hat.
+
+"He won't go without his hat, a night like this!" she thought. "I'll
+hide his hat."
+
+She forthwith possessed herself of it, and explored the room for a
+hiding-place. She decided on one of the little narrow closets in
+either side of the doorway to the east hall, and started towards it,
+holding the hat at her right side. Before she had come within four
+feet of the chosen place, she heard the door from the south hall being
+thrown open, and, casting a swift glance over her left shoulder, saw
+the captain step across the threshold. She choked back her sensations,
+and gave inward thanks that the hat was hidden from his sight by
+herself. Peyton walked briskly towards the table.
+
+Suddenly he stopped short, and turned his eyes from the table to Miss
+Sally, whose back was towards him.
+
+"Ah, Miss Williams," said he, politely but hastily, "I left my hat
+here somewhere."
+
+"Indeed?" said Miss Sally, amazed at her own unconsciousness, while
+she tried to moderate the beating of her heart. At the same moment,
+she turned and faced him, bringing the hat around behind her so that
+it should remain unseen.
+
+Peyton looked from her to the spinet, thence to the sofa, thence back
+to the table.
+
+"Yes, on the table, I thought. Perhaps--" He broke off here, and went
+to look on the mantel.
+
+Miss Sally, who had never thought the captain handsomer, and who
+smarted under the sense of being deterred, by her niece's purpose,
+from employing this opportunity to fascinate him on her own account,
+continued to turn so as to face him in his every change of place.
+
+"I don't see it anywhere," she said, with childlike innocence.
+
+Peyton searched the mantel, then looked at the chairs, and again
+brought his eyes to bear on Miss Sally. She blinked once or twice, but
+did not quail.
+
+"'Tis strange!" he said. "I'm sure I left it in this room."
+
+And he went again over all the ground he had already examined. Miss
+Sally utilized the times when his back was turned, in making a search
+of her own, the object of which was a safe place where she could
+quickly deposit the hat without attracting his attention.
+
+Peyton was doubly annoyed at this enforced delay in his departure,
+since Elizabeth might come into the parlor at any time, and the
+meeting occur which he had, for a moment, hoped to avoid.
+
+"Would you mind helping me look for it?" said he. "I'm in great haste
+to be gone. Do me the kindness, madam, will you not?"
+
+"Why, yes, with pleasure," she answered, thinking bitterly how
+transported she would be, in other circumstances, at such an
+opportunity of showing her readiness to oblige him.
+
+Her aid consisted in following him about, looking in each place where
+he had looked the moment before, and keeping the sought-for object
+close behind her.
+
+Suddenly he turned about, with such swiftness that she almost came
+into collision with him.
+
+"It must have fallen to the floor," said he.
+
+"Why, yes, we never thought of looking there, did we?" And she
+followed him through another tour of the room, turning her averted
+head from side to side in pretendedly ranging the floor with her
+eyes.
+
+"I know," he said, with the elation of a new conjecture. "It must be
+behind something!"
+
+Miss Sally gasped, but in an instant recovered herself sufficiently to
+say:
+
+"Of course. It surely _must_ be--behind something."
+
+Harry went and looked behind the spinet, then examined the small
+spaces between other objects and the wall. This search was longer than
+any he had made before, as some of the pieces of furniture had to be
+moved slightly out of position.
+
+Miss Sally felt her proximity to the object of this search becoming
+unendurable. She therefore profited by Peyton's present occupation to
+conduct pretended endeavors towards the closet west of the fireplace.
+She noiselessly opened one of the narrow doors, quickly tossed the hat
+inside, closed the door, and turned with ineffable relief towards
+Peyton.
+
+To her consternation she found him looking at her.
+
+"What are you doing there?" he asked.
+
+"Why,--looking in this closet," she stammered, guiltily.
+
+"Oh, no, it couldn't be in there," said Peyton, lightly. "But, yes.
+One of the servants might have laid it on the shelf." And he made for
+the closet.
+
+"Oh, no!"
+
+Miss Sally stood against the closet doors and held out her hands to
+ward him off.
+
+"No harm to look," said he, passing around her and putting his hand on
+the door.
+
+Miss Sally felt that, by remaining in the position of a physical
+obstacle to his opening the closet, she would betray all. Acting on
+the inspiration of the instant, she ran to the centre of the room, and
+cried:
+
+"Oh, come away! Come here!" and essayed a well-meant, but feeble and
+abortive, scream.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked Peyton, astonished.
+
+"Oh, I'm going to faint!" she said, feigning a sinkiness of the knees
+and a floppiness of the head.
+
+"Oh, pray don't faint!" cried Peyton, running to support her. "I
+haven't time. Let me call some one. Let me help you to the sofa."
+
+By this time he held her in his arms, and was thinking her another
+sort of burden than Tom Jones found Sophia, or Clarissa was to
+Roderick Random.
+
+The lady shrank with becoming and genuine modesty from the contact,
+gently repelled him with her hands, saying, "No, I'm better now,--but
+come," and took him by the arm to lead him further from the fatal
+closet.
+
+But Peyton immediately released his arm.
+
+"Ah, thank you for not fainting!" he said, with complete sincerity,
+and stalked directly back to the closet. Before she could think of a
+new device, he had opened the door, beheld the hat, and seized it in
+triumph. "By George, I was right! I bid you farewell, Miss Williams!"
+He very civilly saluted her with the hat, and turned towards the west
+door of the parlor.
+
+Must, then, all her previous ingenuity be wasted? After having so far
+exerted herself, must she suffer the ignominious consequences of
+failure?
+
+She ran to intercept him. Desperation gave her speed, and she reached
+the west door before he did. She closed it with a bang, and stood with
+her back against it. "No, no!" she cried. "You mustn't!"
+
+"Mustn't what?" asked Peyton, surprised as much by her distracted
+eyes, panting nostrils, and heaving bosom, as by her act itself.
+
+"Mustn't go out this way. Mustn't open this door," she answered,
+wildly.
+
+He scrutinized her features, as if to test a sudden suspicion of
+madness. In a moment he threw off this conjecture as unlikely.
+
+"But," said he, putting forth his hand to grasp the knob of the door.
+
+"You mustn't, I say!" she cried. "I can't help it! Don't blame me for
+it! Don't ask me to explain, but you must not go out this way!"
+
+She stood by her task now from a new motive, one that impelled more
+strongly than her fear of being reproached and derided by Elizabeth.
+Her own self-esteem was enlisted, and she was now determined not to
+incur her own reproach and derision. She perceived, too, with a
+sentimental woman's sense of the dramatic, that, though denied a drama
+of her own in which she might figure as heroine, here was, in
+another's drama, a scene entirely hers, and she was resolved to act it
+out with honor. Circumstances had not favored her with a romance, but
+here, in another's romance, was a chapter exclusively hers, a chapter,
+moreover, on whose proper termination the very continuation of the
+romance depended. So she would hold that door, at any cost.
+
+Peyton regarded her for another moment of silence.
+
+"Oh, well," said he, at last, "I can go the other way."
+
+And, to her dismay, he strode towards the door of the east hall. She
+could not possibly outrun him thither. Her heart sank. The killing
+sense of failure benumbed her body. He was already at the door,--was
+about to open it. At that instant he stepped back into the parlor. In
+through the doorway, that he was about to traverse, came Elizabeth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE CONQUEST.
+
+
+Miss Sally saw at a glance that her niece was dressed for conquest;
+then, with immense relief and supreme exultation, but with a feeling
+of exhaustion, knowing that her work was done, she silently left the
+room by the door she had guarded, closed it noiselessly behind her,
+and went up-stairs to restore her worked-out energies.
+
+Elizabeth wore a blue satin gown, the one evening dress she had, in
+the possibility of a candle-light visit from the officers at the
+outpost, brought with her from New York. Her bare forearms, and the
+white surface surrounding the base of her neck, were thus for the
+first time displayed to Peyton's view. A pair of slender gold
+bracelets on her wrists set off the smoothness of her rounded arms,
+but she wore no other jewelry. She had not had the time or the
+facilities to have her hair built high as a grenadier's cap, but she
+looked none the less commanding. She was, indeed, a radiant creature.
+Peyton, having never before seen her at her present advantage, opened
+wide his eyes and stared at her with a wonder whose openness was
+excused only by the suddenness of the dazzling apparition.
+
+She cast on him a momentary look of perfect indifference, as she might
+on any one that stood in her way; then walked lightly to the spinet,
+giving him a barely noticeable wide berth in passing, as if he were
+something with which it was probably desirable not to come in contact.
+Her slight deviation from a direct line of progress, though made
+inoffensively, struck him like a blow, yet did not interrupt, for more
+than an instant, his admiration. He stood dumbly looking after her, at
+her smooth and graceful movement, which had no sound but the rustling
+of skirts, her footfalls being noiseless in the satin slippers she
+wore.
+
+Peyton was not now as impatient as he had been to depart. In fact, he
+lost, in some measure, his sense of being in the act of departure.
+What he felt was an inclination to look longer on this so unexpected
+vision. She sat down at the spinet with her back towards him, and
+somehow conveyed in her attitude that she thought him no longer in the
+room. He felt a necessity for establishing the fact of his presence.
+
+"Pardon me for addressing you," he said, with a diffidence new to him,
+taking up the first pretext that came to mind, "but I fear your aunt
+requires looking to. She behaves strangely."
+
+"Oh," said Elizabeth, lightly, too wise to give him the importance of
+pretending not to hear him, "she is subject to queer spells at times.
+I thought you had gone."
+
+She began to play the spinet, very quietly and unobtrusively, with an
+absence of resentment, and with a seemingly unconscious indifference,
+that gave him a paralyzing sense of nothingness.
+
+Unpleasant as this feeling made his position, he felt the situation
+become one from which it would be extremely awkward to flee. For the
+first time since certain boyhood fits of bashfulness, he now
+realized the aptness of that oft-read expression, "rooted to the
+spot." That he should be thrown into this trance-like embarrassment,
+this powerlessness of motion, this feeling of a schoolboy first
+introduced to society, of a player caught by stage fright, was
+intolerable.
+
+When she had touched the keys gently a few times, he shook off
+something of the spell that bound him, and moved to a spot whence he
+could get a view of her face in profile. It had not an infinitesimal
+trace of the storm that had driven him from the room a short time
+before. It was entirely serene. There was on it no anger, no grief, no
+reproach of self or of another, no scorn. There was pride, but only
+the pride it normally wore; reserve, but only the reserve habitual to
+a high-born girl in the presence of any but her familiars. It was hard
+to believe her the woman who had been stirred to such tremendous wrath
+a few minutes ago, by the disclosure that she had been deceived, her
+love tricked and misplaced. Rather, it was hard to believe that the
+scene of wrath had ever occurred, that this woman had ever been so
+stirred by such cause, that she had ever loved him, that he had ever
+dared pretend love to her. The deception and the confession, with all
+they had elicited from her, seemed parts of a dream, of some fancy he
+had had, some romance he had read.
+
+As for Elizabeth, she knew not, thought not, whether, in bearing him
+hot resentment, she still loved him. She knew only that she craved
+revenge, and that the first step towards her desired end was to assume
+that indifference which so puzzled, interested, and confounded him. A
+weak or a stupid woman would have shown a sense of injury, with
+flashes of anger. An ordinarily clever woman would have affected
+disdain, would have sniffed and looked haughty, would have overdone
+her pretended contempt. It is true, Elizabeth had moved slightly out
+of her way to pass further from him, but she had done this with
+apparent thoughtlessness, as if the act were dictated by some inner
+sense of his belonging to an inferior race; not with a visible
+intention of showing repulsion. It is true she had assumed ignorance
+of his presence, but she had given him to attribute this to a belief
+that he had left the room. When his voice declared his whereabouts,
+she treated him just as she would have treated any other indifferent
+person who was _not quite_ her equal.
+
+Peyton felt more and more uncomfortable. Would she continue playing
+the spinet forever, so perfectly at ease, so content not to look at
+him again, so assuming it for granted that, the operation of
+leave-taking being considered over between hostess and guest, the
+guest might properly be gone any moment without further attention on
+either side?
+
+He began to fear that, if he did not soon speak, his voice would be
+beyond recovery. So, with a desperate resolve to recover his
+self-possession at a single _coup_, he blurted out, bunglingly:
+
+"'Tis the first time I have seen you in that gown, madam."
+
+Elizabeth, not ceasing to let her fingers ramble with soft touch over
+the keyboard, replied, carelessly:
+
+"I have not worn it in some time."
+
+Having found that he retained the power of speech, he proceeded to
+utter frankly his latest thought, concealing the slight bitterness of
+it with a pretence of playful, make-believe reproach:
+
+"'Tis not flattering to me, that you never wore it while I was your
+guest, yet put it on the moment you thought I had departed."
+
+She answered with good-humored lightness, "Why, sir, do you complain
+of not being flattered? I thought such complaints were made only by
+women, and only to their own hearts."
+
+"If by flattery," said he, "you mean merited compliment, there are
+women who can never have occasion to complain of not receiving it."
+
+"Indeed? When was that discovery made?"
+
+"A minute ago, madam."
+
+"Oh!" and she smiled with just such graciousness as a woman might show
+in accepting a compliment from a comparative stranger. "Thank you!"
+
+"When I think of it," said he, "it seems strange that you--ah--never
+took pains to--eh--to appear at your best--nay, I should say, as your
+real self!--before me."
+
+"Oh, you allude to my wearing this gown? Why, you must pardon my not
+having received you ceremoniously. _Your_ visit began unexpectedly."
+
+"Then somebody else is about to begin a visit that _is_ expected?"
+
+"Didn't you know? I thought all the house was aware Major Colden was
+to return in a week. He may be here to-night, though perhaps not till
+to-morrow."
+
+"Confound that man!" This to himself, and then, to her: "I was of the
+impression you did not love him."
+
+"Why, what gave you that impression?"
+
+"No matter. It seems I was wrong."
+
+"Oh, I don't say that,--or that you're right, either."
+
+"However," quoth he, with an inward sigh of resignation, "it is for
+_him_ that you are dressed as you never were for me!"
+
+She did not choose to ask what reason had existed for considering him
+in selecting her attire. It was better not to notice his presumption,
+and she became more absorbed in her music.
+
+Peyton strode up and down a few moments, then sat by the table, and
+rested his cheek on his hand, wearing a somewhat injured look.
+
+"Major Colden, eh?" he mused. "To think I should come upon him again!"
+He essayed to renew conversation. "I trust, Miss Philipse, when I am
+gone--" But Elizabeth was now oblivious of surroundings; the notes
+from the spinet became louder, and she began to hum the air in a low,
+agreeable voice. Peyton looked hopeless. Presently he stood up again,
+watching her.
+
+Elizabeth brought the piece to a lively finish, rose capriciously,
+took up the flowers she had laid on the spinet earlier in the evening,
+put them in her corsage, and made to readjust the bracelet on her
+right arm. In this attempt, she accidentally dropped the bracelet to
+the floor. Peyton ran to pick it up. But she quickly recovered it
+before he could reach it, put it on, walked to the table and sat down
+by it, removed the flowers from her bosom to the table, took up the
+volume of "The School for Scandal," and turned the leaves over as if
+in quest of a certain page.
+
+While she was looking at the book, Peyton took up the flowers.
+Elizabeth, as if thinking they were still where she had laid them, put
+out her hand to repossess them, keeping her eyes the while on the
+book. For a moment, her hand ranged the table in search, then she
+abandoned the attempt to regain them.
+
+Peyton held them out to her.
+
+"No, I thank you," she said, laying down the book, and went back to
+the spinet.
+
+"Ah, you give them to me!" cried Peyton, with sudden pleasure.
+
+"Not at all! I merely do not wish to have them now."
+
+"Oh," said he, thinking to make account by finding offence where none
+was really expressed, "has my touch contaminated them for you?"
+
+"How can you talk so absurdly?" And she resumed her seat at the
+spinet, and her playing.
+
+Peyton stood holding the flowers, looking at her, and presently
+heaved a deep sigh. This not moving her, he suddenly had an access of
+pride, brought himself together, and saying, with quick resolution, "I
+bid you good-night and good-by, madam," went rapidly towards the door
+of the east hall. But his resolution weakened when his hand touched
+the knob, and, to make pretext for further sight of her, he turned and
+went to go out the other door.
+
+Elizabeth had had a moment of alarm at his first sign of departure,
+but had not betrayed the feeling. Now when, from her seat at the
+spinet, she saw him actually crossing the threshold near her, she
+called out, gently, "A moment, captain."
+
+The pleased look on his face, as he turned towards her inquiringly,
+betrayed his gratification at being called back.
+
+"You are taking my flowers away," she said, in explanation.
+
+He plainly showed his disappointment. "Your pardon. My thoughtlessness.
+But you said you didn't wish to keep them." He laid them on the spinet.
+
+"I do not,--yet a woman must allow very few hands to carry off flowers
+of her gathering."
+
+She rose and took up the flowers and walked towards the fireplace.
+
+"Then you at least take them back from my hands," said Peyton.
+
+"Why, yes,--for this," and she tossed them into the fire.
+
+He looked at them as they withered in the blaze, then said, "Have you
+any objection to my carrying away the ashes, Miss Philipse?"
+
+She answered, considerately, "'Twill take you more time than you can
+lose, to gather them up."
+
+"Oh, I am in no haste."
+
+"Oh, then, I ask your pardon. A moment since, you were about to go."
+
+"But now I prefer to stay."
+
+"Indeed? May I ask the reason--but no matter."
+
+But he felt that a reason ought to be forthcoming. "Why, you know,
+because--" And here he thought of one. "I wish to stay to meet Major
+Colden, of whom you say I am afraid. I shall prove to you at least I
+am no coward. After what you have said to me this night, I must in
+honor wait to face him."
+
+"But it is late now. I don't think he will come till to-morrow."
+
+"Then I can wait till to-morrow."
+
+"But your duty calls you back to your own camp, now that your wound
+has healed."
+
+"I think my wound has undergone a slight relapse. You shall see, at
+least, I am not afraid of your champion."
+
+"If that is your only reason,--your desire to quarrel with Major
+Colden,--I cannot invite you to remain."
+
+"Well, then, to tell the truth, there _is_ another reason. When I
+said, a while since, I had never seen you in that gown, I used too
+many words. I should have said I had never really seen you at all."
+
+"Where were your eyes?" she asked, absently, seeming to take his words
+literally and to perceive no compliment.
+
+"I was in a kind of waking sleep."
+
+"It has been a time and place of hallucinations, I think. I, too, sir,
+have been, since I came here a week ago, under the strangest spell. A
+kind of light madness or witchery was over me, and made me act
+ridiculously, against my very will. A week ago, when you were
+disabled, I intended to give you up to the British,--as I should do
+now, if it would not be so troublesome--"
+
+"'Twould be troublesome to _me_, I assure you," he said, interrupting.
+
+"But at the last moment," she went on, "I did precisely the reverse of
+what I wished. Awhile ago, in this room, I seemed to be in the
+possession of some evil spirit, which made me say preposterous things.
+I can only remember some wild raving I indulged in, and some
+undeserved rudeness I displayed towards you. But, will you believe,
+the instant you left me, I recovered my right mind. I am like one
+returned from bedlam, cured, and you will pardon any incivility I may
+have done you in my peculiar state, I'm sure, since you speak of
+having been curiously afflicted yourself."
+
+"Then you mean," he faltered, "you did not really love me?"
+
+"Why, certainly I did not! How could you think I did? Something
+possessed my will. But, thank heaven, I am myself again. Why, sir, how
+could I? You know very little of me, sir, to think--Oh!" She covered
+her face with her hands. "What things must I have said and done, in my
+clouded state, to make you think that! You,--an enemy, a rebel, a
+person whose only possible interest to me arises from his enmity!"
+
+Dazzled as he was by her newly discovered beauty, the imposition on
+him was complete. He saw this covetable being now indifferent to him,
+out of his power to possess, likely soon to pass into the possession
+of another.
+
+"Pray try to forget awhile that enmity," he supplicated.
+
+"I shall try, and then you can have no interest for me at all."
+
+"Then don't try, I beg. I'd rather have an interest for you as an
+enemy than not at all."
+
+"Why, really, sir--" She seemed half puzzled, half amused.
+
+"Lord," quoth he, "how I have been deluded! I thought my love-making
+that night, feigned though it was, had wakened a response."
+
+"Love-making, do you say? Will you believe me, sir, I don't remember
+what passed here that night, save the unaccountable ending,--my making
+you my guest instead of their prisoner."
+
+"I wish you were pretending all this!"
+
+"Why, if 'twould make you happier that I were, I wish so, too."
+
+"How can you speak so lightly of such matters?"
+
+"What matters?"
+
+"Love, of course."
+
+"Why, do men alone, because they laugh at women for taking love
+seriously, have the right to take it lightly? And of what love am I
+speaking lightly,--the love you say you feigned for me, or the love
+you say you thought you had awakened in me?"
+
+"The love I vow I do _not_ feign for you! The love I wish I _could_
+awaken in you!"
+
+"Why, captain, what a change has come over you!"
+
+"Yes. I have risen from my sleep. If you, in waking from yours, put
+off love, I, in waking from mine, took on love!"
+
+She smiled, as with amusement. "A somewhat speedy taking on, I should
+say."
+
+"Love's born of a glance, _I_ say!"
+
+"Haven't I heard that before?" reflectively.
+
+"Aye, for I said it here when I did not mean it, and now I say it
+again when I do!"
+
+"And of what particular glance am I to suppose--"
+
+"Of the first glance I cast on you when you entered this room in that
+gown. Yes, born of a glance--"
+
+"Born of a gown, in that case, don't you mean?" derisively.
+
+"Of a gown, or a glance, or a what you wish."
+
+"I don't wish it should be born at all."
+
+"You don't wish I should love you?"
+
+"I don't wish you should love me or shouldn't love me. I don't wish
+you--anything. Why should I wish anything of one who is nothing to
+me?"
+
+"Nothing to you! I would you were to me what I am to you!"
+
+"What is that, pray?"
+
+"An adorer!"
+
+"You are a--very amusing gentleman."
+
+"You refuse me a glimpse of hope?"
+
+"You would like to have it as a trophy, I suppose. You men treasure
+the memories of your little conquests over foolish women, as an Indian
+treasures the scalps he takes."
+
+"Lord! which sex, I wonder, has the busier scalping-knife?"
+
+"I can't speak for all my sex. Some of us seek no scalps--"
+
+"You don't have to. I make you a present of mine. I fling it at your
+feet."
+
+"We seek no scalps, I say,--because we don't value them a finger-snap."
+And she gave a specimen of the kind of finger-snap she did not value
+them at.
+
+"In heaven's name," he said, "say what you do value, that I may strive
+to become like it! What do you value, I implore you, tell me?"
+
+"Oh,--my studies, for one thing,--my French and my music,--"
+
+"Could I but translate myself into French, or set myself to an air!"
+
+"Nay, I don't care for _comic_ songs!"
+
+"I see you like flowers. If I might die, and be buried in your garden,
+and grow up in the shape of a rose-bush--"
+
+"Or a cabbage!"
+
+"I fear you don't like that flower."
+
+"Better come up in the form of your own Virginia tobacco."
+
+"And be smoked by old Mr. Valentine? No, you don't like tobacco. Ah,
+Miss Philipse, this levity is far from the mood of my heart!"
+
+"Why do you indulge in it, then?"
+
+"I? Is it I who indulge in levity?"
+
+"Assuredly, _I_ do not!" Oh, woman's privilege of saying unabashedly
+the thing which is not!
+
+"No," said he, "for there's no levity in the coldness with which
+beauty views the wounds it makes."
+
+"I'm sure one is not compelled to offer oneself to its wounds."
+
+"No,--nor the moth to seek the flame."
+
+"La, now you are a moth,--a moment ago, a rose-bush,--"
+
+"And you are ten million roses, grown in the garden of heaven, and
+fashioned into one body there, by some celestial Praxiteles!"
+
+"Dear me, am I all that?"
+
+"Ay," he said, sadly, "and no more truly conscious of what it means to
+be all that, than any rose in any garden is conscious of what its
+beauty means!"
+
+"Perhaps," she said, softly, feeling for a moment almost tenderness
+enough to abandon her purpose, "more conscious than you think!"
+
+"Ah! Then you are not like common beauties,--as poor and dull within
+as they are rich and radiant without? You but pretend insensibility,
+to hide real feeling."
+
+"I did not say so," she answered, lightly, bracing herself again to
+her resolution.
+
+"But it is so, is it not?" he went on. "Your heart and mind are as
+roseate and delicate as your face? You can understand my praises and
+my feelings? You can value such love as mine aright, and know 'tis
+worthy some repayment?"
+
+But she was not again to be duped by low-spoken, fervid words, or by
+wistful, glowing eyes. She must be sure of him.
+
+"I know,--I recall now," she said, with little apparent interest; "you
+spoke of love a week ago, with no less eloquence and ardor."
+
+"More eloquence and ardor, I dare say, for then I did not feel love.
+Then my tongue was not tied by sense of a passion it could not hope to
+express one hundredth part of! And, even if my tongue had gift to tell
+my heart, I should not dare trust myself under the sway of my
+feelings. But I _do_ love you now,--I do,--I do!"
+
+"If now, why not before?"
+
+"Haven't I said I've been blind to you until to-night? At first I
+regarded you as only an enemy to be turned to my use in my peril.
+Having been fortunate in that, I gave myself to other thoughts. But,
+thinking my false love had drawn true love from you, I saw I could not
+in honor leave you under a false belief. But now the falsehood has
+become truth. A week ago, I avowed a pretended passion, to gain my
+life! Now, I declare a real one, to gain your love!"
+
+"What, you expect to take my love by storm, in reality, as you did, in
+appearance, a week ago?" She had risen from the music seat, and now
+stood with her back against the spinet, her hands behind her, her head
+turned slightly upward, facing him.
+
+"I don't expect," said he. "I only hope."
+
+"And what gives you reason to hope?"
+
+"My own love for you. Love elicits love, they say."
+
+"They say wrong, then. If that were true, there would be no unrequited
+lovers."
+
+"Ay, but such love as mine,--how can it so fill me to overflowing, and
+not infect you?"
+
+"Love is not an infectious disease. If it were, I should have no
+fear,--knowing myself love-proof."
+
+"I can't believe that,--for a woman with no spark in herself could not
+light so fierce a flame in me, by the mere meeting of our eyes."
+
+"If it should create in me such a disturbance as you seem to undergo,
+I shouldn't wish it to increase. But, I assure you, it isn't in me."
+
+"Pray think it is. Only imagine it is there, and soon it will be."
+
+She felt that the time was at hand to strike the blow.
+
+"If I could be perfectly sure you spoke in earnest," she said, seeming
+to search his countenance for testimony.
+
+"In earnest!" he echoed. "Great heavens, what evidence do you want? If
+there is an aspect of love I do not have, tell me, and I shall put it
+on."
+
+"Yes, you are experienced in putting on the _aspects_ of love."
+
+"Oh, you well know I have no reason now for declaring a love I don't
+feel. If you could be sure I spoke in earnest, you said,--what then?
+Tell me, and I shall find a way to convince you I _am_ in earnest."
+
+"Convince me first."
+
+"'Convince me,' you say. And I say, 'Be convinced.' By the Lord, never
+was so great a sceptic! Is not your sense of your own charms
+sufficient to convince you of their effect?"
+
+"Mere words!"
+
+"I'll prove my love by acts, then!"
+
+"By what acts?"
+
+"By fighting for you or suffering for you, dying for you or living for
+you, as you may command."
+
+"You can prove it thus. Say, 'Long live the King!'"
+
+He gazed at her a moment. "No," he said.
+
+"Say, 'Long live the King!'" She went to the door, and paused on the
+threshold, looking at him, as if to give him a last opportunity.
+
+"Long live the King--" he said.
+
+She came back from the door.
+
+"Of France!" he added.
+
+"No," she cried, and dictated, "'Long live the King of Great
+Britain!'"
+
+"Long live the King of Great Britain,--but not of America."
+
+"No! 'Long live George the Third, King of Great Britain and the
+American colonies!'"
+
+"Long live George the Third, King of Great Britain and--Ireland."
+
+"'And of the American colonies.' Say it! Say it all!"
+
+"Long live Elizabeth Philipse, queen of beauty in the United States of
+America!" he answered.
+
+"You don't love me," said she, and set her mind to finding some other
+means by which he might evince what she knew he would never
+demonstrate in the way she had demanded. And she resolved his
+humiliation should be all the greater for the delay. "You don't love
+me."
+
+"I do. I swear, on my knees."
+
+"Then _get_ on your knees!"
+
+"I do!" He dropped on one knee.
+
+"Both knees!"
+
+"Both." He suited action to word.
+
+"Bow lower."
+
+"I touch the floor." He did so, with his forehead. "Are you
+convinced?"
+
+"Yes." And she moved thoughtfully towards the door of the east hall.
+
+"Ah! Convinced that I love you madly?" In obedience to a gesture, he
+remained on his knees.
+
+"Perfectly convinced."
+
+"Then, the reward of which you hinted?"
+
+"Reward?"
+
+"You said, if you could be sure I spoke in earnest. Now you admit you
+are sure. What then?"
+
+She let her eyes rest on him a moment, without speaking, as he looked
+ardently and expectantly up at her from his kneeling attitude, while
+she took in breath, and then she flung her answer at him.
+
+"What then? This! That you are now more contemptible and ridiculous
+and utterly non-existent, to me, than you have formerly been! That,
+whatever I may have done which seemed in your behalf, was partly from
+the strange insanity of which I have spoken, and partly from the most
+meaningless caprice! That, if you remain here till to-morrow, you may
+see me in the arms of the man I really love, and that he may not be as
+careless of the fate of a vagabond rebel as I am. And now, Captain
+Crayton, or Dayton, or Peyton, or whatever you please, of somebody or
+other's light horse, go or stay, as you choose; you're as welcome as
+any other casual passer-by, for all the comical figure your impudence
+has made you cut! Learn modesty, sir, and you may fare better in your
+next love-making, if you do not aim too high! And that piece of advice
+is the reward I hinted at! Good night!"
+
+And she whirled from the room, slamming behind her the mahogany door,
+at which Peyton stared for some seconds, in blank amazement, too
+overwhelmed to speak or move or breathe or think.
+
+But gradually he came to life, slowly rose, stood for a moment
+thoughtful, fashioned his brows into a frown, drew his lips back hard,
+and muttered through his closed teeth:
+
+"I'll stay and fight that man, at least!"
+
+And he sat down by the table, to wait.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE CHALLENGE.
+
+
+A very few moments had elapsed, and Peyton still sat by the table, in
+a dogged study, when the door from the south hall was opened slightly,
+and if he had looked he might have seen a pair of eyes peeping through
+the aperture. But he did not look, either then or when, some seconds
+later, the door opened wide and Miss Sally bobbed gracefully in.
+
+It has been related how, after her brilliant but exhausting conduct of
+the important scene assigned her, she sought repose in her room.
+Looking out of her window presently, she saw something, of which she
+thought it advisable to inform Elizabeth. Therefore she came
+down-stairs. Did she listen at the door to the last part of that
+notable conversation? Ungallant thought, aroint thee! 'Tis well known
+women have little curiosity, and what little they have they would not,
+being of Miss Sally's station in life, descend to gratify by
+eavesdropping. Let it be assumed, therefore, that the much vaunted
+informant, feminine intuition, told Miss Sally of the end of the
+interview between her niece and the captain, both as to the time of
+that end and as to its nature.
+
+She entered, tremulous with a vast idea that had blazed suddenly on
+her mind. Now that Elizabeth was quite through with Peyton, now that
+Peyton must be low in his self-esteem for Elizabeth's humiliation of
+him, and therefore likely to be grateful for consolatory attentions,
+Miss Sally might resume her own hopes. But there was no time to be
+lost.
+
+"Your pardon, captain," she began, sweetly, with her most flattering
+smile. "I am looking for Miss Elizabeth."
+
+"She was here awhile ago," replied Peyton, glumly, not bringing his
+eyes within range of the smile. "She went that way. I trust you've
+recovered from your attack."
+
+"My attack?" inquiringly, with surprise.
+
+"The queer spell, I think Miss Philipse called it. She said you were
+subject to them."
+
+"Well, how does she dare--" She checked her tongue, lest she might
+betray the device for his detention. Something in his absent, careless
+way of associating her with a queer spell irritated her a little for
+the moment, and impelled her to retaliation. "I suppose that was not
+the only thing she said to you?" she added, ingenuously.
+
+"No,--she said other things." He rose and went to the fireplace,
+leaned against the mantel, and gazed pensively at the red embers.
+
+"They don't seem to have left you very cheerful," ventured Miss
+Sally.
+
+"Not so very damned cheerful!--I beg your pardon."
+
+Miss Sally's moment of resentment had passed. Now was the time to
+strike for herself. She thought she had hit on a clever plan of
+getting around to the matter.
+
+"Captain," said she, "you're a man of the world. I know it's
+presumptuous of me to ask it, but--if you would give me a word of
+advice--"
+
+Peyton did not take his look from the fire, or his thoughts from their
+dismal absorption. He answered, half-unconsciously:
+
+"Oh, certainly! Anything at all."
+
+"You are aware, of course," she went on, with smirking, rosy
+confusion, "that Mr. Valentine is a widower."
+
+"Indeed? Oh, yes, yes, I know."
+
+"Yes, a widower twice over."
+
+"How sad! He must feel twice the usual amount of grief."
+
+"Why,--I don't know exactly about that."
+
+"The poor man has my sympathy. Doubtless he is inconsolable." Peyton
+scarce knew what he was saying, or whom it was about.
+
+"Why, no," said Miss Sally, averting her eyes, with a smiling shyness,
+"not altogether inconsolable. That's just it."
+
+"Oh, is it?" said Peyton, obliviously.
+
+"You may have noticed that he spends a good deal of time here at
+present," she went on.
+
+"A good deal of time," he repeated. "There's doubtless some strong
+attraction."
+
+"Yes. Perhaps I oughtn't to say it, but there _is_ a strong
+attraction. In fact, he has proposed marriage to me, and now, as a man
+of the world to a woman of little experience, would you advise me to
+accept him?"
+
+And she looked at the disconsolate officer so sweetly, it seemed
+impossible he should do aught but say it would be throwing herself
+away to bestow on an old man charms of which younger and warmer eyes
+were sensible. But he answered only:
+
+"Certainly! An excellent match!"
+
+For a time Miss Sally was speechless, yet open-mouthed. And then, for
+the length of one brief but fiery tirade, she showed herself to be her
+niece's aunt:
+
+"Sir! The idea! I wouldn't have that old smoke-chimney if he were the
+last man on earth! I'd have given him his conge long ago, if it hadn't
+been that he might propose to my friend, the widow Babcock! I've only
+kept him on the string to prevent her getting him. When I want your
+advice, Captain Peyton, I'll ask for it! Excuse me, I must find
+Elizabeth. I've news for her."
+
+"News?" he echoed, stupidly.
+
+"Yes. From my chamber window awhile ago I saw some one riding this way
+on the post-road,--Major Colden!"
+
+And she swept out by the same door that had closed, a few minutes
+before, on Elizabeth.
+
+"Major Colden!" Peyton's teeth tightened, his eyes shot fire, his hand
+flew to his sword-hilt, as he spoke the name.
+
+He went to the window, the same window at which Elizabeth had looked
+out a week ago, and peered through the panes at the night.
+
+"Why, the ground is white," he said. "It has begun to snow."
+
+But, through the large flakes that fell thick and swiftly among the
+trees, he did not yet see any humankind approaching. His view of the
+branch road was, at some places, obstructed by tall shrubbery that
+rose high above the palings and the hedge.
+
+Yet through those flakes, assaulted by them in eyes and nostrils,
+invaded by them in ears and neck, humankind was riding. It was,
+indeed, Colden that Miss Sally had seen through a fortuitous opening,
+which gave, between the trees, a view of the most eminent point of the
+post-road southward. He was to conduct Elizabeth home the next day,
+but had availed himself of his opportunity to ride out to the
+manor-house that night, so as to have the few more hours in her
+society. He had this time taken an escort of two privates of his own
+regiment, but these men were not as well mounted as he, and, in his
+impatience, having seen the best their horses could do, and having
+passed King's Bridge, he had ridden ahead of them, leaving them to
+follow to the manor-house in their own speediest time. Thus it was
+that now he bore alone down from the post-road, his horse's feet
+making on the new-fallen snow no other sound than a soft crunching,
+scarce louder than its heavy breathing or its mouth-play on the bit,
+or the creak and clank of saddle, bridle, stirrups, pistols, and
+scabbard. His eyes dwelt eagerly on the manor-house, where awaited him
+light and warmth and wine, refuge from the pelting flakes, and, above
+all else, the joy-giving presence of Elizabeth. His breast expanded,
+he sighed already with relief; he approached the gate as a released
+soul, with admission ticket duly purchased by a deathbed repentance,
+might approach the gate of heaven.
+
+But Peyton, looking out on the white world, saw no one. He did not
+change his attitude when the door reopened and Elizabeth and her aunt
+came into the parlor, arm in arm.
+
+"You're sure 'twas he, aunt Sally?" Elizabeth had been saying.
+
+"Positive. He should be here now," Miss Sally had replied.
+
+Elizabeth cast a look of secret elation on the unheeding rebel
+captain, whose forehead was still against the window-pane. She saw a
+possible means of his still further degradation.
+
+Suddenly he took a quick step back from the window, impulsively
+renewed his grasp of his sword-hilt, and showed a face of resolute
+antagonism.
+
+Elizabeth knew from this that he had seen Colden. She gave a smile of
+pleasant anticipation.
+
+But Miss Sally had relapsed into her usual timid self. She held
+tightly to Elizabeth's arm.
+
+"Oh, dear!" she whispered. "Won't something happen when those two
+meet?"
+
+"I hope so!" said Elizabeth, placidly.
+
+"Why?" demanded Miss Sally, beginning to weaken at the knees.
+
+"If Colden sends him to the ground, in our presence, that will crown
+the fellow's humiliation."
+
+Five brisk knocks, in quick succession, were heard from the outside
+door of the east hall.
+
+Peyton walked across the parlor, turned, and stood facing the east
+hall door, the greater part of the room's length being between him and
+it. His hand remained on his sword. He paid no heed to Elizabeth, she
+paid none to him.
+
+"His knock!" she said, and called out through the east hall door:
+"'Tis Major Colden, Sam. Show him here at once." She then stepped back
+from the door, to a place whence she could see both it and Peyton. Her
+aunt clung to her arm all the while, and now whispered, "Oh,
+Elizabeth, I fear there will be trouble!"
+
+"If there is, it won't fall on your silly head," whispered Elizabeth,
+in reply.
+
+From the hall came the sound of the drawing of bolts. Peyton did not
+take his eyes from the door.
+
+A noise of footfalls, accompanied by clank of spurs and weapons, and
+in came Colden, his hat in his left hand, snow on his hat and
+shoulders, his cloak open, his sword and pistols visible, his right
+hand ungloved to clasp Elizabeth's.
+
+She received him with such a cordial smile as he had never before had
+from her.
+
+"Elizabeth!" he cried,--beheld only her, hastened to her, took her
+proffered hand, bent his head and kissed the fingers, raised his eyes
+with a grateful, joyous smile,--and saw Peyton standing motionless at
+the other side of the room. The smile vanished; a look of amazement
+and hatred came.
+
+"I wish you a very good evening, _Major_ Colden!"
+
+Peyton said this in a voice as hard and ironical as might have come
+from a brass statue.
+
+For the next few seconds the two men stood gazing at each other, the
+women gazing at the men. At last the Tory major found speech:
+
+"Elizabeth,--what does it mean? Why is this man here,--again?"
+
+"'Tis rather a long story, Jack, and you shall hear it all in time,"
+said Elizabeth, determined he should never hear the true story.
+
+Before she could continue, Colden suffered a start of alarm to possess
+him, and asked, quickly:
+
+"Are any of his troops here?"
+
+"No; he is quite alone," she answered.
+
+Colden at once took on height, arrogance, and formidableness.
+
+"Then why have not your servants made him a prisoner?" he asked.
+
+"Why," said she, "you being mentioned to-night, in his presence, he
+made some kind of boast of not fearing you, and I, divining how soon
+you would be here, thought fit his freedom with your name should best
+be paid for at _your_ hands, major."
+
+"Ay, major," put in Peyton, "and I have stayed to receive payment!"
+
+Colden thought for a short while. Then he said, "A moment, Elizabeth.
+Your pardon, Miss Williams," and drew Elizabeth aside, and spoke to
+her in a low tone: "We have only to temporize with him. Two of my men
+have attended me from my quarters. I had a better horse, and rode
+ahead, in my eagerness to see you. My two fellows will be here soon,
+and the business will be done."
+
+But such doing of the business did not suit Elizabeth's purpose. "I
+wish to humiliate the man," she answered Colden, inaudibly to the
+others; "to take down his upstart pride! 'Twould be no shame to him,
+to be made prisoner by numbers."
+
+"What, then?" asked Colden, dubiously.
+
+"Bring down the coxcomb, before us women, in an even match!"
+
+To prevent objections, she then abruptly went from Colden, and resumed
+her place at her aunt's side.
+
+Colden stood frowning, not half pleased at her hint. It occurred to
+him, as it did not to her, that the mere allegiance and favoring
+wishes of herself were not sufficient possessions to ensure victory in
+such a match as she meant. Elizabeth, accustomed to success, did not
+conceive it possible that the chosen agent of her own designs could
+fail. But the chosen agent had, in this case, wider powers of
+conception.
+
+All this time, Captain Peyton had stood as motionless as a figure in a
+painting. He now interrupted Colden's meditations with the gentle
+reminder:
+
+"I am waiting for my payment, Major Colden."
+
+Colden was not a man of much originality. So, in his instinctive
+endeavor to gain time, he bungled out the conventional reply, "You
+wish to seek a quarrel with me, sir?"
+
+"Seek a quarrel?" retorted Peyton. "Is not the quarrel here? Has not
+Miss Philipse spoken of an offence to your name, for which I ought to
+receive payment from you? Gad, she'd not have to speak twice to make
+_me_ draw!"
+
+Colden continued to be as conventional as a virtuous hero of a novel.
+"I do not fight in the presence of ladies, sir," said he.
+
+"Nor I," said Peyton. "Choose your own place, in the garden yonder.
+With snow on the ground, there's light enough."
+
+And Harry went quickly, almost to the door, near which he stopped to
+give Colden precedence.
+
+"Nay," put in Elizabeth, "we ladies can bear the sight of a sword-cut
+or two. Wait for us," and she would have gone to send for wraps, but
+that Colden raised his hand in token of refusal, saying:
+
+"Nay, Elizabeth. I will not consent."
+
+"Come, sir," said Peyton. "'Tis no use to oppose a lady's whim. But if
+you make haste, we may have it over before they can arrive on the
+ground."
+
+In handling his sword-hilt, Peyton had pulled the weapon a few inches
+out of the scabbard, and now, though he did not intend to draw while
+in the house, he unconsciously brought out the full length of what
+remained of the blade. For the time he had forgotten the sword was
+broken, and now he was reminded of it with some inward irritation.
+
+Meanwhile Colden was answering:
+
+"There's no regularity in such a meeting. Where are the seconds?"
+
+"I'll be your second, major," cried Elizabeth. "Aunt Sally, second
+Captain Peyton."
+
+"Ridiculous!" said the major.
+
+"Anything to bring you out," said Peyton, as desirous of avenging
+himself on Elizabeth, through her affianced, as she was to complete
+her own revenge through the same instrument. "I'll fight you with half
+a sword. I'd forgotten 'tis all I've left."
+
+"I would not take an advantage," said the New Yorker.
+
+"Then break your own sword, and make us equal," said the Virginian.
+
+"I value my weapon too much for that."
+
+Peyton smiled ironically. But he tried again.
+
+"Then I shall be less scrupulous," said he. "I _will_ take an
+advantage. The greater honor to you, if you defeat me. You take the
+broken sword, and lend me yours."
+
+He held out his hilt for exchange.
+
+Colden pretended to laugh, saying:
+
+"Am I a fool to put it in your power to murder me?"
+
+"_I'll_ tell you what, gentlemen," put in Elizabeth. "Use the swords
+above the chimney-place, yonder. They are equal."
+
+"Yes!" cried Peyton.
+
+But Colden said:
+
+"I will not so degrade myself as to cross swords, except on the
+battle-field, with one who is a rebel, a deserter, and no gentleman."
+
+Peyton turned to Elizabeth with a smile.
+
+"Then you see, madam," said he, "'tis no fault of mine if my affronts
+go unpunished, since this gentleman must keep his courage for the
+battle-field! Egad," he added, sacrificing truth for the sake of the
+taunt, "you Tories need all the courage there you can save up in a
+long time! I take my leave of this house!"
+
+[Illustration: "'I TAKE MY LEAVE OF THIS HOUSE!'"]
+
+He thrust his sword back into the scabbard, bowed rapidly and low,
+with a flourish of his hat, and went out by the same door Elizabeth
+had used in her own moment of triumph. He unbolted the outside door
+himself, before black Sam could come from the settle to serve him.
+Snowflakes rushed in at the open door. He plunged into them, swinging
+the door close after him. Out through the little portico he went, down
+the walk outside the very parlor window through which he had looked
+out awhile ago, but through which he did not now look in as he
+passed; through the gate, and up the branch road to the highway. He
+was possessed by a confusion of thoughts and feelings,--temporary and
+superficial elation at having put Elizabeth's preferred lover in so
+bad a light, wild ideas of some future crossing of her path, swift
+dreams of a future conquest of her in spite of all, a fierce desire
+for such action as would lead to that end. He was eager to rejoin the
+army now, to participate in the fighting that would bring about the
+humbling of her cause and make it the more in his power to master her.
+He heeded little the snow that impeded his steps as his boots sank
+into it, and which, in falling, blinded his eyes, tickled his face,
+and clung to his hair. The tumult of flakes was akin to that of his
+feelings, and he was in mood for encountering such opposition as the
+storm made to his progress.
+
+Arriving at the post-road, he turned and went northward. At his left
+lay the great lawn fronting the manor-house, and separated from the
+road by hedge and palings. He could see, across the snowy expanse,
+between the dark trunks and whitened branches of the trees, the long
+front of the manor-house, its roof and its porticoes already covered
+with snow, the light glowing in the one exposed window of the east
+parlor. As he quieted down within, he felt pleasantly towards the
+house, to which his week's half-solitary residence in it, with the
+comfort he had enjoyed there and the books he had read, had given him
+an attachment. He cast on it a last affectionate look, then breasted
+the weather onward, wondering what things the future might have in
+store for him.
+
+He had little fear of not reaching the American lines in safety. It
+was unlikely that any of the enemy's marauders would be out on such a
+night, and more unlikely that any regular military movement would be
+making on the neutral ground. He expected to meet no one on the road,
+but he would keep a sharp lookout in all directions as he went, and,
+in case of any human apparition, would take to the fields or the
+woods. But all the world, thought he, would stay within doors this
+white night.
+
+Sliding back a part of every step he took in the snow, he passed the
+boundary of the Philipse lawn, and that of such part of the grounds as
+included, with other appurtenances, the garden north of the house. He
+had come, at last, to a place where the fence at his left ended and
+the forest began. He had, a moment before, cast a long look backward
+to assure himself the road was empty behind him. He now trudged on,
+his eyes fixed ahead.
+
+From behind a low pine-tree, at the end of the fence, two dark figures
+glided up to the captain's rear, their steps noiseless in the snow.
+One of them caught both his forearms at the same instant, and pulled
+them back together, as with grips of iron. A second pair of hands
+placed a noose about his wrists, and quickly tightened it. Ere he
+could turn, his first assailant released the bound arms to the second,
+drew a pistol, and thrust the muzzle close to Peyton's cheek,
+whereupon the second man said:
+
+"Your pardon, captain. Come quietly, or you're a dead man!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE UNEXPECTED.
+
+
+Peyton's somewhat elate exit from the parlor was followed by a moment
+of silence and inertia on the part of the three who remained there.
+But Elizabeth's chagrin was speedily translated into anger against
+Major Colden.
+
+"Why didn't you fight him?" she demanded of that gentleman, who was
+flinching inwardly, but who maintained a pale and haughty exterior.
+
+"What was the use?" he replied. "He's reserved for the gallows. If my
+two men were here! Why not send your servants after him? Sam is a
+powerful fellow, and Williams is shrewd and strong."
+
+Elizabeth ignored Colden's reply, and answered her own question,
+thus:
+
+"It was because you remembered the time he disarmed you, three years
+ago."
+
+"You may think so, if you choose," he replied, in the patient manner
+of one who quietly endures unjust reproaches when self-defence is
+useless.
+
+"You will find refreshments in the dining-room," said Elizabeth,
+coldly. "Sam will show you to your room."
+
+"I would rather remain with you," he replied.
+
+"I would rather be alone with my aunt a while."
+
+A deep sigh expressed his dejecting sense of how futile it would be to
+oppose her.
+
+"As you will," he then said, and, bowing gravely, left the parlor.
+
+Elizabeth's feelings now burst out.
+
+"Oh," she exclaimed to her aunt, "what a chicken-hearted copy of a
+man! And he calls himself a soldier! I wonder where he found the
+spirit to volunteer!"
+
+"From you, my dear," replied Miss Sally. "Didn't you urge him to take
+a commission?"
+
+"And that rebel fellow had the best of it all through," Elizabeth went
+on. "I was to see him laid low by his rival, as my crowning revenge!
+How he swaggered out! with what a look of triumph in his eye!
+And--aunt Sally! He won't come back! I shall never see him again!"
+
+"Why, child, do you wish to?"
+
+"Of course not! But I can't have him go away with the laugh on his
+side! He made me ridiculous after my trying to stab him with my love
+for the other man. _Such_ another man! Oh, the rebel must come back!"
+
+"But he isn't likely to," said Miss Sally.
+
+"Oh, what shall I do?" wailed the niece.
+
+"Elizabeth, I'll wager you're still in love with him!"
+
+"I'm not! I hate him!--Well, what if I am? He loved me, I'm sure, the
+last time he said it. But, good heavens, he's going farther away every
+instant!"
+
+She clasped her hands, and, for once, looked at her aunt for help,
+like a distressed child on the verge of weeping.
+
+"Why don't you call him back?" said Miss Sally.
+
+"I? Not if I die for want of seeing him!--I know! I _will_ send the
+servants after him." And she started for the door, but stopped at her
+aunt's comment:
+
+"But that will be as bad as calling him yourself."
+
+"Not at all, you empty pate!" cried Elizabeth, who had become, in a
+moment, all action. "While he's going around by the road, Williams and
+Sam shall cut across the garden, lie in wait, and take him by
+surprise. He has no weapon but a broken sword, and they can make him
+prisoner. They shall bring him back here bound, and he'll think he's
+to be turned over to the British after all!"
+
+"But what then?"
+
+"Why, he shall be left alone here, well guarded, for half an hour,
+and then I'll happen in, give him an opportunity to make love again,
+and I can yield gracefully! Don't you see?"
+
+"Then you _do_ love him?" said the aunt.
+
+"I don't know. However, I don't love Jack Colden. Not a word to him,
+of this! I'm going to give orders to the men."
+
+As she entered the hall, she met Colden, who was coming from the
+dining-room with Mr. Valentine. The major had limited his refreshments
+to two glasses of brandy and water, swallowed in quick succession. Mr.
+Valentine, who was smoking his pipe, held Colden fraternally by the
+arm.
+
+"What, Elizabeth, are you still angry?" said Colden, stopping as she
+passed.
+
+"Excuse me, I have something to see to," said the girl, coolly,
+hurrying away from him.
+
+He made a slight movement to follow her, but old Valentine drew him
+into the parlor, saying:
+
+"Come, major, you'll see the lady enough after she's married to you. I
+was just going to say, the last lot of tobacco I got--"
+
+"Oh, damn your tobacco!" said the other, jerking his arm from the old
+man's tremulous grasp.
+
+"Damn my tobacco?" echoed Mr. Valentine, quite stupefied.
+
+"Yes. I've matters more important on my mind just now."
+
+"The deuce!" cried the old man. "What could be more important than
+tobacco?"
+
+And he stood looking into the fire, muttering to himself between
+furious puffs.
+
+Colden sought comfort of Miss Sally. "Was ever a woman as unreasonable
+as Elizabeth?" he said to her. "She'd have had me lower myself to meet
+that rebel vagabond as one gentleman meets another."
+
+But Miss Sally was not going to betray her own disappointment by
+showing a change from her oft-expressed opinion of the rebel
+captain,--particularly in the presence of Mr. Valentine. So she
+answered:
+
+"You met him so once, three years ago."
+
+"I had a less scrupulous sense of propriety then," replied Colden,
+raging inwardly.
+
+"But, as he's a rebel and deserter," pursued Miss Sally, "was it not
+your duty as a soldier to take him, just now?"
+
+"I'd have done so, had my men been here," growled the major.
+"Elizabeth ought to've had her servants hold him. I had half a mind to
+order them, in the King's name, but I never can bring myself to oppose
+her, she's so masterful! By George, though, I'll have him yet! My two
+fellows will soon come up. They shall give chase. He will leave tracks
+in the snow."
+
+Colden went to the window, and peered out as Peyton himself had done
+not long before. The flakes were coming down as thick as ever.
+
+"I don't see my rascals yet!" he muttered. "They've stopped at the
+tavern, I'll warrant."
+
+And he continued to gaze eagerly out, impatient that his men should
+arrive before the new-fallen snow should cover his enemy's tracks.
+
+Old Mr. Valentine, having exhausted his present stock of mutterings,
+now walked over to Miss Sally, who had sat down near the spinet.
+
+"Miss Williams," said he, "this is the first chance I've had to speak
+to you alone in a week."
+
+"But we're not alone," said Miss Sally, motioning her head towards
+Colden.
+
+"He's nobody," contemptuously replied the octogenarian. "A man that
+damns tobacco is nobody. So you may go ahead and speak out. What's
+your answer, ma'am?"
+
+"Oh, Mr. Valentine, not now! You must give me time."
+
+"That's what you said before," he complained.
+
+She had, indeed, said it before, scores of times.
+
+"Well, give me more time, then," she replied.
+
+"How much?" asked the old man, in a matter-of-fact way.
+
+"Oh, I don't know! Long enough for me to make up my mind."
+
+Thus far, this conversation had followed in the exact lines of many
+that had preceded it, but now Mr. Valentine made a departure from the
+customary form.
+
+"I think," said he, "if my other two wives had taken as long as you to
+make up their minds, I shouldn't have been twice a widower by now."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Valentine!" said Miss Sally, in a sweetly reproachful way.
+"Now you know--"
+
+But he cut her speech off short. "Very likely," said he. "I don't
+know. Well, take your time. Only please remember I haven't so very
+much time left! Better take me while I'm here to be had! Good night,
+ma'am!" And he went to the dining-room to fortify himself for his long
+homeward walk through the snow.
+
+In crossing the hall, he saw Cuff on the settle in Sam's place. In the
+dining-room he met Molly, who was clearing the table of the supper
+that Colden had disdained. He asked her the whereabouts of Williams,
+and she replied that the steward and Sam had gone out on some order of
+Miss Elizabeth's. Deciding to await Williams's return, the old man sat
+down before the dining-room fire, and was soon peacefully snoring.
+
+Elizabeth had gone up-stairs to watch from her darkened window the
+issue of the expedition of Williams and Sam, who had gone out by the
+kitchen, equipped respectively with rope and pistol. While they were
+in the immediate vicinity of the house, she could not see them from
+her elevation, but presently she beheld them glide swiftly across a
+white open space in the garden, cross a stile, and disappear among the
+trees and bushes between the garden and the post-road. Turning her
+eyes to the road itself, that lonely highway now called Broadway,[9]
+she made out a solitary figure toiling forward through the whirling
+whiteness,--and she gave a sigh, the deepest and longest with which
+her frame had ever trembled.
+
+Meanwhile Miss Sally remained in the parlor, thinking it best not to
+go to Elizabeth unless sent for; while Colden continued to stand at
+the window, showing his impatience for the arrival of his two soldiers
+in a tense contracting of the brow, in a restless shifting from foot
+to foot, and in intermittent stifled curses.
+
+As he kept his eyes on the place where the branch road left the
+highway, he did not see that part of the lawn walk which led from the
+garden. But suddenly a slight noise drew his look towards the portico
+before the east hall.
+
+"Who are these coming?" he cried, startling Miss Sally out of her
+musings and her chair.
+
+"Are they your men?" she asked, hastening to join him at the window.
+
+"No, mine are mounted," said he. "Why,--these are Williams and
+Sam,--and they are bringing,--yes, it is he! They're bringing him back
+a prisoner! She has done it, after all, without consulting me!" And he
+strode to the centre of the room, in the utmost elation.
+
+Miss Sally weakened at the imminent prospect of a meeting between the
+two enemies in the changed circumstances, and felt the need of her
+niece's support.
+
+"I must tell Elizabeth they have him," she said, and ran out to the
+east hall, and thence to the dining-room, just in time to avoid seeing
+Peyton led in through the outer door, which Cuff had opened at
+Williams's call.
+
+The steward and Sam conducted their prisoner immediately into the
+parlor. There Colden stood, with a rancorously jubilant smile, to
+receive him.
+
+Peyton's wrists were as Williams had tied them. He was without his
+hat, which had been knocked off in a brief struggle he had essayed
+against his captors in a moment when Sam had lowered the pistol. There
+was a little fresh snow on his hair, and more on his shoulders. The
+feet of his boots were cased with it. His left arm was held by
+Williams, who carried the broken sword, having taken it from the
+scabbard at the first opportunity. Peyton's other arm was grasped by
+the huge, bony left hand of Sam, who held the cocked pistol in his
+right. The two men walked with him to the centre of the parlor, and
+stopped.
+
+"By George," said he, turning his face towards Sam, with fire in his
+eyes, "had the snow not killed the sound of your sneaking footsteps
+till you'd caught my arms behind, I'd have done for the two of you!"
+
+"Good, Williams!" said Colden. "Place him on that chair, and leave him
+here with me. But stay in the hall on guard."
+
+"So Miss Elizabeth ordered us, sir," said Williams, dryly, and, with
+Sam, conducted Peyton to the chair, on which he sat willingly.
+
+"Of course she did," replied Colden. "Was it not at my suggestion?"
+
+Peyton looked sharply up at the major, who regarded him with the
+undisguised pleasure of hate about to be satisfied.
+
+Williams handed the broken sword to Colden, saying, "This was the only
+weapon he had, sir. We grabbed him before he could use it. We ran out
+behind him from the roadside, and he couldn't hear us for the snow."
+
+"Ay, or the pair of you couldn't have taken me!" said Peyton, with hot
+scorn and defiant gameness.
+
+Colden, with the piece of sword, motioned Williams to go from the
+room.
+
+"Leave the door ajar a little," he added, "so you can hear if I
+call."
+
+Peyton uttered a short laugh of derision at this piece of prudence.
+The steward and Sam withdrew to the hall, where Sam remained, while
+Williams went in search of Elizabeth for further orders. As soon as
+she had assured herself, by watching and listening, that Peyton was
+safe in the parlor, she had stolen quietly down-stairs to the
+dining-room, where she had met her aunt, with whom the steward now
+found her sitting. She told him to get the duck-gun, make sure it was
+loaded and primed, and to wait with Sam on the settle in the hall. She
+then requested her aunt to remain in the dining-room, silently
+returned to the hall, and took station by the door leading from the
+parlor,--the door which Williams, at Colden's command, had left
+slightly ajar. Her original plan, she felt, might have to be altered
+by reason of Colden's having obtruded his hand into the game, a
+possibility she had not, in roughly sketching that plan, taken into
+account. It was in order to have the guidance of circumstance, that
+she now put herself in the way of hearing, unseen, what might pass
+between the two men. Meanwhile, through the snow-storm, Colden's two
+soldiers, who had indeed tarried at the tavern for the heating up of
+their interiors, were blasphemously urging their sleepy horses towards
+the manor-house.
+
+In the parlor, the two enemies were facing each other, Peyton on his
+chair, his tied wrists behind him, Colden standing at some distance
+from him, holding the broken sword. As soon as they were alone, Peyton
+uttered another one-syllabled laugh, and said:
+
+"The hospitality of this house beats my recollection. One is always
+coming back to it."
+
+"You'll not come back the next time you leave it!" said Major Colden,
+his eyes glittering with gratified rancor.
+
+"And when shall that time be?" asked Peyton, airily.
+
+"As soon as two of my men arrive, whom I outrode on my way hither
+to-night. They attended me out of New York. I shall be generous and
+give them over to you, to attend you _into_ New York."
+
+"Thanks for the escort!"
+
+"'Tis the only kind you rebels ever have, when you enter New York,"
+sneered the major.
+
+"We shall enter it with an escort of our own choosing some day! And a
+sorry day that for you Tories and refugees, my dear gentleman!"
+
+"But if that day ever comes, _you'll_ have been rotting underground a
+long time,--and thanks to _me_, don't forget that!"
+
+"Thanks to _her_, you coward!" cried Peyton. "'Twas she that sent her
+servants after me! You didn't dare try taking me, alone!"
+
+"Bah!" said Colden, hotly, "I might have pistolled you here
+to-night"--and he placed his hand on the fire-arm in his belt--"but
+for the presence of the ladies!"
+
+"Was it the ladies' presence," retorted Peyton, contemptuously, "or
+the fact that you're a devilish bad shot?"
+
+Neither man heard the door moved farther open, or saw Elizabeth step
+through the aperture to the inner side of the threshold, where she
+stopped and watched. Peyton's back was towards her, and Colden's rage
+at the last words was too intense to permit his eyes to rove from its
+object.
+
+"Damn you!" cried the major. "I'd show you how bad a shot I am, but
+that I'd rather wait and see you on the gallows!"
+
+"Will _she_ come to see me there, I wonder?" said Peyton, half
+thoughtfully. "She ought to, for it's her work sends me there, not
+yours! 'Twill not be _your_ revenge when they string me up, my jolly
+friend!"
+
+Taunted beyond all self-control, the Tory yelled:
+
+"Not mine, eh? Then I'll have mine now, you dog!"
+
+With that, he strode forward and struck Harry a fierce blow across the
+face with the flat side of Harry's own broken sword.
+
+Harry merely blinked his eyes, and did not flinch. He turned pale,
+then red, and in a moment, first clearing his voice of a slight
+huskiness, said, quietly:
+
+"That blow I charge against you both,--the lady as well as you!"
+
+Colden had stepped back some distance after delivering the blow.
+Something in Harry's answer seemed to infuriate still further the
+devil awakened in the Tory's body, for he cried out:
+
+"The lady as well as me,--yes! And this, too!"
+
+And he advanced on Peyton, to strike a second time.
+
+"Stop! How dare you?"
+
+The cry was Elizabeth's. It startled Colden so that he loosened his
+hold of the broken sword before he could deliver the blow. At that
+instant, she caught his arm in her one hand, the sword-guard in her
+other. She tore the weapon from his grasp, and faced him with a
+countenance as furious as his own.
+
+"What do you mean?" he cried.
+
+For answer she struck him in the face with the flat of the sword, as
+he had struck Peyton. "You sneak!" she said.
+
+He recoiled, and stood staring, a ghastly image of bewilderment and
+consternation. After a moment he turned livid.
+
+"Ah! I see now!" he gasped. "You love him!"
+
+"Yes!" came the answer, prompt and decided.
+
+He gazed at her with such an expression as a painter of hell might
+put into the face of a lost soul, and he said, faintly, in a kind of
+articulate moan:
+
+"I might have known!"
+
+Suddenly there came from the outer night the exclamation, quick and
+distinct:
+
+"Whoa!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE BROKEN SWORD.
+
+
+The sound wrought a transformation in Colden. His face lighted up with
+malevolent joy.
+
+"You love too late!" he cried, to Elizabeth. "My men are there! They
+shall take him to New York a prisoner, at last!"
+
+"But not delivered up by me, thank God!" replied Elizabeth, while
+Peyton rose quickly from his chair, and Colden reeled like a drunken
+man to the window.
+
+She went behind Peyton, and, with the edge of the broken sword, hacked
+rather than cut through one of the outer windings that bound his
+wrists together, whereupon she speedily uncoiled the rope.
+
+"You were my prisoner. I set you free!" she said, dropped the rope to
+the floor, and handed him the broken sword.
+
+He took the weapon in his right hand, and imprisoned Elizabeth with
+his left arm.
+
+"I'm more your prisoner now than ever!" he said. "You've cut these
+bonds. Will you put others on me?"
+
+"Sometime,--if we can save your life!" she answered.
+
+Both turned their eyes towards Colden.
+
+The Tory officer had drawn his sword, and was motioning, in great
+excitement, to his soldiers outside.
+
+"This way, men!" he shouted. "To the front door! Damn the louts! Can't
+they understand?" He beat upon the window with his sword, knocking out
+panes of glass. "Come through that door, I say! Quick, curse you,
+there's a prisoner here, with a price for his taking! Ay, that's it!
+Some one in the hall there, open the front door to my men!"
+
+The sound now came of knocks bestowed on the outside door, and of
+Sam's heavy tread on the hall floor.
+
+"Williams! Sam!" shouted Elizabeth. "Don't let them in!"
+
+The heavy tread was heard to stop short. The knocking on the outer
+door was resumed.
+
+"Let them in, I say," roared Colden, too proud to go himself to the
+door. "I command it, in the name of the King!"
+
+"Obey your mistress," cried Peyton, to those in the hall. "I command
+it, in the name of Congress!"
+
+Colden was silent for a moment, then suddenly threw open the window
+and called out, "This way, men! Quick!"
+
+And he drew pistol, and stood ready with steel and ball to guard the
+window by which his men were to enter. A new, wild ferocity was on his
+face, a new, nervous hardness in his body, as if the latent resolution
+and strength which a prudent man keeps for a great contest, on which
+his all may depend, were at last aroused. In such a mood, the man who,
+governed by interest, may have seemed a coward all his life becomes
+for the once supremely formidable. At last he thinks the stake worth
+the play, at last the prize is worth the risk, and because it is so he
+will play and risk to the end, hazarding all, not yielding while he
+breathes. Having opened the theme which alone, of all themes, shall
+transform his irresolution into action, he will, Hamlet like, "fight
+upon this theme until" his "eyelids will no longer wag." So was Colden
+aroused, transfigured, as he stood doubly armed by the window, waiting
+for his men to clamber in.
+
+"What shall we do, dear?" said Elizabeth.
+
+"Fight!" replied Peyton, tightening at the same time his right palm
+around his broken sword, and his left around the hand she had let him
+take,--for she had moved from the embrace of his arm.
+
+"Ay, there are only two of them," she said, as two burly forms
+appeared in the open window, one behind the other.
+
+"There will be three of us, you'll find!" cried Colden. "This time
+I'll take a hand, if need be."
+
+"You must not stay here," said Peyton to Elizabeth, quickly. "Things
+will be flying loose in a moment!"
+
+"I won't leave you!" said she.
+
+"Go! I beg you, go!" he said, releasing her hand, and stepping back.
+
+Meanwhile, Colden's men bounded in through the window. Rough, sturdy
+fellows were they, who landed heavily on the parlor floor, and blinked
+at the light, drawing the while the breeches of their short muskets
+from beneath their coats. Their hats and shoulders were coated with
+snow.
+
+"Take that rebel alive, if you can!" ordered Colden. "He's meant to
+hang! Stun him with your musket-butts!"
+
+The men quickly reversed their weapons, and strode heavily towards
+Harry. To their surprise, before they could bring down their muskets,
+which required both hands of each to hold, Harry dashed forward
+between them, thinking to cut down Colden with his broken sword,
+possess himself of the latter's pistol, shoot one of the soldiers, and
+meet the other on less unequal terms. He saw a possibility of his
+leaping through the open window and fleeing on one of the soldiers'
+horses, but the idea was accompanied by the thought that Elizabeth
+might be made to suffer for his escape. Her safety now depended on his
+getting the mastery over his three would-be captors. So, ere the two
+astonished fellows could turn, Harry had leaped within sword's reach
+of his doubly armed enemy.
+
+But Colden was now as alert as rigid, and he opposed his officer's
+sword against Peyton's broken cavalry blade, guarding himself with
+unexpected swiftness, and giving back, for Harry's sweeping stroke, a
+thrust which only the quickest and most dexterous movement turned
+aside from entering the Virginian's lungs. As Harry stepped back for
+an instant out of his adversary's reach, the Tory raised his pistol.
+At the same moment the two soldiers, having turned about, rushed on
+Peyton from behind. He heard them coming, and half turned to face
+them. Their movement had for him one fortunate circumstance. It kept
+Colden from shooting, for his bullet might have struck one of his own
+men.
+
+Now Elizabeth had not been idle. At the moment when Harry had stepped
+back from her and bade her go, she had run to the door of the east
+hall, and called Williams and Sam. While Peyton had been engaging
+Colden near the window, the steward and the negro had entered the
+parlor, and she had excitedly ordered them to Peyton's aid. Williams
+still had the duck-gun, Sam the pistol. Thus it occurred that, as
+Peyton half turned from Colden towards the two soldiers, these
+last-named saw Williams and Sam rush in between them and their prey.
+Before Williams could bring his duck-gun to bear, he was struck down
+senseless by one of the musket blows first intended for Peyton.
+Another blow, and from another musket, had been aimed at Sam's woolly
+head, but the negro had put up his left hand and caught the descending
+weapon, and at the same time had discharged his pistol at the weapon's
+holder. But Williams, in falling, had knocked against the darky, and
+so disturbed his aim, and the ball flew wide. The man who had brought
+down Williams now struck Sam a terrible blow with the musket-club, on
+the temple, and the negro dropped like a felled ox.
+
+During this brief passage, Peyton had returned to close quarters with
+Colden. The latter, who had lowered his pistol when his men had last
+approached Peyton, and who had resumed the contest of swords unequal
+in size and kind, now raised the pistol a second time. But it was
+caught by the hands of Elizabeth, who had run around to his left, and
+who now, suddenly endowed with the strength of a tigress, wrenched it
+from him as she had wrenched the broken sword earlier in the evening.
+She tried to discharge the pistol at one of the two soldiers, as they,
+relieved of the brief interposition of Williams and Sam, were again
+taking position to bring down their muskets on Peyton's head while he
+continued at sword-work with Colden. But the pistol snapped without
+going off, whereupon Elizabeth hurled it in the face of the man at
+whom she had aimed. The blow disconcerted him so that his musket fell
+wide of Peyton, who at the same instant, having seen from the corner
+of his eye how he was menaced, leaped backward from under the other
+descending musket. Then, taking advantage of the moment when the
+muskets were down, he ran to the music seat before the spinet, and
+mounted upon it, thinking rightly that the infuriated major would
+follow him, and that he might the better execute a certain manoeuvre
+from the vantage of height. Colden indeed rushed after him, and thrust
+at him, Peyton sweeping the thrusts aside with pendulum-like swings of
+his own short weapon. His thought was to send the point that menaced
+him so astray that he might leap forward and cleave his enemy with a
+downward stroke before the Tory could recover his guard. But Colden
+pressed him so speedily that he was at last fain to step up from the
+music seat to the spinet, landing first on the keyboard, which sent
+out a frightened discord as he alighted on it. Finding the keys an
+uncertain footing, he took another step, and stood on the body of the
+instrument, so that Colden would be at the disadvantage of thrusting
+upwards. But Colden, seeming to tire a little after a few such
+thrusts, called to his men:
+
+"Shoot the dog in the legs!"
+
+Both men aimed at once. Elizabeth screamed. Peyton leaped down from
+his height to the little space behind the spinet projection, where he
+had hidden a week before. Here he found himself well placed, for here
+he could be approached on one side only,--unless his adversaries
+should follow his example and come at him from the top of the spinet.
+
+Colden attacked him with sword, at the open side, and shouted to his
+men:
+
+"One of you get on the spinet. The other crawl under. We have him
+now."
+
+Still guarding himself from his enemy's thrusts, Peyton heard one of
+the men leap from the music seat to the spinet, and the other advance
+creeping, doubtless with gun before him, under the instrument. Peyton
+sank to his knees, placed his shoulder under the back edge of the
+spinet's projection, and, warding off a downward movement of Colden's
+sword, turned the instrument over on its side, checking the creeping
+man under it, and throwing the other fellow to the floor some feet
+away. As the spinet fell, one of its legs, rising swiftly into the
+air, knocked Colden's blade upward, and the Tory leaped back lest
+Peyton might avail himself of the opening. But the spinet-leg itself
+hindered Peyton from doing so. Colden rushed forward again, thrusting
+as he did so. Peyton leaped aside, made a swift half-turn, and landed
+a stroke on Colden's sword-hand, making the Tory cry out and drop the
+sword. Harry put his foot on it and cried:
+
+"You're at my mercy! Beg quarter!"
+
+But the man who had been thrown from the top of the spinet now
+returned to the attack, coming around that end of the upset instrument
+which was opposite the end where Colden had menaced Harry. Seeing this
+new adversary, Harry retreated past Colden, in order to put himself in
+position. The soldier hastened after him, with upraised musket. At
+this moment, Peyton saw himself confronted by Elizabeth, who pulled
+open the door of the south hall. He stopped short to avoid running
+against her.
+
+"Save yourself!" she cried, and pushed him through the open doorway,
+flinging the door shut upon him, a movement which the pursuing
+soldier, stayed for a moment by collision with Colden, was not in time
+to prevent. Harry heard the key move in the lock, and knew that
+Elizabeth had turned it, and that he was safe in the south hall, with
+a minute of vantage which he might employ as he would.
+
+Elizabeth withdrew the key from the locked door, just as the pursuing
+soldier arrived at that door. The man, in his excitement, violently
+tried to open the door. Colden, who was wrapping a handkerchief around
+his wounded hand, shouted to the man:
+
+"You fool, she has the key! Take it from her!"
+
+"You shall kill me first!" she cried, and ran from the man towards the
+open window, stepping over the prostrate bodies of Sam and Williams as
+she went.
+
+"After her! She'll throw it into the snow!" cried Colden.
+
+This much Harry heard through the door, and heard also the heavy tread
+of the soldier's feet in pursuit of the girl. His mind imaged forth a
+momentary picture of the fellow's rough hands laid on the delicate
+arms of Elizabeth, of her body clasped by the man in a struggle, her
+white skin reddened by his grasp. The spectacle, imaginary and lasting
+but an instant, maddened Peyton beyond endurance, made him a giant, a
+Hercules. He threw himself against the door repeatedly, plied foot and
+body in heavy blows. Meanwhile Elizabeth had reached the window, and
+thrown the key far out on the snow-heaped lawn. She had no sooner done
+so than the man laid his clutch on her arm.
+
+"Fly, Peyton, for God's sake! For my sake!" she shouted.
+
+"You shall pay for aiding the enemy, if he does!" cried Colden. "Don't
+let her escape, Thompson!"
+
+At that instant the locked door gave way, and in burst Harry, having
+broken, to save Elizabeth from a rude contact, the barrier she had
+closed to save his life. That life, which he had once saved by
+callously assailing her heart, he now risked, that her body might not
+suffer the touch of an ungentle hand. So swift and sudden was his
+entrance, that he had crossed the room, and floored Elizabeth's
+captor, with a deep gash down the side of the head, ere Colden made a
+step towards him.
+
+The man who had been under the fallen spinet had now extricated
+himself, and regained his feet, and he and Colden rushed on Peyton at
+once. Elated by having so speedily wrought Elizabeth's release, and
+reduced the number of his able adversaries to two, Peyton bethought
+himself of a new plan. He fled through the deep doorway to the east
+hall, and took position on the staircase. He turned just in time to
+parry Colden's sword, which the major had picked up and made shift to
+hold in his wrapped-up, wounded hand. Harry saw that an opportune
+stroke might send the sword from his enemy's numb and weakening grasp,
+and his heart swelled with anticipated triumph, until he heard
+Colden's hoarse cry:
+
+"Shoot him, James, while I keep him occupied!"
+
+This order was now the more practicable from Harry's being on the
+stairs, above Colden, a great part of his body exposed to an aim that
+could not endanger his antagonist. Breathing heavily, his eyes afire
+with hatred, Colden repeated his attacks, while Harry saw the other's
+musket raised, the barrel looking him in the eyes. He leaped a step
+higher, swung his broken sword against the pendent chandelier,
+knocked the only burning candle from its socket, and threw the hall
+into darkness. A moment later the gun went off, giving an instant's
+red flame, a loud crack, and a smell of gunpowder smoke. Harry heard a
+swift singing near his right ear, and knew that he was untouched.
+
+Lest Colden's sword, thrust at random, might find him in the dark,
+Harry instantly bestrode the stair-rail, and dropped, outside the
+balustrade, to the floor of the hall. He grasped his half-sword in
+both hands, so as to put his whole weight behind it, and made a lunge
+in the direction of a muttered curse. The curse gave way to a roar of
+pain and rage, and Colden's second follower dropped, spurting blood in
+the darkness, his shoulder gashed horribly by the blunt end of
+Peyton's imperfect weapon. Harry now ran back to the parlor, to deal
+with Colden in the light, the latter's greater length of weapon giving
+a greater searching-power in the darkness. In the parlor Elizabeth
+stood waiting in suspense. Sam was sitting on the floor and staring
+stupidly at Williams, who was now awake and rubbing his head, and the
+Tory first fallen was still senseless. Harry had no sooner taken this
+scene in at a glance, than Colden was upon him.
+
+The major's eyes seemed to stand out like blazing carbuncles from the
+face of some deity of rage.
+
+"G--d d----n your soul!" he screamed, and thrust. The point went
+straight, and Elizabeth, seeing it protrude through the back of
+Harry's coat, near the left side of his body, uttered a low cry, and
+sank half-fainting to her knees. Colden shouted with triumphant
+laughter. "Die, you dog! And when you burn in hell, remember I sent
+you there!"
+
+But the evil joy suddenly faded out of Colden's face, for Harry
+Peyton, smiling, took a forward step, grasped near the hilt the sword
+that seemed to be sheathed in his own body, forced it from Colden's
+hand, and then drew it slowly from its lodgment. No blood discolored
+it, and none oozed from Harry's body.
+
+The Virginian's quick movement to escape the thrust had left only a
+part of his loose-fitting coat exposed, and Colden's sword had passed
+through it, leaving him unhurt. Colden's momentary appearance of
+victory had been the means of actual defeat.
+
+The Tory major saw his cup of revenge dashed from his lips, saw
+himself deprived of sword and sweetheart, neither chance left of
+living nor motive left for life. His rage collapsed; his hate burst
+like a bubble.
+
+"Kill me," he said, quietly, to Peyton.
+
+His look, innocent of any thought to draw compassion, quite disarmed
+Harry, who stood for a moment with moistening eyes and a kind of
+welling-up at the throat, then said, in a rather unsteady voice:
+
+"No, sir! God knows I've taken enough from you," and he looked at
+Elizabeth, who had risen and was standing near him. Softened by the
+triumphant outcome for her love, she, too, was suddenly sensible of
+the defeated man's unhappiness, and her eyes applauded and thanked
+Harry.
+
+"You've taken what I never had," said Colden, with a chastened kind of
+bitterness, "yet without which the life you give me back is
+worthless."
+
+"Make it worth something with this," and Peyton held Colden's sword
+out to him.
+
+"What! You will trust me with it?" said Colden, amazed and incredulous,
+taking the sword, but holding it limply.
+
+"Certainly, sir!"
+
+Colden was motionless a moment, then placed his arm high against the
+doorway, and buried his face against his arm, to hide the outlet of
+what various emotions were set loose by his enemy's display of pity
+and trust.
+
+Harry gently drew Elizabeth to him and kissed her. Yielding, she
+placed her arms around his neck, and held him for a moment in an
+embrace of her own offering. Then she withdrew from his clasp, and
+when Colden again faced them she had resumed that invisible veil which
+no man, not even the beloved, might pass through till she bade him.
+
+"You will find me worthy of your trust, sir," said Colden, brokenly,
+yet with a mixture of manly humility and honorable pride.[10]
+
+"I am so sure of that," said Harry, "that I confide to your care for a
+time what is dearest to me in the world. I ask you to accompany Miss
+Philipse to her home in New York, when it may suit her convenience,
+and to see that she suffer nothing for what has occurred here this
+night."
+
+"You are a generous enemy, sir," said Colden, his eyes moistening
+again. "One man in ten thousand would have done me the honor, the
+kindness, of that request!"
+
+"Why," said Harry, taking his enemy's hand, as if in token of
+farewell, "whatever be the ways of the knaves, respectable and
+otherwise, who are so cautious against tricks like their own, thank
+God it's not so rotten a world that a gentleman may not trust a
+gentleman, when he is sure he has found one!"
+
+Turning to Elizabeth, he said: "I beg you will leave this house at
+dawn, if you can. Williams and Sam, there, will be little the worse
+for their knocks, and can look after the fellows on the floor."
+
+"And you," she replied, "must go at once. You must not further risk
+your life by a moment's waiting. Cuff shall saddle Cato for you. I
+sha'n't rest till I feel that you are far on your way."
+
+He approached as if again to kiss her, but she held out her hand to
+stay him. He took the hand, bent over it, pressed it to his lips.
+
+"But,--" he said, in a tone as low as a whisper, "when--"
+
+"When the war is over," she answered, softly, "let Cato bring you
+back."
+
+
+
+
+NOTES.
+
+
+NOTE 1. (Page 41.)
+
+"The old county historian." Rev. Robert Bolton, born 1814, died 1877.
+His "History of the County of Westchester," especially the revised
+edition published in 1881, is a rich mine of "material." Among other
+works that have served the author of this narrative in a study of the
+period and place are Allison's "History of Yonkers," Cole's "History
+of Yonkers," Edsall's "History of Kingsbridge," Dawson's "Westchester
+County during the Revolution," Jones's "New York during the
+Revolution," Watson's "Annals of New York in the Olden Time," General
+Heath's "Memoirs," Thatcher's "Memoirs," Simcoe's "Military Journal,"
+Dunlap's "History of New York," and Mrs. Ellet's "Domestic History of
+the Revolution." For an excellent description of the border warfare on
+the "neutral ground," the reader should go to Irving's delightful
+"Chronicle of Wolfert's Roost." Cooper's novel, "The Spy," deals
+accurately with that subject, which is touched upon also in that good
+old standby, Lossing's "Pictorial Field-book of the Revolution."
+Philipse Manor-house has been carefully written of by Judge Atkins in
+a Yonkers newspaper, and less accurately by Mrs. Lamb in her "History
+of New York City," and Marian Harland in "Some Colonial Homesteads and
+Their Stories." Of general histories, Irving's "Life of Washington"
+treats most fully of things around New York during the British
+occupation, and these things are interestingly dealt with in local
+histories, such as the "History of Queens County," Stiles's "History
+of Brooklyn," Barber and Howe's "New Jersey Historical Collections,"
+etc., as well as in such special works as Onderdonk's "Revolutionary
+Incidents."
+
+
+NOTE 2. (Page 47.)
+
+Of Colonel Gist's escape, Bolton gives the following account: "The
+house was occupied by the handsome and accomplished widow of the Rev.
+Luke Babcock, and Miss Sarah Williams, a sister of Mrs. Frederick
+Philipse. To the former lady Colonel Gist was devotedly attached;
+consequently, when an opportunity afforded, he gladly moved his
+command into that vicinity. On the night preceding the attack, he had
+stationed his camp at the foot of Boar Hill, for the better purpose of
+paying a special visit to this lady. It is said that whilst engaged in
+urging his suit the enemy were quietly surrounding his quarters; he
+had barely received his final dismissal from Mrs. Babcock when he was
+startled by the firing of musketry.... It appears that all the roads
+and bridges had been well guarded by the enemy, except the one now
+called Warner's Bridge, and that Captain John Odell upon the first
+alarm led off his troops through the woods on the west side of the Saw
+Mill [River]. Here Colonel Gist joined them. In the meantime Mrs.
+Babcock, having stationed herself in one of the dormer windows of the
+parsonage, aided their escape whenever they appeared, by the waving of
+a white handkerchief."
+
+The British attack was under Lieutenant-Colonel Simcoe, whose journal
+shows that his force so far outnumbered Gist's that the latter's only
+sensible course was in flight. About the year 1840, trees cut down
+near the site of Gist's camp were found to contain balls buried six
+inches in the wood.
+
+
+NOTE 3. (Page 76.)
+
+The three generals arrived on the _Cerberus_, May 25th. All the
+histories say that they arrived "with reinforcements." It is true,
+troops were constantly arriving at Boston about that time, but none
+came immediately with the three generals. The _Connecticut Gazette_
+(published in New London) printed, early in June, this piece of news,
+brought by a gentleman who had been in Boston, May 28th: "Generals
+Burgoyne, Clinton, and Howe arrived at Boston last Friday in a
+man-of-war. No troops came with them. They brought over 25 horses." It
+is a wonder that Frothingham, in his admirably complete history of the
+siege of Boston, missed even this little circumstance. Probably
+everybody has read the incident thus related by Irving: "As the ships
+entered the harbor and the rebel camp was pointed out, Burgoyne could
+not restrain a burst of surprise and scorn. 'What!' cried he; 'ten
+thousand peasants keep five thousand King's troops shut up! Well, let
+us get in and we'll soon find elbow room!'" I don't think Irving
+relates anywhere the sequel, which is that when, after his surrender,
+Burgoyne marched with his conquered army into Cambridge, an old woman
+shouted from a window to the crowd of spectators, "Give him elbow
+room!" This story ought to be true, if it is not.
+
+
+NOTE 4. (Page 89.)
+
+It was in a letter under date of October 4, 1778, that Washington
+wrote: "What officer can bear the weight of prices that every
+necessary article is now got to? A rat in the shape of a horse is not
+to be bought for less than L200; a saddle under thirty or forty."
+
+
+NOTE 5. (Page 124.)
+
+Captain Cunningham was the British provost marshal, as everybody
+knows, whose name became a synonym for wanton cruelty in the treatment
+of war prisoners. He had come to New York before the Revolution, and
+had kept a riding school there. As soon as the war broke out he took
+the royal side. It was he who had in charge the summary execution of
+Nathan Hale. He would often amuse himself by striking his prisoners
+with his keys and by kicking over the baskets of food or vessels of
+soup brought for them by charitable women, who, he said, were the
+worst rebels in New York. He died miserably in England after the war.
+His career is briefly outlined in Sabine's "Loyalists." As to the
+manner in which Peyton, if caught, would have died, it must be
+remembered that in the American Revolution the rope served in many a
+case which, occurring in Europe or in one of our later wars, would
+have been disposed of with the bullet. Writing of General Charles Lee,
+John Fiske says: "There is no doubt that Sir William Howe looked upon
+him as a deserter, and was more than half inclined to hang him without
+ceremony." Then, as now, a deserter in time of war was liable to death
+if caught at any subsequent time, his case being worse than that of a
+spy, who was liable to death only if caught before getting back to his
+own lines. There was, by the way, much unceremonious hanging on the
+"neutral ground." Not far from the Van Cortlandt mansion there still
+stood, in Bolton's time, "a celebrated white oak, in the midst of a
+pretty glade, called the Cowboy Oak," from the fact that many of the
+Tory raiders had been suspended from its branches during the war of
+Revolution.
+
+
+NOTE 6. (Page 127.)
+
+I am not sure whether the saying, "The corpse of an enemy smells
+sweet," attributed to Charles IX. of France, in allusion to Coligny,
+is historical or was the invention of a romancer. It occurs in Dumas's
+"La Reine Margot."
+
+
+NOTE 7. (Page 136.)
+
+Mr. Valentine's unwillingness to lend aid was doubtless due to the
+frequency of such incidents as one that had occurred to his neighbor,
+Peter Post, in 1776. Post's estate occupied the site of the present
+town of Hastings. He gave information to Colonel Sheldon regarding the
+movements of some Hessians, and afterwards deceived the Hessians as to
+the whereabouts of Sheldon's own cavalry. Thereby, Sheldon's troop was
+enabled to surprise the Hessians, and defeat them in a short and
+bloody conflict. The Hessians' comrades later caught Post, stripped
+him, beat him to insensibility, and left him for dead. He recovered of
+his injuries. His house, a small stone one, became a tavern after the
+Revolution, and was a celebrated resort of cock-fighters and
+hard-drinkers. Not far north of Hastings is Dobbs Ferry, which was
+occupied by both armies alternately, during the Revolution. Further
+north is Sunnyside, Irving's house, elaborated from the original
+Wolfert's Roost, and beyond that are Tarrytown, where Andre was
+stopped and taken in charge, and Sleepy Hollow. Enchanted ground, all
+this, hallowed by history, legend, and romance.
+
+
+NOTE 8. (Page 179.)
+
+The secret passage or passages of Philipse Manor-house have not been
+neglected by writers of fiction, history, and magazine articles. The
+passage does not now exist, but there are numerous traces of it. The
+different writers do not agree in locating it. The author of an
+interesting story for children, "A Loyal Little Maid," has it that the
+passage was reached through an opening in the panelling of the
+dining-room, this opening concealed by a tall clock. I think Marian
+Harland says that a closet in one of the parlors or chambers connects
+with the secret passage. Both these assumptions are wrong. Mr. R. P.
+Getty has pointed out in the northwestern corner of the cellar what
+seems to have once been the entrance to the passage. One authority
+quotes a belief "that from the cellar there was a passage to a well
+now covered by Woodworth Avenue," and that this was to afford access
+to what may have been a storage vault. A man who was born in 1821 says
+that, when a boy, he saw, near the house, a dry cistern, from the
+bottom of which was an arched passage towards the Hudson, large enough
+for a man six feet tall to pass through. Judge Atkins says that the
+well was opposite the kitchen door, and had, at its western side,
+about ten feet deep, a chamber in which butter was kept. One writer
+locates an ice-house where Judge Atkins places this well, and says a
+subterranean arched way led northward as far as the present Wells
+Avenue. "The ice-house was formerly, it is said, a powder-magazine."
+Many years ago, the coachman of Judge Woodworth used to say he had
+"gone through an underground passage all the way from the manor-house
+to the Hudson River." Judge Atkins has written interesting legends of
+the manor-house, involving the secret passage and other features.
+
+
+NOTE 9. (Page 259.)
+
+"That lonely highway now called Broadway." A block of houses and
+another street now lie between that highway and the east front of the
+manor-house. The building is closely hemmed in by the sordid signs of
+progress. Ugly houses, in crowded blocks, cover all the great
+surrounding space that once was thick forest, fair orchards, gardens,
+fields, and pastoral rivulet. The Neperan or Saw Mill River flows,
+sluggish and scummy, under streets and houses. A visit to the
+manor-house, now, would spoil rather than improve one's impression of
+what the place looked like in the old days. Yet the house itself
+remains well preserved, for which all honor to the town of Yonkers.
+There is in our spacious America so much room for the present and the
+future, that a little ought to be kept for the past. It is well to be
+reminded, by a landmark here and there, of our brave youth as a
+people. A posterity, sure to value these landmarks more than this
+money-grabbing age does, will reproach us with the destruction we have
+already wrought. Worse still than the crime of obliterating all
+human-made relics of the past, is the vandalism of nature herself
+where nature is exceptionally beautiful. To rob millions of
+beauty-lovers, yet to live, of the Palisades of the Hudson, would
+bring upon us the amazement and execration of future centuries. This
+earth is an entailed estate, that each generation is in honor bound to
+hand down, undefaced, undiminished, to its successor. In order that a
+close-clutched wallet or two may wax a little fatter, shall we bring
+upon ourselves a cry of shame that would ring with increasing
+bitterness through the ages,--shall we invite the execration merited
+by such greed as could so outrage our fair earth, such stolid apathy
+as could stand by and see it done? Shall an alien or two, as hard of
+soul as the stone in which he traffics, mar the Hudson that Washington
+patrolled, rob countless eyes, yet unopened, of a joy; countless
+minds, yet to waken, of an inspiration; countless hearts, yet to beat,
+of a thrill of pride in the soil of their inheriting? Shall some
+future reader wonder why Irving, deeming it "an invaluable advantage
+to be born and brought up in the neighborhood of some grand and noble
+object in nature," should have thanked God he was born on the banks of
+the Hudson? I write this with the sound of the blowing up of Indian
+Head still echoing in my ears, and knowing nothing done by Government
+to protect the next fair Hudson headland from similar destruction.
+
+
+NOTE 10. (Page 281.)
+
+It is probable that Colden served with his brigade when it fought in
+the South in the last part of the war. He was afterwards lost at sea,
+leaving no heir. He was of a family prominent in New York affairs,
+both before the Revolution and afterwards, and which was intermarried
+with other New York families of equal prominence, as may be seen in
+the "New York Genealogical and Biographical Record," the "New England
+Genealogical and Historical Register," and similar publications. It is
+probable that Sabine means this Colden when he mentions a Captain
+Colden, of the First Battalion of New Jersey Volunteers. That he was a
+major, however, is certain, from the official British Army lists
+published in Hugh Gaines's "Universal Register" for the years of the
+Revolution.
+
+People curious about Harry Peyton's military record may consult
+Saffel's "Lists of American Officers," Heitman's "Manual," and a large
+work on "Virginia Genealogies," by H. E. Hayden, published at
+Wilkes-barre. To the reader who demands a happy ending, it need be no
+shock to learn that Peyton, having risen to the rank of major, was
+killed at Charleston, S. C., May 12, 1780. For a love story, it is a
+happy ending that occurs at the moment when the conquest and the
+submission are mutual, complete, and demonstrated. A love to be
+perfect, to have its sweetness unembittered, ought not to be subjected
+to the wear and tear of prolonged fellowship. So subjected, it may
+deepen and gain ultimate strength, but it will lose its intoxicating
+novelty, and become associated with pain as well as with pleasure. We
+may be sure that the love of Peyton and Elizabeth was to Harry a
+sweetener of life on many a night encampment, many a hard ride, in the
+campaign of 1779, and in the spring of 1780, and exalted him the
+better to meet his death on that day when Charleston fell to the
+British; and that to Elizabeth, while it receded into further memory,
+it kept its full beauty during the half century she lived faithful to
+it. Her sisters were married into the English nobility, gentry, and
+military, but Elizabeth died in Bath, England, in March, 1828,
+unmarried. Colonel Philipse had moved with his family to England when
+the British quitted New York in 1783. Many other Tories did likewise.
+Some went to England, but more to Canada, the greater part of which
+was then a wilderness. Many of the Tory officers got commissions in
+the English army.
+
+No Tory family did more for the King's cause in America, lost more,
+or got more in redress, than the De Lancey family, which had been
+foremost in the administration of royal government in the province
+of New York. It had great holdings of property in New York City,
+elsewhere on the island of Manhattan, and in various parts of
+Westchester County, notably in Westchester Township, where De
+Lancey's mills and a fine country mansion were a famous landmark
+"where gentle Bronx clear winding flows." The founder of the
+American family was a French Huguenot of noble descent. The family was
+represented in the British army and navy before the Revolution. One
+member of it, a young officer in the navy, at the breaking out of
+the war, resigned his commission rather than serve against the
+Colonies, but most of the other De Lancey men were differently
+minded. Oliver De Lancey, a member of the provincial council, was
+made a brigadier-general in the royal service, and raised three
+battalions of loyalists, known as "De Lancey's Battalions." Of
+these battalions, the Tory historian, Judge Jones, says: "Two served
+in Georgia and the Carolinas from the time the British army landed in
+Georgia until the final evacuation of Charleston." One of these,
+during this period, was commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Stephen De
+Lancey, the other by Colonel John Harris Cruger. The third battalion,
+during the whole war, was employed solely in protecting the
+wood-cutters upon Lloyd's Neck, Queens County, L. I. This General
+De Lancey's son, Oliver De Lancey, Junior, was educated in Europe,
+took service with the 17th Light Dragoons, was a captain when the
+Revolution began, a major in 1778, a lieutenant-colonel in 1781,
+and, on the death of Major Andre, adjutant-general of the British army
+in America. Returning to England, he became deputy adjutant-general of
+England; as a major-general, he was also colonel of the 17th Light
+Dragoons; was subsequently barrack-master general of the British
+Empire, lieutenant-general, and finally general. When he died he was
+nearly at the head of the English army list. This branch of the
+family became extinct when Sir William Heathcoate De Lancey, the
+quartermaster-general of Wellington's army, was killed at Waterloo.
+
+The James De Lancey who commanded the Westchester Light Horse was a
+nephew of the senior General Oliver De Lancey, and a cousin of the
+Major Colden of this narrative. His troop was not "a battalion in the
+brigade of his uncle," Bolton's statement that it was so being
+incorrect; its operations were limited to Westchester County. It
+raided and fought for the King untiringly, until it was almost
+entirely killed off, at the end of the war, by the persistent efforts
+of our troops to extirpate it.
+
+The members of this corps were called "Cowboys" because, in their duty
+of procuring supplies for the British army, they made free with the
+farmers' cattle. Like the other conspicuous Tories, this James De
+Lancey was attainted by the new State Government, and his property was
+confiscated. Local historians draw an effective picture of him
+departing alone from his estate by the Bronx, turning for a last look,
+from the back of his horse, at the fair mansion and broad lands that
+were to be his no more, and riding away with a heavy heart. He went,
+with many shipfuls of Tory emigrants, to Nova Scotia, and became a
+member of the council of that colony. His uncle went to England and
+died at his country house, Beverly, Yorkshire, in 1785. I allude to
+the case of this family, because it was typical of that of a great
+many families. The Tories of the American Revolution constitute a
+subject that has yet to be made much of. They were the progenitors of
+English-speaking Canada.
+
+The act of attainder that deprived the De Lanceys of their estates,
+deprived Colonel Philipse of his. It was passed by the New York
+legislature, October 22, 1779. The persons declared guilty of
+"adherence to the enemies of the State" were attainted, their estates
+real and personal confiscated, and themselves proscribed, the second
+section of the act declaring that "each and every one of them who
+shall at any time hereafter be found in any part of this State, shall
+be, and are hereby, adjudged and declared guilty of felony, and shall
+suffer death as in cases of felony, without benefit of clergy." Acts
+of similar import were passed in other States. Under this act,
+Philipse Manor-house was forfeited to the State about a year after the
+time of our narrative. The commissioners whose duty it was to dispose
+of confiscated property sold the house and mills, in 1785, to
+Cornelius P. Lowe. It underwent several transfers, but little change,
+becoming at length the property of Lemuel Wells, who held it a long
+time and, dying in 1842, left it to his nephew. The town of Yonkers
+grew up around it, and on May 1, 1868, purchased it for municipal use.
+The fewest possible alterations were made in it. These are mainly in
+the north wing, the part added by the second lord of the manor in
+1745. On the first floor, the partition between dining-room and
+kitchen was removed, and the whole space made into a court-room. On
+the second floor, the space formerly divided into five bedrooms was
+transformed into a council-chamber, the garret floor overhead being
+removed. The new city hall of Yonkers leaves the old manor-house less
+necessary for public purposes. May the old parlors, where the besilked
+and bepowdered gentry of the province used to dance the minuet before
+the change of things, not be given over to baser uses than they have
+already served.
+
+Allusion has been made, in different chapters of this narrative, to
+the Hessians who daily patrolled the roads in the vicinity of the
+manor-house. This duty often fell to Pruschank's yagers, the troop to
+which belonged Captain Rowe, whose love story is thus told by Bolton:
+"Captain Rowe appears to have been in the habit of making a daily tour
+from Kingsbridge, round by Miles Square. He was on his last tour of
+military duty, having already resigned his commission for the purpose
+of marrying the accomplished Elizabeth Fowler, of Harlem, when,
+passing with a company of light dragoons, he was suddenly fired upon
+by three Americans of the water guard of Captain Pray's company, who
+had ambuscaded themselves in the cedars. The captain fell from his
+horse, mortally wounded. The yagers instantly made prisoners of the
+undisciplined water guards, and a messenger was immediately despatched
+to Mrs. Babcock, then living below, in the parsonage, for a vehicle to
+remove the wounded officer. The use of her gig and horse was soon
+obtained, and a neighbor, Anthony Archer, pressed to drive. In this
+they conveyed the dying man to Colonel Van Cortlandt's. They appear to
+have taken the route of Tippett's Valley, as the party stopped at
+Frederick Post's to obtain a drink of water. In the meantime an
+express had been forwarded to Miss Fowler, his affianced bride, to
+hasten without delay to the side of her dying lover. On her arrival,
+accompanied by her mother, the expiring soldier had just strength
+enough left to articulate a few words, when he sank exhausted with the
+effort." The room in which he died is in the well-known mansion in Van
+Cortlandt Park.
+
+The incident of the horse, related in an early chapter, has a likeness
+to an adventure that befell one Thomas Leggett early in the
+Revolutionary war. He lived with his father on a farm near Morrisania,
+then in Westchester County, and was proud in the possession of a fine
+young mare. A party of British refugees took this animal, with other
+property. They had gone two miles with it, when, from behind a stone
+wall which they were passing, two Continental soldiers rose and fired
+at them. The man with the mare was shot dead. The animal immediately
+turned round and ran home, followed by the owner, who had dogged her
+captors at a distance in the hope of recovering her.
+
+
+
+
+ SELECTIONS FROM
+ L. C. PAGE AND COMPANY'S
+ LIST OF NEW FICTION.
+
+
+An Enemy to the King.
+
+From the Recently Discovered Memoirs of the Sieur de la Tournoire. By
+ROBERT NEILSON STEPHENS. Illustrated by H. De M. Young.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+An historical romance of the sixteenth century, describing the
+adventures of a young French nobleman at the Court of Henry IV., and
+on the field with Henry of Navarre.
+
+
+The Continental Dragoon.
+
+A Romance of Philipse Manor House, in 1778. By ROBERT NEILSON
+STEPHENS, author of "An Enemy to the King." Illustrated by H. C.
+Edwards.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+A stirring romance of the Revolution, the scene being laid in and
+around the old Philipse Manor House, near Yonkers, which at the time
+of the story was the central point of the so-called "neutral
+territory" between the two armies.
+
+
+Muriella; or, Le Selve.
+
+By OUIDA. Illustrated by M. B. Prendergast.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+This is the latest work from the pen of the brilliant author of "Under
+Two Flags," "Moths," etc., etc. It is the story of the love and
+sacrifice of a young peasant girl, told in the absorbing style
+peculiar to the author.
+
+
+The Road to Paris.
+
+By ROBERT NEILSON STEPHENS, author of "An Enemy to the King," "The
+Continental Dragoon," etc. Illustrated by H. C. Edwards. (In press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+An historical romance, being an account of the life of an American
+gentleman adventurer of Jacobite ancestry, whose family early settled
+in the colony of Pennsylvania. The scene shifts from the unsettled
+forests of the then West to Philadelphia, New York, London, Paris,
+and, in fact, wherever a love of adventure and a roving fancy can lead
+a soldier of fortune. The story is written in Mr. Stephens's best
+style, and is of absorbing interest.
+
+
+Rose a Charlitte.
+
+An Acadien Romance. By MARSHALL SAUNDERS, author of "Beautiful Joe,"
+etc. Illustrated by H. De M. Young.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+In this novel, the scene of which is laid principally in the land of
+Evangeline, Marshall Saunders has made a departure from the style of
+her earlier successes. The historical and descriptive setting of the
+novel is accurate, the plot is well conceived and executed, the
+characters are drawn with a firm and delightful touch, and the
+fortunes of the heroine, Rose a Charlitte, a descendant of an old
+Acadien family, will be followed with eagerness by the author's host
+of admirers.
+
+
+Bobbie McDuff.
+
+By CLINTON ROSS, author of "The Scarlet Coat," "Zuleika," etc.
+Illustrated by B. West Clinedinst.
+
+1 vol., large 16mo, cloth =$1.00=
+
+Clinton Ross is well known as one of the most promising of recent
+American writers of fiction, and in the description of the adventures
+of his latest hero, Bobbie McDuff, he has repeated his earlier
+successes. Mr. Ross has made good use of the wealth of material at his
+command. New York furnishes him the hero, sunny Italy a heroine, grim
+Russia the villain of the story, while the requirements of the
+exciting plot shift the scene from Paris to New York, and back again
+to a remote, almost feudal villa on the southern coast of Italy.
+
+
+In Kings' Houses.
+
+A Romance of the Reign of Queen Anne. By JULIA C. R. DORR, author of
+"A Cathedral Pilgrimage," etc. Illustrated by Frank T. Merrill.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+Mrs. Dorr's poems and travel sketches have earned for her a distinct
+place in American literature, and her romance, "In Kings' Houses," is
+written with all the charm of her earlier works. The story deals
+with one of the most romantic episodes in English history. Queen
+Anne, the last of the reigning Stuarts, is described with a strong,
+yet sympathetic touch, and the young Duke of Gloster, the "little
+lady," and the hero of the tale, Robin Sandys, are delightful
+characterizations.
+
+
+Sons of Adversity.
+
+A Romance of Queen Elizabeth's Time. By L. COPE CONFORD, author of
+"Captain Jacobus," etc. Illustrated by J. W. Kennedy.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+A tale of adventure on land and sea at the time when Protestant
+England and Catholic Spain were struggling for naval supremacy.
+Spanish conspiracies against the peace of good Queen Bess, a vivid
+description of the raise of the Spanish siege of Leyden by the
+combined Dutch and English forces, sea fights, the recovery of stolen
+treasure, are all skilfully woven elements in a plot of unusual
+strength.
+
+
+The Count of Nideck.
+
+From the French of Erckman-Chatrian, translated and adapted by RALPH
+BROWNING FISKE. Illustrated by Victor A. Searles.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+A romance of the Black Forest, woven around the mysterious legend of
+the Wehr Wolf. The plot has to do with the later German feudal times,
+is brisk in action, and moves spiritedly from start to finish. Mr.
+Fiske deserves a great deal of credit for the excellence of his work.
+No more interesting romance has appeared recently.
+
+
+The Making of a Saint.
+
+By W. SOMERSET MAUGHAM. Illustrated by Gilbert James.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+"The Making of a Saint" is a romance of Mediaeval Italy, the scene
+being laid in the 15th century. It relates the life of a young leader
+of Free Companions who, at the close of one of the many petty Italian
+wars, returns to his native city. There he becomes involved in its
+politics, intrigues, and feuds, and finally joins an uprising of the
+townspeople against their lord. None can resent the frankness and
+apparent brutality of the scenes through which the hero and his
+companions of both sexes are made to pass, and many will yield
+ungrudging praise to the author's vital handling of the truth. In the
+characters are mirrored the life of the Italy of their day. The book
+will confirm Mr. Maugham's reputation as a strong and original
+writer.
+
+
+Omar the Tentmaker.
+
+A Romance of Old Persia. By NATHAN HASKELL DOLE. Illustrated. (In
+press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+Mr. Dole's study of Persian literature and history admirably equips
+him to enter into the life and spirit of the time of the romance, and
+the hosts of admirers of the inimitable quatrains of Omar Khayyam,
+made famous by Fitzgerald, will be deeply interested in a tale based
+on authentic facts in the career of the famous Persian poet. The three
+chief characters are Omar Khayyam, Nizam-ul-Mulk, the generous and
+high-minded Vizier of the Tartar Sultan Malik Shah of Mero, and Hassan
+ibu Sabbah, the ambitious and revengeful founder of the sect of the
+Assassins. The scene is laid partly at Naishapur, in the Province of
+Khorasan, which about the period of the First Crusade was at its acme
+of civilization and refinement, and partly in the mountain fortress of
+Alamut, south of the Caspian Sea, where the Ismailians under Hassan
+established themselves towards the close of the 11th century. Human
+nature is always the same, and the passions of love and ambition, of
+religion and fanaticism, of friendship and jealousy, are admirably
+contrasted in the fortunes of these three able and remarkable
+characters as well as in those of the minor personages of the story.
+
+
+Captain Fracasse.
+
+A new translation from the French of Gotier. Illustrated by Victor A.
+Searles.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+This famous romance has been out of print for some time, and a new
+translation is sure to appeal to its many admirers, who have never yet
+had any edition worthy of the story.
+
+
+The Rejuvenation of Miss Semaphore.
+
+A farcical novel. By HAL GODFREY. Illustrated by Etheldred B. Barry.
+(In press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+A fanciful, laughable tale of two maiden sisters of uncertain age who
+are induced, by their natural longing for a return to youth and its
+blessings, to pay a large sum for a mystical water which possesses the
+value of setting backwards the hands of time. No more delightfully
+fresh and original book has appeared since "Vice Versa" charmed an
+amused world. It is well written, drawn to the life, and full of the
+most enjoyable humor.
+
+
+Midst the Wild Carpathians.
+
+By MAURUS JOKAI, author of "Black Diamonds," "The Lion of Janina,"
+etc. Authorized translation by R. Nisbet Bain. Illustrated. (In
+press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+A thrilling, historical, Hungarian novel, in which the extraordinary
+dramatic and descriptive powers of the great Magyar writer have full
+play. As a picture of feudal life in Hungary it has never been
+surpassed for fidelity and vividness. The translation is exceedingly
+well done.
+
+
+The Golden Dog.
+
+A Romance of Quebec. By WILLIAM KIRBY. New authorized edition.
+Illustrated by J. W. Kennedy.
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+A powerful romance of love, intrigue, and adventure in the time of
+Louis XV. and Mme. de Pompadour, when the French colonies were making
+their great struggle to retain for an ungrateful court the fairest
+jewels in the colonial diadem of France.
+
+
+Bijli the Dancer.
+
+By JAMES BLYTHE PATTON. Illustrated by Horace Van Rinth. (In press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+A novel of Modern India. The fortunes of the heroine, an Indian Naucht
+girl, are told with a vigor, pathos, and a wealth of poetic sympathy
+that makes the book admirable from first to last.
+
+
+"To Arms!"
+
+Being Some Passages from the Early Life of Allan Oliphant, Chirurgeon,
+Written by Himself, and now Set Forth for the First Time. By ANDREW
+BALFOUR. Illustrated. (In press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+A romance dealing with an interesting phase of Scottish and English
+history, the Jacobite Insurrection of 1715, which will appeal strongly
+to the great number of admirers of historical fiction. The story is
+splendidly told, the magic circle which the author draws about the
+reader compelling a complete forgetfulness of prosaic nineteenth
+century life.
+
+
+Mere Folly.
+
+A novel. By MARIA LOUISE POOLE, author of "In a Dike Shanty," etc.
+Illustrated. (In press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.25=
+
+An extremely well-written story of modern life. The interest centres
+in the development of the character of the heroine, a New England
+girl, whose high-strung temperament is in constant revolt against the
+confining limitations of nineteenth century surroundings. The reader's
+interest is held to the end, and the book will take high rank among
+American psychological novels.
+
+
+A Hypocritical Romance and other stories.
+
+By CAROLINE TICKNOR. Illustrated by J. W. Kennedy.
+
+1 vol., large 16mo, cloth =$1.00=
+
+Miss Ticknor, well known as one of the most promising of the younger
+school of American writers, has never done better work than in the
+majority of these clever stories, written in a delightful comedy
+vein.
+
+
+Cross Trails.
+
+By VICTOR WAITE. Illustrated. (In press.)
+
+1 vol., library 12mo, cloth =$1.50=
+
+A Spanish-American novel of unusual interest, a brilliant, dashing,
+and stirring story, teeming with humanity and life. Mr. Waite is to be
+congratulated upon the strength with which he has drawn his
+characters.
+
+
+A Mad Madonna and other stories.
+
+By L. CLARKSON WHITELOCK, with eight half-tone illustrations.
+
+1 vol., large 16mo, cloth =$1.00=
+
+A half dozen remarkable psychological stories, delicate in color and
+conception. Each of the six has a touch of the supernatural, a quick
+suggestion, a vivid intensity, and a dreamy realism that is matchless
+in its forceful execution.
+
+
+On the Point.
+
+A Summer Idyl. By NATHAN HASKELL DOLE, author of "Not Angels Quite,"
+with dainty half-tone illustrations as chapter headings.
+
+1 vol., large 16mo, cloth =$1.00=
+
+A bright and clever story of a summer on the coast of Maine, fresh,
+breezy, and readable from the first to the last page. The narrative
+describes the summer outing of a Mr. Merrithew and his family. The
+characters are all honest, pleasant people, whom we are glad to know.
+We part from them with the same regret with which we leave a congenial
+party of friends.
+
+
+Cavalleria Rusticana; or, Under the Shadow of Etna.
+
+Translated from the Italian of Giovanni Verga, by NATHAN HASKELL DOLE.
+Illustrated by Etheldred B. Barry.
+
+1 vol., 16mo, cloth =$0.50=
+
+Giovanni Verga stands at present as unquestionably the most prominent
+of the Italian novelists. His supremacy in the domain of the short
+story and in the wider range of the romance is recognized both at home
+and abroad. The present volume contains a selection from the most
+dramatic and characteristic of his Sicilian tales. Verga is himself a
+native of Sicily, and his knowledge of that wonderful country, with
+its poetic and yet superstitious peasantry, is absolute. Such pathos,
+humor, variety, and dramatic quality are rarely met in a single
+volume.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONTINENTAL DRAGOON***
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