Meantime “Old Peeksniff,”
as commentators of the day among the graceless subs
were won’t to call Colonel Stevens, was having
his bad quarter of an hour. Leaving his team
with the orderly, John Folsom had stamped into his
presence unannounced, and after his own vigorous fashion
opened the ball as follows:
“Stevens, what in the devil
has that young fellow done to deserve arrest?”
“Oh, ah, shut the door, Mr.
Adjutant,” said the commanding officer, apprehensively,
to his staff officer, “and d I desire
to confer with Mr. Folsom a moment,” whereat
the adjutant took the hint and then hied himself out
of the room.
“Now, ah, in the first place,
Mr. Folsom this is rather a long and d
painful story. I’m m ah,
ah in a peculiar position.”
“For God’s sake talk like
a man and not like Burleigh,” broke in the old
trader impulsively. “I’ve known you
off and on over twenty years, and you never used to
talk in this asinine way until you got to running with
him. Come right to the point What crime
is young Dean charged with? Those girls of mine
will have to know it. They will know he’s
in arrest. What can I tell them?”
“Crime ah is
hardly the word, Folsom. There has been a misunderstanding
of orders, in short, and he was placed under arrest
before ah before I had been furnished
with a mass of information that should have been sent
to me before.”
“Well, what fault is that of
his? See here, man, you don’t mean to say
it is because he didn’t get here three days ago?
That’s no crime, and I haven’t knocked
around with the army the last forty years not to know
the regulations in such matters. Do you mean without
ever hearing what kept him and what splendid, spirited
service he rendered there along the Laramie, that
you’ve humiliated that fine young fellow and
put him in arrest?”
Pecksniff whirled around in his chair.
“Really now, Mr. Folsom, I can’t permit
you to instruct me in my military duties. You
have no conception of the way in which I’ve
been ignored and misled in this matter. There
are collateral circumstances brought about, er forced
on me in fact, by injudicious friends of this young
man, and he he must blame them he
must blame them, not me. Now if you’ll permit
me to glance over this mass of matter, I can the sooner
do justice in the premises.” And over his
goggles the colonel looked pleadingly up into his visitor’s
irate features.
“Read all you like, but be quick
about it,” was the angry rejoinder. “I
want to take that boy back with me to town and confront
him with one of his accusers this very day the
man I believe, by the ghost of Jim Bridger, is at
the bottom of the whole business!” and Folsom
flopped heavily and disgustedly into a chair, at sound
of a rap at the door, which opened an inch and the
adjutant’s nose became visible at the crack.
“Major Burleigh, sir, would like to see you.”
“And I’d like to see Major
Burleigh!” stormed Folsom, springing to his
feet. Commanding officers of the Stevens stamp
had no terrors for him. He had known his man
too long.
“Gentlemen, gentlemen!”
cried Pecksniff, “I can have no disturbance now
over this unfortunate matter. Really, Mr. Folsom,
I cannot permit my office to be the scene of any of
any ”
But his words wandered aimlessly away
into space as he discovered he had no listener.
Folsom, finding that the major had apparently changed
his mind and was not coming in, had changed his plan
and was going out. He overtook Burleigh on the
boardwalk in front and went straight to the point.
“Major Burleigh, you told me
a short time ago that you had nothing to do with the
allegations against this young gentleman who was placed
in arrest here this afternoon, yet I learn from my
own daughter that you spoke of him to a brother officer
of his in terms of disparagement the day you got aboard
the car at Sidney. Mr. Loomis corroborates it
and so does Miss Dean. I’ve heard of two
other instances of your speaking sneeringly of him.
Now I ask you as man to man what it is you have to
tell? He has saved the lives of my son, his wife
and child, and the people of the ranch, and by the
Eternal I’m his friend and mean to see justice
done him!”
Burleigh listened with solemn face
and with no attempt to interrupt. He waited patiently
until Folsom came to a full stop before he spoke at
all. Then his voice was eloquent of undeserved
rebuke of infinite sympathy. “Mr.
Folsom,” he said, “it would be useless
for me to deny that before I knew your charming daughter
or her ah very interesting friend
I did speak in their presence ah incautiously,
perhaps, of Mr. Dean, but it was in continuance of
a conversation begun before we boarded the car, and
what I said was more in sorrow than in criticism.
The young gentleman had attracted my attention my
favorable ah opinion on the up
trip to the Big Horn, and I was ah simply
disappointed in his conduct on the way back. It
was perhaps due to ah inexperience
only, and my whole object in coming here in haste
this afternoon was to bear testimony to his ability
and zeal as a troop commander, and to urge ah Colonel
Stevens to reconsider his action and restore him at
once to duty. I had hoped, sir, to be here ah ahead
of you and to have driven him in my buggy ah to
meet you, but I am disappointed I am disappointed
in more ways than one.”
Folsom stood and wiped his streaming
face, and looked the speaker square in the eye, and
Burleigh stood the scrutiny with unlooked-for nerve.
Long years at the poker-table had given him command
of his features, and the faculty of appearing the
personification of serene confidence in his “hand,”
when the twitching of a nerve might cost a thousand
dollars. Folsom was no match for him in such
a game. Little by little the anger and suspicion
faded from his eyes, and a shame-faced look crept into
them. Had he really so misjudged, so wronged this
gentleman? Certainly there was every appearance
of genuine sympathy and feeling in Burleigh’s
benevolent features. Certainly he was here almost
as soon as he himself had come, and very possibly
for the same purpose. It was all that old fool
Pecksniff’s doing after all. Folsom had
known him for years and always as more or less of
an ass a man of so little judgment that,
though a major in the line at the outbreak of the war,
he had never been trusted with a command in the field,
and here he was now a full colonel with only three
companies left him. Burleigh saw his bluff was
telling, and he took courage.
“Come with me,” he said,
“and let me reassure you,” and the doors
of the commanding officer’s sanctum opened at
once to the omnipotent disburser of government good
things, Folsom following at his heels. “Colonel
Stevens,” he began, the moment he was inside,
and before the colonel could speak at all, “in
a moment of exasperation and extreme nervous ah depression
the night I er started East so
hurriedly after a most exhausting journey from the
Big Horn, I spoke disparagingly of the action of Lieutenant
Dean in face of the Indians the day we met Red Cloud’s
band, but on mature reflection I am convinced I misjudged
him. I have been thinking it all over. I
recall how vigilant and dutiful he was at all times,
and my object in hurrying out here to-day, at ah almost
the instant I heard of his arrest, was to put in the
best words I could think of in his behalf to ah urge
you to reconsider your action, especially in view
of all the e ah encomiums
passed upon his conduct in this recent raid on the
Laramie.”
The colonel whirled around upon him
as he had on Folsom. “Major Burleigh,”
he began, “I call you to witness that I am the
most abused man in the army. Here am I, sir,
thirty-five years in service, a full colonel, with
a war record with the regulars that should command
respect, absolutely ignored by these mushroom generals
at Omaha and elsewhere stripped of my command
and kept in ignorance of the movements of my subordinates.
Why, sir,” he continued, lashing himself on,
as he rose from his chair, “here’s my
junior at Frayne giving orders to my troop, sir; presumes
to send them scouting the Laramie bottoms, when every
man is needed here, and then, when, as it happens,
my officer and his men get into a fight and drive
the Indians, to whom does he report, sir? Not
to me, sir not to his legitimate commander,
but he sends couriers to Laramie and to Frayne, and
ignores me entirely.”
A light dawned on Burleigh in an instant.
Well he knew that Dean’s reasons for sending
couriers to those guard posts of the Platte were to
warn them that a war party had crossed into their territory,
and was now in flight. There was nothing to be
gained by sending a man galloping back to the line
of the railway seventy-five miles to the rear no
earthly reason for his doing so. But the fact
that he had sent runners to officers junior in rank
to Stevens, and had not sent one to him, fairly “stuck
in the crop” of the captious old commander, and
he had determined to give the youngster a lesson.
But now the mail was in, and dispatches from various
quarters, and a telegram from Omaha directing him
to convey to Lieutenant Dean the thanks and congratulations
of the general commanding the department, who had
just received full particulars by wire from Cheyenne,
and Stevens was glad enough to drop the game, and
Burleigh equally glad of this chance to impress Folsom
with the sense of his influence, as well as of his
justice.
“I admit all you say, colonel.
I have long ah considered you
most unfairly treated, but really ah in
this case of Lieutenant Dean’s, it is, as I
said before, inexperience and ah the
result of-ah er not unnatural
loss of er balance at a most
exciting time. A word of ah admonition,
if you will pardon my suggestion, all he probably
needs, for he has really behaved very well ah surprisingly
well in conducting this ah pursuit.”
And so was it settled that later the
colonel was to see Mr. Dean, and admonish accordingly,
but that meantime the adjutant should go and whisper
in his ear that his arrest was ended, and all would
be explained later, thereby releasing him before the
girls discovered the fact that he was confined to
his tent.
But the adjutant came too late.
The tearful eyes of one, the flushed and anxious faces
of both damsels, and the set look in the eyes of both
the young officers at Dean’s tent, as the adjutant
approached, told him the cat was out of the bag.
“The explanation cannot be made too promptly
for me, sir,” said Dean, as he received the
colonel’s message and permitted the adjutant
to depart without presenting him to the two prettiest
girls he had seen in a year. “Now, Loomis,
just as quick as possible I want you to go with me
to that man Burleigh. I’ll cram his words
down his throat.”
“Hush, Dean, of course, I’ll
stand by you! But both girls are looking.
Wait until to-morrow.”
How many a project for the morrow
is dwarfed or drowned by events unlooked for unsuspected
at the time! Not ten minutes later Folsom and
Burleigh came strolling together to the little tent.
Ashamed of his apparently unjust accusation, Folsom
had begged the quartermaster’s pardon and insisted
on his coming with him and seeing the young people
before driving back to town. The horses were being
groomed at the picket line. The western sun was
low. Long shadows were thrown out over the sward
and the air was full of life and exhilaration.
The somber fears that had oppressed the quartermaster
an hour earlier were retiring before a hope that then
he dare not entertain.
“You you stood by
me like a trump, Burleigh,” old Folsom was saying,
“even after I’d abused you like a thief.
If I can ever do you a good turn don’t you fail
to let me know.”
And Burleigh was thinking then and
there how desperately in need of a good turn he stood
that minute. What if Folsom would back him?
What if
But as they came in full view of the
picket line beyond the row of tents, the major’s
eagerly searching gaze was rewarded by a sight that
gave him sudden pause. Halted and examining with
almost professional interest the good points of a
handsome little bay, Lieutenant Loomis and Jessie
Dean were in animated chat. Halted and facing
each other, he with glowing admiration in his frank
blue eyes, she with shy pleasure in her joyous face,
Dean and Elinor Folsom stood absorbed in some reminiscence
of which he was talking eagerly. Neither saw the
coming pair. Neither heard the rapid beat of
bounding hoofs nearing them in eager haste. Neither
noted that a horseman reined in, threw himself from
saddle and handed Burleigh a telegraphic message which,
with trembling hands, he opened and then read with
starting eyes.
“My heaven, Folsom!” he
cried. “I ought to have known something
was coming when I got orders to have every mule and
wheel ready. Everything’s to be rushed
to the Big Horn at once. Just as you predicted,
Red Cloud’s band has broken loose. There’s
been a devil of a fight not eighty miles from Frayne!”