An hour after sundown and the rattling
old cabriolet has two occupants as it drives back
to town. Colonel Putnam comes forth with the old
gentleman whom he had so tenderly conducted to the
farmhouse but a few moments after the strange scene
out on the bank, and is now his escort to Frederick.
The sergeant of the guard has been besieged with questions,
for several of the men saw the doctor drop upon the
bench and were aware of the melodramatic nature of
the meeting. Lieutenant Abbot with a face paler
than before, with a strange look of perplexity and
smouldering wrath about his handsome eyes, has gone
over to his own tent, where the surgeon presently
visits him. The colonel and his civilian visitor
are closeted together over half an hour, and the latter
looks more dead than alive, say the men, as he feebly
totters down the steps clinging to the colonel’s
arm.
“What did you say was the name
of the officer who was killed his son?”
asks one of the guards as he stands at the entrance
to the tent.
“Warren Guthrie Warren,”
answers the sergeant, briefly. “I don’t
know whether the old man’s crazy or not.
He said the lieutenant had been writing to him for
months about his son, and the lieutenant denied having
written a line.”
“He lied then, by !”
comes a savage growl from within the tent. “Where
is the old man? Give me a look at him!”
and the scowling face of Rix makes its sudden appearance
at the tent-flop, peering forth into the fire-light.
“Be quiet, Rix, and go back
where you belong. You’ve made more than
enough trouble to-day,” is the sergeant’s
low-toned order.
“I tell you I only want to see
the old man,” answers the teamster, struggling,
“Don’t you threaten me with that bayonet,
Drake,” he growls savagely at the sentry, who
has thrown himself in front of the opening. “It’ll
be the worse for you fellows that you ever confined
me, no matter by whose order; but as for that stuck-up
prig, by ! you’ll see soon enough
what’ll come of his ordering me into the
guard-tent.”
His voice is so hoarse and loud with
anger that the colonel’s attention is attracted.
He has just seated Doctor Warren in the vehicle, and
is about to take his place by his side when Rix’s
tirade bursts upon his ear. The words are only
partially distinguishable, but the colonel steps promptly
back.
“What is the matter with your
prisoner, sergeant? Is he drunk or crazy, that
he persists in this uproar?”
“I don’t think it either,
sir,” answers the sergeant; while Rix, at sight
of his commanding officer, pops his head back within
the tent, and shuts the narrow slit. “He’s
simply ugly and bent on making trouble.”
“Well, stop it! If he utters
another insubordinate word, have him bucked and gagged
at once. He is disgracing the regiment, and I
won’t tolerate it. Do you understand?”
“I do, sir.”
The colonel turns abruptly away, while
the prisoner, knowing his man, keeps discreetly out
of sight, and correspondingly silent. At the gate
the older officer stops once more and calls to a soldier
who is standing near.
“Give my compliments to Lieutenant
Abbot, and say that I will be out here again to-morrow
afternoon. Now, doctor, I am with you.”
The old gentleman is leaning wearily
back in his corner of the cab; a strange, stunned,
lethargic feeling seems to have come over him.
His eyes are fixed on vacancy, if anything, and the
colonel’s attempt at cheeriness meets no response.
As the vehicle slowly rattles away he makes an effort,
rouses himself as it were from a stupor-like condition,
and abruptly speaks:
“You tell me that that
you have seen Lieutenant Abbot’s mail all summer
and spring and never saw a our postmark Hastings?”
“I have seen his mail very often,
and thought his correspondents were all home people.
I am sure I would have noticed any letters coming
frequently in one handwriting, and his father’s
is the only masculine superscription that was at all
regular.”
“My letters our home
letters were not often addressed by me,”
hesitates the doctor. “The postmark might
have given you an idea. I had not time ”
but he breaks off, weakly. It is so hard for him
to prevaricate: and it is bitter as death to
tell the truth, now. And worse worse!
What is he to tell how is he to tell
her?
The colonel speaks slowly and sadly,
but with earnest conviction:
“No words can tell you how I
mourn the heartlessness of this trick, doctor; but
you may rest assured it is no doing of Abbot’s.
What earthly inducement could he have? Think
of it! a man of his family and connections and
character, too. Some scoundrel has simply borrowed
his name, possibly in the hope of bleeding you for
money. Did none of the letters ever suggest embarrassments?
It is most unfortunate that you did not bring them
with you. I know the writing of every officer
and many of the men in the regiment, and it would
give me a clew with which to work. Promise me
you will send them when you reach home.”
The Doctor bows his head in deep dejection.
“What good will it do? I thought to find
a comrade of my boy’s. Indeed! it must be
one who knew him well! and how can I desire
to bring to punishment one who appreciated my son
as this unknown writer evidently did. His only
crime seems to have been a hesitancy about giving
his own name.”
“And a scoundrelly larceny of
that of a better man in every way. No, doctor.
The honor of my regiment demands that he be run down
and brought to justice; and you must not withhold
the only proof with which we can reach him. Promise
me!”
“I I will think.
I am all unstrung now, my dear sir! Pray do not
press me! If it was not Mr. Abbot, who could
it have been? Who else could have known him?”
“Why, Doctor Warren, there are
probably fifty Harvard men in this one regiment or
were at least,” says the colonel, sadly, “up
to a month ago. Cedar Mountain, Bull Run, South
Mountain, and Antietam have left but a moiety.
Most of our officers are graduates of the old college,
and many a man was there. I dare say I could
have found a dozen who well knew your son. In
the few words I had with Abbot, he told me he remembered
that there had been some talk among the officers last
July after your son was killed. Some one saw
the name in the papers, and said that it must have
been Warren of the class of ’58, and our Captain
Webster, who was killed at Manassas, was in that class
and knew him well. Abbot said he remembered him,
by sight, as a sophomore would know a senior, but
had never spoken to him. Anybody hearing all the
talk going on at the time we got the news of Seven
Pines could have woven quite a college history out
of it and somebody has.”
“Ah, colonel! There is
still the fact of the photograph, and the letters
that were written about Guthrie all last winter long
before Seven Pines.”
The colonel looks utterly dejected,
too; he shakes his head, mournfully. “That
troubles Abbot as much as it does me. Fields,
gallant fellow, was our adjutant then, and he and
Abbot were close friends. He could hardly have
had a hand in anything beyond the photograph and letter
which, you tell me, were sent to the Soldier’s
Aid Society in town. I remember the young fellows
were having quite a lot of fun about their Havelocks
when we lay at Edwards’s Ferry but
Fields was shot dead, almost the first man, at Cedar
Mountain, and of the thirty-five officers we had when
we crossed the Potomac the first time, only eleven
are with the th to-day. Abbot, who
was a junior second lieutenant then, is a captain now,
by rights, and daily expecting his promotion.
I showed you several letters in his hand, and they,
you admit, are utterly unlike the ones you received.
Indeed, doctor, it is impossible to connect Abbot with
it in any way.”
The doctor’s face is covered
by his hands. In ten minutes or less he must
be at her side. What can he tell his little
girl? What shall he say? What possible,
probable story can man invent to cover a case so cruel
as this? He hardly hears the colonel’s words.
He is thinking thinking with a bursting
heart and whirling brain. For a time all sense
of the loss of his only son seems deadened in face
of this undreamed-of, this almost incredible shadow
that has come to blight the sweet and innocent life
that is so infinitely dear to him. What can he
say to Bessie when he meets those beautiful, pleading,
trusting, anxious eyes? She has borne up so bravely,
silently, patiently. Their journey has been trying
and full of fatigue, but once at Frederick he has left
her in the hands of a sympathetic woman, the wife of
the proprietor of the only tavern in which a room
could be had, and, promising to return as soon as
he could see the lieutenant, he has gone away on his
quest with hopeful heart. A soldier claiming
to be of the th Massachusetts told them
that very morning at the Baltimore station that Mr.
Abbot was well enough to be up and about. It
is barely nine o’clock now. In less than
an hour there will be a train going back. All
he can think of is that they must go go
as quick as possible. They have nothing now to
keep them here, and he has one secret to guard from
all his little girl’s. No one
must know, none suspect that. In the bitterness
of desolation, still stunned and bewildered by the
cruelty of the blow that has come upon them, his mind
is clear on that point. If possible no one, except
those people at the tavern, must know she was with
him. None must suspect above all none
must suspect the bitter truth. It would crush
her like a bruised and trodden flower.
“If if it had been
a correspondence where there was a woman in the case,”
begins the colonel again and the doctor
starts as though stung, and his wrinkled hands wring
each other under the heavy travelling-shawl he wears “I
could understand the thing better. Quite a number
of romantic correspondences have grown up between
our soldiers and young girls at home through the medium
of these mittens and things; they seem to have lost
their old significance. But you give me to understand
that that there was none?”
“The letters were solely about
my son, all that ever came to me,” said the
doctor, nervously.
“That seems to complicate the
matter. If it were a mere flirtation by letter,
such as is occasionally going on, then somebody
might have borrowed his name and stolen his photograph;
but I don’t see how he could have secured the
replies the girl’s letters in
such a case. No. As you say, doctor, that
wasn’t apt to be the solution, though I’m
at a loss to account for the letters that came from
you. They were addressed to Lieutenant Abbot,
camp of the th Massachusetts, you tell me,
and Abbot declares he has never heard from any one
of your name, or had a letter from Hastings.
He would be the last man, too, to get into a correspondence
with a woman for he is engaged.”
The doctor starts again as though
stung a second time. Was there not in one of
those letters a paragraph over which his sweet daughter
had blushed painfully as she strove to read it aloud?
Did it not speak of an entanglement that once existed;
an affair in which his heart had never been enlisted,
but where family considerations and parental wishes
had conspired to bring about a temporary “understanding”?
The cabriolet is bouncing about on the cobblestones
of the old-fashioned street, and the doctor is thankful
for the physical jar. Another moment and they
draw up at the door of the old Maryland hostelry,
and the colonel steps out and assists his companion
to alight.
“Let me take you to your room
now, doctor; then I’ll have our staff surgeon
come over and see you. It has been a shock which
would break a younger man ”
But the old gentleman has nerved himself
for the struggle. First and foremost no
one must follow him to his room none suspect
the trial there awaiting him. He turns sadly,
but with decision.
“Colonel, I cannot thank you
now as you deserve; once home, I will write, but now
what I need is absolute rest a little while. I
am stunned, bewildered. I must think this out,
and my best plan is to get to sleep first. Forgive
me, sir, for my apparent discourtesy, and do not take
it amiss if I say that for a few moments for
the present I should like to be alone.
We we will meet again, sir, if it rest with
me, and I will write. Good-night, colonel.
Good-night, sir.”
And he turns hurriedly away.
For a moment the soldier stands uncertain what to
do. Then he enters the hallway determined to bespeak
the best offices of the host in behalf of his stricken
friend. There is a broad stairway some distance
back in the hall, and up this he sees the doctor slowly
laboring. He longs to go to his assistance, but
stands irresolute, fearing to offend. The old
gentleman nears the top, and is almost on the landing
above, when a door is suddenly opened, a light, quick
step is heard, and in an instant a tall, graceful girl,
clad in deep black a girl whom the colonel
sees is young, beautiful, and very pale springs
forward into view, places her hands on the old man’s
shoulders, and looks eagerly, imploringly, into his
face. What she asks, what she says, the colonel
cannot hear; but another moment solves all doubt as
to his proper course. He sees her clasped to the
doctor’s breast; he sees them clinging to each
other one instant, and then the father, with sudden
rally, bears her pale and probably fainting from his
sight. A door shuts with muffled slam, and they
are gone; and with the intuition of a gentleman Colonel
Putnam realizes why his proffer of services would
now be out of place.
“And so there is a woman in
the case, after all,” he thinks to himself as
he steps forth into the cool evening air. “And
it is for her sake the good old man shrinks from dragging
the matter into the light of day his daughter,
probably; and some scoundrel has been at work, and
in my regiment.”
The colonel grinds his teeth and clinches
his fists at this reflection. He is a husband
and father himself, and now he understands some features
in the old doctor’s trouble which had puzzled
him before. He strolls across the street to the
sidewalk under the quaint old red-brick, dormer-windowed
houses where lights are still gleaming, and where groups
of people are chatting and laughing in the pleasant
air. Many of them are in the rough uniform of
the army teamsters, drivers, and slightly
wounded soldiers out on pass from the neighboring field
hospitals. The old cabriolet is being trundled
off to some neighboring stable after a brief confabulation
between the driver thereof and the landlord of the
tavern, and the colonel is about hailing and tendering
the Jehu another job for the morrow, when he sees
that somebody else is before him; and, bending down
from his seat, the driver is talking with a man who
has come out from the shadow of a side porch.
There is but little light in the street, and the colonel
has turned on reaching the curb, and is seeking among
the windows across the way for one which may possibly
prove to be the young lady’s. He is interested
in the case more than ever now, but the windows give
no sign. Some are lighted, and occasional shadows
flit across them, but none that are familiar.
Suddenly he hears a sound that brings him back to
himself the tramp of marching feet, and
the sudden clash of arms as they halt; a patrol from
the provost-marshal’s guard comes quickly around
a corner from the soft dust of a side street, and
the non-commissioned officers are sharply halting
all neighboring men in uniform, and examining their
passes. Several parties in army overcoats shuffle
uneasily up the street, only to fall into the clutches
of a companion patrol that pops up as suddenly around
the next corner beyond. “Rounding up the
stragglers,” thinks the colonel, with a quiet
smile of approval, and, like the soldier he is, he
finds time to look on a moment and watch the manner
in which the work is done. The patrol seems to
have possessed itself of both sides of the street
at the same instant, and “spotted” every
man in blue. These are bidden to stand until
their papers are examined by the brace of young officers
who appear upon the scene, belted and sashed, and bearing
small lanterns. Nor are uniforms alone subject
to scrutiny. Ever since Second Bull-Run there
has been much straggling in the army, and not a little
desertion; and though a fortnight has passed since
Antietam was fought, the provost-marshal’s men
have not yet finished scouring the country, and a
sharp lookout is kept for deserters. Those civilians
who can readily establish their identity as old residents
of the town have no trouble. Occasionally a man
is encountered whom nobody seems to know, and, despite
their protestations, two of those characters have been
gathered in by the patrol, and are now on their way
to the office. The colonel hears their mingled
complaint and blasphemy as they are marched past him
by a file of the guard, and then turns to the nearest
of the officers
“Lieutenant, did you note the
man who ran back from where that cab is standing?”
The officer of the patrol looks quickly
up from the “pass” he is examining by
the light of his lantern, and at sight of Colonel Putnam
his hand goes up to the visor of his cap.
“No, colonel; was there one? Which way
did he go?”
“Straight back to the shadow
of the porch; just a minute ago. What attracted
my attention to him was the fact that he was deep in
talk with the driver when your men rounded the corner,
and did not seem to see or hear them. Then I
turned to look at that corporal yonder, as he crossed
to halt a man on the east side, and at sound of his
voice this fellow at the cab started suddenly and
ran, crouching in the shadow, back to the side of
the tavern there. It looks suspicious.”
“Come with me, two of you,”
says the lieutenant, quickly, and, followed by a brace
of his guard, he crosses the street, and his lantern
is seen dancing around the dark gallery. The
colonel, meantime, accosts the driver:
“What took that man away so suddenly? Who
is he?”
“I don’t know, sir.
I never seen him afore. He stopped me right here
to ask who the gentleman was I was drivin’.
I told him your name, ’cause I heard it, and
he started then kinder queer, but came back and said
’twas the citizen he meant; and the boss here
had just told me that was Doctor Warren, and that
his daughter was up-stairs. Then the feller jumped
like he was scared; the guard had just come round
the corner, and when he saw them he just put for the
barn.”
“Is there a barn back there?”
asks the colonel. The driver nods assent.
A moment’s silence, and then the colonel continues:
“I want to see you in the morning. Wait
for me here at the hotel about nine o’clock.
Meantime say nothing about this, and you’ll lose
nothing by holding your tongue. What was his
face like this man I mean?”
“Couldn’t see it, sir.
It was dark, and he had a beard all over it, and wore
a black-felt hat soft; and he had a cloak
something like yours, that was wrapped all over his
shoulders.”
“Remember, I want to see you
here in the morning; and hold your tongue till then.”
With that the colonel hastens off
on the trail of the searching-party. He sees
the lantern glimmering among some dark buildings beyond
the side-gallery, and thither he follows. To
all appearances the spot is almost a cul de sac
of wooden barns, board-fences, and locked doors, except
for a gateway leading to the yard behind the tavern.
The search has revealed no trace of the skulker, and
the lieutenant holds his lamp aloft as he examines
the gate and peers over the picket fence that stands
barely breast-high and bars them out.
“May have gone in here,” he mutters.
“Come on!”
But the search here only reveals half
a dozen avenues of escape. The man could have
gone back through several doors into the building itself,
or eastward, through some dilapidated yards, into
a street that was uninfested by patrols, and dark
as the bottom of a well. “It is useless
to waste further time,” says the lieutenant,
who presently rejoins the colonel behind the tavern,
and finds him staring up at the rear windows.
To him the young officer, briefly and in low tone,
reports the result of his search.
“I presume there is nothing
else I can do just here, is there, colonel?”
he asks. The colonel shakes his head.
“Nothing that I can think of,
unless you look through the halls and office.”
“We are going there. Shall
I light you back to the street?”
“Er ah no!
I think I’ll wait here just a moment,”
says the colonel, and, marvelling not a little, the
subaltern leaves him.
No sooner is he gone, followed by
his men, than Colonel Putnam steps back to the side
of an old chain-pump that he has found in the course
of his researches, and here he leans for support.
Though his shoulder has set in shape, and is doing
fairly well, he has had two rather long drives this
day, and one fatiguing experience; he is beginning
to feel wearied, but is not yet ready to go to his
bed. That was Doctor Warren’s shadow, bent
and feeble, that he saw upon the yellow light of the
window-shade a moment ago, and he is worried at the
evidence of increasing weakness and sorrow. Even
while he rests there, irresolute as to what he ought
to do whether to go and insist on his right,
as a man and a father, to be of some comfort to another
in his sore trial, or to respect that father’s
evident wish to conceal his daughter’s interest
in the trouble that had come upon them he
is startled to see another shadow, hers; and this
shadow is in hat and veil. Whither can they be
going at this hour of the night? ’Tis nearly
ten o’clock. Yes, surely; there is the
doctor’s bent shadow once more, and he has thrown
on an outer coat of some kind. Then they are
going back by the night train. They shrink from
having it known that she was here at all; that she
was in any way interested. And the doctor wants
to make his escape without the pang of seeing or being
seen again by those who witnessed his utter shock
and distress this day. So be it! thinks the colonel.
God knows I would not intrude on the sanctity of his
sorrow or her secret. Later, when they are home
again, the matter can be looked into so far as getting
specimens of this skulking felon’s handwriting
is concerned, and no one need know, when he is unearthed,
that it was a young girl he was luring under the name
of another man. So be it! They may easily
elude all question now. Night and the sacred
mantle of their evident suffering will shield them
from observation or question.
The colonel draws deeper into the
shade of the barn. It seems a sacrilege now to
be thus spying upon their movements, and he is ashamed
of the impulse that kept him there. He decides
to leave the yard and betake himself to his lodgings,
when he is suddenly aware of a dark object rising
from under the back porch. Stealthily and slowly
the figure comes crouching out into the open yard,
coming towards where the colonel stands in the shadow
of the black out-buildings; and then, when close by
the pump where he stood but a moment before, it rises
to its full height, and draws a long breath of relief.
It is a man in a soft black-felt hat, with a heavy,
dark beard, and wearing one of the biggest of the
great circular capes that make a part of the officer’s
overcoat, and are most frequently worn without the
coat itself, unless the weather be severe.
The colonel is unarmed; his pistols
are over at the room he temporarily occupies in town;
he is suffering from recent injury, and one arm is
practically good for nothing, but he loses no time
in lamenting these points. The slight form of
the girl approaches the window at this very instant
as though to pick up some object on the sill, then
disappears, and the light vanishes from the room.
From the figure at the pump he hears a stifled exclamation
of surprise, but no articulate word; and before the
figure has time to recover he stands close beside it
and his voice breaks the stillness of the night.
“Your name, sir, and your regiment? I am
Colonel Putnam.”
He has laid his hand on the broad
shoulder under the cloak and plainly feels the start
and thrill with which his words are greeted. He
even fancies he can hear the stifled word “God!”
The man seems stricken dumb, and more sharply the
colonel begins his stern query a second time, but
gets no farther than “Your name,” when,
with a violent wrench, the stranger is free; he makes
a spring, trips over some loose rubbish, and goes
crashing to earth.
“The guard!” yells the
colonel, as he throws himself upon him, but the man
is up in an instant, hurls off his antagonist, and,
this time, leaps off into the darkness in comparative
safety. But he has left a clew behind. As
the soldiers of the provost guard come running around
into the yard and the windows are thrown up and eager
heads peer forth in excited inquiry, Colonel Putnam
raises to the light of the first lantern a hairy,
bushy object that he holds in his hand; it is a false
beard, and a big one.
“By Jove!” says the lieutenant.
“It must be some rebel spy.”