Walking abroad at noontime next day,
Prescott saw Helen Harley coming toward Capitol Square,
stepping lightly through the snow, a type of youthful
freshness and vigour. The red hood was again over
her head, and a long dark cloak, the hem of it almost
touching the snow fallen the night before, enclosed
her figure.
“Good-morning, Mr. Soldier,”
she said cheerily; “I hope that your dissipations
at the Mosaic Club have not retarded the recovery of
your injured shoulder.”
Prescott smiled.
“I think not,” he replied.
“In fact, I’ve almost forgotten that I
have a shoulder.”
“Now, I can guess where you are going,”
she said.
“Try and see.”
“You are on your way to the
Capitol to hear Mr. Redfield reply to that attack
of Mr. Winthrop’s, and I’m going there,
too.”
So they walked together up the hill,
pausing a moment by the great Washington monument
and its surrounding groups of statuary where Mr. Davis
had taken the oath of office two years before, and
Mr. Sefton, who saw them from an upper window of that
building, smiled sourly.
The doors of the Capitol were wide
open, as they always stood during the sessions of
Congress, and Robert and Helen passed into the rotunda,
pausing a moment by the Houdon Washington, and then
went up the steps to the second floor, where they
entered the Senate Chamber, now used by the Confederate
House of Representatives. The tones of a loud
and tireless voice reached them; Mr. Redfield was
already on his feet.
The honourable member from the Gulf
Coast had risen on a question of personal privilege.
Then he required the clerk of the House to read the
offending editorial from Winthrop’s newspaper,
during which he stood haughtily erect, his feet rather
wide apart, his arms folded indignantly across his
breast, and a look of righteous wrath on his face.
When the clerk finished, he spat plentifully in a
spittoon at his feet, cleared his throat, and let
loose the flood of rhetoric which was threatening
already to burst over the dam.
The blow aimed by that villainous
writer, the honourable gentleman said, was struck
at him. He was a member of the Committee on Military
Affairs, and he must reply ere the foul stain was
permitted to tarnish his name. He came from a
sunny land where all the women were beautiful and all
the men brave, and he would rather die a thousand
deaths than permit any obscure ink-slinger to impeach
his fair fame. He carried the honour of his country
in his heart; he would sooner die a thousand deaths
than to permit to permit –
He paused, and waved his hand as he
sought for a metaphor sufficiently strong-winged.
“Wait a minute, Mr. Redfield,
and I’ll help you down,” dryly said a
thin-faced member from the Valley of Virginia.
The sound of subdued laughter arose
and the Speaker rapped for order. Mr. Redfield
glared at the irreverent member from the Valley of
Virginia, then resumed his interrupted flight.
Unfortunately for him the spell was broken. Some
of the members began to talk in low whispers and others
to read documents. Besides the murmur of voices
there was a sound of scraping feet. But the honourable
member from the sunny shores of the Gulf helped himself
down, though somewhat angrily, and choosing a tamer
course began to come nearer to the point. He called
for the suppression of the offending newspaper and
the expulsion of its editor from the city. He
spoke of Winthrop by name and denounced him. Robert
saw Mr. Sefton appear upon the floor and once nod
his head approvingly as Mr. Redfield spoke.
The House now paid more heed, but
the dry member from the Valley of Virginia, in reply
to Mr. Redfield, called the attention of the members
to the fact that they could not suppress the newspapers.
They might deny its representatives the privileges
of the House, but they could go no further. He
was opposed to spreading the thing to so great an extent,
as it would be sure to reach the North and would be
a standing advertisement to the Yankees that the South
was divided against itself.
Then a motion was made to deny the
privileges of the House to Winthrop, or any representative
of his paper, but it was defeated by a narrow margin.
“That, I think,” said
Robert, “will be the end of this affair.”
“I am glad of it,” responded
Helen, “because I like Mr. Winthrop.”
“And, therefore, you believe
everything he says is correct?”
“Yes; why not?”
“Women have more personal loyalty
than men,” said Robert, not replying directly.
“Shall we go now?” he asked a moment later;
“I think we have heard all of interest.”
“No, I must stay a little,”
she replied with some embarrassment. “The
fact is I am waiting to see Mr.
Sefton.”
“To see Mr. Sefton!” Prescott
could not refrain from exclaiming in his surprise.
She looked at him with an air half defiance, half
appeal.
“Yes,” she said, “and
my business is of considerable importance to me.
You don’t think that a mere woman can have any
business of weight with so influential a personage
as Mr. Sefton. You Southern men, with all your
courtesy and chivalry, really undervalue us, and therefore
you are not gallant at all.”
Her defiant look and manner told Prescott
that she did not wish him to know the nature of her
business, so he made a light answer, asking her if
she were about to undertake the affairs of the Government.
He had no doubt some would be glad to get rid of them.
He excused himself presently and strolled
into the rotunda, where he gazed absently at the Washington
statue and the Lafayette bust, although he saw neither.
Conscious of a feeling of jealousy, he began to wish
ill to the clever Secretary. “What business
can she have with a man like Sefton?” he said
to himself.
Passing out of the rotunda, he walked
slowly down the steps, and looking back saw Helen
and Mr. Sefton in close and earnest conversation.
Then he went on faster with increased ill temper.
“I have a piece of news for
you,” said Mrs. Prescott the next morning to
her son at the breakfast table.
He looked at her with inquiring interest.
“Helen Harley has gone to work,” she said.
“Gone to work! Mother, what do you mean?”
“The heiress of seven generations
must work like a common Northern mill-hand to support
that pompous old father of hers, the heir of six Virginia
generations, who certainly would not work under any
circumstances to support his daughter.”
“Won’t you explain yourself more clearly,
mother?”
“It’s this. The Harleys
are ruined by the war. The Colonel is absorbed
in his career and spends all his salary on himself.
The old gentleman doesn’t know anything about
his financial affairs and doesn’t want to; it’s
beneath his dignity. Helen, who does know about
them, is now earning the bread for her father and
herself. Think of a Southern girl of the oldest
blood doing such a thing! It is very low and degrading,
isn’t it?”
She looked at him covertly. A sudden thought
occurred to him.
“No, mother,” he replied.
“It is not low and degrading. You think
just the contrary, and so do I. Where has Helen gone
to work?”
“In the Treasury Department,
under Mr. Sefton. She is copying documents there.”
Robert felt a sudden relief and then
alarm that she should owe so much to Sefton.
“I understand that Harley senior
stormed and threatened for awhile,” continued
his mother. “He said no female member of
his family had ever worked before, and he might have
added, few male members either. He said his family
would be disgraced forever by the introduction of such
a low Yankee innovation; but Helen stood firm, and,
moreover, she was urged by the hand of necessity.
I understand that she has quite a good place and her
salary is to be paid in gold. She will pass here
every day at noon, coming home for her luncheon.”
Prescott spent most of the morning
at home, the remainder with his new friends, wandering
about the city; but just before noon he was in front
of the Custom House, waiting by the door through which
Helen must come. She appeared promptly at the
stroke of twelve and seemed surprised to see him there.
“I came merely to tell you how
much I admire your resolution,” he said.
“I think you are doing a noble thing.”
The colour in her cheeks deepened
a little. He knew he had pleased her.
“It required no great amount
of courage,” she replied, “for the work
is not hard and Mr. Sefton is very kind. And,
aside from the money I am happier here. Did you
never think how hard it was for women to sit with
their hands folded, waiting for this war to end?”
“I have thought of it more than once,”
he replied.
“Now I feel that I am a part
of the nation,” she continued, “not a mere
woman who does not count. I am working with the
others for our success.”
Her eyes sparkled like the eyes of
one who has taken a tonic, and she looked about her
defiantly as if she would be ready with a fitting reply
to any who might dare to criticize her.
Prescott liked best in her this quality
of independence and self-reliance, and perhaps her
possession of it imparted to her that slight foreign
air which he so often noticed. He thought the
civilization of the South somewhat debilitating, so
far as women were concerned. It wished to divide
the population into just two classes women
of beautiful meekness and men of heroic courage.
Helen had broken down an old convention,
having made an attempt that few women of her class
and period would have dared, and at a time, too, when
she might have been fearful of the results. She
was joyous as if a burden had been lifted. Prescott
rarely had seen her in such spirits. She, who
was usually calm and grave, seemed to have forgotten
the war. She laughed and jested and saw good
humour in everything.
Prescott could not avoid catching
the infection from the woman whom he most admired.
The atmosphere the very air took
on an unusual brilliancy. The brick walls and
the shingled roofs glittered in the crisp, wintry
sunshine; the schoolboys, caps over their ears and
mittens on their fingers, played and shouted in the
streets just as if peace reigned and the cannon were
not rumbling onward over there beyond the trees.
“Isn’t this world beautiful at times?”
said Helen.
“It is,” replied Robert,
“and it seems all the more strange to me that
we should profane it by war. But here comes Mrs.
Markham. Let us see how she will greet you.”
Mrs. Markham was in a sort of basket
cart drawn by an Accomack pony, one of those ugly
but stout little horses which do much service in Virginia
and she was her own driver, her firm white wrists showing
above her gloves as she held the reins. She checked
her speed at sight of Robert and Helen and stopped
abreast of them.
“I was not deceiving you the
other night, Captain Prescott,” she said, after
a cheerful good-afternoon “when I told you that
all my carriage horses had been confiscated.
Ben Butler, here I call him Ben Butler
because he is low-born and has no manners arrived
only last night, bought for me by my husband with
a whole wheelbarrowful of Confederate bills:
is it not curious how we, who have such confidence
in our Government, will not trust its money.”
She flicked Ben Butler with her whip,
and the pony reared and tried to bolt, but presently
she reduced him to subjection.
“Did I not tell you that he
had no manners,” she said. “Oh, how
I wish I had the real Ben Butler under my hand, too!
I’ve heard what you’ve done, Helen.
But, tell me, is it really true? Have you actually
gone to work as a clerk in an office, like
a low-born Northern woman?”
The colour in Helen’s cheeks
deepened and Robert saw the faintest quiver of her
lower lip.
“It is true,” she replied.
“I am a secretary in Mr. Sefton’s office
and I get fifteen dollars a week.”
“Confederate money?”
“No, in gold.”
“What do you do it for?”
“For the money. I need it.”
Mrs. Markham flicked the pony’s
mane again and once more he reared, but, as before,
the strong hand restrained him.
“What you are doing is right,
Helen,” she said. “Though a Southern
woman, I find our Southern conventions weigh heavily
upon me: but,” she added quizzically, “of
course, you understand that we can’t know you
socially now.”
“I understand,” said Helen, “and
I don’t ask it.”
Her lips were pressed together with
an air of defiance and there was a sparkle in her
eyes.
Mrs. Markham laughed long and joyously.
“Why, you little goose,”
she said, “I believe you actually thought I was
in earnest. Don’t you know that we of the
Mosaic Club and its circle represent the more advanced
and liberal spirit of Richmond if I do say
it myself and we shall stand by you to the
utmost. I suspect that if you were barred, others
would choose the same bars for themselves. Would
they not, Captain Prescott?”
“I certainly should consider
myself included in the list,” replied the young
man sturdily.
“And doubtless you would have
much company,” resumed she. “And now
I must be going. Ben Butler is growing impatient.
He is not accustomed to good society, and I must humour
him or he will make a scene.”
She spoke to the horse and they dashed down the street.
“A remarkable woman,” said Prescott.
“Yes; and just now I feel very grateful to her,”
said Helen.
They met others, but not all were
so frank and cordial as Mrs. Markham. There was
a distinct chilliness in the manners of one, while
a second had a patronizing air which was equally offensive.
Helen’s high spirits were dashed a little, but
Robert strove to raise them again. He saw only
the humourous features of such a course on the part
of those whom they had encountered, and he exerted
himself to ridicule it with such good effect that
she laughed again, and her happy mood was fully restored
when she reached her own gate.
The next was a festal day in Richmond,
which, though always threatened by fire and steel,
was not without its times of joyousness. The famous
Kentucky raider, Gen. John H. Morgan, had come to town,
and all that was best in the capital, both military
and civil, would give him welcome and do him honour.
The hum and bustle of a crowd rose
early in the streets, and Prescott, with all the spirits
of youth, eager to see and hear everything of moment,
was already with his friends, Talbot, Raymond and Winthrop.
“Richmond knows how to sing
and dance even if the Yankee army is drawing near.
Who’s afraid!” said Winthrop.
“I have declined an honour,”
said Raymond. “I might have gone in one
of the carriages in the procession, but I would rather
be here on the sidewalk with you. A man can never
see much of a show if he is part of it.”
It was a winter’s day, but Richmond
was gay, nevertheless. The heavens opened in
fold on fold of golden sunshine, and a bird of winter,
rising above the city, poured out a flood of song.
The boys had a holiday and they were shouting in the
streets. Officers in their best uniforms rode
by, and women, bringing treasured dresses of silk or
satin from old chests, appeared now in gay and warm
colours. The love of festivity, which war itself
could not crush, came forth, and these people, all
of whom knew one another, began to laugh and jest
and to see the brighter side of life.
“Come toward the hotel,”
said Talbot to his friends; “Morgan and some
of the great men of Kentucky who are with him have
been there all night. That’s where the
procession starts.”
Nothing loath, they followed him,
and stayed about the hotel, talking with acquaintances
and exchanging the news of the morning. Meanwhile
the brilliant day deepened and at noon the time for
the festivities to begin was at hand.
The redoubtable cavalry leader, whose
fame was rivaling that of Stuart and Wood, came forth
from the hotel, his friends about him, and the grand
procession through the streets was formed. First
went the Armory Band, playing its most gallant tunes,
and after that the city Battalion in its brightest
uniform. In the first carriage sat General Morgan
and Mayor Joseph Mayo of Richmond, side by side, and
behind them in carriages and on horseback rode a brilliant
company; famous Confederate Generals like J. E. B.
Stuart, Edward Johnson, A. P. Hill and others, Hawes,
the so-called Confederate Governor of Kentucky, and
many more.
Virginia was doing honour to Kentucky
in the person of the latter’s gallant son, John
H. Morgan, and the crowd flamed into enthusiasm.
Tumultuous applause arose. These were great men
to the people. Their names were known in every
household, and they resounded now, shouted by many
voices in the crisp, wintry air. The carriages
moved briskly along, the horses reared with their
riders in brilliant uniforms, and their steel-shod
hoofs struck sparks from the stones of the streets.
Ahead of all, the band played dance music, and the
brass of horn and trumpet flashed back the golden
gleam of the sun. The great dark-haired and dark-eyed
cavalryman, the centre and object of so much applause
and enthusiasm, smiled with pleasure, and bowed to
right and left like a Roman Cæsar at his triumph.
The joy and enthusiasm of the crowd
increased and the applause swelled into rumbling thunder.
Richmond, so long depressed and gloomy, sprang up
with a bound. Why cry when it was so much better
to laugh! The flash of uniforms was in the eyes
of all, and the note of triumphant music in every
ear. What were the Yankees, anyway, but a leaderless
horde? They could never triumph over such men
as these, Morgan, Stuart, Wood, Harley, Hill, not
to mention the peerless chief of them all, Lee, out
there, always watching.
The low thunder of a cannon came faintly
from the north, but there were few who heard it.
The enthusiasm of the crowd for Morgan
spread to everybody, and mighty cheers were given
in turn for all the Generals and the Mayor. The
rebound was complete. The whole people, for the
time being, looked forward to triumph, thorough and
magnificent. The nearer the Yankees came to Richmond
the greater would be their defeat and rout. High
spirits were contagious and ran through the crowd like
a fire in dry grass.
“Hurrah!” cried Talbot,
clapping his hand heavily upon Prescott’s shoulder.
“This is the spirit that wins! We’ll
drive the Yankees into the Potomac now!”
“I’ve never heard that
battles were won by shouting and the music of bands,”
replied Prescott dryly. “How many of these
people who are making so much noise have anything
whatever to do with the war?”
“That’s your Puritan mind,
old Gloomy Face,” replied Talbot. “Nothing
was ever won by being too solemn.”
“And we mustn’t hold too
cheaply the enthusiasm of a crowd even a
crowd that is influenced merely by the emotion of
the moment,” said Raymond. “It is
a force which, aimless in itself, may be controlled
for good uses by others. Ha, look at Harley,
there! Well done!”
Helen’s brother was riding an
unusually spirited horse that reared and curveted
every time the band put forth an unusual effort.
The Colonel himself was in gorgeous attire, wearing
a brand new uniform with much gold lace, very large
epaulets on his shoulders and a splendid silken sash
around his waist. A great cavalry saber hung at
his side. He was a resplendent figure and he
drew much applause from the boys and the younger women.
His eyes shone with pleasure, and he allowed his horse
to curvet freely.
A little girl, perhaps pressed too
much by the unconscious crowd or perhaps driven on
by her own enthusiasm, fell directly in front of the
rearing horse of Harley. It was too late for him
to stop, and a cry of alarm arose from the crowd,
who expected to see the iron-shod hoofs beat the child’s
body into the pavement, but Harley instantly struck
his horse a mighty blow and the animal sprang far
over the child, leaving her untouched.
The applause was thunderous, and Harley
bowed and bowed, lifting his plumed hat again and
again to the admiring multitude, while sitting his
still-rearing horse with an ease and grace that was
beyond criticism.
“The man’s whole character
was expressed in that act,” said Raymond with
conviction; “vain to the last degree, as fond
of display and colours as a child, unconsciously selfish,
but in the presence of physical danger quick, resourceful,
and as brave as Alexander. What queer mixtures
we are!”
Mr. Harley was in one of the carriages
of the procession and his eyes glittered with pleasure
and pride when he witnessed the act of his son.
Moreover, in his parental capacity he appropriated
part of the credit and also took off his hat and bowed.
The procession advanced along Main
Street toward the south porch of the City Hall, where
General Morgan was to be presented formally to the
people, and the cheers never ceased for a moment.
Talbot and the two editors talked continually about
the scene before them, even the minds of the two professional
critics becoming influenced by the unbounded enthusiasm;
but Prescott paid only a vague attention, his mind
having been drawn away by something else.
The young Captain saw in the throng
a woman who seemed to him somewhat different from
those around her. She was not cheering nor clapping
her hands merely floating with the stream.
She was very tall and walked with a strong and graceful
step, but was wrapped to her cheeks in a long brown
cloak; only a pair of wonderfully keen eyes, which
once met the glance of his, rose above its folds.
Her look rested on him a moment and held him with
a kind of secret power, then her eyes passed on; but
it seemed to him that under a show of indifference
she was examining everything with minute scrutiny.
It was the lady of the brown cloak,
his silent companion of the train, and Prescott burned
with curiosity at this unexpected meeting. He
watched her for some time and he could make nothing
of her. She spoke to no one, but kept her place
among the people, unnoticed but noticing. He
was recalled to himself presently by Talbot’s
demand to know why he stared so much at the crowd
and not at the show itself.
Then he turned his attention away
from the woman to the procession, but he resolved
not to lose sight of her entirely.
At the south porch of the City Hall
General Morgan was introduced with great ceremony
to the inhabitants of the Confederate capital, who
had long heard of his gallant deeds.
After the cheering subsided, the General,
a handsome man of thirty-six or seven, made a speech.
The Southern people dearly love a speech, and they
gave him close attention, especially as he was sanguine,
predicting great victories. Little he dreamed
that his career was then close to its bloody end,
and that the brilliant Stuart, standing so near, would
be claimed even sooner; that Hill, over there, and
others beside him, would never see the close of the
war. There was no note of all this in the air
now, and no note of it in Morgan’s speech.
Young blood and lively hope spoke in him, and the
bubbling spirits of the crowd responded.
Prescott and his comrades stood beside
the porch, listening to the address and the cheers,
and Prescott’s attention was claimed again by
the strange woman in the throng. She was standing
directly in front of the speaker, though all but her
face was hidden by those around her. He saw the
same keen eyes under long lashes studying the generals
on the porch. “I’m going to speak
to that woman,” resolved Prescott. “Boys,”
he said to his comrades, “I’ve just caught
the eye of an old friend whom I haven’t seen
in a long time. Excuse me for a minute.”
He edged his way cautiously through
the throng until he stood beside the strange woman.
She did not notice his coming and presently he stumbled
slightly against her. He recovered himself instantly
and was ready with an apology.
“I beg your pardon,” he
said, “but we have met before. I seem to
remember you, Miss, Miss ”
The woman looked startled, then set her lips firmly.
“You are rude, sir,” she
said. “Is it the custom of Southern gentlemen
to accost ladies in this manner?”
She gave her shoulders a haughty shrug
and turned her back upon him. Prescott flushed,
but held his ground, and he would have spoken to her
again had she given him the chance. But she began
to move away and he was afraid to follow deliberately
lest he make a scene. Instead, he went back to
his friends.
The General’s speech came to
an end and was followed by a rolling thunder of cheers.
Then all the people of consequence were presented to
him, and forth from the Hustings court-room, where
they had been biding their time, walked twenty of
the most beautiful young ladies of Richmond, in holiday
attire of pink, rose and lilac silk or satin, puffed
and flounced, their hair adorned with pink and red
roses from Richmond hothouses.
It was really a wonderful bit of feminine
colouring amid the crowd, and the Southern people,
ever proud of their women, cheered again. Helen
was there it was a holiday in
a wonderful old dress of rose-coloured satin, her
cheeks glowing and her eyes shining, and as Prescott
saw her he forgot the strange woman who had rebuffed
him.
“The most beautiful girl of
this score of beautiful girls is to present a wreath
of roses to General Morgan. I wonder who it will
be,” said Raymond.
He looked quizzically at Prescott.
“I wonder,” repeated Prescott,
but he felt no doubt whatever upon the subject.
The cheering of the crowd ceased,
and Helen, escorted by her brother, stepped from the
unserried ranks of beauty to a table where the chaplet
of roses lay. Then the General stood aside, and
Helen, walking forward alone, made a little speech
to General Morgan, in which she complimented him on
his courage and brilliant achievements. She said
that the sound of his voice would always strike terror
in the North and kindle hope anew in the South.
She was half afraid, half daring, but she spoke the
words clearly. The big, black-bearded General
stood before her, hat in hand and openly admiring.
When she came to the end of her speech she reached
up, rested the wreath for a moment on his bushy black
crown of hair and then put it in his hands. Now
the crowd gave its greatest burst of applause.
The two figures standing there, the tall, brown soldier
and the beautiful woman, appealed to all that was
gallant in their nature.
“It does not look as if there
would be any social ostracism of Miss Harley because
she has turned working woman,” said Winthrop.
“Cold and selfish emotions don’t
count at a time like this,” said Raymond; “it’s
the silent pressure of time and circumstance that she’ll
have to reckon with.”
Helen, her great deed performed, walked
back, blushing somewhat, and hid herself among her
companions. Then, the official ceremonies over,
the occasion became informal, and soon generals and
young women alike were surrounded by admirers, war
and beauty having chances about equal in the competition.
The good spirits of the crowd, moved by triumphant
oratory, the beauty of the women and the blaze of uniforms,
grew to such a pitch that no discordant note marred
the cheerfulness of those gathered in the old Court
House.
Prescott pressed into the crowd, but
he found himself somewhat lost, or, rather, dimmed,
amid the brilliant uniforms of the generals, who were
as thick as corn in the field, and he despaired of
securing more than a small part of Helen’s attention.
He had admired her beauty more than ever that day;
her timid dignity when all critical eyes were upon
her impressed him, and yet he felt no jealousy now
when he saw her surrounded and so sincerely flattered
by others. He was surprised at himself, and a
little angry, too, that it should be so, but search
his mind as he would he could not find the cause.
At last he secured a word or two with her and passed
on toward the porch; but looking back saw the great
cavalry leader, Wood, the mountaineer, talking to her,
his tall figure towering a head over hers, his black
eyes sparkling with a new fire and lighting up his
face like a blaze. His uniform was not too bright
and he was an imposing figure lionlike was
the simile that occurred to Prescott.
But he felt no pang again
he was surprised at himself and went on
his way to the parlour, where the decorations were
yet untouched, and gazed at the crowd, portions of
which still lingered in the streets.
His eyes unconsciously sought one
figure, a figure that was not there, and he came to
himself with a start when he realized the cause that
had drawn him to the place. Displeased with himself,
he rejoined his friends in the court-room.
“Let’s go into the hall
and see the ladies and the great men,” said
Talbot, and his comrades willingly went with him.
It was indeed an animated scene in the building, the
same high spirits and confident hope for the future
that had marked the crowd prevailing here.
Despite the winter without, it was
warm in the rooms of the City Hall, and Prescott,
after awhile, went back to the porch from which General
Morgan had made his speech. Many of the enthusiastic
throng of spectators still lingered and small boys
were sending off amateur fireworks. Going outside,
he became once more one of the throng, simply because
he had caught another glimpse of a face that interested
and mystified him.
It was the tall woman of the brown
cloak, still watching everything with eyes that missed
no detail. She annoyed Prescott; she had become
an obsession like one of those little puzzles the
solution of which is of no importance except when
one cannot obtain it. So he lingered in her neighbourhood,
taking care that she should not observe him, and he
asked two or three persons concerning her identity.
Nobody knew her.
As the crowd, by and by, began to
diminish, the woman turned away. The outlines
of her figure were not disclosed, but her step was
swinging and free, as that of one who had an abundance
of health and vigour. She spoke to nobody, but
seemed sure of her way.
She went up Main Street, and Prescott,
his curiosity increasing, followed at a distance.
She did not look back, and he closed up gradually
the gap between them, in order that he might not lose
sight of her if she turned around a corner. This
she did presently, but when he hastened and passed
the corner, too, he found himself face to face with
the woman in brown.
“Well, sir?” she said sharply.
“Ah, I Excuse
me, I did not see you. I turned the corner with
such suddenness,” he said awkwardly, having
an uneasy sense that he had been intrusive, yet anxious
to solve the troublesome little mystery.
“You were following me and for the
second time to-day.”
He was silent, but his flushed face
confirmed the truth of her accusation. For the
moment that he stood near he examined her features.
He saw eyes so dark that he could not tell whether
they were blue or black, eyelashes of unusual length,
and a pale face remarkable for its strength.
But it was youthful and finely cut, while a wisp of
bronze hair at the edge of the hood showed a gleam
of gold as the sunshine fell across it.
“I have heard that Southern
gentlemen were always courteous, as I told you once
before,” she said.
“I thought I knew you, but made
a mistake,” Prescott replied, it being the first
thing that came into his mind. “I fear that
I have been rude and I ask your pardon.”
He lifted his hat and bowed humbly.
“You can show contrition by
ceasing to follow me,” she said, and the sharp
tone of her accusation was still in her voice.
Prescott bowed again and turned away.
He fully meant to keep his implied promise, but curiosity
was too strong for him, and watching once more from
a distance, he saw her go up Shockoe Hill and into
the Capitol through the wide-open doors. When
he found it convenient presently to enter the Capitol
in his turn, he saw no trace of her, and, disappointed
and annoyed with himself, he went back to the City
Hall. Here Talbot was the first whom he met.
“Where have you been?” asked his friend.
“Following a woman.”
“Following a woman?”
Talbot looked at Prescott in surprise.
“I didn’t know you were
that kind of a man, Bob,” he said; “but
what luck?”
“None at all. I failed
even to learn her name, where she lived or anything
else about her. I’ll tell you more this
evening, because I want your advice.”
The reception ended presently, and
the ladies, escorted by the young men, went to their
homes. Talbot, Winthrop and Raymond rejoined Prescott
soon afterward near Shockoe Hill.
“Now tell us of the woman you
were following,” said Talbot.
“I don’t think I shall,”
replied Prescott. “I’ve changed my
intention about it at least, for the present.”
The affair had clung to his mind and
the result of his second thought was a resolution
to keep it to himself a while longer. He had formed
a suspicion, but it might be wrong, and he would not
willingly do injustice to any one, least of all to
a woman. Her face, when he saw her close at hand,
looked pure and good, and now that he recalled it he
could remember distinctly that there had been in it
a touch of reproach and the reproach was for him she
had seemed to ask why he annoyed her. No, he
would wait before speaking of her to his friends.
Talbot regarded Prescott for a moment
with an inquiring gaze, but said nothing more upon
the subject.
Prescott left his friends at the Capitol
and spent the remainder of the day with his mother,
who on the plea of age had avoided the reception and
the festivities, although she now had many questions
to ask.
“I hear that great enthusiasm
was shown and brilliant predictions were made,”
she said.
“It is quite true,” he
replied. “The music, the speeches and the
high spirits, which you know are contagious in a crowd,
have done good, I think, to the Southern cause.”
“Did Morgan bring any new recruits
for General Lee’s army?”
“Now, mother,” replied
Prescott, laughing a little, “don’t let
your Northern blood carry you too far. I know,
too, that wars are not won by music and shouting,
and days like to-day bring nothing substantial merely
an increase of hope; but after all, that is what produces
substantial results.”
She smiled and did not answer, but
went on quietly with her sewing. Prescott watched
her for awhile and reflected what a beautiful woman
his mother must have been, and was yet, for that matter.
“Mother,” he said presently,
“you do not speak it aloud, but you cannot disguise
from me the fact that you think it would be better
for the North to win.”
She hesitated, but at last she said:
“I cannot rejoice whichever
way this war ends. Are you not on the side of
the South? All I can pray for is that it may end
quickly.”
“In your heart, mother, you have no doubt of
the result.”
She made no reply, and Prescott did not pursue the
subject.