It is late that evening when Major
Abbot returns to Willard’s. He has found
time to write a brief note to the doctor, which it
was his intention to send by the orderly who bears
the official order releasing the Warrens from surveillance.
It suddenly occurs to him, however, that she may see
the note. If so, what will be her sensations on
finding that the handwriting is utterly unlike that
in which all her letters had come to her. Abbot
tears it into shreds, and contents himself with a message,
saying that he is compelled to see the adjutant-general
on immediate business, but will soon be with them.
It is true that the adjutant-general
has business with Major Abbot, but it is some time
before audience is obtained. There is still a
whirl of excitement over Stuart’s movements,
and it is ten o’clock before the young officer
is able to see his chief. The general is courteous,
but a trifle formal and cold. Staff officers,
he says, are now urgently needed, and he desires to
know how soon the major will feel able to resume duty.
“At once, sir,” is the answer.
“But you are still far from
strong, and I do not mean office duty here;
we have abundance of material for that sort of work.”
“Neither do I, sir. I mean
duty at the front. I can sit around headquarters
in the field as comfortably as I can anywhere, and,
to the best of my observation, the duty performed
by the adjutant-general at corps or division headquarters
is not such as involves much physical exertion.”
The general smiles benignantly upon
the younger officer, and with the air of a man who
would say, “How little you know of the importance
and responsibilities of the labors to which we are
assigned; but you will soon understand.”
“But can you ride yet?” he asks.
“I can; if a forward movement
is in contemplation; and every day will bring me strength,”
answers Abbot. “In brief, general, if you
have a post for me at the front I can go at once.”
“One other thing. Have
you any idea of the whereabouts of Mr. Hollins of
your old regiment, or can you give us any idea as to
where he would be likely to go? He has forwarded
his resignation, dated Keedysville, Maryland, September
18. It was post-marked Baltimore, October 8, and
came direct. Of course it cannot be accepted.
What is needed is some clew as to his movements.
Could he or would he have gone back to Boston?
Had he anything to draw him thither?”
Abbot reflects a moment. “I
can form no idea where he has gone,” he answers.
“It was proposed to send an
officer of your regiment back to confer with the police
authorities, Major Abbot, and there are reasons why
I prefer you should go. A few days’ visit
at your old home may not be unacceptable, and you
can probably render valuable service. I have been
told that there is reason to believe that Lieutenant
Hollins is lurking somewhere around Boston at this
very minute, and that is the first duty on which you
are needed. Your instructions can be written later.
Now can you go in the morning?”
There is a moment’s silence.
This is not the duty which Major Abbot expected, nor
is it at all what he desires. He wonders if his
father has not been in collusion with the senator,
and, between the two, if some pretext has not been
devised to get him home for a few days. It looks
vastly that way.
“I confess that my hopes were
in the opposite direction, general. I had visions
of immediate employment at the front, when you spoke.”
The bureau official is evidently pleased.
He likes the timber the younger soldier is made of,
and his grim, care-worn face relaxes.
“Major Abbot, you shall have
your wish, and, depend upon me, the moment there is
prospect of a forward move you shall join a division
at the front. Your old colonel will have one
this very week if it can be managed here, and he will
be glad of your services; but I tell you, between
ourselves, that I do not believe McClellan can be made
to budge an inch from where he stands until positive
orders are given from here. You go not
on leave, but on duty for a week, and then
we’ll have work for you in the field. I
have promised it.”
Then the bewildered young major is
notified that his father is waiting for him at the
senator’s, and thither he drives, half determined
to upbraid them both; but the delight in the old gentleman’s
face is too much for him. It is nearly eleven
when they reach Willard’s, and, before he will
consent to pack his soldier kit, Paul Abbot goes at
once to the Warrens’ room, and his father follows.
The secret-service man has gone.
The physician is there and the nurse, both conversing
with their patient, when the two gentlemen appear.
Major Abbot presents his father and looks around the
room somewhat disappointedly. Despite his excitement
of the day, and possibly because of it, Doctor Warren
seems in higher spirits and better condition than
Abbot has imagined it possible for him to be.
The two old gentlemen shake hands, and Mr. Abbot speedily
seats himself by the side of the invalid, and frees
himself of his impressions as to the extraordinary
charges that had been preferred, and his satisfaction
at their speedy refutation. The local physician,
in low tones, is assuring Major Abbot that a day or
two will restore their patient to strength sufficient
to journey homewards, and that he believes the “set
back” of the early evening will be of no avail
if he can get him to sleep by midnight. Abbot
hastily explains that he leaves at daybreak for Boston,
and had only come in fulfilment of a promise.
Then he accosts his father.
“I know we have both a great
deal to say to Doctor Warren, father, but it is a
pleasure only to be deferred. We must say good-night,
so that he can sleep, and will meet in New York next
week.”
Doctor Warren looks up inquiringly.
He is far from willing to let them go, but the physician
interposes. They say their adieux and still Abbot
hesitates; his eyes wander to the door which communicates
with Bessie’s room, and, as though in answer,
it opens and she softly enters.
“I am so glad you have come,”
he says, in low, eager tone. “Let me present
my father,” and the old gentleman bows with courtly
grace and comes forward to take her hand. She
is a lovely picture to look at, with the sweet, shy
consciousness in her face. The very gaze in Abbot’s
eyes has sent the color to her brows, and he holds
her hand until he has to transfer it to his father’s
out-stretched palm.
“The doctor tells us we must
not stay, Miss Bessie,” he continues, “but
I could not go without a word. I am ordered to
Boston by first train in the morning, but shall see
you may I not in New York?”
Brave as she is, it comes too suddenly this
news that she must part with her knight just as he
has done her such loyal service, and before she has
even thanked him by look or word. All the radiance,
all the bright color fades in an instant, and Paul
Abbot cannot but see it and divine, in part at least,
the reason. He has in his pocket letters from
her own fair hand, that he knows were written for him,
and yet that he has no right to see. He reads
in her lovely eyes a trust in him, a pain at this
sudden parting, that he thrills in realizing, yet should
steel his heart against or be no loyal man. But
he cannot go without a word from her, and it is a
moment before she can speak:
“Is is it not very
sudden? I shall never thank you enough for what
you have done for father for us,
this evening. What would we have done without
you?”
“That is nothing. There
is no time now but next week New
York I may see you there, may I not?”
May he not? What man can look
in her eyes and ask less? He holds her hand in
close pressure one instant and hastens from the room.
Forty-eight hours later he is in the
presence of the woman who had promised to be his wife.
The evening has seemed somewhat long. She was
out when he called at an earlier hour, but was to be
found at a dinner-party in the neighborhood.
Major Abbot feels indisposed to meet her in presence
of “society,” and leaves word that he will
return at ten o’clock. He finds her still
absent and has to wait. Mr. Winthrop is at his
club; Mrs. Winthrop has begged to be excused she
had retired early with a severe headache. She
does not want to see me, thinks Abbot, and that looks
as though Viva were obdurate. It is a matter that
has served to lose its potency for ill, and the major
is angered at himself because of a thrill of hope;
because of the thought of another face that will
intrude. It is nearly eleven o’clock when
he hears the rumble of carriage wheels at the door.
He steps to the front window and looks out upon the
pavement. Yes, there is the old family carriage
drawn up in front in the full glare of the gas lamp.
The footman is opening its door and Viva Winthrop
steps quickly forth, glances up and down the street
as though expectant of some one’s coming, and
turns quickly to speak to some one in the carriage.
Abbot recognizes the face at the open window as that
of an old family friend nodding good-night. The
footman still stands, but Viva speaks to him; he touches
his hat respectfully, but in some surprise, and then
springs to his perch; the two ladies nod and exchange
cordial good-nights again, and away goes the carriage,
leaving Miss Winthrop standing on the sidewalk, where
she is still searchingly looking up and down and across
the street. As though in answer there comes springing
through the dim light the hulking, slouching, round-shouldered
figure of a big man. He is across the street and
at her side in a few vigorous leaps, and away as quick
as he came. No word has been interchanged, no
sign on his part. He has handed her a small white
parcel. She has placed in his hand a dark roll
of something that he eagerly seizes and makes off
with. It all happens before Abbot has time to
realize what is going on, then she scurries up the
stone steps and rings the bell. His first impulse
is to go and open the door himself, but that will
produce confusion. She will have no time to dispose
of that packet, and Major Abbot will not take advantage
of what he has inadvertently seen. He hears the
old butler shuffling along the marble hallway, and
his deferential announcement.
“Mr. Abbot is in the parlor, Miss Winthrop.”
And then he steps forward under the chandelier to
meet her.
It is a moment before she enters.
Evidently his coming is a shock for which she is unprepared.
She comes in with swiftly changing color and lips
that tremble despite the unflinching courage of her
eyes.
“This is indeed a surprise,”
she says, as she gives him her hand. “Why when
did you come, and how did you come, and how well you
look for a man who has had so much suffering I
mean from your wounds,” she finishes, hurriedly.
It is all said nervously and with evident purpose
of simply talking to gain time and think. “Won’t
you sit down? You must be so fatigued. Take
this chair, it’s so much more comfortable than
that one you are getting. Have you seen mamma!
No? Why? Does she know you are here?
Oh, true; she did speak of a headache before I went
out. Mrs. Laight and I have been to dinner at
the Farnham’s and have just returned. Why
didn’t you come round there they’d
have been so delighted to see you? You know you
are quite a hero now.”
He lets her run on, sitting in silence
himself, and watching her. She continues her
rapid, nervous talk a moment more, her color coming
and going all the time, and then she stops as suddenly.
“Of course you can answer no questions when
I keep chattering like a magpie.”
She is seated now on the sofa facing
him, as he leans back in one of those old-fashioned
easy-chairs that used to find their way into some
parlors in the ante-bellum days. When silence
is fully established, and she is apparently ready
to listen, he speaks:
“I came to-night, Viva, and
to see you. Did you get my letter?”
“Your last one, from Washington? Yes.
It came yesterday.”
“I have come to see the letters.”
“What letters?”
“Those which you must have received
or been shown in order to make you believe me disloyal
to you.”
“I have no such letters.”
“Did you send them to me, Viva?”
“No.”
“What did you do with them?”
She hesitates, and colors painfully; then seeks to
parry.
“How do you know I ever saw any letters?
“Because nothing less could
explain your action; nor does this justify it.
Still, I am not here to blame you. I want to get
at the truth. What did you do with them?”
“They went back.”
“When? Before or after you got my letter?”
No answer for a moment, then:
“Why do you ask that? What
possible difference can it make? They were shown
me in strict confidence. I had long believed you
cared more for another girl than you did for me, and
these letters proved it.”
“I do not admit that, Viva,”
is the grave, almost stern reply. “But do
you mean that, after receiving my letter, you returned
those that I asked for that I had a right
to see?”
“They were called for; and they were not mine
to do as I chose with.”
“Will you tell me how and by whom they were
called for?”
He has risen now, and is standing
under the chandelier, drawn to his full height.
“I do not wish to speak of it
further. I have told the person that you denied
the truth of them, and that is enough.”
“I am sorry that you mentioned
me to the person, or weighed my statements in any
such scale.”
“Paul Abbot!” she breaks
in impetuously, rising too. “You say you
never wrote to this girl, and I believe you; but tell
me this: have you never seen her? do you not
at this moment care for her infinitely more than you
do for me?”
He considers a moment. It is
a leading question; one he had not expected; but he
will not stoop to the faintest equivocation. Still,
he wants her to understand.
“Listen, Viva. Up to the
time of your letter’s coming she was a stranger
to me. Now I have met her. She and her father
were in the same hotel with us at Washington; and
she, too, has been victimized by forged letters as
you have.”
“Enough, enough! Why not
end it where it is? You know well that if you
cared for me that would be the first assurance.
Granted that we have both been cheated, fooled, tricked,
why keep up the farce of a loveless engagement?
That, at least, must end now.”
“Even if it should, Viva, I
am not absolved from a duty I owe you. It is
my conviction that you have been drawn into a correspondence
with a man against whom it is my solemn right and
duty to warn you at once. You have no brother.
For Heaven’s sake be guided by what I say.
Whatever may have been his influence in the past,
you can never in the future recognize Mr. Hollins.
If not captured by this time, he is a disgraced exile
and deserter.”
“He is nothing of the kind!
You, and imperious men like you, denied to him the
companionship of his brother officers, and his sensitive
nature could not stand it. He has resigned and
left the service, that is all.”
“You are utterly mistaken, Viva.
What I tell you is the solemn truth. For your
name’s sake I implore you tell me what has been
his influence in the past. I well know he can
be nothing to you in the future, Viva. You are
not in communication with him now, are you?”
A ring at the bell. The old butler
comes sleepily shuffling along the hall again, and
appears at the parlor with a telegram. “They
sent it after you, sir,” is the explanation.
Abbot, with curious foreboding, opens, and hurriedly
reads the words,
“Rix also deserted; is believed to have gone
to Boston.”
“Viva!” he exclaims, “the
man you gave that packet to was Rix, another deserter.
My God! Do you know where Hollins is?”
But Viva Winthrop has fallen back
on the sofa, covering her face with her hands.