Dunwody remained seated at the table,
carelessly shuffling the cards between his fingers.
Once in a while he cast an amused glance toward Carlisle,
and at last remarked, as though continuing an arrested
thought:
“Amanuensis, is she?”
He chuckled. The other ventured no reply.
“My dear sir, at your age, I
congratulate you! The choice of an amanuensis
is one very important for a public man, not less so,
I imagine, for a military man. Consider the
need ”
“I think that will do, my dear
Dunwody,” rejoined Carlisle at length, the hot
blood in his face. “Frankly, this conversation
is unwelcome to me.”
“I’ll tell you what I’ll
do with you,” exclaimed the Missourian suddenly.
“I’ll bet you every cent in this pile
of my winnings here that that young lady isn’t
your amanuensis, and never has been. I’ll
bet its like that she is no relative of yours.
I’ll bet it all over again that she is the
most beautiful woman that ever set foot on a boat
on this river, or ever set foot on any land.
Moreover, I’ll bet again ”
“You might win a certain share
of these wagers,” smiled the young officer,
willing to pass by a possible argument. “Moreover,
I am quite willing to discuss arrangements for changing
the term of servitude of this young lady. I’ve
been doing a little thinking about one or two matters
since this morning.”
“What!”
“Quite right. I wouldn’t
care to restrain her in any way, if she cared to travel
in other company. Our work is well advanced toward
completion, as it is.”
“Yet you came here with her? Then what ?”
“Never mind what the relation
may have been, my dear fellow. It irks me now.
Especially does this sort of conversation irk me,
because it is not fair to the young lady herself.”
Dunwody drew in his breath with a
strong sigh. He sat up straight in his chair,
then rested an arm on the table, as he leaned forward
toward the other. “A young lady has had
a poor protector who would not protect her name.
Of course!”
“In any case,” smiled
Carlisle, forcing the frown away from his face, “my
fortunes need mending now. Do you think I could
continue a journey down the river in company so strong
at cards as yours? At a later time, if you like,
I will endeavor to get my revenge.”
“Suppose you have it now,”
said Dunwody calmly. “Haven’t you
just heard me say I haven’t the means?”
“You have as much as I have.”
“Tut! tut! I don’t borrow to play
cards.”
“You do not need to borrow.
I say, your stake equals mine, and we will play at
evens, too. Come, deal one hand, poker between
two, and to the hilt.”
The other man looked at him and gazed
at the heaped pile of coins and notes which lay before
him. He himself was no pale-blooded opponent,
nor usually disposed to slight the opportunities of
the game. “I don’t understand,”
said he finally. “Certainly I am not willing
to pledge my land and ‘niggers,’ like our
friend from Belmont here. Perhaps my fall has
been hard enough not to tempt me to go on with my
sort of luck. Suppose I decline!”
“You don’t understand
me,” said Dunwody, looking him fair in the face.
“I said that your stake can easily be equal
with this on the table. I’ll play you
just two out of three jack-pots between the two of
us. You see my stake.”
“But mine?”
“You can make it even by writing
one name and correctly here on
a piece of paper. Full value yes,
ten times as much as mine! You are giving odds,
man!”
“I don’t understand you.”
“You don’t want to understand
me. Come, now. You, as an army man, ought
to know something of the history of poker in these
United States. Listen, my friend. Do you
recall a certain game played by a man higher in authority younger
than he is to-day a game played upon a
snowbound train in the North country? Do you
remember what the stakes were then?
Do you recall that that man later became a president
of the United States? Come. There is fine
precedent for our little enterprise.”
The swift flush on the face of the
other man made his answer. Dunwody went on mercilessly:
“He played then much as you
do now. There was against him then, as there
is now against you, a man who admired not so much just
one woman in all the world as, let us say, one particular
woman then and there present. Perhaps you remember
his name Mr. Parish later ennobled
by the German government and long known as a land baron
in New York. Come! Think of it!
Picture that snowbound train, that great citizen,
and Parish, playing and playing, until at last it
came to the question of a woman not so beautiful
as this one here, but in her own way shrewd, the
same sort of woman, I might say mysterious,
beautiful, and no, don’t protest,
and I’ll not describe. You remember very
well her name. It was pleasant property not so
long ago for everybody. They played for the love,
not for the hand, of that woman. Parish won her.
Do you remember now?”
The younger man sat looking at him
silently, his face now grown quite pale. “I
am unwilling, sir, to allow any man to mention such
details regarding the past life of my commander-in-chief,
a president of the United States. It is not
seemly. My profession should free me, by its
very nature, from conversation such as this.
My errand should free me. My place as a gentleman
should free me, and her, from such discussion.
It must, it shall, sir!”
“Forgive me,” said Dunwody,
coloring. “Your rebuke is just. I
ask your pardon freely; but remember, what I say here
is between us two, and no one else. Why deny
yourself the luxury of remembering such a game as
that? It was a man’s game, and well worth
the playing. Your former head of the army, at
least, lost; and he paid. The other won.
All Ogdensburg can tell you about that to-day.
They lived there together Parish
and the woman, till he went abroad. Yes, and
she was a prisoner there not simply for a short time;
she lived and died there. Whatever Parish did,
whoever he was, he never loved any other woman as
he did that one. And by the Lord! when it comes
to that, no other woman in that town ever was loved
more than she by everybody. Odd creatures, women,
eh? Who can find them out? Who can weigh
them, who can plumb their souls? But, my God!
who can do without them?”
Carlisle made no answer, and Dunwody
went on. “She had political intrigues
back of her, just as this woman here has, for all I
know. But one lost in that game, and the other,
won. I’ve often wondered about that particular
game of cards, my friend, whether after
all she loved the man who won her, right or wrong, what
became of her, who she was? But now,
tell me, was not our drunken friend right? Has
human nature changed since Rome? And has not
the conqueror always ruled? Have not the spolia
opima, the rarest prizes, always been his?”
Carlisle only sat silent, looking
at him, pale now, and rigid. He still made no
comment.
“So now I say,” went on
Dunwody, “here is that same situation, twice
in one lifetime! It’s ominous, for somebody.
There is trouble in the air, for some or all of us.
But I say I offer you fair play, even, man to man.
I ask no questions. I will not take any answers,
any more than those two would have allowed any, that
day on the train there, when they played, ten years
or more ago. That was a foreign woman.
So is this, I think. She is the most beautiful
woman I have ever seen. I have looked her in
the face. I shall never see such another face
again. Man, I’m mad over her. And
you’ve just said you’d loose your hold
on her, whatever it is for her sake.
By God! once my hold was on her, she never should
get away again.”
“What do you propose?” asked the other
hoarsely.
“I propose only to offer you
that same game over again!” replied Dunwody.
“Man, what an uncanny thing this is! But,
remember one thing, no matter what comes,
I shall never mention our meeting here. I am
not your keeper.”
“Sir,” broke out the other,
“you embarrass me unspeakably. You do
not know the circumstances. I can not tell ”
“Pardon me, I make no taunts,
and I have said I tell no tales. But my word
of honor, man, I will play you, two
out of three, to see who takes her.”
His voice was low, tense, savage.
The younger man sat back in his chair.
One knowing his tempestuous nature might have expected
anger, consternation, resentment, to remain on his
face. On the contrary, a sudden light seemed
to come into his countenance. Suddenly he stifled
a smile! He passed a hand across his brow, as
though to assure himself. It was not so much
confidence or resolution as half deliberation which
shone in his eye as he cast a glance upon the heap
of money on the opposite side of the table.
Yet no sordid thought, no avarice was in his gaze.
It was the look of the fanatic, the knight errant,
resolved upon deed of risk or sacrifice for sake of
a woman’s wish; but with it was the amusement
of a man who foresaw that difficulties lay ahead of
him who essayed the rôle of jailer to Josephine, Countess
St. Auban. What now passed across his countenance,
little by little, therefore, was relief, relaxation
from a strain, a solution of some doubtful problem.
In brief, there seemed offered to him now the opportunity
to terminate an errand which suddenly had grown distasteful
to him and dangerous both to him and to his charge.
At one stroke he might secure for himself riddance
of the company of an embarrassing companion who already
had served notice of her intention to desert him;
and might also keep silent this man, whom she had
asked for aid. As for him, she would take his
measure quickly enough if he presumed in any way.
Would not the purpose of his journey have been accomplished,
might not he himself return to his work, would not
each of these three have been served to his or her
own liking, should now the suggestion of this eager
man be accepted? If he won at the cards, why
then if he lost but that he
resolved not to do! The greatest misfortune possible,
to his perplexed soul, was that the cards should not
be against him. As he reflected upon these things,
he hesitated. It was but to gain time.
“Senator Dunwody,” said
he, at length, “you and I are from different
parts of the country from two different
worlds, you might say. You believe in slavery
and the extension of it I believe in just
the reverse. I would sacrifice my professional
future, if need were, in that belief.”
The other nodded, but his eyes did not waver.
“Very good! Now, I want
to say to you this much. The young lady who
has been with me is dangerous. She is an abolitionist
of the strictest sect. She is very likely an
European revolutionist, among other things.
She is dangerous as such. I think I can say
this much, and break no pledge of confidence.”
“That isn’t how she is
dangerous to me. But is that the crime for which
you transport her for life?” smiled the other.
His shot came so close that his companion raised
a hand.
“I don’t deny, don’t
explain, don’t argue,” he retorted curtly.
“I only say that I shall be willing to part
with her services and turn her over to your own care,
if you both so like. We know she has
appealed to you for aid. My own errand, if you
please, is near to its close. It has been ”
“Cut the cards, man!”
cried the Missourian. It was lucky that he interrupted.
He was just in time to prevent the other from making
the mistake of saying what was the truth that
he was in any case about to leave the young lady to
her own devices, and by her own request. The
game which he most valued now was not on the table
before him. He was playing it in his own mind.
In short, duty or no duty, he was resolved to end
the rôle of jailer and prisoner, for sake of the prisoner
herself. Let others attempt the unpleasant task
if they liked. Let others condemn if they liked.
He, Carlisle, could be jailer no longer. Yet
he deliberated well the risk he ran.
“It would be ruin to me if this
were known, Senator Dunwody, and of that you are perfectly
aware."’
“I know that as well as you,
but there can be honor even in politics, war, or love.
I have given you my word. Deal!”
“You are impatient. You
rejoice as a strong man to run a race, my dear sir.”
“I do run a race.
I am strong. Play! It is in the
cards that I must win.”
“But if you should lose?”
“I shall not lose!”
His insistence, his confidence, almost
caused the older man to laugh. “No, my
friend,” said he to himself, “you shall
not lose!” But what he said aloud was, “You
must not be excited, Dunwody. You may need all
your nerve. I thought you cooler in times of
stress.”
“You don’t know me.
I don’t know myself. Perhaps it is ice
in your blood I don’t know, it’s
fire in mine.”
“Very well, I hope
you like the cards I have given you.” But
there was no ice in the red flush on Carlisle’s
sanguine face,
“Give me four more,” cried
the Missourian, flinging down his own cards with hands
that trembled.
“Quite right, sir, you shall
have them. But how you tremble! I wouldn’t
have so poor a nerve as yours for all the money in
the world, my dear Senator. You act as though
there were four hundred acres of niggers at stake,
as Mr. Jones would say!”
“Go on! You don’t know what there
is at stake.”
“So, now. You have your
four cards. For myself though you
are so excited you wouldn’t notice it if I did
not call your attention to it I take but
three. You are an infant, man. See that
you be not delivered into the hands of the enemy.”
They looked now each into his renewed
hand of five cards. Dunwody swept a stack of
money toward the center of the table. “A
thousand dollars against one look from her eye!”
“My dear sir,” rejoined
the other calmly, “you are raised to the extent
of two glances one from each eye.”
“Another thousand for the touch of her glove.”
“I come back. You shall have a pair.”
“A thousand more to hear the
sound of her step another thousand for
one smile!”
Carlisle’s voice trembled, but
he forced himself under control. “My dear
sir, you shall have all you wish! I am sure if
she could see you now she herself would be disposed
to smile. You do not yet understand that woman.
But now, suppose that the betting has gone far enough?
What cards have you? For myself, I discover
that I have drawn four kings. I trust that you
have four aces of your own.”
There was sincerity in this wish,
but Dunwody answered gloomily: “You gave
me three tens and a pair of fives, with what I held.
You have won the first round.”
He dashed a hand, and cleared the
square of matted hair from his forehead, which now
was beaded. Red, florid, full-blooded, balked
in his eagerness, he looked as savage as some denizen
of the ancient forest, in pursuit as reckless, as
ill-suited with ill-fortune.
“My deal,” said he, at
length, in a voice half a growl. And later,
“How many?”
“I shall, if you please, require
but one card,” was the quiet answer. Dunwody
himself required two. They sat narrowly eying
each other, although there was in this close duel small
advantage for either except in the run of the cards
themselves.
“It is perhaps needless for
us to waste time, since I can not divide my stakes,”
smiled the younger gentleman.
Again with a half growl, Dunwody threw
down his cards, face upward. His teeth were clenched,
all his muscles set, all his attitude strained, tense.
“You have won, my dear Senator!
I failed to improve my four cards, which, it is true,
were of one color, but which I regret to say still
remain of the one color and of no better company!”
“It is even!” exclaimed Dunwody.
“Come!”
The cards went around once more, and
once more the officer asked for a single card.
Once again he lost.
Dunwody drew back with a deep sigh.
“Look!” he said, “of my three cards,
two were what I wanted aces, aces, man! four
of them! By every token, I have won. It’s
fate!”
The face of his opponent was a study.
His eyebrows went up in pleasant expostulation at
the other’s eagerness. “So, then,”
said he, “I suppose I must pay my stake, much
to my regret. Ah! how fortune has run against
me to-day. And so, here it is, I write
her name for you once more this time her
real name, so far as any in America know it thus, Josephine,
Countess St. Auban, of France, of Hungary, of America,
abolitionist, visionary, firebrand. There, then, though
I think you will find the matter of taking possession
somewhat difficult to compass so far as
I am concerned, she is, with all my heart, yours to
have and to hold, if you can! My duty
to her is over. Yours begins, I hope!”
Dunwody found no speech. He
was pale, and breathing fast.
Gravity increased in the other’s
demeanor. His face now looked drawn, weary.
“I beg, my dear sir,” he said, “nay,
I entreat and command you, to make all gentle and
kind use of this which the gods have given you.
I confess nothing whatever, except that I am hungry
and tired to extinction. I congratulate the winner,
and consider myself fortunate to be allowed to go
in peace to my own place penniless, it
is true, but at least with a conscience quite clear.”
The frown on his face, the troubled gaze of his eyes,
belied his last words. “It’s no part
of my conscience to coerce a woman,” he added
defiantly. “I can’t do it not
any longer.”
“It is well to be a cheerful
loser,” returned Dunwody, at last. “I
couldn’t blame any man for being coerced by her!
I admit that I am. But after this, what will
be your plans?”
“I purpose leaving the boat
at the first suitable stop, not farther down than
Louisville, at least. Perhaps Cincinnati would
be yet better. By the fortunes of war you will,
therefore, stand in my stead. I’ve changed
my mind, suddenly. I told the young lady that
we would continue on together, even beyond Cairo.
But now well, to the victor, as Mr. Marcy
has said, belong the spoils. Only, there are
some titles which may not be negotiated. A quitclaim
is by no means a warranty. You’ll discover
that.” He smiled grimly.
The other made no answer. He
only stood to his full height and stretched out his
great arms. He seemed a figure come down unchanged
from some savage day.