Major Abbot’s stay in Boston
is but brief. He had a hurried conference with
the police late at night, after his painful interview
with Miss Winthrop, and there is lively effort on
part of those officials to run down the bulky stranger
to whom she had intrusted that packet. There has
been a family conference, too, between the elders of
the households of Abbot and Winthrop, and the engagement
is at an end. Coming in suddenly from his club,
Mr. Winthrop entered the parlor immediately after the
receipt of the telegram, and he is overwhelmed with
consternation at the condition of affairs. He
has insisted on a full statement from Viva’s
lips, and to her mother the story has been told.
She withholds no point that is at all material, for
her pride has been humbled to the dust in the revelation
that has come to her. She is not the first woman,
nor is she at all liable to be the last, to undertake
the task of championing a man against the verdict
of his associates, and the story is simple enough.
With his sad, subdued manner, his air of patient suffering,
and his unobtrusive but unerring attentions, Mr. Hollins
had succeeded in making a deep impression while they
were abroad. Not that her heart was involved;
she protests against that; but her sympathy, her pity,
was aroused. He had never inflicted his confidences
upon her, but had deftly managed to rouse her curiosity,
and make her question. By the time they returned
to America she believed him to be a sensitive gentleman,
poor, talented, struggling, and yet burdened with
the support of helpless relatives, too distant of
kin for her father’s notice. She had come
back all aflame with patriotic fervor, too; and his
glowing words and soldierly longings had inspired
her with the belief that here was a man who only needed
a start and fair treatment to enable him to rise to
distinction in his country’s service. Through
her father’s influence he was commissioned in
the th, then being organized, and in her
friendship she had sought to make his path easy for
him. But he was certainly deep in her confidence
even then, and shrewd enough to take advantage of it.
He had frequently written before, and it was not unnatural
he should write after the regiment left for the front letters
which intimated that he was far from content among
his associates, which hinted at distress of mind because
he daily saw and heard of things which would cause
bitter sorrow to those who had the right to command
his most faithful services. He had shown deep
emotion when informed of her engagement to Mr. Abbot,
and it was hard to confess this. It soon became
apparent to her that he desired her to understand that
he deeply loved her, and was deterred only by his
poverty from seeking her hand. Then came letters
that were constructed with a skill that would have
excited the envy of an Iago, hinting at other correspondences
on part of Mr. Abbot and of neglects and infidelities
that made her proud heart sore. Still there were
no direct accusations; but, taken in connection with
the long periods of apparent silence on his part and
the unloverlike tone of his letters when they reached
her, the hints went far to convince her that she had
promised her hand to a careless and indifferent wooer.
This palliated in her mind the disloyalty of which
she was guilty towards him, and at last, in the summer
just gone, she had actually written to Mr. Hollins
for proofs of his assertions. For a long time for
weeks he seemed to hold back, but at last
there came three letters, written in a pretty, girlish
hand. She shrank from opening them, but Mr. Hollins,
in his accompanying lines, simply bade her have no
such compunction. They had been read by half a
dozen men in camp already, and the girl was some village
belle who possibly knew no better. She did read,
just ten lines, of one of them, and was shamed at
her act as she was incensed at her false fiance.
The ten lines were sweet, pure, maidenly words of
trust and gratitude for his praise of her heroic brother;
and in them and through them it was easy for the woman
nature to read the budding love of a warm-hearted and
innocent girl.
This roused her wrath, and would have
led to denunciation of him but for the news of his
wounds and danger. Then came other letters from
Hollins, hinting at troubles in which he was involved;
and then, right after Antietam, he seemed to cease
to write for a fortnight, and his next letter spoke
of total change in all his prospects resignation
from the service, serious illness, possibly permanently
impaired health, and then of suffering and want.
A foul accusation had been trumped up against him
by enemies in the regiment; he was alleged to have
stolen letters belonging to officers. In part
it was true. He had bribed a servant to get those
three letters which he sent her, that she might be
saved from the fate that he dreaded for her.
It was for her sake he had sinned; and now he implored
her to keep his secret, and to return to him all his
letters on that subject, as well as those he had sent
as proofs. He dare not trust them to the mails,
but a faithful friend, though a poor man like himself,
would come with a note from him, and he would be a
trusty bearer. The friend had come but the morning
of Abbot’s arrival. He humbly rang at the
basement door; sent up a note; and, recognizing Hollins’s
writing, she had gone down and questioned him.
He sadly told her that the quartermaster was in great
trouble. “His enemies had conspired against
him;” his money accounts were involved, and there
lay the great difficulty. Mr. Hollins would never
forgive him, said the man, if he knew he was hinting
at such a thing, but what he needed to help him out
of his trouble was money. It made her suspicious,
but she reread the note. “He is devoted
to me, and perfectly reliable. I have cared for
him and his sister from childhood. Do not fear
to trust the letters, or anything you may write, to
him.”
Mr. Hollins was too proud ever to
ask for money and could not contemplate the possibility
of its being asked in his behalf, she argued.
But if anything she might write was to be trusted to
the messenger, surely she could trust his statements,
and so she questioned eagerly. The bearer thought
a thousand dollars might be enough to straighten everything,
and she bade him be at the front of the house that
night by half after ten, to bring her a little packet
he spoke of as having received from Hollins her
own letters to him and the money would
be ready. There was something about the man’s
face and carriage that was familiar. She could
not tell where she had seen him, but felt sure that
she had, and it seemed to her that it was in uniform.
But he denied having ever been in service, and seemed
to shrink into shadow as though alarmed at the idea.
During the day she got the money from the bank and
gave it, as Abbot saw, and then when the telegram came
it all flashed across her the messenger
was indeed Rix. Rix was a deserter beyond all
peradventure. Then, doubtless, she was all wrong
and Abbot all right as to the real status of Mr. Hollins.
No wonder she was overwhelmed.
But in all her self-abasement and
distress of mind Viva Winthrop was clear-headed on
the question of the dissolution of that engagement.
“He does not love me and I do not deserve that
he should,” was her epitome of the situation.
“It will cause him no sorrow now, and it must
be ended.” And it was. He called and
asked to see her, if she felt well enough to receive
him; he acquiesced in her decision, but he wanted to
part as friends. She begged to be excused, explaining
that she had not left her rooms since the night of
his arrival, which was true. And now, with a
heart that beats more joyously despite the major’s
proper and conscientious effort to believe that he
is not happier in his freedom, he is hastening back
to the front, for his orders have come.
Two things remain to be attended to
before reporting for duty. He makes every effort
to find Hollins’s hiding-place, but without avail.
Miss Winthrop tells him that beyond the postmark,
Baltimore, there is not a clew in any of the letters,
and that they have ceased coming entirely. Rix
made no mention beyond saying that he was in Baltimore
among people who would guard him, and Rix himself
has gone no man can say whither.
The other matter is one to which he
hastens with eager heart. Twice he has written
to Doctor Warren since their parting at Washington,
and he has asked permission to call upon them at Hastings
before returning. His orders come before any
reply. He therefore writes to Hastings the day
before he leaves home, begging that a telegram be sent
to meet him at the Metropolitan, the war-time rendezvous
of army men when in New York on leave, and his face
is blank with disappointment when the clerk tells
him that no telegram has been received. He has
a day at his disposal, and he loses no time, but goes
up the river by an afternoon train, and returns by
the evening “accommodation” with uneasy
heart. Doctor Warren and Miss Bessie had not
yet come back was the news that met him at the pretty
little homestead. The doctor had been ill in Washington,
and when he was well enough to start the young lady
was suddenly taken down. Abbot is vaguely worried.
He anxiously questions the kindly old housekeeper,
and draws from her all that she knows. She is
looking for letters any moment; but the last one was
from Willard’s, four days since, saying they
would have to stay. Miss Bessie was suddenly taken
ill. Won’t the gentleman come in? and she
will get the letter. He takes off his cloak and
forage cap, and steps reverently into the little sitting-room,
wherein every object is bathed in the sunshine of late
afternoon, and everywhere he sees traces of her handiwork.
There on the wall is Guthrie’s picture; there
hangs his honored sword and the sash he wore when
he led the charge at Seven Pines. With the soldier-spirit
in his heart, with the thrill of sympathy and comradeship
that makes all brave men kin, Abbot stands before
that silent presentment of the man he knew at college,
and slowly stretches forth his hand and reverently
touches the sword-hilt of the buried officer.
He is not unworthy; he, too, has led in daring charge,
and borne his country’s flag through a hell
of carnage. They are brothers in arms, though
one be gathered already into the innumerable host
beyond the grave. They are comrades in spirit,
though since college days no word has ever passed between
them, and Abbot’s eyes fill with emotion he
cannot repress as he thinks how bitter a loss this
son and brother has been to the stricken old father
and fragile sister. Ah! could he but have known,
that day on the Monocacy; could he but have read the
truth in the old man’s eyes, and accepted as
a fact his share of that mysterious correspondence
rather than have unwillingly dealt so cruel a blow!
His lips move in a short, silent prayer, that seems
to well up from his very heart; and then the housekeeper
is at his side, and here is the doctor’s letter.
It is too meagre of detail for his anxiety. He
reads it twice, but it is all too brief and bare.
He is recalled to himself again. The housekeeper
begs pardon, but she is sure this must be Mr. Abbot,
whose letters were so eagerly watched for all the
time before they went away. She had heard in
the village he was killed, and she is all a-quiver
now, as he can see, with excitement and suppressed
feeling at his resurrection. Yes, this is Mr.
Abbot, he tells her, and he is going straight to Washington
that he may find them. And she shows him pictures
of Bessie in her girlhood, Bessie at school, Bessie
in the bonnie dress she wore at the Soldiers’
Fair. Yes, he remembers having seen that very
group before, at Edwards’s Ferry, before Ball’s
Bluff. She prattles about Bessie, and of Bessie’s
going for his letters, and how she cried over them.
He is all sympathy, and bids her say on as he moves
about the room, touching little odds-and-ends that
he knows must be hers; and he is loath to go, but
eager too, since it is to carry him back to her.
He writes a few lines on a card to tell them of his
visit and his orders, should they fail to meet; he
begs the doctor to write, and warns him that he must
expect frequent letters; and then, with one long look
about the sunlit, love-haunted room, with one appeal
for brotherly sympathy in his parting gaze at Guthrie
Warren’s picture, he strides back to the station,
and by sunrise of another day is hurrying to Washington.
In his breast-pocket he carries the compact little
wad of letters, all addressed to himself, all written
in her own delicate and dainty hand, yet sealed from
his eyes as securely as though locked in casket of
steel. Though he longs inexpressibly to read
their pages and to better know the gentle soul that
has so suddenly come into his life, they are not his
to open. What would he not give for one moment
face to face with the man who had lured and tricked
her and with his name!
They are not at Willard’s, says
the clerk, when Major Abbot arrives and makes his
inquiries. The doctor paid his bill that morning
and they were driven away, but he does not think they
left town. Yes, telegrams and letters both had
come for the doctor, and the young lady had been confined
to her room a few days, and was hardly well enough
to be journeying now. Abbot’s orders require
him to report at the War Department on the following
day, and he cannot go to rest until he has found their
hiding-place. Something tells him that she has
at last discovered the fraud of which she has been
made the victim, and he longs to find her longs
to tell her that if the real Paul Abbot can only be
accepted in lieu of the imaginary there need be no
break in that strange correspondence; he is ready
to endorse anything his fraudulent double may have
written provided it be only love and loyalty to her.
It is late at night before he has
succeeded in finding the hack driver who took them
away, and by him is driven to the house wherein they
have sought refuge. All distressed as he is at
thought of their fleeing from him, Paul Abbot finds
it sweet to sit in the carriage which less than twelve
hours ago bore her over these self-same dusty streets.
He bids the hackman rein up when he gets to the corner,
and wait for him. Then he pushes forward to reconnoitre.
Lights are burning in many rooms, but the neighborhood
is very silent. Far down an intersecting avenue
the band of some regiment is serenading a distinguished
senator or representative from the state from which
they hail, and Abbot can hear the cheers with which
the great man is greeted as he comes forth to tender
his acknowledgments, and invite the officers and such
of his fellow-citizens as may honor him, to step in
and “have something.” It is a windy
night in late October. The leaves are whirling
in dusty spirals and shutters bang with unmelodious
emphasis, and all the world seems dreary; yet, to
him, with love lighting the way, with the knowledge
that the girl he has learned to worship is here within
these dull brick walls, there is a thrill and vigor
in every nerve. No light burns in the hallway;
none in the lower floor of the number to which he has
been directed. He well knows it is too late to
call, even to inquire for them, but the army has moved,
and at last is pushing southward again, feeling its
way along the Blue Ridge, and he so well knows that
the morrow must send him forward to resume his duties.
If he cannot see her, it will be comfort, at
least, to see her father. He is half disposed
to ring and ask for him when a figure comes around
a neighboring corner and bears slowly down upon him.
The night lamps are dull and flickering and the stranger
is a mere shadow. Where Major Abbot stands enveloped
in the cloak-cape of his army overcoat there is no
light at all. Whoever may be the approaching party
he has the disadvantage of being partially visible
to a watcher whose presence he cannot be aware of
until close at hand. When he has come some yards
farther Abbot is in no doubt as to his identity, and
steps forward to greet him.
“Doctor Warren, I am so glad
to have found you, for I must hurry after the army
to-morrow, and only reached Washington this evening.
Tell me, how is Miss Bessie?”
The doctor is startled, as a matter
of course, but there is something in the young soldier’s
directness that pleases him. Perhaps he is pleased,
too, to know that his own views are correct, and that
the moment Paul Abbot reached Washington he has come
in search of them. He takes the proffered hand
and holds it or, rather, finds his firmly
held.
“Bessie has been ill, but is
better, major; and how did you leave them all at home?
I have just been taking a walk of two or three blocks
before turning in. Fresh air is something I cannot
do without. How did you find us?”
“By hunting up your hackman.
I was grievously disappointed at not finding you at
Hastings, where I went first, or here at Willard’s.
Did you not get my letters and telegrams?”
“They were forwarded, and came last night.”
“Then you moved this morning
to avoid me, doctor. Does it mean that I am to
be punished for another man’s crime? Guthrie’s
picture had no such unfriendly welcome for me, and
I do not believe you want to hide her from me.
Tell me what it is that makes Bessie avoid me of her
own accord. Has she heard the truth about the
old letters?”
Doctor Warren is silent a moment,
looking up into the young soldier’s face.
Then he more firmly grasps his hand.
“I do not want to avoid
you, Abbot, but it is only natural that now she should
find it hard to meet you. Three days after you
left she caught me fairly, and finding that the letter
in my hand was yours, she noted instantly the difference
between the writing and that of the letters that came
to her at home. Something else had roused her
suspicions, and I had to tell her that there had been
trickery, and she would have no half-way explanation.
She probed and questioned with a wit as keen as any
lawyer’s. She made me confess that that
was why I told her Paul Abbot was dead when I got
back to her at Frederick. He was dead to us.
And so, little by little, it all came out, and she
was simply stunned for a while. It made her too
ill to admit of our travelling, and she made me tell
her when you were expected back, and bring her here.
In a day or two we will start homeward.”
“And meantime I shall have had
to start for the front. Doctor Warren, give her
this little package her own letters.
Tell her that I have read no line of one of these,
but that, until I can win for myself letters in her
dear hand there will be no peace or happiness for me.
These are the letters that were sent to you at Frederick,
with a few remorseful lines, from the scoundrel who
wrought all the trouble. His original motive was
simply to injure me, in the hope that he might profit
by it. He sought to break an engagement of marriage
that existed between me and Miss Winthrop, of Boston.
Before he succeeded in making this breach it is my
belief that he had become so touched and charmed by
the letters she wrote that even his craven heart was
turned to see its own baseness. He had every
opportunity of tampering with our mail. He felt,
when I was left wounded at the Monocacy, that that
would end the play; and then, in his despair and remorse,
he deserted. He was around Frederick a day or
two in disguise, and sought to see you and her.
Failing in that, he sent you by the landlady the packet
that was afterwards taken from your overcoat by the
secret-service men; and the next thing he came within
an ace of being captured by his own colonel.
Escaping, he was believed to be a rebel spy, and so
implicated you. It was to search for him I was
sent to Boston. There Miss Winthrop formally broke
our engagement, and I would be a free man to-day,
doctor, but for your daughter; and now it is not freedom
I seek, but a tie that only death can break. You
came to Paul Abbot when you thought him sorely wounded,
and she came with you. Now that he is sore stricken
he comes to you. If it will pain her I will ask
no meeting now, but don’t you think I owe her
a good many letters, doctor? Won’t you
let me pay that debt?”
It is a long speech for Abbot, but
his heart is full. The old gentleman’s
sad face seems to thaw and beam under the influence
of his frank avowal and that winning plea. Abbot
has held forth his other hand, and there the two men
stand, both trembling a little, under the influence
of a deep and holy emotion, clasping each other’s
hands and looking into each other’s face.
They are at the very door-step of the old-fashioned
boarding-house which was so characteristic a feature
of the capital in the war-days. The door itself
is but a few arms’-lengths away, and all of
a sudden it softly opens, and, with a light mantle
thrown over her shoulders, a tall, slender, graceful
girl comes forth upon the narrow porch.
“Is that you, papa? I heard
your step, and wondered why you remained outside.
Was the door locked?”
There is an instant of silence.
Then a young soldier, in his staff uniform, takes
three quick, springing steps, and is at her side.
The doctor seems bent on further search for fresh
air, for he turns away with a murmured word to his
trembling companion, and Bessie Warren finds it impossible
to retreat. Major Abbot has seized her hand, and
is saying she hardly hears, she hardly
knows, what. But it is all so sudden; it is all
so sweet.