1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
780
781
782
783
784
785
786
787
788
789
790
791
792
793
794
795
796
797
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
815
816
817
818
819
820
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
838
839
840
841
842
843
844
845
846
847
848
849
850
851
852
853
854
855
856
857
858
859
860
861
862
863
864
865
866
867
868
869
870
871
872
873
874
875
876
877
878
879
880
881
882
883
884
885
886
887
888
889
890
891
892
893
894
895
896
897
898
899
900
901
902
903
904
905
906
907
908
909
910
911
912
913
914
915
916
917
918
919
920
921
922
923
924
925
926
927
928
929
930
931
932
933
934
935
936
937
938
939
940
941
942
943
944
945
946
947
948
949
950
951
952
953
954
955
956
957
958
959
960
961
962
963
964
965
966
967
968
969
970
971
972
973
974
975
976
977
978
979
980
981
982
983
984
985
986
987
988
989
990
991
992
993
994
995
996
997
998
999
1000
1001
1002
1003
1004
1005
1006
1007
1008
1009
1010
1011
1012
1013
1014
1015
1016
1017
1018
1019
1020
1021
1022
1023
1024
1025
1026
1027
1028
1029
1030
1031
1032
1033
1034
1035
1036
1037
1038
1039
1040
1041
1042
1043
1044
1045
1046
1047
1048
1049
1050
1051
1052
1053
1054
1055
1056
1057
1058
1059
1060
1061
1062
1063
1064
1065
1066
1067
1068
1069
1070
1071
1072
1073
1074
1075
1076
1077
1078
1079
1080
1081
1082
1083
1084
1085
1086
1087
1088
1089
1090
1091
1092
1093
1094
1095
1096
1097
1098
1099
1100
1101
1102
1103
1104
1105
1106
1107
1108
1109
1110
1111
1112
1113
1114
1115
1116
1117
1118
1119
1120
1121
1122
1123
1124
1125
1126
1127
1128
1129
1130
1131
1132
1133
1134
1135
1136
1137
1138
1139
1140
1141
1142
1143
1144
1145
1146
1147
1148
1149
1150
1151
1152
1153
1154
1155
1156
1157
1158
1159
1160
1161
1162
1163
1164
1165
1166
1167
1168
1169
1170
1171
1172
1173
1174
1175
1176
1177
1178
1179
1180
1181
1182
1183
1184
1185
1186
1187
1188
1189
1190
1191
1192
1193
1194
1195
1196
1197
1198
1199
1200
1201
1202
1203
1204
1205
1206
1207
1208
1209
1210
1211
1212
1213
1214
1215
1216
1217
1218
1219
1220
1221
1222
1223
1224
1225
1226
1227
1228
1229
1230
1231
1232
1233
1234
1235
1236
1237
1238
1239
1240
1241
1242
1243
1244
1245
1246
1247
1248
1249
1250
1251
1252
1253
1254
1255
1256
1257
1258
1259
1260
1261
1262
1263
1264
1265
1266
1267
1268
1269
1270
1271
1272
1273
1274
1275
1276
1277
1278
1279
1280
1281
1282
1283
1284
1285
1286
1287
1288
1289
1290
1291
1292
1293
1294
1295
1296
1297
1298
1299
1300
1301
1302
1303
1304
1305
1306
1307
1308
1309
1310
1311
1312
1313
1314
1315
1316
1317
1318
1319
1320
1321
1322
1323
1324
1325
1326
1327
1328
1329
1330
1331
1332
1333
1334
1335
1336
1337
1338
1339
1340
1341
1342
1343
1344
1345
1346
1347
1348
1349
1350
1351
1352
1353
1354
1355
1356
1357
1358
1359
1360
1361
1362
1363
1364
1365
1366
1367
1368
1369
1370
1371
1372
1373
1374
1375
1376
1377
1378
1379
1380
1381
1382
1383
1384
1385
1386
1387
1388
1389
1390
1391
1392
1393
1394
1395
1396
1397
1398
1399
1400
1401
1402
1403
1404
1405
1406
1407
1408
1409
1410
1411
1412
1413
1414
1415
1416
1417
1418
1419
1420
1421
1422
1423
1424
1425
1426
1427
1428
1429
1430
1431
1432
1433
1434
1435
1436
1437
1438
1439
1440
1441
1442
1443
1444
1445
1446
1447
1448
1449
1450
1451
1452
1453
1454
1455
1456
1457
1458
1459
1460
1461
1462
1463
1464
1465
1466
1467
1468
1469
1470
1471
1472
1473
1474
1475
1476
1477
1478
1479
1480
1481
1482
1483
1484
1485
1486
1487
1488
1489
1490
1491
1492
1493
1494
1495
1496
1497
1498
1499
1500
1501
1502
1503
1504
1505
1506
1507
1508
1509
1510
1511
1512
1513
1514
1515
1516
1517
1518
1519
1520
1521
1522
1523
1524
1525
1526
1527
1528
1529
1530
1531
1532
1533
1534
1535
1536
1537
1538
1539
1540
1541
1542
1543
1544
1545
1546
1547
1548
1549
1550
1551
1552
1553
1554
1555
1556
1557
1558
1559
1560
1561
1562
1563
1564
1565
1566
1567
1568
1569
1570
1571
1572
1573
1574
1575
1576
1577
1578
1579
1580
1581
1582
1583
1584
1585
1586
1587
1588
1589
1590
1591
1592
1593
1594
1595
1596
1597
1598
1599
1600
1601
1602
1603
1604
1605
1606
1607
1608
1609
1610
1611
1612
1613
1614
1615
1616
1617
1618
1619
1620
1621
1622
1623
1624
1625
1626
1627
1628
1629
1630
1631
1632
1633
1634
1635
1636
1637
1638
1639
1640
1641
1642
1643
1644
1645
1646
1647
1648
1649
1650
1651
1652
1653
1654
1655
1656
1657
1658
1659
1660
1661
1662
1663
1664
1665
1666
1667
1668
1669
1670
1671
1672
1673
1674
1675
1676
1677
1678
1679
1680
1681
1682
1683
1684
1685
1686
1687
1688
1689
1690
1691
1692
1693
1694
1695
1696
1697
1698
1699
1700
1701
1702
1703
1704
1705
1706
1707
1708
1709
1710
1711
1712
1713
1714
1715
1716
1717
1718
1719
1720
1721
1722
1723
1724
1725
1726
1727
1728
1729
1730
1731
1732
1733
1734
1735
1736
1737
1738
1739
1740
1741
1742
1743
1744
1745
1746
1747
1748
1749
1750
1751
1752
1753
1754
1755
1756
1757
1758
1759
1760
1761
1762
1763
1764
1765
1766
1767
1768
1769
1770
1771
1772
1773
1774
1775
1776
1777
1778
1779
1780
1781
1782
1783
1784
1785
1786
1787
1788
1789
1790
1791
1792
1793
1794
1795
1796
1797
1798
1799
1800
1801
1802
1803
1804
1805
1806
1807
1808
1809
1810
1811
1812
1813
1814
1815
1816
1817
1818
1819
1820
1821
1822
1823
1824
1825
1826
1827
1828
1829
1830
1831
1832
1833
1834
1835
1836
1837
1838
1839
1840
1841
1842
1843
1844
1845
1846
1847
1848
1849
1850
1851
1852
1853
1854
1855
1856
1857
1858
1859
1860
1861
1862
1863
1864
1865
1866
1867
1868
1869
1870
1871
1872
1873
1874
1875
1876
1877
1878
1879
1880
1881
1882
1883
1884
1885
1886
1887
1888
1889
1890
1891
1892
1893
1894
1895
1896
1897
1898
1899
1900
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031
2032
2033
2034
2035
2036
2037
2038
2039
2040
2041
2042
2043
2044
2045
2046
2047
2048
2049
2050
2051
2052
2053
2054
2055
2056
2057
2058
2059
2060
2061
2062
2063
2064
2065
2066
2067
2068
2069
2070
2071
2072
2073
2074
2075
2076
2077
2078
2079
2080
2081
2082
2083
2084
2085
2086
2087
2088
2089
2090
2091
2092
2093
2094
2095
2096
2097
2098
2099
2100
2101
2102
2103
2104
2105
2106
2107
2108
2109
2110
2111
2112
2113
2114
2115
2116
2117
2118
2119
2120
2121
2122
2123
2124
2125
2126
2127
2128
2129
2130
2131
2132
2133
2134
2135
2136
2137
2138
2139
2140
2141
2142
2143
2144
2145
2146
2147
2148
2149
2150
2151
2152
2153
2154
2155
2156
2157
2158
2159
2160
2161
2162
2163
2164
2165
2166
2167
2168
2169
2170
2171
2172
2173
2174
2175
2176
2177
2178
2179
2180
2181
2182
2183
2184
2185
2186
2187
2188
2189
2190
2191
2192
2193
2194
2195
2196
2197
2198
2199
2200
2201
2202
2203
2204
2205
2206
2207
2208
2209
2210
2211
2212
2213
2214
2215
2216
2217
2218
2219
2220
2221
2222
2223
2224
2225
2226
2227
2228
2229
2230
2231
2232
2233
2234
2235
2236
2237
2238
2239
2240
2241
2242
2243
2244
2245
2246
2247
2248
2249
2250
2251
2252
2253
2254
2255
2256
2257
2258
2259
2260
2261
2262
2263
2264
2265
2266
2267
2268
2269
2270
2271
2272
2273
2274
2275
2276
2277
2278
2279
2280
2281
2282
2283
2284
2285
2286
2287
2288
2289
2290
2291
2292
2293
2294
2295
2296
2297
2298
2299
2300
2301
2302
2303
2304
2305
2306
2307
2308
2309
2310
2311
2312
2313
2314
2315
2316
2317
2318
2319
2320
2321
2322
2323
2324
2325
2326
2327
2328
2329
2330
2331
2332
2333
2334
2335
2336
2337
2338
2339
2340
2341
2342
2343
2344
2345
2346
2347
2348
2349
2350
2351
2352
2353
2354
2355
2356
2357
2358
2359
2360
2361
2362
2363
2364
2365
2366
2367
2368
2369
2370
2371
2372
2373
2374
2375
2376
2377
2378
2379
2380
2381
2382
2383
2384
2385
2386
2387
2388
2389
2390
2391
2392
2393
2394
2395
2396
2397
2398
2399
2400
2401
2402
2403
2404
2405
2406
2407
2408
2409
2410
2411
2412
2413
2414
2415
2416
2417
2418
2419
2420
2421
2422
2423
2424
2425
2426
2427
2428
2429
2430
2431
2432
2433
2434
2435
2436
2437
2438
2439
2440
2441
2442
2443
2444
2445
2446
2447
2448
2449
2450
2451
2452
2453
2454
2455
2456
2457
2458
2459
2460
2461
2462
2463
2464
2465
2466
2467
2468
2469
2470
2471
2472
2473
2474
2475
2476
2477
2478
2479
2480
2481
2482
2483
2484
2485
2486
2487
2488
2489
2490
2491
2492
2493
2494
2495
2496
2497
2498
2499
2500
2501
2502
2503
2504
2505
2506
2507
2508
2509
2510
2511
2512
2513
2514
2515
2516
2517
2518
2519
2520
2521
2522
2523
2524
2525
2526
2527
2528
2529
2530
2531
2532
2533
2534
2535
2536
2537
2538
2539
2540
2541
2542
2543
2544
2545
2546
2547
2548
2549
2550
2551
2552
2553
2554
2555
2556
2557
2558
2559
2560
2561
2562
2563
2564
2565
2566
2567
2568
2569
2570
2571
2572
2573
2574
2575
2576
2577
2578
2579
2580
2581
2582
2583
2584
2585
2586
2587
2588
2589
2590
2591
2592
2593
2594
2595
2596
2597
2598
2599
2600
2601
2602
2603
2604
2605
2606
2607
2608
2609
2610
2611
2612
2613
2614
2615
2616
2617
2618
2619
2620
2621
2622
2623
2624
2625
2626
2627
2628
2629
2630
2631
2632
2633
2634
2635
2636
2637
2638
2639
2640
2641
2642
2643
2644
2645
2646
2647
2648
2649
2650
2651
2652
2653
2654
2655
2656
2657
2658
2659
2660
2661
2662
2663
2664
2665
2666
2667
2668
2669
2670
2671
2672
2673
2674
2675
2676
2677
2678
2679
2680
2681
2682
2683
2684
2685
2686
2687
2688
2689
2690
2691
2692
2693
2694
2695
2696
2697
2698
2699
2700
2701
2702
2703
2704
2705
2706
2707
2708
2709
2710
2711
2712
2713
2714
2715
2716
2717
2718
2719
2720
2721
2722
2723
2724
2725
2726
2727
2728
2729
2730
2731
2732
2733
2734
2735
2736
2737
2738
2739
2740
2741
2742
2743
2744
2745
2746
2747
2748
2749
2750
2751
2752
2753
2754
2755
2756
2757
2758
2759
2760
2761
2762
2763
2764
2765
2766
2767
2768
2769
2770
2771
2772
2773
2774
2775
2776
2777
2778
2779
2780
2781
2782
2783
2784
2785
2786
2787
2788
2789
2790
2791
2792
2793
2794
2795
2796
2797
2798
2799
2800
2801
2802
2803
2804
2805
2806
2807
2808
2809
2810
2811
2812
2813
2814
2815
2816
2817
2818
2819
2820
2821
2822
2823
2824
2825
2826
2827
2828
2829
2830
2831
2832
2833
2834
2835
2836
2837
2838
2839
2840
2841
2842
2843
2844
2845
2846
2847
2848
2849
2850
2851
2852
2853
2854
2855
2856
2857
2858
2859
2860
2861
2862
2863
2864
2865
2866
2867
2868
2869
2870
2871
2872
2873
2874
2875
2876
2877
2878
2879
2880
2881
2882
2883
2884
2885
2886
2887
2888
2889
2890
2891
2892
2893
2894
2895
2896
2897
2898
2899
2900
2901
2902
2903
2904
2905
2906
2907
2908
2909
2910
2911
2912
2913
2914
2915
2916
2917
2918
2919
2920
2921
2922
2923
2924
2925
2926
2927
2928
2929
2930
2931
2932
2933
2934
2935
2936
2937
2938
2939
2940
2941
2942
2943
2944
2945
2946
2947
2948
2949
2950
2951
2952
2953
2954
2955
2956
2957
2958
2959
2960
2961
2962
2963
2964
2965
2966
2967
2968
2969
2970
2971
2972
2973
2974
2975
2976
2977
2978
2979
2980
2981
2982
2983
2984
2985
2986
2987
2988
2989
2990
2991
2992
2993
2994
2995
2996
2997
2998
2999
3000
3001
3002
3003
3004
3005
3006
3007
3008
3009
3010
3011
3012
3013
3014
3015
3016
3017
3018
3019
3020
3021
3022
3023
3024
3025
3026
3027
3028
3029
3030
3031
3032
3033
3034
3035
3036
3037
3038
3039
3040
3041
3042
3043
3044
3045
3046
3047
3048
3049
3050
3051
3052
3053
3054
3055
3056
3057
3058
3059
3060
3061
3062
3063
3064
3065
3066
3067
3068
3069
3070
3071
3072
3073
3074
3075
3076
3077
3078
3079
3080
3081
3082
3083
3084
3085
3086
3087
3088
3089
3090
3091
3092
3093
3094
3095
3096
3097
3098
3099
3100
3101
3102
3103
3104
3105
3106
3107
3108
3109
3110
3111
3112
3113
3114
3115
3116
3117
3118
3119
3120
3121
3122
3123
3124
3125
3126
3127
3128
3129
3130
3131
3132
3133
3134
3135
3136
3137
3138
3139
3140
3141
3142
3143
3144
3145
3146
3147
3148
3149
3150
3151
3152
3153
3154
3155
3156
3157
3158
3159
3160
3161
3162
3163
3164
3165
3166
3167
3168
3169
3170
3171
3172
3173
3174
3175
3176
3177
3178
3179
3180
3181
3182
3183
3184
3185
3186
3187
3188
3189
3190
3191
3192
3193
3194
3195
3196
3197
3198
3199
3200
3201
3202
3203
3204
3205
3206
3207
3208
3209
3210
3211
3212
3213
3214
3215
3216
3217
3218
3219
3220
3221
3222
3223
3224
3225
3226
3227
3228
3229
3230
3231
3232
3233
3234
3235
3236
3237
3238
3239
3240
3241
3242
3243
3244
3245
3246
3247
3248
3249
3250
3251
3252
3253
3254
3255
3256
3257
3258
3259
3260
3261
3262
3263
3264
3265
3266
3267
3268
3269
3270
3271
3272
3273
3274
3275
3276
3277
3278
3279
3280
3281
3282
3283
3284
3285
3286
3287
3288
3289
3290
3291
3292
3293
3294
3295
3296
3297
3298
3299
3300
3301
3302
3303
3304
3305
3306
3307
3308
3309
3310
3311
3312
3313
3314
3315
3316
3317
3318
3319
3320
3321
3322
3323
3324
3325
3326
3327
3328
3329
3330
3331
3332
3333
3334
3335
3336
3337
3338
3339
3340
3341
3342
3343
3344
3345
3346
3347
3348
3349
3350
3351
3352
3353
3354
3355
3356
3357
3358
3359
3360
3361
3362
3363
3364
3365
3366
3367
3368
3369
3370
3371
3372
3373
3374
3375
3376
3377
3378
3379
3380
3381
3382
3383
3384
3385
3386
3387
3388
3389
3390
3391
3392
3393
3394
3395
3396
3397
3398
3399
3400
3401
3402
3403
3404
3405
3406
3407
3408
3409
3410
3411
3412
3413
3414
3415
3416
3417
3418
3419
3420
3421
3422
3423
3424
3425
3426
3427
3428
3429
3430
3431
3432
3433
3434
3435
3436
3437
3438
3439
3440
3441
3442
3443
3444
3445
3446
3447
3448
3449
3450
3451
3452
3453
3454
3455
3456
3457
3458
3459
3460
3461
3462
3463
3464
3465
3466
3467
3468
3469
3470
3471
3472
3473
3474
3475
3476
3477
3478
3479
3480
3481
3482
3483
3484
3485
3486
3487
3488
3489
3490
3491
3492
3493
3494
3495
3496
3497
3498
3499
3500
3501
3502
3503
3504
3505
3506
3507
3508
3509
3510
3511
3512
3513
3514
3515
3516
3517
3518
3519
3520
3521
3522
3523
3524
3525
3526
3527
3528
3529
3530
3531
3532
3533
3534
3535
3536
3537
3538
3539
3540
3541
3542
3543
3544
3545
3546
3547
3548
3549
3550
3551
3552
3553
3554
3555
3556
3557
3558
3559
3560
3561
3562
3563
3564
3565
3566
3567
3568
3569
3570
3571
3572
3573
3574
3575
3576
3577
3578
3579
3580
3581
3582
3583
3584
3585
3586
3587
3588
3589
3590
3591
3592
3593
3594
3595
3596
3597
3598
3599
3600
3601
3602
3603
3604
3605
3606
3607
3608
3609
3610
3611
3612
3613
3614
3615
3616
3617
3618
3619
3620
3621
3622
3623
3624
3625
3626
3627
3628
3629
3630
3631
3632
3633
3634
3635
3636
3637
3638
3639
3640
3641
3642
3643
3644
3645
3646
3647
3648
3649
3650
3651
3652
3653
3654
3655
3656
3657
3658
3659
3660
3661
3662
3663
3664
3665
3666
3667
3668
3669
3670
3671
3672
3673
3674
3675
3676
3677
3678
3679
3680
3681
3682
3683
3684
3685
3686
3687
3688
3689
3690
3691
3692
3693
3694
3695
3696
3697
3698
3699
3700
3701
3702
3703
3704
3705
3706
3707
3708
3709
3710
3711
3712
3713
3714
3715
3716
3717
3718
3719
3720
3721
3722
3723
3724
3725
3726
3727
3728
3729
3730
3731
3732
3733
3734
3735
3736
3737
3738
3739
3740
3741
3742
3743
3744
3745
3746
3747
3748
3749
3750
3751
3752
3753
3754
3755
3756
3757
3758
3759
3760
3761
3762
3763
3764
3765
3766
3767
3768
3769
3770
3771
3772
3773
3774
3775
3776
3777
3778
3779
3780
3781
3782
3783
3784
3785
3786
3787
3788
3789
3790
3791
3792
3793
3794
3795
3796
3797
3798
3799
3800
3801
3802
3803
3804
3805
3806
3807
3808
3809
3810
3811
3812
3813
3814
3815
3816
3817
3818
3819
3820
3821
3822
3823
3824
3825
3826
3827
3828
3829
3830
3831
3832
3833
3834
3835
3836
3837
3838
3839
3840
3841
3842
3843
3844
3845
3846
3847
3848
3849
3850
3851
3852
3853
3854
3855
3856
3857
3858
3859
3860
3861
3862
3863
3864
3865
3866
3867
3868
3869
3870
3871
3872
3873
3874
3875
3876
3877
3878
3879
3880
3881
3882
3883
3884
3885
3886
3887
3888
3889
3890
3891
3892
3893
3894
3895
3896
3897
3898
3899
3900
3901
3902
3903
3904
3905
3906
3907
3908
3909
3910
3911
3912
3913
3914
3915
3916
3917
3918
3919
3920
3921
3922
3923
3924
3925
3926
3927
3928
3929
3930
3931
3932
3933
3934
3935
3936
3937
3938
3939
3940
3941
3942
3943
3944
3945
3946
3947
3948
3949
3950
3951
3952
3953
3954
3955
3956
3957
3958
3959
3960
3961
3962
3963
3964
3965
3966
3967
3968
3969
3970
3971
3972
3973
3974
3975
3976
3977
3978
3979
3980
3981
3982
3983
3984
3985
3986
3987
3988
3989
3990
3991
3992
3993
3994
3995
3996
3997
3998
3999
4000
4001
4002
4003
4004
4005
4006
4007
4008
4009
4010
4011
4012
4013
4014
4015
4016
4017
4018
4019
4020
4021
4022
4023
4024
4025
4026
4027
4028
4029
4030
4031
4032
4033
4034
4035
4036
4037
4038
4039
4040
4041
4042
4043
4044
4045
4046
4047
4048
4049
4050
4051
4052
4053
4054
4055
4056
4057
4058
4059
4060
4061
4062
4063
4064
4065
4066
4067
4068
4069
4070
4071
4072
4073
4074
4075
4076
4077
4078
4079
4080
4081
4082
4083
4084
4085
4086
4087
4088
4089
4090
4091
4092
4093
4094
4095
4096
4097
4098
4099
4100
4101
4102
4103
4104
4105
4106
4107
4108
4109
4110
4111
4112
4113
4114
4115
4116
4117
4118
4119
4120
4121
4122
4123
4124
4125
4126
4127
4128
4129
4130
4131
4132
4133
4134
4135
4136
4137
4138
4139
4140
4141
4142
4143
4144
4145
4146
4147
4148
4149
4150
4151
4152
4153
4154
4155
4156
4157
4158
4159
4160
4161
4162
4163
4164
4165
4166
4167
4168
4169
4170
4171
4172
4173
4174
4175
4176
4177
4178
4179
4180
4181
4182
4183
4184
4185
4186
4187
4188
4189
4190
4191
4192
4193
4194
4195
4196
4197
4198
4199
4200
4201
4202
4203
4204
4205
4206
4207
4208
4209
4210
4211
4212
4213
4214
4215
4216
4217
4218
4219
4220
4221
4222
4223
4224
4225
4226
4227
4228
4229
4230
4231
4232
4233
4234
4235
4236
4237
4238
4239
4240
4241
4242
4243
4244
4245
4246
4247
4248
4249
4250
4251
4252
4253
4254
4255
4256
4257
4258
4259
4260
4261
4262
4263
4264
4265
4266
4267
4268
4269
4270
4271
4272
4273
4274
4275
4276
4277
4278
4279
4280
4281
4282
4283
4284
4285
4286
4287
4288
4289
4290
4291
4292
4293
4294
4295
4296
4297
4298
4299
4300
4301
4302
4303
4304
4305
4306
4307
4308
4309
4310
4311
4312
4313
4314
4315
4316
4317
4318
4319
4320
4321
4322
4323
4324
4325
4326
4327
4328
4329
4330
4331
4332
4333
4334
4335
4336
4337
4338
4339
4340
4341
4342
4343
4344
4345
4346
4347
4348
4349
4350
4351
4352
4353
4354
4355
4356
4357
4358
4359
4360
4361
4362
4363
4364
4365
4366
4367
4368
4369
4370
4371
4372
4373
4374
4375
4376
4377
4378
4379
4380
4381
4382
4383
4384
4385
4386
4387
4388
4389
4390
4391
4392
4393
4394
4395
4396
4397
4398
4399
4400
4401
4402
4403
4404
4405
4406
4407
4408
4409
4410
4411
4412
4413
4414
4415
4416
4417
4418
4419
4420
4421
4422
4423
4424
4425
4426
4427
4428
4429
4430
4431
4432
4433
4434
4435
4436
4437
4438
4439
4440
4441
4442
4443
4444
4445
4446
4447
4448
4449
4450
4451
4452
4453
4454
4455
4456
4457
4458
4459
4460
4461
4462
4463
4464
4465
4466
4467
4468
4469
4470
4471
4472
4473
4474
4475
4476
4477
4478
4479
4480
4481
4482
4483
4484
4485
4486
4487
4488
4489
4490
4491
4492
4493
4494
4495
4496
4497
4498
4499
4500
4501
4502
4503
4504
4505
4506
4507
4508
4509
4510
4511
4512
4513
4514
4515
4516
4517
4518
4519
4520
4521
4522
4523
4524
4525
4526
4527
4528
4529
4530
4531
4532
4533
4534
4535
4536
4537
4538
4539
4540
4541
4542
4543
4544
4545
4546
4547
4548
4549
4550
4551
4552
4553
4554
4555
4556
4557
4558
4559
4560
4561
4562
4563
4564
4565
4566
4567
4568
4569
4570
4571
4572
4573
4574
4575
4576
4577
4578
4579
4580
4581
4582
4583
4584
4585
4586
4587
4588
4589
4590
4591
4592
4593
4594
4595
4596
4597
4598
4599
4600
4601
4602
4603
4604
4605
4606
4607
4608
4609
4610
4611
4612
4613
4614
4615
4616
4617
4618
4619
4620
4621
4622
4623
4624
4625
4626
4627
4628
4629
4630
4631
4632
4633
4634
4635
4636
4637
4638
4639
4640
4641
4642
4643
4644
4645
4646
4647
4648
4649
4650
4651
4652
4653
4654
4655
4656
4657
4658
4659
4660
4661
4662
4663
4664
4665
4666
4667
4668
4669
4670
4671
4672
4673
4674
4675
4676
4677
4678
4679
4680
4681
4682
4683
4684
4685
4686
4687
4688
4689
4690
4691
4692
4693
4694
4695
4696
4697
4698
4699
4700
4701
4702
4703
4704
4705
4706
4707
4708
4709
4710
4711
4712
4713
4714
4715
4716
4717
4718
4719
4720
4721
4722
4723
4724
4725
4726
4727
4728
4729
4730
4731
4732
4733
4734
4735
4736
4737
4738
4739
4740
4741
4742
4743
4744
4745
4746
4747
4748
4749
4750
4751
4752
4753
4754
4755
4756
4757
4758
4759
4760
4761
4762
4763
4764
4765
4766
4767
4768
4769
4770
4771
4772
4773
4774
4775
4776
4777
4778
4779
4780
4781
4782
4783
4784
4785
4786
4787
4788
4789
4790
4791
4792
4793
4794
4795
4796
4797
4798
4799
4800
4801
4802
4803
4804
4805
4806
4807
4808
4809
4810
4811
4812
4813
4814
4815
4816
4817
4818
4819
4820
4821
4822
4823
4824
4825
4826
4827
4828
4829
4830
4831
4832
4833
4834
4835
4836
4837
4838
4839
4840
4841
4842
4843
4844
4845
4846
4847
4848
4849
4850
4851
4852
4853
4854
4855
4856
4857
4858
4859
4860
4861
4862
4863
4864
4865
4866
4867
4868
4869
4870
4871
4872
4873
4874
4875
4876
4877
4878
4879
4880
4881
4882
4883
4884
4885
4886
4887
4888
4889
4890
4891
4892
4893
4894
4895
4896
4897
4898
4899
4900
4901
4902
4903
4904
4905
4906
4907
4908
4909
4910
4911
4912
4913
4914
4915
4916
4917
4918
4919
4920
4921
4922
4923
4924
4925
4926
4927
4928
4929
4930
4931
4932
4933
4934
4935
4936
4937
4938
4939
4940
4941
4942
4943
4944
4945
4946
4947
4948
4949
4950
4951
4952
4953
4954
4955
4956
4957
4958
4959
4960
4961
4962
4963
4964
4965
4966
4967
4968
4969
4970
4971
4972
4973
4974
4975
4976
4977
4978
4979
4980
4981
4982
4983
4984
4985
4986
4987
4988
4989
4990
4991
4992
4993
4994
4995
4996
4997
4998
4999
5000
5001
5002
5003
5004
5005
5006
5007
5008
5009
5010
5011
5012
5013
5014
5015
5016
5017
5018
5019
5020
5021
5022
5023
5024
5025
5026
5027
5028
5029
5030
5031
5032
5033
5034
5035
5036
5037
5038
5039
5040
5041
5042
5043
5044
5045
5046
5047
5048
5049
5050
5051
5052
5053
5054
5055
5056
5057
5058
5059
5060
5061
5062
5063
5064
5065
5066
5067
5068
5069
5070
5071
5072
5073
5074
5075
5076
5077
5078
5079
5080
5081
5082
5083
5084
5085
5086
5087
5088
5089
5090
5091
5092
5093
5094
5095
5096
5097
5098
5099
5100
5101
5102
5103
5104
5105
5106
5107
5108
5109
5110
5111
5112
5113
5114
5115
5116
5117
5118
5119
5120
5121
5122
5123
5124
5125
5126
5127
5128
5129
5130
5131
5132
5133
5134
5135
5136
5137
5138
5139
5140
5141
5142
5143
5144
5145
5146
5147
5148
5149
5150
5151
5152
5153
5154
5155
5156
5157
5158
5159
5160
5161
5162
5163
5164
5165
5166
5167
5168
5169
5170
5171
5172
5173
5174
5175
5176
5177
5178
5179
5180
5181
5182
5183
5184
5185
5186
5187
5188
5189
5190
5191
5192
5193
5194
5195
5196
5197
5198
5199
5200
5201
5202
5203
5204
5205
5206
5207
5208
5209
5210
5211
5212
5213
5214
5215
5216
5217
5218
5219
5220
5221
5222
5223
5224
5225
5226
5227
5228
5229
5230
5231
5232
5233
5234
5235
5236
5237
5238
5239
5240
5241
5242
5243
5244
5245
5246
5247
5248
5249
5250
5251
5252
5253
5254
5255
5256
5257
5258
5259
5260
5261
5262
5263
5264
5265
5266
5267
5268
5269
5270
5271
5272
5273
5274
5275
5276
5277
5278
5279
5280
5281
5282
5283
5284
5285
5286
5287
5288
5289
5290
5291
5292
5293
5294
5295
5296
5297
5298
5299
5300
5301
5302
5303
5304
5305
5306
5307
5308
5309
5310
5311
5312
5313
5314
5315
5316
5317
5318
5319
5320
5321
5322
5323
5324
5325
5326
5327
5328
5329
5330
5331
5332
5333
5334
5335
5336
5337
5338
5339
5340
5341
5342
5343
5344
5345
5346
5347
5348
5349
5350
5351
5352
5353
5354
5355
5356
5357
5358
5359
5360
5361
5362
5363
5364
5365
5366
5367
5368
5369
5370
5371
5372
5373
5374
5375
5376
5377
5378
5379
5380
5381
5382
5383
5384
5385
5386
5387
5388
5389
5390
5391
5392
5393
5394
5395
5396
5397
5398
5399
5400
5401
5402
5403
5404
5405
5406
5407
5408
5409
5410
5411
5412
5413
5414
5415
5416
5417
5418
5419
5420
5421
5422
5423
5424
5425
5426
5427
5428
5429
5430
5431
5432
5433
5434
5435
5436
5437
5438
5439
5440
5441
5442
5443
5444
5445
5446
5447
5448
5449
5450
5451
5452
5453
5454
5455
5456
5457
5458
5459
5460
5461
5462
5463
5464
5465
5466
5467
5468
5469
5470
5471
5472
5473
5474
5475
5476
5477
5478
5479
5480
5481
5482
5483
5484
5485
5486
5487
5488
5489
5490
5491
5492
5493
5494
5495
5496
5497
5498
5499
5500
5501
5502
5503
5504
5505
5506
5507
5508
5509
5510
5511
5512
5513
5514
5515
5516
5517
5518
5519
5520
5521
5522
5523
5524
5525
5526
5527
5528
5529
5530
5531
5532
5533
5534
5535
5536
5537
5538
5539
5540
5541
5542
5543
5544
5545
5546
5547
5548
5549
5550
5551
5552
5553
5554
5555
5556
5557
5558
5559
5560
5561
5562
5563
5564
5565
5566
5567
5568
5569
5570
5571
5572
5573
5574
5575
5576
5577
5578
5579
5580
5581
5582
5583
5584
5585
5586
5587
5588
5589
5590
5591
5592
5593
5594
5595
5596
5597
5598
5599
5600
5601
5602
5603
5604
5605
5606
5607
5608
5609
5610
5611
5612
5613
5614
5615
5616
5617
5618
5619
5620
5621
5622
5623
5624
5625
5626
5627
5628
5629
5630
5631
5632
5633
5634
5635
5636
5637
5638
5639
5640
5641
5642
5643
5644
5645
5646
5647
5648
5649
5650
5651
5652
5653
5654
5655
5656
5657
5658
5659
5660
5661
5662
5663
5664
5665
5666
5667
5668
5669
5670
5671
5672
5673
5674
5675
5676
5677
5678
5679
5680
5681
5682
5683
5684
5685
5686
5687
5688
5689
5690
5691
5692
5693
5694
5695
5696
5697
5698
5699
5700
5701
5702
5703
5704
5705
5706
5707
5708
5709
5710
5711
5712
5713
5714
5715
5716
5717
5718
5719
5720
5721
5722
5723
5724
5725
5726
5727
5728
5729
5730
5731
5732
5733
5734
5735
5736
5737
5738
5739
5740
5741
5742
5743
5744
5745
5746
5747
5748
5749
5750
5751
5752
5753
5754
5755
5756
5757
5758
5759
5760
5761
5762
5763
5764
5765
5766
5767
5768
5769
5770
5771
5772
5773
5774
5775
5776
5777
5778
5779
5780
5781
5782
5783
5784
5785
5786
5787
5788
5789
5790
5791
5792
5793
5794
5795
5796
5797
5798
5799
5800
5801
5802
5803
5804
5805
5806
5807
5808
5809
5810
5811
5812
5813
5814
5815
5816
5817
5818
5819
5820
5821
5822
5823
5824
5825
5826
5827
5828
5829
5830
5831
5832
5833
5834
5835
5836
5837
5838
5839
5840
5841
5842
5843
5844
5845
5846
5847
5848
5849
5850
5851
5852
5853
5854
5855
5856
5857
5858
5859
5860
5861
5862
5863
5864
5865
5866
5867
5868
5869
5870
5871
5872
5873
5874
5875
5876
5877
5878
5879
5880
5881
5882
5883
5884
5885
5886
5887
5888
5889
5890
5891
5892
5893
5894
5895
5896
5897
5898
5899
5900
5901
5902
5903
5904
5905
5906
5907
5908
5909
5910
5911
5912
5913
5914
5915
5916
5917
5918
5919
5920
5921
5922
5923
5924
5925
5926
5927
5928
5929
5930
5931
5932
5933
5934
5935
5936
5937
5938
5939
5940
5941
5942
5943
5944
5945
5946
5947
5948
5949
5950
5951
5952
5953
5954
5955
5956
5957
5958
5959
5960
5961
5962
5963
5964
5965
5966
5967
5968
5969
5970
5971
5972
5973
5974
5975
5976
5977
5978
5979
5980
5981
5982
5983
5984
5985
5986
5987
5988
5989
5990
5991
5992
5993
5994
5995
5996
5997
5998
5999
6000
6001
6002
6003
6004
6005
6006
6007
6008
6009
6010
6011
6012
6013
6014
6015
6016
6017
6018
6019
6020
6021
6022
6023
6024
6025
6026
6027
6028
6029
6030
6031
6032
6033
6034
6035
6036
6037
6038
6039
6040
6041
6042
6043
6044
6045
6046
6047
6048
6049
6050
6051
6052
6053
6054
6055
6056
6057
6058
6059
6060
6061
6062
6063
6064
6065
6066
6067
6068
6069
6070
6071
6072
6073
6074
6075
6076
6077
6078
6079
6080
6081
6082
6083
6084
6085
6086
6087
6088
6089
6090
6091
6092
6093
6094
6095
6096
6097
6098
6099
6100
6101
6102
6103
6104
6105
6106
6107
6108
6109
6110
6111
6112
6113
6114
6115
6116
6117
6118
6119
6120
6121
6122
6123
6124
6125
6126
6127
6128
6129
6130
6131
6132
6133
6134
6135
6136
6137
6138
6139
6140
6141
6142
6143
6144
6145
6146
6147
6148
6149
6150
6151
6152
6153
6154
6155
6156
6157
6158
6159
6160
6161
6162
6163
6164
6165
6166
6167
6168
6169
6170
6171
6172
6173
6174
6175
6176
6177
6178
6179
6180
6181
6182
6183
6184
6185
6186
6187
6188
6189
6190
6191
6192
6193
6194
6195
6196
6197
6198
6199
6200
6201
6202
6203
6204
6205
6206
6207
6208
6209
6210
6211
6212
6213
6214
6215
6216
6217
6218
6219
6220
6221
6222
6223
6224
6225
6226
6227
6228
6229
6230
6231
6232
6233
6234
6235
6236
6237
6238
6239
6240
6241
6242
6243
6244
6245
6246
6247
6248
6249
6250
6251
6252
6253
6254
6255
6256
6257
6258
6259
6260
6261
6262
6263
6264
6265
6266
6267
6268
6269
6270
6271
6272
6273
6274
6275
6276
6277
6278
6279
6280
6281
6282
6283
6284
6285
6286
6287
6288
6289
6290
6291
6292
6293
6294
6295
6296
6297
6298
6299
6300
6301
6302
6303
6304
6305
6306
6307
6308
6309
6310
6311
6312
6313
6314
6315
6316
6317
6318
6319
6320
6321
6322
6323
6324
6325
6326
6327
6328
6329
6330
6331
6332
6333
6334
6335
6336
6337
6338
6339
6340
6341
6342
6343
6344
6345
6346
6347
6348
6349
6350
6351
6352
6353
6354
6355
6356
6357
6358
6359
6360
6361
6362
6363
6364
6365
6366
6367
6368
6369
6370
6371
6372
6373
6374
6375
6376
6377
6378
6379
6380
6381
6382
6383
6384
6385
6386
6387
6388
6389
6390
6391
6392
6393
6394
6395
6396
6397
6398
6399
6400
6401
6402
6403
6404
6405
6406
6407
6408
6409
6410
6411
6412
6413
6414
6415
6416
6417
6418
6419
6420
6421
6422
6423
6424
6425
6426
6427
6428
6429
6430
6431
6432
6433
6434
6435
6436
6437
6438
6439
6440
6441
6442
6443
6444
6445
6446
6447
6448
6449
6450
6451
6452
6453
6454
6455
6456
6457
6458
6459
6460
6461
6462
6463
6464
6465
6466
6467
6468
6469
6470
6471
6472
6473
6474
6475
6476
6477
6478
6479
6480
6481
6482
6483
6484
6485
6486
6487
6488
6489
6490
6491
6492
6493
6494
6495
6496
6497
6498
6499
6500
6501
6502
6503
6504
6505
6506
6507
6508
6509
6510
6511
6512
6513
6514
6515
6516
6517
6518
6519
6520
6521
6522
6523
6524
6525
6526
6527
6528
6529
6530
6531
6532
6533
6534
6535
6536
6537
6538
6539
6540
6541
6542
6543
6544
6545
6546
6547
6548
6549
6550
6551
6552
6553
6554
6555
6556
6557
6558
6559
6560
6561
6562
6563
6564
6565
6566
6567
6568
6569
6570
6571
6572
6573
6574
6575
6576
6577
6578
6579
6580
6581
6582
6583
6584
6585
6586
6587
6588
6589
6590
6591
6592
6593
6594
6595
6596
6597
6598
6599
6600
6601
6602
6603
6604
6605
6606
6607
6608
6609
6610
6611
6612
6613
6614
6615
6616
6617
6618
6619
6620
6621
6622
6623
6624
6625
6626
6627
6628
6629
6630
6631
6632
6633
6634
6635
6636
6637
6638
6639
6640
6641
6642
6643
6644
6645
6646
6647
6648
6649
6650
6651
6652
6653
6654
6655
6656
6657
6658
6659
6660
6661
6662
6663
6664
6665
6666
6667
6668
6669
6670
6671
6672
6673
6674
6675
6676
6677
6678
6679
6680
6681
6682
6683
6684
6685
6686
6687
6688
6689
6690
6691
6692
6693
6694
6695
6696
6697
6698
6699
6700
6701
6702
6703
6704
6705
6706
6707
6708
6709
6710
6711
6712
6713
6714
6715
6716
6717
6718
6719
6720
6721
6722
6723
6724
6725
6726
6727
6728
6729
6730
6731
6732
6733
6734
6735
6736
6737
6738
6739
6740
6741
6742
6743
6744
6745
6746
6747
6748
6749
6750
6751
6752
6753
6754
6755
6756
6757
6758
6759
6760
6761
6762
6763
6764
6765
6766
6767
6768
6769
6770
6771
6772
6773
6774
6775
6776
6777
6778
6779
6780
6781
6782
6783
6784
6785
6786
6787
6788
6789
6790
6791
6792
6793
6794
6795
6796
6797
6798
6799
6800
6801
6802
6803
6804
6805
6806
6807
6808
6809
6810
6811
6812
6813
6814
6815
6816
6817
6818
6819
6820
6821
6822
6823
6824
6825
6826
6827
6828
6829
6830
6831
6832
6833
6834
6835
6836
6837
6838
6839
6840
6841
6842
6843
6844
6845
6846
6847
6848
6849
6850
6851
6852
6853
6854
6855
6856
6857
6858
6859
6860
6861
6862
6863
6864
6865
6866
6867
6868
6869
6870
6871
6872
6873
6874
6875
6876
6877
6878
6879
6880
6881
6882
6883
6884
6885
6886
6887
6888
6889
6890
6891
6892
6893
6894
6895
6896
6897
6898
6899
6900
6901
6902
6903
6904
6905
6906
6907
6908
6909
6910
6911
6912
6913
6914
6915
6916
6917
6918
6919
6920
6921
6922
6923
6924
6925
6926
6927
6928
6929
6930
6931
6932
6933
6934
6935
6936
6937
6938
6939
6940
6941
6942
6943
6944
6945
6946
6947
6948
6949
6950
6951
6952
6953
6954
6955
6956
6957
6958
6959
6960
6961
6962
6963
6964
6965
6966
6967
6968
6969
6970
6971
6972
6973
6974
6975
6976
6977
6978
6979
6980
6981
6982
6983
6984
6985
6986
6987
6988
6989
6990
6991
6992
6993
6994
6995
6996
6997
6998
6999
7000
7001
7002
7003
7004
7005
7006
7007
7008
7009
7010
7011
7012
7013
7014
7015
7016
7017
7018
7019
7020
7021
7022
7023
7024
7025
7026
7027
7028
7029
7030
7031
7032
7033
7034
7035
7036
7037
7038
7039
7040
7041
7042
7043
7044
7045
7046
7047
7048
7049
7050
7051
7052
7053
7054
7055
7056
7057
7058
7059
7060
7061
7062
7063
7064
7065
7066
7067
7068
7069
7070
7071
7072
7073
7074
7075
7076
7077
7078
7079
7080
7081
7082
7083
7084
7085
7086
7087
7088
7089
7090
7091
7092
7093
7094
7095
7096
7097
7098
7099
7100
7101
7102
7103
7104
7105
7106
7107
7108
7109
7110
7111
7112
7113
7114
7115
7116
7117
7118
7119
7120
7121
7122
7123
7124
7125
7126
7127
7128
7129
7130
7131
7132
7133
7134
7135
7136
7137
7138
7139
7140
7141
7142
7143
7144
7145
7146
7147
7148
7149
7150
7151
7152
7153
7154
7155
7156
7157
7158
7159
7160
7161
7162
7163
7164
7165
7166
7167
7168
7169
7170
7171
7172
7173
7174
7175
7176
7177
7178
7179
7180
7181
7182
7183
7184
7185
7186
7187
7188
7189
7190
7191
7192
7193
7194
7195
7196
7197
7198
7199
7200
7201
7202
7203
7204
7205
7206
7207
7208
7209
7210
7211
7212
7213
7214
7215
7216
7217
7218
7219
7220
7221
7222
7223
7224
7225
7226
7227
7228
7229
7230
7231
7232
7233
7234
7235
7236
7237
7238
7239
7240
7241
7242
7243
7244
7245
7246
7247
7248
7249
7250
7251
7252
7253
7254
7255
7256
7257
7258
7259
7260
7261
7262
7263
7264
7265
7266
7267
7268
7269
7270
7271
7272
7273
7274
7275
7276
7277
7278
7279
7280
7281
7282
7283
7284
7285
7286
7287
7288
7289
7290
7291
7292
7293
7294
7295
7296
7297
7298
7299
7300
7301
7302
7303
7304
7305
7306
7307
7308
7309
7310
7311
7312
7313
7314
7315
7316
7317
7318
7319
7320
7321
7322
7323
7324
7325
7326
7327
7328
7329
7330
7331
7332
7333
7334
7335
7336
7337
7338
7339
7340
7341
7342
7343
7344
7345
7346
7347
7348
7349
7350
7351
7352
7353
7354
7355
7356
7357
7358
7359
7360
7361
7362
7363
7364
7365
7366
7367
7368
7369
7370
7371
7372
7373
7374
7375
7376
7377
7378
7379
7380
7381
7382
7383
7384
7385
7386
7387
7388
7389
7390
7391
7392
7393
7394
7395
7396
7397
7398
7399
7400
7401
7402
7403
7404
7405
7406
7407
7408
7409
7410
7411
7412
7413
7414
7415
7416
7417
7418
7419
7420
7421
7422
7423
7424
7425
7426
7427
7428
7429
7430
7431
7432
7433
7434
7435
7436
7437
7438
7439
7440
7441
7442
7443
7444
7445
7446
7447
7448
7449
7450
7451
7452
7453
7454
7455
7456
7457
7458
7459
7460
7461
7462
7463
7464
7465
7466
7467
7468
7469
7470
7471
7472
7473
7474
7475
7476
7477
7478
7479
7480
7481
7482
7483
7484
7485
7486
7487
7488
7489
7490
7491
7492
7493
7494
7495
7496
7497
7498
7499
7500
7501
7502
7503
7504
7505
7506
7507
7508
7509
7510
7511
7512
7513
7514
7515
7516
7517
7518
7519
7520
7521
7522
7523
7524
7525
7526
7527
7528
7529
7530
7531
7532
7533
7534
7535
7536
7537
7538
7539
7540
7541
7542
7543
7544
7545
7546
7547
7548
7549
7550
7551
7552
7553
7554
7555
7556
7557
7558
7559
7560
7561
7562
7563
7564
7565
7566
7567
7568
7569
7570
7571
7572
7573
7574
7575
7576
7577
7578
7579
7580
7581
7582
7583
7584
7585
7586
7587
7588
7589
7590
7591
7592
7593
7594
7595
7596
7597
7598
7599
7600
7601
7602
7603
7604
7605
7606
7607
7608
7609
7610
7611
7612
7613
7614
7615
7616
7617
7618
7619
7620
7621
7622
7623
7624
7625
7626
7627
7628
7629
7630
7631
7632
7633
7634
7635
7636
7637
7638
7639
7640
7641
7642
7643
7644
7645
7646
7647
7648
7649
7650
7651
7652
7653
7654
7655
7656
7657
7658
7659
7660
7661
7662
7663
7664
7665
7666
7667
7668
7669
7670
7671
7672
7673
7674
7675
7676
7677
7678
7679
7680
7681
7682
7683
7684
7685
7686
7687
7688
7689
7690
7691
7692
7693
7694
7695
7696
7697
7698
7699
7700
7701
7702
7703
7704
7705
7706
7707
7708
7709
7710
7711
7712
7713
7714
7715
7716
7717
7718
7719
7720
7721
7722
7723
7724
7725
7726
7727
7728
7729
7730
7731
7732
7733
7734
7735
7736
7737
7738
7739
7740
7741
7742
7743
7744
7745
7746
7747
7748
7749
7750
7751
7752
7753
7754
7755
7756
7757
7758
7759
7760
7761
7762
7763
7764
7765
7766
7767
7768
7769
7770
7771
7772
7773
7774
7775
7776
7777
7778
7779
7780
7781
7782
7783
7784
7785
7786
7787
7788
7789
7790
7791
7792
7793
7794
7795
7796
7797
7798
7799
7800
7801
7802
7803
7804
7805
7806
7807
7808
7809
7810
7811
7812
7813
7814
7815
7816
7817
7818
7819
7820
7821
7822
7823
7824
7825
7826
7827
7828
7829
7830
7831
7832
7833
7834
7835
7836
7837
7838
7839
7840
7841
7842
7843
7844
7845
7846
7847
7848
7849
7850
7851
7852
7853
7854
7855
7856
7857
7858
7859
7860
7861
7862
7863
7864
7865
7866
7867
7868
7869
7870
7871
7872
7873
7874
7875
7876
7877
7878
7879
7880
7881
7882
7883
7884
7885
7886
7887
7888
7889
7890
7891
7892
7893
7894
7895
7896
7897
7898
7899
7900
7901
7902
7903
7904
7905
7906
7907
7908
7909
7910
7911
7912
7913
7914
7915
7916
7917
7918
7919
7920
7921
7922
7923
7924
7925
7926
7927
7928
7929
7930
7931
7932
7933
7934
7935
7936
7937
7938
7939
7940
7941
7942
7943
7944
7945
7946
7947
7948
7949
7950
7951
7952
7953
7954
7955
7956
7957
7958
7959
7960
7961
7962
7963
7964
7965
7966
7967
7968
7969
7970
7971
7972
7973
7974
7975
7976
7977
7978
7979
7980
7981
7982
7983
7984
7985
7986
7987
7988
7989
7990
7991
7992
7993
7994
7995
7996
7997
7998
7999
8000
8001
8002
8003
8004
8005
8006
8007
8008
8009
8010
8011
8012
8013
8014
8015
8016
8017
8018
8019
8020
8021
8022
8023
8024
8025
8026
8027
8028
8029
8030
8031
8032
8033
8034
8035
8036
8037
8038
8039
8040
8041
8042
8043
8044
8045
8046
8047
8048
8049
8050
8051
8052
8053
8054
8055
8056
8057
8058
8059
8060
8061
8062
8063
8064
8065
8066
8067
8068
8069
8070
8071
8072
8073
8074
8075
8076
8077
8078
8079
8080
8081
8082
8083
8084
8085
8086
8087
8088
8089
8090
8091
8092
8093
8094
8095
8096
8097
8098
8099
8100
8101
8102
8103
8104
8105
8106
8107
8108
8109
8110
8111
8112
8113
8114
8115
8116
8117
8118
8119
8120
8121
8122
8123
8124
8125
8126
8127
8128
8129
8130
8131
8132
8133
8134
8135
8136
8137
8138
8139
8140
8141
8142
8143
8144
8145
8146
8147
8148
8149
8150
8151
8152
8153
8154
8155
8156
8157
8158
8159
8160
8161
8162
8163
8164
8165
8166
8167
8168
8169
8170
8171
8172
8173
8174
8175
8176
8177
8178
8179
8180
8181
8182
8183
8184
8185
8186
8187
8188
8189
8190
8191
8192
8193
8194
8195
8196
8197
8198
8199
8200
8201
8202
8203
8204
8205
8206
8207
8208
8209
8210
8211
8212
8213
8214
8215
8216
8217
8218
8219
8220
8221
8222
8223
8224
8225
8226
8227
8228
8229
8230
8231
8232
8233
8234
8235
8236
8237
8238
8239
8240
8241
8242
8243
8244
8245
8246
8247
8248
8249
8250
8251
8252
8253
8254
8255
8256
8257
8258
8259
8260
8261
8262
8263
8264
8265
8266
8267
8268
8269
8270
8271
8272
8273
8274
8275
8276
8277
8278
8279
8280
8281
8282
8283
8284
8285
8286
8287
8288
8289
8290
8291
8292
8293
8294
8295
8296
8297
8298
8299
8300
8301
8302
8303
8304
8305
8306
8307
8308
8309
8310
8311
8312
8313
8314
8315
8316
8317
8318
8319
8320
8321
8322
8323
8324
8325
8326
8327
8328
8329
8330
8331
8332
8333
8334
8335
8336
8337
8338
8339
8340
8341
8342
8343
8344
8345
8346
8347
8348
8349
8350
8351
8352
8353
8354
8355
8356
8357
8358
8359
8360
8361
8362
8363
8364
8365
8366
8367
8368
8369
8370
8371
8372
8373
8374
8375
8376
8377
8378
8379
8380
8381
8382
8383
8384
8385
8386
8387
8388
8389
8390
8391
8392
8393
8394
8395
8396
8397
8398
8399
8400
8401
8402
8403
8404
8405
8406
8407
8408
8409
8410
8411
8412
8413
8414
8415
8416
8417
8418
8419
8420
8421
8422
8423
8424
8425
8426
8427
8428
8429
8430
8431
8432
8433
8434
8435
8436
8437
8438
8439
8440
8441
8442
8443
8444
8445
8446
8447
8448
8449
8450
8451
8452
8453
8454
8455
8456
8457
8458
8459
8460
8461
8462
8463
8464
8465
8466
8467
8468
8469
8470
8471
8472
8473
8474
8475
8476
8477
8478
8479
8480
8481
8482
8483
8484
8485
8486
8487
8488
8489
8490
8491
8492
8493
8494
8495
8496
8497
8498
8499
8500
8501
8502
8503
8504
8505
8506
8507
8508
8509
8510
8511
8512
8513
8514
8515
8516
8517
8518
8519
8520
8521
8522
8523
8524
8525
8526
8527
8528
8529
8530
8531
8532
8533
8534
8535
8536
8537
8538
8539
8540
8541
8542
8543
8544
8545
8546
8547
8548
8549
8550
8551
8552
8553
8554
8555
8556
8557
8558
8559
8560
8561
8562
8563
8564
8565
8566
8567
8568
8569
8570
8571
8572
8573
8574
8575
8576
8577
8578
8579
8580
8581
8582
8583
8584
8585
8586
8587
8588
8589
8590
8591
8592
8593
8594
8595
8596
8597
8598
8599
8600
8601
8602
8603
8604
8605
8606
8607
8608
8609
8610
8611
8612
8613
8614
8615
8616
8617
8618
8619
8620
8621
8622
8623
8624
8625
8626
8627
8628
8629
8630
8631
8632
8633
8634
8635
8636
8637
8638
8639
8640
8641
8642
8643
8644
8645
8646
8647
8648
8649
8650
8651
8652
8653
8654
8655
8656
8657
8658
8659
8660
8661
8662
8663
8664
8665
8666
8667
8668
8669
8670
8671
8672
8673
8674
8675
8676
8677
8678
8679
8680
8681
8682
8683
8684
8685
8686
8687
8688
8689
8690
8691
8692
8693
8694
8695
8696
8697
8698
8699
8700
8701
8702
8703
8704
8705
8706
8707
8708
8709
8710
8711
8712
8713
8714
8715
8716
8717
8718
8719
8720
8721
8722
8723
8724
8725
8726
8727
8728
8729
8730
8731
8732
8733
8734
8735
8736
8737
8738
8739
8740
8741
8742
8743
8744
8745
8746
8747
8748
8749
8750
8751
8752
8753
8754
8755
8756
8757
8758
8759
8760
8761
8762
8763
8764
8765
8766
8767
8768
8769
8770
8771
8772
8773
8774
8775
8776
8777
8778
8779
8780
8781
8782
8783
8784
8785
8786
8787
8788
8789
8790
8791
8792
8793
8794
8795
8796
8797
8798
8799
8800
8801
8802
8803
8804
8805
8806
8807
8808
8809
8810
8811
8812
8813
8814
8815
8816
8817
8818
8819
8820
8821
8822
8823
8824
8825
8826
8827
8828
8829
8830
8831
8832
8833
8834
8835
8836
8837
8838
8839
8840
8841
8842
8843
8844
8845
8846
8847
8848
8849
8850
8851
8852
8853
8854
8855
8856
8857
8858
8859
8860
8861
8862
8863
8864
8865
8866
8867
8868
8869
8870
8871
8872
8873
8874
8875
8876
8877
8878
8879
8880
8881
8882
8883
8884
8885
8886
8887
8888
8889
8890
8891
8892
8893
8894
8895
8896
8897
8898
8899
8900
8901
8902
8903
8904
8905
8906
8907
8908
8909
8910
8911
8912
8913
8914
8915
8916
8917
8918
8919
8920
8921
8922
8923
8924
8925
8926
8927
8928
8929
8930
8931
8932
8933
8934
8935
8936
8937
8938
8939
8940
8941
8942
8943
8944
8945
8946
8947
8948
8949
8950
8951
8952
8953
8954
8955
8956
8957
8958
8959
8960
8961
8962
8963
8964
8965
8966
8967
8968
8969
8970
8971
8972
8973
8974
8975
8976
8977
8978
8979
8980
8981
8982
8983
8984
8985
8986
8987
8988
8989
8990
8991
8992
8993
8994
8995
8996
8997
8998
8999
9000
9001
9002
9003
9004
9005
9006
9007
9008
9009
9010
9011
9012
9013
9014
9015
9016
9017
9018
9019
9020
9021
9022
9023
9024
9025
9026
9027
9028
9029
9030
9031
9032
9033
9034
9035
9036
9037
9038
9039
9040
9041
9042
9043
9044
9045
9046
9047
9048
9049
9050
9051
9052
9053
9054
9055
9056
9057
9058
9059
9060
9061
9062
9063
9064
9065
9066
9067
9068
9069
9070
9071
9072
9073
9074
9075
9076
9077
9078
9079
9080
9081
9082
9083
9084
9085
9086
9087
9088
9089
9090
9091
9092
9093
9094
9095
9096
9097
9098
9099
9100
9101
9102
9103
9104
9105
9106
9107
9108
9109
9110
9111
9112
9113
9114
9115
9116
9117
9118
9119
9120
9121
9122
9123
9124
9125
9126
9127
9128
9129
9130
9131
9132
9133
9134
9135
9136
9137
9138
9139
9140
9141
9142
9143
9144
9145
9146
9147
9148
9149
9150
9151
9152
9153
9154
9155
9156
9157
9158
9159
9160
9161
9162
9163
9164
9165
9166
9167
9168
9169
9170
9171
9172
9173
9174
9175
9176
9177
9178
9179
9180
9181
9182
9183
9184
9185
9186
9187
9188
9189
9190
9191
9192
9193
9194
9195
9196
9197
9198
9199
9200
9201
9202
9203
9204
9205
9206
9207
9208
9209
9210
9211
9212
9213
9214
9215
9216
9217
9218
9219
9220
9221
9222
9223
9224
9225
9226
9227
9228
9229
9230
9231
9232
9233
9234
9235
9236
9237
9238
9239
9240
9241
9242
9243
9244
9245
9246
9247
9248
9249
9250
9251
9252
9253
9254
9255
9256
9257
9258
9259
9260
9261
9262
9263
9264
9265
9266
9267
9268
9269
9270
9271
9272
9273
9274
9275
9276
9277
9278
9279
9280
9281
9282
9283
9284
9285
9286
9287
9288
9289
9290
9291
9292
9293
9294
9295
9296
9297
9298
9299
9300
9301
9302
9303
9304
9305
9306
9307
9308
9309
9310
9311
9312
9313
9314
9315
9316
9317
9318
9319
9320
9321
9322
9323
9324
9325
|
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Storm Centre, by Charles Egbert Craddock
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 Storm Centre
Author: Charles Egbert Craddock
Release Date: February 27, 2011 [EBook #35423]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORM CENTRE ***
Produced by David Edwards, Val Wooff and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
by The Internet Archive.)
THE STORM CENTRE
_A NOVEL_
BY CHARLES EGBERT CRADDOCK
AUTHOR OF "THE STORY OF OLD FORT LOUDON," "A
SPECTRE OF POWER," "IN THE STRANGER-PEOPLE'S
COUNTRY," "THE PROPHET OF THE GREAT SMOKY
MOUNTAINS," "WHERE THE BATTLE WAS FOUGHT," ETC.
New York
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO., LTD.
1905
COPYRIGHT, 1905,
By THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
Set up and electrotyped. Published June, 1905.
Norwood Press
J. S. Cushing & Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.
Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
THE STORM CENTRE
CHAPTER I
The place reminded him then and later of the storm centre of a cyclone.
Outside the tempests of Civil War raged. He could hear, as he sat in the
quiet, book-lined room, the turbulent drums fitfully beating in tented
camps far down the Tennessee River. Through the broad, old-fashioned
window he saw the purple hills opposite begin to glow with a myriad of
golden gleams, pulsing like fireflies, that told of thousands of troops
in bivouac. He read the mystic message of the signal lights, shining
with a different lustre, moving athwart the eminence, then back again,
expunged in blackness as a fort across the river flashed out an answer.
A military band was playing at headquarters, down in the night-begloomed
town, and now and again the great blare of the brasses came widely
surging on the raw vernal gusts. In the shadowy grove in front of this
suburban home his own battery of horse-artillery was parked. It had
earlier made its way over many an obstacle, and, oddly enough, through
its agency he was recently enabled to penetrate the exclusive reserve
of this Southern household, always hitherto coldly aloof and averse to
the invader.
He had chanced to send a pencilled message on his card to the mansion.
It merely expressed a warning to lift the sashes of the windows during
the trial practice of a new gun, lest in the firing the glass be
shattered by the concussion of the air. His name was unusual, and seeing
it on the card recalled many pleasant reminiscences to the mind of old
Judge Roscoe. Another "Fluellen Baynell" had been his college chum, and
inquiry developed the fact that this Federal captain of artillery was
the son of this ancient friend. An interchange of calls ensued. And here
sat Captain Baynell in the storm centre, the quiet of evening closing
in, the lamp on the table serenely aglow, the wood fire flashing on the
high brass andirons and fender, the lion delineated on the velvet rug
respectfully crouching beneath his feet. But in this suave environment
he was beginning to feel somewhat embarrassed, for the old colored
servant who had admitted him and replenished the fire, and whom he had
politely greeted as "Uncle Ephraim," in deference to his age, now
loitered, volubly criticising the unseen, unknown inmates of the house,
who would probably overhear, for at any moment the big oak door might
usher them into the room.
His excuses for his master's delay to appear absorbed but little time,
and he assiduously brushed the polished stone hearth with a turkey wing
to justify his lingering in conversation with the guest. Unexpected
business had called Judge Roscoe to the town, thus preventing him from
being present upon the arrival of Captain Baynell, invited to partake of
tea _en famille_.
"But den, he 'lowed dat Miss Leonora--dat's Mrs. Gwynn, his niece, a
widder 'oman--would be ready, but Marster mought hev' knowed dat Miss
Leonora ain't never ready for nuffin till day arter ter-morrow! Den
dere's de ladies--dey hes been dressin' fur ye fur better dan an hour.
But shucks! de ladies is so vain dat dey is jus' ez liable ter keep on
dressin' fur anodder hour yit!"
This was indubitably flattering information; but Captain Baynell, a
blond man of thirty, of a military stiffness in his brilliant uniform,
and of a most uncompromising dignity, glanced with an uneasy monition at
the door, a trifle ajar. He was sensible, notwithstanding, of an
unusually genial glow of expectation. The rude society of camps was
unacceptable to a man of his exacting temperament, and, the sentiment of
the country being so adverse to the cause he represented, he had had
scant opportunities here to enter social circles of the grade that would
elsewhere have welcomed him. He had not adequately realized how he had
missed these refinements and felt the deprivation of his isolation till
the moment of meeting the ladies of Judge Roscoe's household was at
hand. He had hardly expected, however, to create so great a flutter
amongst them, and he was at once secretly elated and disdainful.
Although a stranger to the ladies, the officer was well known to the old
servant. The guns had hardly been unlimbered in the beautiful grove in
front of the house ere the ancient slave had appeared in the camp to
express his ebullient patriotism, to thank his liberators for his
freedom,--for this was the result of the advance of the Federal army, a
military measure and not as yet a legal enactment.
Despite his exuberant rhetoric, there was something tenuous about his
fervent protestations, and the fact that he still adhered to his
master's service suggested a devotion to the old régime incongruous with
his loudly proclaimed welcome of the new day.
"Why don't you leave your servitude, then, Uncle Ephraim?" one of the
younger officers had tentatively asked him.
"Dat is jes' whut I say!" diplomatically replied Uncle Ephraim, who thus
came to be called "the double-faced Janus."
Now indeed, instead of a vaunt of liberty, he was disposed to apologize,
for the sake of the credit of the house, that there were no more slaves
to make a braver show in servitude.
"Dey ain't got no butler now,--he's in a restauroar up north,--nor no
car'age driver; dat fool nigger went off wid de Union army, an' got
killed in a scrimmage. He would hev' stayed wid Marster, dough, if de
Fed'ral folks hedn't tuk de hosses off wid de cavalry; he 'lowed he wuz
too lonesome yere, wid jes' nuffin' but two-footed cattle ter 'sociate
wid."
Once more he whisked the turkey wing along the clean, smooth hearth;
then, still on his knees before the fire, he again addressed himself to
the explanations he deemed fit as to the reduced status of his master's
household.
"Me an' my wife is all de servants dey got now--she's Chaney, de cook in
de kitchen. Dey hatter scuse me, fur I never waited in de house afore.
No, sah! jes' a wuckin' hand; jes' a cawnfield hand, out'n de cawnfield
straight!"
Whisk went the turkey wing.
"Dat's whut I tell Miss Leonora,--dat's Mrs. Gwynn, de widder 'oman,
Marster's niece whut's been takin' keer ob de house yere sence his wife
died,--I say I dunno no better when I break de dishes, an' Miss Leonora,
she say a b'ar outer a holler tree would know better. Yah! yah!"
The officer, feeling these domestic confidences a burden, began to
scrutinize with an appearance of interest the Dresden china shepherd and
shepherdess at either end of the tall white wooden mantelpiece, and then
the clock of the same ware in the centre.
Old Janus mistook the nature of his motive. "'Tis gittin' late fur
shore! Gawd! dem ladies is a-dressin' an' a-dressin' yit! It's a pity
Miss Leonora--dat's de widder 'oman--don't fix _herself_ up some; looks
ole, fur true, similar to a ole gran'mammy of a 'oman. But, sah, whut
did she ever marry dat man fur?"
Captain Baynell, in the stress of an unusual embarrassment, rose and
walked to one of the tall book-cases, affecting to examine the title of
a long row of books, but the old servant was not sensitive; he resorted
to the simple expedient of raising his voice to follow the guest in a
detail that brought Captain Baynell back to his chair in unseemly haste,
where a lower tone was practicable.
"She could hev' married my Marster's son, Julius, an' him de flower ob
de flock! But no! She jus' would marry dis yere Gwynn feller, whut
nobody wanted her ter marry, an' eloped wid him--she did! An' shore
'nuff, dey do say he pulled her round de house by de hair ob her head,
dough some 'lows he jus' bruk a chair ober her head!"
The officer was a brave man, but now he was in the extremity of panic.
What if some one were at the door on the point of entering?--the "widder
'oman" herself, for instance!
"I don't need you any longer, Uncle Ephraim," he ventured to
remonstrate.
"I'm gwine, Cap'n, jus' as soon as I git through wid de ha'th," and
Uncle Ephraim gave it a perfunctory whisk.
He interpolated an explanation of his diligence. "I don't want Miss
Leonora--dat's de widder 'oman--ter be remarkin' on it. Nobody kin do
nuthin' ter suit her but Chaney, dis cook dey got, who belong ter Miss
Leonora, an' befo' de War used ter be her waitin'-'oman. Chaney is all
de estate Miss Leonora hes got lef,--an' ye know dat sort o' property
ain't wurf much in dis happy day o' freedom. Miss Leonora wuz rich once
in her own right. But she flung her marriage-settlements--dat dey had
fixed to tie up her property so Gwynn couldn't sell it nor waste
it--right inter de fiah! She declared she would marry a man whut she
could trust wid her fortune! An'," the narrator concluded his story
impressively, "when dat man died--his horse throwed him an' bruk his
neck--I wondered dey didn't beat de drum fur joy, 'twuz sich a crownin'
mercy! But he hed spent all her fortune 'fore he went!"
The whisking wing was still; Uncle Ephraim's eyes dwelt on the fire with
a glow of deep speculation. He lowered his voice mysteriously.
"Dat man wuz de poorest stuff ter make an angel out'n ever you see! I
dunno _whut's_ become of him."
There was a stir outside, a footfall; and, as Captain Baynell sprang to
his feet, feeling curiously guilty in receiving, however unwillingly,
these revelations of the history of the family, Judge Roscoe entered,
his welcome the more cordial and expressed because he noticed a certain
constraint in his guest's manner, which he ascribed to the unintentional
breach of decorum in the failure to properly receive him.
"I had hoped my niece, Mrs. Gwynn, might have been here to save you a
dull half hour, or perhaps my granddaughters--where are the ladies and
Mrs. Gwynn, Ephraim?" he broke off to ask of "the double-faced Janus,"
scuttling out with his basket of chips and his turkey wing.
"De ladies is dressin' ter see de company," replied Janus, with a grin
wide enough to decorate both his faces. "Miss Leonora, she is helpin'
'em!"
Captain Baynell experienced renewed embarrassment, but Judge Roscoe
laughed with obvious relish.
The host, pale, thin, nervous, old, was of a type ill calculated to
endure the stress of excitement and turmoil of incident of the Civil
War; indeed, he might have succumbed utterly in the mortality of the
aged, so general at that period, but for the incongruous rest and
inaction of the storm centre. The town was heavily garrisoned by the
Federal forces; the firing line was far afield. He had two sons in the
Confederate army, but too distant for news, for speculation, for aught
but anxiety and prayer. The elder of them was a widower, the father of
"the ladies," and hence in his absence Judge Roscoe's charge of his
granddaughters.
The phrase "the ladies and Mrs. Gwynn" grated on Captain Baynell. It
seemed incongruous with the punctilious old Southern gentleman to make a
discourteous distinction thus between his granddaughters and his niece.
Baynell dated his sympathy with her from that moment. However old and
faded and reduced the house-keeperish "widder 'oman" might be, it was an
affront to thus segregate her. He felt an antagonism toward "the ladies"
in their exclusive aristocratic designation even before he heard the
first dainty touch of their slippered feet upon the great stairway, or a
gush of fairylike treble laughter. As a silken rustle along the hall
heralded their bedizened approach, he arose ceremoniously to greet them.
The door flew open with a wide swing; his eyes rested on nothing beyond,
for he was looking two feet over range. There rushed into the room three
little girls, six and eight years of age, all hanging back for a moment
till their grandfather's encouraging "Come, ladies!" nerved them for the
introduction of Captain Baynell. Although sensible of a deep
disappointment and a sudden cessation of interest in the storm centre,
he could hardly refrain from laughing at the downfall of his own
confident expectations.
Yet "the ladies," in their way, were well worth looking at, and their
diligent care of their toilette had not been in vain. The two younger
ones were twins, very rosy, with golden hair, delicately curled and
perfumed. The other was far more beautiful than either. Her hair was of
a chestnut hue; her dark blue eyes were eloquent with meaning--"speaking
eyes." She had an exquisitely fair complexion and an entrancing smile,
and amidst the twittering words and fluttering laughter of the others
she was silent; it was a sinister, weighty, significant silence.
"A deaf mute," her grandfather explained with a note of pathos and pain.
Captain Baynell's acceptance of the fact had the requisite touch of
sympathy and interest, but no more. How could he imagine that the
child's infirmity could ever concern him, could be a factor of import in
the most notable crisis of his life!
Indeed, he might have forgotten it within the hour had naught else
riveted his attention to the house. He had begun to look forward to a
dull evening,--the reaction from the expectation of charming feminine
society of a congenial age. "The ladies" failed in that particular,
lovely though they were in the quaint costumes of the day, the
golden-haired twins respectively in faint blue and dark red "satin
faced" merino, the brown-haired child in rich orange. Over their bodices
all three wore sheer spencers of embroidered Swiss muslin, with
embroidered ruffles below the waist line. This was encircled with
silken sashes, the tint of their gowns. The skirts were short, showing
long, white, clocked stockings and red morocco slippers with elastic
crossing the instep. The trio were swift in making advances into
friendship, and soon were swarming about the officer, counting his
shining buttons with great particularity, and squealing with greedy
delight when an unexpected row was discovered on the seam of each of his
sleeves.
As the door again opened, the very aspect of the room altered--a new
presence pervaded the life of Fluellen Baynell that made the idea of
strife indeed alien, aloof; the past a forgotten trifle; the future
remote, in indifferent abeyance, and the momentous present the chief
experience of his existence. It was partially the effect of surprise,
although other elements exerted a potent influence.
Instead of the forlorn, faded "widder 'oman" of his fancy, there
appeared a girlish shape, whose young, fair face was a magnet to all the
romance within him. What mattered it with such beauty that the
expression was a dreary lassitude, the pose indifference, the garb a
shabby black dress worn with no touch of distinction, no thought, no
care for appearances. As he rose, with "the ladies" affectionately
clinging about him, and bowed low in the moment of introduction, his
searching eyes discerned every minute detail. It was like a sun picture
upon his consciousness, realized and fixed in his mind as if he had
known it forever. And with a sudden ignoble recollection his face
flushed from his forehead to his high military collar. Was it her hair,
the old gossip had said, or was it a chair?
It was impossible to look at her without noticing her hair. A rich,
golden brown, it waved back from her white brow in heavy undulations,
caught and coiled in a great glittering knot at the back of her head,
with no ornament, simplicity itself. Certainly, he reflected, no
preparations were in progress in this quarter for his captivation. One
of the ready-made crape collars of the period was about her neck, the
delicate, fine contour of her throat displayed by the cut of her dress.
Her luminous gray eyes, with their long black lashes, cast upon him a
mere glance, cool, casual, unfriendly, it might even seem, if it were
worth her languid while.
He sought to win her to some demonstration of interest when they were
presently at table, with old Janus skirmishing about the dining room
with a silver salver, hindering the meal rather than serving it. Only
conventional courtesy characterized her, although she gave Baynell a
radiant smile when offering a second cup of tea; an official smile, so
to speak, strictly appertaining to her pose as hostess, as she sat
behind the massive silver tea service that had been in the Roscoe family
for many years.
She left the conversation almost wholly to the gentlemen when they had
returned to the library. Quiescent, inexpressive, she leaned back in a
great arm-chair, her beautiful eyes fixed reflectively on the fire. The
three "ladies," on a small sofa, apparently listened too, the little
dumb girl seeming the most attentive of the trio, to the half-hearted,
guarded, diplomatic discussion of politics, such as was possible in
polite society to men of opposing factions in those heady, bitter days.
Only once, when Baynell was detailing the names of his brothers to
gratify Judge Roscoe's interest in the family of his ancient friend, did
Mrs. Gwynn suggest her individuality. She suddenly rose.
"You would like to see the portraits of Judge Roscoe's sons," she said
as definitely as if he had asked this privilege. It may not have been
the fact, but Baynell felt that she was making amends to the absent for
the apostasy of "entertaining a Yankee officer," as the phrase went in
that day, by exhibiting with pride their cherished images and forcing
him to perform polite homage before them.
He meekly followed, however, as she took from a wide-mouthed jar on the
table a handful of tapers, made of rolled paper, and, lighting one at
the fire, led the way across the wide hall and into the cold, drear
gloom of the drawing-rooms. There in the dim light from the hall
chandelier, shining through the open door, she flitted from lamp to
lamp, and instantly there was a chill, white glitter throughout the
great apartments, showing the floriated velvet carpets, affected at that
time, the carved rosewood furniture upholstered with satin damask of
green and gold, the lambrequins of a harmonizing brocade and lace
curtains at the windows, the grand piano, and marble-topped tables, and
on the walls a great inexpressive mirror, above each of the white marble
mantelpieces, and some large oil paintings, chiefly the portraits of the
family.
The three "ladies" gathered under the picture of their father with the
fervor of pilgrims at a votive shrine. Clarence Roscoe's portrait seemed
to gaze down at them smilingly. He it was who had given his little
daughters their quaint, formal sobriquet of "the ladies," the phrase
seriously accepted by others, until no longer recognized as a nickname.
Suddenly the deaf mute rushed back to officiously claim the officer's
attention. Her brilliant eyes were aglow; the fascination of her smile
transfigured her face; she was now gazing at another portrait. This was
of a very young man, extraordinarily handsome, in full Confederate
uniform, and, carrying her hand to her forehead with the most spirited
air imaginable, she gave the military salute.
"That is her sign for Julius," cried Mrs. Gwynn, delightedly. "We have
seen many armies with banners, but Julius is her ideal of a soldier, and
the only one in all the world whom she distinguishes by the military
salute."
"My younger son," explained Judge Roscoe; while "the ladies" with their
quick transitions from subject to subject were sidling about the rooms,
sinking their feet as deep as possible into the soft pile of the velvet
carpets, and feeling with their slim fingers the rich gloss of the satin
damask coverings, complacent in the consciousness that it was all very
fine and revelling in a sense of luxury. Poor little ladies!
But Mrs. Gwynn with a word presently sent them scuttling back to the
warmth of the library. As she began to extinguish the lamps Baynell
offered to assist. She accepted civilly, of course, but with the
unnoting, casual acquiescence that had begun to pique him, and as they
closed the door upon the shadowy deserted apartments he thought they
were of a grewsome favor, that the evening was of an untoward drift, and
he lingered only for the conventional interval after returning to the
library before he took his leave.
As the door closed after him he noted that the stars were in the dark
sky. The wind was laid. The lights in the many camps had all
disappeared, for "taps" had sounded. Now and again in close succession
he heard the clocks in divers towers in Roanoke City striking the hour.
There was no token of military occupation in all the land, save that
from far away on a turnpike toward the dark west came the dull
continuous roll of wagon wheels as an endless forage train made its way
into the town; and as he passed out of the portico, a sentry posted on
the gravelled drive in front of the house challenged him. He had ordered
a guard to be stationed there for its protection against wandering
marauders, so remote was the place. He gave the countersign, and took
his way down through the great oak and tulip trees of the grove that his
authority had also been exerted to preserve. His father's old friend had
this claim upon his courtesy, he felt, for century oaks cannot be
replaced in a fortnight, and without them the home would indeed be
bereft.
Thinking still of the placid storm centre, Leonora Gwynn's face was
continually in his mind; the tones of her voice echoed in his revery.
And then suddenly he heard his step ringing on the frosty ground with a
new spirit; he felt his finger tips tingle; his face glowed with rancor.
The man was dead, and this indeed was well! But--profane thought! was it
her hair? her beautiful hair? "The coward! the despicable villain!" he
called aloud between his set teeth.
CHAPTER II
The next day naught of interest would Baynell detail of his venture into
the storm centre. His invitation to the house of Judge Roscoe, somewhat
noted for the vigor of his rebellious sentiments, resentful, implacable,
even heady in the assumptions of his age, had roused the curiosity of
Baynell's two most intimate friends concerning the traits of that
secluded inner exclusive circle which only the accident of ancient
association had enabled him to penetrate. In the tedium of camp routine
even slight matters were of interest, and it was the habit of the three
to compare notes and relate for mutual entertainment their varied
experiences since last they had met.
The battery of six pieces which Baynell commanded enjoyed a certain
renown as a crack corps, and spectators were gathering to witness the
gun-drill,--a number of soldiers from the adjoining cavalry and infantry
camps, a few of the railroad hands from the repair work on a neighboring
track, and a contingent of freedmen, jubilantly idle. Standing a little
apart from these was a group, chiefly mounted, consisting of several
officers of the different arms of the service, military experts,
critically observant, among whom was Colonel Vertnor Ashley, who
commanded a volunteer regiment of horse, and a younger man, Lieutenant
Seymour of the infantry.
It was a fine fresh morning, with white clouds scudding across a densely
blue sky chased by the wind, the grass springing into richer verdure,
the buds bourgeoning, with almost the effect of leaflets already, in the
great oak and tulip trees of the grove. Daffodils were blooming here and
there, scattered throughout the sward,--even beneath the carriages of
the guns a score perhaps, untrampled still, reared aloft the golden
"candlesticks" with an illuminating effect. The warm sun was flashing
with an embellishing glitter on the rows of the white tents of the army
on the hills around the little city as far as the eye could reach. The
deep, broad river, here and there dazzling with lustrous stretches of
ripples, was full of craft,--coal-barges, skiffs, gunboats, the ordinary
steam-packets, flatboats, and rafts; the peculiar dull roar of a railway
train heavily laden, transporting troops, came to the ear as the engine,
shrieking like a monster, rushed upon the bridge with its great
consignment of crowded humanity in the long line of box cars, an
additional locomotive assisting the speed of the transit.
"Come here, Ashley, and see if you can make anything of Baynell," said
the infantry lieutenant, whose regiment lay in camp a little to the
west, as the colonel reined in his horse under the tree where Seymour
was hanging on to Baynell's stirrup-leather. "He hasn't a syllable to
say. I want to know what is the name of that pretty girl at Judge
Roscoe's."
Ashley came riding up with his inimitable pompous swagger, half the
result of jocose bravado, half of genuine and justifiable vanity. It
went very well with the suggestions of his high cavalry boots, his
clanking sword, and his jingling spurs. His somewhat broad ruddy face
had the merit of a sidelong glance of great archness, delivered from a
pair of vivacious hazel eyes, and he twirled his handsome, long, dark
mustache with the air of a conqueror at the very mention of a pretty
girl.
"I can tell you more about Judge Roscoe's family than Fluellen Baynell
ever will," Ashley declared gayly. "So ask _me_ what you want to know,
Mark, and don't intrude on Nellie's finical delicacy."
Throughout the campaign Colonel Ashley's squadrons had coöperated with
Baynell's artillery. The officers had come to know and respect each
other well in the stress of danger and mutual dependence. It may be
doubted whether any other man alive could with impunity have called
Fluellen Baynell "Nellie."
Baynell was in full uniform, splendidly mounted, awaiting the hour
appointed, and now and again casting his eye on the camp "street" at
some distance, the stable precincts all a turmoil of hurrying drivers
and artillerymen harnessing horses and adjusting accoutrements, while a
continuous hum of voices, jangling of metal, and tramping of steeds came
on the air. He withdrew his attention with an effort.
"Why, what do you want me to tell?" he demanded sarcastically;--"what
they had for supper?"
"No--no--but just be neighborly. For sheer curiosity I want to know his
daughter's name," persisted the lieutenant of infantry.
"Judge Roscoe has no daughter," replied Baynell.
"His granddaughter, then."
"His granddaughters are children--I have forgotten their names."
"Well, _who_ is that young lady there?--a beauty of beauties. I caught a
glimpse of her at the window the day we pitched our camp in the peach
orchard over there."
"She is the most beautiful girl I have ever seen," solemnly declared
Ashley, who had artistic proclivities. "I never saw a face like
that--such chiselling, so perfect--unless it were some fine antique
cameo. It has the contour, the lines, the dignity, of a Diana! And her
hair is really exquisite! Who is she, Fluellen?"
Baynell was conscious of the constraint very perceptible in his voice as
he replied, "She is Judge Roscoe's niece, Mrs. Gwynn."
Ashley stared. "_Mrs.!_ Why, she doesn't look twenty years old!" Then,
with sudden illumination, "Why--that must be the '_widder 'oman!_'" with
an unctuous imitation of old Ephraim's elocution. "I _am_ surprised.
Mrs. Gwynn! 'De widder 'oman!'" He broke off to laugh at a sudden
recollection.
"I wish you could have heard old Janus's account of his effort to clean
the knives to suit her. She seems to be in command of the commissariat
up there. The old darkey came into camp, searching for the methods of
polishing metals that the soldiers use for their accoutrements.
'Brilliancy without labor,' was Uncle Ephraim's desideratum. I gave him
some rotten-stone. His sketch of how the judgment day would overtake him
still polishing knives for the 'widder 'oman' was worth hearing."
Baynell would not have so considered it--thus far apart were the friends
in prejudice and temperament. Yet there was no derogation in the simple
gossip. To the campaigners the Roscoe household was but the temporary
incident of the mental landscape, and the confidential bit of criticism
and comment served only to make conversation and pass the time.
All of Vertnor Ashley's traits were on a broad scale, genial and open.
He had the best opinion imaginable of himself, and somehow the world
shared it--so ingratiating was his joviality. His very defects were
obviated and went for naught. Although, being only of middle height,
his tendency to portliness threatened the grace of his proportions, he
was esteemed a fine figure and a handsome man. He made a brave show in
the saddle, and was a magnificent presentment of a horseman. He was a
poor drill; his discipline was lax, for he dearly loved popularity and
fostered this incense to his vanity. He was adored in his regiment, and
he never put foot in stirrup to ride in or out of camp that even this
casual appearance was not cheered to the echo. "That must be Vert
Ashley, or a rabbit!" was a usual speculation upon the sound of sudden
shouting, for the opportunity to chase a rabbit was a precious break in
the monotony of the life of the rank and file.
Baynell's coming and going, on the contrary, was greeted with no
demonstration. He was a rigid disciplinarian. He exacted every capacity
for work that the men possessed, and his battery was one of the most
efficient of the horse artillery in the service. But when it came to the
test of battle, the cannoneers could not shout loud and long enough.
They were sure of fine execution and yet of careful avoidance of the
reckless sacrifice of their lives and the capture of their guns, often
returning, indeed, from action, covered with glory, having lost not one
man, not so much as a sponge-staff. So fine an officer could well
dispense with the arts that fostered popularity and ministered to
vanity. Thus the slightest peccadillo made the offender and the wooden
horse acquaint.
None of Baynell's qualities were of the jovial order. He was a martinet,
a technical expert in the science of gunnery, a stern and martial leader
of men. His mind was an orderly assimilation of valuable information,
his consciousness a repelling exclusive assortment of sensitive fibres.
He had a high and exacting moral sense, and his pride of many various
kinds passed all bounds. He listened with aghast dismay to the story of
Mrs. Gwynn's unhappy married life that Ashley rehearsed,--the ordinary
gossip of the day, to be heard everywhere,--and then a discussion took
place as to whether or not the horse that killed her husband were the
vicious charger now ridden by the colonel of a certain regiment.
"It couldn't be," said Ashley, "that happened nearly a year ago."
This talk hung on for a long time, as it seemed to Baynell. Yet he did
not welcome its conclusion, for a greater source of irritation was to
come.
"But now that you have a footing there, Fluellen, I want you to
introduce me," said Colonel Ashley, who was a person of consideration in
high and select circles at home, and spoke easily from the
vantage-ground of an acknowledged social position. "I should be glad to
meet Mrs. Gwynn. I never saw any one whose appearance so impressed me."
"Take me with you when you two call," the lieutenant, all unprescient,
interjected casually. The next moment he was flushing angrily, for,
impossible as it seemed, Baynell was declining in set terms.
"My footing there would not justify me in asking to introduce my
friends," he said. "I should be afraid of a refusal."
Ashley, too, cast a swift, indignant glance upon him. Then, "I'll risk
it," he said easily; for ill-humor with him was "about face" so suddenly
that it was hardly to be recognized.
Baynell showed a stiff distaste for the persistence, but maintained his
position.
"Judge Roscoe made it plain that it was only for the sake of his
friendship with my father that he offered any civility to me--no
concession politically. My status as an officer of the 'Yankee army' is
an offence and a stumbling-block to him."
"Bless his fire-eating soul! I don't want to convert him from his
treason. I desire only to call on the lady."
"I myself could not call on Mrs. Gwynn," protested Baynell. "She hardly
spoke a word to me."
"It will be quite sufficient for her to listen to me," laughed Ashley.
"She took only the most casual notice of my presence--barely to give me
a cup of tea."
"Now, Baynell," said the lieutenant, exceedingly wroth. "I want you to
understand that I take this very ill of you."
He was a tall, spare young fellow, with light, straight brown hair, a
light-brown mustache, and a keen, excitable blue eye, which showed
well-opened and alert from under the dark brim of his cap as he looked
upward, still standing at the side of Baynell's restive horse. "I think
it a very poor return for similar courtesy. I took _you_ with me to call
on Miss Fisher--and--"
"This is a very different case. I, personally, am not on terms with Mrs.
Gwynn. Besides, she is very different from Miss Fisher, who entertains
general society. Mrs. Gwynn is a widow--in deep mourning."
"But it _is_ told in Gath that widows are not usually inconsolable,"
suggested Ashley, with a brightening of his arch eyes, and still
laughing it off.
"I am much affronted, Captain Baynell," declared the irascible
lieutenant. "I consider this personal. And I will get even with you for
this!"
"And I will get an introduction to Mrs. Gwynn without your kind
offices," declared Ashley, with a jocular imitation of their young
friend's indignant manner.
"I shall be very happy if you can meet her in any appropriate way. It is
not appropriate for me, cognizant of their ardent rebel sympathies and
intense antagonism to the Union cause and antipathy to all its
supporters, to ask to introduce my friends of the invading 'Yankee
army,'" Baynell replied with stiff hauteur.
Just then the bugle sang out, its mandatory, clear, golden tones lifting
into the sunshine with such a full buoyant effect that it was like the
very spirit of martial courage transmuted into sound. Baynell instantly
put his horse into motion, and rode off through the brilliant air and
the sparse shadows of the budding trees. His blond hair and mustache,
gilded by the sunlight, had as decorative an effect as his gold lace;
his blue eyes glittered with a stern, vigilant light; his face was
flushed, something unusual, for he was wont to be pale, and his erect,
imposing, soldierly figure sat his spirited young charger with the
firmness of a centaur. The eyes of all the group followed him, several
commenting on his handsome appearance, his fine bearing, his splendid
horse, and his great value as an officer.
"He is an admirable fellow," declared Dr. Grindley, a surgeon on his way
to the hospital hard by. He had paused at a little distance, and had not
heard the conversation.
"If he were not such a prig," Ashley assented dubiously. "Such an
uncompromising stickler on trifles! Any other man in the world would
have slurred the matter over, and never kept the promise of the
introduction. If inconvenient or undesirable, he might have postponed
the call indefinitely."
"He is a most confounded prig," said Lieutenant Seymour, in great
irritation.
"Baynell must have everything out--to the bitter end," said Ashley.
"I'd like to break his head! I'd like to break his face--with my fist,"
exclaimed the lieutenant, petulantly, clenching his hand again and
again. He detailed the tenor of the conversation to the surgeon as the
group watched the manoeuvring battery. "Isn't that a dog-in-the-manger-ish
trick, Dr. Grindley? He wants to keep his Roscoes to himself. Mrs. Gwynn
won't speak to him, and so he wants nobody else to go there whom she
_might_ speak to!"
Baynell, still uncomfortably conscious of the rancor he had roused, had
taken his position in the centre, just the regulation twelve paces in
front of the leading horses, with the music four paces distant from the
right of the first gun. As the sound blared out gayly on the crisp,
clear, vernal breeze, the glittering ranks, every soldier mounted on a
strong, fresh steed, moved forward swiftly, with the gun-carriages and
caissons each drawn by a team of six horses. The air was full of the
tramp of hoofs and the clangor of heavy, revolving wheels, ever and anon
punctuated by the sharp monition, "Obstacle!" as one of the giant oaks
of the grove intervened and the direction of the march of a piece was
obliqued. The efficiency of the battery was very evident. The drill was
almost perfect, despite the difficulty of manoeuvring among the trees.
But when the ranks passed from the grove they swept like a whirlwind
over the open spaces of the adjoining pasture-lands, the whole battery
swinging here and there in sharp turns, never losing the prescribed
intervals of the relative distance of squads, and guns, and
caissons--all like some single intricate piece of connected mechanism,
impossible of disassociation in its several parts. Ever and anon the
clear tenor tones of the captain rang out with a trumpet-like effect,
and the refrain of the subalterns and non-commissioned officers
commanding the sections followed in their various clamors, while the
great whirling congeries of horses and men and wheels and guns obeyed
the sound like some automatic creation of the ingenuity of man. Once the
surgeon bent an attentive ear.
"By sections--break from the right to march to left!" called the
commander, with a sudden "catch" in the tones.
"Caissons forward! Trot! March!" came from a different voice.
"Section forward, guide left!" thundered a basso profundo.
"March!" cried the captain, sharply.
"March!" came the subaltern's echo.
As the moving panorama turned and wheeled and shifted, the surgeon
commented in a spirit of forecast:--
"If that fellow doesn't pay some attention to his bronchial tubes, they
will pay some attention to him, and that promptly."
So promptly indeed was this prophecy verified that within the next few
days old Ephraim, who purveyed all the news of the period to the remote
secluded country house, informed Judge Roscoe that Captain Baynell was
seriously ill with bronchitis and threatened with pneumonia. In order to
have indoor protection and treatment he was to be removed as soon as
possible to the hospital near the town. Judge Roscoe verified this rumor
upon hastening to camp, and with hospitable warmth he invited the son of
his old schoolmate to sojourn instead in his house; for in the college
days to which he was fond of recurring he had been taken into the home
of the elder Fluellen Baynell, and nursed by his friend's mother through
a typhoid attack. To repay the obligation thus was peculiarly acceptable
to a man of his type. But Baynell hardly heeded the detail of the
hospitable precedent. He needed no persuasion, and thereafter he seemed
more than ever lapsed in the serenities of the storm centre, ensconced
in one of the great square upper bedrooms, with the spare furnishing of
heavy mahogany that gave an idea of so much space, the order of the day
when the plethora of decoration, the "cosy corner," the wall pocket, the
"art drapery," the crowded knickknackery, did not obtain. For more than
a week Baynell could not rise; the surgeon visited him at regular
intervals, and Judge Roscoe appeared unfailingly each morning in the
sick room; but the rest of the family remained invisible, and held
unsympathetically aloof.
This was a shrewd loss to Ashley, for although he had called at first
with genuine anxiety as to his friend's state, the humors of the
situation appealed to him as time wore on, and he recollected with the
enhanced interest of enforced idleness his boast that he would compass
an introduction to Mrs. Gwynn, despite Baynell's stiff refusal. Seymour
still resented the circumstance so seriously that he had withheld all
manifestations of sympathy or concern, and this, the kind Ashley
considered, carried the matter much too far. He thought it might effect
a general reconciliation if he should meet Mrs. Gwynn by accident, when
he fancied he would not fear to introduce any one whom he considered fit
for good society. Thus, after he had ceased to be apprehensive
concerning Baynell's condition, he called on him again and again, but
hearing never a light footfall on the stair or the flutter of flounces
that might promise a realization of his quest. He was all unconscious
that his project had an unwitting ally in Judge Roscoe himself. For more
than once Judge Roscoe was uncomfortably visited by hospitable
monitions.
"I should have liked to ask Colonel Ashley to dine with us," he said
tentatively to Mrs. Gwynn. "He was leaving the house just as the meal
was being served. Old Ephraim--confound the old fellow--has no sort of
tact. He brought in the soup to Captain Baynell with Colonel Ashley
sitting by the bedside! It was indeed a hint to beat a retreat. I was--I
was mortified. I was really mortified not to ask him to stay."
"Heavens, Uncle Gerald!--what are you dreaming about? Ask people to
dine, and no trained servant to wait on the table--and this china--and
the ladies in their pinafores!" And Mrs. Gwynn glanced scoffingly around
the domestic board, for the place had once been famous for the elegance
of its entertainments; but the balls, the "wine suppers," the formal
late dinners of many courses, had come to an end with the conclusion of
the period of prosperity, and the perfectly trained service had vanished
with the vanishing butler and his corps of assistants whom he himself
had rigorously drilled in the school of the pantry, in strict accordance
with old traditions.
"Well, we have better china," said the judge, inexorably. "And the
pinafores don't grow on the ladies; we have excellent precedent for
believing they can be dispensed with."
Mrs. Gwynn fixed him with a resolute eye. "I don't intend to have the
ladies taken from their studies in the forenoon to dress for company and
distract their minds with fascinating gentlemen. Besides it is too great
a compliment to receive an absolute stranger informally, as one of
ourselves,--as we treat Captain Baynell,--and it is almost impossible
to entertain Colonel Ashley otherwise. You forget that we have no
trained servants. And I am not going to trust the handling of my aunt's
beautiful old Sèvres dinner set to our inexperienced factotum--oh, the
idea! It makes me shudder to think of the nicks and smashings. It ought
to be kept intact for Julius's wife when he takes one, or for Clarence's
if he should ever marry again. A stray Yankee officer isn't sufficient
justification for risking it."
"He has called so often, and has been so kind to Captain Baynell."
"Well, so have I been kind to Captain Baynell, and here am I eating on
the everyday china--no Sèvres for me! And I am going to be kinder still,
for he is allowed to have some dessert to-day, and I have spread this
tray with mine own hands."
She touched a call-bell, and, as old Janus appeared, "Take this tray
upstairs to Captain Baynell," she said, as she transferred it, "be
careful--don't tilt it so!" Then, as the old servant left the room, she
resumed, addressing Judge Roscoe: "You can sentimentalize about your
precious Captain Baynell, if you like, on the score of old friendship. I
can appreciate the claims of old friendship, especially as he has been
so ill, and possibly was better off here than at the hospital. But to go
in generally for entertaining Yankee officers,--and all our near and
dear out yonder in those cold wet trenches, half starved, and ragged,
and wounded, and dying,--indeed, no! For my own part, I couldn't be
induced to spread a board for another one, except at the point of the
bayonet."
"Colonel Ashley don't wear no bayonet," interposed Adelaide, glibly.
"He's got him a sword," acceded Geraldine.
"A long sword, clickety-clank," suggested the first "lady."
"Clickety, clickety-clank," echoed the other, with brightening eyes.
"Don't eat with your fingers--nor the spoon; take the fork." Mrs.
Gwynn's admonitory aside was hardly an interruption.
"That is a very narrow view, Leonora," the judge contended. "There can
be no parity between the fervor of convictions on the issues of a great
national question and merely human predilections as between individuals.
Patriotism is not license for rancor. I have shown my devotion to the
Southern cause. I have risked the lives of my dear, dear sons. I have
expended much in its interests; I have endangered and lost my fortune.
The future of all I hold dear is in jeopardy in many aspects. But I _do
not_ feel bound for that reason to hate individually every
fellow-creature who has opposite convictions, to which he has a right,
and takes up arms to sustain them."
"Well--_I do_! Being a woman, and having no reasoning capacities, there
is no necessity for me to be logical on the subject. I feel what I
feel, without qualification. And I know what I know without either legal
proof or ocular demonstration. You are welcome to your intellect, Uncle
Gerald! Much good may it do you! Intuition is enough for me. Meantime
the Sèvres is safe on the shelves."
Beaten from the field as Judge Roscoe must needs be when his vaunted
ratiocination was no available weapon, he held stanchly nevertheless to
his own opinion, helpless though he was in the domestic administration.
He adopted such measures as were practicable to comport with his own
view. Flattered by Ashley's interest in Baynell and recognizant of the
frequency of his visits, never dreaming that a glimpse of Mrs. Gwynn was
their ultimate object, he took occasion to offer him such slight
courtesies as opportunity presented.
One day when they were descending the stairs Judge Roscoe chanced to
comment on the fine bouquet of a certain choice old wine. He still
hoarded a few costly bottles of an ancient importation, and with a
sudden thought he insisted on pausing in the library to take a glass and
finish a discussion happily begun by the invalid's bedside. The room was
vacant, as the colonel's keen glance swiftly assured him, and the
judge's order for wine was inaugurated through the bell-cord, which
jangling summons old Ephraim answered somewhat procrastinatingly. The
expression of surprise in the old darkey's eyes, even admonitory
dissuasion, as he hearkened to the demand, very definitely nettled the
judge and secretly amused Ashley, who divined the old servitor's doubts
as to gaining the permission of "de widder 'oman." The host was more
relieved than he cared to acknowledge to himself when the factotum
presently reappeared, bearing a tray, with the old-fashioned
red-and-white Bohemian wine-glasses and decanter which contained the
rare vintage, and he felt with a sigh that he was still supreme in his
own house, despite the sway of Mrs. Gwynn. He recognized the more
gratefully, however, her influence in the perfection of the service and
the solemnly careful, preternaturally watchful step of old Ephraim, as
he bore about the delicate glass with all the effect of treading on
eggs,--finally depositing it on the table and withdrawing at his
habitual plunging gait.
Although Ashley dawdled as he listened and sipped his wine languorously,
no rustle of draperies rewarded his attentive ear, no graceful presence
gladdened his expectant eye. And when at last he could linger no longer,
he took up his hope even as he had laid it down, in the expectation of a
luckier day.
"Come again, my dear sir, whenever you can. I am always glad to see you,
and your presence cheers Captain Baynell. His father was my dearest
friend. I felt his death as if he had been a brother. I have grown
greatly attached to his son, who closely resembles him. Anything you can
do for Captain Baynell I appreciate as a personal favor. Come again!
Come again soon!"
Perhaps if Colonel Ashley had not been so bereft of the normal interests
of life, in this interval of inactivity, his curiosity as to that
fleeting glimpse of a beautiful woman might not have maintained its
whetted edge. Perhaps constantly recurrent disappointment roused his
persistence. He came again and yet again, and still he saw no member of
the family save Judge Roscoe. Even the surgeon commented. "There is a
considerable feminine garrison up there," he said one day; "I often hear
mention of the ladies, but they never make a sally. I suspect the old
judge is more of a fire-eater than he shows nowadays, for his womenfolks
are evidently straight-out 'Secesh'!"
CHAPTER III
Captain Baynell himself, throughout his illness, saw naught of the
feminine inmates of the house, but the first day of convalescence that
he was able to be out of his room and to descend the stairs, unsteadily
enough and holding to the balustrade all the way, he was very civilly
greeted by Mrs. Gwynn when he suddenly appeared at the library door.
She glanced up with obvious surprise, then advanced with the light, airy
elegance that was naturally appurtenant to her slight figure, and seemed
no more a conscious pose or gait than the buoyancy of a bird or a
butterfly. She shook hands with him, hoped he was better, congratulated
him on the happy termination of so serious an illness, cautioned him
against exposure to the chilly uncertain weather, drew a great arm-chair
nearer to the fire, and as he seated himself she piled up some old
numbers of _Blackwood's Magazine_ and the _Edinburgh Review_ on a little
table close to his elbow.
Her regard for his comfort--casual, even official, so to speak, though
it was, the attentive, considerate expression of her beautiful eyes,
the kindly tones of her dulcet, drawling voice--affected him like a
benediction. He was still feeble, tremulous, and his heart throbbed with
sudden surges of emotion. He was grateful, recognizant, flattered,
although the provision for his mental entertainment bore also the
interpretation that he need not trouble himself to talk.
Therefore he affected to read, and she sat apparently oblivious of his
presence, crocheting a fichu-like garment, called a "sontag" in those
days, destined for a friend, evidently, not for her own sombre wear. The
material was of an ultramarine blue zephyr, with a border of flecked
black and white. She was making no great speed, for often the long,
white bone needle fell from her listless grasp, and with her beautiful
eyes on the fire, her face no longer a cold, impassive mask, but all
unconscious, soft, wistful, sweet, showing her real identity, she would
lose herself in revery till some interruption--Judge Roscoe's entrance,
the "ladies" and their demands, old Ephraim seeking orders--would rouse
her with a start as from a veritable dream.
As the days went thus slowly by it soon came to pass that Baynell could
not be silent. Her presence here flattered him, but he did not reflect
that the library was the gathering-place of all the family; it held,
too, the only fire, except his own, in the house, a fact which he,
forgetful of the scarcity of fuel which the army had occasioned, did not
appreciate. She could hardly withdraw, and, with her work in her hand,
she could not ignore her uncle's guest.
Sometimes he caught himself covertly studying her expression, marvelling
at its complete absorption;--at the strange fact that so slight a token
of such deep introspection showed on the surface. It was like some
expanse of still, clear waters--one can only know that here are
unmeasured fathoms, abysses of unexplored depths. Her meditation, her
obvious brooding thought, seemed significant; yet sometimes he was prone
to deem this merely the cast of her noble, reflective features, her
expansive brow, the comprehensive intelligence of her limpid eyes,--all
so beautiful, yet endowed with something far beyond mere beauty. Now and
again he read aloud a passage which specially struck his attention, and
occasionally her comments jarred on his preconceived opinion of her, or,
rather, of what a woman so young, so favored, so graciously endowed,
ought to feel and think. One day, particularly, he was much impressed by
this. Some benignant philosopher, reaching out both hands to the happy
time of the millennium, had given voice to the theory that man's
inhumanity to man, particularly in the more cultured circles, was the
result of scant mutual knowledge--if we but knew the sorrows of others,
how hate would be metamorphosed to pity, the bruised reed unbroken! This
sentiment mightily pleased Captain Baynell, and he read it aloud.
It seemed potently to arrest her attention. She laid her work down on
her knee and gazed steadily at him.
"If we could know the secret heartache--the blighted aspiration--the
denied longing--the bruised pride of others?"
As he signified assent, she gazed steadily at him for a moment longer in
silence. Then--
"If we only knew!" she cried,--"Christian brethren,--what a laughing,
jeering, gibing world we should be!"
Once more she took her work in her hands, once more exclaimed, "If we
only knew!" and paused to laugh aloud with a low icy tone. Then she
inserted the dexterous needle into the fashioning of the "shell" and
bent her reflective, smiling face over the swift serpentines of the
"zephyr."
Captain Baynell was shocked in some sort. This frank unconscious
cynicism was out of keeping with so much grace and charm. He was hardly
ready to argue the question. He was dismayed by a sense of futility. If
she had thought this, it was enough to show her inmost nature. A
substituted, cultivated conviction does not uproot the spontaneous
productions of the mind. It is only foisted in their midst. He was
silent in his turn, and presently fell to fluttering the leaves of his
book and reading with slight interest and only a superficial appearance
of absorption.
If we only knew the sorrows of others! Mrs. Gwynn's satiric eyes glowed
with the uncomfortable thought that hers at all events had been public
enough. If openness be a claim for sympathy, she might well be entitled
to receive balm of all her world. It seared every sensitive fibre within
her to realize how much of her intimate inner life they all knew,--her
friends, who masked this knowledge with a casual face, but talked over
her foolish miseries among themselves with the mingled gusto of gossip,
the superiority of contemptuous commiseration, and a rabid zest of
speculation concerning such poor reserves as she had been able to
maintain. Much of this drifted back to her knowledge through her old
colored nurse, who since her childhood had remained her special
attendant, though now officiating as cook to the Roscoe household, and
by all respectfully called "Aunt Chaney." Her association with other
cooks and ladies' maids enabled her to become well informed as to what
was said and known in other households of these affairs. As Aunt Chaney
detailed the gossip, she herself would burst into painful tears at the
humiliating disclosures, exclaiming ever and anon, "Oh, de debbil was
busy, shorely, de day dee married dat man!"
But despite her burden of sympathetic woe, she would gather her powers
to compass a debonair assurance toward observant outsiders and
optimistically toss her head. "De man was good-looking to
_de_straction," she would loftily asseverate, in defence of the
situation, "and he didn't live long, nohow."
Continuing, she would remind her hearers that she had been opposed to
her young mistress's marriage, "But shucks! de pore chile saw how the
other gals wuz runnin' arter Rufus Allerton Gwynn,--dat Fisher gal tried
hard fur true, an' not married yit,--an' dat made Leonora Gwynn--Leonora
Roscoe dat wuz--think mo' of his bein' so taken up with her! De
hansomes' man in de whole country! He didn't live long!"
This gallant outward show did not prevent the iron from entering the old
nurse's soul especially as she detailed the gossip of Miss Fisher's
maid, Leanna, who overheard the conversation of her mistress with two
particular girl-cronies beside the midnight fire, pending the duty of
brushing the long hair of the Fisher enchantress, which, being of a
thrice-gilded red tint, required much care and gave her much trouble. It
gave trouble elsewhere. Its flaring glories kept others awake besides
poor Leanna, plying the brush nightly one "solid hour by the clock." For
the fair Miss Mildred Fisher was a famous belle, and many hearts had
been entangled in those glittering meshes.
This trio had been Leonora Gwynn's intimate coterie, and she knew just
how they looked as they sat half undressed in the chilly midnight before
the dying fire in a great bedroom, in the home of one of the three,
their tresses--Maude Eldon's dark, and Margaret Duncan's brown, and
Mildred Fisher's red-gold, with Leanna's interested face leaning above
their gilded shimmer--hanging down over dressing-sacques or nightgowns,
while they actively gesticulated at each other with handglass or brush,
and with spirit disputed whether it was a chair which Rufus Gwynn had
broken over Leonora's head, or did he merely drag her around by the
hair--"Think of that, my dear,--by her hair!"
It was a poor consolation, but this neither they, nor any other, would
ever know. With the reflection Leonora set her even little teeth
together as she still dreamily gazed into the fire.
Other more obvious facts she could not conceal. Her stringent, hopeless
poverty would bring a piteous expression to Judge Roscoe's face as
occasion required him to seek to gather together some humble remnants of
the estate her husband had recklessly flung away, for he had dissipated
her fortune as well as desolated her heart. She needed no reminder, and
indeed no word passed Judge Roscoe's lips of the settlements that he had
drawn when he discovered that, despite all remonstrances, his orphaned
niece was bent upon this marriage. Though Rufus Gwynn protested that he
would sign them, she had tossed them into the fire like a heroine of
romance, grandiloquently declaring that she would not trust herself to a
man to whom she could not trust her fortune.
How pleased her lover had been! How gay, gallant, triumphant! Later he
found his account in her folly and a more substantial value than
flattered pride, for by reason of her marriage the financial control of
her guardian was abrogated, and her thousands slipped through her
husband's fingers like sand at the gaming-table, the wine-rooms, the
race-track, as with his wild, riotous companions he went his swift way
to destruction and death. And even this did not alienate her, for her
early admiration and foolish adoration had a continuance that a devotion
for a worthier object rarely attains, and she loved him long, despite
financial reverses and wicked waste and cruelty and neglect. She could
have forgiven him aught, all, but his own unworthiness. Who can gauge
the sophistries, the extenuations, the hopes, that delude a woman who
clings to an ideal of her own tender fashioning, the dream of a fond
heart, and the sacrifice of a loving young life. He left her not one
vain imagining that she might still hold dear amidst the wreck of her
existence.
The crisis came at the end of a quarrel,--one of his own making,--a
quarrel about a horse that he wished to sell;--oh, the trifle--the
trifle that had wrought such woe!
As she thought of it anew, sitting before the fire, she laid the work
upon her knee and unconsciously wrung her hands. The next moment she
felt the eyes of the officer lifted toward her in a cursory glance. She
affected to shift the rings on her fingers, then took up the
crochet-needle and bent her head to the deft fashioning of shells.
Now she could think unmolested, think of what she could never forget!
Yet why should she canvass the details again and again, save that she
must. The event marked an epoch of final significance in her life,--the
moment that her dream fled and she awakened to the stern fact that she
had ceased to love. And at first it was a trifle, a mere trifle, that
had inaugurated this amazing change. Her husband wished to sell the
horse, her horse, that Judge Roscoe had given her a week before. The
gift had come, she knew, as an overture of reconciliation, as there had
been much hard feeling between Judge Roscoe and his niece. For after her
elopement and marriage he promptly applied to the chancery court seeking
to protect her future by securing the settlement on her of certain funds
of her estate, urging the fact of her minority and the spendthrift
character of her husband. Leonora vehemently opposed the petition, and
owing to the efforts of her counsel to gain time and the law's delays,
she came of age before any decree could be granted, and then defeated
the measure by making a full legal waiver of her rights in favor of her
husband. But, at length, when pity overmastered Judge Roscoe's just
anger, she welcomed a token of his renewed cordiality. She did not feel
at liberty to sell the gift, she had remonstrated. It was not bestowed
as a resource--to sell. She feared to wound her kinsman. What was the
pressing necessity for money? Why not manage as if the horse had not
been given her?
The contention waxed high as she stood in habit and hat just in the
vestibule with the horse outside hitched to the block, for Judge Roscoe
was coming to ride with her. She held fast, for a wonder; she seldom
could resist; but the horse was not theirs _to sell_. Rufus Gwynn
suddenly turned at last, sprang up the stairs, three steps at a time,
and as he came bounding down again she saw the glint of steel in his
hand.
Even now she shuddered.
"It is growing colder," Captain Baynell said. (How observant that man
seemed to be!) "Allow me to mend the fire."
He stirred the hickory logs, and as the yellow flames shot up the
chimney he sank back into his great chair, and she took up the thread of
her work and her reminiscences together.
She honestly thought her husband had intended to kill her. Somehow the
veil dropped from her eyes, and she knew him for the fiend he was even
before the dastardly act that revealed him unqualified.
But it was not she on whom his spite was to fall. Such deeds bring
retribution. Only the horse--the glossy, graceful, spirited animal,
turning his lustrous confiding eyes toward the house as the door
opened, whinnying a low joyous welcome, anticipative of the breezy
gallop--received the bullet just below the ear.
It was then and afterward like the distraught agony of a confused dream.
She heard her own screams as if they had been uttered by another; she
saw the great bulk of the horse lying in the road, struggling
frightfully, futilely, whether with conscious pain or merely the last
reserves of muscular energy she did not know; she noted the gathering
crowd, dismayed, bewildered, angry; she knew that her husband had
hastily galloped off, a trifle out of countenance because of certain
threats of some brawny Irish railroad hands going home with their
dinner-pails who had seen the whole occurrence. Then Judge Roscoe had
ridden up at last to accompany her as of old, thinking how pretty and
pleased she would be on the new horse,--for equestrianism was the vaunt
of the girls of that day and she had been a famous horsewoman,--and
feeling a great pity because of her privations, and her cruel folly, and
her unworthy husband. When he saw what had just occurred, he said
instantly, "You must come home with me, Leonora; you are not safe." And
she had answered, "Take me with you--quick--quick! So that I may never
see that coward again." Thus she had left her husband forever.
"Shall I draw up the blind?" asked Captain Baynell, seeing her fumble
for her zephyr.
"No, thank you; there is still light sufficient, I think. The days are
growing longer."
Again, in the silence of the quiet room, the spell of her reminiscences
resumed its sway. She recalled the promises that had not sufficed; no
explanations extenuated the facts; no lures could avail; her resolution
was taken and held firm. She laughed when, with full confidence in her
unshaken love for him, her husband appealed to her by their mutual
devotion. She was simply enlightened. But she resented the satisfaction
that Judge Roscoe and his wife obviously felt in the separation, and the
knowledge of the secret triumph of all her friends who had opposed the
match. She was embittered, humiliated, broken-spirited, yet she
maintained throughout a mask of placidity to the world, inquisitive,
pitying, ridiculing, as she knew it to be. The separation passed as
temporary. She was making a visit to her former home. This feint had the
more countenance when a sudden need for her presence arose. Her aunt
fell ill and died, and soon there came tidings of the death of Clarence
Roscoe's wife while he was far away in the Confederate army. The three
little girls were all alone.
"Bring them here, Uncle Gerald. I will take charge of them," Leonora had
said. "Perhaps I can feel less dependent then."
And Judge Roscoe, who had borne his own losses like a philosopher, had
tears in his eyes for her losses. "Oh, poor Leonora!" he had exclaimed.
"Your very presence is a boon, my dear. But for _you_ to be so stricken
and desolate and--"
He was about to say "robbed," but the facts forbade him; for Gwynn's
legal rights rendered her position as difficult as unenviable. In her
own house she had contrived to hold her belongings together. Now, day by
day, came tidings of the sale of her special personal effects--her
carriage, her domestic animals, her furniture, the very pictures on the
walls; then had followed a letter from her husband, regretting all his
misdeeds and promising infinite rehabilitation if she would but forgive
him. Naught could provoke a remonstrance, could stimulate Leonora to
action, could induce a return.
Judge Roscoe had said but little. He had the deep-seated juridical
respect for the relation of man and wife as a creation of law, as well
as an institution of God. When he was appealed to, he felt it his duty
to place impartially before her the husband's arguments, and promises,
and protestations, but he experienced intense relief when she tersely
dismissed Rufus Gwynn's plea for a reconciliation. "I know him now," she
replied.
"An' 'fore de Lawd, _I_ knows him too!" her old nurse declared; "I jes'
uped an' I sez, 'Marse Rufe, ye hev' got sech a notion o' sellin' out,
ye mought sell old Chaney--ef ennybody would buy sech a contraption in
dese days! So I'm goin' over to my old home at Judge Roscoe's place, to
wait on Miss Leonora. I knows she needs me, an' I 'spect she's watchin'
fur me now.' An' Marse Rufe, he says, 'Aunt Chaney, I don't know _what_
you are talking about! Go over there, an' welcome! An' try to get my
wife to see I was just overtaken in my temper and desperate; _you_
persuade her to come back, Aunt Chaney.' Dat's what de debbil said ter
me. I always heard dat de debbil had a club foot. But, mon, he ain't.
Two long, slim, handsome feet, an' his boots, sah, made in New Orleens!"
The end had come characteristically at last! A horse, furiously ridden,
brutally beaten, reared suddenly, lost his balance, fell backward,
crushing the rider and breaking his neck. And so Rufus Gwynn reached his
goal, and his wife was free at last.
Free as some defenceless, hunted, tremulous animal, miraculously
escaping fierce fangs, and a furious rush of a murderous pursuit;
forever dominated by the sense of disaster, and despair, and flight;
forever looking backward, forever hearkening to the echoes of the
troublous past--exhausted, listless, hopeless, every impulse of volition
stunned.
It was well for her, doubtless, that the insistent duties of the care of
her uncle's household had grown difficult in the changed conditions
induced by the war; that the education, the training, the well-being, of
the motherless little "ladies"--all restricted by the ever narrowing
opportunity of the beleaguered town, and overshadowed by the impending
clouds of disaster--appealed to her womanly heart and her maternal
instincts. Their needs had roused her interest, stimulated her
invention, elicited her self-control, that she might more definitely
control them.
In the days of Captain Baynell's convalescence he had unique
opportunities for observing the methods that had prevailed under her
management, for all the life of the house revolved about the one big
fire in the library. Sometimes, as he and Judge Roscoe sat there with
papers and books and cigars, presumably oblivious of the minutiæ of the
household matters, while the fire flared and the tobacco smoke hung in
blue wreaths about the stuccoed ceiling and the carved ornaments of the
tall book-cases, he fancied that it was the characteristic interest in
trifles animating an invalid which caused him to smilingly watch the
scholastic struggles of the "ladies,"--their turmoils with "jogaphy,"
for it was decreed that they should learn somewhat of the earth on which
they lived; the anguish inflicted by that potent instrument of torture,
the Blue Speller; the bowed head of juvenile despair on the wooden rim
of the slate, over the mysteries of "subscraction," as the "lady" sobbed
softly, under her breath, for loud weepings were interdicted, however
poignant the woe might be. Mrs. Gwynn was indeed unfeeling in these
crises and often sarcastic. "You might use your sponge to wipe away
your tears, Geraldine," she would say, with that curt icy inflection of
her soft voice. "I notice it is too dry for use on your slate."
Each slate had a string to which was attached a small sponge and a short
slate-pencil, capable of an excruciating creak, which often set the
judge's teeth on edge; as he would wince from the sound, Mrs. Gwynn
would comment in this wise, "I have often heard that learned ladies do
not contribute to household comfort,--so your Honor must suffer for the
erudition that we have here."
And the activities of "subscraction" were never abated.
Baynell had at first a certain shrinking to witness the lessons of the
deaf-mute, pitying the poor deprived child, so young, so tender, so
pretty, so plaintive in her infirmity, shut out from all the usual
avenues of knowledge. He would take up his book and withdraw his
attention. But after a time there was suddenly forced upon his
observation the superior judgment and acumen and careful altruistic
thought exerted in these small matters by Mrs. Gwynn. Inexpert in the
manual alphabet, she wasted no time nor labor on its acquisition for
herself; but, notwithstanding this, "subscraction" had no terrors for
Lucille. So practised was she in the domain of demonstration that her
slate was swiftly covered with figures, and her sponge had no necessity
to be diverted to the incongruous function of wiping her bright eyes.
All the questions were put in writing and answered by the little
deaf-mute with correct spelling and a most legible and creditable
chirography, over which Captain Baynell found himself exclaiming with
delighted surprise, while the cheeks both of the scholar and teacher
flushed with pride and gratification, as they exchanged congratulatory
smiles. So far from being the sport of her limitations and humiliated by
them, Lucille was pressed forward to excel, and the twins gazed upon her
as a miracle of learning, and often craved the privilege of scanning her
slate, and imitating the childish flourishes of her capital letters. In
naught was she permitted to feel her deficiencies--so craftily tender
was her preceptress. The hour which the twins devoted to playing scales
on the grand piano--being snugly buttoned up in sacques to protect them
from the chill of the great parlors, and often called across the hall to
warm their fingers at the library fire--Lucille sat at her
drawing-board, and although she had only an ordinary degree of talent,
she acquired a deftness and a proficiency that made the result
remarkable for a child of her age; her leisure was encouraged to express
itself in sketching from nature, and she went about much of the time
pleasantly engrossed, holding up a pencil at a stiff angle and at
arm's-length to take accurate measurement of relative distances and
details of perspective.
Baynell was a man who could be allured by a pretty face, but he could
never have fallen in love with a woman merely for her beauty. He was
possessed of insistent ideals, and now and then these were shattered by
an evidence of Mrs. Gwynn's incongruously bitter cynicism, or a touch of
repellent hardness and an icy coldness unpleasing in one so young, and
all his preconceived prejudices were to adjust anew. He was beginning at
last to feel that he must seek to realize her nature, rather than to fit
her into the niche awaiting the conventional goddess of his fancy. She
had other traits as inconsistent with her youth, her grace, her beauty,
her lissome gait, her delicate hand; and these were homespun virtues, so
plain, so good, so useful, so aggressive--such as one may fancy are
designed to compensate the possessor for limitations in a more graceful
sort,--according with an angular frame, a near-sighted vision, a rasping
voice. There was scant need to look so beautiful, so daintily
speculative, as she sat and cast up the judge's household accounts in a
big red book that seemed full of cobweb perplexities and strenuous
calculations to make both ends meet. Sometimes she brought it over to
her uncle and, placing it before his reluctant gaze, pointed out some
item of his own extravagance with a dignity of rebuke and a look of
superior wisdom that might have realized to the imagination Minerva
herself. Such a wealth of good house-keeping lore, so accurately
applied, might have justified any amount of feminine ugliness.
Her tender, far-sighted, commiserative appreciation of the deaf-mute's
limitations, and the simple measures that had so far nullified them and
utilized all the child's capacity, were incongruous with the iron rule
under which the three were held.
"I am afraid the ladies are giving you a great deal of trouble,
Leonora," her uncle said one day, apologetically, when absolute mutiny
seemed abroad amongst them.
"Not half so much trouble as I intend to give them," Mrs. Gwynn replied
resolutely.
Their meek, mild, readjusted little faces after the scholastic hours
were over were enough to move a heart of stone, and now and again Judge
Roscoe glanced uneasily at them, and at last said inappropriately
enough:--
"I am afraid you have not had a happy morning, ladies."
"They have been brought to hear reason," Mrs. Gwynn observed dryly. "And
I have heard reason, too,--the Fourth Line of the Multiplication Table
recited backward four times, standing facing the wall. It is an exercise
that tends to subdue the angry passions. Allow me to commend it for
general experiment."
Baynell sought to laugh the episode off genially with the "ladies," but
the three little faces looked for permission to ridicule this dire
experience, and as Mrs. Gwynn's countenance maintained a blank
inscrutability, they did not venture to make merry over their miseries
of the "Four Line," now happily overpast.
The scholastic duties were well over by noon, except perhaps for the
scale-playing on the grand piano, and the "ladies" roamed at will about
the house, or in the parterre if the weather were dry, or played at
battledore and shuttlecock or graces in the long gallery enclosed with
Venetian blinds. If it rained they were permitted to repair to the
kitchen, where Aunt Chaney, a very tall, portly woman, with a stately
gruffness, obviously spurious, accommodated them with bits of dough, to
be moulded into ducks and pigs, and assigned them a small section of the
stove whereon to bake these triumphs of the plastic art. Doll's dresses
were here laundered, being washed in a small cedar noggin owned in
common by the trio, and a miniature sad-iron, heated by special
permission on Aunt Chaney's stove, was brought into requisition.
Sometimes Aunt Chaney was in a softened mood, and fluted a ruffle on a
wax baby's skirt, and told wonderful tales about Mrs. Gwynn's dresses in
her girlhood, "flounced to the waist, and crimped to a charm." Thence
the transition was easy to the details of her young mistress's social
triumphs and celebrated beauty, with lovers in gangs, all sighing like
furnaces and represented as rolling in riches and riding splendid and
prancing horses, the final special zest of each story being the
fruitless jealousy of the red-headed Miss Mildred Fisher, eating her
heart out,--this to the immature imagination of the "ladies" literally
resembled the chickens' hearts which were so daintily chopped to garnish
the dish of fried pullets amidst the parsley.
As the rain beat against the windows and the evening fell, the trio
thought many a loitering-place less attractive than the chimney-nook
behind the stove in Aunt Chaney's kitchen, regaled with her stories as
she cooked, and now and then a spoonful of some dainty, administered
with the curt command, "Open yer mouf, ladies!"
Thus it was that the library was almost deserted when Colonel Ashley
called more than once. Captain Baynell he found, and occasionally the
judge also. He always selected the afternoons, and after a time he was
wont to glance about with such a keen, predatory expression that the
truth began to dawn vaguely on Captain Baynell. Vanity is so robust an
endowment that it had been easy enough for the recipient of these visits
to appropriate wholly the interest that prompted them. It struck Baynell
with an indignant sense of impropriety when he began to remember
Ashley's ardent desire to meet Mrs. Gwynn, his admiration of the glimpse
of her beauty that had once been vouchsafed him, and to connect this
with his manifestation of good comradeship and eager solicitude
concerning his friend's health. Baynell was infinitely out of
countenance for a moment.
"Why, confound the fellow! He doesn't care a fig whether I live or die."
Then he was sensible of a rising anger, that he should be made the
subterfuge of a systematic endeavor to casually meet Mrs. Gwynn,--likely
to prove successful in the last instance. For lowering clouds overspread
the sky when Ashley entered late in the afternoon, and a storm so
violent, so tumultuous, broke with such sudden fury that it was
impossible for him to take leave had he desired this. Baynell knew that
nothing was further from his comrade's wish. Ashley reconciled himself
so swiftly to Judge Roscoe's insistence that he should remain to tea
that it might seem he had come for that express purpose.
"Dat man," soliloquized the "double-faced Janus" impressively, "mus'
hev' smelled de perfume of dat ar flummery plumb ter de camp. Chaney wuz
jes' dishin' up when he ring de door-bell!"
CHAPTER IV
Now, face to face with the long-sought opportunity, Colonel Ashley was
grievously disappointed. A woman--young, singularly beautiful, dressed
like a middle-aged frump, with the manners of a matron of fifty, staid,
reserved, inattentive, uninterested!
The incongruity affected him like a discourtesy; its rarity had no
attractions for him, nor in the slightest degree roused his curiosity.
He had expected charm, glow, responsiveness, coquetry,--all the various
traits that attend on beauty and youth. Even a conscious hauteur would
have had its special grace and piqued an effort to win her to
cordiality, but here was the inexpressiveness, the indifference, of an
elderly woman, one tired, despondent, done with the world--civil,
indeed, as behooved her rearing, her station, but unnoting--really apart
from all the interests of the present and all thought for the future.
And, certainly, Mrs. Gwynn's life might be considered already lived out
in her past.
The rain fell in sheets, and Colonel Ashley wished himself back in camp,
despite the flavor of the flummery. As they sat at table, now and again
a vivid glare of lightning revealed through the windows the expanse of
falling water, closely wrought as a silver-gray fabric, and the flash of
white foam from its impact with the ground. The house seemed to rock
with the reverberations of the bursts of thunder.
When they were once more in the library, Colonel Ashley found himself
with a long evening on his hands; his chum, Baynell, had fallen into one
of his frequent fits of silent reflectiveness as he smoked, and Judge
Roscoe, an ascetic, quiet, uncongenial old man, of opposite political
convictions,--which placed an embargo on all the topics of the day,--did
not seem to promise much in the way of lively companionship.
Mrs. Gwynn still lingered in the dining room, and the little "ladies"
explained that her old nurse, who was now the cook, was afflicted with a
"misery," seeming to bear some relation to neuralgia, and needed help to
get through with her work, "Uncle Ephraim being a poor dependence" where
the handling of crockery was concerned.
The "ladies," with true feminine coquetry, affected a shy reserve, and
rather retreated from the expansive jovial bonhomie of Colonel Ashley's
hearty advances toward them, albeit they were wont to press their
attentions upon the inexpressive Captain Baynell. They met with
fluttering downcast glances the engaging twinkle of Ashley's bright dark
eyes. They replied with demure little clipped monosyllables to his gay
sallies, and indeed Colonel Ashley bade fair to discharge the task of
entertaining himself throughout the evening, till he luckily asked one
of them what she liked best to play--graces or battledore and
shuttlecock, Geraldine having brought in a grace-hoop and now holding it
in her hands before her as she stood in the flicker of the fire.
"I like cards best," Adelaide volunteered unexpectedly.
"Have you a pack of cards? Then let's have a game!" Ashley cried gayly;
"though I'm afraid you can beat me at anything I try."
There was a shrill jubilance of juvenile acclaim. The three, their
ringlets waving, their cheeks flushing, the short skirts of their gay
attire--blue, and crimson, and orange--fluttering joyfully, were
instantly placing the chairs about the little card-table and climbing
into them, while Colonel Ashley took the cards and dealt them with many
airy fancy touches, to the amazement and admiration of the "ladies."
With his versatile capacity for all sorts of enjoyment, the incident was
beginning to have a certain zest for him, involving no sacrifice either
of inclination or time. Baynell realized how Ashley also valued the
pose. He had an intuitive perception of Ashley's own relish of its
incongruity,--the gallant colonel of cavalry, who had successfully
measured blades with the fiercest swordsmen and masters of fence, to be
now lending himself gently to play with three little children, whose
soft eyes glowed upon him with radiant admiration and tenderest
confidence, while the firelight flared and flickered within and the
storm raged without! Baynell knew that it was with an appreciated
sacrifice of the perfect proportions of the situation that Ashley
finally dealt cards for his friend and Judge Roscoe; he would have
preferred to exclude them, if he might, and have the whole stage for the
effects of his own dramatic personality. But never, in all his weavings
of romance about himself, was Ashley guilty of even the slightest
injustice or discourtesy or forgetfulness of the claims of others; hence
his character was almost as fine and lovable as he feigned, or as it
would have seemed, had but his foible of self-appreciation,
self-gratulation, borne a juster proportion and been rendered less
obvious by his own cheerful, unconscious, transparent candor. There was
no guile in him, and the smile was quite genuine with which he took up
his cards and affected to look anxiously through them to discern if Fate
lurked therein in the presence of the Old Maid.
For it was this dread game that the "ladies" had chosen, and a serious
affair it is when regarded from their standpoint. Ashley had now no need
of his own sentiments or mental processes or artistic poses to minister
to his entertainment. It was quite sufficient to watch the faces of the
"ladies" as the "draw" went round, each player in turn taking at random
an unseen card from the hand of the next neighbor to the left, the
whole pack of course having been dealt. The heavy terror of doom was
attendant upon the unwelcome pasteboard. Once, as this harbinger of Fate
passed on, a gleeful squeal announced that a "lady" had escaped the
anguish of the prospect of single blessedness.
"That's not fair, Ger'ldine!" exclaimed Adelaide, reprovingly; "you have
told ever'body that Gran'pa has drawed the Old Maid!"
"I jus' couldn't help it--I was _so glad_ she was gone," apologized the
contrite Geraldine.
"It makes no difference, my precious, for I have two of the queens, and
they are a pair," said Judge Roscoe, and as he threw the mates on the
table the "ladies" placed their hands on their lips to stifle the aghast
"Ohs!" and "Ahs!" that trembled on utterance, and gazed on their
fellow-gamesters with great, excited, round eyes. For the crisis had
supervened. Of course one of the queens had been withdrawn from the pack
at the commencement of the game, in order to leave an odd queen as the
Old Maid. Since two had just been discarded there remained the prophetic
spinster, and each "lady's" delicate little fingers trembled on the
"draw." Ashley could scarcely preserve a becoming gravity and
inexpressiveness as the pleading beseeching eyes of his next neighbor
were cast up to his countenance, seeking to read there some intimation
of the character of the card she had selected. More than once the
choice was precipitately abandoned at the last moment and another card
snatched at hysteric haphazard. Then when an insignificant five of
diamonds or three of spades was revealed,--what joy of relief, what
deep-drawn sighs of relaxed tension, what activity of little slippered
feet under the table, unable to be still, fairly dancing with pleasure
that the Old Maid with her awful augury still held aloof and went the
rounds elsewhere! Then--the eagerness of expectation and the renewed
jeopardy of doubt.
"On my word, this is sport!" exclaimed Colonel Ashley. "This is better
than a 'small stake to give an interest to the game,'--eh, Judge?"
"It's a _big_ stake," said Geraldine, at his elbow, "the Old Maid is!"
The desperate suspense, the anguish of jeopardy, continued, and at
length Geraldine had but one card left, Colonel Ashley holding two; the
other players having matched and tabled the rest of the pack were now
out of the game. Seeing how seriously the doom of spinsterhood was
regarded, Colonel Ashley sought to prevent his little neighbor from
drawing the fateful pasteboard by craftily shifting the cards in his
hand as she was about to take hold of the grim-visaged queen. Geraldine
detected the motion instantly, with deep suspicion misinterpreted his
intention, and laid hold on the card he had manoeuvred to retain. Her
crestfallen dismay betrayed the disaster. With wide, fearfully
prescient eyes she nevertheless gathered all her faculties for the final
effort. Cautiously holding her two cards under the table, she shifted
them, interchanged them back and forth, then tremulously permitted him
to draw. This done, he placidly placed two fives on the table.
There was a moment of impressive silence while the "lady" held before
her eyes in her babyish fingers the single card, and gazed petrified on
the Medusa-like visage of the Old Maid. Then, as a murmur of awe arose
from the other "ladies," looking pityingly upon her, yet blissful in
their own escape, she burst into tears, and, bowing her golden head in
her arms on the table, wept copiously, though softly, silently, mindful
that Cousin Leonora allowed no "loud whooping in weeps," her little
shoulders shaken by her sobs.
Colonel Ashley could but laugh as he protested, "This is truly
flattering to masculine vanity." Then, his kindly impulses uppermost,
"Come, Miss Geraldine, let's have another round. There must be more Old
Maids still hiding out in this crowd. Let's see who they are."
Adelaide looked alarmed as the stricken one lifted her head to the
prospect of the company that misery loves.
"I wish I was like Cousin Leonora, born a widow-woman," she remarked,
regarding the doubtful future askance.
"Widow-womans can marry,--Aunt Chaney says they can," Geraldine
declared, as she took up the cards of the new deal.
"Well, you would speak more properer if you said 'widow-_womens_' than
'widow-_womans_,'" rejoined the critical Adelaide, rendered tart by her
renewed jeopardy and the sudden termination of the definite sense of
escape.
While each player's hand was full of cards, the three queens still
amongst them, the interest was not so tense as the first few draws went
round and Mrs. Gwynn's entrance from the dining room created some stir.
Baynell and Ashley rose to offer her a chair, and the latter proposed to
deal her a hand in the game.
"Not this round," she returned, "as the game has already commenced.
Besides, I am quite chilly. I shall sit by the fire and read the evening
paper until you play out the hand."
She seated herself near the fire, shivered once or twice, and held out
her dainty fingers to it with exactly the utilitarian manner of some
elderly woman, whose house-keeping errands have detained her in the
cold, and who extends gnarled, misshapen, chapped, wrinkled hands,
soliciting comfort from the warmth. Then she took up the paper and held
the sheet to catch the lamplight from the centre-table upon it.
"Why doesn't she put on her 'specs'? She knows she needs them," Colonel
Ashley said to himself in a sort of whimsical exasperation. Her figure
was slim and girlish, sylphlike as she reclined in the large fauteuil;
her hair glittered golden in the flicker of the fire and the sheen of
the lamp; her face, with its serious expression intent on the closely
printed columns, might almost seem a sculptor's study of perfect facial
symmetry. Her incongruous indifference, her elderly assumptions,--if,
indeed, she was conscious of the effect of her manner,--all betokened
that she considered it no part of her duty, and certainly no point of
interest, to entertain young men.
"We are mere boys to her, Baynell and I; she'll never see her sixtieth
birthday again. I have known younger grandmothers," was Colonel Ashley's
farcical thought.
Her nullity of attitude toward him was so complete that she limited the
possibilities of his imagination. He began to devote himself to the
gentle pursuit in hand with a freshened ardor.
Around and around the draw went, almost in absolute silence. Now and
again the tabling of matching cards sounded with the sharp impact of
triumph, but this was growing infrequent as the hands were thus
depleted. The firelight flickered on the incongruous group,--the bearded
faces of the military men, the gold-laced uniforms, with buttons
glimmering like points of light, the infantine softness of the "ladies,"
with their fluttering ringlets and gala attire, the gray head and
ascetic aspect of the judge. The heat had enhanced the odor of a bowl
of violets on the table in the centre of the room; as the flames rose
and fell, the lion on the rug seemed to stir about, to rouse from his
lair.
Outside the rain still fell in torrents; the tumult of the gush from the
gutter hard by gave intimations of great volume of overflow. At long
intervals a drop fell hissing down the chimney on the coals where the
fire had burned to a white heat. The wind sang like a trump, and from
far away the reverberations of a train of cars came with a sort of
muffled sonority that was almost indistinguishable from the vibrations
of the earth. One hardly knew whether the approach of the train was felt
or heard.
"I can't see how a locomotive can keep the rails in such a night as
this," Colonel Ashley remarked, lifting his head to listen. "I had
rather my command would be playing the duck down there in the puddles
than crossing that half-submerged bridge on that troop train."
"Are they transporting troops now?" asked Judge Roscoe, casually. He was
a lawyer and knew the general inappropriateness and inadmissibility of a
leading question. He had, however, no interest in the response, for the
transit of troops did not necessarily intimate reënforcements to the
garrison, and hence the expectation of attack, but perhaps merely the
intention of distant activity.
Captain Baynell lifted his eyes from his cards, and a glance of
warning, of upbraiding, flashed into the jovial dark eyes of Colonel
Ashley. Judge Roscoe perceived it with surprise and a sort of
uncomfortable monition that he and his guest, the son of his cherished
friend, were in reality in opposition in a most important crisis of the
life of each--in effect, national enemies. He had not thus regarded
their standpoint, and the idea that this was Baynell's conviction
wounded him. He hardly thought the warning glance in his own house
either necessary or in good form, and he was not ill pleased to subtly
perceive that Ashley secretly resented it.
"A troop train, I should judge, by the sound," Ashley said hardily, his
head still poised in a listening pose. "Evidently heavily laden; might
be horses, though," he continued speculatively. He would not submit to
be checked or disciplined into prudential considerations by Baynell,
especially as Judge Roscoe must have noted the warning sign, which
itself would tend to convert a simple casual remark into a significant
disclosure. He said to himself that he knew the proper limitations of
conversation, and was the last man in the world to let slip a hint that
might by any means inform or even prompt the enemy. Moreover, Judge
Roscoe was not deaf, and could distinguish the deep rumble of cars laden
with troops from the usual sound of the running-gear of a train of
ordinary freight and passengers. He went on casually and with an
expansive effect of frankness: "Horses, most probably; there is a
cavalry regiment in town that has been at the front as dismounted
troops, and I think an order is out for horses for their use as cavalry
again; they have been pressing horses all over the county yesterday and
the day before. Winstead's troopers, you know," he added, addressing
Baynell. "I saw him to-day. He says his men all seem pigeon-toed, or
web-footed, or something. They were of no use afoot, although they have
done very well in the saddle."
"An'--an' did they wear boots on birds' feet an' web-toes?" asked the
amazed Geraldine, innocently.
"Oh--oh, _Ger'ldine_!" screamed the superior Adelaide. "He means walkin'
this-a-way," and her hands went across the table in a "toeing-in" gait,
illustrative of the defect known as "pigeon toes."
"Aw--aw--_I_ know now!" said the instructed "lady," wofully out of
countenance. Then she turned to draw from her neighbor's hand with much
doubt and circumspection, for the matched pile in the centre was now
large and the remaining cards had become few.
At that moment Mrs. Gwynn glanced up from the paper; she had been
reading an account of a recent spirited skirmish at the front.
"What is the difference between shrapnel and grape-shot?" she asked of
the company at large.
Baynell, the artillery expert, rejoiced to enlighten her. He turned in
his chair and promptly took the word from the others. Few experts can
answer any simple question categorically. Not only did he explain the
missiles in question, but also how they had happened to be what they
were, and the earlier stages of their development. He gave his views on
their relative value and the possibility of their future utility,--all
while Ashley, who now sat next him, as they had chanced to shift their
chairs when Mrs. Gwynn had entered, waited with quiet and polite
patience for him to draw. Baynell did this at haphazard at last, and
whether it was accident or Fate that the significant card was
practically thrust into his heedless hand by the mischievous Ashley, his
countenance fell at beholding the prognosis of single blessedness, so
palpably, so preposterously, that the jovial Ashley could not restrain
his bantering laughter. Baynell instantly presented the cards to him to
draw in turn, but either favored by luck or having acquired some
surreptitious unfair knowledge of the outer aspect of the card, Ashley
avoided the ill-omened pasteboard, and Baynell was at last left with the
single card in his hand, while his triumphant friend made the room
riotous with laughter, and the three "ladies" bent compassionate, tender
eyes upon him, as if they anticipated the conventional gush of tears.
They had grown very fond of him, and deeply felt the disaster that had
befallen him.
"Oh, Captain Baynell, never mind! never mind!" cried the inspirational
Adelaide. "_We'll_ marry you! _We'll_ marry you! You needn't be _so_
anxious!"
Once more Ashley's ringing merriment amazed the sympathetic "ladies."
Lucille cast a burning glance of reproof upon him. Then she held up
three fingers to Captain Baynell to intimate that three brides awaited
him.
"Ha! ha!" laughed Ashley. "Here's a settler for Utah, Judge. That's
evidently the place for this fellow 'when this cruel war is over'!"
Judge Roscoe smilingly watched the benignant, commiserating little
countenances.
Adelaide had gone around the table and was hanging on the arm of Captain
Baynell's chair as she proffered consolation.
"Colonel Ashley wouldn't think it so mighty funny if _he_ had the Old
Maid! But _don't_ mind, Captain. Why, _I_ know _Cousin Leonora_ would
marry you, if nobody else would,--she always does anything when nobody
else wants to."
The silver tones were singularly clear, and for a moment the group sat
in appalled silence. Ashley did not laugh, though his face was still
distended with the risible muscles. It was like a laughing mask--the
form without the fact. He did not dare even to glance toward the chair
where Mrs. Gwynn imperturbably perused the war news, nor yet at the
stony terror which he felt was petrified on his friend's face. At that
moment a vivid white light quivered horribly through the room and the
repetitious crashing clamor of the thunder was like a cannonade at close
quarters. A great fibrous sound of the riving of timber told that a tree
hard by had been split by the bolt; the torrents descended with
redoubled force, and the massive old house seemed to rock.
And in the moment of comparative quiet a new, strange sound intruded
itself on recognition,--that most uncanny voice, the cry of a horse in
the extremity of terror. It came again and again; at each successive
peal of the thunder and recurrent furious flare of lightning it seemed
nearer. It had a subterranean effect; and then after the crash of
falling objects, as if some barrier had been overthrown, the iteration
of unmistakable hoof beats on stone flagging announced that there was a
horse in the cellar.
This phenomenon obviously indicated an effort to save the animal from
the impress of horses for army service, which had been in progress for
days and to which Colonel Ashley had alluded. Far away in the
wine-cellar, in the safe precincts under the back drawing-room, which
was rarely used nowadays, the horse had evidently been ensconced, and
but for the storm his presence might have continued indefinitely
undetected. The tremendous conflict of the powers of the air, the
unfamiliar place, the loneliness, had stricken the creature with panic
fright, and, doubtless hearing human voices in the library, he had
overthrown temporary obstacles, burst down inadequate doors, and
following the genial sound was now stamping and whinnying just beneath
the floor. Colonel Ashley, affecting to note nothing unusual, dealt the
cards anew, and commented on the fury of the tempest.
"I fancy you have lost one of your fine ancestral oaks, Judge. That bolt
struck timber with a vengeance."
"We have the consolation of a prospect of firewood," responded Judge
Roscoe. "But I doubt if it struck only one of the trees."
"I think I never before saw such a flash as that," remarked Ashley.
The horse in the cellar protested that _he_ never had. Then he fairly
yelped at a comparatively mild suffusion followed by a dull roar of
thunder, evidently anticipating a renewal of the pyrotechnic horrors
that had so terrified him.
Judge Roscoe maintained an imperturbable aspect, despite a certain
mortification and a sense of derogation of dignity. He recognized this
as a scheme of old Ephraim's. More than once he had so contrived the
disappearance of the last milch cow that his master possessed as to save
her from the foraging parties bent on beef. Chickens had experiences of
invisibility that were not fatal, and though the carriage pair and the
judge's saddle-horse had been the victims of surprise,--impressed long
ago,--the old servant had again and again rescued a beautiful animal
that Mrs. Gwynn owned and which had been a second gift from Judge
Roscoe. Hearing betimes of the press orders from the soldiers, the
"double-faced Janus" had besought Judge Roscoe to leave the concealment
of Acrobat to him; and, although only a passive factor in the
enterprise, Judge Roscoe, as much surprised at the denouement as any one
else, was forced to bear the brunt of the lamentable fiasco in which the
secret had become public.
Baynell, though silent, looked extremely annoyed.
"This rainfall will raise the river considerably," Ashley commented.
"Shouldn't be surprised if the lower portions of the town are flooded
already," said Judge Roscoe, throwing out a pair of matched cards.
"Those precincts are very ill situated," said Ashley.
The Houyhnhnm in the cellar protested that he was, too.
"High water must occasion considerable suffering among the poorer
class," rejoined the judge.
"But the locality could have been easily avoided in laying out Roanoke
City. Draw, Captain--" Ashley broke off suddenly, being forced to remind
the preoccupied Baynell of his turn to supply his hand.
"The commercial convenience of wharfage at low stages of water was
doubtless the inducement," explained Judge Roscoe.
"To be sure,--minimizes the distance for loading freights," assented
Ashley.
"Yes, the drays come to the very decks of the boats."
"_That_ was a pretty sharp flash," said Ashley.
"Oh, it was--it was!" whooped the Houyhnhnm from out the cellar. He
evidently executed a sort of intricate passado, to judge from the sound
of his hysteric hoofs on the stone flagging.
"I hope your fine grove will sustain no more casualties," said Ashley.
"I hope, myself, the house won't be struck," whimpered the speculative
Adelaide.
"Me, too! Me, too!" cried the horse.
"Draw, Captain,"--once more Ashley had occasion to rouse the absorbed
Baynell.
At every inapposite, disaffected remark that the horse in the cellar saw
fit to interject into the conversation, the twins, evidently well aware
of the betrayal of the domestic secret by his loud-voiced intrusion into
the apartment beneath the library, fully apprehending the disaster, at
first looked aghast at each other, then referred it to the adjustment of
superior wisdom by a long, earnest gaze at their grandfather.
Judge Roscoe could ill sustain the expectation of their childish
comment. But he felt that his dignity was involved in ignoring that
aught was amiss. His composure emulated Ashley's resolute placidity and
well-bred, conventional determination to admittedly hear and see naught
that was not intentionally addressed by his host to his observation.
Baynell gave no outward and obvious sign of notice, but the subcurrent
of brooding thought that occupied his mind was token of his evident
comprehension and a nettled annoyance. Perhaps they all felt the relief
from the tension when Ashley, suddenly glancing toward the window, saw
between the long red curtains the section of a clearing sky and the
glitter of a star.
"The storm is over," he said. "I think, Judge, we might venture out now
to view the damage. I trust there is not much timber down."
The three men trooped heavily out into the hall, and suddenly the
challenge of the sentry rang forth, simultaneously with the sound of the
approach of horses' hoofs and the jingle of military accoutrements.
Colonel Ashley's groom had bethought himself to bring up his master's
charger in case he should care, since the weather had cleared, to return
to camp. This Ashley preferred, despite Judge Roscoe's cordial
insistence that he could put him up for the night without the slightest
inconvenience.
As Ashley took leave of the family and galloped down the avenue in the
chill damp air, and over the spongy turf, now and then constrained to
turn aside to avoid fallen boughs, he had not even a vague prevision
how short an interval was to elapse before chance should bring him back.
His expectation of meeting a charming young lady, with perhaps the
sequel of an interesting flirtation, in which all his best qualities as
squire of dames should be elicited for the admiration of the fair,--his
preëminence in singing, in quoting poetry, in saying pretty things, in
horsemanship, above all the killing glances of his arch dark eyes, to
say naught of the relish he always experienced in his own excellent pose
as a lover, one of his favorite rôles,--all had been nullified by Mrs.
Gwynn's unresponsiveness. His vanity was touched, upon reflecting on the
events of the evening. He did not feel entreated according to his merits
by her attitude of a faded and elderly widow-woman, and his relegation
to the puerilities of the little Old Maids, or little "ladies," or
whatever they called themselves (certainly not the first), with Baynell
playing the stick, and the old judge merely a galvanized Opinion. He
resolved that he would stick to camp hereafter. He knew a game of "Draw"
with no Old Maid in the pack, and he would solace his spare time with
such diversion as it might afford, and look to the drill of his
squadrons.
Nevertheless the moisture of the storm was scarcely sun-dried the next
afternoon before he was again galloping up the long avenue of the grove
and inquiring of old Janus, appropriately playing janitor, if Captain
Baynell were within, as he had some special business with him.
As on other occasions there was no glimpse or sound of feminine presence
in the halls or on the stairs as he followed the old servant up the
softly padded ascent. He fancied the old negro was much disaffected; he
had a plaintive, remonstrant submissiveness, and a sort of curious,
shadowy, aged look that seemed a concomitant of a sullen reproach. Had
they been beyond earshot of the household, Ashley would have bidden the
old man out with his grievance, but naught was said, and presently the
door of Captain Baynell's bedroom closed upon him.
"Did you know that Tompkins had sent up here and impressed Mrs. Gwynn's
horse?"
Baynell had not risen from a seat at an escritoire, where he seemed to
have been writing, and Ashley was half across the room and had flung
himself into a chair before the fire ere his friend could lay down the
pen.
"Yes, I knew it."
"Why--why--how did he know they had the animal in the cellar? He was up
here the day before yesterday, and that old darkey told him that the
horse had already been pressed into service."
"He must have been put into the cellar earlier. You know we heard the
animal there last night."
"Why--why--" Colonel Ashley stammered in his haste--"how did _Tompkins_
know?"
"How?--why, of course I notified him--this morning."
Vertnor Ashley was altogether inarticulate. Baynell replied to the
surprise in his face.
"Why--whatever did you think I should do?"
"Hold your tongue, of course!--as I held mine! Why, I thought you were a
friend of these people."
Baynell looked at him, surprised in turn. "And so I am."
"And they have been kindness itself to you!"
"But do they expect me to return their kindness by helping them deceive
the government, or to hold back supplies the army needs? They are
mistaken if they do! It is a matter of conscience!"
"Oh, a _little_ thing like that--" Ashley snapped his fingers--"a lady's
horse!"
"It is a matter of conscience!" Baynell reiterated.
"I tell you, my friend, I wouldn't have such a conscience as that in the
house! It's a selfish beast--a raging monster! exceedingly deadly to the
interests of other folks," Ashley retorted with his bright eyes aglow.
Baynell glanced out of the great window, with its white, embroidered
muslin curtains, between which he could see the ranges in the distance,
Roanoke in the mid-spaces, the white tents of the girdle of encampments
on all the hillsides about the little city; at intervals, held in
cup-like hollows, were great glittering ponds of water, the
accumulations of the storm, glassing the clouds like mirrors, and
realizing to the eye the geologist's description of the prehistoric days
when lakes were here.
A sudden suspicion was in Ashley's mind. His resolution was taken on the
instant. "I hope you will advance no objection; but I intend to see Mrs.
Gwynn and Judge Roscoe, and assure them that _I_ had no part in giving
this information to the quartermaster's department."
Baynell looked at him with an indignant retort rising to his lips, then
laughed satirically.
"Do you imagine I left _you_ under that imputation?"
"You consider it no imputation, but a duty. Now I don't see my duty in
that light. And I prefer to make my position clear to them."
Baynell already had his hand on the bell-cord, and it was with pointed
alacrity that he gave the order when old Ephraim appeared--"Please say
to Mrs. Gwynn and Judge Roscoe that Colonel Ashley and Captain Baynell
wish to speak to them a few minutes on a matter of business if they are
at leisure."
Uncle Ephraim, in whose soul the misadventure about the horse was
rankling deep, surlily assented, closed the door, and took his way
downstairs.
"I recken _you_ kin speak ter dem," he soliloquized,--"mos' ennything
kin speak hyar. Who'd 'a' thought dat ar horse, dat Ac'obat, would set
out ter talk ter de folks in de lawberry, like no four-footed one hev'
done since de days ob Balaam's ass. But I ain't never hearn dat de ass
was fool enough ter got hisse'f pressed inter de Fed'ral army. 'Fore de
Lawd, dat horse wish now he had held his tongue an' stayed in de
wine-cellar, wid dat good feed, whar I put him."
Once in the library, the traits which so endeared Vertnor Ashley to
himself, and eke to others, were amply in evidence. He was gentle,
deferential, thoroughly straightforward and frank, albeit he saw the
subject was a mortification to Judge Roscoe and abated his sense of his
own dignity; still Ashley gave no offence.
"I understand. It was a matter of conscience with Captain Baynell," said
Judge Roscoe, seeking to dispose of the question in few words. "I can
have no displeasure against a man for obeying the dictates of his own
conscience, as every man must."
"Well, I am happy to say I had no conscience in the matter," said
Colonel Ashley.
"Dear me!" exclaimed Mrs. Gwynn, with her curt, low, icy tone. "We have
indeed fallen on evil times. Captain Baynell has conscience enough to
destroy us all, if only he sees fit. And Colonel Ashley, by his own
admission, has no conscience at all. Between the two we _must_ come to
grief."
"It seems to me a trifle," Ashley persisted smilingly, "brought to my
attention accidentally on a hospitable occasion. For aught _I_ knew, you
might have a permit, or the horse might have been a condemned animal,
unsound, thus escaping the requisition. I had no orders to investigate
your domestic affairs, nor to search for animals evading the impress.
The men detailed to that duty are presumed to be capable of discharging
it."
"I assure you we have no feeling on that account--no antagonism--" began
Judge Roscoe.
"I desire you to realize that _nothing_ would have induced me to report
the presence of the horse here," Ashley interrupted; "though," he added,
checking himself, "I do not wish to reflect on Captain Baynell's
procedure!"
"He thought himself justified, indeed obligated," interposed Judge
Roscoe.
"Of course I greatly regretted the necessity, which seemed forced on me,
as I saw the matter," said Baynell.
"I fully appreciate that you take a different view," began Ashley.
"'O give ye good even. Here's a million of manners,'" quoted Mrs. Gwynn,
satirically, smiling from one to the other as each sought to press
forward his own view, yet to cast no reflections on the probity of the
standpoint of the other.
Judge Roscoe laughed. He was an admirer of what he called
"understanding in women," and the mere flavor of a Shakespearian
collocation of words refreshed his spirit like an oasis in a desert.
Ashley looked at her doubtfully. He wondered that they could forgive
Baynell for this gratuitous bit of official tyranny, as it seemed to
him, and also the serious loss of the value of the horse. He said to
himself that almost any rule is constrained to exceptions. He thought
Baynell's course was small-minded, unjustifiable, and an ungrateful
requital of hospitality, such as only important interests might warrant.
He did not reckon on the strength of the attachment which Judge Roscoe,
despite politics, had formed for his dear friend's son, or for his
respect for the coercive force of a man's convictions of the
requirements of duty. It was a sort of Brutus-like urgency which
appealed to a high sense of probity and which commended itself to the
ex-judge, accustomed to deal with subtle differentiations of moral
intent as well as intricate principles of sheer law.
As for Mrs. Gwynn--it was sufficient that she had lost the horse. She
cared too little for either man as an individual to consider the
delicate adjustment of the problem of official integrity involved.
"I surely should have lost every claim to your good opinion if I had
glozed it over and passed it by for personal reasons," Baynell argued
after Ashley had gone.
She looked at him speculatively for an instant, wondering what possible
claim he could fancy he possessed to her good opinion.
"If you think impressing a horse is a recommendation, a great many
citizens of this town have cause to hold the quartermaster-general in
high esteem. A perfect drove of horses passed here this afternoon. I
looked for Acrobat, but I did not see him."
He was taken aback at this turn. "But you know, of course, it was
against my own will--my own preference--the horse--it was a sacrifice on
my part!"
"So glad to know it; I thought the sacrifice was mine!"
He shifted the subject.
"Judge Roscoe has kindly given me permission to stable here my own
horses,--not belonging to the service,--and to use the pasture, and I
hope you will ride one that I think is particularly suitable for a lady.
Judge Roscoe, to show that he bears no malice, is riding another one to
Roanoke City this afternoon."
She said that she had lost her equestrian tastes. But she listened quite
civilly while he argued the ethics anew, and, as her interest in the
subject had waned with the dissolving view of her horse and she did not
care for the question in the abstract, she did not controvert his theory
or relish placing obstacles to the justification of his course.
CHAPTER V
Baynell's disposition to recur to the subject inaugurated a habit of
conversation with Mrs. Gwynn after the scholastic hours of the "ladies,"
when he sat in the library through the long afternoons. The vast subject
of the abstract values of right and wrong, the ultimate decrees of
conscience, whether in matters of great or minute importance, might seem
inexhaustible in itself. But he gradually drifted therefrom into a
discursive monologue of many things. He began to talk of himself as
never before, as he had never dreamed that he could. He described his
friends and acquaintances; he rehearsed his experiences; he even
repeated traditional stories of his father's college life, and the mad
pranks which the staid Judge Roscoe had played in the callow days of
their youth, thus emphasizing the bond of intimacy and his own claim to
recognition as a hereditary friend; he went farther and detailed his own
intimate plans for the future.
Throughout she maintained a conventional pose of courteous attention.
Surely, he thought, he must have roused some responsive interest. For
himself, in all his life, he had never experienced moments so surcharged
with significance, with pleasure, with importance. One day he concluded
a long exposition of thought and conviction, intensely vital to him, by
making a direct appeal to her opinion. She looked up with half-startled
eyes, then hesitatingly replied, while a quick, deep flush sprang into
her pale cheeks. Elated, confident, victorious, he beheld the color rise
and glow, and noted her lingering, conscious embarrassment; for the
subject was unimportant save as it concerned him, and why, but for his
sake, should she blush and falter in sweet confusion?
How could he know that hardly one word in ten had she heard! Absent,
absorbed, she was silently turning again and again the ashes of the dead
past, while he, insistently, clamorously, was knocking at the door of
the living present.
Step by step she had been retracing her early foolish fondness for the
man who had been her husband. How could she have been so blind! she was
asking herself. Why could she not have seen him with the eyes of
others,--that wise, kindly, far-sighted vision which scanned the present
with caution for her sake, and by its gauge measured the future with an
unerring and an appalled accuracy? How contemptuously, like a heroine of
romance indeed, she had flouted the well-meant opposition of her
relatives to her marriage! They had proved wise prophets. Drunkard,
gambler, spendthrift, he had wrecked her fortune and embittered her
whole life. The two years she had spent with him seemed an æon of
misery. They had obliterated the past as well as excluded the future.
Somehow she could not look beyond them into her earlier days save upon
those gradations of events--the swift courtship, the egregious,
headstrong, romantic resolution, the foolish love founded on false
ideals which led her at last to the altar, so confiding, so happy, so
disdainful of the grave faces and the disapproving shaking heads of all
her elder kith and kindred, so triumphant in setting them at naught and
enhancing Rufus Gwynn's victory with the quelling of their every claim.
In these long, quiet afternoons she would silently canvass humiliating
details--when was it that she had first known him for the liar he was;
when had she admitted to herself his inherent falsity? Even the truth
had faltered for his sake. She had eagerly sought to deceive herself--to
gloze over his lies, now told for a purpose, and constrained to their
misleading device, now thrown off without intention or effect, as if the
false were the more native incident of his moral atmosphere. Perhaps,
with the love that possessed her, she, too, might have acquired the
proclivity; she meditated on this possibility with a bowed head. At
first, when he lied to her, she herself could not distinguish the truth
from the false in his words. She had found herself at sea without a
rudder. However she might have desired to protect him, whether she might
have bent in time to deceit for his sake, there is a sort of monopoly
in falsehood. It is a game at which two cannot play to good effect. The
first time he struck her full in the face was in the fury which
possessed him, when, through her agency, a lie had been fairly fixed
upon him. She had given him as her authority for a statement she made to
Judge Roscoe, and her uncle had, in repeating it to him, discovered the
lie--the blatant open lie--that could not be qualified or gainsaid.
And she had forgiven this, both the word and the blow. How strange! She
made allowances for his irritation, for his mortification at the
discovery by a man so upright, so ascetic, so unsympathetic with any
moral weakness as Judge Roscoe. She offered to herself excuses which
even she, however, in her inmost soul, hardly accepted--for the lie
itself! He desired to avoid reproaches for mistaken arrangements about
money matters, she had said to herself; he shrank from contention with
her thus. Never dreaming that she might be questioned, he had been led
to palliate, to distort the facts. For at first she would have no
traffic with the ignoble word "lie." The restrictions of her own phrases
began to have a sort of terror for her. She could no longer talk freely.
She hardly dared make the most obvious statement concerning any simple
fact of household affairs, or amusements, or visits, or friends, lest,
in his prodigal untruth, for no reason,--the abandonment of folly, or a
momentary whim,--he should have committed himself and her unequivocally
to some different effect. She hesitated, stammered, when she was in
company,--faltered, blushed,--she who used to be so different!--while
all her world stared. And when they were alone, he would storm at her
for it, furiously mimicking her distressful uncertainty, her tremulous
solicitude lest she openly convict him of lying continually. She sought
to give him no occasion for anger, not that she so dreaded the hurt of
his heavy hand, but that she might save him from the ignominy of
striking his wife. She studied his face and conformed to his whims, and
anticipated his wants, and forbore vexation. Her subjection was so
obvious that while her own near friends raged inwardly, divining that he
was unkind, their casual acquaintance sportively fleered, never dreaming
how their arrows sped to the mark.
Their fleers nettled him; he was specially out of countenance one day
because of a careless shaft of Mildred Fisher's.
"It is one of the beautiful aspects of matrimony that the law once
recognized the right of a man to correct his wife with 'a stick not
thicker than his thumb'; let me see the size of your thumb, Mr.
Gwynn,--it must be that which keeps Leonora in this edifying state of
subjection."
And when she had gayly gone her way, Rufus Gwynn bitterly upbraided his
wife.
"Damn you!" he had cried; "can't you hold up your head at all?"
Then it was that she had donned her most charming toilette--a dress of
heavy white satin simple yet queenly--and had gone to one of those balls
of the early times of the Confederacy, where the cavaliers were many and
gay; she was all smiles and bright eyes, though these were the only
jewels she wore, for had she not discovered at the moment of opening the
case that her diamonds--Rufus Gwynn's own bridal gift to her--were
missing!--sold, pawned, given away, it was never known. Thus seeking her
duty in these devious ways and to do his choice credit, as a wife
should, her charm held a court about her,--even Mildred Fisher, who
loved splendor, ablaze with the collection of precious stones at her
disposal, her mother's, her grandmother's, and her aunt's, was eclipsed.
The glittering officers followed the beautiful young wife in the
promenade, and stood about and awaited the cessation of the whirl as she
waltzed with one of the number, and devoutly held her bouquet while in
the banqueting room, and drank her health and toasted her happiness, and
broke her fan, soliciting a breeze for her comfort. The result?--When in
the carriage homeward bound, she was fit to throw herself out of the
window and under the wheels in sheer terror of the demon of jealousy she
had aroused. Her husband loaded her with curses, he foamed at the mouth
as he threatened the men with whom she had danced, more than one of
whom he had himself introduced for the purpose. He protested he would
shoot Julius Roscoe because he had _not_ asked her to dance, but had
turned pale when he saw her, and had stood in the shadows of the columns
at the upper end of the ball room and with melancholy, love-lorn eyes
watched her in the waltz. When she declared she had not seen Julius, she
had not spoken to him--"You dare not!" he cried. And but that she
clutched his arm, he would have sprung from the vehicle in motion to
hide in the shrubbery--the pine hedge--as they passed Judge Roscoe's
gate, to shoot Julius in the back as he went home from the ball,--in the
back, in the darkness, from ambush, that none might know! Then as her
husband could not force himself from her grasp, he turned and struck her
across the face twice, heavily.
All her soldier friends, old playmates, youthful compeers, elder
associates, marched away without a farewell word from her,--a last
farewell it would have been to many, who, alack, came never marching
back again; for she was denied at the door to all callers, since her
bruises were so deep and lacerated that she must needs keep her room in
order that the conjugal happiness might not be impugned. For still she
made excuses for Gwynn, sought to shield him from himself. He had begun
to drink heavily under the sting of the universal financial disasters
occasioned by the war which he also shared, supplemented by heavy
losses at the gaming table and the race track and often "was not
himself," as she phrased it. He was expert at repentance, practised in
confession, and had a positive ingenuity for shifting responsibility to
stronger shoulders. He could burst into torrents of protesting tears,
and dramatically fling himself on his knees at her feet, and bury his
face in her hands, covering them with kisses, and craving her pardon and
help. And she would once more, inconsistently, hopefully, take up her
faith in him anew, albeit it had all the tearful tremors of
despair,--believing, yet doubting, with a strange duality of emotion
impossible to the analysis of reason. Thus the curtain was rung up
again, and the terrible tragedy of her life on this limited stage went
on apace.
He had infinite ingenuity in concealment, abetted by her silence in
suffering which her pride fostered. Albeit her friends had divined his
unkindness, the extent of his brutality was not suspected by them until
one night when frightful screams had been heard to issue from the house,
despite the closed and shuttered windows of winter weather. These were
elicited by the sheer agony of being dragged by the hair through the
rooms and halls and down the stairs, and thrust out into the chill of
the fierce January freeze. She was given hardly time for the instinct of
flight to assert itself, to rise up with wild eyes looking adown the
snowy street; for the door opened, and he dragged her within once more,
as a watchman of the precinct, Roanoke City being at this time heavily
policed, ascended the steps to the portico with an inquiry as to the
sound. He was satisfied with the explanation from the husband that Mrs.
Gwynn was suffering with a violent attack of hysterics. But the next
day, while the mistress of the house, bruised and almost shattered, lay
half unconscious in her own room, the housemaid, in the hall polishing
the stair rail and wainscot, was terrified to draw out here and there
from the balusters great bloody lengths of Mrs. Gwynn's beautiful hair
which had caught and held as she was dragged by it down the stairs. This
rumor, taken in connection with the explanation of her screams offered
by her husband to the watchman, occasioned Mrs. Gwynn's relatives great
anxiety for her safety. It was with the view of discovering from her the
truth, insisting on its disclosure as a matter of paramount importance,
that Judge Roscoe as her nearest kinsman and former guardian had
suggested a ride with her, when in the quiet of an uninterrupted
conversation he intended to remonstrate against her lack of candor, seek
to ascertain the facts, and then devise some measures looking toward the
betterment of the unhappy situation.
The slaughter by Rufus Gwynn of the unoffending horse had eliminated the
necessity alike of remonstrance or advice. Her ideals, her hope, her
love, were destroyed as by one blow. Her resolution of separation was
taken and, albeit her anxious friends feared her capacity for
forgiveness was not exhausted, it proved final. The end came on the day
that Rufus Gwynn's horse, rearing under whip and spur, and falling,
broke his rider's neck.
This was her romance and her awakening from love's young dream. These
were the scenes that she lived over and over. This was her past that
every moment of leisure converted into her present,--palpable, visible,
vital,--and her future seemed bounded only by the possibilities of
retrospect.
With the many-thonged scourge of her memory how could she listen to the
monologue of this stranger! Thus it was that her attentive attitude was
suddenly stultified by his direct appeal to her. Thus she had reddened
and faltered in embarrassment for the rude solecism, and gathered her
faculties for some hesitant semblance of polite response.
Lapsed in the delight of his fool's paradise, Baynell discerned naught
of the truth. Left presently alone in the library, he serenely watched
through the long window the slow progress of the shadows following the
golden vernal sunshine throughout the grove. The wind faintly stirred,
barely enough to shake the bells of the pink and darkly blue hyacinths
standing tall and full in the parterre at one side of the house. The
plangent tone of a single key, struck on the grand piano, fell on the
stillness within, and after a time another, and slowly still another, in
doubting ascension of the gamut, as one of the "ladies" submitted to the
cruelty of a music lesson. His lip smilingly curved at the thought. And
still gazing out in serene languor, all unprescient, he once more noted
the spring sun of that momentous day slowly westering, westering.
A red sky it found at the horizon; a chill wind starting up over a
purple earth spangled with golden camp-fires. Presently the world was
sunk in a slate-tinted gloom, and the night came on raw and dark, with
moon and stars showing only in infrequent glimpses through gusty clouds.
A great fire had burned out on the library hearth; the group had
genially sat together till the candles were guttering in their sockets
in the old crystal-hung candelabra. Judge Roscoe still lingered,
smoking, meditating before the embers. All the house was asleep, silent
save for the martial tread of the sentry walking to and fro before the
portico. Suddenly Judge Roscoe heard a sound, alien, startling,--a sound
at the side window. The room was illumined by a pervasive red glow from
the embers, in which he saw his own shadow, gigantic, gesticulatory, as
he rose to his feet, listening again to--silence! Only the wind rustling
in the lilac hedge, only the ring of the sentry's step, crisp and clear
on the frosty air.
The moment that the soldier turned to retrace his way to the farther
side of the house, there came once more that grating sound at the
window, distinct, definite, of sinister import.
For one instant Judge Roscoe was tempted to call for the sentry's aid.
The next the shutter opened, the sash glided up noiselessly, and, as the
old gentleman gazed spellbound with starting eyes and chin a-quiver, a
tiny flame flickered up, keenly white amongst the embers, illuminating
the room, revealing the object at the window. Only for one moment; for
in a frenzy of energy Judge Roscoe had caught up the heavy velvet rug
and, as he held it against the aperture of the chimney, the room once
more sunk into indistinguishable gloom; the sudden bounding entrance of
an agile figure was wholly invisible to the sentry, albeit he was almost
immediately under the window, peering in with a stern "Who goes there?"
"There seems something amiss with the catch of the shutter," said the
placid voice of the master of the house, who had left the rug still
standing on its thick edge before the chimney place. "Can you help me
there? Thank you very much."
The sentry muttered a sheepish apology, pleading the unusual noise at
this hour. His excuse was cheerfully accepted. "It is well to be on the
alert. Good night!"
"Good night, sir!" And once more there sounded through the sombre air
the martial beat of the sentry's tread on the frosty ground.
Then two men in the darkness within, reaching out in the gloom, fell
into each other's arms with tears of joy, but presently reproaches too.
"Oh, my son, my son! why did you come here?"
"Came a-visiting!" said a voice out of the obscurity, with a boy's
buoyant laughter. "The picket-lines are so close to-night, I couldn't
resist slipping in. Is Leonora here? How are my dear little nieces,--the
'ladies'?"
"Oh, Julius! My boy, this is so dangerous!"
"I'd risk ten times more to hear your dear voice again--" with a
rib-cracking hug--"only think, father, it's more than two years now
since I have seen you! I want to see Leonora ten minutes and kiss the
'ladies,' and then I'm off again in a day or so, and none the wiser."
"No, no, that is out of the question! No one must know. The camps are
too close; you must have seen them, even in the grove."
"Why, I can lie low."
"And there is a--" Judge Roscoe hardly knew how to voice it--"a--a
Yankee officer in the house."
"Thunderation! The dickens there is! Why--"
"There is no time to explain; you must go back at once, while the
Federal pickets are so close, and you can slip through the line. It's
just at the creek."
"But they have thrown it out since dark, five miles. Our fellows
skedaddled back to their support. And I tell you it will never do for me
to be caught inside the lines. The Yankees might think I was spying
around!"
Judge Roscoe turned faint and sick. Then, rising to the emergency, and
considering the suspicions the sound of voices here at this hour of the
night might excite in the mind of the sentry, he grasped his son's arm,
with a warning clutch imposing silence, and led him along the dark hall,
groping up the staircase. As the boy was about to bolt in the direction
of his former chamber, his father turned the corner to the second
flight.
"Sky parlor, is it?" the young daredevil muttered, as they stumbled
together up the steep ascent to the garret.
A dreary place it showed as they entered, large, low ceiled, extending
above the whole expanse of the square portion of the house. It was
lighted only by the windows at either side; through one of these pale
watery glimmers were falling from a moon which rolled heavily like a
derelict in the surges of the clouds. This sufficed to show to each the
other's beloved face; and that Judge Roscoe's ribs were not fractured in
the hugs of the filial young bear betokened the enduring strength of his
ancient physique.
The place was sorely neglected since the reduction of the service in the
old house. Cobwebs had congregated about ceiling and windows; the dust
was thick on rows of old trunks, which annotated the journeyings of the
family since the hair-covered, brass-studded style was the latest
fashion to the sole leather receptacle that bore the initials of Judge
Roscoe's dead wife, and the gigantic "Saratoga" that had served in Mrs.
Gwynn's famous wedding journey. There were many specimens of broken
chairs, and some glimmering branching girandoles, five feet high, that
had illumined the house at one of the great weddings of long ago. A
large cedar chest, proof against moths, preserved the ancient shawls and
gowns of beauties of by-gone times, who little thought this ephemeral
toggery would survive them. Certain antiquated pieces of furniture,
hardly meet for the more modern assortment below,--chests of drawers
surmounted by quaint little cabinets with looking-glasses, a lumbering
wardrobe that seemed built for high water and stood on four long
stilt-like legs, a pair of old mantel mirrors, wide and low, with
tarnished gilded frames, dividing the reflecting surface into three
equal sections, a great barometer that surlily threatened stormy
weather, clumsy bureaus, bedsteads, each with four tall "cluster posts"
surmounted by testers of red, quilled cloth drawn to a brass star in the
centre, fire-dogs and fenders of dull brass--all were grouped here and
there. One of these bedsteads had been occupied on some occasion when
the house had been overcrowded, for the cords that sufficed in lieu of
the more modern slats now supported a huge feather-bed. Judge Roscoe
threw on it a carriage rug that had been hung to air on a cord which was
stretched across one corner of the room. He almost fainted at a sudden,
frightened clutch upon his arm, and, turning, saw his son in the agonies
of panic, his teeth chattering, his eyes starting out of his head, his
hand pointing tremulously toward the bed, as if bereft of his senses,
demanding to be informed what that object might be. It was the
time-honored joke of the young Southern soldiers that they had not seen
or slept in a bedstead for so long that the mere sight of so
unaccustomed a thing threw them into convulsions of fear. His father
forgave the genuine tremors the joke had occasioned him for the joker's
sake, and as Julius, flinging off his cap, coat, and boots, stretched
out at his long length luxuriously, he stood by the pillow and
admonished him of the plan of the campaign.
The Yankee officer had been ill, Judge Roscoe explained, and,
convalescing now, joined the family in their usual gathering places--the
library, dining room, on the portico, in the grove. If Leonora or the
"ladies" knew of the presence here of Julius, they could hardly preserve
in this close association with the enemy an unaffected aspect; so
significant a secret might be betrayed in facial expression, a tone of
voice, a nervous start. This would be fatal; his life might prove the
forfeit. It was a mistake to come, and this mistake must forthwith be
annulled. Despite the man in the house, Julius could lie perdu here in
the garret, observing every precaution of secrecy, till the ever
shifting picket-line should be drawn close enough to enable him to hope
to reach it without challenge. They would confide in trusty old Ephraim.
He would maintain a watch and bring them news. And old Ephraim, too,
would bring up food, cautiously purloined from the table.
"The typical raven! appropriately black!" murmured Julius.
"Are you hungry now, dear?" Judge Roscoe asked disconsolately, after
telling him that he must wait till morning.
"If you have such a thing as the photograph of a chicken about you, I
should be glad to see it," Julius murmured demurely.
Judge Roscoe bent down and kissed him good night on the forehead, then
turned to pick his way carefully among the debris of the old furniture.
Soon he had reached the stairway, and noiseless as a shadow he flitted
down the flight.
The young officer lay for a while intently listening, but no stir
reached his ear; naught; absolute stillness. For a long time, despite
his fatigue, the change, the pleasant warmth, the soft luxury of the
feather-bed, would not let him slumber. He was used to the canopy of
heaven, the chill ground, the tumult of rain; the sense of a roof above
his head was unaccustomed, and he was stiflingly aware of its
propinquity. Nevertheless he contrasted its comfort with his own recent
plight and that of his comrades a few miles away, lying now asleep under
the security of their camp-guards, some still in the mud of the
trenches, all on the cold ground, shelterless, half frozen, half
starved, ill, destitute, but fired with a martial ardor and a zeal for
the Southern cause which no hardship could damp, and only death itself
might quench. As he gazed about at the grotesqueries of the great room,
now in the sheen of the moon, and now in the shadow of the cloud, he
thought how little he had anticipated finding the enemy here ensconced
in his place in his father's house, a convalescent, "the son of an old
friend, of whom we have all grown very fond." He raged inwardly at the
destruction of his cherished plans wrought by the mere presence of the
Federal officer. The joy of his visit was brought to naught. Dangerous
as it would have been under the best auspices, its peril was now great
and imminent. Instead of the meeting his thoughts had cherished,--the
sweets of the stolen hours at the domestic fireside, with the dear faces
that he loved, the dulcet voices for which he yearned,--he was to skulk
here, undreamed of, like some unhappy ghost haunting a lonely place,
fortunate indeed if he might chance to be able to make off elusively
after the fashion of the spectral gentry, without becoming a ghost in
serious earnest by the event of capture, or catching the pistol ball of
the Yankee officer. So much he had risked for this visit--life and
limb!--and to be relegated to the surplusage of the garret, the
loneliness, the desolate moon, the deserted dust of the unfrequented
place! He was to approach none of them--none of the hearthstone group!
There was to be no joyous greeting, no stealthy laughter, no interchange
of loving words, and clasps, and kisses. He was still young; his eyes
filled, his throat closed. But that shadowy glimpse of his dear
father--he had had that boon!
"I'll remember it, if I bite the dust in the next skirmish. And the
question is to get away--for the next skirmish!"
Once more he fell to studying mechanically the grouping of the archaic,
disordered furniture; the shifting of the shadows amongst it as a cloud
sped by with the wind; the spare boughs of a bare aspen tree etched on
the floor by the moon, shining down through the high windows; and that
melancholy orb itself, suggestive of a futile vanished past, a time
forgotten, and spent illusions, the familiar of loneliness, and the deep
empty hours of the midnight--itself a spectre of a dead planet, haunting
its wonted pathway of the skies. When its light ceased to fill his
lustrous, contemplative eyes he did not know, but as the moon passed on
to the west, his melancholy gaze had ceased to follow.
CHAPTER VI
Joy came in the morning when the raven alighted. The "two-faced Janus"
was wreathed in smiles, bent double with chuckles, and tears of delight
sparkled in his eyes.
"How dee is growed!" he whispered cautiously. "Mannish now, fur true.
Gawd! de han'somest one ob de fam'ly!" For, with the refreshment of
sleep and the substance, not merely the similitude, of fried chicken,
waffles, and coffee, Julius, in the gray uniform of a first lieutenant,
made a very gallant show despite the incongruities of the piled-up
lumber of the old garret. He had a keen, high, alert profile, his nose a
trifle aquiline; his complexion was fair and florid; his eyes were a
fiery brown, his hair, of the same rich tint, was now and again tossed
impatiently backward, the style of the day being an inconvenient length,
for it was worn to hang about the collar. He had a breezy, offhand,
impetuous manner, evidently only bridled in by rigorous training to
decorous forms, and he stood six feet one inch in his stockings, taller
now by one inch more in his boots, which the old servant had helped him
to draw on. "Lawd-a-massy! dis de baby?" cried the old negro,
admiringly, still on his knees, contemplating the young officer as he
took a turn through the apartment with his straight-brimmed cap on his
head and his hand on his sword. "'Fore Gawd, whut sorter baby is dis
yere--over six feet high?"
"Wish I was a baby for about two hours, Uncle Ephraim! You could carry
me 'pickaback' through the Yankee lines!"
"Hue-come ye run dem lines, Marse Julius? I reckon, dough, you hatter
see Miss Leonora," said the discerning old darkey. "'Fore de Lawd, she
hed better be wearin' dem widder's weeds fur de good match she flung
away in you 'stead o' fur dat ar broken-necked man whut's daid, praise
de Lamb!"
If Julius joined in this pious thanksgiving, he made no outward sign. He
only flushed slightly as he asked constrainedly, "Is she wearing
mourning yet?"
"Yes, sah, to be shore. Dis yere Yankee man, whut ole Marster an' de
'ladies' an' all invited to stay yere, he is gwine round Miss Leonora
mighty smilin' an' perlite an' humble. Dat man behaves lak he is mos'
too modes' ter say his prayers! 'Anything ye got lef' over, good Lawd,
will do Baynell, especially a lef'-over widder 'oman!' Dat's his
petition ter de throne ob grace!"
Oh, double-faced Janus!--now partisan of the Rebel, erstwhile so
friendly with "de Yankee man."
"Ef 'twarn't fur him, yer Pa could come up yere an' smoke a _see_gar an'
talk, an' Miss Leonora an' de ladies mought play kyerds wid dee wunst in
a while, wid dem blinds kept closed."
"He isn't such an awful Tartar, is he, Uncle Ephraim?" said Julius,
plaintively, allured by this picture. "Wouldn't he wink at it, if he
missed them or heard voices, or caught a suspicion of my being here?
They have been so good to him--and I am doing nothing aggressive--only
visiting the family."
"_Lawsy--Lawsy--Lawsy-massy, no! No!_" cried Uncle Ephraim, in extreme
agitation and with the utmost emphasis of negation. "Dat man is
afflicted wid a powerful oneasy conscience, Marse Julius!"
And he detailed with the most convincing and graphic diction the
disaster that had befallen the too-confiding Acrobat.
Julius was very definitely impressed with the imminence of his peril.
"The son of Belial!" he exclaimed in dismay.
"Naw sah,--_dat_ ain't his daddy's Christian name," said Uncle Ephraim,
ingenuously. "'Tain't Benial!--dough it's mighty nigh ez comical. Hit's
'_Fluellen_'--same ez dis man's. I hearn ole Marster call it--but what
you laffin' at? Dee bed better come out'n dat duck-fit! Folks can hear
ye giggling plumb down ter de Big Gate!"
He was constrained to take himself downstairs presently, lest he be
missed, although longing to continue his discourse. His caution in his
departure, his crafty listening for sounds from below before he would
trust his foot to the stair, his swift, gliding transit to the more
accustomed region of the second story, the art he expended in concealing
in a dust cloth the bowl in which he had conveyed "the forage," as
Julius called it--all were eminently reassuring to the man who stood in
such imminent peril for a casual whim as he gazed after "the raven's"
flight.
Solitary, silent, isolated, the day became intolerably dull to the young
soldier as it wore on. He dared not absorb himself in a book, although
there were many old magazines in a case which stood near the stairs, for
thus he might fail to note an approach. Once he heard the treble babble
of two of the "ladies" and the strange, infrequent harsh tone of the
deaf-mute, and he paused to murmur, "Bless their dear little souls!"
with a tender smile on his face. And suddenly, his attention still bent
upon the region below stairs, so unconscious of his presence above,
there came to him the full, mellow sound of a stranger's voice, a
well-bred, decorous voice with a conventional but pleasant laugh; and
then, both in the hallway now, Leonora's drawling contralto, with its
cantabile effects, her speech seeming more beautiful than the singing of
other women. The front door closed with a bang, and Julius realized
that they had gone forth together. He stood in vague wonderment and
displeasure. Was it possible, he asked himself, that she really received
this man's attentions, appeared publicly in his company, accepted his
escort? Then, to assure himself, he sprang to the window and looked out
upon the grove.
There was the graceful figure of his dreams in her plain black bombazine
dress worn without the slightest challenge to favor, the black crape
veil floating backward from the ethereally fair face, the glittering
gold-flecked brown hair beneath the white ruche, called the "widow's
cap," in the edge of her bonnet. Her fine gray eyes were cast toward the
house with a languid smile as the "ladies" tapped on the pane of the
library window and signed farewell. Beside her Julius scanned a tall,
well-set-up man in a blue uniform and the insignia of a captain of
artillery, with blond hair and beard, a grave, handsome face, a
dignified manner, a presence implying many worldly and social values.
This walk was an occasion of moment to Baynell. The opportunity had
arisen in the simplest manner.
There was to be the funeral of a friend of Judge Roscoe's in the
neighborhood, and at the table he had been arranging how "the family
should be represented," to use his formal phrase, for business
necessitated his absence.
"But I will walk over with _you_, Leonora, although I cannot stay for
the services. I will call by for you later."
It was natural, both in the interests of civility and his own pleasure,
that Baynell should offer to take the old gentleman's place, urging that
an officer was the most efficient escort in the unsettled state of the
country; and, indeed, how could they refuse? He, however, thought only
of her acceptability to him. Apart from her beauty he had never known a
woman who so conformed to his ideals of the appropriate, despite the
grotesque folly of her blighted romance. It was only her nobility of
nature, he argued, that had compassed her unhappiness in that instance.
The graces of her magnanimity would not have been wasted on him, he
protested inwardly. He appreciated that they were fine and high
qualities thus cast before swine and ruthlessly trampled underfoot. She
herself had lacked in naught--but the unworthy subject of the largess of
her heart.
It was Baynell who talked as they took their way through the grove and
down the hill. Now and again she lifted her eyes, murmured assent,
seemed to listen, always subacutely following the trend of her own
reflections.
He would not intrude into the house of affliction, being a stranger, he
said, and therefore he strolled about outside during the melancholy
obsequies, patiently waiting till she came out again and joined him. She
seemed cast down, agitated; he thought her of a delicately sensitive
organization.
"How familiar death is becoming in these war times!" she said drearily,
when they were out of the crowd once more and fairly homeward bound.
"There was not one woman of the hundred in that house who is not wearing
mourning."
She rarely introduced a topic, and, with more alacrity than the subject
might warrant, he spoke in responsive vein on the increased losses in
battle as arms are improved, presently drifting to the comparison of
statistics of the mortality in hospitals, the relative chances for life
under shell or musketry fire, the destructive efficacy of sabre cuts,
and the military value of cavalry charges. The cavalry fought much now
on foot, he said, using the carbine, but this reduced the efficiency of
the force one-fourth, the necessary discount for horse-holders; he
thought there was great value in the cavalry charge, with the unsheathed
sabre; it was like the rush of a cyclone; only few troops, well
disciplined, could hold their ground before it; thus he pursued the
subject of cognate interest to his profession. And meantime she was
thinking only of these women, mourning their dead and dear, while
she--the hypocrite--wore the garb of the bereaved to emphasize her
merciful and gracious release. She wondered how she had ever endured it,
she who hated deceit, a fanciful pose, and the empty conventions, she
who did not mourn save for her lost exaltations, her wasted affection,
the hopeless aspirations--all the dear, sweet illusions of life! Perhaps
she had owed some compliance with the customs of mere widowhood, the
outward respect to the status. Well, then, she had paid it; farther than
this she would not go.
The next morning as Captain Baynell took his seat at the breakfast-table
she was coming in through the glass door from the parterre at one side
of the dining room, arrayed in a mazarine blue mousseline-de-laine
flecked with pink, a trifle old-fashioned in make, with a bunch of pink
hyacinths in her hand, their delicate cold fragrance filling all the
room.
Even a man less desirous of being deceived than Baynell might well have
deduced a personal application. He was sufficiently conversant with the
conventions of feminine attire to be aware that this change was
something of the most sudden. His finical delicacy was pained to a
certain extent that the casting off her widow's weeds could be
interpreted as a challenge to a fresh romance. But he argued that if
this were for his encouragement, surely he should not cavil at her
candor, for it would require a bolder man than he to offer his heart and
hand under the shadow of that swaying crape veil. Nevertheless when his
added confidence showed in his elated eyes, his assured manner, she
stared at him for a moment with a surprise so obvious that it chilled
the hope ardently aglow in his consciousness. The next instant realizing
that all the eyes at the table were fixed on her blooming attire, noting
the change, she flushed in confusion and vexation. She had not counted
on being an object of attention and speculation.
Judge Roscoe's ready tact mitigated the stress of the situation.
"Leonora," he said, "you look like the spring! That combination of
sky-blue and peach-blow was always a favorite with your aunt,--French
taste, she called it. It seems to me that the dyes of dress goods were
more delicate then than now; that is not something new, is it?"
"Oh, no; a worn-out thing, as old as the hills!" she answered casually.
And so the subject dropped.
It was renewed in a different quarter.
Old Ephraim was sitting on the floor in the garret, while his young
master, adroitly balanced in a crazy arm-chair with three legs, was
scraping with a spoon the bottom of the bowl that had contained "the
forage."
Julius made these meals as long as he dared, so yearning he was for the
news of the dear home life below, so tantalized by its propinquity and
yet its remoteness. He was barred from it by his peril and the presence
of the Federal officer as if he were a thousand miles away. But old
Ephraim came freshly from its scenes; from the table that he served,
around which the familiar faces were grouped; from the fireside he
replenished, musical with the voices that Julius loved. He caught a
glimpse, he heard an echo, through the old gossip's talk, and thus the
symposium was prolonged. The old negro told the neighborhood news as
well; who was dead, and how and why they died; who was married, and how
and when this occurred; what ladies "received Yankee officers," for some
there were who put off and on their political prejudices as easily as an
old glove; what homes had been seized for military purposes or destroyed
by the operations of war.
"De Yankees built a fote on Marse Frank Devrett's hill," he remarked of
the home of a relative of the Roscoes.
"Which side," demanded the boy; "toward the river?"
"Todes de souf."
"Pshaw! Uncle Ephraim, it couldn't be the south; the crest of the hill
slopes that way," Julius contradicted, still actively plying the spoon.
"You don't know north from south; you don't know gee from haw!"
"'Twas de souf, now! 'Twas de souf!" protested the old servant.
"Now look here," argued Julius, beginning to draw with the spoon upon
the broad, dusty top of a cedar chest close by. "Here is the Dripping
Spring road, and here runs the turnpike. Now here is the rise of the
hill, and--"
"Dar is Gen'al Belden's cavalry brigade camped at de foot," put in Uncle
Ephraim, rising on his knees, taking a casual interest in cartography.
"And here is the bend of the river,"--the bowl of the spoon made a great
swirl to imply the broad sweep of the noble Tennessee.
"Dat's whar dey got some infantry, four reg'ments."
"I see," with several dabs to mark the spot, "convenient for
embarkation."
"An' dar," said the old man, unaware of any significance in the
disclosure, "is one o' dem big siege batteries hid ahint de bresh--"
"Masked, hey? to protect launching and prevent approach by water; they
_are_ fixed up mighty nice! And here goes the slope of the hill to the
fort."
"No, dat's de ravelin, de covered way, an' de par'pet."
"As far down as this, Uncle Ephraim? surely not!"
"Now, ye ain't so much ez chipped de shell ob dis soldierin' business,
ye nuffin' but a onhatched deedie! An' yere I been takin' ye fur a
perfessed soldier-man! You lissen! _yere_ is de covered way ob de
ravelin, outside ob a redoubt, whar dey got a big traverse wid a
powder-magazine built into it. I been up dar when dis artillery captain
sent his wagons arter his ammunition."
"About where is the magazine located?" demanded Julius, gravely intent.
"Jes' dar--dar--"
"No, no!" cried the Confederate officer, in a loud, elated voice.
The old servant caught him by the sleeve, trembling and with a warning
finger lifted. Then they were both silent, intently listening.
The sunlight across the garret floor lay still, save for the bright bar
of glittering, dancing motes. The tall aspen tree by the window made no
sound as it touched the pane with its white velvet buds. A wasp
noiselessly flickered up and down the glass. Absolute quietude, save for
a gentle, continuous murmur of voices in conversation in the library
below.
"I'se gwine ter take myse'f away from yere," said old Janus, loweringly,
his eyes full of reproach, his nerves shaken by the sudden fright. "Ye
ain't fitten fur dis yere soldierin' business; jes' pipped de shell. You
gwine ter git yerself cotched by dat ar Yankee man whut we-all done
loaded ourself up wid, an' _den_ whar will ye be? He done got well
enough ter knock down a muel, an' I dunno _why_ he don't go on back ter
his camp. Done wore out his welcome yere, good-fashion!"
But Julius had entirely recovered from the _contretemps_. He was gazing
in fixed intentness at the map drawn in the dust on the smooth, polished
top of the cedar chest.
"Uncle Ephraim," he said in an impressive whisper, "this powder-magazine
is built right over a cave! I _know_, because there is a hole, a sort of
grotto down in the grove, where you can go in; and in half a mile you
come right up against the wall of my cousin Frank Devrett's cellar. We
played off ghost tricks there one Christmas, the Devrett boys and me,
singing and howling in the cave, and it made a great mystery in the
house, frightening my Cousin Alice; but Cousin Frank was in the secret."
"Gimme--gimme dat spoon! I don't keer if de Yankees built deir magazine
in de _well_ instead ob de cellar. I'm gwine away 'fore dat widder 'oman
begins arter me 'bout dat spoon an' bowl! Gimme de bowl, sah, it's de
salad bowl!"
"Oh, I see," still pondering on the map; "they utilized part of the
cellar, the wine vault, blown out of the solid rock, for the bottom of
the powder-magazine to save work, and then covered it over with the
traverse, and--"
"Gimme dat bowl, Marse Julius, dat widder 'oman will be on our track
direc'ly. She keeps up wid every silver spoon as if she expected ter own
'em one day! But shucks! _you_ gwine ter miss her again, wid all dis
foolishness ob playin' Rebel soldier. Dat ar widder 'oman is all dressed
out in blue an' pink ter-day, an' dat Yankee man smile same ez a
possum!"
Julius Roscoe's absorption dropped in an instant. "You are an egregious
old fraud!" he cried impetuously. "I saw her myself, yesterday, dressed
in deep mourning."
"Thankee, sah!" hoarsely whispered the infuriated old negro. "Ye'se
powerful perlite ter pore ole Ephraim, whut's worked faithful fur you
Roscoes all de days ob his life. I reckon I'se toted ye a thousand miles
on dis ole back! An' I larned _ye_ how ter feesh an' ter dig in the
gyarden,--dough ye is a mighty pore hand wid a hoe,--an' ter set traps
fur squir'ls, an' how ter find de wild bee tree. An' dem fine house
sarvants never keered half so much fur ye ez de ole cawnfield hand; an'
now dey hes all lef', an' de plantation gangs have all gone, too, an' ye
would lack yer vittles ef 'twarn't fur de ole cawnfield hand! I'll fetch
ye yer breakfus', sah, in de mornin', fur all ye are so perlite.
Thankee, kindly, sah, callin' _me_ names!"
And he took his way down the stair. Albeit in danger of capture and
death, Julius flew across the floor to the head of the flight,
beguilingly beckoning the old negro to return, for the ministering raven
had cast up reproachful eyes as he faced about on the first landing.
Although obviously relenting, and placated by the tacit apology, the old
servant obdurately shook his head surlily. Julius jocosely menaced him
with his fists; then, as the gray head finally disappeared, the young
man with a sudden change of sentiment strode restlessly up and down the
clear space of the garret, feeling more cast down and ill at ease than
ever before.
"Oh, why did I come home!" Julius said over and again, reflecting on his
heady venture and its scanty joy. It seemed that the great unhappiness
of his life was about to be repeated under his eyes; once before he had
witnessed the woman he loved won by another man. Then, however, he was
scarcely more than a mere boy; now he was older, and the defeat would go
more harshly with him. But was he not even to enter the lists, to break
a lance for her favor? Although he had controverted the idea of her
doffing her weeds in this connection, he now nothing doubted the fact.
Her choice was made, the die was cast. And he stood here a fugitive in
his father's house, in peril of capture--nay, it might be even his neck,
the shameful death of a spy--that he might once more look upon her face!
He could not be calm, he could no longer be still; and ceaselessly
treading to and fro after the house had long grown quiet, and the
brilliant radiance of the moon was everywhere falling through the broad,
tall windows, his restless spirit was tempted beyond the bounds of the
shadowy staircase that he might at least, wandering like some unhappy
ghost, see again the old familiar haunts. He passed through the halls,
silent, slow, unafraid, as if invested with invisibility. He was grave,
heavy-hearted, as aloof from all it once meant as if he were indeed
some sad spirit revisiting the glimpses of the moon. Now and again he
paused to gaze on some arrangement of sofas or chairs familiar to his
earlier youth. By this big window always lay the backgammon-board. There
was the old guitar, with memory, moonlight, romantic dreams, all
entangled in the strings! It had been a famous joke to drag that light
card-table before the pier glass, which reflected the hand of the unwary
gamester. He sank down in a great fauteuil in the library, and through
the long window on the opposite side of the room he could see the sheen
of the moonlight lying as of old amidst the familiar grove.
The sentry, with his cap and light blue overcoat, its cape fluttering in
the breeze, ever and anon marched past, his musket shouldered, all
unaware of the eyes that watched him; the budding trees cast scant
shadows, spare and linear, on the dewy turf; the flowers bloomed all
ghostly white in the parterre at one side. So might he indeed revisit
the scene were he dead, Julius thought; so might he silently,
listlessly, gaze upon it, his share annulled, his hope bereft.
Were he really dead, he wondered, could he look calmly at Leonora's book
where she had laid it down? He knew its owner from her habit of marking
the place with a flower; it held a long blooming rod of the _Pyrus
Japonica_, the blossoms showing a scarlet glow even in the pallid
moonlight. One of the "ladies" had cast on the floor her "nun's
bonnet," a tube-like straw covering, fitted with lining and curtain of
blue barège and blue ribbons; that belonged to Adelaide, he was sure,
the careless one, for the bonnets of the other two "nuns" hung primly on
the rack in the side hall. His father's pen and open portfolio lay on
the desk, and there too was the pipe that had solaced some knotty
perplexity of his business affairs, growing complicated now in the
commercial earthquake that the war had superinduced.
Without doubt more troublous times yet were in store. Julius rose
suddenly. He must not add to these trials! He must exert every capacity
to compass his safe withdrawal from this heady venture, for his father's
sake as well as his own. With this monition of duty the poor ghost bade
farewell to the scene that so allured him, the old home atmosphere so
dear to his sense of exile, and took his way silently, softly, up the
stairs.
He met the dawn at the head of the flight, filtering down from a high
window. It fell quite distinct on the map of the town and its defences
that he had drawn, in the dust on the polished top of the cedar chest,
and suddenly a thought came to him altogether congruous with the garish
day.
"I know a chief of artillery who would like mightily to hear where that
masked battery is! I do believe he could reach it from Sugar Loaf
Pinnacle if he could get a few guns up there!"
Then he was reminded anew of the subterranean secret passage from the
grotto in the grove through the cave to the cellar of the old Devrett
place, where now there was a powder-magazine. "I'd like to get out of
the lines with that map set in my head precisely." He thought for a
minute with great concentration. "Better still, I'll draw it off on
paper."
He had half a mind to take Uncle Ephraim into his confidence to procure
pencils and paper, but a prudent monition swayed him. This was going
far, very far! He would possess himself of the map duly drawn, but he
would share this secret with no one. He resolved that when next the
family should be out of the house, for daily they and their invalid
guest strolled for exercise in the grove or wandered among the flowers
in the old-fashioned garden, he would then venture into the library
quietly and secure the materials.
The opportunity, however, did not occur till late in the afternoon. He
did not postpone the quest for a midnight hazard, for he daily hoped
that with the darkness might come news of the drawing in of the
picket-lines, affording him a better chance to make a run for escape.
Hence it so happened that when the elder members of the household came
in to tea, they found the "ladies" already at the table, the twins
gloomily whimpering, the dumb child with an elated yet scornful air, her
bright eyes dancing.
They had seen a ghost, the twins protested.
"Oh, fie! fie!" their grandfather uneasily rebuked them, and Captain
Baynell turned with the leniency of the happy and consequently the
easily pleased to inquire into this juvenile mystery.
Oh, yes, they _had_ seen a ghost! a truly true ghost! They mopped their
eyes with their diminutive handkerchiefs and wept in great depression of
spirit. It was in the library, they further detailed, just about dark.
And it had seen them! It scrabbled and scrunched along the wall! And
they both drew up their shoulders to their ears to imitate the shrinking
attitude of a ghost who would fain shun observation and get out of the
way.
Little Lucille laughed fleeringly, understanding from the motion of
their lips what they had said. She gazed around with lustrous, excited
eyes; then, she turned toward Baynell, and with infinite élan, she
smartly delivered the military salute.
"Why," cried Mrs. Gwynn, on the impulse of the moment, "Lucille says it
is Julius Roscoe; that is her sign for him. What is all this foolery,
Lucille?"
But just then Uncle Ephraim, in his functions as waiter, overturned the
large, massive coffee urn, holding much scalding fluid, upon the table,
causing the group to scatter to avoid contact with the turbulent flood.
The "widder 'oman" struggled valiantly to keep her temper, and said
only a little of what she thought. The rearrangement of the table, with
her awkward and untrained servant, for the service of the meal so
occupied her faculties that the matter passed from her mind.
CHAPTER VII
Miss Mildred Fisher was one of the happiest of women, and this was the
result of her own peculiar temperament, although she enjoyed the
endowments of a kind fate, for she came of a good family and had a fine
fortune in expectation. Her resolute intention was to make the best of
everything. With a strong, fresh, buoyant physique and an indomitable
spirit it became evident to her in the early stages of this effort that
the world is a fairly pleasant planet to live on. Her red hair--a
capital defect in those days, when Titian's name was never associated
with anything so unfashionable, and which bowed to the earth the soul of
many an otherwise deserving damsel--was most skilfully manipulated, and
dressed in fleecy billows, usually surmounted with an elaborate comb of
carved tortoise-shell, but on special occasions with a cordon of very
fine pearls, as if to attract the attention that other flame-haired
people avoided by the humblest coiffure. By reason of this management it
was described sometimes as auburn, and even golden, but this last was
the aberration usually of youths who had lost their own heads, red and
otherwise, for Mildred was a bewildering coquette. She had singularly
fine hazel eyes, which she used rather less for the purpose of vision
than for the destruction of the peace of man. Her complexion of that
delicate fairness so often concomitant of red hair did not present the
usual freckles. In fact it was the subject of much solicitous care. She
wore so many veils and mufflers that her identity often might well be a
matter of doubt as far as her features could be discerned, and Seymour,
being a very glib young lieutenant, once facetiously threatened her with
arrest for going masked and presumably entertaining designs pernicious
to the welfare of the army. That she did entertain such designs, in a
different sense, was indeed obvious, for with her determination to make
the best of everything, Miss Fisher had resolved to harass the heart of
the invader the moment a personable man with a creditable letter of
introduction presented himself. For she "received the Yankees," as the
phrase went, while others closed their doors and steeled their hearts in
bitterness.
"We _all_ receive the Yankees," she was wont to say smilingly. "It is a
family failing with us. My father and five brothers in the Confederate
vanguard are waiting now to receive Yankees--as many Yankees as care to
come to Bear-grass Creek."
"Oh, Miss Fisher!" remonstrated the gay young lieutenant, perceiving her
drift; "how can you consign me so heartlessly to six red-handed
Rebels!"
"Only red-headed as yet, fiery,--_all_ of them! They'll be red-handed
enough after you and they come to blows!"
This mimic warfare had a certain zest, and many were the youths among
the officers of the garrison who liked to "talk politics" in this vein
with "Sister Millie," as she was often designated in jocose allusion to
the five fiery-haired brothers. And indeed, as the Fisher family was so
numerously represented in the Confederate army, she considered that her
Southern partisanship was thus comprehensively demonstrated, and she
felt peculiarly at liberty to make merry with the enemy if the enemy
would be merry in turn.
Very merry and good-natured the enemy was pleased to be as far as she
was concerned. They wrote home for social credentials. They secured
introductions from brother-officers who had the entrée, and especially
courted for this purpose were two elderly colonels who had been
classmates of her father's at West Point, where he was educated,
although he had resigned from the army many years ago. The two had
sought and naturally had found a cordial welcome at the home of his
wife, sister, and mother. It was natural, too, that they should feel and
exert a sort of prudential care of the household, in the midst of
inimical soldiers, and although their ancient companion-in-arms was in
an adverse force hardly fifty miles away, they regarded this as merely
the political aspect of the situation, which did not diminish their
amity and bore no relation to their personal sentiment, as they came and
went in his house on the footing of friends of the family. Now and again
the incongruity was brought home to them by some audacity of Mildred
Fisher's.
"If you should meet papa, Colonel Monette," she said one day as one of
these elderly officers was going out to command a scouting
expedition--"if you _should_ meet papa, don't fail to reintroduce
yourself, and give him our prettiest compliments."
The elderly officer was a literal-minded campaigner, and as he put his
foot in the stirrup he felt rather dolorously that if ever he did meet
Guy Fisher again, it would probably be at point-blank range where one
would have to swallow the other's pistol ball.
The war, however, was seldom so seriously regarded at the Fisher
mansion, one of the fine modern houses of the town,--brick with heavy
limestone facings and much iron grille work, perched up on a double
terrace, from which two flights of stone steps descended to the
pavement. The more youthful officers contrived to import fruits and
hothouse flowers, the fresh books and sheet music of the day, and they
stood by the piano and wagged their heads to the march in "Faust," which
was all the rage at that time, and sped around nimbly to the vibrations
of its waltz, that might have made a pair of spurs dance. She had a
very pretty wit of an exaggerated tenor, and it seemed to whet the
phrase of every one who was associated with "The Fair One with the
Equivocal Locks," as an imitator of her methods had dubbed her.
No order was so strictly enforced as to touch her mother's and her
aunt's household. Their poultry roosted in peace. Their firearms were
left by officers conducting searches through citizens' houses and
confiscating pistols, guns, and knives.
"_We_ are as capable of armed rebellion as ever," she would declare
joyously.
Miss Fisher's favorite horse bore her airy weight as jauntily down the
street as if no impress had desolated equestrian society. On these
occasions she was always accompanied by two or three officers, sometimes
more, and there was a fable in circulation that once the cavalcade was
so numerous that the guard was turned out at the fort, the sentries
mistaking the gayly caparisoned approach for the major general
commanding the division and his mounted escort.
She sang in a very high soprano voice and with a considerable degree of
culture, but one may be free to say that her rendering of "Il Bacio" and
"La Farfalletta" was by no means the triumph of art that it seemed to
Seymour, and it was suggested to the mind of several of the elder
officers that there ought to be something more arduous for him to do
than to languish over the piano in a sentimental daze, fairly
hypnotized by the simpler melodies--"Her bright smile haunts me still"
and "Sweet Evangeline."
Serious thoughts were sometimes his portion, and Vertnor Ashley now and
again received the benefit of them.
"I heard some news when I was in town to-day--and I don't believe it,"
Seymour said as he sat on a camp-stool on the grass in front of the
colonel's tent.
The so-called "street" of the cavalry encampment lay well to the rear.
Hardly a sound emanated therefrom save now and then the echo of a step,
the jingling of a spur or sabre, and sometimes voices in drowsy
talk--perhaps a snatch of song or the thrumming of a guitar. A sort of
luminous hush pervaded the atmosphere of the sunny spring afternoon. The
shadows slanted long on the lush blue-grass that, despite the trampling
to which it had been subjected, sent a revivifying impetus from its
thickly interlaced mat of roots and spread a turf like dark rich velvet.
The impulse of bloom was rife throughout nature--in a sort of praise
offering for the grace of the spring. Humble untoward sprigs of
vegetation, nameless, one would think, unnoticed, must needs wear a tiny
corolla or offer a chalice full of dew--so minute, so apart from
observation, that their very creation seemed a work of supererogation.
The dandelions' rich golden glow was instarred along the roadside, and
there was a bunch of wood violets in the roots of the maple near
Ashley's head, the branches of the tree holding far down their dark
garnet blossoms with here and there clusters of flat wing-like
seed-pods, striped with green and brown. A few paces distant was a
tulip-tree, gloriously aflare with red and yellow blooms through all its
boughs to the height of eighty feet, and between was swung Ashley's
hammock with Ashley luxuriously disposed therein. His eyes were on the
infinite roseate ranges of the Great Smoky Mountains in the amethystine
distance; the purple Chilhowee darkly loomed closer at hand, and about
the foot-hills was belted the placid cestus of tents, all gleaming
white, while the splendid curves of the river, mirroring the sky, vied
with the golden west. Nothing could have more picturesquely suggested
the warrior in his hours of ease. The consciousness of one's own graces
ought to add a zest to their value, especially when vanity is as
absolutely harmless as Vertnor Ashley's enjoyment of his own good
opinion of himself.
"What news? Why don't you believe it? Grape-vine?" asked Ashley.
(Grape-vine was the telegraph of irresponsible rumor.)
"No--no--nothing fresh from the army. I heard a rumor to-day about Miss
Fisher--that she is engaged to be married."
"I am not surprised--the contrary would surprise me."
Seymour looked alarmed. "Had you heard it, too?"
"No; but from what I have seen of 'Sister Millie,' as they call her
about here, I should say she is a fine recruiting officer."
There was an interval of silence, while Ashley swung back and forth in
the hammock and Seymour sat in a clumped posture on the camp-stool, his
hands on his knees, and his gloomy eyes on the square toes of his new
boots. At length he resumed:--
"Did you ever hear of a fellow that hails from somewhere near here named
Lloyd?"
"Lawrence Lloyd?"
"That's the man," said Seymour.
"I've heard of him. That's the Lloyd place a little down the river,--old
brick house, but all torn down now--burned by Gibdon's men; good-sized
park, or 'grove,' as they call it. That's the man, is it? Commanded some
Rebel cavalry in the Bear-grass Creek skirmish."
"Fought like a bear with a sore head--mad about his house, I suppose."
"If I _knew_ that Miss Fisher was engaged to him, I would send her a
barrel or two of fine old books that I rescued from Gibdon's
men--thought I'd save 'em for the owner. They made a bonfire of the
library there."
"Lloyd used 'em up in a raid last fall--Gibdon's fellows. I don't blame
'em. But, say Miss Fisher has not been fair to me if she is engaged to
that man."
"I always thought Miss Fisher was particularly fair--owing to a
sun-bonnet, rather than to a just mind."
"You think she would treat me as she has--encourage me to make a fool of
myself--if she is engaged to another man?"
"I think she is likelier to be engaged to five than 'another.'"
"You should not say that, Ashley," retorted Seymour, gravely. "It is not
appropriate. You should not say that," he urged again.
"Oh, I mean no offence, and certainly no disrespect to the lovely Miss
Fisher, who is my heart's delight. But you have heard the five-swain
story?"
As Seymour looked an inquiry--
"Five Rebs in camp, all homesick, very blue, on a Sunday morning," began
Ashley, graphically; "all sitting on logs, each brooding over his
fiancée's ivory-type. And, as misery loves company, one sympathized with
another, and, by way of boastfulness, showed the beautiful counterfeit
presentment of his lady-love. Their clamors brought up the rest of the
five, and _each_ had the identical photograph of Miss Millie Fisher. She
was engaged to all five! There was nothing else they could do--so they
held a prayer-meeting!"
"What bosh!" exclaimed Seymour, fretfully. "People are always at some
extravagant story about her like that. It isn't true, of course."
"It is as much like her as if it were true," Ashley declared laughingly.
The serious, not to say petulant traits of Seymour were intensified by
the conscious jeopardy of his happiness, and the continual doubt in his
mind as to whether he had any ground for hope at all.
"By George! if I knew she was engaged--or--if I knew--anything at all
about anything--I'd cut it all, and give it up. I don't want to be a
source of amusement to her--or to be made a show of. Sometimes, I pledge
you my word, I feel like a dancing bear."
"Miss Fisher has something of the style of a bear-ward, it must be
confessed," said Ashley. "I fancied at one time she had a notion of
getting a chain on me--she is enterprising, you know."
Then, after a moment, "Why _don't_ you cut it all, Mark?"
"Oh," cried Seymour, with an accent of positive pain, "I can't.
Sometimes I believe she _does_ care--she makes me believe it."
"Well," smiled Ashley, banteringly, "you dance very prettily--not a bit
clumsily--a very creditable sort of bear."
Another interval of silence ensued.
"I blame Baynell for all this," said Seymour, sullenly.
"Why? Is he a rival?"
"No. But it was not at all serious--I wasn't so dead gone, I mean--when
I wanted him to take me to the Roscoes'. If I had had some other place
to visit--some other people to know--some distraction of a reasonable
social circle, she couldn't have brought me to such a--a--"
"--state of captivity," suggested Ashley.
"Well, you know, seeing nobody else of one's own sort--and a charming
girl--and nothing to do but to watch her sing--and hear her talk--and
all the other men wild about her--and--it's--it's--"
"You'll forget it all before long," suggested the consolatory Ashley.
"You know we are here to-day and gone to-morrow, in a sense that General
Orders make less permanent than Scripture. If the word should come to
break camp and march--how little you would be thinking of Miss Fisher."
"I suppose you were never in love, Ashley," Seymour said, a trifle
drearily, adding mentally, "except with yourself!"
"I!" exclaimed Ashley, twirling his mustache. "Oh, I have had my sad
experiences, too--but I have survived them--and partially forgotten
them."
"I have no interest now in going to the Roscoes'. Mrs. Fisher offered to
introduce me. She and Miss Millie are going there to-morrow to some sort
of a sewing-circle--they just want an officer's escort through the
suburbs, I know. That sewing-circle is a fraud, and ought to be
interdicted. They pretend to sew and knit for the hospitals here and
Confederate prisoners, and I feel sure they smuggle the lint and clothes
and supplies through the lines to Rebels openly in arms. I hate to go."
"Well, now, I'll engage to eat all the homespun cotton shirts that Miss
Fisher ever makes for the Rebel in arms, or any other man. You need have
no punctilio on that score."
"Oh, it isn't that. I hate to meet Baynell--what is he staying on there
for? He is as rugged now as ever in his life. Is he in love with the
widow?"
"He has a queer way of showing it if he is." And Ashley detailed the
circumstance of the impressing of the horse. Seymour listened with a
look of searching, keen intentness.
"Baynell would never have done that in this world," he declared, "if you
had not been there to hear the neighing, too. Why, it stands to reason.
The family must have known the horse might whinny at any moment. They
relied on his winking at it, and he would have done it if you had not
been there. He took that pose of being so regardful of the needs of the
service because he has been favoring the Roscoes in every way
imaginable. Why, hardly anybody else has a stick of timber left, and
every day houses are seized for military occupation, and the owners
turned adrift, but _I_ know that when one of his men stole only a plank
from Judge Roscoe's fence, he had the fellow tied up by his thumbs with
the plank on his back for hours in the sun. That was for the sake of
_discipline_, my dear fellow--not for Judge Roscoe's plank. On the
contrary--quite the reverse!"
Seymour wagged his satiric head, unconvinced, and Ashley remembered
afterward that he vaguely wished that Baynell would not make so definite
a point about these matters, provoking a sort of comment that ordinary
conduct could hardly incur. Baynell ought to be in camp.
CHAPTER VIII
Baynell, himself, reached the same conclusion the next evening, but by
an altogether different process of reasoning.
He had noticed the unusual stir among the "ladies" early in the
afternoon and a sort of festival aspect that the old house was taking
on. The parlors were opened and a glow of sunshine illumined the windows
and showed the grove from a new aspect--the choicer view where the slope
was steep. The river rounded the point of woods, and there was a great
stretch of cliffs opposite; beyond were woods again, reaching to the
foot-hills that clustered about the base of the distant mountains
bounding the prospect. The glimpse seen through the rooms was like a
great painting in intense, clear, fine colors, and he paused for a
moment to glance at it as he passed down the hall, for all the doors
were standing broadly aflare and all the windows were open to the
summer-like zephyr that played through the house.
"Oh, Captain Baynell!" cried Adelaide, catching sight of him and gasping
in the sheer joy of the anticipation of a great occasion. "The
Sewing-Society is going to meet here, and you can come in, too! Mayn't
he come in, Cousin Leonora?"
Mrs. Gwynn was filling a large bowl on a centre-table with a gorgeous
cluster of deep red tulips, and Baynell noticed that she had thrust two
or three into the dense knot of fair hair at the nape of her neck. As
she turned around one of the swaying bells was still visible, giving its
note of fervid brilliancy to her face. Her dress was a white mull, of
simple make--old, even with a delicate darn on one of its floating open
sleeves, but to one familiar with her appearance in the sombre garb of
widowhood she seemed radiant in a sort of splendor. What was then called
a "Spanish waist," a deeply pointed girdle of black velvet, flecked with
tiny red tufts, made the sylphlike grace of her figure more pronounced,
and at her throat was a collarette of the same material. Her cheeks were
flushed. It had been a busy day--with the morning lessons, with the
arrangement of the parlors, the array of materials, the setting of the
sewing-machines in order, including two or three of the earlier
hand-power contrivances, sent in expressly from the neighbors, the
baskets for lint,--one could hear even now the whirring of the
grindstone as old Ephraim put a keener edge on the scissors. Last but
not least Leonora had accomplished the bedizenment of the "ladies."
Adelaide was not born to blush unseen. She realized the solecism that
her vanity lured her to commit, yet she said hardily, "Look at _me_,
Captain--I'm got me a magenta sash!"
"And it's beautiful!" cried Baynell, responsively. "And so are you!"
Mrs. Gwynn glanced down at her reprovingly and was out of countenance
for a moment.
"How odious it is to give to colors the names of battles," she
said,--"Magenta and Solferino!"
"This is a beautiful color, though," said Baynell.
"But the name gives such an ensanguined suggestion," she objected.
Her eye critically scanned the three "ladies" in their short white mull
dresses and magenta sashes, each with a bow of black velvet in her hair,
as they led Captain Baynell into the room, and it did not occur to her
till too late to canvass the acceptability of the presence of the Yankee
officer to the ladies of the vicinity, assembling in this choice
symposium, who had some of them the cruel associations of death itself
with the very sight of the uniform.
Whether it were good breeding, or the magnanimity that exempts the unit
from the responsibility of the multitude, or a realization that Judge
Roscoe's guest, be he whom he might, was entitled to the consideration
of all in the Roscoe house, there was no demonstration of even the
slightest antagonism. The usual civility of salutation in acknowledging
the introduction served to withhold from Captain Baynell himself the
fact that he could hardly hope to be _persona grata_; and ensconced in
an arm-chair at the window overlooking the lovely landscape, he found a
certain amusement and entertainment in watching the zealous industry of
the little Roscoe "ladies," who were very competent lint-pickers and
boasted some prodigies of performance. A large old linen crumb-cloth,
laundered for the occasion, had been spread in the corner between the
rear and side windows of the back parlor, so that the flying lint should
not bespeck the velvet carpet, or an overturned basket work injury, and
here in their three little chairs they sat and competed with each other,
appealing to Captain Baynell to time them by his watch.
Now and then their comments, after the manner of their age, were keenly
malapropos and occasioned a sense of embarrassment.
"Don't you reckon Ac'obat is homesick by this time, Captain?" demanded
Adelaide.
"Look out of the window, Captain--you can see the grating to the
wine-cellar where he could put his nose out to take the air," said
Geraldine.
"An' he thought the lightning could come in there to take
him--kee--kee--" giggled Adelaide.
"Oh, _wasn't_ he a foolish horse!" commented Geraldine, regretfully.
"Uncle Ephraim said Ac'obat had no religion else he'd have stayed where
he was put like a Christian," Adelaide observed.
"Oh, but he was _just_ a horse--poor Ac'obat!"
At this moment emulation seized Geraldine. "Oh, my--just look how
Lucille is double-quickin' about that lint pickin'!"
And a busy silence ensued.
The large rooms were half full of members of the society. In those days
the infinite resources of the "ready-made" had not penetrated to these
regions, and doubtless the work of such eager and industrious coteries
carried comfort and help farther than one can readily imagine, and the
organized aid of woman's needle was an appreciable blessing. Two or
three matrons, with that wise, capable look of the able house-sovereign,
when scissors, or a dish, or a vial of medicine is in hand, sat with
broad "lapboards" across their knees, and cut and cut the coarse
garments with the skill of experts, till great piles were lying on the
floor, caught up with a stitch to hold component parts together and
passed on to the younger ladies at the sewing-machines that whirred and
whirred like the droning bees forever at the jessamine blooming about
the windows. Nothing could be more unbeautiful or uninviting than the
aspect of these stout garments, unless it were to the half-clad soldier
in the trenches to whom they came like an embodied benediction. The
thought of him--that unknown, unnamed beneficiary, for whose grisly
needs they wrought--was often, perhaps, in the mind of each.
"And oh!" cried Adelaide, "while I'm pickin' lint for this hospital, I
dust know some little girl away out yonder in the Confederacy is
pickin' lint too--an' if my papa was to get wounded, they'd have
plenty."
"Pickin' fast, she is, like us!" cried the hastening Geraldine.
The deft-fingered mute, discerning their meaning by the motion of their
lips, redoubled her speed.
Others were sewing by hand, and one very old lady had knitted some
lamb's wool socks, which were passed about and greatly admired; she was
complacent, almost coquettish, so bland was her smile under these
compliments.
And into this scene of placid and almost pious labor came Miss Mildred
Fisher presently, leading her "dancing bear."
If there were any question of the acceptability of the enforced presence
of a Yankee officer, either in the mind of the Sewing-Circle or
Lieutenant Seymour, it was not allowed to smoulder in discomfort, but
set ablaze to burn itself out.
"I know you are all just perfectly amazed at our assurance in bringing a
Yankee officer here,--_don't_ be mortified, Lieutenant Seymour,--but
mamma wouldn't hear of coming without a valiant man-at-arms as an
escort, so I begged and prayed him to come, and now I want you all to
beg and pray him to stay!"
Then she introduced him to several ladies, while Mrs. Fisher, always the
mainspring of the executive committee, a keen, thin, birdlike woman,
swift of motion and of a graceful presence, but prone to settle moot
points with a decisive and not altogether amiable peck, gave him no
attention, but darting from group to group devoted herself wholly to the
business in hand. She seemed altogether oblivious, too, of Mildred's
whims, which were to her an old story. Seldom, indeed, had Mildred
Fisher looked more audaciously sparkling. Her fairness was enhanced by
the black velvet facing of her white Leghorn turban, encircled with one
of those beautiful long white ostrich plumes then so much affected that,
after passing around the crown, fell in graceful undulations over the
equivocal locks and almost to the shoulder of her black-and-white
checked walking suit of "summer silk," trimmed with a narrow
black-and-white fringe.
"Grandma sent these socks and shirts--" she said officiously, taking a
bundle from a neat colored maid who had followed her--"and I brought my
thimble--here it is--golden gold--and a large brass thimble for Mr.
Seymour. You wouldn't think he has so much affinity for brass--to look
at him now! I intend to make him sew, too. Mrs. Clinton, I know you
think I am just _awful_," turning apologetically upon the very old lady
her sweet confiding eyes. "But--oh, Mrs. Warren--before I forget it, I
want to let you know that your son was _not_ wounded in that Bear-grass
Creek skirmish at all. I have a letter from one of my brothers--brother
number four--and he says it is a mistake; your son was not hurt, but
distinguished himself greatly. Here's the letter. I can't tell you _how_
it came through the lines, for Lieutenant Seymour might _repeat_ it; he
has the l-o-n-g-e-s-t tongue, though you wouldn't think it, to see him
now, speechless as he is."
Lieutenant Seymour rallied sufficiently to protest he couldn't get in a
word edgewise, and Mrs. Gwynn, with her official sense of hospitality
and a real pity for anything that Millie Fisher had undertaken to
torment on whatever score, adopted the tone of the conversation, and
said with a smile that he might consider himself "begged and prayed" to
remain.
Lieutenant Seymour was instantly placed at ease by this episode, but
Mrs. Gwynn experienced a vague disquietude because of the genuine
surprise that expressed itself in Mildred Fisher's face as that
comprehensive feminine glance of instantaneous appraisement of attire
took account of her whole costume. Leonora had not reckoned on this
development when, in that sudden revulsion of feeling, she had discarded
the fictitious semblance of mourning for the villain who had been the
curse of her life. The momentary glance passed as if it had not been,
but she could not at once rid herself of a sense of disadvantage. She
knew that to others as well the change must seem strange--yet, why
should it? All knew that her widow's weeds had been but an empty
form--what significance could the fact possess that they were worn for a
time as a concession to convention, then laid aside? She could not long
lend herself, however, to the absorption of reflection. The present was
strenuous.
Miss Fisher was bent on investing Lieutenant Seymour with the thimble
and requiring him to thread a needle for himself, while she soberly and
with despatch basted a towel which she destined him to hem. The comedy
relief that these arrangements afforded to the serious business of the
day was very indulgently regarded, and her bursts of silvery laughter
and the young officer's frantic pleas for mercy--utterly futile, as all
who knew Millie Fisher foresaw they must be--brought a smile to grave
faces and relaxed the tension of the situation, placing the unwelcome
presence of the unasked visitor in the category of one of Millie
Fisher's many freaks.
Seymour had a very limited sense of humor and could not endure to be
made ridiculous, even to gladden so merry a lady-love; but when she
declared that she would transfer the whole paraphernalia--thimble,
needle, towel, and all--to Captain Baynell, and let him do the hemming,
Seymour, all unaware of the secret amusement his sudden consent afforded
the company, showed that he preferred that she should make him ludicrous
rather than compliment another man by her mirthful ridicule.
"Now, there you go! Hurrah! Make haste! Not such a big stitch! Now, Mr.
Seymour, let me tell you, Hercules with the distaff was not a
circumstance to you!"
And the Sewing-Circle could but laugh.
Upstairs in the quiet old attic these evidences of hilarity rose with an
intimation of poignant contrast. The dreary entourage of broken
furniture and dusty trunks and chests, the silence and loneliness,--no
motion but the vague shifting of the motes in the slant of the sun, no
sound but the unshared mirth below, in his own home,--this seemed a more
remote exile. Julius felt actually further from the ancestral roof than
when he lay many miles away in the trenches in the cold spring rains,
with never a canopy but the storm, nor a candle but the flash of the
lightning. He sat quite still in the great arm-chair that his weight
deftly balanced on its three legs, his head bent to a pose of attention,
his cap slightly on one side of his long auburn locks, his eyes full of
a sort of listening interest, divining even more than he heard. He was
young enough, mercurial enough, to yearn wistfully after the fun,--the
refined "home-folks fun" of the domestic circle, the family and their
friends,--to which he had been so long a stranger; not the riotous
dissipation of the wilder phases of army life nor the animal spirits,
the "horse-play," of camp comrades. Sometimes at a sudden outburst of
laughter, dominated by Millie Fisher's silvery trills of mirth, his own
lips would curve in sympathy, albeit this was but the shell of the
joke, its zest unimagined, and light would spring into his clear dark
eyes responsive to the sound. Now and again he frowned as he noted men's
voices, not his father's nor well-remembered tones of old friends. They
had been less frequent than the women's voices, but now they came at
closer intervals, with an unfamiliar accent, with a different pitch, and
he began to realize that here were the Yankee officers.
"Upon my word, they seem to be having a fine time," he said
sarcastically.
In the next acclaim he could distinguish, besides the tones of the
invaders and the ringing vibration from Millie Fisher that led every
laugh, Leonora's drawling contralto accents, now and again punctuated
with a suggestion of mirth, and high above all the callow chirp of the
twin "ladies." He lifted his head and looked at the wasps, building
their cells on the window lintel, the broad, dreary spaces of the attic;
and he beheld, as it were, in contrast, his own expectation, the
welcome, the cherished guest, the guarded secret, the open-hearted talks
with his father, with the "ladies," with her whom, since widowed, he
might call to himself, without derogation to his affection or disrespect
to her, his "best beloved." The hardship it was that for the bleak
actuality he should have risked his capture, his life,--yes, even his
neck! His hand trembled upon the map, wrought out to every detail of
his discoveries, that he kept now in his breast, and now shifted to the
sole of his boot, and now slid in the lining of his coat-pocket, always
seeking the safest hiding-place,--forever seeking, forever doubting the
wisdom of his selection.
But the map--that was something! He had gained this precious knowledge.
Only to get away with it, unharmed, unchallenged, unmolested! This was
the problem. This was worth coming for.
"I'll give you some more active entertainment before long, my fine
squires of dames," he apostrophized the strangers triumphantly. Then he
experienced a species of rage that they should be so merry--and he, he
must not see Leonora's face, must not touch her hand, must not tell her
all he felt; this would have been dear to him even if she had not cared
to listen. It would have been like the votive offering at a shrine, like
a prayer from out the fulness of the heart.
There was presently the tinkle of glasses and spoons, intimating the
serving of refreshments. "I'd like to see old Uncle Ephraim playing
butler. He must step about as gingerly as a gobbler on hot tin," Julius
said to himself with a smile. "I'll bet a million of dollars he has
saved me my share--on a high shelf in the pantry it is right now, in a
covered dish; and if Leonora should come across it, she would think the
old man was thieving on his own account. Such are the insincerities of
circumstantial evidence!"
The genial hubbub in the parlors below was resumed after the decorous
service of salad and sherbet, and became even more animated when Colonel
Ashley chanced to call to see Baynell on a matter affecting their
respective commands. He had of course no idea that he would find Baynell
engaged with the Sewing-Society, but he met Miss Fisher on her own
ground, as it were, and there ensued an encounter of wits, a gay joust,
neither being more sincere than the other, nor with any _arrière pensée_
of irritable feeling to treat a feint as a threat or to cause a thrust
to rankle.
Seymour did not welcome him. The prig, Baynell, as he regarded the
captain, was so null, so stiffly inexpressive, that his presence had
sunk out of account, and the young lieutenant felt that he could rely to
a degree on the quiet kindness of the mature dames at work. They did not
laugh at his sewing over much, although they noted with secret amusement
that, being of the ambitious temper which cannot endure to be found
lacking, he had bent his whole energies to the endeavor, and had sewed,
indeed, as well as it was possible for a lieutenant of infantry to do on
a first lesson. He had a sort of pride in his performance as he handed
it up to Miss Fisher, and she showed it to Ashley with an air of
pronounced amaze.
"A well-conducted Rebel," she said at last, solemnly, "grounded in the
proper conviction as to the ordinance of secession and the doctrine of
States' Rights, would go into strong convulsions if he should have to
bathe with that towel in a hospital. That wavering hem is an epitome of
all the Yankee crooks, and quirks, and skips, and evasions, and
concealments of the straight path that typifies right and justice, and
Mason and Dixon's line! Therefore out it comes!"
As Ashley's joyous laughter rang out with its crisp, genial intonations,
the listening exile in the attic again involuntarily smiled in sympathy,
albeit the next moment he was frowning in jealous discomfort, with a
poignant sense of supersedure. Here, under his own roof-tree--his
father's home!
Lieutenant Seymour protested with ardor, and in truth he was aghast at
the prospect. He had taken so much pains. He had wrought with his whole
soul. He had imagined that he had hemmed so well. Although he had lost
all thought of Baynell in his interest in the exercises of the
afternoon, now that Ashley was at hand to witness his discomfiture he
became resentfully conscious of the presence of the other officer. He
was suddenly mindful that he could not appear to distinguished advantage
as the butt of a joke, however mirthful and merry, and this pointed the
fact that he was not gracing the introduction here which he had earlier
sought through Baynell's kind offices, and had been, as he thought,
most impertinently refused. He forgot the grounds of the declination and
took no heed of the circumstance that they included Ashley's request as
well as his own. He did not realize that had it fallen to Ashley's lot
to hem the towel and thread the needle and wear the brass thimble in a
genuine sewing-circle, his genial gay adaptability would have accorded
so well with the humor of the company that the jest itself would have
been blunted. Its edge was whetted by Lieutenant Seymour's serious
disfavor, the red embarrassment of his countenance, even the stiff lock
of hair, at the apex of the back of the skull, that stood out and
quivered with his eager insistence, as he rose erect and held on to the
towel and looked both angrily and pleadingly at Miss Fisher.
"I hope you will not be mutinous and disobedient," she said gravely. "I
should be sorry to discipline you with the weapons of the society."
She threatened to pierce his fingers with a very sharp needle, and as he
hastily withdrew one hand, shifting the towel to the other, she opened a
very keen pair of shears; as he evaded this she brought up the needle,
enfilading his retreat.
As he stood among a crowd of ladies, insisting that his work should be
spared with a vehemence which most of them thought was only a humorous
affectation and a part of the fun, he noted that Baynell was laughing
too, slightly, languidly. Baynell was standing beside the low, marble
mantelpiece, with one elbow upon it, the light from the flaming west
full on his trim blond beard and hair, his handsome, distinguished face,
the manly grace of the attitude. Seymour resented with an infinite
rancor at that moment the contrast with his own flushed, fatigued,
tousled, agitated, persistent, querulous personality. He could not have
given up to save his life, and yet he could but despise himself for
holding on.
"You had better stop pushing me to the wall," he said, and this was
literal, for he gave back step by step at each feint of the needle; "you
had better be looking out for Captain Baynell. He might have an attack
of conscience at any moment, and have all the fruits of your industry
seized and confiscated as contraband of war. You must remember he had
Mrs. Gwynn's horse impressed."
Baynell was rigid with an intense displeasure. Twice he was about to
speak--twice, mindful of the presence of ladies, he hesitated. Then he
said, quite casually, though visibly with a heedful self-control:--
"That was because of an order, calling for all citizens' horses in this
district for cavalry."
"With which _you_ had as much to do as last year's snow. Just see, Miss
Fisher,"--Seymour waved his hand toward the piles of clothing,--"'all
the coats and garments that Dorcas made'; for Captain Baynell might
report that they are intended to give aid and comfort to the enemy!--to
be smuggled out of the lines! He has a dangerous conscience!"
There was a sudden agitated flutter in the coterie. The beautiful aged
countenance of Mrs. Clinton was overcast with a sort of tremor of
fright. A sense of discovery, as of a moral paralysis, pervaded the
atmosphere. A long significant pause ensued. Then with the intimations
of a stanch reserve of resolution,--a sort of "die in the last ditch"
spirit,--those more efficient members of the association, middle-aged,
competent, experienced matrons, recovered their dignified equanimity and
went on with the examining and counting of the results of the day's work
and the contributions from without,--Mrs. Fisher, the acting secretary,
receiving the reports of the conferring squads and jotting the
enumeration down during the sorting and folding of the completed
product.
Baynell, apparently losing self-control, had started angrily forward.
Ashley, grave, perturbed, had changed color--even he was at a loss. One
might not say what a moment so charged with angry potentialities might
bring forth. But nothing, no collocation of invented circumstances
seemed capable of baffling Miss Fisher. She was equal to any emergency.
She had snatched the towel from the lieutenant's hand, and, flying to
meet Baynell, her smiling face incongruous with a serious, steady light
in her eyes, she stopped him midway the room.
"Now do me the favor to look at that," she cried gayly, presenting the
hem for inspection; "wouldn't you despise an enemy who could take aid
and comfort from such a hem as that?"
"A good soldier should never despise the enemy," replied Baynell,
seeking to adopt her mood and repeating the truism with an air of
banter.
"Well, then, to fit the phrase to your precision, such an enemy would
deserve to be despised! What--going--Mrs. Clinton? It _is_ getting
late."
It was not the usual hour of their separation, but to a very old woman
the turmoils of war were overwhelming. As long as the idea of conflict
was expressed in the satisfaction of being able to aid in her little way
the needy with the work of her own hands,--to knit as she sat by her
desolate fireside and wrought for the unknown comrades of her dead sons;
to join friends in furnishing blankets and making stout clothes for the
soldiers; to bottle her famous blackberry cordial, and to pick lint for
the hospitals,--it seemed to have some gentle phase, to bear a human
heart. But when the heady tumult, the secret inquisitions, the bitter
rancors, the cruelty of bloodshed, and the savagery of death that
constitute the incorporate entity of the great monster, War, were
reasserted with menace, her gentle, wrinkled hands fell, her hope fled.
The grave was kind in those days to the aged.
Ashley had contrived to give Seymour a glance so significant that he
heeded its meaning, though he was already repentant and cowed by the
fear of Miss Fisher's displeasure. His heart beat fast as she turned her
face all rippling with smiles toward him, albeit he told himself in the
same breath that she would have smiled exactly so sweetly had she been
as angry as he deserved. For Miss Fisher was not in the business of
philanthropy. She had no call to play missionary to any petulant young
man's rôle of heathen.
"Are you going to take mamma and me home?" she asked, "or are you going
to leave us to be eaten up by the cows homeward bound?"
Now and again might be heard the fitful clanking of a bell as the cows,
wending their way along the river bank, paused to graze and once more
took up their leisurely progress toward the town. The sunlight was
reddening through the rooms. It had painted on the walls arabesques of
the lace curtains of the western windows; the glow touched with a sort
of revivifying effect the family portraits. Groups of the members of the
society having resumed their bonnets and swaying crape veils were going
from one to another and commenting on the likeness to the subject and
the resemblance to other members of the family, and one or two of
artistic bent discussed the relative merits of the artists, for several
canvases were painted by eminent brushes. All were going home, though in
the grove the mocking-birds were singing with might and main, but there
indeed in the moonlight they would sing the night through with a
romantic jubilance impossible to describe.
Ashley, with the ready tact and good breeding which caused him so much
to be admired, and so much to admire himself, passed by the more
attractive of the younger members of the Circle, and did not even heed
the half-veiled challenge of Miss Fisher to join her party homeward, for
she had become exceedingly exasperated with Lieutenant Seymour, and had
Colonel Ashley been attainable, she would have made the younger man
rabid with jealousy on the walk to the town.
But no! He offered his services as escort to Mrs. Clinton, who looked
suspiciously and helplessly at him like some tender old baby.
"There is no necessity, but I thank you very much," she said; "I came
alone."
The engaging Ashley would not be denied. He had noticed, he said, that
to-day some droves of mules were being driven into town, and the
heedless soldiers raced along perfectly regardless of what was in the
roads before them. They should have some order taken with them, really.
"Oh, _don't_ report them," said the old lady. "The--the discipline of
the army is so--so _painful_."
"But there are no painless methods yet discovered of making men obey,"
said Ashley, laughing.
She still looked at him, doubtfully, as a mouse might contemplate the
graces of a very suave cat. But when Julius gazed out from the garret
window at the departing group, he was duly impressed with the handsome
colonel of cavalry conducting the aged lady on one arm and bearing her
delicate little extra shawl on the other, while Mrs. Fisher with Mildred
and her "dancing bear," who had taken some clumsy steps that day, made
off toward Roanoke City, and the other ladies variously dispersed,
Captain Baynell attending the party only to the end of the drive.
Ashley's graceful persistence was justified by the meeting of some of
the reckless muleteers in full run down the road, with furious cries and
snapping whips and turbulent clatter of animals and men. As his
tremulous charge shrunk back aghast, he simply lifted his sword "like a
wand of authority," as she always described it, and the noisy rout was
turned aside, as if by magic, into a byway, leaving the whole stretch of
the turnpike for the passage of the gallant cavalier and one aged lady.
When Baynell came back through the grove and into the house, the parlor
doors still stood open. The western radiance was yet red on the walls,
albeit the moon was in the sky. The crumb-cloth that had protected the
carpet from lint was gone, the sewing-machines had vanished, all traces
of the work were removed, and wonted order was restored among chairs and
tables. The rear apartment was as he had seen it hitherto, save that the
windows on the western balcony were open, and Mrs. Gwynn, in her white
dress, was standing at the vanishing point of the perspective, glimpsed
through the swaying curtains and a delicate climbing vine. He hardly
hesitated, but passed through the rooms and stepped out, meeting her
surprised eyes as she leaned one hand on the iron railing of the
balcony.
"I want to speak to you," he said. "I want to know if you think I should
have made it plain to those ladies this afternoon that they need fear no
interference from me?"
"Oh, I think they understood," she said listlessly, as if it was no
great matter.
Her eyes were fixed on the purple western hills. The last vermilion
segment of the great solar sphere was slipping beyond them, the sunset
gun boomed from the fort, and the flag fluttered down the staff.
"I felt very keenly the position in which I was placed."
She merely glanced at him and then gazed at the outline of the fort
against the red sky, all flecked and barred with dazzling flakes of
amber. The rampart remained massive and heavy, but the sentry-boxes,
giving their queer little castellated effect, were growing indistinct in
the distance.
"I was tempted to express my resentment, but I was afraid of going too
far--of getting into a wrangle with that fellow--"
"Oh, _that_ would have been unpardonable; in the presence of Mrs.
Clinton and the rest of the Circle!" she said definitely.
"I am _so_ glad you approve my course," he rejoined with an air of
relief.
Once more she looked at him as he stood beside her. A white jessamine
clambered up the stone pillar at the outer corner of the grille work.
Its blossoms wavered about her; a hummingbird flickered in and out and
was still for a moment, the light showing the jewelled effect of the
emblazonment of red and gold and green of his minute plumage, then was
distinguishable only as a gauzy suggestion of wings. The moon was in her
face, ethereal, delicate, seeming to him entrancingly beautiful. He
stipulated to himself that it was not this that swayed him. He loved her
beauty, but only because it was hers. He did not love her for her
beauty. They were close distinctions, but they made an appreciable
difference to him. She did not hold his conscience. She did not dictate
his sense of right. This was apart from her, a sanction too sacred for
any woman, any human soul to control. Yet he sighed with relief to feel
the coincidence of his thought and hers.
"You know, about your horse--it was a matter of conscience with me--a
sense of duty--a matter of conformity to my oath as a soldier and my
knowledge of the needs of the service. I would not for any consideration
evade or fail to forward in letter and spirit any detail even of a
special order that merely chanced to come to my notice, and with which I
was not otherwise concerned. Not for your sake--not even to win your
approval, precious as that must always be to me, nor to avoid your
displeasure, and I believe that is the strongest coercion that could be
exerted upon me. But the destination of the work done by the
Sewing-Circle--that is different. I have no information that it is other
than is claimed. I am not bound to nourish suspicions, nor to
investigate mysteries, nor to take action on details of circumstantial
evidence."
He paused. There was something in her face that he did not
understand;--something stunned, blankly silent, and inexpressive. He
went on eagerly, the enforced repression of the afternoon finding outlet
in a flood of words.
"Lieutenant Seymour understands my position thoroughly well, as Colonel
Ashley does. They take a different view--their construction of their
duty is more lenient. I don't know why--perhaps because they are
volunteers, and the whole war to them is a temporary occupation. But
orders are to be obeyed else they would not be issued. If any exceptions
were intended, a permit would be granted."
He paused again, looking straight at her with such confident, lucid,
trusting eyes,--and she felt that she must say something to divert their
gaze.
"Exceptions, such as Miss Fisher's favorite mount, Madcap? How pretty
Mildred was to-day! Really beautiful; don't you think so?"
"No." His expression was so tender, so wistful, yet so confident, that,
amazed, embarrassed, she felt her color begin to flame in her cheeks.
"How could she seem beautiful where you are,--the loveliest woman in all
the world and the best beloved."
"Captain Baynell!" she exclaimed, hardly believing that she heard him
aright. "I do not understand the manner in which you have seen fit to
speak to me this evening." She paused abruptly, for he was looking at
her with a palpable surprise.
"You must know--you must have seen--that I love you!" he said hastily.
"Almost from the moment that I first saw you I have loved you--but more
and more, hour by hour, and day by day, as I have learned to know you,
to appreciate you--so perfect and so peerless!"
"You surprise me beyond measure. I must beg--I insist that you do not
continue to speak to me in this strain."
"Do you mean to say that you did not know it--that you did not perceive
it?"
"I did not dream it for one moment," she replied.
It seemed as if he could not accept her meaning. He pondered on the
words as if they might develop some difference.
"You afflict me beyond expression!" he exclaimed with a sort of
desperate breathlessness. "You destroy my dearest hopes. How could you
fail--how could I fancy! I--I would not suggest the subject as long as
your mourning attire repelled it, but--but--since--since--I--I thought
you knew all my heart and I might speak!"
"You thought I laid aside a widow's weeds to challenge your avowal!"
exclaimed Mrs. Gwynn, in her icy, curt, soft tones.
"Oh, Leonora--for God's sake--put on it no interpretation except that I
love you--I adore you; and I thought such hearty, whole-souled affection
must awaken some interest, some response. I could hardly be silent
except I so feared precipitancy. I spoke as soon as I might without rank
offence."
Even then, in the presence of an agitation, a humiliation peculiarly
keen to a man of his type, he was not first in Mrs. Gwynn's thoughts.
She was reviewing the day and wondering if this connection between the
lack of the widow's weeds and the presence of the Yankee officer was
suggested to any of the sewing contingent. A vague gesture, a pause, a
remembered facial expression, sudden, involuntary, at the sight of him
and her,--all had a new interpretation in the sequence of this
disclosure. They had thought it the equivalent of the acceptance of a
new suitor, and the supposed favored lover had thought so himself!
The recollection of her woful married life, with its train of
barbarities, and rancors, and terrors, both grotesque and horrible, that
still tortured her present--the leisure moments of her laborious
days--was bitterly brought to mind for a moment. That she, of all the
women in the world--that _she_ should be contemplating matrimony anew!
She gave a light laugh that had in it so little mirth, was so little
apposite to ridicule, that he did not feel it a fleer.
"You did not mean it, then?"
"Not for one moment."
"You did not have me in mind?"
"No--no--never at all!"
"Leonora--Mrs. Gwynn--this is like death to me--I--I--"
"I am very sorry--"
"I do not reproach you," he interrupted. "It is my own folly, my own
fault! But I have lived on this hope; it is all the life I have. You do
not withdraw it utterly? May I not think that in time--"
"No--no--I have no intention of ever marrying again. I--I--was
not--not--happy."
"But I am different--" he hesitated. He could not exactly find words to
protest his conviction of his superiority to her husband, a man she had
loved once. "I mean--we are congenial. I am very considerably older; I
am nearly thirty-one. My views in life are fixed, definite; my
occupation is settled. Might not--"
"I am sorry, Captain Baynell; I would not willingly add to the
unhappiness, real or imaginary, of any one--but all this is worse than
useless. I must ask you not to recur to the subject. And now I must
leave you, for the 'ladies' are going to bed, and I must hear them say
their prayers."
He seemed about to detain her with further protestations, then desisted,
evidently with a hopeless realization of futility.
"Ask them to remember me in their petitions," he only said with a dreary
sort of smile.
He had always seemed to love the "ladies" fraternally, with lenient
admiration, and she liked this tender little domestic trait in the midst
of his unyielding gravity and inexorable stiffness. She hesitated in the
moonlight with some stir of genuine sympathy, and held out her hand as
she passed. He caught it and covered it with kisses. She drew it hastily
from him, and Baynell was left alone on the balcony; the scene before
him, the vernal glamours of the moon, the umbrageous trees, the sweet
spring flowers, the sheen of the river, the bivouacs of the hills, the
fort on the height,--these things seemed unrealities and mere shadows as
he faced the fragments of that nullity, his broken dream, the only
positive actuality in all his life.
CHAPTER IX
That night, so long his step went to and fro in his room as he paced the
floor, for he could not sleep and he could not be still, that the Rebel,
hidden in the attic, was visited by grave monitions concerning his
neighbor and did not venture out to roam the stairways and halls and the
unoccupied precincts of the ground floor as he was wont to do.
"'The son of Belial' has something on his mind, to a certainty, and I
hope to the powers 'tisn't me," Julius said now and again, as he
listened. He had sat long in his rickety arm-chair in the broad slant of
the moonlight, that fell athwart the dim furniture and the gray shadows,
for the night continued fair and the moon was specially brilliant. Once
in the clear glow he saw distinctly in the further spaces the figure of
a man, watchful-eyed, eager, springing toward him as he moved, and he
experienced the cold chill of despair before he realized that it was his
own reflection in a dull mirror at the opposite side of the great room
that had elicited this apparition of terror. He took himself quickly out
of the range of its reflection.
"Two Johnny Rebs are a crowd in this garret! I have just about room
enough for myself. I'm not recruiting."
He crept silently to the bed and lay down at full length, all dressed
and booted as he was, his hands clasped under his head, with the
moonlight in his eyes and illuminating his sleepless pillow, still
listening to the regular step marching to and fro in the room below.
Julius did not court slumber.
"I must keep the watch with you, my fine fellow," he said resolutely.
Though there was a strong coercion to wakefulness in the propinquity of
that spirit of unrest which possessed his enemy so close at hand, his
eyes once grew heavy-lidded and opened with a sudden start as, half
dreaming, he fancied a stealthy approach. He sprang from the recumbent
posture, and the floor creaked under the abrupt movement. This gave him
pause, and he slowly collected his faculties. Surely the stranger would
hardly venture, even under the relentless scourge of his own wakeful
thoughts, to roam about the house in search of peace or the surcease of
mental tyranny that change might effect. This might savor of disrespect
to his host, yet Julius canvassed the suggestion. These were untoward
times, and strange people were queerly mannered. The officer must have
learned in the length of his residence here that the great vacant attic
was untenanted wholly, and of course he knew that the ground floor was
altogether unoccupied by night. He might descend and light the library
lamp and read. He might indeed roam the deserted rooms with the same
sort of satisfaction that Julius himself had already felt in the great
spaces, the absolute quiet, the still moonlight, the long abeyance of
day with its procrastination of the sordid problems and the toilsome
business of life. If he had chanced to meet the Rebel on the stairs, he
would scarcely have thought the apparition a spectral manifestation, as
the poor little twins had construed the encounter in the library, for
old Janus, trembling and terrified, had detailed the significance of the
scene in the dining room afterward, and the eagerness of Julius to get
away, to be off, had been redoubled. Daily he had hoped for news of the
approach of the picket-lines, and daily the old servant wrung his hands
and made his report, of which the burden was, "Wuss an' wuss!"--or
detailed a "scrimmage" in which "dem scand'lous Rebs had run like
tuckies, an' deir line is furder off dan it eber was afore!"
The Confederate officer, nevertheless, had hitherto felt a degree of
safety in the attic and had the resources of a manly patience to await
the event. This nocturnal eccentricity on the part of the guest of the
house, however, roused new forebodings. It bore in its own conditions
the inception of added danger. It was unprecedented. It marked a
turbulent restlessness and the element of change. In the evidently
agitated state of the stranger's nerves, some trifle, the scamper of a
rat, the dislodgment of the rickety old cornice of this bedstead, the
fall of one of the girandoles, teetering over there on a chest of
drawers, might rouse him with its clamor and justify the ascent of the
attic stairs to investigate its source. These were troublous times.
There were stories forever afloat of lawless marauders. Smoke-houses
were broken into and pillaged. Mansions were robbed and fired, and their
tenants, chiefly women and children, fleeing into the cornfields to
hide, watched the roof-tree flare. It was hard for the authorities to
find and fix the responsibility for these dread deeds in remote
inaccessible spots, and it would be culpable neglect for this Federal
officer to tolerate the suggestion of an ill-omened noise or an
unaccustomed presence without seeking out its cause. Evidently any
accident would bring him upstairs. It was equally obvious that the
garret was no place to sleep to-night! Julius, as he lay on the pillow,
could hardly rid himself of the idea of approach. Ever and anon he
looked for the stealthy shadow of which he had dreamed, climbing in the
moonbeams along the balusters of the stairway. Finally he stole silently
out of the reach of the moonlight to a darker corner of the room,--the
deep recess of one of the windows which the shadow of a great branch of
the white pine made duskier still. The tall tree, with its full,
sempervirent boughs, showed the varying nocturnal tints that color may
compass, uninformed by the sun,--the cool suggestion of a fair dull
green where the moonbeams glistered, the fibrous leaves tipped with a
dim sparkle; the deep umbrageous verdure where the darkness lurked and
yet did not annul the vestige of tone. As he reclined on the
window-seat, he discerned farther down a faint flare of artificial
light. It described a regularly barred square amidst the pine needles,
and he presently recognized it as the light from the window of Captain
Baynell's room. Now and again it flickered in a way that told how the
disregarded candle was beginning to gutter in the socket. Still to and
fro the regular footfalls went, muffled on the heavy carpet, but in the
dead hush of night perceptible enough to the watching listener. At last
with a final flare the taper burned out, but the moon was in the windows
along the western side of the house, and still to and fro went the
steps, betokening the turmoil of unquiet thoughts. Julius watched how
the moonbeams shifted from bough to bough as the slow night lingered. He
heard the bells from the city towers mark the hour and the recurrent
echo from the rocky banks of the river: then one far away, belated,
faint, scarcely perceived, beat out the tally of the time on some remote
cliff. Once more the air fell silent save for the jubilee of the
mocking-birds, for spring had come, and skies were fair, and the
gossamer moon was a-swing in the night, and love, and life, and home
were dear, and the incredibly sweet, brilliant delight of song arose in
pæans of joy and faith. Even this waned after a time. A wind with the
thrills of dawn in its wings sprang up, and Julius shivered with the
chill. The dew was cold and thick in the pines, and the sward glittered
like a sheet of water.
At last all was quiet and silent in the room below. Julius listened
intently. No creak of opening door; no footfall on the stair. Now, he
told himself, was the moment of danger, when he could no longer be
assured of the man's movements, and could not even guess at his
intentions. He listened--still--still to silence. Silence absolute,
null.
A bird stirred with a half-awakened chirp. The sky showed a clearer
tone, a vague blue, growing ever more definite. In the stillness, with
an elastic, leaping sound, strong and sweet, the call of a bugle rang
out suddenly from the fort on the heights, and, behold, with a flash of
red on the water, and a flare of gold in the sky, the sweet spring day
was early here.
It came glowing on with all the graces and soft splendors of the season
as if it bore, too, none of the prosaic recall to the labors and sordid
routine and unavailing troubles and vexations of the workaday world. The
camps were alive, the drums were beating, and all the echoes of the
hills gave voice to martial summons. The flag was floating anew from the
heights of the fort in the fresh and fragrant sunshine, and now and
again a bar or two of the music of a military band in the distance came
on the wind. The clatter of wagon wheels was audible from the stony
streets of the little city. The shriek of a locomotive split the air as
an incoming train whizzed across the bridge. The river craft steamed and
puffed, and blockaded the landing, now backing water and now forging
forward, remonstrating with bells and whistles in strenuous dialogue.
It was a day like yesterday, yet to Baynell all the world had changed.
No day could ever be the same. Life itself was made up of depreciated
values. The blow had fallen so heavily, so suddenly, so conclusively.
All, all was dead! It was much with a sense of decorous observance, of
reverential respect, that he made haste to bury his slain hopes, his
foolish dream, his ardent expectations out of sight, never to rise
again. It was unwise to linger here, but not because of his own
interest, he said to himself. It would not unfit him for his duty. This
was all that was left to him. His feeling for this had never swerved. It
was unaffected--all apart from what had come and gone. But his presence
could but be distasteful to her. And any moment might reveal his state
of feeling to others--to Judge Roscoe, who would resent it if it should
suggest an unwelcome urgency. And the neighbors--he had not been
unnoting of the glances of surprise that had already greeted that
radiant figure in white and red yesterday. While he winced a little
from the realization that his sudden departure would illustrate the sad
plight of a love-lorn suitor, disregarded and cast aside,--for he had a
thousand keen susceptibilities to pride,--and he would fain the tongues
of gossips should forbear this sacred theme, it were best that he should
go, and that shortly.
When he appeared at the breakfast-table, pale and a trifle haggard, he
gave no other token of his long vigil and the radical change that he had
suffered in his life and prospects. He was a man of theory. He valued
his self-respect. He insisted on his self-control. He had exerted all
his capacities, summoned all the resources of his courage; and this was
the more needed because of the unconventional, informal footing on which
he stood with the family. To say farewell and ride away might seem easy
enough, but this was like quitting a home with affectionate domestic
claims. When he said that he thought he must return to camp to-day, the
twin "ladies" laid down knife and fork to enter their protest. They
lifted their voices in plaintive entreaty, and the deaf-mute looked at
Baynell with limpid eyes and a quivering lip. But Uncle Ephraim,
bringing in the waffles, had a vague suggestion of "It's time, too," in
the wag of his head. Judge Roscoe doubtless experienced a vivid
realization of the advantage to accrue to the young soldier in the
attic, whose security in his hiding-place was so endangered by the
presence of the Federal officer, for he was very guarded even in his
first cordial phrases, and thenceforward said no more than policy
required. The twin "ladies," however, continued to loudly urge that the
captain might find lizards in his cot; and asked if his tent had a
floor; and warned him that frogs were everywhere now. "Tree-toads,
o-o-oh! with injer-rubber feet," cried Geraldine, shudderingly, "that
blow out and climb!"
"And you'll have _no_ little girl to put a lump of sugar in your
after-dinner coffee, Captain," said Adelaide, impressing the merits of
her methods.
"And no little girl to bring you a lighted taper for your cigar," chimed
in Geraldine.
"It's _my_ turn to-day, Ger'ldine," cried the enterprising Adelaide,
springing from her chair to monopolize the precious privilege.
"No--no! mine--_mine_! You had it yesterday!" cried Geraldine, racing
after her out of the room.
"'Twas day before!" protested Adelaide's voice far up the hallway.
"You had better get your cigar-case ready, to bestow the boon on the
first comer," suggested Mrs. Gwynn. She had entirely recovered her
equanimity, as he perceived. The state of his unsought affections was
naught to her. The wreck of his heart--she had known wrecked hearts for
a more bitter cause! Doubtless she thought the pain transitory in his
case; already its contemplation seemed to have passed from her mind
like a tale that is told. She was sedately suave as always, barely
attentive, preoccupied, her usual manner, so incongruous with her youth
and beauty, so at variance with her attire from the old wardrobe of
by-gone days,--the fresh white lawn, flecked with light blue, the
ruffles finished with "footing," and with a bobinet scarf about her
throat, wherein was thrust a pin of a single rose carved in coral. She
was like some dainty maiden, no refugee from the world, sad and widowed.
She led the way to the library, partly to see that the "ladies" did not
set themselves aflame as their short skirts flickered about the small
dully burning fire, still lighted night and morning against the chill of
the crisp vernal air. They were, indeed, leaping back and forth over the
fender with some temerity, and Baynell, seating himself by the table,
his cigar between his teeth, thought it best to dispose of both the
lighted spills by not drawing at all till both were alternately offered
and the extinction of each secured. Then, as the "ladies" flew back to
the dining room and out to the parterre, having volunteered to gather
the rest of the flowers for the vases, Leonora and Baynell were left for
the time together.
It gratified him to perceive that she did not fear the introduction of
the subject anew. She experienced not even a momentary embarrassment.
She understood him so well, and the plane of his emotion.
The early morning sunshine was in the cheerful library windows; a
mocking-bird on a vine outside swayed so close, as he sang, that his
shadow continually flickered over the sill; the flowers were all freshly
abloom, and Mrs. Gwynn was standing on the opposite side of the table,
her hands full of the spring blossoms that lay already on a tray,
preparing to fill the great blue and white Wedgwood bowl.
Baynell, commenting on the splendor of the tulips as he smoked his
cigar, spoke of the craze for speculation in the bulb that had existed
in Holland, and said he had once seen an old book of illustrations of
famous prize-takers, with fabulous prices; he had always wondered how
they compared with the results of modern culture and the infinite
variety to which the bloom had been brought, and he had often wished to
see the book again.
"Why, we have that!" exclaimed Mrs. Gwynn, pausing with her hands full
of the gold variety "flamed" with scarlet. She glanced uncertainly
toward the bookshelves, then suddenly remembering--"Oh, I know now where
it is;--in the old bookcase upstairs, at the head of the third flight. I
will call one of the ladies to go for it."
Baynell rose, his lighted cigar between his lips. "Don't trouble them;
let me go!"
Julius heard the swift step of a young man on the stair. He knew that
the crucial moment had come. And yet for the sake of the safety of his
father, who had concealed him here, he dared not defend himself with his
pistols. He had not a moment for flight or to seek a hiding-place. He
could only nerve his powers to meet the crisis as best he might.
Baynell, taken wholly by surprise, felt his senses reel when, like the
grotesque inconsequence of a dream, a man in the uniform of a
Confederate officer in the quiet, peaceful house confronted him at the
head of the flight.
"You are my prisoner!" Baynell mechanically gasped, clutching Julius
with one hand and drawing his pistol with the other. "You are my
prisoner!"
"In a horn!" retorted Julius, delivering his enemy a blow between the
eyes which flung Baynell, stunned and bleeding, down the flight to the
landing, while the boy went by him like a flash.
That swift fiery figure, with its gray regimentals and its brass and
steel glitter, covered with blood, passed Leonora like some gory
apparition as she stood in the library door, amazed, pallid, breathless,
summoned by the sound of loud voices and the reverberating clamors of
the collision on the stairs. Julius dashed through the drawing-rooms,
opened the window on the western balcony, sprang over the rail, and
disappeared swiftly among the low boughs of the row of evergreen shrubs
planted there in old times as a wind-break, and stretching along the
crest of the hill.
And placidly in the sunshine the sentry paced his beat before the south
portico, the reaches of the drive in sight, the appropriate entrance of
the place, all unconscious of aught amiss, seeing nothing, hearing
nothing,--till suddenly, with an effect of confusion, like the
distortions of a delirium, he was aware that the grove was full of
Federal soldiers, chiefly from the infantry regiment camped in the
orchard to the west,--soldiers in wild disorder, hatless, shoeless,
coatless, many of them,--all armed, all howling with an unexplained
excitement, racing frantically hither and thither, bushwhacking with
their rifles every bough in their reach. And now they came at full run,
still howling and wild, toward the house.
"Halt!" cried the sentry. "Halt!"
The advance came surging on, regardless.
"Halt, or I fire!" once more the guard warned the onset. And he levelled
his weapon.
They clamored out words at him, all madly intermingled, all
unintelligible, approaching still at full run.
Perhaps the sentinel had some excusable regard for his own safety, for
in the unexplained excitement that possessed them, they were less
soldiery than a frantic mob. He had warrant enough to fire into the
midst of the crowd. But it seemed that he might in a moment have been
torn limb from limb. He interpreted his duty on the side of caution. He
cocked his weapon, fired into the air, and called lustily upon the
"Corporal of the guard." The mass surged into the house, some by the
front door, some by the open library window, others scaled the balcony
and pressed through the drawing-rooms and into the hall.
The terrified children clung to the skirt of Mrs. Gwynn's dress, as
amazed and bewildered she stood in the wide long hall, by the great
carved newel of the stairs, while with frantic interrogatories--"Where
is he? Where is he? Who is he?"--the intruders searched every nook and
cranny of the lower floor. Destruction, the inadvertent incident of
haste, or the concomitant of clumsy accoutrements, seemed to attend
their steps. Now sounded the shiver of glass as a soldier burst through
one of the long French windows of the dining room. A trooper caught his
huge cavalry spurs in the meshes of a lace curtain in one of the parlors
and brought down cornice, lambrequin, and all with a crash. The crystal
shades of the hall chandelier were not proof against a bayonet, held
unduly aloft at the posture of Shoulder Arms. A tussle for precedence
knocked a weighty marble statue, half life-size, out of the niche at the
turn of the staircase. These casualties and the attendant noise, the
heavy tramp of booted feet, the raucous sonority of their voices as they
called suggestions to each other, all intensified the terror, the
tumult of their uncontrolled and turbulent presence.
As a score raced up the stairs a sudden hush fell upon the rout. Those
still below apprehended developments of moment and pressed to the scene.
The foremost had encountered Judge Roscoe and old Ephraim bearing down
to the second story the prostrate body of Captain Baynell, all dripping
with blood, while the floor of the stairs to the attic showed the stains
of the fall.
The unexpected spectacle stayed the tumult for a moment. Then as a
hoarse murmur rose, Judge Roscoe turned toward the foremost standing at
the foot of the attic flight.
"Lend a hand here," he said with a calm, steady voice. Then, looking
over the balustrade to those below, "Has the surgeon come?"
The question went from one to another--"Has the surgeon come?" to those
that filled the halls and made sudden excursions to and fro in the
adjoining rooms as suspicion of hiding-places occurred to them; to
others that gorged the main staircase, packed close at its head, with
necks craning forward, and ears and eyes intent to hear and see what had
chanced.
By this time officers were in the house and the unwelcome voice of
command curtailed the activities of the mob and reduced it speedily to
the aspect of soldiery. The voice of command had irate intonations, and
one or two of the younger officers showed a disposition to lay about
with the flat of their swords, as a "wand of authority" indeed, but,
apparently inadvertently, dealing blows that had tingling intimations.
They cleared the mansion quickly, the unruly manifestation serving to
minimize its provocation.
To Judge Roscoe's infinite relief the officers were disposed to regard
the disturbance as one of those inexplicable attacks of folly which
sometimes lay hold on a mass of men, but which would be incapable of
affecting them as individuals. For a search-party organized on a strict
military principle had carefully ransacked every portion of the house
and cellar and also the attic,--where no traces betrayed recent
habitation,--examined all the vineyard, hedges, shrubbery, and even the
boughs of the great trees, and invaded the stable, barn, crib,
ice-house, poultry yards, dairy, kennel, dove-cote, the miscellaneous
outbuildings, sties and byres, all empty, devoid even of the usual
domestic animals--absolutely with no result. No Confederate fugitive,
covered with blood or in any other plight, was found, and in the
thrice-guarded camps that surrounded the place escape seemed impossible.
The ranking officer who ordered the search naturally believed that the
sudden conviction of the presence of a Confederate soldier in the house
was a sheer delusion, promulgated and distorted by rumor. Some story of
Captain Baynell's fall and wound, caught possibly from the messenger
sent to fetch the surgeon, had been misunderstood. This he considered
was the only reasonable explanation. No one, he argued, could have
escaped under the circumstances. No Rebel was in the house or in the
grounds. It was impossible for a man to have fled except into the midst
of the camps.
Notwithstanding the conviction thus reached, special precautionary
measures were taken. New sentries were stationed on the rear and west of
the house as well as in front. These posts were to be visited by a
sergeant with a patrol, twice during the night. If any Rebel had
contrived to escape from the place, he would find it difficult indeed to
reënter it. These duties concluded, the officer dismissed the whole
matter as a canard or one of the inexplicable manifestations of human
folly, and departed, leaving quiet descending upon the distracted scene.
It was the cook, Aunt Chaney, who had been sent at full speed for the
surgeon. She had vaguely understood from old Ephraim's aspect and
frantic mandate that something terrifying had befallen the household,
and she did not realize until afterward the sacrifice of dignity her
aspect must have presented as she ran, fatly waddling, over the hill,
across the commons, and then up a path to a hospital on an eminence
overlooking the town, formerly a Medical College. She was bonnetless,
limping actively, for one of her large, loose slippers had gone, and
gone forever. Its loss destroyed the equipoise of her gait; her unshod
foot was pierced with stones and chilled with the damp ground; her
sleeves were rolled up, her arms held out at a bandy angle, for her
fingers were dripping with cake-batter, and she did not have sufficient
composure to wring them free till she was following the surgeon home.
The condition of the messenger intimated the seriousness of the call,
and the surgeon hardly waited to hear more than the wild appeal--"Come
at once! Captain Baynell has killed his-self--Heabenly Friend! I wish he
could hev' tuk enny other premises ter hev' c'mitted the deed." As she
toiled along behind the surgeon, "Oh, my Lawd an' King!" she panted at
intervals.
Baynell remained unconscious for some time. When at length he came to
himself he was lying quietly in the great, commodious bedroom that he
had of late occupied in the storm centre, the green Venetian blinds half
closed, the afternoon sunlight softly flecking the carpet, the air of
high decorum and gentle nurture which so characterized the place
peculiarly in evidence, and old Ephraim noiselessly flitting about with
a palm-leaf fan in his hand, ready to annihilate any vagrant fly with
enough temerity to appear.
"Ye los' yer balance, sah, an' fell down de steers," he unctuously
explained.
"I know--I remember that--but who--where is that Rebel officer?"
"I reckon ye mus' hev' drempt about him, Cap'n," the "double-faced
Janus" responded casually, with the superior air of humoring a delusion.
"Ye been talkin' 'bout him afore whenst ye wuz deelerious. But dar ain't
none ob dem miser'ble slave-drivers round dese diggin's now'-days,
praise de Lawd! Freedom come wid de Union army."
This assurance convinced the Federal officer. The old servant's interest
was so obviously with the invading force that his motive was not open to
question. Moreover, it was not the first time that Baynell had dreamed
of the Confederate officer, the erstwhile lover of Leonora Gwynn, whose
splendid portrait hung on the wall, and whom she often mentioned with
interest.
When the surgeon next called he expressed to his patient great surprise:
"It is very natural that in your state of convalescence you should grow
dizzy and fall; but I can't for my life understand how you contrived to
get such a blow from the edge of a step. It has all the style about it
of a hit straight from the shoulder of an expert boxer. Uncle Ephraim
doesn't happen to be something of a pugilist, now?" he added jocosely,
smiling and glancing at the old negro.
"I don't happen to be nuffin, sah, dat ain't perlite," grinned the
amenable "Janus."
"Your friends downstairs seemed frightened out of their wits,
Baynell,--lest your wound should be imputed to them, I suppose," the
surgeon said openly, for he did not consider the presence of the
ex-slave.
"Yes, sah!" put in Uncle Ephraim, "eider me or Marster, or de widder
'oman, or de ladies air sure bound ter hev' knocked him up dat way, kase
'twould take a puffick reel-foot man ter fall downstairs dat fashion.
Yah! Yah!"
It did not occur to Baynell to doubt this statement, and not one word
did he say to the surgeon of his dream of the presence of the
Confederate officer. He made no effort to account for the disaster,
merely lending himself to the surgeon's view that he had grown suddenly
dizzy and the stairs were steep in the third flight.
This gave the surgeon a disquieting sense of suspicion some time
afterward. When returning from his tour of duty at the hospital he was
again in the camp, he heard there the amazing rumor among the soldiers
that a Confederate officer, covered with blood, had been seen to issue
from the Roscoe house and with lightning-like speed disappear among the
shrubbery. He wondered that Baynell should not have mentioned the
commotion, forgetting that as he was unconscious he might be still
unaware of the fact.
Dr. Grindley was not of a designing nature; but he was consciously
experimenting when he said, rather banteringly, on his next visit, "How
about the notion that there was a Confederate officer concealed in this
house?"
Baynell looked annoyed. He had heard as yet not an allusion to the raid
upon the house during the period of his insensibility, and he did not
know that the presence of a Confederate officer had even been rumored.
He supposed that the doctor referred to the chance question he had asked
Uncle Ephraim, and he deprecated the fact that the old man should have
heedlessly repeated this. The dream of the altercation, as he fancied
the recollection, was still vague in his mind, and with that quality of
unreality and so blended with other visions of his delirium and fever
that he in naught doubted its tenuous state as a figment of a disordered
brain.
"There was no Rebel," he said somewhat gruffly.
"That was all merely the love of sensation?" asked the surgeon.
"Of course," Baynell assented, and fell silent.
This had been the conclusion among the officers of the surrounding camp,
and it was not surprising to the surgeon that Baynell should share it,
but there was a consciousness, a mortification, in his manner, that
implied a personal interest and forced the question to be dropped. The
surgeon had no wish to press it, and moreover he was anxious to avoid
exciting the patient. He had some doubt as to the result of the fall; he
was meditating seriously on symptoms which indicated that the skull had
sustained a fracture. But when he remarked that all might be well if
Captain Baynell remained quiet and stirred as little as possible, he was
surprised and dismayed by the vehemence with which the patient declared
that he must move; he must leave the house; he could not, he would not
stay under this roof another night, not even an hour longer. He
requested the surgeon to make arrangements to attend him elsewhere, and
rang the bell to send a message to camp directing his servant to come
and get his personal effects. Only a sleeping-potion could restrain this
determination at the time, and the next day a return of the fever and
delirium solved the surgeon's problem how to bend the will of the
refractory patient to the demands of his own best interests.
Uncle Ephraim found some difficulty in sustaining with composure the
disasters and excitement and fears that crowded in upon him. He must
play his part with requisite spirit when in presence of the public, and
he must suffer in silence and alone. He dared not seek to confer apart
with his master as to the next step, lest he rouse suspicion that they
had some secret understanding, and had indeed harbored the enemy. He
dared not confide his troubles even to his wife, Aunt Chaney, although
he yearned for sympathy, for reassurance. The old cook, however, had not
been admitted to any detail of the secret presence of Julius in the
house. For aught she knew, even now, he was five hundred miles away.
The perversity of the falling out of events dismayed and daunted old
Ephraim. Only that morning--the morning of that momentous day--Captain
Baynell had announced at the table the termination of his visit.
"An' it wuz time, too. 'Fore de Lawd, it wuz surely time," the old
servant grumbled, in surly retrospect. For had the officer but taken his
leave and his cigar together, how different it might all have been!
"Marse Julius mought hev' seen Miss Leonora, an' mebbe de ladies, an'
come down inter de house an' smoked a _see_gar wid his Pa. Lawdy, massy!
wid de curtains drawed, an' de blinds down. Dat's whut he honed for! Oh,
'fore Gawd, I dunno whar dat baby-chile--dat pore leetle Julius--is
now!"
His face caught a fleeting grimace to remember the height of the
"baby-chile,"--but as helpless, as forlorn, as some tiny waif, and oh,
so terribly threatened in this beleaguered, in this thrice-guarded,
town!
When at last he was dismissed from his station in the sick room by the
sinking of Baynell into slumber under the influence of the sedative
administered by the surgeon, old Ephraim, succumbing both in physique
and in spirit, even in gait, stumbled downstairs and took his way into
the kitchen to find some talk of trifles, some stir of the familiar
duties, that might enable him to be rid of his unquiet thoughts, of his
dread prognostications, of his sheer terror of the future. He sunk into
a wooden chair beside the stove, for the cooking of supper was already
under way. He was feeling very old and weary. His countenance seemed to
have collapsed in some sort, so did his usual expression of brisk
satisfaction and dapper respectfulness and reserve of intelligence prop
and sustain its contours. Its bony structure now seemed withdrawn. It
was a sort of dilapidated mask of desolation. He drew a long sigh. And
then he said:--
"Dis is a tur'ble, tur'ble world, mon!"
"Dis world is a long sight better dan de nex' world for _you_!" said his
wife, rancorously prophetic. "You hear _me_!"
The imperious Chaney had not collapsed. Her "head-handkercher" was
bestowed in a turban that had two high standing ends like tufts of
feathers above her black, resolute face. Her black eyes snapped as she
looked beyond him, not at him. She was stepping about, stoutly, firmly,
audibly, in her Sunday shoes, for no amount of mourning materialized the
lost slip-shod _chaussure_--pressed deep in the mud of the highway by
wagon-wheels and the uninformed hoof of an unimaginative army mule.
Uncle Ephraim gazed up in growing anxiety, not to say fright, for Aunt
Chaney's mood was not suave. She suddenly paused on the other side of
the stove, and, gesticulating across it with a long spoon, demanded:
"You--ole--_dee_stracted--cawnfield--hand! What fur did you send _me_
fur de doctor-man?"
"Whut you go fur, den?"
Aunt Chaney reflected on her appearance on the highway, in her old
homespun dress, "coat," as she called it, one slipper, no bonnet, the
cake-dough dripping from her hands. She remembered that some wagoners of
a forage train, struck by her agitated aspect, had looked back to laugh
from their high perches among the hay and fodder; she remembered that
some little imp-like boys had twitted her, calling after her in their
high, callow chirp, and sorry was she that she had not left all to chase
them--to chase them till they died of fright! She--_she_ who was
accustomed to flaunt in a "changeable" silk, and her bonnet had an
ostrich plume! She wore a bracelet, too, on grand occasions, and this
was gold, solid and heavy, fine and engraved, for "Miss Leonora" herself
had it bought in New Orleans expressly for her, after she had discovered
and unaided extinguished a midnight fire. Not that old Chaney would have
wasted all this splendor on the errand for the doctor. If she had
thought but for a moment, she would have garbed herself as now, as she
did instantly on her return home, to save her self-respect,--in a purple
calico and a clean, white, domestic apron, with her respected and
respectable green-and-white checked sun-bonnet, all laundered, as ever,
to absolute perfection. Her haste had destroyed her judgment.
"Whyn't ye tole me dat de man hed jes' fell downsteers,--when ye come
out yere, howlin' lak a painter wid a misery in his jaw. I 'lowed de
Yankee had deestroyed his-self on dese yere premises."
"So did I! So did I! He bled--and _bled_!" Old Ephraim paused, his face
fallen. The association of ideas brought by the mention of blood was
uncanny.
"What ailed de man dat he hatter fall downsteers?"
"I dunno." The denial was pat.
"Whut's he come down here fightin' in the War without he's able ter keep
from fallin' downsteers? De Roscoes kin stan' up! I'll say dat fur 'em."
"Dey kin dat," replied the "double-faced Janus" admiringly, thinking of
Julius.
"How long he gwine stay?"
"'Twell he git well, I reckon."
"Den _I_ say dis ain't no house nor home. Dis is horspital Number
Forty--dat's whut. Marse Gerald Roscoe ain't got no more sense 'n a
good-sized chicken, dough he _is_ a jedge, ter hev' dat man yere fur
Miss Leonora ter keer fur, an' take ter marryin' agin 'fore her old
sweetheart, Julius Roscoe, kin git home. 'Fore de Lawd, I stood it ez
long ez dere seemed enny end to it, but now--" she banged her pots, and
pans, and kettles about with virulence.
"Marse Julius," she continued, "_he's_ de man fur Leonora Roscoe,--_I_
ain't gwine call her 'Gwynn,'--Marse Julius is good-hearted and
free-handed; I knowed him from a baby, an' he wuz a big one! I always
knowed he war in love wid her ever since dat Christmas up at the Devrett
place, when he an' some o' dem limber-jack Devrett boys got inter de
wall or inter de groun'--I dunno whar--an' sung right inter de company's
ear, powerful mysterious,--skeered 'em all! Marse Julius, he tuk his
guitar an' sung,--'Oh, my love's like a red, red rose!' An' she looked
lak one while she listened, fur she knowed his voice. I wuz peekin' in
at de company at de winder--Lawd--Lawd! I 'lowed _dat_ would be a
match--but yere come along dat Gwynn feller!"
A sudden white flare of burning lard spread over the red-hot stove, for
Uncle Ephraim had sprung up so abruptly as to strike the long handle of
the skillet and overturn the utensil.
"Ain't ye got no mo' use of yer haid 'n ter go buttin' 'roun' de
kitchen, lak a ole deestracted Billy-goat, lak you is!" Aunt Chaney
demanded.
As the smoke circled about she snatched up the skillet with its flaming
contents.
"Git out my kitchen, else I'll scald de grizzled woolly soul out'n you!"
"Bress de Lawd, 'oman, _I_ ain't wantin' ter stay in yer kitchen," said
Uncle Ephraim, suddenly spry and saucy and brisk,--a trifle more brisk,
indeed, accelerating his pace toward the door, as she took two or three
long, agile, elastic steps toward him.
"I got other feesh ter fry!" he chuckled to himself.
For the blazing lard but typified a certain illumination in old
Ephraim's mind.
CHAPTER X
It was a clear, gusty night when he emerged on the lawn at the side
entrance of the house. For two hours with the faint and freakish light
of candle ends he had been rummaging over old chests and boxes in the
attic. The aspect of the desolate, deserted place that had held his
young master, a tenant dear to his loyal heart, wrung from him a sigh.
Sometimes he dropped his hands, lifted himself from his crouching
attitude to a kneeling posture, looked wistfully about the dreary, dusty
silence, shook his head sorrowfully to and fro, and then once more
addressed himself to his search. When he began to find the various
articles he desired, he grew tremulous, agitated. His breath was fast,
and now and again he must needs check himself in his disposition to
fluent soliloquy lest some one overhear in his sonorous voice such
significant words as would reveal his intention. When these seizures
supervened, he became anxious concerning the possible betrayal of his
enterprise by the feeble light cast from the windows, and ever and anon
he screened the bit of candle behind a trunk or some massive piece of
furniture. He knew that the house was a marked spot; the events of the
day had rendered the locality of special and suspicious interest to all
the camps in the vicinity. Many an eye was turned thither, he was aware,
as the evening drew on, and in fact he hardly dared to light the tiny
tapers till he had heard tattoo sound and taps beat. The tents were lost
in darkness and slumber, but there were the camp and quarter guards, and
soon would come the patrol and grand rounds. The sentries about the
house gave him less anxiety.
"They be 'bleeged to know we-all keep some of our stuff in the
garrit--mought be huntin' fur suthin' fur dat ar Yankee man's nicked
haid. But _I ain't_!" he soliloquized.
When at last he had found all he desired, he extinguished the light and
quietly waited. Thus in the darkness the place was even more grewsome
with its associations of concealment and flight, the imminence of his
young master's capture and violent death. He heard his heart plunge at
every stir of the wind, every clash of the boughs, and he muttered: "Dat
pore chile wuz denied a light. His Pa p'intedly wouldn't 'low him a
candle, fur fear folks would spy it out. An' here he set an' waited in
de ever-lastin' night!"
Old Ephraim suffered here in the dark from a terror which had loosed its
hold on his young master long ago,--the fear of the supernatural. Ghosts
of many types, "ha'nts," headless horrors, spectral sounds from the
other world, direful prognostications of signs, all in grisly procession
passed and repassed and crowded the garret to suffocation. It would be
impossible to imagine what the old gray-headed negro saw and heard as he
crouched on the dusty floor, and listened to the rout of the wind in the
trees, and watched the eerie aspect of the old furniture, itself
associated with the long-gone dead, as the moon and the gust-driven
shadowy clouds flickered and faded and flickered and faded across the
dim spaces. When suddenly a shrill sound pierced the ghostly solitude,
he fell prone in complete surrender on the floor, terrified, his nerves
almost shattered. An inarticulate scream came again and again, and then
a low chuckling chatter. A screech-owl, a tiny thing, had alighted on
the window-sill, and hearing the stir, turned its head without shifting
its body, its great round eyes encountering the reproachful rolling
stare of old Ephraim as he tremulously gathered himself from the floor.
Taking a package under his arm under the long coat he wore, he at last
went noiselessly and swiftly down the stairs.
He looked out heedfully for Judge Roscoe, whom he did not wish to
encounter.
"Marster hes been a jedge, an' dey say he hes set on de bench--dough I
dunno whut fur dat's so oncommon, fur mos' ennybody kin set on a bench!
He's sot in his own cushioned arm-chair in de lawbrary whut kin lean
backwards on a spring, and recline his foots upwards, an' dat's a deal
ch'icer dan enny bench I knows on! But he's been a jedge, an' he's got
book-larnin', but somehow I 'low he ain't tricky enough ter be up ter
_dis_ kink. I ain't gwine ter let him know nuffin'."
When fairly out of the house all suggestion of secrecy and caution
vanished. The old darkey flung his feet on the stone steps with a noisy
impact, and before he reached the pavement, he had burst into song,
marking the time with an emphatic rhythm--a wide blare of melody with a
great baritone voice, that sounded far down the bosky recesses of the
grove, all dappled with shadow and sheen.
"Rise an' shine, _children_!
Rise an' _shine_, children!
Rise an' shine, _children_!
De angels bid me ter come along!
O-h-h, I want ter go ter heaben when I die--"
He broke off suddenly. He did not wait to be challenged by the sentry as
he turned, but greeted him with a sort of plaintive humility and a
mendicant's confiding manner.
"Marse Soldier, could ye gimme a chaw of terbacker, please, sir?"
The soldier would not have allowed even one of his own officers to pass
from the house or enter it without the countersign, but he was thrown
off his guard by this personal appeal; and although he could not comply
with the request, not being given to the bad habit of "chawin'
terbacker," he shifted his weapon from hand to hand while he rummaged
his pockets for "fine-cut" for the pipe of old Ephraim--the fraud, who
was amply supplied.
"Neb mind--neb mind," the old man said deprecatingly. "Thanky, sah,
thanky! Dere's anodder soldier round de front po'ch--mebbe he's got a
chaw!"
And this sentinel, having listened to the colloquy with his comrade, as
well as distance would permit, adopted his friendly tactics and was able
to produce the requisite "chaw." He naturally supposed the countersign
had been demanded and given at the door whence the servant of the house
emerged, for after unctuous and profuse thanks old Ephraim swung off
down the hill with another great gush of song--"I want ter go ter heaben
when I die--" echoing far over the grove and the silent camps beyond.
Listening to the resounding progress of his departure the first sentry
thought of course that in letting him pass his comrade had taken the
countersign. It was only a vague thought, however, cast after him. "That
old night-hawk is bound for the river, I guess, going fishing," for
nocturnal angling was the favorite sport of the darkeys of the region.
The soldier did not even notice when the surge of the chant gave way to
a musical whistle, still carrying the air with great spirit and a sort
of enthusiasm of rhythm, "An' de angels bid me ter come along." Still
less did he discriminate the difference in the change of sound, not
immediately apparent, so elusive was it, and difficult to describe, when
a whistle of a different timbre took up the air and finished the
phrase--"I'll shout salvation as I fly!" After a pause Uncle Ephraim was
in the distance, humming now, and soon all sound ceased. Both the
sentinels would have sworn he had quitted the grove.
But it was not alone the wind among the young firs that tossed their
branches to and fro, when trembling, terrorized, casting now and then a
horrified, rebuking glance at the radiant moon, as the flying scud drew
back and left the sphere undimmed, he sought the spot he had marked when
the responsive whistle had apprised him that his signal was understood
and answered. At length he paused to catch his breath and wipe the cold
drops from his brow.
"Lawdy massy! dese yere shines dat dis yere Rebel cuts up will be de
death ob me--ef dey ain't de death ob himse'f fust!"
He judged from his close observation he was on the spot--yet he could
not ascertain it. Suddenly hard by the roots of a great lush specimen of
a Norway spruce, the boughs lying far on the ground, his foot slipped on
the thick spread of the fallen needles. He could not recover himself. He
was going down--down. His courage all evaporated. He would have
screamed if he could. In his terror he had almost lost consciousness
till all at once he felt a strong grasp of aid and heard a familiar
smothered laugh that restored his faculties with the realization of
success and the recognition of a friend at hand.
"Hesh! Hesh!" he said imperatively. "Dat laffin' an' laffin' is gwine
ter be de _de_struction ob you an' all yer house, an' 'fore de Lawd, ole
Ephraim, too!"
He had no response, but he had submitted himself to guidance. He was
being led along a downward course in a narrow subterranean passage, his
feet shuffling and kicking uncertainly as he ludicrously sought for the
ground and to accommodate his gait to the easy accustomed stride of his
conductor. They made more than one turn before Julius paused and said:
"We might as well stop here, Uncle Ephraim. We can sit down on the
rocks. Did my father send me any message? Is the officer much hurt?"
"Do you think you kin pitch folks down them steep steers, an' not hurt
'em, you owdacious, mis_chie_vious chile! His head is consider'ble
nicked,--an' dat's a fac'!"
"Is that all?" said Julius, evidently much relieved. "What word did my
father send me?"
"No word! He didn't know whar dee is--an' I didn't tell him whar I was
goin' ter hunt fur dee."
"Oh, but he _must_ know--he must not be left so uneasy. Oh, how I wish I
had never come to disturb and endanger my good father!"
It was dark, and he did not care that Uncle Ephraim should hear his
sobs.
"Now, look-a-yere, Marse Julius, chile--de less folks knows 'bout dee,
de less dey is liable ter be anxious. What you reckon I brung dee?"
"Some supper?"
"Lawd, no! I ain't hed time ter git ye supper."
"Some money? I don't want any money. My father gave me money in case of
any necessity when I was to run the pickets--_gold_!" He chinked some
coins alluringly in his pocket.
"'Tain't money. It's--_cloes_!"
"Clothes?" said Julius, uncertainly.
"'Twas dat ar tarrifyin' Rebel uniform dat got dee in dis trouble
ter-day. Ye got ter change dem cloes. Ye can't run de pickets, an' ye
can't git out'n de lines nohow in dem cloes."
Julius hesitated. The uniform was in one sense a protection. To be taken
in his proper character, even lurking in hiding, did not necessarily
expose him to the accusation of being a spy which capture in disguise
would inevitably fix upon him.
"What clothes did you bring,--Aunt Chaney's?" he asked, prefiguring a
female disguise, and reflecting on the ample size and notable height of
the cook.
A sort of sharp yelp of dismay came out of the darkness. Old Ephraim
wriggled and shuffled his feet audibly on the rocks in his effort at
emphasis and absolute negation.
"Marse Julius you is gone _de_ranged! Surely, surely, you is los' what
sense you ever had! Chaney wouldn't loan ye ez much ez a apern or a
skirt out'n her chist ter save ye from de pit o' perdition! I hes been
reckless and darin' in my time, but de Lawd knows I never was so forsook
by Providence as ter set out ter carry off any wearin' apparel belongin'
ter dat 'oman, what's gin ober ter de love o' de cloes in her chist. Dat
chist is de idol ob dat _de_stracted heathen 'oman, an' de debbil will
burn her well for de love o' de vanities she's got tucked away dar.
Chaney's cloes! Gawd A'mighty! _Chaney's_ cloes! Borry _Chaney's_
cloes!"
"Well, whose clothes, then, Uncle Ephraim? You know I couldn't get into
the citizen's clothes I left at home. I'm three inches taller, and a
deal stouter. And it would be dangerous to try to buy clothes."
"Lissen; I disremembered dere wuz a trunk in de garret what wuz brung
down from de Devrett place when de Yankees tore down de house an' built
de fort. It b'longed ter yer cousin Frank's wife's brother, an' wuz sent
home atter de war broke out when he died in some outlandish place--I
dunno whar, in heathen land. As I knowed he wuz tall an' spare, I 'lowed
de cloes mought fit dee. So I opened de trunk--an' de cloes wuz
comical; but not as comical as a Rebel uniform in dese days an' dis
place."
Julius had a vague vision of himself, robed in the comicalities of the
dress of the Orient,--Japanese or Arabian or Turkish,--seeking an escape
in obscurity and inconspicuousness, through the closely drawn Federal
lines.
"Oh, Uncle Ephraim!" he whined, almost in tears, because of the futility
of every device, every hope.
"You wait till I show dem ter dee!" exclaimed Uncle Ephraim, hustling
out the bundle from under his coat.
It proved to be a small portmanteau that had been itself enclosed in the
trunk. This much was discernible by the sense of touch. Old Ephraim
placed it on the ground, and then, lowering his voice mysteriously, he
asked solemnly, "Marse Julius, is you sure acquainted with dis place?"
"I certainly am," declared Julius, the tense vibration of triumph in his
voice. "I know it from end to end!"
"Den, ef I wuz ter strike a light, could dem sentries see hit at de
furder e-end?"
"Not to save their souls. We're ever so far down, and the tunnel has
already made three turns."
"Ef dey wuz ter follow us, dey couldn't crope up unbeknownst on us?"
"They'd break their necks at the entrance if they didn't know the place
or have a ladder."
"Dere is a ladder ter de stable, dough," the old man urged, vaguely
uneasy.
"We'd hear 'em putting it down."
"Dat's so! Dat's so!" cried Uncle Ephraim, all cheerful alacrity once
more.
He forthwith struck a match and lighted one of his candle ends, which he
fixed on the ledge of the rock by holding it inverted for a few minutes,
then on the hot drippings placing the taper erect. He had shielded it
with his hand during this process, and on perceiving no draught
whatever, looked up in amazement at the strange surroundings--a rugged
stone tunnel stretching far along into the dense blackness of the
distance, fifteen feet in height, perhaps, and of varying width,--about
ten feet where they stood; evidently this was an offshoot of some
extensive subterranean system, not uncommon in the cavernous limestone
country, therefore exciting scant interest, and perhaps never heretofore
explored, even in part, save by Julius and the Devrett boys when it
might be made a factor in Christmas fun.
"De Lawd-a-massy," exclaimed Uncle Ephraim, looking about in awe and by
no means prepossessed in favor of the aspect of the place. "Is disher de
bestibule ob hell?"
But the attention of Julius was concentrated on the portmanteau, a very
genteel-looking receptacle, which when open disclosed the garments that
Uncle Ephraim considered so comical. They were, indeed, a contrast with
his standard of proper attire for a "gemman of quality"--this being the
judge's fine black broadcloth, with a black satin waistcoat and stock,
and with linen laid in plaits, the collar standing in two sharp points.
But for the first time that day Julius had a sudden hope of deliverance.
No kaftan, kimono, nor burnoose as he had feared, but he was turning in
his hands a soft, rough-surfaced tweed of a dark fawn color, with tiny
checks of the style called invisible, the coat bound with a silk braid
on which Uncle Ephraim laid a finger of doubt and inquiry, looking
drearily up into the young man's face. For this was a novel finish
indeed in those days.
"These are of English make," said the discerning Julius, beginning to
understand that the foreign "heathen land" to which old Ephraim had
referred was England. Julius now remembered that his cousin's
brother-in-law, James Wrayburn, had been sojourning there at the time of
his death. The garments had lain in the garret for more than a year, but
in those days so slow was the transmission of styles across the Atlantic
that the cut was by no means antiquated, indeed was in accord with the
fashion that was familiar on the main street of the town. There was a
hat of soft felt of a deep brown, and the old servant had added from the
trunk two or three white Marseilles waistcoats and some neckties and
linen.
"Dee got on good new boots," he observed, glancing down at the young
man's feet.
"Ought to be--cost me six hundred dollars!" said Julius.
"Lo!--my Heabenly Friend!" exclaimed Uncle Ephraim, falling back aghast,
unaccustomed to the inflations of the currency of the Confederacy.
When the transformation was complete, he looked up from his knees, in
which lowly posture he had assisted in drawing down the trousers over
the boots, and smiled broadly in satisfaction.
"Dar now!" he exclaimed. "'Fore de Lawd, ye look plumb beau-some in dem
comical cloes. Dey becomes ye! Dat they does--dough I ain't never see no
such color as they got, 'dout 'twuz on a cow!"
He made up a bundle of the Confederate uniform and stowed it away on one
of the ledges. "I don't want dem Yankees ter ever git no closer ter dis
yere shed snake-skin dan dey is now."
But after the old man had been assisted to clamber out of "the vestibule
of hell" by the stalwart arm of his young master and had disappeared
among the firs, Julius made up the uniform into a compact bundle, packed
it into the portmanteau, and, putting out the candle, sat down in the
obscurities of the subterranean passage to await the enhanced
opportunity for escape that the dark clouds, now gathering about the
moon, might bring to the fortuitous collocation of circumstance.
When the sentries next heard any suggestion of Uncle Ephraim's presence,
he was still singing on his return,--now and then humming and whistling
as he came. He was approaching the house from the driveway, having
indeed been to the river; he was bringing home a goodly mess of fish.
CHAPTER XI
An hour later there was a more significant landfall than the fate of
these finny trophies. Few of the river craft kept their dates of arrival
with certainty, and this was especially the case with the general
packets. Though the water was high, the operations of the Confederates
rendered the passage sometimes unsafe, sometimes impracticable. Now and
again the Federal authorities pressed a boat into government service for
a time and released it to its owners and its old traffic when the
emergency was past. Therefore on this dull night, when no sign or news
was received of the _Calypso_, overdue some ten hours, the wharf became
deserted. Hardly a light showed on the river banks or along the spread
of the stream, save indistinct gleams in the misty gloom where the
picket boats kept up a ceaseless vigilant patrol. The gunboats, with a
vaguely saurian suggestion lay with their noses in the mud. Here and
there in allotted berths were the ordinary steamboats with their
curiously flimsy aspect, as if constructed of white cardboard, silent,
disgorged, asleep. The rafts, the coal-barges, the humble skiffs, and
flatboats were all tied up for the night. The town had lapsed to
silence and slumber as the hour waxed late. The great pale stream seemed
as vacant as the great pale sky.
Suddenly far down the river two lights, close together, high in the air,
red and green, shimmering through the mist, struck the attention of a
wanderer along the high bluffs near Judge Roscoe's house, even before a
hoarse, remonstrant, outspreading sound, the clamor of the whistle three
times repeated, hailing the landing, invaded the murky air. It was a
spell to rouse all the precincts of the river bank. Lights flickered
here and there. Hack drivers, who had given up the expectation of the
boat's arrival at any hour that would admit of the transfer of the
passengers to the hotel, heard the sound from afar, harnessed their
teams in haste, and the carriages came rattling turbulently down the
stony declivity to the wharf. Baggage vans, empty and curiously noisy,
recklessly jolted along, careening ill-poised and light without their
wonted burdens. The omnibuses, with the glow of their dim little front
windows to distinguish their approach, were soon on the scene; the
driver of one was vociferating with a hackman, because of the lack of
lighted carriage lamps, which had caused a collision and the wrenching
away of the door and the cover of the step of the "bus," swaying open
for want of a cautionary pull on the cord. Loud and turbulent did this
wrangle grow, and presently it was punctuated by blows. The crowd that
the mere sound of a fight summons from invisibility was almost instantly
swaying about the scene and hindering the efforts of the police, who
found it necessary to interfere, and while both participants were
arrested and hurried off to the station in the clutches of the law, they
left their respective vehicles like white elephants in the hands of the
remainder of the force, two of whom must needs mount the boxes to
restrain the "cattle," as the hack driver mournfully called his beasts
in commending them to police protection. The horses plunged and reared,
terrified at the apparition of the _Calypso_, now manoeuvring and turning
in the river, the paddles beating upon the water with a splashing impact
as the side-wheels slowly revolved. The ripples were all aglow with the
reflection of her red furnace fires, and her cabin lights sent long
avenues of white evanescent radiance into the vague riparian glooms. The
jangle of the pilot bells and the sound of the exhaust pipes came
alternately on the air. And presently the great white structure was
motionless, towering up into the gray uncertainties of the night, the
black chimneys seeming to fairly touch the clouds, the lacelike guards
filled with flitting figures all in wild commotion pressing toward the
stairway.
Albeit the discharge of the freight would not take place till morning,
the scene was one of great confusion. In accordance with the regulation
which the military occupation of the country required, the passengers
rendered up their passes on deck to the officer who had boarded the
vessel for the purpose of receiving them, permitting the travellers to
depart one by one through a guarded gate, but it was impossible to
identify them after they were once on the wharf. Hence there was naught
to distinguish from the other passengers a gentleman carrying a
portmanteau, who entered an omnibus, save that the wharf lamps might
have shown that he was handsome, taller than common, with a fine
presence and gait, and clad in garments of unmistakably English cut and
make. The night clerk of the hotel evidently saw nothing else unusual in
the stranger as he stood under the gas-jet to register at the desk in
the office, almost deserted at this hour--not even in the momentary
hesitation when he had the pen in hand. He wrote "John Wray, Junior,
Manchester, England," had a room assigned to him, and passed on to the
late supper, for which Uncle Ephraim's negligence had prepared him to do
ample justice.
Julius did not appear next morning at the usual breakfast hour. The
terrors of the Chinese gong, that was wont to rouse the laggards as it
howled about the hotel under the belaborings of a stalwart waiter,
failed to stimulate his activity or break his slumber. The fatigues and
dangers Julius had encountered had prostrated him. He was unconsciously
recuperating, gathering strength for the rebound. He did not wake,
indeed, till near noon. He turned once or twice luxuriously in the
comfortably sheeted bed--at his home they had not dared to purloin linen
from the household store to furnish his couch in the attic--and then,
with his hands clasped under his head, he lay with a mind almost vacant
of any conscious process, mechanically, quietly, taking in the details
of the place. The sun sifted in at a crevice of the green shutters of
the window that opened to the floor and gave upon a wide gallery
without--now and again he heard at considerable intervals the passing of
a footstep on this gallery. He noticed the wind stir and the flicker of
the shadow of foliage on the blinds. The room was in the second story,
and he knew that there were trees in a space at the rear of the
old-fashioned little hotel. The furniture was of a highly varnished,
cleanly, straw-colored aspect, of some cheap wood that refreshingly made
no pretentions to be aught but what it was, for on the bureau drawers,
the head and foot-boards of the bed, and on the rocking-chair was
painted a gay little bouquet of flowers in natural but intense tints. A
fresh Chinese matting was on the floor, and muslin curtains hung from
poles supported on pins that had a great brass rosette or boss at the
extremity. The building enclosed a quadrangle, bounded by the river at
the lower end. On each of the other three sides the wide galleries of
the three-story brick edifice overlooked the grassy space. He had
learned that the hotel had gone into the hands of a new proprietor, but
even were it otherwise he hardly feared recognition, although he had
been born and reared in the immediate vicinity. At his time of life a
few years work great changes. The boy of nineteen was hardly to be
identified in the man of twenty-two, with his mustached lips, his
broadened shoulders, his three inches of added height, and the
composure, confidence, and capability conferred by those years of
activity and emergency and responsibility working at high pressure. Some
old resident might recognize the Roscoe eye, but he knew he could trust
the kindly associations of "auld lang syne" to avoid the sifting of a
casual recollection. Besides, this was hardly likely to befall, for the
town was an ever shifting kaleidoscope of confused humanity. It was full
of strangers,--Federal officers, on service and unattached, on leave of
absence, wounded, and their families; special correspondents; hospital
nurses; emissaries of the Sanitary Commission; enterprising promoters of
all manner of jobs, and the horde of nondescript non-combatants that
hangs on the rear of every army, seeking the many methods of securing a
windfall from the vast expenditures of money and goods necessary to
maintain a great force on a war footing. He was hardly likely to meet
any one who had ever known him, or even his father, in his stay at the
hotel, which he must contrive by some method to make as short as
practicable. Then suddenly a great dismay fell upon him. He lifted his
head and gasped as he looked about him for something that was gone! His
treacherous memory!--in the prostration of his mental faculties by
excitement and fatigue, in the lull of his long slumber, he had
forgotten the alias he had registered as his own name on his entrance to
the hotel. He thought of half a dozen of the most usual nomenclature,
striving to goad his mind to a recognition of each in turn as the one he
had selected. He was in desperation. True, he might have an opportunity
to study the register and could recognize his own handwriting. But
something--anything might occur in the interval in which it might be
necessary to give the name he had assumed, and any incongruity with the
registered alias would be fatal. Every casual step along the hall on one
side, or the gallery on the other, threw him into a sudden tremor as he
prefigured a stoppage, a knock, an inquiry--"Are you Mr. Alfred
Jones?--here's a note for you. Messenger waits for an answer."
"And _I_ don't know whether to answer as Mr. Jones or not!" he said to
himself in a panic. He might turn away a note of warning from his
father, who possibly had recognized his handwriting on the register, of
greeting from Leonora in whose face he had seen an appalled
commiseration as he sped past her yesterday in his father's hall; or it
might be that some Confederate agent within the lines would hear of his
plight and contrive this way to communicate with him. No matter how
cautiously worded, his was not a correspondence at this juncture to
decline to receive, and to turn lightly over to the investigating
scrutiny of all the A. Joneses to whom it might be presented. On the
other hand he might "throw all the fat in the fire," should he meddle
with the large correspondence of the Jones family by opening sealed
missives bearing their name, obviously not intended for him, if he had
registered as Abner Smith.
Julius was about to spring up, throw on his clothes, and rush to the
register, when the name struck him with the force of conviction. _John
Wray_--That was it! _Manchester, England!_ The address had been selected
to take advantage of the typically English clothes. He meditated upon it
as he sat upright in bed. He had added the "Junior," for the sake of
verisimilitude. He smiled with satisfaction to have regained it.
Then--"I must have something to fix that in my memory," he said.
He looked fruitlessly about. He had no paper, save the map in the lining
of his boot, no pencil, no pen and ink, naught for a memorandum. Then
with his gay youthful inconsequence--"Constant repetition will settle
it--Mr. John Wray--Mr. John Wray; Mr. John Wray. How do you do to-day?"
He threw himself back on his pillow, laughing at the unintentional
rhyme.
"I'm a poet--if I did but know it!"
His irrepressible youthful mirth found its account in the most untoward
trifles.
"There it is again!" he said to himself, "I have destroyed the sequence
of my ideas. I am just as likely now to say, 'I am Mr. Poet'--or perhaps
with the notion that I have got to butt out of this somehow--'I am Mr.
Goat!'"
He laughed again, yawned lazily, stretched his arms upward, and fell
back luxuriously on the bed, resting his tired muscles.
He lay staring at the design of the wall-paper, which was in scrolls of
brown that, as they whorled over clear enamelled spaces of creamy white,
enclosed an outline in fainter browns and yellow,--a scene of waves
breaking on rocks and surmounted by a lighthouse; a far and foreign
suggestion to this deeply inland nook, and refreshing, for there was
more than vernal warmth in the air. And presently, still repeating--"Mr.
John Wray, how do you do to-day?" he slipped off into a half-conscious
doze from which he was roused only by a knock at the door.
CHAPTER XII
Downstairs in the hotel there had been the usual stir of the morning.
Till a late hour the punkahs had swung back and forth above the long
tables in the dining room, each furnished with one of those primitive
contrivances for the banishment of flies. The swaying of the pendent
fringes of paper rivalled the rustling of the trees in the quadrangle
outside, on which the broad, long windows looked, as each punkah-cord
was pulled by a specimen of the cheerful and alert pickaninny of that
day, keenly interested in all that occurred. Others ran in and out of
the kitchen, bearing to the waiters, to be dispensed among the guests,
interminable relays of the waffles of those times, golden brown,
delicately rich, soft, yet crisp, of a peculiar lightness,--a kind that
will be seen no more, despite the food inventions and dietetic
improvements, for the artists of that choice cookery are all dead and
their receipts only serve to mark the decadence of proficiency.
Strangers of all sorts, officers of the army, civilians from every
quarter of the north, filled the public apartments, aimlessly chatting,
discussing the news from the front, smoking matutinal cigars, buying
papers from the omnipresent newsboys, or reading them in the big
arm-chairs within or on the benches under the trees in the quadrangle,
glimpsed in attractive verdure through the open doors of the office.
There was continual passing through the halls, and groups filled the
verandas and stood about on the sidewalk in front of the hotel, for the
great brick pillars that supported the roof of the arcade at the height
of the third story were anchored at the curb of the pavement, and this
colonnade illustrated the forgotten architect's idea of impressiveness.
In the gay sunshine, the streets, with substantial two and three storied
buildings on either side, with much effect of big airy windows and now
and again a high, iron-railed balcony, were congested with traffic. The
pavements were crowded with pedestrians of varying aspect,--freedmen in
rags, idle, exhaustlessly zealous of sensation, grotesquely slouching
along, eying the shop windows, seeing all that there was to be seen;
soldiers in uniform on furlough; citizens of a new migration, having
almost superseded the old townsmen, so limited were the latter in number
in comparison with the present population of the gorged town; ladies,
many the wives and daughters of Federal officers, with an unfamiliar
accent and walk, and with toilettes of a more recent style than
characterized the native exponents of fashion. Now and again some
passing body of troops filled the avenue,--cavalry, with guidon and
trumpet, or a jaunty progress of infantry, to the fife and drum and the
tune of "The girl I left behind me!"
At this period the war had focussed a sort of superficial prosperity
here. The counters were covered with Northern goods to supply the needs
and excite the extravagance of this medley of congregated humanity.
Street venders howled their wares in raucous voices that added to the
unintelligible clamors of the old highways that were wont to be so dull
and quiet and decorous.
The paving stones roared with the reverberation of wheels. Sometimes
endless trains of white-hooded army wagons defiled by; again heavy open
transfers; sometimes an ambulance anguish-laden passed slowly, taking
the crown of the causeway. Occasionally a light-wheeled buggy whisked
about with the unmistakable effect of display and with a military
charioteer handling the ribbons, who found the Tennessee blooded
roadsters much to his mind. And forever the dray, laden with cotton
bales sometimes, and sometimes with boxes, or barrels, or hogsheads,
took its drag-tailed way to the depots or to the wharf. All was
dominated by the presence of the mule--in force, driven loose in
hundreds through the town to some remote scene of usefulness, now
drawing the great transfers and drays, now giving an exhibition of the
peculiar pertinacity of mule nature by planted hoofs and ears laid back
and a resolution of immovableness, bringing the whole tumultuous noisy
rout to a blockade of such intricacy and cumbrous obstructiveness that
one might wonder by what magic the interlocked wheels, the twisted
harness, the crowded beasts, the whistling, long-thonged whips and
shouting, swearing men were ever disentangled.
These incidents impeded progress, and the passengers from the noon
railroad train were disposed to complain and comment, and seemed fit
subjects for sympathy, as they interchanged petulant accounts of
experiences at the hotel desk, waiting to register. One was apparently
not unknown to the clerk now in charge, an affable functionary to the
deserving few, altogether stiff and unapproachable to the general
public. He was the day clerk, and a far more magnificent individual than
the forlorn night bird that languished behind the desk with no company
but the wee sma' hours of the clock, and the somnolent bell-boys on
their bench, and the watchman, walking hither and thither like a ghost
as if his only mission were to be about, and the incoming traveller. The
day clerk's courtesy had the grace of a personal compliment as he
hurried the book away from the last signer and passed it on to another
in the line,--a somewhat portly, red-faced, middle-aged gentleman, with
short side-whiskers, of the hairbrush effect and a pale hue, not
definitely gray, for he seemed hardly old enough for such tokens of
years, and yet the flaxen tint had lost its earlier lustre. His hair was
of the same shade, and he wore a stiff hat, a suit of "pepper-and-salt,"
and a dark overcoat of light weight.
"Glad to see you, Mr. Wray," said the clerk, handing him the pen. "I am
sorry I can't give you a room to yourself, but I can put you a bed in
your son's room."
The pen was poised uncertainly--the gentleman with the side-whiskers
stared.
"Your son got in last night," explained the clerk.
The gentleman still silently stared. He had a close, compact mouth, a
cautious mouth, and the lips were now compressed with an expression of
waiting incommunicativeness. He evidently had not expected to be
confronted with a ready-made family.
The clerk surprised in turn cast on him a glance of keen intentness. In
these strenuous times every stranger in the town was liable to suspicion
as a Confederate emissary. "I was not on duty, myself, but I thought I
saw--ah--here it is," turning the page of the register, "John Wray,
Junior, Manchester, England."
For one moment the portly gentleman gazed at the signature as if
dumfounded. Then with an air of ready recognition he justified his
previous manifestations of extreme surprise by explaining the mistake of
the clerk as to the matter of identity.
"Oh, aw, a distant relative," he said, at last. "Ah, aw,--he is the son
of a cousin of the same name as mine, 'John Wray.' The younger man is to
be associated with me in business. What room? Number ninety?"
And as he was assigned to that haven he took the pen and wrote, "John
Wray, Manchester, England."
Thus it was that, awakened by the brisk tap at the door, Julius, leaning
out of bed, turned the key, and reached out for the pitcher of ice water
for which, being warm and thirsty, he had a drowsy impression that he
had rung the bell. Perceiving his mistake, and lifting himself on his
elbow, Julius beheld entering this blond and robust stranger, an
inexplicable apparition, too solid for a spectre, too prosaic for a
fancy.
The visitor stood, when the door had closed, gazing silently down at the
recumbent figure, while Julius, amazed at the form which his Nemesis had
taken, gazed up silently and lugubriously at the intruder.
All the methods of Mr. John Wray were in conformity with his portly
rotundity, his slow respectability, his unimaginative commercialism.
The young man found speech first. "Why this unexpected pleasure?" he
asked ceremoniously, but with a satiric inflection.
"Sorry to intrude, I'm sure," said the elder. "But my name is John Wray
of Manchester, England."
The skies had fallen on Julius. He strove to recover himself.
"And do you like it?" he asked vacuously.
"_You_ seemed to like it well enough to register it."
"With a 'Junior,' if you please."
The other fixed him with a stare of round blue eyes. "I think I
understand you, sir."
"Very possibly," said poor Julius. "I am not very deep."
He was thinking that this was doubtless a military detective, a very
usual factor for ferreting out schemes, obnoxious to the Federal
government and in aid of the Confederacy. He determined to hold hard and
sell his life dear.
"Have you any letters or papers--any written communication for me?"
"None whatever," Julius ventured.
"You knew you would meet me here?" the older man apparently wished to
say as little as he might.
"I fancied I should meet you, but not in this manner," said Julius, also
enigmatical.
The portly gentleman looked painfully nonplussed and ill at ease, as he
sat in the light little yellow rocking-chair, which now and again
treacherously tilted backward and caused him a momentary but agitated
effort at equilibrium, and Julius vaguely remembered to have heard that
rocking-chairs were not popular in England, and reflected that this
worthy was not accustomed to have his centre of gravity so jeopardized.
"I think I should have had ampler voucher. You will pardon me for saying
this?" remarked the stranger, at length.
"I will pardon you for saying anything you like," said Julius, politely.
"The Company informed me that a young man familiar with the country--a
native, in fact--would meet me here and that I should be afforded means
to identify him. I fancied he would have letters. But when I saw the
register I supposed this the mark of identification. Am I right?"
"My dear sir, you must not expect me to guarantee your impressions,"
said Julius. He was glad he was in bed. He felt that he could not have
stood up. "I should say, judging from the effect your valuable mental
qualities make upon me, that any impression you see fit to entertain
would be amply justified by the fact."
He did not know how to appraise the distinction of his own manner and
special attractiveness, and he was both amazed and amused to note how
Mr. John Wray of Manchester, England, expanded under the compliment.
"I see, I see--I suppose this is even better than a letter, which might
have been stolen, or transferred, or--however, or--shall we proceed to
our commercial affairs?"
"I don't usually transact commercial affairs in my night-shirt," said
Julius, "but if I look sufficiently businesslike to suit you--just fire
away; it's all the same to me."
He was growing reckless. The risk involved in this war of words with the
supposed detective was overwhelming his reserves. He did not know
certainly of what the man suspected him, how fully informed he might
have become. He knew it was imprudent to suggest his withdrawal, for the
effort at escape might precipitate immediate arrest. Yet he could no
longer spar back and forth.
"However," he said, as if with a second thought, "I _should_ like a
dabble of a bath, first, and to get on my duds, and to have a whack at
breakfast, or dinner,--whichever is on parade by this time."
"Certainly--certainly--by all means. I will meet you in the hotel
office, and shall we dine together at two?" He held out the dial of his
watch.
"At two," assented Julius.
His friend was in such polite haste to be gone that he shuffled and
plunged awkwardly on his gaitered feet, fairly stumbling over his
portmanteau near the door as he opened it; then he went down the hall
with a brisk, elastic step. Julius lay dumfounded, staring at the
portmanteau, which was of an English make and bore the letters, J. Wray,
Manchester, England, on one side. He rose and turned it about. It had
not been hastily arranged to mislead him. The lettering had been done
long ago. The receptacle was evidently travel-worn, and stamped deep in
the bottom was the makers' name, trunk manufacturers, Manchester,
England.
Julius dressed in haste, his heart once more agitated with the hope of
deliverance. He could hardly control his nerves, his eager desire that
this might prove merely an odd coincidence, instead of a detective's
deep-laid scheme. It began to seem that the man's name might be really
John Wray of Manchester, England, some army jobber, or speculator,
perhaps--the country was full of them. He said he had expected to meet
an "agent of the company," who knew the country.
"_I_ know the country," said Julius, capably; "I know the country to a
t-y ty. I can give him all the information he wants, free, gratis, and
for nothing."
Yet in naught, he resolved, would he betray himself. This mistake, on
the contrary, might open to him some means of getting through the lines
and back to his command with this map--this precious plan of the
defences of the place that would be of distinct value to the cause of
the Confederacy.
He therefore cast aside his half-formulated scheme of seeking escape
from the supposed detective through the street. He had remembered that
there were stairs on the galleries, leading from one floor to another,
and thence to the quadrangle, as well as the great main staircase from
the hallways into the office. He at last took his way, however, down
this main staircase, with its blatant publicity, and its shifting groups
of Federal officers and busy, newly imported civilians. He recognized
the wisdom of his boldness almost immediately. Mr. John Wray of
Manchester, England, standing conferring amicably with a cluster of
worthies of that marked commercial aspect, alertness, and vim of
expression, which imply the successful business man of the heady,
venturesome type, since known as "plungers," turned and perceived him,
and catching his eye beckoned to him with great empressement.
"Allow me, gentlemen, to introduce Mr. John Wray, Junior--the son of my
cousin, John Wray," he said.
There ensued the usual greetings, the usual stir of hand-shaking, and if
any eye in the office had chanced to note the newcomer with the faint
suggestion of doubt or interest or suspicion, which a stranger is apt to
excite, it evaporated at once, for the elder Mr. Wray was well known in
the hotel and the town, having been here often before, and was a very
sufficient voucher for any kinsman.
Genial indeed this group proved at dinner, seated on either side of the
upper portion of one of the long tables. Julius found it accorded with
his subsidiary character as youthful kinsman of one of the chief
spokesmen to maintain an intelligent and receptive silence. Once or
twice one of the more jovial of his newly acquired cousin's _confrères_
gave him a glance and lifted his wine-glass with a nod, as who should
say, "To you, sir," in the midst of the general discourse.
This was eagerly commercial, for the most part, and piecing the details
together as he plied his knife and fork, Julius learned that his new
friend was interested in a flourishing American concern which had large
government contracts for ready-made army clothing, the woollen cloth and
other textile fabrics being supplied from Manchester, and was indeed one
of the English agents. He could not reconcile anything that he heard
with a requisite for caution or for any service which he could perform,
necessitating secrecy or an alias, or his sudden and affectionate
adoption as a kinsman.
"It is a trait of piety to trust in Providence," Julius reflected in
this quiescent state. "But I doubt if my confiding reliance in this fix
can be set down to my credit. For the Lord knows there's nothing else to
do!"
He created the impression of a decorous, well-bred youth, and in the
fashionable English clothes he looked little less British than the elder
John Wray. There was so much good-fellowship that it was natural that
the postprandial cigars with a decanter and glasses should be taken out
to a summer-house in the quadrangle, where at one extremity the river
had a slant of the westering sun on its surface. The hills of the
distance were of a dull grapelike blue against an intensely turquoise
sky; the magnolia trees above their heads already bore fine cream-white
blossoms among the densely green and glossy foliage, and the surrounding
town was cut off from sight and sound by the three encompassing sides of
the hotel. Yet it was not a solitary place. No one looking at the group
could imagine it had been chosen for seclusion. From the galleries of
each of the three stories a glance could command it. Guests were
continually sauntering into and out of the office. Here and there a
Federal officer strolled along the little esplanade above the
water-side. On the lower veranda two elderly men--one a chaplain--were
playing very slowly and with great circumspection a game of chess. There
were onlookers here, with whom time seemed no object, calmly studying
the moves, solaced by a meditative cigar, and at long intervals showing
a flicker of excitement at the magic word, "Check!"
The summer-house had already a thatch of vines, but bare columns upheld
the roof, and it occupied a little circular space of gravel, whence a
broad gravel walk ran toward each point of the compass. An approach
could be instantly observed, a step instantly heard, and therefore it
did not seem to Julius altogether incongruous that business of
importance and details of secrecy should presently be broached. The
table in the centre was all at once covered with papers, and he began to
understand the mysteries that had hitherto baffled him when gradually
the details of a very bold and extensive blockade-running scheme were
unfolded.
This was in defiance, of course, of the Federal regulations, and in so
far militated against no interest of the government that Julius had
sworn to serve. But it was a private enterprise for personal profit, and
whether the export of cotton from the country to England at this
juncture accorded with the policy of the Confederate States he had no
means of knowing. At one time, he was aware, there existed an impression
that the official withholding of such shipments as could be effected by
running the blockade tended to create such paucity of the staple in the
English market as might influence the already pronounced disposition of
the British to interfere in aid of the Confederacy, and bringing the war
to an end remove this restriction of manufactures and trade. All this
was beyond his province. He held very still, remained keenly observant,
watching for the loophole that might enable him to quit these tortuous
ways for the very simple matter of fighting the battles of his section.
After these various turmoils of doubt, and hope, and despair, it would
be a mere trifle to charge with his company to the muzzles of the
biggest howitzers that ever bellowed.
He discovered that these men were in correspondence with secret agents
in the Confederacy; they spoke of various depots of the cotton which
presently developed as mere caches--bales hidden in swamps, to be
brought out only by such craft as could navigate bayous, or in deserted
gin-houses on abandoned plantations, or in old tumble-down warehouses on
the outskirts of towns,--never much at any one point, but all that could
be found and bought, and concealed and held, to be gotten away at last
to a foreign market. The system sought to reach to the Gulf of Mexico,
to gather up the scattered wayside stores, and either by taking
advantage of some lapse of Federal vigilance, or else by strategy, to
run the blockade with a ship-load, and away for England! Thus the
enterprise was contrary to the policy of both factions. The Company's
gold would recruit the endurance of the South, and yet he knew that the
Confederate authorities had put the torch to thousands of bales rather
than let the cotton fall into their enemy's hands--the precious
commodity, then selling at amazing prices in the markets of New York.
Suddenly his own personality came into the scheme with an abruptness
that made his head whirl.
"How is it," demanded a sharp-featured man, who had sparse sandy hair,
very straight, very thin, the head almost bald on top extending the
effect of the forehead, watery-blue eyes that nevertheless made out very
accurately the surrounding country, metaphorically considered, a
somewhat wrinkled face albeit he was not old--"how is it that your
cousin should be so well acquainted with the country? I take it that he
is an Englishman, too!"
"Why, no, he is not," candidly answered Mr. John Wray, and Julius had an
instinct to clutch at him from across the table to hinder the divulging
of the imposture, "and, in fact, he is not my kinsman at all. I should
be extremely glad if he were," and he smiled suavely across the table at
Julius. "He is, I understand, a native of this region." And forthwith he
told the story of the register.
The spare, businesslike man, whose name was Burrage, at once laid his
cigar down on the table with its ash carefully disposed over the edge.
"And did he bring no letters?"
"None; very properly. It is most unwise to multiply papers in the hands
of outside parties."
"But he should have had something definite."
"I think the registry of the name very definite." Mr. John Wray reddened
slightly. He was not in the habit of being called in question for
precipitancy.
"It strikes me as a most fantastic whim on the part of the Company. You
might not have interpreted it correctly--taken as you were by surprise,"
Mr. Burrage rejoined. Then, "Did _you_ have any specific instructions to
guide you personally?" The querist turned full on the young man, much to
Mr. John Wray's disapproval. But Julius answered easily:--
"None at all. It is my business to hold myself subject to orders."
"What is your name?" queried Mr. Burrage.
"At present--John Wray, very much at your service," Julius replied
glibly; then with a sudden recollection of the vicissitudes of "Mr.
Poet" and "Mr. Goat," he burst into his irresistible laugh, that cleared
the frown from the brow of the actual Mr. John Wray and his colleagues,
and caused the officers pacing along the esplanade, their shadows long
now in the sun, to glance in the direction of the sound, sympathetic
with the unknown jest.
Mr. Burrage pressed the matter no farther, but as he took up his cigar
again, filliping off the ash with a delicate gesture, and placed it
between his teeth once more, no physiognomist would have been required
to discern in his resolute facial expression a firm determination to
have full advices on this subject before he should ever lose sight of
the very prepossessing young man introduced by Mr. John Wray.
"He goes out with the little steamboat down the river. I think a packet
leaves to-morrow." Mr. Wray began to explain the simplicity of the
duties devolving upon Julius in order to demonstrate his own
perspicacity and regard for precaution. "At her stoppages he visits the
plantations on his list, notifies the men in charge of the cotton to get
it out on the rafts and flatboats and to be ready to float down--there's
a full sufficiency of water on the shoals now--to where the steamer we
have chartered, bought, in fact, can pick it up. Then he returns on the
next packet. It is a trip of a hundred miles or so."
Julius felt his heart beat tumultuously in the prospect of escape--to be
out of the town once more! But to-morrow! what in the interval might
betide!
"The point is to have our own steamboat clear fairly with the
upper-country consignment. The rest she picks up as she goes. She is
known as a packet to the river pickets; they won't be aware she has
changed her trade till she has gone. But meantime to get the cotton
collected it is necessary to have a man familiar with the country. On
the way down or the return trip, in the distracted state of the region,
politically, and its physical aspect as a nearly unexplored wilderness,
it would be simply impossible for a stranger to cope with any disasters
or difficulties, if one could be found to undertake the trip."
Julius was astonished at himself when he heard his own voice blandly
suggest--"Come with me, Mr. Burrage! You would enjoy the trip--beautiful
scenery! I should have the benefit of your long experience in matters of
business, and you could avail yourself of my knowledge of the country
and the people--the methods and the manners."
He was in admiration of his own astuteness. His intuition had captured
the emergency. He had perceived in Mr. Burrage's face unmistakable
indications that he would play the obstructive. He would detain the
supposed agent here, and would not intrust him with the necessary
instructions in this difficult and most compromising business, until the
fullest advices could be had from the distant promoters of the
enterprise, who were presumed to have sent hither "John Wray, Junior."
The suggestion of Julius met with instantaneous favor among the group,
except, indeed, that Mr. Burrage himself looked disconcerted, surprised,
definitely at a loss. It removed all possible objections to the
employment of this agent with no other credentials than the name on the
register--but at this moment Mr. Burrage thought that perhaps the
coincidence would have struck him with more force had the name been his
own and the registry anticipated his arrival. Time was of importance. No
one more than the experienced man of business realizes the Protean
capacity for change appertaining to that combination of cause and
effect called opportunity. What is possible to-day may be relegated to
the regions of everlasting regret to-morrow. Everything was favorable at
the moment, feasible. The future stood with the boon of success in an
outstretched hand. Delay was hardly to be contemplated. The proposition
that Mr. Burrage should accompany the agent of his own company on a tour
of important negotiation, and at no sacrifice of personal ease, was at
once so reasonable and so indicative of the fairest intentions that he
was ashamed of the cautionary doubt he had entertained. All at once the
journey seemed too much trouble. The matter had already been adjusted,
he said. The plan might well stand as Mr. Wray had arranged it.
But Mr. Wray, too, added his insistence. "Nothing could be better," he
declared.
And as Mr. Burrage demurred, and half apologized, and was distinctly out
of countenance, Mr. Wray compassionately overlooked all his disquieting
cautions and protested with cordiality that the change would be an
advantage. Some difficulty might arise, some reluctance to deliver the
cotton they had already purchased, some doubt as to the locality where
it was stored,--they used this expression rather than "hidden," though
Julius apprehended that its cache was now a cane-brake and now a rock
house or cave, and now a tongue of dry land in a network of bayous and
swamps,--some failure of facilities in respect to men or water carriage
or land transportation, with all of which this young gentleman, new to
the arrangements and the enterprise, might find it difficult to cope
successfully. Such unforeseen obstacles might require a divergence from
the original plan and the agent's instructions. But Mr. Burrage, a
member of the Company, could meet and provide for all these emergencies,
and yet with such a guide be as assured and as confident of his footing
in this strange country as if he himself were a native. It was the
happiest suggestion! It enabled him to make a long arm, as it were, and
manipulate the matter in effect without a proxy.
"And meantime it will be strange indeed if I cannot make a long leg!"
thought Julius, triumphantly.
The actual Mr. Wray was treated everywhere with all possible
consideration and due regard to the fact that he was a British subject.
The neutrality of Great Britain was considered exceedingly precarious,
and there was no disposition to twist the tail of the Lion, albeit this
appendage was whisked about in a way that ever and anon provoked that
catastrophe. The British Lion was supposed in some quarters to be
solicitous of a grievance which would justify a roar of exceeding wrath.
In this instance, however, there was no necessity of withholding the
favor asked by a British subject, Mr. John Wray,--for a pass for his
cousin, Mr. John Wray, Junior, of Manchester, England, and his friend,
Mr. Alfred Burrage.
That night the two slept on the crowded steamer, as she was to cast off
at a very early hour. Long, long did Julius lie awake in his berth in
the tiny stateroom peculiar to the architecture of the "stern-wheeler."
The good Mr. Burrage in the berth below snored in satisfaction with the
events of the day, untroubled as to the morrow. Julius had been so
tormented by vacillations, by the untoward "about-face" movements of the
probable, so hampered by the unexpected, so repeatedly disappointed,
that even now he could not believe in his good fortune. Something,
somehow, would snatch the cup from his lips. But in the midst of his
turmoil of emotion he had a distinct sense of gratitude that the
preservation of his safety had involved no forwarding of equivocal
interests. The affairs of the Company were doubtless such as many were
seeking to prosecute with varying chances of success. He would report
the scheme to his commanding officer, however, and he could forecast the
reply, "One of hundreds." But, at all events, the map in his boot-lining
was a matter of no slight import. He could hardly wait to spread it on a
drumhead before his Colonel's eyes, and solicit the honor of leading the
enterprise he had planned.
But was he, indeed, destined to escape, to come off scatheless from this
heady venture!
"If ever I see the command again, by thunder, I'll stick to them as long
as I live. If ever I can lay hold of my sword again, I swear my right
hand shall never be far from its hilt!"
In the early hours of the night the loading of the cargo was still
unfinished. The calls of the deck-hands, the vociferations of the mate,
which were of an intensity, a fervor, a mad strenuousness, that might
seem never heard before out of Bedlam, the clash and commotion of boxes
and barrels, the lowing of cattle and bleating of sheep, for the lower
deck was given over to the transportation of army supplies, sounded
erratically, now louder, now moderated, dying away and again rising in
agitated vibrations. Sometimes, as he lay, a great flare of light
illumined the tiny apartment as the torches, carried by the roustabouts
on shore, cast eerie vistas into the darkness, and he could see the
closely fitted white planking of the ceiling just above his head, the
white coverlet, and through the glass door, that served too as window,
the railing of the guards without and the dim glimpse of the first
street of the town--River Avenue--about on a level with his eye, so deep
was the declivity to the wharf.
Quiet came gradually. The grating and shifting of the cargo ceased
first; the boat was fully loaded at length. Then the voices became
subdued,--once a snatch of song, and again a burst of laughing banter
between the roustabouts going up into the town and the deck-hands about
to turn in on the boat. Now it was so quiet that he could distinguish
the flow of the current. Yet he could not sleep. Once he seemed near
unconsciousness when he heard the clash of iron as the stoker was
banking the fires, for steam was up. Then Julius lay in unbroken
silence, till an owl hooted from out the Roscoe woods down the river.
There was home! He thought of his father with so filial a tenderness
that the mere recollection might be accounted a prayer. In that dense
mass of foliage off toward the west, under the stars and the moon, stood
the silent house, invisible at the distance, but every slant of the
roof, every contour of the chimneys, every window and door,--nay, every
moulding of the cornice, was as present to his contemplation as if he
beheld it in floods of matutinal sunshine. "Oh, bless it!" he breathed.
"Bless it, and all it holds!"
With dreary melancholy he fell to gazing out at the real instead,--at
the vague slant to the wharf in the flickering moonlight, and the dim
warning glow of a lantern on an obstructive pile of brick on the crest
of River Avenue. Somehow the trivial thing had a spell to hold his eyes,
as he watched it with a mournful, dull apprehension of what might
betide, for he feared to hope still to escape--so often had this hope
allured and disappointed him. Would something happen at the last
moment--and what would the next disaster be?
Therefore when he suddenly became sensible that the boat was moving
swiftly, strongly, in midcurrent under a full head of steam, he felt a
great revulsion of emotion. Floods of sunshine suffused the guards and,
shining through the glass section of the door, sent a wakening beam into
his face. A glance without apprised him that while he slept the town was
left far behind, the fort, the camps, the pickets, all the features of
grim-visaged war, and now great forest masses pressed down to the craggy
banks on either side. The moment of deliverance was near,--it was at
hand,--and as he dressed in the extreme of haste, he listened
expectantly for the whistle of the boat, for it was approaching a little
town on the opposite side where a landing was always made. Julius hardly
feared the entrance of any passenger who might recognize him, but he
took his way into the saloon and asked for breakfast, in order that thus
employed he might have time to reconnoitre. The boat, however, barely
touched the wharf, and when he emerged and joined Mr. Burrage on the
deck there was something so breezily triumphant in his manner that the
observant elder man looked askance at him with a conscious lack of
comprehension. He thought he was evidently mistaken if he had imagined
he had gauged this youth. His breeding was far above his humble and
subsidiary employment, and his manner singularly well poised and
assured. There was a hint of dignity, of command, in his pose and the
glance of his eye. He was perfectly courteous; he did not forget to
apologize for a lapse of attention, albeit absorbed in a certain
undercurrent of excitement. He did not hear what Mr. Burrage had said of
the news from the front in the morning paper, and upon its repetition
accepted the proffered sheet with thanks and threw himself into a chair
beside his elderly fellow-passenger. He had hardly read ten words before
he lifted his head with a certain alert expectancy, like the head of a
listening deer. The whistle of the boat had sounded again, the hoarse,
discordant howl common to river steamers, an acoustic infliction even at
a distance, and truly lamentable close at hand, but it was not this that
had caught his attention. The boat was turning in midstream and heading
for the shore, now backing at the signal of her pilot's bells,
peremptorily jangling, now going forward with a jerk, and again swinging
slowly around, and at last slipping forward easily toward the wood-yard
where great piles of ready-cut fuel awaited her.
An alien sound had also caught Mr. Burrage's attention.
"What is that?" he demanded of the captain of the steamboat, who held a
field-glass and was looking eagerly toward the woods.
"Musketry," replied the captain, succinctly.
"There is some engagement taking place in the forest?" inquired Mr.
Burrage.
"Seems so," said the captain.
"And are you--are you going to land?"
"Must have wood--that's my regular depot," returned the steamboatman.
"You had best return to Roanoke City instead," urged Mr. Burrage,
aghast.
"Need wood for _that_!"
"But the boat will be captured by the Rebels. Why don't you burn the
freight?"
"Beeves ain't convenient for fuel on the hoof."
"Oh, I reckon the captain can wood and get off," said Julius,
good-naturedly, reassuring Mr. Burrage. "Nobody is thinking about this
boat now." Then, as a sharper volley smote the air, he added, "I think
I'll look into this a bit," rose and took his way through the groups of
excited passengers and down to the lower deck.
The "mud clerk," the roustabouts, the wood-yard contingent, made quick
work of fuelling the steamer, and she was once more in midstream,
forging ahead at high speed, before it occurred to Mr. Burrage to
compare notes with his young colleague and ascertain if he had learned
aught of what forces were engaged.
He was not easily found, and Mr. Burrage asked the captain of his
whereabouts.
"He must have got left by the boat," said the captain, as if the packet
were a sentient thing and subject to whims.
Mr. Burrage, gravely disturbed, caused inquiry to be circulated among
the hands and officials,--all, in effect, who had set foot on _terra
firma_.
"Who? that young dandy with the long hair?" said the "mud clerk,"
staring, his measuring staff still in his hand. "Why, that man
_intended_ to land. He had his portmanteau and walked off along the road
as unconcerned as if he was going home. I was too busy measuring the
wood to pass the time of day, thinking the riverbank was alive with
guerillas."
His departure remained a mystery to Mr. Burrage. As to the topographical
features of his involved scheme he was powerless to prosecute this phase
alone. The simple expedient of sticking to the packet and retracing his
way on her return trip brought him at last to a consultation with his
_confrères_, who also long pondered fruitlessly on the strange meeting
and its result. About this time the agent or guide, provided by the
Company, presented himself with due credentials from the main office,--a
heavy, dull, somewhat sullen man, with no further capacity, or will,
indeed, than a lenient interpretation of his duty might require.
"I always shall think," Mr. Wray used to say, "that we suffered a great
loss in that young man--that John Wray, Junior."
CHAPTER XIII
In these days the picket lines were seldom stationary; one or the other
faction continually drew in close these outlying guards, as if by
presentiment,--an unexplained monition of caution, or perhaps because of
some vague rumor of danger. Now and again, by a sudden belligerent
impulse, they were impetuously attacked and driven in; but apparently in
pursuance of no definite plan of aggression emanating from the main
body. A few days of surly silence and stillness would ensue, and then
the opposing force would return the warlike compliment with interest,
holding the enemy's ground and kindling bivouac fires from the embers
they had left. It seemed a sort of game of tag--a grim game; for the
loss of life in these futile manoeuvres amounted to far more in the long
run than the few casualties in each skirmish might indicate. Sometimes
these feints were entirely relinquished, and intervals of absolute
inaction continued so long that it might seem a matter of doubt why the
two lines were there at all, with so vague a similitude of war.
Occasionally they lay so near that the individual soldiers, forgetful of
sectional enmity, gave rein to mere human interest in the opportunities
afforded by a common tongue and an apprehended and familiar range of
feeling. A lot of tobacco, thrown into a group about a bivouac fire by
an unseen hand one night, brought the next night a package of "hard
tack" from over the way. Now and again long-range conversations were
held, full of kindly curiosity, or humorously abusive, the questionable
wit of which mightily rejoiced the heart of the lonely sentinel, and
upon his relief all the jokes were duly rehearsed when once more in
camp, he himself, of course, represented as coming off winner in the
wordy war, being able to appropriate all the good things said by the
enemy. The loud, cheerful, "Say, air you the galoot ez wuz swapping lies
with Ben Smith day 'fore yestiddy?" and the response, "Smith, _Smith_,
you say. I dis-remember the name. I guess I never heard it afore!" all
were much more commendable from a merely humanitarian point of view than
the singing of the minié ball or the hissing shriek of a shell that had
been wont to intrude on the bland quietude of the sweet spring air.
Thus it was that Miss Mildred Fisher, accompanied by Lieutenant Seymour
and one of her father's ancient friends, Colonel Monette, himself
attended by a very smart orderly, riding out of Roanoke City down the
long turnpike road, saw naught that might indicate active hostilities.
The picturesque tents in the distance about the town, the outline of
the forts against the blue sky, and afar off a gunboat in the river,
were all still, all silent, all as suave as the painted incident of a
picture on the wall. The turnpike itself bore heavy tokens of the war in
the deeply worn holes and wheel tracks of the great wagon and artillery
trains, wrought during the wet weather of the winter. It was hard going
on the horses, and precluded that brisk pace and easy motion which are
essential to the pleasure of the equestrian. Mildred Fisher, indeed,
delighted in a breakneck speed, and it may be doubted whether it was
altogether a happy animal which had the honor of bearing her light
weight. As they reached a "cut off," where a "dirt road" had been
recently repaired and put into fine condition to obviate the obstacles
of the main travelled way, Miss Fisher proposed that they should "let
the horses out" along this detour for a bit. Then she challenged the two
officers for a race.
They could but accede, and indeed it would have been difficult to deny
her aught. The elder looked at her with an almost paternal pride, the
other with a sort of surly adoration, tempered by many a grievance and
many a realized imperfection in his idol, and a spirit of revolt against
the sunny whims and again the cold caprice which he and others sustained
at her hands. Seymour had little to complain of just now; yet, if she
smiled on him and his heart warmed to the sunshine of her eyes, the
next moment he was saying to himself that it meant nothing, it was not
for his sake; for she was smiling with the same degree of brightness on
that whiskerando, the elderly colonel. Her face was exquisitely fair,
and in horseback exercise--the luxury she loved--she tolerated no veil
to protect the perfection of her complexion. Her fluffy red hair had a
sheen rather like gold, because of the contrast with her damson-tinted
cloth riding-habit. The hat was of the low-crowned style then worn with
a feather, and this was a long ostrich plume of the same damson tint,
curling down over her hair, and shading to a lighter purple. Her hazel
eyes were full of joy like a child's. Her mouth was not closed for a
moment,--its red lips emitting disconnected exclamations, laughter, gay
banter, and sometimes just held apart, silently taking the swift rush of
the air, showing the rows of even white teeth and a glimpse of the
deeper red of the interior, like the heart of a crimson flower.
She tore along like the wind itself. "Madcap," who had raced before,
and, sooth to say, with more numerous spectators, had thrust his head
forward, striking out a long stride, and the soft, elastic, dirt road
fairly flew beneath his compact hoofs. The skirt of the
riding-habit--much longer than in the later fashions--floated out in the
breeze of the flight, and Colonel Monette, who did not really approve
outdoor sports for women, expected momently to see it catch in a thorn
tree of the thickets that lined the road, or on some stake of the
fragments of a ridered rail fence, and tear her from the saddle. Then,
her foot being held by the stirrup perhaps, she might be dragged by
Madcap or brained by one blow of the ironshod hoofs. Thus his heart was
in his mouth, and he was eminently appreciative of the folly of the
elderly wight who seeks to share the pleasures of the young.
The lieutenant, being young himself, was not so cautiously and
altruistically apprehensive. He admired Miss Fisher's dash and courage
and buoyant spirit of enjoyment, and, having a good horse, he pressed
Madcap to his best devoir. Colonel Monette, to keep them in sight at
all, was compelled to make very good speed, and went galloping and
plunging down the road in a wild and reckless manner.
It was the elder officer who was first visited by compunctions in behalf
of the horses.
"Halt!" he cried. "Halt! Miss Fisher is the winner--as she always is!
Halt! Lieutenant Seymour!" Then in a lower voice when he could be heard
to speak, "We shall have the horses badly blown," he said with an
admonitory cadence, which reminded Seymour that a military man's whole
duty does not consist in scampering after a harum-scarum girl in a race
with two wild young horses.
Seeing that she was not followed, Miss Fisher reined in after several
wild plunges from Madcap, who felt that he had not had his run half out,
and snorted with much surprise in his full bright eyes as, turning in
the road, he saw the two mounted officers far behind, stationary and
waiting. The victor should never be unduly elated, but Madcap expressed
his glee of triumph chiefly in his heels, curvetting and prancing,
presently kicking up so uncontrollably, the excitement of the contest,
the joy of racing, still surging in his veins and tense in his muscles,
that the officers might well have feared some disaster to the girl. They
at once put their steeds in motion to go to her assistance, but Madcap,
with outstretched head, viewing their start, suddenly made a bounding
_volte-face_ in the road, and with the bit between his teeth set out at
a pace that discounted his former efforts and carried him out of sight
in a few minutes.
Miss Fisher, with all the courage of the red-headed Fisher family,
albeit she had become pale and breathless, settled herself firmly in the
saddle, held the reins in close, now and then essaying a sharp jerk,
first with the right then quickly with the left hand--and it was as much
as she could do to keep the saddle at these moments--to displace the
grasp of his teeth on the bit. For a time these manoeuvres failed, but at
last the road became rougher, brambles appeared in its midst, the
intention of repair had evidently ceased, and running at full tilt was
no longer any great fun. The horse voluntarily slowed his pace, and the
sudden jerk right and left snatched the bit from his teeth. He might
still have pranced and curvetted, for the spirit of speed was not
satiated, but his foot slipped on the uneven gullied ground, he
stumbled, and being a town horse and seeing nowhere any promise of a
good road, he resigned himself to the guidance of his rider, thinking
perhaps she knew more of the country than he.
While she breathed him for a time, she looked about her along the curves
of the road, seeing nothing of her companions, and realizing that she
was quite alone. This gave her a sentiment of uneasiness for a moment;
then she reflected that her friends were doubtless riding forward to
overtake her. She drew up the reins, intending to turn, and, retracing
her way, to meet them.
The place was all unfamiliar. So swift had been her transit that she had
not had a moment's contemplation of the surroundings. She stood at the
summit of a gentle slope and could look off toward stretches of forest,
here and there interspersed with considerable acreage of cleared ground,
evidently formerly farm land, now abandoned in the stress of war and the
presence of contending armies. The correctness of this conclusion was
confirmed by the sight of two gaunt chimneys at no great distance,
between which lay a mass of charred timbers,--once the dwelling, now
burned to the ground. The scene was an epitome of desolation, despite
the sunshine, which indeed here was but a lonely splendor; despite the
brilliance of the trumpet vine, tangled in remnants of the fence, in
many a bush, and swaying in long lengths, its scarlet bugles flaring,
from the boughs of overshadowing trees; despite the appeal of the elder
blossoms of creamy, lacelike delicacy, catching her eye in the thickets,
which were so lush, so green, so favored by the rich earth and the
prodigal season. She was sensible of a clutch of dread on that merry
spirit of hers before she heard a sound--a significant sound that
stilled the pulsations of her heart and sent her blood cold. It was the
unmistakable sinister sibilance of a shell. She saw the tiny white puff
rise up above the forest, skim through the air, drop among the thickets,
and then she heard the detonation of an explosion. Before she could draw
her breath there came a sudden volley of musketry at a distance,--she
knew that for the demonstration of regular soldiers, firing at the
word,--then ensued another, and again only a patter of dropping shots.
She wondered that her companions did not overtake her--she must find
them--she must rejoin them,--when suddenly an object started up from the
side of the road, the sight of which palsied her every muscle. A man it
was who had lain in the bushes on the hillside, a man so covered with
blood that he had lost every semblance of humanity. The blood still came
in a steady stream from his mouth, impelled in jets, as if it were under
the impulse of a pump, and he held his hand to his stomach, whence too
there came blood, dripping down from his fingers. In sickened, aghast
dismay she watched his approach, and as he passed she found her voice
and called to him to stop,--might she not help him stanch his wounds?
His staring eyes gazed vacantly forward with no recognition of the
meaning of her words, and he walked deliriously on, every step sending
the blood forward, draining the vital currents to exhaustion. Now she
dared not turn, she could not pass that hideous apparition. She
shuddered and trembled and rode irresolutely forward, just to be
moving--hardly with a realized intention. Suddenly the road curved, and
the scene of the conflict was before her.
The woods were dense on three sides of a wide stretch of fields that
were springing green with new verdure; a portion had even been ploughed
and bedded up for cotton; here and there lay strange objects in curious
attitudes, which she did not at once recognize as slain men. Among them
were scattered carbines, horses already dead, and more than one in
scrambling agonies of dying. In the farthest vista field-guns were
evidently getting in battery, ready to sweep from the earth a little
force of dismounted cavalrymen who had come to close quarters with
infantry and who were fighting on foot with carbines. The minié balls
now and then sang sharply in the air, and in the excitement she did not
realize the danger. Suddenly a puff of smoke rose from the battery, the
shell winging its way high above the infantry line and at last falling
among the dismounted cavalrymen, who, perceiving the situation to be
hopeless, wavered, sought to rally, and at last broke and ran to the
horse-holders hidden in the thickets. Thither the shells pursued them,
bursting all along the plain, and as Mildred Fisher gazed she saw three
men on the field, powerless to reach the shelter. One was wounded,--an
officer, evidently,--and the other two were seeking to support him to
his horse hard by. At this moment a fragment of shell killed the animal
before their eyes.
"Ride out! Ride out!" cried Millie Fisher to a horse-holder that she
observed close by in the woods. He was mounted himself, and he held the
bridles of three horses. He looked half bewildered, pale, disabled. A
shell burst prematurely, out of range and wide of aim, high in the air
above their heads.
"I can't," he said; "I'm hit!"
"Give _me_ the line, then!" she cried.
He was past reasoning, beyond surprise, stunned by the clamors and
succumbing to wounds.
The next moment, the three great horses in a leash, Madcap led his
wildest chase across that stricken plain, now shying aside as some
wounded man lifted a ghastly face almost beneath his hoofs, or pitifully
sought to crawl away like a maimed and dying beast. The thunder of the
frenzied gallop shook the ground; the group of men, for whom the rescue
was designed, turned a startled and amazed gaze as the horses came on
abreast, snorting and neighing and with tossing manes and wild eyes,
rushing like the steeds of Automedon.
"The gallant little game-cock!" exclaimed Jim Fisher, eying the supposed
horse-holder from beside the smoking guns of his battery in the
distance. "Now, I'm glad to spare him if never another man goes clear!"
For the Confederate cavalry were starting out in pursuit, and to let the
squadrons pass without danger the cannonade was discontinued. The
bugle's mandate, "Cease firing!" rose lilting into the air, and there
was sudden silence among the guns. As Captain Fisher disengaged the
strap of his field-glass seeking to adjust it, he noted that there was
something continually flying out at the side of the young soldier's
saddle. One glance through the magnifying lenses at the floating folds
of the riding-habit and the radiant face crowned by the purple
plume--and Jim Fisher almost fell under the wheel of the limber as it
was run up to the gun-carriage. "My God, Watt!" he exclaimed to his
first lieutenant who was also his brother, "that--that--cavalryman
is--is Sister Millie!"
When she was at last with them, for in tumultuous agitation they had
rushed forward to meet her, beckoning and shouting, and their kisses had
smeared the gunpowder from their grim countenances to her lovely roseate
cheeks, they began to experience the reactionary effects of their fright
and scolded her with great rancor, declaring repeatedly they felt much
disposed, even yet, to slap her. All of which had no effect at all on
Millie Fisher. They tried æsthetic methods of reducing her to see her
deed from their standpoint.
"I thought you were a patriotic girl, Sister," one of them urged. "And
see, now--you have helped three Yankees to escape!"
"I _am_ patriotic--more patriotic than anybody," she asseverated. "But I
forgot they were Yankees--they were just three men in great danger!"
"But _you_ were in great danger, Sister, I--I--might have shot you!"
"Didn't you feel funny when you found out who 'twas?" she queried with a
giggle of great zest.
"I felt mighty funny," said Jim Fisher, grimly. "I suppose few men have
ever felt so funny!"
Few men have ever looked less funny than he as he reflected on the
episode. He recovered his equanimity only gradually, but especially
after he had been able to make arrangements to convey intelligence to
his mother within the Federal lines as to his sister's safety. This was
rendered possible by a flag of truce sent out almost immediately by
Colonel Monette, who with Lieutenant Seymour was in the greatest anxiety
as to her fate, feeling a sense of responsibility in the matter. She
insisted on adding a line addressed to the younger officer, bidding him
sing daily with his hand on his heart:--
"'Would I were with thee!'--_In the Confederate lines!_"
if he expected her to conserve any faith in his constancy.
That evening Jim Fisher almost regained his wonted cheerfulness. The
other four brothers had gathered together to welcome the unexpected
guest, and as they sat around a great wood fire in an old deserted
farm-house, a primitive structure built of logs, with Millie and the
youngest, favorite brother, Walter, in the centre, it seemed so joyful a
reunion that he was almost tempted to forgive the manner in which it had
come about.
Jim Fisher's body-servant, Cæsar, cooked a supper for them, in a room
across an open passage, consisting of corn-bread, bean-coffee, bacon,
and a chicken, which last came as a miracle, as he mysteriously
expressed it, upon inquiry--"as de mussy ob Providence!" Cæsar was a
brisk young darkey, with a capacity for a sullen and lowering change,
and with a great distaste for ridicule, induced by much suffering as the
butt of the practical jokes of his young masters, for among so many
Fisher boys one or another must needs be always disposed for mirth.
"You needn't ax me so p'inted 'bout dat chicken's pedigree, Marse Watt,"
Cæsar was beguiled into retorting acrimoniously. "Naw, sah. I dunno. I
dunno whedder hit's Dominicky or Shanghai. An' _ye_ have no call to know
whedder hit's foreign or native! _I_ tell you hit's fried--an' dat's all
I'm _gwine_ ter tell you!--fried ter a turn! An' if you bed enny
religion, you'd say grace, an' give Miss Millie a piece while it's hot.
Naw, sah! naw, Marse Watt! I _ain't_ no robber! Marse Jim--you hear what
Marse Watt done call me! Naw, sah! I don't expec' ter see Satan!--not
_dis week_, nohow."
Cæsar was glad to gather up the fragments and make off to the kitchen
opposite, where he sat before the fire and crunched the last bone of the
precious fowl, and grinned over the adroit methods of its capture on
this great occasion, for such a luxury could hardly be bought at any
price, in Confederate money or any other currency.
After supper was despatched something of a levee was held; so many of
Miss Millie Fisher's old friends--officers in the military force--called
to renew the acquaintance of happier times. And as she recognized the
more intimate old playfellows or neighbors, with a gush of delighted
little screams and a musical acclaim of their Christian names, sometimes
an old half-forgotten nickname, other guests, later acquaintances, were
envious and wistful, and sought to stem the tide of reminiscence, the
"Don't you remembers" and "Oh-h-h, wasn't it funny?" and to impress the
values of the present, despite the lures of the past.
She was delightfully gracious and gay with them all, and perhaps she had
never seemed more lovely than the flicker of the firelight revealed her,
for there were no other means of illumination. She stood to receive in
the centre of the floor, radiant in her dark purple riding-habit and
hat, the military figures, all in full uniform, clustering about her,
some resting on their swords, some half leaning on a comrade's shoulder,
while jest and repartee went around, the laughter now and again making
the rafters ring. It was with reluctance that they gradually tore
themselves away in obedience to a realization that after so long a
separation the family might desire to spend the evening alone, for three
of the brothers must needs repair to their own command at some distance
at break of day, and it might be long before they could all be together
once more.
So at last, the visitors gone, the door barred, the night wearing on,
the Fishers gathered round the replenished fire, for the air was chill
and the warmth was as welcome as the light. The deserted house was
entirely bare of furniture, and as the force was a "flying column,"
flung forward without the impediments of baggage trains or tents, there
was not even a camp-stool available. Millie and Watt sat side by side on
a billet of wood, their arms around each other's waists to preserve the
equilibrium, and the rest of the brothers half reclined on the saddles
on the floor. And every face was smiling, and every head was red. Again
and again a shout of laughter went up, as she detailed the news of the
town,--and some very queer things, indeed, she told,--and Watt, the
lieutenant, responded with the news of the battery and the camp.
Perhaps he felt that his prestige as a wit was threatened, for once he
said, "I'd give a hundred dollars, Sister, to be assured that all you
are telling is the truth."
"I wouldn't give a brass thimble to be assured that all _you_ are
telling is the truth, for I know 'tisn't!" retorted Millie.
"Oh, I meant in Confederate money!" He lowered the face value of his
bid.
They kept late hours that night; but at last, when the fire was burning
low and great masses of coals had accumulated, they swung a military
cloak hammock-wise across a corner of a little inner room, hardly more
than a cupboard, and this Millie Fisher in her new rôle as a campaigner
found a comfortable bed enough. The restricted apartment had no window,
and no door save the one opening into the larger room; and this she set
ajar, making Walter place a great solid shot against it lest it close,
declaring that if that catastrophe should supervene, she should die of
solitary fright. The five Fisher brothers were well within call and
sight, as they clustered around the embers, talking for a time in low
voices of what had chanced in the interval of their separation. For only
Jim and Watt were together in the same company. They commented on the
relative cost and value of their _chaussure_, as they stretched out
their long, booted legs, with their feet on the hearth, and compared the
wearing qualities of the soles and upper leather. They looked kindly
into each other's faces and laughed as they made a point, and between
the two younger brothers, Watt and Lucien, there was a disposition to
horse-play, manifested in unexpected tweaks, that each was glad to
receive as a compliment, so did separation and the sense of an imminent
and ever environing danger soften and make tender their fraternal
sentiment. But first one, then another, flung his cloak around him and,
pillowing his head on his saddle, lay down to rest, the two younger
brothers the last of all.
And now--silence. The dull red light of the embers gloomed on the daubed
and chinked walls of the old log house, with its rude puncheon floor.
The five prostrate, cloaked figures upon it were still, asleep. Here and
there from amongst the arms, placed ready to seize at a moment's notice,
came a keen steely gleam. Mildred could hear the sentry's tread outside
up and down before the door. Once, far away, she noted the measured
tramp of marching feet, then a challenge, and anon, "Stand! Grand
Rounds! Advance, Sergeant, with the countersign!" and presently the
march was resumed in the distance. And again--silence! Only the wind
astir in the forest, only the rustle of the lush foliage. All--how
different from her dainty bedroom where she had spent last night, the
downy couch, the silken coverlet, the velvet carpet, the lace curtains,
the tremulous flicker of the wind in the flower-stand on the balcony!
"Hugh!" she said suddenly.
Every red head on the floor had lifted at the sound, and every hand had
clutched a weapon.
"What's the matter, Sister?"
"I--I--believe there must be a flying squirrel or--or--something in the
wall. Don't they build in old walls? I've seen that in some book."
Jim and Hugh arose and investigated the wall of the inner room by means
of a torch of light-wood.
"Why, Sister, it is as solid as a rock!" Jim asseverated. "There's no
flying squirrel here."
He extinguished the flaming torch in the ashes banked in the
chimney-place in the larger room, and again the two brothers laid
themselves down to rest, with their feet on the hearth.
Once more the silence of the night, the vague crumbling of the ash, the
measured sound of the sentry's tread. There was no echo of the passing
of time--but how leaden-footed! How slowly fared the night! How
motionless lay those cloaked figures, each with his head on his saddle!
"Watt," her voice came plaintively out of the gloom. "I'm scared!"
This time, though all stirred, they did not rise.
"Pshaw! Scared of what?"
She did not answer. Only after a time she queried irrelevantly, "Can
mice climb?"
"Did you see that in a book, too?" asked Watt.
"They can only climb under certain conditions," opined Hugh, sleepily.
"But they'd scorn to intrude on a lady in a hammock, Sister," declared
George.
"Oh, hush, George!" said Jim, authoritatively. "No mouse can get up
there, Sister. Why don't you go to sleep?"
"I can't," said Millie Fisher, plaintively. "I saw so many awful things
to-day!"
"You had better think about mice," said Watt, quickly, to effect a
diversion. "They are minute, but monstrous. Just imagine how one could
scale the wall, and taking its tail under its left arm spring across to
your hammock, and run along, say, the nape of your neck! Oh-h-h!
wouldn't that be just _aw-w-wful_!"
"Oh, hush, Watt!" said Jim. "Just compose your mind, Sister. Shut your
eyes and think about nothing."
"Think how nearly you scared a gallant captain of artillery out of his
seven senses to-day," suggested Watt, anew. "I thought Jim would get run
over by the gun-carriages and the caissons, whether or no. He was so
scatter-brained, and white, and wild-eyed, and blundering--nearly under
the horses' feet."
Millie Fisher gave a pleased little laugh.
"Was he? Was he, truly?"
"He was, for a fact. Few captains of artillery have the opportunity to
make their own sister a target in a regular knock-down-and-drag-out
fight. I thought I was going to have to support the gentleman off the
field of battle. He couldn't stand up for a while."
"How funny!" exclaimed Millie Fisher, delightedly. "Just _too_ funny."
She shifted her position in the hammock, closed her eyes, and when she
opened them again the sun was flaring into the open door and window of
the large room, and all the five Fisher brothers were up and fully
accoutred for the duty of the service, and she was requested to get out
of the hammock that it might again be turned into a cloak.
The details of her exploit were brought back to the main body of the
Federal army and bruited abroad by the men whom she had rescued from
death or capture. One of these, the officer, was much disposed to vaunt
his gratitude and sense of obligation, and as Miss Millie Fisher was as
well known as the river itself, the incident created no small stir in
many different circles. The girl was held to be a prodigy of courage.
All the men of the family were known to be brave, eke to say, fractious.
There had been seldom a row of any sort, in several generations, in
which a Fisher's red head had not been in the thick of it, and held
high. There were several who were now men of mark, but never had aught
else so appealed to their pulse of pride, their close bond of union in
family ties and clannish affection for which they were noted. Great were
the boastings of the Fisher brothers, each feeling that he shone by
reflected light, and echoes of their vain-glorious brag were borne to
the storm centre by that mysterious means of communication known as the
Grape-vine Telegraph.
One day Seymour detailed, with a touch of bitter sarcasm, the rumor that
Jim Fisher had declared that Sister Millie could stampede the whole
Yankee army if she had the chance. With his customary bluntness Seymour
had broached the subject on a hospitable occasion, in a group both of
officers and civilians. The latter said nothing, leaving it to the
comrades of the men who had benefited by her hair-brained bravery and
dashing equestrianism to controvert the hyperbole. But Ashley's tact was
so rooted in good nature that it was difficult to take him amiss. He
could not say, he declared, whether she could stampede the army, but he
could testify that she had captured it.
The Grape-vine was shortly burdened with other rumors that were of far
more import to Seymour, who was of a serious mind, and of an exacting,
not to say, petulant, temper. These traits had been intensified by his
recent subjection to the whims and caprices of a coquette of exceptional
capacity, for his feelings were deeply involved. He was truly in love,
and all his dearest interests hung on the uncertain telegraphy of the
Grape-vine. It was an unhappy time for him, when he doubted in a rush of
hope, and again believed sunk in the despondency of absolute despair,
having almost as much foundation for the one as the other, the reports
of her marriage to Lawrence Lloyd.
This time the Grape-vine had proved a reliable medium of information.
Colonel Lloyd had sought and secured leave of absence long enough to
ride fifty miles across country to greet her as soon as he had heard she
was within the Confederacy. When her father joined the family party
Colonel Lloyd laid siege for his consent to an immediate marriage.
They had long been engaged, he urged.
"I had almost forgotten that," Millie interpolated. She had promised her
assistance in the persuasion of her father, and thus she fulfilled her
pledge.
"There is no reason for further delay," Lloyd insisted.
"I _have_ been a _débutante_ these--four--years!" she suggested
demurely.
Lloyd submitted that he hoped there were no objections to him in Colonel
Fisher's estimation.
"Except such as are insuperable--you'll never be any better," suggested
Millie.
It would be undesirable, even dangerous, Lloyd argued, to send her back
to her home in Roanoke City with a flag of truce in the present state of
conflict.
"But it is not at all dull there--" she interrupted vivaciously. "Some
very nice Yankee officers are in society there--several old friends of
yours, papa. Colonel Monette and Lieutenant-Colonel Blake of the regular
army--old classmates of yours. And some others whom you don't
know--Captain Baynell, who is _very_ handsome, and Colonel Ashley--he
belongs to the volunteers; he is most agreeable and highly thought of,
and oh--of course Lieutenant Seymour--oh, it is _not_ dull there!"
Lloyd looked at her in blank dismay, and the blank dismay on the face of
her father was nearly as marked, but the latter's anxiety was due to a
different cause--what would his wife decide if she were here!--for
every one who knew the Fishers was well aware that Guy Fisher, albeit a
man of much force in his own domain of business or military life, "sung
mighty small" in all matters in which his wife had concern.
Lloyd rallied to the attack and continued to explain that he had orders
detaching him, showing that he would be stationary, in command of a fort
in the far South for some time, and that Millie would be in a position
to be comfortable.
"But can I ride horseback there?" she stipulated. "I have just found out
what I can do in that line!"
She liked to describe this conversation afterward. Her lover was the
most serious and literal-minded of men, anxious and doubtful, and her
father the prey of vacillation and indecision. They looked alternately
at her and at each other with an expression of startled bewilderment as
she spoke, seeking to adjust what she had said with their own knowledge
of the facts.
The flying column was once more in motion, and one evening, after a
considerable distance southward had been accomplished, the leave both of
Colonel Fisher and Colonel Lloyd being close upon expiration and
decision exigent, the doubting, anxious father gave his consent.
The young people were married like campaigners under a tree in a
beautiful magnolia grove, the rhododendron blooming everywhere in the
woods and the mocking-birds in full song. Colonel Lloyd was in uniform,
armed and spurred, Miss Fisher in her hat and riding-habit, which last
she wore with peculiar elegance; as the skirts of the day were of great
length, the superfluous folds were caught up and carried over one arm,
and it was said she had attained her graceful proficiency in this art,
which was esteemed of much difficulty, by constant practice before the
long mirror in her wardrobe at home. She used to tell afterward of the
beautiful site, the velvet turf, the magnolia blooms, the rhododendron
blossoms, the singing mocking-birds. Then she would enumerate the
brilliant martial assemblage that witnessed the ceremony, the men of
high rank in full uniform; the wives of a number of them--refugees in
the Confederacy "seeking for a home," as the sardonically humorous song
of that day phrased it--also graced the occasion. Her father and
brothers, all the six Fisher men, were present, and she used to say,
with the tone of an after-thought, but with a glint of mischief in her
eye, "_And_ Colonel Lloyd--_he_ was there, too!"
There, but hardly up to the standard. He was a man whose courage had
been of especial note, even in those days when bravery seemed the rule.
He had had, too, exceptional opportunities to display his mettle. But on
this occasion his terror was so palpable that he trembled perceptibly;
he was pale and agitated; he fumbled for the ring and occasioned a
general fear that he might let it fall--altogether furnishing an
admirable exhibition of the stage fright usual with bridegrooms.
All these details did she observe and recollect and even his gravity
would relax as she rehearsed them in after years. It was considered one
of the evidences of her incurable frivolity that she seemed to care
nothing for that momentous incident of her experience in those days,
hardly to remember it,--the exploit by which she had saved the lives of
three men, sore harassed and beset; but she found endless source of
interest in the reminiscence of trifles such as the incongruous aspect
of the chaplain who officiated at the wedding ceremony, with his spurs
showing on his reverend heels beneath his surplice, and the brass
buttons on his sleeves as he lifted his hands in benediction,--which
afforded her a glee of retrospect.
CHAPTER XIV
After the escape of Julius Roscoe time held to a tranquil pace in the
placidities of the storm centre. The rose-red dawns burst into bloom and
the days flowered whitely, full of fragrance and singing birds, of
loitering sunshine and light-winged breezes. One by one the still noons
glowed and glistered, expanding into summer radiance, and dulled
gradually to the mellow splendors of the sunset. Then fell the serene
dusk, blue on the far-away mountains, violet nearer at hand, with a
white star in the sky, and a bugle's strain leaping into the air like a
thing of life, a vivified sound. And all the panorama of troops, and
forts, and camps, and cannon might be some magnificent military
spectacle, so remote seemed the war--so unreal. Every morning the
"ladies" wrought at their lessons in the library, and Leonora cut their
small summer garments and helped the seamstress, who came in by the day,
to sew. Despite these absorptions Mrs. Gwynn managed to find leisure to
read aloud to Judge Roscoe his favorite old novels, and essays, and dull
antiquated histories. She evolved subjects of controversy on which to
argue with him, and was facetious and found occasion to call him "Your
Honour" oftener than heretofore. For he had grown old suddenly; his step
had lost its elasticity; he looked up a cane that had once been
presented to him by some fraternity; his hair was turning white
and--worst sign of all--he was not sorry to be approaching the end.
"The night is long, and the day is a burden," he once said.
Then, when she reminded him of duty, he recanted. But he had obviously
fallen into that indifference to life incident to advancing age, and was
sensible of a not involuntary gravitation toward the tomb. Later he
asked her if she did not think those lines of Stephen Hawes's had a most
mellow and languorous cadence,--
"For though the day appear ever so long,
At last the bell ringeth to even-song."
He showed great anxiety concerning Captain Baynell's recovery, but he
had never mentioned to her the fact of Julius's presence in the house.
She knew that he and probably old Ephraim had been aware of it, but this
was only a constructive knowledge on her part, and founded on no
assurance. When once more Baynell was able to come downstairs, she
perceived that he himself had no remote consciousness of his assailant.
He had entirely accepted the theory of a fall instead of a collision,
and was only a little deprecatory and embarrassed at being so long in
getting himself away.
"Positively my last appearance!" He was reduced even to the hackneyed
phrase.
Mrs. Gwynn made the conventional polite protest, and the "ladies"
joyously and affectionately flocked around him, and his heart expanded
to the grave kindness of his host. Nevertheless he appreciated a subtle
change. Despite the enhancing charm of the season, which even a few days
had wrought to a deeper perfection, the place had somehow fallen under a
tinge of gloom. But the roses were blooming at the windows, the lilies
stood in ranks, tall and stately, in the borders, the humming-birds were
rioting all day in the honeysuckle vines over the rear galleries and the
side porch, the breeze swept back and forth through the dim, perfumed,
wide spaces of the house, which seemed expanded, with all the doors
open. Sometimes he attributed the change to the tempered light, for all
the trees were in full leaf, and the deeply umbrageous boughs
transmitted scarce a beam to the windows, once so sunny; much of the
time, too, the shutters were partially closed. And though the children
flitted about like little fairies, in their thin white dresses, and Mrs.
Gwynn, garbed, too, in white, seemed, with her floating draperies, in
the transparent green twilight, like some ethereal dream of youth and
beauty, there was a pervasive sense of despondency, of domestic
discomfort, of impending disaster. Sometimes he attributed the change to
one or two untoward chances, a revelation of the real character of war
that happened to be presented to the observation of the household. The
"ladies" came clamoring in one day, all wide-eyed and half distraught.
With that relish of horror characteristic of ignorance, a negro woman, a
visitor of Aunt Chaney's, had detailed to them the sentence of a soldier
to be shot for some military crime--shot, as he knelt on his own coffin.
Presently they heard the music of the band playing a funeral march along
the turnpike as the poor wretch was taken out with a detail from the
city limits; then, only the drum, a terrible sound, a dull, muffled
thud, at intervals, that barely timed the marching footfall, while the
victim was in the midst! And still the vibration of the mournful drum,
seeking out every responsive nerve of terror within the shuddering
children!
Their painful, tearless cries, their clinging hands, their frantic
appeals for help for the doomed creature--would no one help him!--were
most pathetic.
And though Leonora could shut the windows and gravely explain, then tell
a story and divert the moment,--they were so young, so plastic, so
trustful,--no ingenuity could find a satisfactory method to account for
the anti-climax of the tragedy, when within the hour came the same
detail, marching briskly back along the turnpike, with fife and drum
playing a waggish tune. The wide, daunted eyes of the children, their
paling cheeks, their breathless silence, annotated the lesson in
brutality, in the essential heartlessness of the world, except for the
tutored graces of a cultivated philanthropy. For a long time one or the
other would wake in the night to cry out that she heard the muffled
drum,--they were taking the man out to shoot him, kneeling on his
coffin,--and again and again would come the plaintive query, "And is
nobody, _nobody_ sorry?"
The incident passed with the events of the crowded time, but even within
the domestic periphery harmony had ceased to reign as of yore. Old
Ephraim was a bit sullen, gloomy, did his work with an ill grace, and
repudiated all acquaintance with "Brer Rabbit" and "Brer Fox." The
soldiers in the neighboring camps--possibly to secure an influence, his
alienation from the interest of his quasi-owner, in order to ferret out
more of the mystery concerning the Confederate officer, possibly only
animated by political fervor, and it may be with a spice of mischief,
finding amusement in the old negro's garrulous grotesqueries--had been
talking to him of slavery, making the most of his grievances, setting
them in order before him, and urging him to rouse himself to the great
opportunities of freedom.
"I done make up my mind," he said autocratically, one day in the
kitchen. "I gwine realize on my forty acres an' a muel!"
For this substantial bonanza freedom was supposed to confer on each
ex-slave.
"Forty acres an' a mule!" the old cook echoed in derisive incredulity
and with a scornful black face. "You _done_ realize on de mule--a mule
is whut you is, sure! Here's yer mule! An' now you go out an' fotch me a
pail of water, else I'll make ye realize on enough good land ter kiver
ye! Dat's whut! It'll be six feet--not forty acres,--but it kin do yer
job!"
He might have made a fractious politician but for this adverse
influence, for he had the variant moods of a mercurial nature, and in
gloom showed a morose perversity that could have been easily manipulated
into a spurious sense of martyrdom, lacking a tutored ratiocination to
enable him to discriminate the facts. But despite his failings, his
ignorance, the bewildering changes in his surroundings, never a word
concerning his young master escaped his lips, never an inadvertent
allusion, a disastrous whisper. He scarcely allowed himself a thought, a
speculation.
"Fust thing I know," he reflected warily, "I'll be talkin' ter myself.
They always tole me dat walls had ears!"
A day or two of murky weather seemed to penetrate the mental atmosphere
as well. It was perhaps the inauguration of the chill interval known as
"blackberry winter." Everywhere the great brambles were snowy with
bloom, and in the house the "ladies" shivered and clasped their cold
elbows in the sleeves of their thin summer dresses till the fenders and
fire-dogs were brought out once more, and the flicker of hearthstone
flames made cheery the aspect of the library, and dispensed a genial
warmth. The air was moist; the trains ran with a dull roar and an
undertone of reverberation; there was a collision of boats in the fog on
the river, involving loss of life, and one night, the window being up,
the sentry in passing called Captain Baynell out on the portico. He said
he hesitated to summon the corporal of the guard, lest the sound should
pass before the non-commissioned officer could come.
"What sound?" asked Baynell.
"Listen, sir," said the sentry.
The night was dark. There was no moon. The stars now and then glimmering
through the mists afforded scant illumination to the earth. The fires of
the troops in bivouac about the town shone like thousands of
constellations, reflected by the earth. The wind was surging fitfully
among the pines. There was a dull iterative beat, rather felt than
heard.
"The train?" suggested Baynell.
"The train is in, sir."
"Must have been a freight," Baynell hazarded, for the indefinite
vibration had ceased.
"That's 'hep, hep, hep,'--that's marching feet, sir,--that's what it
is!"
"Well, what of that?" Baynell demanded. "It's the corporal of the guard
going out with the relief."
"It's too early----"
"Grand Rounds, possibly."
"It's too near," objected the man. "It's very near."
The wind struck their faces with a dank fillip of dew. The vine hard by
was dripping; they could hear the drops fall, and a silent interval, and
again a falling drop.
"There is nothing now," said Baynell. "It was doubtless some patrol. The
air is very moist, and sounds are heavier than usual."
"This seemed to me very near, sir," said the soldier, discontentedly. He
wished he had fired his piece and called for the corporal of the guard.
He had hesitated, for the corporal had scant patience with a military
zealot who was forever discovering causes of alarm without foundation,
and this exercise of judgment was a strain on a soldier's sense of duty.
He had expected the captain to respond to the mere suggestion of a
secret approach, remembering the search for the hidden Rebel officer.
But Baynell had never heard of that episode!
Suddenly all the camps broke into a turbulence of sound. A hundred drums
were beating the tattoo. From down the valley and over the river the
bugle iterated the strain. Near the town and along the hills it was
duplicated anew, and all the echoes of the crags and the rocks of the
river bank repeated it, and called out the mandate, and sang it again in
a different key; at last it died into a fitful repetition; silence once
more; an absolute hush.
A rocket went up from the fort hard by; another rose, starlike and
stately, from unseen regions beyond a hill. Presently the lights were
dying out like magic all along the encampments, as if some great
cataclysm were among the stellular reflections, blotting them from the
sphere of being. The constellations above glowed more brightly as the
earth darkened. The wind was gathering force. Baynell listened as the
boughs clashed and surged together.
"You doubtless heard the patrol," he said. And again--"The air is dank."
Then he turned and went within; the soldier marched back and forth, as
he was destined to do for some time yet, and listened with all the keen
intentness of which he was capable. And heard nothing.
The next morning--it was still before dawn--a sudden sharp clamor rose
from a redoubt within which was a powder magazine near the main works,
lying on the hither side of the river. The mischief which the earlier
sentinel at the Roscoe place anticipated had come; how, whence,--the man
now on duty hardly knew. He fired his rifle and called for the guard.
Then a few sharp reports, and a tumult of shouting sounded from the
redoubt. A general alarm ensued. The drums were beating the long roll
in the infantry camps,--a nerve-thrilling, terrifying vibration; and the
sharp cry, "Fall in!--Fall in!" was like an incident of the keen, rare,
matutinal air, the iterative command sounding like an echo from every
quarter in which the lines of tents were beginning to glimmer dimly.
From where the cavalry horses were picketed in long rows came the clash
of accoutrements and the tramp of hoofs as the trumpets sang "Boots and
Saddles!" Once a courier--a shadowy, mounted figure, half
distinguishable in the gray obscurity, seeming gigantic, like some
horseman of a fable--dashed past in the gloom, going or coming none
could know whither. The clamors increased, the shots multiplied, then
the clear, chill light came gradually over the turmoils of darkness and
sudden surprise. The first rays of the sun struck upon the Confederate
flag flying from the redoubt, and its paroled garrison were trooping
across to the main line of fortifications, bearing the miraculous story
that they had awakened to find the work full of Confederate soldiers who
seemed to have mined their way into the place from some subterranean
access, and who were now in the name of Julius Roscoe, their ranking
officer, demanding the surrender of the fort which the redoubt
overlooked.
The Federal commander would have shelled them out of their precarious
advantage with very hearty good-will, but he feared for the stores of
powder, which he really could not spare. Moreover, the explosion of the
magazine at such close quarters could but result in the total demolition
of the main work and its valuable armament, inflicting also great
destruction of life. Thus, although the burly and experienced warrior,
Colonel Deltz, was fairly rampant with indignation at the insignificance
of this bold enemy both in point of the subordinate rank of the leader
and the small number of the force, he was fain to hold parley, instead
of opening fire upon the redoubt at once and wiping the raiders, with
one hand, as it were, from the face of the earth. It may be doubted if
any capable and trusted military expert ever discharged a more
distasteful duty. Nevertheless, it was performed _secundum artem_, with
every show of those amenities which of all professional courtesies have
the slightest root in truth and real feeling. He invited the surrender
of the redoubt, ignoring the demand for the surrender of the fort as a
puerile and impudent folly, offering the usual fine and humane
suggestions touching the avoidance of the useless effusion of blood,
such as often before have been heard when a sophistry must needs fill
the breach in lieu of force. When this was declined, Julius Roscoe was
reminded, in the most cautious terms, of the personal jeopardy incurred
by a commander who undertakes to hold out an untenable position. Julius
Roscoe's reply, couched in the same strain of courteous phraseology,
such, indeed, as might have been employed by a general of division,
deliberating on articles of capitulation involving the well-being of an
army, intimated that he was popularly supposed to be able to take care
of himself; that so far from being unprepared to hold the redoubt which
he had captured, he had means at his disposal to possess himself of the
fort itself, and if its garrison would but await his onset, he should be
happy to entertain Colonel Deltz in his own quarters at dinner in a
campaigner's simple way--say, at one of the clock.
These covert allusions to the signal advantages of his situation showed
that Lieutenant Roscoe was fully apprized of the very large quantity of
ammunition stored in the magazine, and the tone of his rejoinder
intimated that he would avail himself to the uttermost of its
efficiency. The works were close enough to render visible the
occupations of the Confederates. Though gaunt and half-starved, many
ragged and barefoot, they were as merry as grigs and as industrious as
beavers, destroying such Federal stores as they could not remove,
spiking or otherwise disabling the ordnance that they could not
use,--the heavy howitzers at the embrasures,--and briskly preparing to
serve the barbette battery, that they had shifted to command the fort
and a line of intrenchments taken at a grievous disadvantage in the
rear, and some lighter swivel artillery that could sweep all the horizon
within range.
It was a sight to stir the gorge of a professed soldier and a martinet.
If aught of action could have availed, the colonel would have welcomed a
fierce and summary devoir. But the true soldier rarely allows personal
antagonism or a sentimental theory to influence the line of conduct to
which duty and prudence alike point. He swallowed his fury, and it was a
great gulp for a heady and choleric man who had lived by burning
gunpowder--lo, these many years. He perceived that his garrison, able to
descry the antics of the Confederates in the redoubt, were apprized of
their own imminent peril from the magazine in the hands of their
enemy--now, practically a mine. There was a doubt among his observant
officers as to whether the reckless band were taking any of the usual
precautions, requisite in dealing with so extensive a store of
explosives, as they joyfully loaded the cannon. Under these
circumstances, attack being out of the question, Colonel Deltz could
hardly be assured of the efficiency of his force in defence. His
garrison were palsied by surprise, the mysterious appearance of the
Confederates, and the impunity of their situation. They could only be
shelled out of the redoubt by the jeopardy of the powder magazine
itself, and its explosion would destroy the lives of the besiegers as
well as the besieged. Hence strategy was requisite. The fort was
gradually evacuated as a lure to draw the raiders into the main works,
where they could be dealt with, thus quitting their post of advantage.
Later in the day from a knob called Sugar Loaf Pinnacle an artillery
fire opened, the shells falling at first at uncertain intervals, seeking
to ascertain the range; then, in fast and furious succession, hurtling
down upon the guns of the masked battery beside the river. The missiles
seemed but tiny clouds of white smoke, each with a heart of fire, the
fuse redly burning against the densely blue sky, till dropping
elastically to the moment of explosion it was resolved into a fiercely
white focus with rayonnant fibres and stunning clamors.
The town itself was hardly in danger during this riverside bombardment,
unless, indeed, from some accident of defective marksmanship. But with
all the world gone mad, the atmosphere itself a field of pyrotechnic
magnificence, the familiar old mountains but a background to display the
curves a flying shell might describe, now and again bursting in mid-air
ere it reached its billet, the non-combatant populace was
panic-stricken. Streets were deserted. All ordinary vocations ceased.
The more substantial buildings of brick or stone were crowded, their
walls presumed to be capable of resisting at least the spent balls, wide
of aim, for these were often endowed with such a residue of energy as
still to be destructive. Cellars were in request, and while the darkness
precluded the terrifying glare of the bursting projectiles, nevertheless
the tremendous clamor of the detonation, the wild reverberations of the
echoes, the shouts of cheering men, the sound of bugles and drums and of
voices in command in the distance, gave intimations of what was going
forward, and uncertainty perhaps enhanced fear.
"Dar, now, de Yankee man's battery is done gone too!" exclaimed Uncle
Ephraim, as the voice of authority rang out sharply, with all its
echo-like variants in the subalterns' commands. The clangor of
accoutrements, the heavy but swift roll of the wheels of gun-carriages
and caissons, the tumultuous hoof-beats of horses at full gallop, the
spirited cheering of the artillerymen, filled the air--and then silence
ensued, deep and dark, the stone walls of the cellar vaguely glimmering
with one candle set on the head of a barrel.
"He's gone wid 'em,--dat man! Time dat bugle blow he tore dat bandage
off his haid--nicked or no,--dat he did!"
Uncle Ephraim was seated on an inverted cotton basket, and Aunt Chaney,
with the three "ladies" clustered about her knees, sat on the flight of
steps that led down from a cautiously closed door. The "ladies" kept
their fingers in their ears as a protection against sound, but the
deaf-mute, strangely enough, was the most acute to discern the crash,
possibly by reason of the vibrations of the air, since she could not
hear the detonation of the shells.
Somehow the sturdy courage of that soldierly shout was reassuring.
"Dere ain't no danger, ladies," declared Aunt Chaney. Then, "Oh, my
King!" she cried in an altered voice, while the three "ladies" hid their
faces in the folds of her apron as a terrific explosion took place in
mid-air, the pieces of the shell falling burning in the grove.
"Jus' lissen at dat owdacious Julius!" muttered Uncle Ephraim,
indignantly. "I never 'lowed he war gwine ter kick up sech a tarrifyin'
commotion as dis yere, nohow."
"I wish Gran'pa would come down here," whined one of the twins.
"Where the cannon-balls can't catch him," whimpered the other.
"What you talking about, ladies?" demanded the old cook, rising to the
occasion. "You 'spec' a gemman lak yer gran'pa gwine sit in de cellar,
lak--lak a 'tater!"--the simile suggested by a bushel-basket half full
of Irish potatoes for late planting in the "garden spot."
The "ladies," reassured by the joke, laughed shrilly, a little off the
key, and clung to her comfortable fat arm that so inspired their
confidence.
"_I_ gwine sit in de cellar tell _I_ sprout lak a 'tater, ef disher
tribulation ain't ober 'twell den," declared Uncle Ephraim. "Dar now!
lissen ter dat!" as once more the clamorous air broke forth with sound.
The "ladies" exclaimed in piteous accents.
"Dat ain't nuffin ter hurt, honey," Aunt Chaney reassured her trembling
charges. "Dese triflin' sodjers ain't got much aim. Yer gran'pa an' yer
cousin Leonora wouldn't stay up dere in de lawbrary ef dere was
destruction comin'."
"Then why do _you_ come in the cellar?" asked the logical Adelaide.
"Jes' ter git shet o' de terror ob seein' it, honey!" replied Aunt
Chaney. "I ain't no perfessor ob war, nohow, an' my eyes ain't practised
ter shellin' an' big shootin'."
"Me, neither," said Adelaide.
"Nor me," whimpered Geraldine.
"De cannon-balls ain't gwine kill us, dough. We gwine live a long time,"
Aunt Chaney optimistically protested. "I ain't s'prised none ef when de
war is ober an' we tell 'bout dis fight, we gwine make out dat when de
shellin' wuz at de wust, you three ladies an' me jus' stood up on de
highest aidge ob de rampart ob de fort, an' 'structed de men how ter
fire de cannon, an' p'inted out de shells flyin' through de air wid dat
ar actial little forefinger, an' kep' up de courage ob de troops."
"On which side, Aunt Chaney?" asked Adelaide, the reasonable.
"On bofe sides, honey," said Aunt Chaney, "'cordin' ter de politics ob
dem we is talkin' to!"
A rat whisked over the floor, across the dim slant of light that fell
from the candle on the head of the barrel. Uncle Ephraim, his elbows on
his knees, his gray head slightly canted in a listening attitude,
smiled vaguely, pleased like a child himself with Aunt Chaney's sketch.
"Oh, Aunt Chaney!--_do_ you s'pose we'll tell it _that_ way?" cried
Adelaide, meditating on the flattering contrast.
"Dat's de ve'y way de tales 'bout dis war is gwine be tole, honey, you
mark my words," declared the prophetess.
The contrast of the imaginative future account with the troublous
actuality of the present so delighted Adelaide that she spelled it off
on her fingers to Lucille, both repairing to the side of the barrel
where the candle was glimmering, in order to have the light on their
twinkling fingers in the manual alphabet. The humors of the expectation,
the incongruity of their martial efficiency, the boastful resources of
the future, elicited bursts of delighted gigglings, and when the next
shell exploded, neither took notice of the hurtling bomb shrieking over
the house and bound for the river.
The rest of the populace were enjoying no such solace from any waggish
interpretation of the future. The present, that single momentous day,
was for them as much of time as they cared to contemplate. Doubtless the
satisfaction was very general among the citizens, regardless of
political prepossessions, when it became known that Captain Baynell with
a detachment of horse artillery had gone out and taken up a position
that had enabled him at last to silence the Confederate guns on the
pinnacle, not, however, before the masked battery by the river was
practically dismounted.
Now both infantry and cavalry were ordered out in an effort to intercept
the venturesome Rebel artillerymen as they sought to descend from their
steep pinnacle of rock. The dust on the turnpike, redly aflare in the
sunset rays, betokened the progress of the march, and now and then it
was harassed by shells and grape from the swivel guns of the fort, for
Roscoe's limited command had not been able to bring the heavier ordnance
of the embrasures to bear upon the camps around the town.
The whole community was in a panic, for this might soon betide. But a
gunboat came, as it chanced, up the river, took a position of advantage,
and with great precision of aim soon shelled the little force out of the
main work. Their capture was momently expected, but they made good their
retreat to their former position in the redoubt, with the intention
unquestionably of escaping thence by the secret passage which had
afforded them access. In leaving, however, the powder magazine was blown
up by accident or design, destroying the integrity of the whole
fortification, and shattering nearly every pane of glass in the town,
the force of the concussion indeed bringing the tower of the hospital
hard by to the ground. That the raiders had perished was not doubted,
till news came of a sharp skirmish which took place under cover of
darkness at the mouth of a sort of grotto in Judge Roscoe's grove, and
in the confusion, surprise, and obscurity all escaped save some
half-dozen left dead upon the ground.
CHAPTER XV
With these important works wrecked and dismantled, with the destruction
of great stores of ammunition and artillery which obviously placed the
system of defence in an imperfect condition, with the difficulty of
repair and supply which time and distance and insufficiency of
transportation rendered insurmountable, with the elation of victory that
so dashing an exploit, so thoroughly consummated, must communicate to
the Confederate troops, an attack by them in force was daily expected.
The capture of Roanoke City was considered an event of the near future,
anticipated with joy or gloom, according to the several interests of the
varied population, but in any case regarded as a foregone conclusion.
Daily the Northern trains, heavily laden, bore away passengers who had
no wish to become citizens of the Southern Confederacy. Perishable
effects, stocks of goods of the order that a battle would endanger or
destroy, were shipped to calmer regions. Reinforcements came by every
train, by every boat, till all the resources of the country were
strained to maintain them, and still the Southerners had not advanced to
the opportunity. It was one of those occasions of the Civil War when
the hand that took was not strong enough to hold. The Confederate force
near the town was inadequately supplied to enable it to do more than
seize the advantage, which must needs be relinquished. Its slim
resources admitted of no permanent occupation of the town, and the empty
glory of the capture of Roanoke City would have been offset by the
disastrous necessity of the evacuation of the post. Gradually the
Federal lines were extended until they lay almost as before the raid on
the works. The Confederate ranks had been depleted to furnish
reinforcements to a more practicable point. They were falling back, and
now and again sudden sallies brought in prisoners from such a distance
as told the story.
The town was once more secure, work was begun on the dismantled
fortifications, and daily the question of how so hazardous an enterprise
could have been devised and executed revived in interest. The commanding
general had not the loss of the town itself to account for, as at one
time was probable, but for the destruction of a great store of
ammunition, as well as the loss of life, of guns, of the works
themselves, representing many thousands of dollars and the labor of
regiments. All, however, seemed hardly commensurate with the disaster he
would sustain in point of reputation. That such a dashing, destructive
exploit could be planned and consummated under his own ceaselessly
vigilant eyes appeared little short of the miraculous, and for his own
justification he looked needfully into its inception.
It was discovered that there was a natural subterranean passage from the
grove of Judge Roscoe's place to a cellar, a portion of which had
constituted the powder magazine on the Devrett hill, and that this had
been exploded by means of a slow match through the grotto, previously
prepared, enabling the raiders to effect their escape. It was further
ascertained that Julius Roscoe, who had led the enterprise, had been in
hiding for some time at his father's home, and had been seen as he
issued thence covered with blood, evidently fresh from some personal
altercation with a Federal officer, for weeks a guest in the house.
Although bruised and bleeding, this officer could offer no account of
his wounds save a fall, impossible to have produced them; he had raised
no alarm, and had given no report of the presence of an enemy, whose
intrusion had wrought such damage and disaster to the Union cause.
One detail led to another, each discovery unveiled cognate mysteries,
the disclosure of trifles brought forward circumstances of importance.
The claim of the sentinel posted at Judge Roscoe's portico that he had
fired the first shot which raised the alarm, evoked the fact that an
earlier sentry had told Captain Baynell that he had heard marching
feet--a moving column in the cadenced step, he described it now--near,
very near, that murky night, and that Captain Baynell had waived it away
with the suggestion of "a corporal of the guard with the relief"--at
that hour!--when the next relief would not be due till nearly
midnight,--and had gone back into the parlor, where Mrs. Gwynn had begun
to sing, "Her bright smile haunts me still."
This account reminded several of his camp-fellows that, having been in
town on leave, they had met that dark night on the turnpike a force
marching in column, and naturally thinking this only the removal of
Federal troops from some point to another, here, so far within the
lines, they had quietly stood aside and watched the shadowy progress.
Nothing amiss had occurred to their minds. The men had all their
officers duly in position, and they were marching silently and with
great regularity. But by reference to the various written reports, it
was easily ascertained that there was no shifting of troops that day, no
assignment of a company to any duty which would have taken them out at
that hour, no detail reporting for service. Still following in the
footsteps of this column, something more was learned from a young negro,
who had been out to fish that night, which was the delight of the
plantation darkey at this season of the year, and had cast his lines
from under the bluff near Judge Roscoe's place; the night being foggy,
he had not noticed, till they were very near, the approach of three or
four large open boats, filled with soldiers, to judge by the rifles, who
were rowing very fast and hard against the current and keeping close in
to the shore. When they landed and beached the boats they were very
quiet, fell into order, and marched off without a word, except the
necessary curt commands. It had never occurred to him to give the alarm.
He had taken none. They had rowed so close in to shore, he thought, to
avoid such a collision as had happened in the mists earlier in the
night, when a large barge was run down by a gunboat and sunk. Doubtless
if they had passed the picket boats, the misty invisibility of all the
surface of the water protected them, but for the most part the patrol of
the river pickets was further down-stream. As they had come, so they had
gone, and the matter remained a nine days' wonder. The commanding
general almost choked when he thought of it.
"This is going to be a serious matter for Baynell," said Colonel Ashley,
one day. He had called at Judge Roscoe's partly because he did not wish
to break off with abrupt rudeness an acquaintance which he had persisted
in forming, and partly because he was not willing in the circumstances
that had arisen to seem to shun the house.
Judge Roscoe was not at home, but Mrs. Gwynn was in the parlor. Ashley
had asked her to sing. There was something "delightfully dreary," as he
described it, in the searching, romantic, melancholy cadences of her
sweet contralto voice. He had not intended to open his heart, but
somehow the mood induced by her singing, the quiet of the dim, secluded,
cool drawing-rooms, with the old-fashioned, high, stucco ceiling, and
the shadowy green gloom of the trees without, prevailed with him, and he
spoke upon impulse.
"What matter?" she asked. She had wheeled half around on the
piano-stool, and sat, her slim figure in its white dress, delicate and
erect, one white arm, visible through the thin fabric, outstretched to
the keyboard, the hand toying with resolving chords.
He had been standing beside the piano as she sang, but now, with the air
of inviting serious discussion, he seated himself in one of the stiff
arm-chairs of the carved rosewood "parlor set" of that day, and replied
gravely:----
"His association with Julius Roscoe."
Her eyes widened with genuine amazement.
"It seems," proceeded Ashley, slowly, "that a dozen or two of the
soldiers, who claimed to have seen a Confederate officer on the balcony
here, recognized him as Julius Roscoe, when he reappeared in command of
the forces that captured the redoubt. And the surgeon has always
insisted that Baynell's hurt was a blow, not a fall. There is a good
deal of smothered talk in various quarters."
He stroked his mustache contemplatively, looked vaguely about the room,
and sighed in a certain disconsolateness.
"I don't understand," said Mrs. Gwynn, sharply, fixing intent eyes upon
him. "How can Captain Baynell be called in question?"
"Oh, the general theory--however well or ill grounded--is that young
Roscoe was here on a reconnoitring expedition of some sort, or perhaps
merely on a visit to his kindred, and that Baynell winked at his
presence on account of friendship with the family, instead of arresting
him, as he should have done. It's an immense pity. Baynell is a fine
officer."
Mrs. Gwynn had turned pale with excitement.
"But _none of us_ knew that Julius Roscoe was in the house!" she
exclaimed. She hesitated a moment as the words passed her lips. Judge
Roscoe's reticence on the subject might imply some knowledge of the
harbored Rebel.
Ashley was suddenly tense with energy.
"Don't imagine for one moment, my dear madam, that I have any desire to
extract information from you. It is no concern of mine how he came or
went. I only mention the subject because it is very much on my mind and
heart. And I don't see any satisfactory end to it. I have a great
respect for Baynell as a man, and especially as an artillerist, and
somehow in these campaigns I have contrived to get fond of the
fellow!--though he is about as stiff, and unresponsive, and prejudiced,
and priggish a bundle of animal fibre as ever called himself human."
"Why, he doesn't give me that idea," exclaimed Leonora, her eyes
widening. "He seems unguarded, and impulsive, and ardent."
Colonel Ashley was very considerably her senior and far too experienced
to be ingenuous himself. He made no comment on the conviction her words
created within him. He only looked at her in silence, receiving her
remark with courteous attention. Then he resumed:----
"Of course in a civil war there are always some instances of undue
leniency,--the pressure of circumstances induces it,--but rarely indeed
such as this; it amounts to aiding and abetting the enemy, however
unpremeditated. Young Roscoe could not have secured the means or
information for his destructive raid had not Baynell permitted him to be
housed here. Doubtless, however, Baynell thought it a mere visit of the
boy to his father's family."
"But Captain Baynell never dreamed that Julius Roscoe was in the house!"
she exclaimed.
"That's just what he says he _did_--dreamed that he saw him! I can rely
on you not to repeat my words. But I have had no confidential talk with
him."
"I am sure--I _know_--they were never together for a moment."
"The surgeon says that Roscoe's knuckles cut to the bone," commented
Ashley, with a significant smile. But the triumphs of stultifying Mrs.
Gwynn in conversation were all inadequate to restore his usual serene
satisfaction, and once more he looked restlessly about the rooms and
sighed.
"What do you think Captain Baynell was guilty of? Permitting an enemy to
remain within the lines, _perdu_, unsuspected, to gather information,
and make off with it--conniving at the concealment, and assisting the
escape of an enemy? And _you_ call yourself his friend!"
Leonora's cheeks were flushed. Her voice rang with a tense vibration.
She fixed her interlocutor with a challenging eye.
"Oh--I don't _know_ what he intended," replied Ashley, almost irritably.
"Doubtless he had some high-minded motive, so intricate that he can
never explain it, and nobody else can ever unravel it. I only know he
has played the fool,--and I _fear_ he has ruined himself irretrievably."
"But you don't answer my question--what do _you think_ he has done?"
Ashley might have responded that his conclusions were not subject to her
inquisition. But his suave methods of thought and conduct could not
compass this unmannerly retort. Moreover, it was a relief to his
feelings to canvass the matter so paramount in his mind with an
irresponsible woman, rather than with his brother officers, among whom
it was rife, thereby sending his speculations and doubts and views
abroad as threads to be wrought into the warp and woof of their
opinion, and possibly give undue substance and color to the character of
the fabric.
"Why,--of course this is just my own view,--formed on what I hear from
outsiders,--and I think it is the general view. Baynell knew the young
man was hidden in the house, on a stolen visit to his father, thinking
he had no ultimate intentions but to escape at a convenient opportunity.
These separations must be very cruel indeed, with no means of
communication. Baynell, though very wrongfully, _might_ have indulged
this concealment from motives of--ah--er--friendship to the family, for
young Roscoe would undoubtedly have been dealt with as a spy, had he
been captured in lurking here. The two _may_ have been more or less
associated,--certainly they came together in an altercation that
resulted in blows. _I_ think Baynell possibly discovered Roscoe's
scheme, and threatened him with arrest. Roscoe knocked him down the
stairs and fled from the house to the grotto, considering this safe, for
he might have crossed from the balcony to the firs without observation
if he had been lucky, as at that time none of us knew that the grotto
existed. Now these are _my_ conclusions--but for the integrity of the
service Baynell's acts and his motives must be sifted. They may not bear
to an impartial mind even so liberal a construction as this. It is a
threatening situation, and I am apprehensive--I am very apprehensive."
Mrs. Gwynn's hand fell with a discordant crash on the keys of the piano.
"Why--why--what can they do to him?" she gasped.
Vertnor Ashley shied from the subject like a frightened horse.
"Ah--oh--ah--er--well," he said, "let us not think of that." He paused
abruptly. Then, "To forecast the immediate future is enough of disaster.
There is already said to be an official investigation on the cards. No
doubt charges will be preferred, and he will be brought to a
court-martial."
He sighed again, and looked about futilely, as if for suggestion. He
rose at length, and with his pleasant, cordial manner and a smile of
deprecating apology, he said, "I am afraid my grim subjects do not
commend me for a lady's parlor." Then with a light change of tone, "So
much obliged for that lovely little French song--what is it--_Quel est
cet attrait qui m'attire_? I want to be able to distinguish it, for may
I not ask for it again some time?" And bowing, and smiling, and
prosperous, he took his graceful departure.
Mrs. Gwynn stood motionless, her eyes on the carpet, her mind almost
dazed by the magnitude, by the terrors, of the subjects of her
contemplation. She felt she must be more certain; she could not leave
this disastrous complication thus. She could not speak to this man,
friendly though he had seemed, lest she betray some fact of her own
knowledge that might be of disadvantage to another who had meant no
ill--nay, she was sure had done no ill. Then she was beset by the
realization of the sophistry of circumstance. But if circumstance could
be adduced against Baynell, should it not equally prevail in his favor?
When she, knowing naught of the lurking Julius, had sent to his
hiding-place this Federal officer, did not instantly the clamors of
discovery resound through the house? She could hear even now in the
tones of his voice, steadied and sonorous by the habit of command, sharp
and decisive on the air, the words, "You are my prisoner!" twice
repeated, that had summoned her, stricken with sudden panic, from her
flowers on the library table to the hall, where she saw the balustrade
of the stairs still shaking with the concussion of a heavy fall. And as
she stood there, another moment--barely a moment--brought the apparition
of Julius, flying as if for his life, a pistol in his hand, and covered
with blood. Dreams! Who said aught of dreams! This was not the course a
man would take who desired to shield a concealed Rebel. There was no
eye-witness of the altercation. But she, on the lower floor, had heard
it all--the swift ascent for the book, the exclamation of amazement,
then the stern voice of command, the words of arrest, the impact of the
blow, and the clamors of the fall. Then the flight; she had seen Julius,
fleeing for safety, fleeing from the house into the very teeth of the
camps.
Should not Baynell know this, the event that preceded the long
insensibility which had so blunted his impressions, his recollections?
She resolved to confer with Judge Roscoe. How much he knew of Julius
Roscoe's lurking visit, how much he cared for her to know, she could not
be sure. She suspected that old Ephraim was fully informed, for without
his services the visitor could hardly have been maintained. But neither
had been at hand at the moment of discovery, of collision.
When Judge Roscoe came in she submitted this question to his judgment.
To her surprise he did not canvass the matter. He said at once: "By all
means Captain Baynell ought to know this. It would be best to send for
him and explain to him what you saw and heard,--the whole occurrence.
Captain Baynell should be made aware of all the details of the actual
event that you more nearly than any one else witnessed."
The house in these summer days, with the shutters half closed and the
doors all open, seemed more retired, more solitary, than when all the
busy life of the place was drawn to the focus of the library fire. She
was quite alone, as she traversed the hall and sat down to write at the
library table. The "ladies" were playing out of doors, close in to the
window under a tree. Judge Roscoe had business in the town and walked
thither leaning rather heavily on his cane, for no news came of Acrobat,
and somehow he no longer cared to ride the glossy iron-gray that Captain
Baynell still left grazing in his pastures. So still were all the
precincts she feared she might not find a messenger as she went out on
the latticed gallery searching for old Ephraim. But there he sat in the
sun in front of the kitchen door. He was not wont to be so silent. He
said naught when she handed him the missive with her instructions, but
he looked unwilling, with a sort of warning wisdom in his expression,
and several times turned the note gingerly in his hand, as if he thought
it might explode. He would fain have remonstrated against the renewal of
communication with the elements that had brought so much disquiet into
the calm life of the old house hitherto. But his lips were sealed so far
as the "Yankee man" and Julius were concerned. And he would maintain
that he had never seen or heard of the grotto till indeed it was blown
up.
"All dese young folks is a stiff-necked and tarrifyin' generation, an'
ef dey will leave ole Ephraim in peace, he p'intedly won't pester dem,"
he said to himself.
Therefore, merely murmuring acquiescence, "Yes'm, yes'm, yes'm," while
he received his orders, he put on his hat which he had hitherto held in
his hand, and walked off briskly to the tent of the artillery captain.
The succinct dignified tone of Mrs. Gwynn's note requesting to see
Captain Baynell at his earliest convenience on a matter of business
precluded effectually any false sentimental hopes, had any communication
from her been calculated to raise them. He was already mounted, having
just returned from afternoon parade; and saying to Uncle Ephraim that he
would wait on Mrs. Gwynn immediately, he wheeled his horse and forthwith
disappeared in the midst of the shadow and sheen of the full-leaved
grove.
Baynell had changed, changed immeasurably, since she had last seen him.
Always quiet and sedate, his gravity had intensified to sternness, his
dignified composure to a cold, impenetrable reserve, his attentive
interest to a sort of wary vigilance, all giving token of the effect
wrought in his mental and moral endowment by the knowledge of the
suspicions entertained concerning his actions, and the charges that were
being formulated against him.
In one sense these had already slain him. His individuality was gone. He
would be no more what once he was. His pride, so strong, so vivid, as
essential an element of his being as his breath, as his soul, had been
done to death. It had been a noble endowment, despite its exactions, and
maintained high standards and sought finer issues. It had died with the
woe of a thousand deaths, that calumny should touch his name; that
accusation could ever find a foothold in his life; that treachery should
come to investigation in his deeds.
She rather wondered at his calmness, the self-possession expressed in
his manner, his face. He had himself well in hand. He was not nervous.
His haggard pallor told what the sleepless hours of self-communing
brought to him, yet he was strong enough to confront the future. He
would give battle to the false charge, the lying circumstance, the
implacable phalanxes of the probabilities. The truth was intrinsically
worth fighting for, in any event, and even now his heart could swell
with the conviction that the truth could only demonstrate the impeccancy
of his official record.
He met her with that grave, conventional, inexpressive courtesy which
had always characterized him, and it was a little difficult, in her
unusual flutter and agitation, to find a suitable beginning.
She had seated herself in the library at the table where she had written
the note, and she was mechanically trifling with an ivory paper-knife,
the portfolio and paper still lying before her. He took a chair near at
hand and waited, not seeking to inaugurate the conversation.
"I sent for you, Captain Baynell, because I have heard something--there
are rumors--"
He did not take the word from her, nor help her out. He sat quietly
waiting.
"In short, I think you ought to know that I overheard all that passed
between you and Julius Roscoe on the stairs that morning."
Captain Baynell's rejoinder surprised her.
"Then he was really in the house?" he said meditatively.
"Oh, yes,--though I did not know it till he dashed past me in the hall.
Two minutes had not elapsed since you had left me here standing by the
table."
She detailed the circumstances, and when she had finished speaking he
thanked her simply, and said that the facts would be of value to him.
"I thought you ought to know them, hearing Colonel Ashley describe the
various rumors afloat--but, but these--they--they will soon die out?"
She looked at him appealingly.
He did not answer immediately. Then--
"I shall be court-martialled," he said succinctly.
Her heart seemed almost to stand still in the presence of this great
threat, yet she strove against its menace.
"Of course I know this is serious, and must trouble all your friends,"
she said vaguely. "But doubtless--doubtless there will be an acquittal."
"It is a matter of liberty, and life itself," he said. "But I do not
care for either,--I deprecate the reflections on my character as a
soldier." He hesitated for one moment, then broke out with sudden
passion, "I care for the jeopardy of my honor--my sacred honor!"
There was an interval of stillness so long that a slant of the sunset
light might seem to have moved on the floor. The soft babble of the
voices of the children came in at the open window; the mocking-bird's
jubilance rose from among the magnolia blooms outside. The great bowl on
the table was full of roses, and she eyed their magnificence absently,
seeing nothing, remembering all that Ashley had said, and realizing how
difficult it would be to convince even him, with all his friendly
good-will, of the simplicity of the motives that had precipitated the
real events, so grimly metamorphosed in the monstrous mischances of war.
"Oh--" she cried suddenly, with a poignant accent, "that this should
have fallen upon you in the house of your friends! We can never forgive
ourselves, and you can never forgive us!"
"There is nothing to forgive," he said heartily; "I have no grievance
against this kind roof. I could not expect Judge Roscoe to betray his
own son, and deliver him up to capture, to death as a spy--because I
happened to be here, a temporary guest. And I could not expect the young
man to voluntarily surrender--for my convenience. No--I blame no one."
"You are magnanimous!" exclaimed Mrs. Gwynn, her luminous gray eyes
shining through tears as she looked at him.
"Only omniscience could have foreseen and guarded against this
disastrous complication of adverse circumstances. But the results are
serious enough to justify doubt and provoke investigation. Knowing the
simple truth, it seems a little difficult to see how it can fail to be
easily established--it is the imputation that afflicts me. I am not used
to contemplate myself as a traitor--with my motives."
"Oh, it is so unjust--so rancorously untrue! You arrested him the moment
you saw him--although he was in Judge Roscoe's house. You must have
known that he was Judge Roscoe's son."
"I recognized him from his portrait--" Baynell checked himself. He would
not have liked to say how often, with what jealous appraisement of its
manly beauty and interest of suggestion, he had studied the portrait of
Julius on the parlor wall, knowing him as a man who had loved Leonora
Gwynn, and fearing him as a man whom possibly Leonora Gwynn loved.
"But I was obliged to arrest him on the spot--why, I was in honor
bound."
His face suddenly fell--in this most intimate essential of true
gentlemanhood, in this dearest requisition of a soldier's faith, that is
yet the commonest principle of the humblest campaigner, he was held to
have failed, in point of honor. He was held to have paltered and played
a double part, to have betrayed alike his country, the fair name of his
corps, and his own unsullied record. And this was the fiat of
fair-minded men, comrades, countrymen, to be expressed in the preferred
charges.
Bankrupt in all he held dear, he shrank from seeming to beg the sheer
empty bounty of her sympathy. He hardly cared to face these reflections
in her presence. He arose to go, and it was with composed, conventional
courtesy, as inexpressive as if he were some casual friendly caller,
that he took his leave, resolutely ignoring all the tragedy of the
situation.
The next day came the news that charges having been duly preferred he
had been placed in arrest to await the action of the general
court-martial to be assembled in the town.
CHAPTER XVI
Ashley, in common with a number of Baynell's friends, did not recognize
a fair spirit in the inception of the investigation. The military
authorities in Roanoke City seemed rancorously keen to prove that naught
within the scope of their own duty could have averted the disasters of
the battle of the redoubt. The moral gymnastic of shunting the blame was
actively in progress. The proof of treachery within the lines,
individual failure of duty, would explain to the Department far more to
the justification of the commander of the garrison of the town the
losses both of life and material, and the jeopardy of the whole
position, than admission of the fact that the military of the post had
been outwitted, and that the enemy was entitled to salvos of applause
for a very gallant exploit. Indeed, only specific details from one
familiar with the interior of the works, to which, of course, citizens
were not admitted, could have informed Julius Roscoe of the location of
the powder magazine and enabled him to utilize in this connection his
own early familiarity with the surroundings. Thus the theory that Julius
Roscoe could not have accomplished its destruction had he not been
harbored, even helped, by the connivance of a personal friend in the
lines, and that friend, a Federal officer, was far more popular among
the military authorities than the simple fact that a Rebel had been
detected visiting his father's house by a Federal officer, a guest
therein, promptly arrested, and in the altercation the one had been hurt
and the other had escaped. Had the capture of the redoubt never occurred
later as a sequence, this transient encounter of Baynell's would hardly
have elicited a momentary notice.
The aspect of the court-martial was far from reassuring even to men of
worldly experience on broad lines. The impassive, serious, bearded
faces, the military figures in full-dress uniform, the brilliant
insignia of high rank being specially pronounced, for of course no
officer of lower degree than that of the prisoner was permitted to sit,
were ranged on each side of a long table on a low rostrum in a large
room, formerly a fraternity hall, in a commercial building now devoted
to military purposes. The spectacle might well have made the heart
quail. It seemed so expressive of the arbitrary decrees of absolute
force, oblivious of justice, untempered by mercy!
A jury as an engine of the law must needs be considered essentially
imperfect, and subject to many deteriorating influences, only available
as the best device for eliciting fact and appraising crises that the
slow development of human morals has yet presented. But to a peaceful
civilian a jury of ignorant, shock-headed rustics might seem a safe and
reasonable repository of the dearest values of life and reputation in
comparison with this warlike phalanx, combining the functions of both
judge and jury, the very atmosphere of destruction sucked in with every
respiration.
The president, a brevet brigadier-general, at the head of the table, was
of a peculiarly fierce physiognomy, that yet was stony cruel. The
judge-advocate at the foot had the look of laying down the law by main
force. He had a keenly aggressive manner. He was a captain of cavalry,
brusque, alert; he had dark side whiskers and a glancing dark eye, and
was the only man on the rostrum attired in an undress uniform. His
multifarious functions as the official prosecutor for the government,
and also adviser to the court, and yet attorney for the prisoner to a
degree,--by a theory similar to the ancient fiction of English law that
the judge is counsel for the accused,--would seem, in civilian
estimation, to render him "like Cerberus, three gentlemen at once," as
Mrs. Malaprop would say, or a military presentment of Pooh-Bah. The
nominal military accuser, acting in concert with the judge-advocate,
seated at a little distance, was conscious of sustaining an unpopular
_rôle_, and it had tinged his manner with disadvantage. The prisoner
appeared without any restraint, of course, but wearing no sword. The
special values of his presence, his handsome face, his blond hair and
beard that had a glitter not unlike the gold lace of his full-dress
uniform, his fine figure and highbred, reserved manner, were very marked
in his conspicuous position, occupying a chair at a small table on the
right of the judge-advocate. Baynell had a calm dignity and a look of
steady, immovable courage incongruous with his plight, arraigned on so
base a charge, and yet a sort of blighted, wounded dismay, as
unmistakable as a burn, was on his face, that might have moved even one
who had cared naught for him to resentment, to protest for his sake.
The light of the unshaded windows, broad, of ample height, and eight or
ten in number on one side of the room, brought out in fine detail every
feature of the scene within. Beneath no sign of the town appeared, as
the murmur of traffic rose softly, for the building was one of the few
three-story structures, and the opposite roofs were low. The aspect of
the far-away mountains, framed in each of the apertures, with the
intense clarity of the light and the richness of tint of the approaching
summer solstice, was like a sublimated gallery of pictures, painted with
a full brush and of kindred types. Here were the repetitious long
ranges, with the mouldings of the foot-hills at the base, and again a
single great dome, amongst its mysterious shimmering clouds, filled the
canvas. Now in the background were crowded all the varying mountain
forms, while a glittering vacant reach of the Tennessee River stretched
out into the distance. And again a bridge crossed the currents, light
and airy in effect, seeming to spring elastically from its piers, in the
strong curves of the suspended arches, while a sail-boat, with its head
tucked down shyly as the breeze essayed to chuck it under the chin,
passed through and out of sight. Another window showed the wind in a
bluffer mood, wrestling with the storm clouds; showed, too, that rain
was falling in a different county, and the splendors of the iris hung
over far green valleys that gleamed prismatically with a secondary
reflection.
The room was crowded with spectators, both military and civilian,
finding seats on the benches which were formerly used in the fraternity
gatherings and which were still in place. The case had attracted much
public attention. There were few denizens of the town who had not had
individual experiences of interest pending the storming of the fort, and
this fact invested additional details with peculiar zest and whetted the
edge of curiosity as to the inception of the plan and the means by which
Julius Roscoe's exploit had become practicable. The effect of the
imposing character of the court was manifested in the perfect decorum
observed by the general public. There was scarcely a stir during the
opening of the proceedings. The order convening the court was read to
the accused, and he was offered his right to challenge any member of
the court-martial for bias or other incompetency. Baynell declined to
avail himself of this privilege. There ensued a moment of silence. Then,
with a metallic clangor, for every member wore his sword, the court
rose, and, all standing, a glittering array, the oath was administered
to each of the thirteen by the judge-advocate. Afterward the president
of the court, of course the ranking officer present, himself
administered the oath to the judge-advocate, and the prosecution opened.
The military accuser was the first witness sworn and interrogated, but
the prosecution had much other testimony tending to show that the
prisoner had been living in great amity with persons notoriously of
sentiments antagonistic to the Union cause, as exemplified by his long
stay in Judge Roscoe's house; that he was in correspondence and even in
intimate association with a Rebel in hiding under the same roof; that
either with treacherous intent, or for personal reasons, he had
leniently permitted this enemy in arms to lie _perdu_ within the lines
and subsequently to escape with such information as had resulted in
great loss of men, materials, and money to the Federal government; that
he had been apprised, by the sentinel at the door, of the approach of a
body of troops the night before the attack on the redoubt took place,
and that he nefariously or negligently declined to investigate the
incident. Most of this evidence, however, was circumstantial.
The defence met it strenuously at every point. The intimacy between
Judge Roscoe and the Baynell family was shown to be of a far earlier
date, and the friendship utterly devoid of any connection with political
interests; in this relation the accused had in every instance
subordinated his personal feeling to his military duty, even going so
far as to cause the property of his host's niece to be seized for
military service,--the impressment of the horse, which Colonel Ashley
testified he had at that time considered an unwarrantable bit of
official tyranny, some individuals being allowed to retain their horses
through the interposition of army officers among their friends.
Colonel Ashley testified further that the prisoner was such a stickler
on trifles, as to seek to check him, a person of responsibility and
discretion, an experienced officer, in expressing some casual
speculations in the presence of Judge Roscoe concerning troops on an
incoming train.
The accused admitted that he had not investigated the sound of marching
troops in the thrice-guarded lines of the encampment, but urged it was
no part of his duty and impracticable. Small detachments were coming and
going at all hours of the night. If an officer of the guard, going out
with the relief or a patrol, had seen fit to march across Judge Roscoe's
grove, it was no concern of his nor of the sentinel's. He had no
divination of the proximity of the enemy.
Perhaps the ardor of the witnesses, called in Captain Baynell's behalf,
when the prosecution had rested at length, made an impression
unfavorable to the idea of impartiality. More than one on
cross-examination was constrained to acknowledge that he was swayed by
the sense of the prisoner's hitherto unimpugnable record, and his high
standing as a soldier. No such admission could be wrung from Judge
Roscoe, skilled in all the details of the effect of testimony. His plain
asseverations that his son had come to his house, not knowing that a
Federal officer was a temporary inmate, the account of the simple
measures taken to defeat the guest's observation or detection of the
young Rebel's propinquity, the reasonableness of his quietly awaiting an
opportunity to run the pickets when a chance meeting resulted in
discovery and a collision--all went far to establish the fact that the
presence of Julius Roscoe was but one of those stolen visits home in
which the adventurous Southern soldiers delighted and of which Captain
Baynell had no sort of knowledge till the moment of their encounter,
when Julius rushed forth to the gaze of all the camp.
This was the point of difficulty with the prosecution, the point of
danger with the defence,--the adequacy of the proof as to the prisoner's
knowledge of the presence of the Rebel in hiding, harbored in the house.
For this the prosecution had the apparition of the Confederate officer,
covered with blood and later identified as Julius Roscoe, and the
condition of Baynell's wound, which the surgeon swore was a "facer,"
delivered by an expert boxer. Evidently this came from an altercation,
in which both had forborne the use of weapons, thus suggesting some
collision of interests, as between personal associates or former friends
rather than a hand-to-hand conflict of armed enemies.
On this vital point, to form the conclusions of military men, Baynell
could command no testimony save that of the Roscoe household,--the most
important witness of course being the judge himself, who had devised and
controlled all the methods to keep the Federal officer unsuspicious and
tranquil, and to maintain the lurking Rebel in security. The anxiety of
the authorities to fix the responsibility for the disclosure of the
military information concerning the interior of the works, which only
one familiar with the location of the magazine could have given, had
induced them to ignore Judge Roscoe's shelter of their enemy, thus
avoiding the entanglement of a slighter matter with the paramount
consideration under investigation. While the fact that his feelings as a
father must needs have coerced Judge Roscoe into harboring and
protecting his son and requiring his servant to minister to his wants,
still the recital of the concealment of his presence affronted the
sentiment of the court-martial, even though Judge Roscoe's part was
obviously restricted to the sojourn of the Confederate officer in his
house, for he had no knowledge of the details of the escape and
subsequent adventures.
The course of the proceedings of such a body was not competent to afford
any very marked relaxations in the line of comedy relief. But certainly
old Ephraim, when summoned to the stand, must have been in any other
presence a mark of irresistible derision, not unkind, to be sure, and
devoid of bitterness.
Keenly conscious that he had been discovered in details which to "Marse
Soldier" were a stumbling-block and an offence, and that his own
prestige for political loyalty was shattered,--for he doubted if it were
possible to so present the contradiction of his conviction of his
interest and yet his adherence to old custom and fidelity in such a
guise that the brevet brigadier would do aught but snort at it,--he
came, bowing repeatedly, cringing almost to the earth, his hat in his
hand, his worn face seamed in a thousand new wrinkles, and looking
nearly eighty years of age. The formidable embodiment of military
justice fixed him with a stern comprehensive gaze, and the brigadier,
who had no realization of the martial terrors of his own appearance,
sought to reassure him by saying in his deep bluff voice, "Come forward,
Uncle Ephraim, come forward." The old negro started violently, then
bowed once more in humble deprecation. Suddenly he perceived Baynell.
In his relief to recognize the face of a friend he forgot the purport of
the assemblage, and broke out with a high senile chirp.
"_You_ here, Cap'n! Well, sah! I is p'intedly s'prised." Then
recollecting the situation, he was covered with confusion, especially as
Baynell remained immovable and unresponsive, and once more old Ephraim
bowed to the earth.
Not a little doubt had been felt by the court when deliberating upon the
admissibility of the testimony of the old negro. It was contrary to the
civil law of the state and contravened also the theory of the unbounded
influence over the slave which the master exerts. In view of the pending
abolition of slavery, both considerations might be considered abrogated,
and since this testimony was of great importance to the prosecution as
well as to the defence, bearing directly on the main point at issue,--as
a freedman he was duly sworn. The members of the court-martial had ample
opportunity to test the degree of patience with which they had been
severally endowed as the old darkey was engineered through the
preliminary statements; inducted into the witness-chair on the left hand
of the judge-advocate, his hat inverted at his feet, with his red
bandanna handkerchief filling its crown; induced to give over his
acquiescent iteration, "Yes, sah! Yes, sah! jes' ez _you_ say!"
regardless of the significance of the question; and at last fairly
launched on the rendering of his testimony. The prosecution, however,
soon thought he was no such fool as he seemed, for the details of the
earlier sojourn of Julius had a simplicity that was coercive of
credence. The old servant stated, as if it were a matter of prime
importance, that he had to feed him in the salad-bowl. He "das'ent fetch
Marse Julius a plate 'kase de widder 'oman, dat's Miss Leonora, mought
miss it. But _he_ didn't keer, little Julius didn't,"--then to explain
the familiarity of the address he stated that "Julius de youngest ob
Marster's chillen--de Baby-chile." Old Ephraim repeated this expression
often, thinking it mitigated the fall from political grace which he
himself had suffered, because of the leniency which must be shown to a
"Baby-chile." And now and then, at first, the court-martial, though far
from lacking in brainy endowment and keen perception, were at sea to
understand that the "Baby-chile" would have been allowed to smoke a
_see_gar,--he being "plumb desperate" for tobacco,--except so anxious
was Judge Roscoe to avoid attracting the suspicion of Captain Baynell,
who would "have tuk little Julius in quick as a dog snappin' at a fly!
Yes--sah--yes--Cap'n," with a deprecatory side glance at Baynell. "De
Baby-chile couldn't even dare to smoke, fur fear de Cap'n mought smell
it from out de garret. De Baby-chile wanted a _see_gar so bad he sont
his Pa forty messages a day. But his Pa didn't allow him ter light
one--not one; he jes' gnawed the e-end."
It required, too, some mental readjustment to recognize the "Baby-chile"
in the young Samson, who had almost carried off the gates of the town
itself, the key of the whole department, on his stalwart back. This
phrase was even more frequently repeated as Uncle Ephraim entered upon
the details of Julius's escape and his attack on Baynell--it seemed to
mitigate the intensity with which he played at the game of war to speak
of it as the freaks of a "Baby-chile."
The witness could produce no replies to the question, and indeed he had
no recollection, as to how Julius Roscoe became possessed of the facts
concerning the works, for old Ephraim did not realize that he himself
had afforded this information--acquired in aimlessly tagging after the
detail sent for ammunition, the negroes coming and going with scant
restriction in the camps of their liberators. But very careful was he to
let fall no word of the citizen's dress he had conveyed to the
"Baby-chile" in the grotto, under cover of night.
"Bress Gawd!" he said to himself, "it's de Cap'n on trial--_not me_!"
He detailed with great candor the lies he had told Captain Baynell,
when, emerging from his long insensibility, he had asked about the Rebel
officer. "It was a dream," the witness had told "Cap'n." In Captain
Baynell's earlier illness he had often been delirious, and it had amused
him when he recovered to hear the quaint things he had said; sometimes
"Cap'n" himself described to Judge Roscoe or to the surgeon the queer
sights he had seen, the results of the morphine administered. So in this
instance he had hardly seemed surprised, but had let it pass like the
rest.
Uncle Ephraim did not vary these statements in any degree, not even
under the ordeal of cross-examination. Indeed, he stood this remarkably
well and left the impression he had made unimpaired. But when he was
told that he might stand aside, and it entered into his comprehension
that the phrase meant that he might leave the room, he fairly chirped
with glee and obvious relief.
"Thankee, Marse Gen'al!" he said to the youngest member of the court, a
captain, to whom he had persisted in addressing most of his replies, and
had continuously promoted to the rank of general, as if this high
station obviously best accorded with the young officer's deserts.
Old Ephraim scuttled off to the door, stumbling and hirpling in his
haste and agitation, and it had not closed on him, when his "Bress de
Lawd! he done delivered me f'om dem dat would have devoured me!"
resounded through the room.
There was a laugh outside--somebody in the corridor opined that the
court-martial wanted no such tough old morsel, but not a smile touched
the serious faces on each side of the table, and the next witness was
summoned.
This was Mrs. Gwynn. She produced an effect of sober elegance in her
dress of gray barège, wearing a simple hat of lacelike straw of the same
tint, with velvet knots of a darker gray, on her beautiful golden-brown
hair. The court-martial, guaranteed to have no heart, had, as far as
perceptible impression was concerned, no eyes. They looked stolidly at
her as, with a swift and adaptive intelligence, she complied with the
formalities, and her testimony was under way.
So youthful, so girlish and fair of face, so sylphlike in form was she,
that her appearance was of far more significance in their estimation
than their apparent lack of appreciation might betoken. More than one
who had begun to incline to the views of the prosecution thought that he
beheld here the influence which had fostered treason and brought a fine
officer to a forgetfulness of his oath, a disregard of his duty, and the
destruction of every value of life and every consolation of death.
Her manner, however, was not that of a siren. All the incongruities of
her aspect were specially pronounced as she sat in the clear light of
the window and looked steadfastly at each querist in turn, so soberly,
so earnestly, with so little consciousness of her beauty, that it seemed
in something to lack, as if a more definite aplomb and intention of
display could enhance the fact.
Apparently it was a conclusive testimony that she was giving, for it was
presently developed that she did not know that Julius Roscoe was in the
house; that she herself had suggested to Captain Baynell to go in search
of a book up the stairs to his hiding-place, from which there was no
other mode of egress; that in less than two minutes she heard Captain
Baynell's loud exclamations of surprise, and the words in his voice,
very quick and decisive--"You are my prisoner!" twice repeated. She had
rushed to the door of the hall to hear a crash as of a fall, and she saw
the balustrade of the staircase, which was the same structure throughout
the three stories, shaking, as Julius Roscoe, covered with blood, dashed
by her and out into the balcony. She knew that Baynell was delirious
subsequently, and that he was kept in ignorance as to what had
occasioned his fall.
There was a degree of discomfiture on the part of the prosecution. It
was not that the judge-advocate was specially bloody-minded or
vindictive. He had a part to play, and it behooved him to play it well.
It would seem that if the prosecution broke down on so obvious and
simple a case, which had been the nucleus of so much disaster, blame
might attach to him, by the mere accident of his position. These
reflections rendered him ingenious, and with the license of
cross-examination he began with personalities.
"You have stated that you are a widow?"
"Yes. I am the widow of Rufus Allerton Gwynn."
"You do not wear widow's weeds?"
"No. I have laid them aside."
"In contemplation of matrimony?"
"No."
"Is not the accused your accepted suitor?"
"No."
Baynell was looking down at a paper in his hand. His eyelids flickered,
then he looked up steadily, with a face of quiet attention.
A member of the court preferred the demand:--
"Was he ever a suitor for your hand?"
"Yes." Her face had flushed, but she kept her eyes steadily fixed on the
questioner.
The president of the court cleared his throat as if minded to speak.
Then obviously with the view of avoiding misunderstandings as to dates
he formulated the query: "Was this recent? May I ask _when_ you declined
his proposal?"
"I am not certain of the date," she replied. "It was--let me think--it
was the evening of a day when the neighborhood sewing-circle met at my
uncle's house. I remember, now--it was the sixth of May."
"Did Captain Baynell attend the meeting of the sewing-circle?"--the
judge-advocate permitted himself an edge of satire.
"He was present, and Colonel Ashley, and Lieutenant Seymour."
"Oh!" said the judge-advocate, at a loss.
At a loss and doubtful, but encouraged. To his mind she offered the key
to the situation. Keenly susceptible to feminine influence himself, he
fancied he could divine its effect on another man. He proceeded warily,
reducing his question to writing, while on various faces ranged about
the table appeared a shade of doubt and even reprobation of the tone he
was taking.
"You have laid aside the insignia of mourning--yet you do not
contemplate matrimony. You are very young."
"I am twenty-three--as I have already stated."
"You may live a long time. You may live to grow old. You propose to live
alone the remainder of your days. Did you tell Captain Baynell that?"
"In effect, yes."
Her face had grown crimson, then paled, then the color came again in
patches. But her voice did not falter, and she looked at her
interlocutor with an admirable steadiness. The president again cleared
his throat as if about to speak. The shade of disapprobation deepened on
the listening faces.
The judge-advocate leaned forward, wrote swiftly, then read in a
tantalizing tone, as of one who has a clincher in reserve:--
"Now was not that a mere feminine subterfuge? You know you could hardly
be _sure_ that you will never marry again--at your age."
Once more the president cleared his throat, but he spoke this time.
"Do you desire to push this line of investigation farther?" he said,
objection eloquent in his deep, full voice.
"One moment, sir." The judge-advocate had been feeling his way very
cautiously, but he was flustered by the interruption, and he was
conscious that he put his next question less adroitly than he had
intended.
"Why are you so sure, if I may ask?"
There was a tense silence. She said to herself that this was no time or
place for finical delicacy. A man's life, his honor, all he held dear,
were in jeopardy, and it had fallen to her to say words that must needs
affect the result. She answered steadily. "My reply to Captain Baynell
was not actuated by any objections to him. I know nothing of him but
what is greatly to his credit." She hesitated for a moment. She had
grown very white, and her eyes glittered, but her voice was still firm
as she went on:----
"There is no reason why I should not speak freely under these
circumstances, for every one knows--every one who is cognizant of our
family affairs--that my married life was extremely wretched. I was very
unhappy, and I told Captain Baynell that I would never marry again."
Dead silence reigned for a moment. They had all heard the story of her
hard fate. The discussion as to whether a chair had been merely broken
over her head, or she had been dragged about her home one woful midnight
by the masses of her beautiful hair, was insistently suggested as the
sunlight lay athwart it now, and the breeze moved its tendrils
caressingly. The eyes of the court-martial looked at the judge-advocate
with fiery reproach, and the heart of the court-martial beat for her for
the moment with chivalric partisanship.
For the first time Baynell seemed to lose his composure. His face was
scarlet, his hands trembled. He was biting his under lip violently in an
effort at self-control; he was experiencing an agony of sympathy and
regret that this should be forced upon her, of helpless fury that he
could be of no avail.
Still once more the president cleared his throat, this time
peremptorily. The judge-advocate, considerably out of countenance,
hastily forestalled him, that he might justify his course by bringing
out the point he desired to elicit, reading his question aloud for its
submission to the court, though her last reply had rendered his clincher
of little force.
"Did you say to Captain Baynell that you have no intention of marrying
again merely as a subterfuge--to soften the blow, because you expect to
marry Lieutenant Roscoe as soon as the war is over?"
His suspicion that Baynell had been accessory to the concealment of
young Roscoe so long as he did not fear him as a rival was evident.
Baynell turned suddenly and stared with startled eyes in which an amazed
dismay contended with futile anger that this,--such a motive--such a
course of action, could be attributed to him.
She replied only to the obvious question, evidently not realizing the
implication. The tension was over; her color had returned; her voice was
casual.
"No. I have no thought of marrying Lieutenant Roscoe."
"Has he asked you to marry him?"
"Long ago,--when he was a mere boy."
"And again since your widowhood?"
"No."
"You have seen him since?"
"Only that morning when he rushed past me in the hall," she replied, not
apprehending the trend of his questions.
"Captain Baynell must have had some reason to think you would marry him,
or he would not have asked you. You rejected him one evening. The next
morning he arrested Lieutenant Roscoe, who had been in hiding in the
house,--was there some understanding between you and Captain
Baynell,--had he earlier forborne this arrest in the expectation of your
consent, and was the arrest made in revenge on a rival whom he fancied a
successful suitor?"
She looked at the judge-advocate with a horrified amazement eloquent on
her face.
"No! No! Oh," she cried in a poignant voice, "if you knew Captain
Baynell, you could not, you would not, advance such implications against
him,--who is the very soul of honor."
The judge-advocate was again for an instant out of countenance.
"You thought so little of him yourself as to reject his addresses," he
said by way of recovering himself.
She was absorbed in the importance of the crisis. She did not realize
the effect of her words until after she had uttered them.
"I did not appreciate his character then," she said simply.
Once more there was an interval of tense and significant silence.
Baynell, suddenly pale to the lips, lifted startled eyes as if he sought
to assure himself that he had heard aright. Then he bent his gaze on the
paper in his hand.
Mrs. Gwynn, tremulous with excitement, appreciated a moment later the
inadvertent and personal admission, and a burning flush sprang into her
cheeks. The judge-advocate took instant advantage of her loss of poise.
"I don't know what you mean by that--that you would not reject him
again? Will you explain?" he read his question with a twinkling eye that
nettled and harassed her.
A member of the court-martial objected to the interrogation as
"frivolous and unnecessary," and therefore it was not addressed to the
witness. A pause ensued.
The brevet brigadier cleared his throat.
"Have you concluded this line of investigation?" he said to the
judge-advocate, for the prosecution was obviously breaking down.
"I believe we are about through," said the judge-advocate, vacuously,
looking at a list in his hand, "that is"--to the accused--"if you have
no questions to put in reëxamination." And as Mrs. Gwynn was permitted
to depart from the room, he still busied himself with his list. "Three
names, yet. These are the children, sir."
Every member of the household of Judge Roscoe was summoned as a witness
for the defence, to seek to establish Baynell's innocence in these
difficult circumstances, even the little girls, and indeed otherwise the
prosecution would have subpoenaed them on the theory that if there were
any treachery, the children had not the artifice to conceal it. So far
this testimony was unequivocal. Judge Roscoe had sworn to the simple
facts and the measures taken to avoid the notice of the Federal officer.
Uncle Ephraim's testimony, save for the withheld episode of the grotto,
the exact truth, was corroborative, but suffered somewhat from his
reputation for wearing two faces, his sobriquet of "Janus" being adduced
by the prosecution. Mrs. Gwynn had affirmed that she herself did not
know or suspect the presence of Julius in the house, so completely was
he held _perdu_. The agitated little twins, each examined as to her
knowledge of the obligations of an oath and sworn, separately testified
in curiously clipped, suppressed voices that they knew nothing, heard
nothing, saw nothing of Julius Roscoe in the house.
In the face of this unanimity it seemed impossible to prove aught save
that in one of those hazardous visits home, so dear to the rash young
Southern soldiers, the father had taken successful precautions to defeat
suspicion; and the Confederate officer had shown great adroitness in
carrying out the plan of his campaign which his observations inside the
lines had suggested.
On the last day of the trial Captain Baynell was beginning to breathe
more freely, all the testimony having been taken except the necessarily
formal questioning of the dumb child. As she was sworn and interrogated,
one of the other children, sworn anew for the purpose, acted as her
interpreter, being more accustomed than the elders to the use of the
manual alphabet. The court-room was interested in the quaint situation.
The aspect of the two little children, in their white summer attire, in
this incongruous environment, with their tiny hands lifted in signalling
to each other, their eyes shining with excitement, touched the
spectators to smiles and a stir of pleasant sympathy. Now and then
Geraldine's silvery treble faltered while repeating the question, to
demonstrate her comprehension of it, and she desisted from her task to
gaze in blue-eyed wonder over her shoulder at the crowd. The deaf-mute
was passed over cursorily by the defence, only summoned in fact that no
one of the household might be omitted or seem feared. Suddenly one of
the members of the court asked a question in cross-examination. In civil
life this officer, a colonel of volunteers, had been an aurist of some
note and the physician in attendance in a deaf-and-dumb asylum. He was a
portly, robust man, whose prematurely gray hair and mustache were at
variance with his florid complexion and his bright, still youthful, dark
eyes. He had a manner peculiarly composed, bland, yet commanding. He
leaned forward abruptly on the table; with an intent, questioning gaze
he caught the child's eyes as she stood lounging against the tall
witness-chair. Then as he lifted his hands it was obvious that he was
far more expert in the manual alphabet than Geraldine. In three minutes
it was evident to the assembled members of the court-martial on each
side of the long table, the president at its head, the judge-advocate at
its foot, that the line of communication was as perfect as if both
spoke. Delighted to meet a stranger who could converse fluently with
her, the child's blue eyes glittered, her cheek flushed; she was
continually laughing and tossing back the curls of her rich chestnut
hair, as if she wished to be free of its weight while she gave every
capacity to this matter. And yet in her youth, her innocence, her
inexperience, she knew naught of the ultimate significance of the
detail.
It was an evidence of the degree to which she was isolated by her
infirmity, how slight was her participation in the subtler interests of
the life about her, that she had no remote conception of the intents and
results of the investigation. Even her curiosity was manacled--it
stretched no grasp for the fact. She did not question. She did not dream
that it concerned Captain Baynell. She had no idea that trouble had
fallen upon him. Tears to her expressed woe, or a visage of sadness, or
the environment of poverty or physical hurt--but this bright room, with
its crowd of intent spectators; this splendid array of uniformed men of
an august aspect; her own friend, Captain Baynell, present, himself in
full regimentals, calm, composed, quiet, as was his wont, looking over a
paper in his hand--how was the restricted creature to imagine that this
was the arena of a life-and-death conflict.
"Yes!" the little waxen-white fingers flashed forth. "Yes, indeed, she
had known that Soldier-Boy was in the house. That was Julius!"
She gave the military salute with her accustomed grace and spirit,
lifting her hand to the brim of her hat, and looked laughing along the
line of stern, bearded faces and military figures on either side of the
long table.
The other "ladies" did not know that Soldier-Boy was there, though they
saw him, and she saw him, too! It was in the library, and it was just
about dusk. They were surprised, and came and told the family that they
had seen a ghost. They knew no better! They were young and they were
little. They were only six, the twins, and she was eight; a great girl
indeed!
Once more she tossed back her hair, and, with her eyes intent from under
the wide Leghorn brim of her hat, bedecked with bows of a broad white
ribbon with fluffy fringed edges, she watched his white military
gauntlets, uplifted as he asked the next question on his slow fingers.
How her own swiftly flickered!
Yes, indeed, she had told the family better. It was no ghost, but only
Soldier-Boy! She had told Captain Baynell. She wanted him to see
Soldier-Boy. He was beautiful--the most beautiful member of the family!
Oh, yes, Baynell knew he was in the house. She had told him by her sign.
When she had first shown him Soldier-Boy's fine portrait, they had told
him what she meant.
No! Captain Baynell had not forgotten! For when she said it was no
ghost, but Soldier-Boy, Cousin Leonora cried out, "Oh, she means Julius;
that is her sign for him!" Cousin Leonora did not use the manual
alphabet; she read the motion of her lips. None of them used the
alphabet except a little bit; Soldier-Boy the best of all.
Throughout there was a continual ripple of excitement among the members
and several heads were dubiously shaken. More than once Baynell's
counsel sought to interpose an objection,--mindful of the preposterous
restrictions of his position, swiftly writing his views, transmitted, as
if he himself were dumb, through the prisoner to the judge-advocate and
by him to the court. The testimony of the witness could not be legally
taken this way, he insisted, merely by the repetition of what she had
said, by a member of the court-martial for the benefit of the rest.
The peculiar petulance of those who lack a sense was manifested in the
acrimony which shone in the child's eyes as she perceived that he sought
to restrict and repress her statement of her views. When he ventured
himself to ask her a question, having some knowledge of the manual
alphabet, she merely gazed at his awkward gesticulations with an
expression of polite tolerance, making no attempt to answer, then cast
up her eyes, as who should say, "Saw ever anybody the like of that!" and
catching the intent gaze of the brigadier, she burst into a sly
coquettish ripple of laughter that had all the effect of a roguish
aside. Then, turning to the ex-surgeon, her fingers flickered forth the
hope that he would come and see her and talk. When the war was over, she
was going back to school where she had learned the manual
alphabet,--there, although dumb, they talked much.
The mention of the word "school" suggested an idea which obviated the
difficulty as to how this extraordinary testimony could be put into such
shape as to render it available, impervious to cavil, strictly in
accordance with precedent in the case of witnesses who are "mute by the
visitation of God." The cross-examiner asked her if she could write. How
she tossed her head in pride and scorn of the question! Write--of course
she could write. Cousin Leonora had taught her.
When she was placed in a chair, and mounted on a great book beside the
judge-advocate--looking like a learned mushroom under her big white hat,
her white flounced skirts fluttering out, her long white hose and
slippered feet dangling--he wrote the questions and accommodated her
with a blotting-pad and pen, and it may be doubted if ever hitherto a
small bunch of fabric and millinery contained so much vainglory. In
truth the triumph atoned for many a soundless day--to note the surprise
on his solemn visage, between his Burnside whiskers, as she glanced
covertly up into his face, watching the effect of her first answer, five
or six lines of clear, round handwriting, sensibly expressed, and
perfectly spelled. She wrote much the more legibly of the two, and once
there occurred a break when one of the members of the court asked a
question in writing, and she was constrained to put one hand before her
face to laugh gleefully, for one of his capital letters was so bad--she
was great on capitals--that she must needs ask what was meant by it.
Baynell, in reëxamination, himself wrote to ask what he had said when he
was told that the ghost in the library was Julius Roscoe.
"Nothing," she wrote in answer, all unaware how she was destroying him.
"Nothing at all. You just looked at me and then looked at Cousin Leonora.
But Grandpa said, 'Oh, fie! oh, fie!' all the time."
Thus the extraordinary testimony was taken. The paper, with her answers
in her round childish characters and flourishing capitals, all as plain
as print and exhibiting a thorough comprehension of what she was asked,
was handed to each of the members of the court-martial, here and there
eliciting a murmur of surprise at her proficiency. The prosecution, that
had practically broken down, now had the point of the sword at the
throat of the defence.
There was naught further necessary but to confront the earlier witnesses
with this episode. Mrs. Gwynn, recalled, stared in amazement for a
moment as a question was put as to the significant event of the
discovery of a ghost in the library, one afternoon. Then as the
reminiscence grew clear to her mind, she rehearsed the circumstance,
stating in great confusion that she had disregarded it at the time, and
had forgotten it since.
So unimportant, was it?
She had thought it merely some folly of the children's; they were always
taking silly little frights. She did remember that she had told Captain
Baynell once before that the military salute was the child's sign for
Julius Roscoe, and that she had repeated this information then.
No--Captain Baynell made no search in the library where the supposed
ghost was seen,--no,--nor elsewhere.
When Mrs. Gwynn, under the stress of these revelations, broke down and
burst into tears, the eyes of the members of the court-martial intently
regarding her were unsympathetic eyes, despite her beauty and
charm,--the more unsympathetic because Judge Roscoe had also remembered
these circumstances, stating, however, that they had not alarmed him,
for Captain Baynell evidently did not understand.
"Is his knowledge of English, then, so limited?" he was ironically
asked.
Old Ephraim, too, was able to recollect the fact of the child's
disclosure of the presence of Julius Roscoe in the house to Captain
Baynell,--declaring, though, that he himself had hindered its
comprehension by upsetting the coffee urn full of scalding coffee, which
he had just brought to the table where the group were sitting, thus
effecting a diversion of interest.
All the witnesses were dismissed at last, and the final formal defence
was presented in writing. The room was cleared and the judge-advocate
read aloud to the members of the court the proceedings from the
beginning. Laboriously, earnestly, impartially, they bent their minds to
weigh all the details, and then for a time they sat in secluded
deliberation--a long time, despite the fact that the conclusions of the
majority admitted of no doubt. Several of the members revolted against
the inevitable result, argued with vehemence, recapitulated all in
Baynell's favor with the fervor of eager partisans, and at last
protested with a passion of despair against the decision, for the
finding was adverse and the unanimity of two-thirds of the votes
rendered the penalty death.
The sentence was of course kept secret until it should be approved and
formally promulgated by authority. But the public had readily divined
the result and anticipated naught from the revision of the proceedings.
Suspense is itself a species of calamity. It has all the poignant
acuteness of hope without the buoyancy of a sustained expectation, and
all the anguish of despair without its sense of conclusiveness and the
surcease of striving. Pending the review of the action of the
court-martial Baynell discovered the wondrous scope of human suffering
disassociated from physical pain. He had seriously thought he might die
of his wounded pride, thus touched in honor, in patriotism, in life
itself, and therefore he was amazed by the degree of solace he
experienced in the sight of a woman's tears shed for his sake. For to
Leonora Gwynn he seemed a persecuted martyr, with all a soldier's valor
and a saint's impeccability. No one could know better than she the
falsity of the charges against him, and in her resentment against the
unhappy chances and the military law that had overwhelmed him, and her
absolute despair for his fate, he enlisted all her heart. Those high and
noble qualities which he possessed and which she revered were elicited
in the extremity of his mortal peril. His exacting conscientiousness;
his steadfast courage on the brink of despair; his absolute truth; his
constancy in adversity; his strict sense of justice which would not
suffer him to blame his friends whose concealments had wrought his ruin,
nor his enemies who seemed indeed rancorously zealous in aspersing him
that they might exculpate themselves at his risk; his lofty sense of
honor which he valued more than life itself,--all showed in genuine
proportions in the bleak unidealizing light which an actual vital crisis
brings to bear on the incidents of personal character.
She had even a more tender sympathy for his simpler traits, the filial
friendship which he still manifested for Judge Roscoe, his affectionate
remembrance of the little children of the household, the blended pride
and delicacy with which he restrained all expression of the feeling he
entertained toward her, that might seem to seek to utilize and magnify
her unguarded admissions on the witness-stand,--influenced, as he
feared, by her anxiety lest her rejection of his suit should militate to
his disadvantage in the estimation of the court. In truth, however,
there was scant need of his reserve on this point, for she made no
disguise of her sentiment toward him. It became obvious, not only to
him, but to all with whom she spoke. Indeed, she would have married him
then, that she might be near him, that she might share his calamities,
even while his disgrace, his everlasting contumely, seemed already
accomplished, and he had scarcely a chance for life itself. And yet,
hardly less than he, she valued those finer vibrations of chivalric
ethics to which his every fibre thrilled. "I know that you are the very
soul of honor," she said to him, "and that this certain assurance ought
to be sufficient to nullify the stings of calumny,--but I had rather
that you had died long ago, that I had never seen you, that I were dead
myself, than that your record as a soldier, your probity as a man, the
truth, the eternal truth, should even be questioned."
Judge Roscoe, too, was infinitely dismayed by this strange blunder of
circumstance, and flinched under the sense of responsibility, of a
breach of hospitality, albeit unintentional, that his guest should incur
so desperate a disaster by reason of a sojourn under his roof. Baynell
was constrained to comfort them both, but in the hope to which he
magnanimously affected to appeal he had scant confidence indeed.
Even amidst the turmoil of his emotions and the crisis of his personal
jeopardy he did not forget that the hand that hurled the bolts of doom
had been innocent of cruel intent. "Never let her know," he warned Judge
Roscoe, again and again. For although the testimony of the deaf-mute
must needs have been elicited, she would be grieved to learn that she
had wrought all these woes. Though literally the truth, it had the
deceptive functions of a lie. It traduced him. It convicted him, the
faithful soldier, of treachery. It hurled him down from his honorable
esteem, and he seemed the basest of the base, traitor to his comrades,
false to his oath, renegade to his cause, recreant to every sanction
that can control a gentleman, and stained with blood-guiltiness for
every life that was sacrificed in the skirmish by reason of his secret
colloguing with the enemy.
Nevertheless, he tenderly considered how frightful a shock she would
experience should she realize that it was she who had set this hideous
monster of falsehood grimly a-stalk as fact. "But never let her know!"
he insisted with an unselfish thoughtfulness that endeared him the more
to those who already loved him. In that silent life of hers, so much
apart, he would fain that not even a vague echo of reproach should
sound. In those mute thoughts, which none might divine, he would not
evoke a suggestion of regret. One could hardly forecast the effect, he
urged. A sorrow like this might prove beyond the reach of reason, of
remonstrance, of consolation. She loved him, the silent, little thing!
and he loved her. Never, never, let her know.
And thus, although in the storm centre all else was changed, swept with
sudden gusts of tempestuous grief, now and again reverberating with
strange echoes of tumults beyond, all a-tremor with terror and frightful
presage, calm still prevailed in her restricted little life. But to
maintain this placidity was not without its special difficulties. More
than once her grandfather's deep depression caught her intelligent
attention, and she would pause to gaze wistfully, helplessly, sadly,
upon him. Upon discovering Leonora in tears one day she flung herself on
her knees beside her cousin, and kissing her hands wept and sobbed
bitterly in sympathy with she knew not what. Sometimes she was moved to
ask the dreary little twins if aught were amiss, and when they shook
their heads in negation, she promptly signed that she did not believe
them. Once she came perilously near the solution of the mystery that
baffled her. Missing the visits of Baynell, who of course was still in
arrest, she asked the twins if he were ill, and when they hysterically
protested that he was well, a shadow of aghast apprehension hovered
over her face, and she solemnly queried if he were dead.
The phrase, "Never let her know," was like a dying wish, as sacred, as
imperative, and Judge Roscoe hastily interfered to assure her that
Baynell was indeed alive and well, and affected to rebuke the twins,
saying that they were getting so dull and slow in the manual alphabet
that they could scarcely answer a simple question of their sister's, and
set them to spelling on their fingers under Lucille's instruction the
first stanza of "The boy stood on the burning deck."
Thus the continued calm of her life was akin to the quiet languors of
the sweet summer evening so mutely reddening in the west, so softly
changing to the azure and silver of twilight, so splendid in the vast
diffusive radiance of the soundless moon. All the growths were as
speechless. The rose was full of the voiceless dew. What need of words
when the magnolia buds burst into bloom without a rustle. With a placid
heart she watched the echoless march of the constellations. The daily
brightening of the sumptuous season, the vivid presentment of the great
pageant of the distant mountains glowed noiselessly. Amidst this
encompassing hush, in suave content she thought out her inconceivable,
unexpressed thoughts, with a smile in her eyes and the seal of eternal
silence on her lips. For his behest was a sacred charge,--and she did
not know,--she never knew!
The evidence on which Baynell had been convicted and which had seemed so
conclusive to the general court-martial, present during the testimony of
the deaf-mute and its subsequent unwilling confirmation by the other
witnesses for the defence, was not so decisive on a calm revision of the
papers. The doubt remained as to how much he could be presumed to
understand from the peculiar methods of the dumb child's disclosure and
the scattered haphazard comments of the household. The circumstances
were deemed by the reviewing authorities extra hazardous, difficult, and
peculiar. The matter hung for a time in abeyance, but at last the court
was ordered to reconvene for the rectification of certain irregularities
in its proceedings, and for the reconsideration of its action in this
case.
The interval of time which had elapsed, with its proclivity to annul the
effects of surprise and the first convincing force of a definite and
irrefutable testimony, had served to foster doubt, not of the fact
itself, but as to Baynell's comprehension of it. Perhaps the incredulity
obviously entertained in high quarters rendered certain members of the
court-martial less sure of the justifiability of their own conclusions.
The maturer deliberation of the body accomplished the amendment of those
points in the record which had challenged criticism, and the ripened
judgment exercised in the reconsideration was manifested in such
modifications of the view of the evidence adduced that, although several
members still adhered to the earlier findings, the strength of the
opposing opinion was so recruited that a majority of the number
concurred in it, and the vote resulted in an acquittal.
Hence Captain Baynell had again the stern pleasure of leading his
battery into action. His pride never fully recovered its elasticity
after the days of his humiliation, but his martyrdom was not altogether
without guerdon. His marriage to Leonora, which was a true union of
hearts and hands, took place almost immediately. Compassion, faith, the
admiration of strength and courage in adversity, proved more potent
elements with Leonora Gwynn than her appreciation of the prowess that
stormed the fort.
Beyond his promotion and a captain's shoulder straps, Julius Roscoe
gained naught by his signal victory. Although he seemed to meet his
disappointment in love jauntily enough, he went abroad almost
immediately after the cessation of hostilities in America, and still
later attained distinction as a soldier of fortune especially in the
Franco-Prussian war. Now and again echoes from those foreign drum-beats
penetrated the tranquillities of the storm centre, and Lucille, looking
over the shoulders of the other two "ladies," officiously opening the
evening paper to discern some item perchance of the absent, would
glance up elated at the elders of the group, lifting her hand to her
forehead with that spirited military salute, so expressive of
Soldier-Boy.
THE END
THE COMMON LOT
By ROBERT HERRICK
Author of "The Real World," "The Web of Life," "The Gospel of Freedom,"
etc.
Cloth 12mo $1.50
"Mr. Herrick has written a novel of searching insight and absorbing
interest; a first-rate story ... sincere to the very core in its matter
and in its art."--HAMILTON W. MABIE.
"The book is a bit of the living America of to-day, a true picture of
one of its most significant phases ... living, throbbing with
reality."--_New York Evening Mail._
"Novels of its style and quality are few and far between ... he tells a
story that is worth the telling ... it is a study of life as he sees it,
and as thousands of his readers try to avoid seeing it."--_Boston
Transcript._
THE QUEEN'S QUAIR, or The Six Years' Tragedy
By MAURICE HEWLETT
Author of "Richard Yea-and-Nay," "The Forest Lovers," etc., etc.
Cloth 12mo $1.50
"Mr. Hewlett has produced in this book an enthralling work. It is at
once a chronicle of certain momentous years in the life of his famous
heroine and a searching study of her character.... 'The Queen's Quair'
is profoundly absorbing, and no one among the novelists of to-day save
Mr. Hewlett could have written it. No one else could have sustained such
a long narrative on so high a level with such consummate art."--_New York
Tribune._
"No piece of historical fiction has so adequately described the career
of the unfortunate and misguided Queen of Scotland, and no other writer
has approached Mr. Hewlett in dramatic power and literary skill. He uses
words that express his meaning precisely.... His conciseness of forcible
expression is indeed admirable. The story, too, is full of action and
commands undivided attention. Mary's portrait leaves a lasting
impression."--_Boston Budget._
DOCTOR TOM, The Coroner of Brett
By JOHN WILLIAMS STREETER
Author of "The Fat of the Land," etc.
Cloth 12mo $1.50
"A good story of the Kentucky mountains. The reader is caught at the
start and held to the end."--_New York Sun._
"One of the best and manliest novels that have appeared in a
year."--_Philadelphia Press._
THE CROSSING
By WINSTON CHURCHILL
Author of "Richard Carvel," "The Crisis," etc.
ILLUSTRATED IN COLORS
Cloth 12mo $1.50
"Mr. Churchill's work, for one reason or another, always commands the
attention of a large reading public."--_The Criterion._
"'The Crossing' is a thoroughly interesting book, packed with exciting
adventure and sentimental incident, yet faithful to historical fact both
in detail and in spirit."--_The Dial._
"Mr. Churchill's romance fills in a gap which history has been unable to
span, that gives life and color, even the very soul, to events which
otherwise treated would be cold and dark and inanimate."--Mr. HORACE R.
HUDSON in the _San Francisco Chronicle_.
WHOSOEVER SHALL OFFEND
By F. MARION CRAWFORD
Author of "The Heart of Rome," "Saracinesca," "Via Crucis," etc.
ILLUSTRATED BY HORACE T. CARPENTER
Cloth 12mo $1.50
"Not since George Eliot's 'Romola' brought her to her foreordained place
among literary immortals has there appeared in English fiction a
character at once so strong and sensitive, so entirely and consistently
human, so urgent and compelling in its appeal to sustained, sympathetic
interest."--_Philadelphia North American._
"She is the most womanly woman Mr. Crawford has given us in many a day,
and after her another peasant, bloody, brooding Ercole, is most
alive."--_Boston Daily Advertiser._
THE QUEST OF JOHN CHAPMAN
_THE STORY OF A FORGOTTEN HERO_
By NEWELL DWIGHT HILLIS, D.D.
Author of "The Influence of Christ in Modern Life," etc.
Cloth 12mo $1.50
"In this story Mr. Hillis has woven the life of the Middle West, the
heroism and holiness of those descendants of the New England Puritans
who emigrated still further into the wilderness. The story is of great
spiritual significance, and yet of the earth, earthy--hence its strength
and vitality.--_Montreal Daily Star._
"No practised technist takes hold of his reader's interest with a
prompter or surer grip than does this author at the very outset. Nowhere
else in his book does he demonstrate his fitness for the work of fiction
better than in the purely creative work. The style leaves little to be
desired, for Dr. Hillis is, as we all know, a stylist. What perhaps is a
surprise and also a pleasure, is the dramatic power revealed by the
author. The book is forceful, its poetic opportunities are never missed,
it is vivid and striking in its scenes, and pathos is a powerful element
in the work."--_Brooklyn Daily Eagle._
THE TWO CAPTAINS
_A STORY OF BONAPARTE AND NELSON_
By CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY
Author of "A Little Traitor to the South," etc.
ILLUSTRATED
Cloth 12mo $1.50
The action takes place in the years 1793 and 1798. The historic
incidents centre around the siege of Toulon in Southern France in 1793,
in which General Bonaparte first attracts the attention of the world to
his genius; and the epoch-marking Battle of the Nile in the Bay of
Aboukir, in Egypt, in 1798, in which Admiral Nelson forever shatters the
Frenchman's dream of empire in the East. The story revolves around the
love of Captain Robert Macartney, an Irishman who is an officer in the
English Navy under Nelson, and Louise de Vaudémont, granddaughter of
Vice-Admiral de Vaudémont, a great Royalist noble and officer of the old
Navy of France before the Revolution. One of the leading characters is
Bréboeuf, a silent Breton sailor--he does not speak a dozen words in the
whole story--who interferes at critical points to promote the welfare of
the young lovers in most striking and unconventional ways. The coast of
Provence, the land of the minstrel and the troubadour, the city of
Toulon, grim-walled, cannon-circled, the blue waters of the
Mediterranean, the great ships-of-the-line, the sandy shores of Egypt,
the ancient city of Alexandria, the palace of the Khedive, the Bay of
Aboukir, are the successive settings of the dramatic story. General
Bonaparte and Admiral Nelson both take prominent parts in the romance,
and the characters of these fascinating men are described with fidelity,
accuracy, and brilliancy.
THE SECRET WOMAN
By EDEN PHILLPOTTS
Author of "The American Prisoner," "My Devon Year," etc.
Cloth 12mo $1.50
Rude and romantic characters, descriptions of lonely and picturesque
Devonshire scenery, and a simple plot in which love and passion play
strong parts, are part of the secret of Mr. Eden Phillpotts' very strong
hold on the public. Slow-acting and slow-speaking but deep-feeling
peasants play their parts in each drama amid a characteristically wild
but sympathetic environment. The present powerful story shows the author
at his best. The real tragedy is not in the actual murder and in the
shadow of the gallows, but in the moral situation and the intense,
engrossing moral struggle. Despite certain faults, each character in the
story is of high mind and purpose, unselfish and deserving of respect.
What might else be a gloomy theme is relieved by the minor characters.
The talk of the Devonshire rustics is amusing, and every minor figure in
the book is a distinct, true-to-nature character. The descriptions of
external nature are done with feeling and knowledge; in this field no
other living romancer equals Mr. Phillpotts. This work has some of the
great qualities of serious literature--single in purpose, deep in study
of motive and passion.
THE WOMAN ERRANT
Being Some Chapters from the Wonder Book of Barbara
By the author of "The Garden of a Commuter's Wife," etc.
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY WILL GREFÉ
Cloth 12mo $1.50
"This clear-visioned writer, calmly surveying life from the wholesome
vantage ground of a modest, contented suburban home, is not merely
entertaining each year a growing number of appreciative readers, but she
is inculcating in her own incisive way much of that same wise and simple
philosophy of life that forms the enduring charm of the essays of
Charles Wagner."--_New York Globe._
RECENT FICTION
Cloth 12mo $1.50 each
BARNES--THE UNPARDONABLE WAR. By JAMES BARNES, author of "Yankee Ships
and Yankee Sailors," "Drake and his Yeomen," etc.
A queer turn in the political game; a clever scheme in
Newspaper Row; a perfectly plausible invention; these are a
few of the elements of interest in this absorbing story.
DAVIS--FALAISE OF THE BLESSED VOICE: A Tale of the Youth of St. Louis,
King of France. By WILLIAM STEARNS DAVIS, author of "A Friend of Cæsar,"
"God Wills It," etc.
A quick-moving, interesting tale of the development of the
young King Louis IX of France under the stress of a great
crisis.
DEEPING--LOVE AMONG THE RUINS. By WARWICK DEEPING, author of "Uther and
Igraine." With illustrations by W. Benda.
"A vigorous story ... told in the spirit of pure romance."--_New York
Evening Post._
HOUSMAN--SABRINA WARHAM: The Story of Her Youth. By LAURENCE HOUSMAN,
author of "Gods and Their Makers," etc.
A fascinating study of a woman's youth in one of the coast
counties of England, a carefully drawn picture of ever
interesting human types.
LOVETT--RICHARD GRESHAM. By ROBERT MORSS LOVETT.
"Goes forward determinedly from a singular opening to an
unsuspected close, without faltering or wavering ... a very
honest piece of workmanship."--_New York Evening Post._
LUTHER--THE MASTERY. By MARK LEE LUTHER, author of "The Henchman," "The
Favor of Princes," etc.
A vigorous and convincing story of modern practical politics,
so notably strong in its sense of reality as to give the
reader the thrill of a privileged glimpse into the mysteries
of the one great game.
OVERTON--CAPTAINS OF THE WORLD. By GWENDOLEN OVERTON, author of "Anne
Carmel," "The Heritage of Unrest," etc.
An unusually fascinating book ... has the double attractive
power of earnestness and a subject which compels sympathetic
attention.
POTTER--THE FLAME GATHERERS. By MARGARET HORTON POTTER, author of "Istar
of Babylon," etc.
"A wonderful romance of intensity and color."--_Book News._
SINCLAIR--MANASSAS. By UPTON SINCLAIR, author of "Springtime and Harvest,"
etc.
"In no single volume which we can call to mind have the
undercurrents of feeling, so intense and so varied, that
swayed men's minds in those troublous times, been so fully and
well portrayed."--_The Times Dispatch_ (Richmond).
WEBSTER--TRAITOR AND LOYALIST: Or, The Man who Found his Country. By
HENRY KITCHELL WEBSTER, author of "Roger Drake: Captain of Industry," "The
Banker and the Bear," etc. With illustrations by Joseph Cummings Chase.
Mr. Webster's new romance is one in which love and war
contribute a full quota of interest, intrigue, thrilling
suspense, and hairbreadth escapes.
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York
Transcriber's Note
There is some arcane and inconsistent spelling and dialect. These have
been preserved as far as possible.
Only obvious typographical errors such as letters being transposed have
been corrected and hyphenation has been made consistent.
End of Project Gutenberg's The Storm Centre, by Charles Egbert Craddock
*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORM CENTRE ***
***** This file should be named 35423-8.txt or 35423-8.zip *****
This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
https://www.gutenberg.org/3/5/4/2/35423/
Produced by David Edwards, Val Wooff and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
by The Internet Archive.)
Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
will be renamed.
Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
redistribution.
*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
https://gutenberg.org/license).
Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic works
1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works. See paragraph 1.E below.
1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
States.
1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
copied or distributed:
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
1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
1.E.9.
1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
Gutenberg-tm License.
1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
that
- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License. You must require such a user to return or
destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
Project Gutenberg-tm works.
- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
of receipt of the work.
- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
1.F.
1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
your equipment.
1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
DAMAGE.
1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
opportunities to fix the problem.
1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
people in all walks of life.
Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
Foundation
The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
page at https://pglaf.org
For additional contact information:
Dr. Gregory B. Newby
Chief Executive and Director
gbnewby@pglaf.org
Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation
Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
status with the IRS.
The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
particular state visit https://pglaf.org
While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
approach us with offers to donate.
International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works.
Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
https://www.gutenberg.org
This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
|