There is an air of unusual excitement
about the War Department this bright October day.
It is only a month since the whole army seemed tramping
through the streets on its way to the field of the
Antietam; only three weeks since the news was received
that Lee was beaten back across the Potomac, and every
one expected that McClellan would be hot on his trail,
eager to pursue and punish before the daring Southerners
could receive accessions. But though two corps
managed to reoccupy Harper’s Ferry and there
go into camp, the bulk of the army has remained where
Lee left it when he slipped from its grasp, and McClellan’s
cry is for reinforcements. Three weeks of precious
time slip by, and then back come those
daredevils of Stuart’s, riding with laugh and
taunt and jeer all around the Union forces; and there
is the mischief to pay here in Washington, for if
he should take a notion to pay the capital a visit
on his homeward trip, what would the consequences
be? Of course there are troops lots
of them all around in the fortifications.
The trouble is, that we have so few cavalry, and,
after all, the greatest trouble is the old one those
fellows, Stuart and Jackson, have such a consummate
faculty of making a very little go a great way.
All that is known of Stuart’s present move is,
that he is somewhere up the Cumberland Valley; that
telegraphic communication beyond McClellan’s
headquarters is broken, and that it is more than likely
he will come hitherwards when he chooses to make his
next start.
Going to the War Department to make
inquiries for the provost-marshal, and show him Putnam’s
telegram, Major Abbot finds that official too busy
to see him, “unless it be something urgent,”
says the subaltern, who seems to be an aide-de-camp
of some kind.
“I have come to show him a despatch
received last night late from
Point of Rocks.”
“You are Major Abbot, formerly th
Massachusetts, I believe, and your despatch is about
the missing quartermaster, is it not?”
“Yes,” replies Abbot, in surprise.
“We have the duplicate of the
despatch here,” says the young officer, smiling.
“You would know Hollins at once, would you not?”
“Yes, anywhere, I think.”
“One of the secret-service men
will come in to see you this morning if you will kindly
remain at your room until eleven or twelve o’clock.
Pardon me, major, you saw this Doctor Warren at Frederick,
did you not?”
“Yes. The evening he came out to the field
hospital.”
“Did he impress you as a man
who told a perfectly straight story, and properly
accounted for himself?”
“Why You put it in
a way that never occurred to me before,” says
the major, in bewilderment. “Do you mean
that there was anything wrong about him?”
“Strictly entre nous,
major something damnably wrong. He
was all mixed up on meeting you, we are told.
He claimed to have known and been in correspondence
with you, did he not?”
“Yes; he did. But ”
“That is only one of several
trips he made. There are extraordinary rumors
coming in about spies around Frederick, and there seems
to be an organized gang. It is this very matter
the general is overhauling now, and he gave orders
that he should be uninterrupted until he had finished
the correspondence. Will you wait?”
“Thank you, no. I believed
it my duty to show him this despatch, but he knows
as much as, or more than, I do. May I ask if you
have any inkling of Hollins’s whereabouts.”
“Not even a suspicion.
He simply dropped out of sight, and no man in the
army appears to have set eyes on him since the night
before Antietam. Colonel Putnam is investigating
his accounts at Point of Hocks, and is most eager
to get him.”
Major Abbot turns away with a heavy
weight at heart. All of a sudden there has burst
upon him a complication of injustice and mystery, of
annoyance and perplexity that is hard to bear.
In some way he feels that the disappearance of the
quartermaster is a connecting link in the chain of
circumstance. He associates him, vaguely, with
each and every one of the incidents which have puzzled
him within the month past with Rix, with
Doctor Warren’s coming, with that cold and bitter
letter from Miss Winthrop, and finally with the shock
and faintness that overcame this fair young girl at
sight of him.
To his father he has shown Miss Winthrop’s
letter, and briefly sketched the visit of Doctor Warren,
and the sudden meeting with his daughter the evening
previous. Mr. Abbot is in a whirl of indignation
over the letter, which he considers an insult, but
is all aflame with curiosity about the doctor and
the young lady. He has been preparing to return
to Boston this very week, but is now determined to
wait until he can see these mysterious people, who
are so oddly mixed up in his son’s affairs.
It is with some difficulty that the major prevails
upon him not to write to Miss Winthrop, and overwhelm
her with reproaches. That letter must be answered
only by the man to whom it was written, says Abbot,
and it is evident that he does not mean to be precipitate.
He has much to think of, and so drives back to Willard’s
and betakes himself to his room, where his father
awaits him, and where they are speedily joined by an
official of the secret service, who has a host of singular
questions to ask about Hollins. Some of them
have a tendency to make the young major wonder if
he really has been the possessor of eyes and ears,
or powers of discernment, during the past winter.
Then come some inquiries about Rix. Abbot is
forced to confess that he knows nothing of his antecedents,
and that he was made quartermaster-sergeant at Hollins’s
request, at a time when nobody had a very adequate
idea of what his duties might be.
“Who had charge of the distribution
of the regimental mail all winter and spring?”
asks the secret-service man, after looking over some
memoranda.
“The quartermaster, ordinarily.
The mail-bag was carried to and from the railway about
thrice a week, while we were at Edward’s Ferry
in the fall. Rix looked after it then, and when
we came down in front of Washington the matter still
remained in his hands. There was never any complaint,
that I can remember.”
“Did any of your officers besides
Mr. Hollins have civilian dress or disguise of any
kind?”
“I did not know that he did much
less any of the others.”
“He wore his uniform coming
to the city, but would soon turn out in ‘cits,’
and in that way avoided all question from patrols.
As he gambled and drank a good deal then, we thought,
perhaps, it was a rule in the regiment that officers
must not wear their uniforms when on a lark of any
kind; but he was always alone, and seemed to have no
associates among the officers. What use could
he have had for false beard and wig?”
“None whatever that I know of.”
“He bought them here, as we
know, and, presumably, took them down to camp with
him. If he has deserted, he is probably masquerading
in that rig now. I tell you this knowing you
will say nothing of it, Major Abbot, and because I
feel that you have had no idea of the real character
of this man, and it is time you had.”
Abbot bows silently. If the detective
only knew what was going on at home, how much the
more would he deem the missing quartermaster a suspicious
character.
Then there comes a knock at the door,
and, opening it, Major Abbot finds himself face to
face with the nurse whom he had seen the previous
afternoon in Doctor Warren’s room. She looks
up into his face with a smile that betokens a new
and lively interest.
“The doctor left us but a few
minutes ago,” she says, “and he tells me
my patient is on the mend. Of course, we have
said nothing to him as yet about Miss Bessie’s
fainting yesterday, but I thought you might
be anxious to know how they are.”
“I am indeed,” says Abbot,
cordially, “and thank you for coming. How
is Miss Warren to-day?”
“She keeps her room, as is natural
after one has been so agitated, and, of course, she
does not like to speak of the matter, and has forbidden
my telling the doctor her father, I mean.
But he will be sitting up to-morrow, probably, and I
thought you might like to see them. He is sleeping
quietly now.”
“Yes, I want very much to see
him, as soon as he is well enough to talk, and, if
the young lady should be well enough to come out into
the parlor this afternoon or take the air on the piazza,
will you let me know?”
The nurse’s smiles of assent
are beaming. Whether she, too, has seen that
photograph Abbot cannot tell. That she has had
the feminine keenness of vision in sighting a possible
romance is beyond question. The secret-service
official is at Abbot’s side as he turns back
from the door.
“I shall see you again, perhaps
to-morrow,” he says; “meantime there is
a good deal for us to do,” and before the nurse
has reached the sick man’s door, she is politely
accosted by the same urbane young man, and is by no
means sorry to stop and talk with somebody about her
sad-faced old patient and his wonderfully pretty daughter.
It was Abbot’s purpose to devote
a little time that afternoon to answering the letter
received but yesterday from Miss Winthrop. It
needs no telling the fact that there had
never been a love-affair in their engagement; and
no one can greatly blame a woman who is dissatisfied
with a loveless match. Viva Winthrop was not so
unattractive as to be destitute of all possibility
of winning adorers. Indeed, there was strong
ground for believing that she fully realized the bliss
of having at least one man’s entire devotion.
Whatsoever evil traits may have cropped out in Mr.
Hollins’s army career, she had seen nothing
of them, and knew only his thoughtful and lover-like
attentions while they were abroad, and his assiduous
wooing on his return. Paul Abbot had never asked
for her love indeed, he had hardly mentioned
the word as incidental to their engagement. Nevertheless,
yielding to what she had long been taught to consider
her fate, she had accepted the family arrangement and
him and was the subject of incessant and
enthusiastic congratulation. Abbot’s gallant
service and distinguished character as an officer
had won the hearty admiration of all the circle in
which she lived and moved and had her being, and she
was thought an enviable girl to have won the love
of so brave and so promising a man. A little more
reserved and cold than ever had Miss Winthrop become,
and the smile with which she thanked these many well-wishers
was something wintry and weary in the last degree.
If he had only loved her, there might have bloomed
in her heart an answering passion that would have filled
her nature, and made her proudly happy in her choice.
But that he had never had for her anything more than
a brother-and-sister, boy-and-girl sort of affection a
kind, careless, yet courteous tenderness was
something she had to tell herself time and again,
and to hear as well from the letters of a man whose
letters she should have forbidden.
Even in his astonishment at the charge
brought against him, and in his indignation at the
accusation of deceit, Paul Abbot cannot but feel that
allowances must be made for Viva Winthrop. He
meant to marry her, to be a loyal and affectionate
husband; but he had not loved her as women love to
be loved, and she was conscious of the lacking chord.
That she had been deceived and swindled, too, by some
shameless scoundrel, and made to believe in her fiance’s
guilt, was another thing that was plain to him.
She had probably been told some very strong story of
his interest in this other girl. Very probably,
too, Hollins was the informer and, presumably, the
designer of the plot. Who can tell how deep and
damnable it was, since it had been carried so far as
to induce the Warrens to believe that he was the writer
of scores of letters from the front? Then again,
ever since he had raised that fainting girl in his
arms, especially ever since the moment when her lovely
eyes were lifted to his face and her sweet lips murmured
his name, Paul Abbot has been conscious of a longing
to see her again. Not an instant has he been
able to forget her face, her beauty, her soft touch;
the wave of color that rushed to her brow as he met
her at her father’s door when the nurse brought
her, still trembling, back to the old man’s bedside.
He had murmured some hardly articulate words, some
promise of coming to inquire for her on the morrow,
and bowed his adieu. But now now, he
feels that not only Genevieve, but that Bessie Warren,
too, has been made a victim of this scoundrel’s
plottings, and, though longing to see her and hear
her speak again, he knows not what to say. It
was hard enough to have to deny himself to the poor
old doctor when he came out to the Monocacy. Could
he look in her face and tell her it was all a fraud;
that some one had stolen and sent her his picture?
some one had stolen and used his name, and, whatsoever
were the letters, all were forgeries? No!
He must wait and see Doctor Warren, and let her think
him come back to life let her think they
were his letters rather than face
her, and say it was all a lie. Yet he longs to
see her once again.
But to Viva he must write without
further delay. Her letter unquestionably frees
him, and does it with a brusqueness that might excuse
a man for accepting the situation without a word.
If the engagement has ever been irksome to him it
is now at an end, and he is in no wise responsible.
Giving him no opportunity for denial, she has accused
him of breach of faith and cast him off. Wounded
pride, did he love her deeply, might now impel him
to be silent. A sense of indignity and wrong
might drive many a man to turn away at such a juncture,
and leave to the future the unravelling of the plot.
There are moments, it must be confessed, when Major
Abbot is so stung by the letter that he is half disposed
to take it as final, and let her bear the consequences
of discovery of the fraud; but they are quickly followed
by others in which he is heartily ashamed of himself
for such a thought. Right or wrong, Viva Winthrop
is a woman who has given her life into his hands; a
woman who has been reared in every luxury only to
be denied the one luxury a woman holds most precious
of all. He has not been a devoted lover any more
than he has been disloyal; and now that trouble has
come to her, and she is deceived, perhaps endangered,
Major Abbot quietly decides that the only obvious
course for a gentleman to follow is to crush his pride
under foot and to act and think for her. And this,
after several attempts, is what he finally writes
her:
“Your letter came last night,
dear Viva, and I have thought long over it before
answering. It is all my fault that this constraint
has hung over your letters. I have seen it
for months, and yet made no effort until lately
to have it explained. Long ago, had I done so,
you would probably have given me the reason, and I
could have assured you of the error into which
you were led. Now it seems that you and
I are not the only ones involved.
“Neither to Miss Warren nor any
other girl have I written since our engagement;
but her father has been to see me, and tell me that
many letters purporting to come from me have been
received, and I have hardly time to recover from
that surprise when your indignant charge is added.
Taken together, the two point very strongly to a piece
of villainy. You could never have believed this
of me, Viva, without proofs; and I feel sure
that letters must have been sent to you.
Now that we are pushing every effort to detect and
punish the villain who has wrought this, and
I fear other wrongs, such letters will be most
important evidence, and I conjure you to send them
to me by express at once. Father would come
for them, but I need him here. I do not
seek to inquire into your personal correspondence,
Viva, but letters that bear upon this matter are
of vital weight.
“As to my dismissal, may I not
ask you to reconsider your words, and, in the
light of my assurance that I am innocent of the sin
with which you have charged me, permit me to sign
myself, as ever, lovingly and faithfully yours?
PAUL.”
It is no easy letter to write.
He wants to be calm and just, and that makes it sound
cold and utterly unimpassioned. Beyond doubt she
would be far happier with a fury of reproaches, cutting
sarcasm, and page after page of indignant denial.
He also wants to be tender when he thinks of what
he has not had to lavish on her in the past, and that
prompts him to the little touch of sentiment at the
close a touch that is perhaps unwarranted
by the facts in the case. There is a third matter,
one that he does not want to mention at all, a name
he hates to put on any page addressed to her; but
he knows that it is due her she should be told the
truth, and at last, just as sunset is coming, he adds
a postscript:
“I feel that I must tell you
that Mr. Hollins has been missing ever since
Antietam, under circumstances that cloud his name with
grave suspicion. It is no longer concealed
that his conduct and character have left him
practically friendless in the regiment, and that he
could not long have retained his position.
He is not worthy the friendship you felt for
him, Viva; of that I am certain.”
He is still pondering over this when
his father comes in for a word or two.
“I am going over to call at
Doctor Warren’s room and ask how he is.
Possibly he may be able to see me. Have you written
to ”
And he stops. He does not feel
like saying “Viva” to or of the girl who
has so misjudged his boy.
Abbot holds up the letter and its addressed envelope.
“Yes, and it must go at once or miss the mail.”
“I’ll post it for you,
then, as I have to go to the office a moment,”
is the answer, and the elder stands looking at his
son, while the latter quickly scans the last page,
then folds and encloses it. Paul smiles into
his father’s eyes as he hands it, and the letter-bearer
goes briskly away.
His footsteps have hardly become inaudible
when there is a tap at the door, and behold! the nurse.
“You told me you would like
to know when Miss Warren came out, major. She
is on the veranda now.”