Prescott has never forgotten that
night, the long ride, the relief from danger, the
silent woman by his side; and there was in all a keen
enjoyment, of a kind deeper and more holy than he had
ever known before. He had saved a woman, a woman
whom he could admire, from a great danger; it was
hers rather than his own that appealed to him, and
he was thankful. In her heart, too, was a devout
gratitude and something more.
The worthy Elias Gardner, slumbering
so peacefully under his crates, was completely forgotten,
and they two were alone with the universe. The
clouds by and by passed away and the heavens shone
blue and cold; a good moon came out, and the white
hills and forests, touched by it, flashed now and
then with the gleam of silver. All the world was
at peace; there was no sign of war in the night nor
in those snowy solitudes. Before them stretched
the road, indicated by a long line of wheel tracks
in the snow, and behind them was nothing. Prescott,
by and by, let the lines drop on the edge of the wagon-bed,
and the horses chose their own way, following with
mere instinct the better path.
He began now to see himself as he
was, to understand the impulse that had driven him
on. Here by his side, her warm breath almost on
his face, was the girl he had saved, but he took no
advantage of time and place, infringing in no degree
upon the respect due to every woman. He had come
even this night believing her a spy, but now he held
her as something holy.
She spoke by and by of the gratitude
she owed him, not in many words, but strong ones,
showing how deeply she felt all she said, and he did
not seek to silence her, knowing the relief it would
give her to speak.
Presently she told him of herself.
She came from that borderland between North and South
which is of both though not wholly of either, but her
sympathies from the first had turned to the North,
not so much through personal feeling, but because
of a belief that it would be better for the North
to triumph. The armies had come, her uncle with
whom she had lived had fallen in battle, and their
home was destroyed, by which army she did not know.
Then she turned involuntarily to her nearest relative,
Miss Grayson, in whose home she knew she would receive
protection, and who, she knew, too, would share her
sympathies. So she had come to Richmond.
She said nothing of the accusation,
the affair of the papers, and Prescott longed to ask
her again if she were guilty, and to hear her say
that she was not. He was not willing to believe
her a spy, that she could ever stoop to such an act;
and here in the darkness with her by his side, with
only purity and truth in her eyes, he could not believe
her one. But when she was away he knew that his
doubts would return. Then he would ask himself
if he had not been tricked and used by a woman as
beautiful and clever as she was ruthless. Now
he saw only her beauty and what seemed to him the
truth of her eyes, and he swore again silently and
for the twentieth time that he would not leave her
until he saw her safe within the Northern lines.
So little thought he then of his own risks, and so
willing a traitor was he, for a moment, and for the
sake of one woman’s eyes, to the cause that he
served. But a traitor only in seeming, and not
in reality, he would have said of himself with truth.
“What do you intend to do now?” asked
Prescott at last.
“There is much in the trail
of our army that I can do,” she said. “There
will be many wounded soon.”
“Yes, when the snow goes,”
said Prescott. “Doesn’t it seem strange
that the dead cold of winter alone should mean peace
nowadays?”
Both spoke solemnly. For the
time the thought of war inspired Prescott with the
most poignant repulsion, since he was taking this girl
to the army which he expected to fight.
“There is one question which
I should like to ask you,” he said after awhile.
“What is it?”
“Where were you hidden that
day my friend Talbot searched for you and I looked
on?”
She glanced quickly up into his face,
and her lips curved in the slightest smile. There
was, too, a faint twinkle in her eye.
“You have asked me for the second
time the one question that I cannot answer,”
she replied. “I am sorry to disappoint you,
Captain Prescott, but ask me anything else and I think
I can promise a reply. This one is a secret not
mine to tell.”
Silence fell once more over them and
the world about them. There was no noise save
the soft crush of the horses’ feet in the snow
and the crunch of the wagon wheels. The silvery
glow of the moon still fell across the hills, and
the trees stood motionless like white but kindly sentinels.
Prescott by and by took his flask from his pocket.
“Drink some of this,”
he said; “you must. The cold is insidious
and you should fend it off.”
So urged she drank a little, and then
Prescott, stopping the horses, climbed back in the
wagon-bed.
“It would be strange,”
he said, “if our good farmer prepared for a
twenty-mile drive without taking along something to
eat.”
“And please see that he is comfortable,”
she said. “I know these are war times,
but we are treating him hardly.”
Prescott laughed.
“You shouldn’t feel any
remorse,” he said. “Our worthy Elias
was never more snug in his life. He’s still
sleeping as sweetly as a baby, and is as warm as a
rabbit in its nest. Ah, here we are! Cold
ham, light bread, and cold boiled eggs. I’ll
requisition them, but I’ll pay him for them.
It’s a pity we can’t feed the horses, too.”
He took a coin from his pocket and
thrust it into that of the sleeping farmer. Then
he spread the food upon the seat of the wagon, and
the two ate with hearty appetites due to the cold,
their exertions and the freedom from apprehension.
Prescott had often eaten of more luxurious
fare, but none that he enjoyed more than that frugal
repast, in a lonely wagon on a cold and dark winter
morning. Thrilled with a strange exhilaration,
he jested and found entertainment in everything, and
the girl beside him began to share his high spirits,
though she said little, but laughed often at his speeches.
Prescott never before had seen in her so much of feminine
gentleness, and it appealed to him, knowing how strong
and masculine her character could be at times.
Now she left the initiative wholly to him, as if she
had put herself in his hands and trusted him fully,
obeying him, too, with a sweet humility that stirred
the deeps of his nature.
At last they finished the crumbs of
the farmer’s food and Prescott regretfully drove
on.
“The horses have had a good
rest, too,” he said, “and I’ve no
doubt they needed it.”
The character of the night did not
change, still the same splendid white silence, and
just they two alone in the world.
“We must be at least twenty
miles from Richmond,” said the girl.
“I haven’t measured the
time,” Prescott replied, “but it’s
an easy progress. I am quite sure that if we
keep on going long enough we’ll arrive somewhere
at last.”
“I think it likely,” she
said, smiling. “I wonder that we don’t
see any houses.”
“Virginia isn’t the most
densely peopled country in the world, and we are coming
to a pretty sterile region that won’t support
much life in the best of times.”
“Are we on doubtful ground?”
“That or very near it.”
They passed at least one or two houses
by the roadside, but they were lone and dark.
No lean Virginia dogs howled at them and the solitary
and desolate character of the country did not abate.
“Are you cold?” asked Prescott.
“Not at all,” she replied.
“I have never in my life taken an easier journey.
It seems that fortune has been with us.”
“Fortune favours the good or ought to do so.”
“How long do you think it is until daylight?”
“I don’t know; an hour, I suppose; why
bother about it?”
Certainly Prescott was not troubling
his head by trying to determine the exact distance
to daylight, but he began to think for the first time
of his journey’s end. He must leave Miss
Catherwood somewhere in comparative safety, and he
must get back to Richmond, his absence unnoted.
These were problems which might well become vexing,
and the exaltation of the moment could not prevent
their recurrence. He stopped the wagon and took
a look at the worthy Elias, who was slumbering as
peacefully as ever. “A sound conscience
makes a sound sleeper,” he quoted, and then
he inspected the country.
It was a little wilderness of hills
and scrub forest, all lying under the deep snow, and
without sign of either human or animal life.
“There is nothing to do but
drive on,” he said. “If I only dared
to wake our friend, the farmer, we might find out
from him which way the nearest Northern pickets lie.”
“You should let me go now, Captain
Prescott, I beg you again.”
“Abandon you in this snowy waste!
I claim to be an American gentleman, Miss Catherwood.
But if we don’t strike a promising lead soon
I shall waken our friend Elias, and he will have to
point a way, whether he will or no.”
But that threat was saved as a last
resort, and he drove quietly around the curve of a
hill. When they reached the other side, there
was the rapid crunch of hoofs in the snow, an abrupt
command to halt, and they found themselves surrounded
by a dozen troopers. Prescott recognized the
faded blue uniform and knew at once that he was in
the midst of Yankee horsemen. The girl beside
him gave one start at the sudden apparition and then
became calm and impassive.
“Who are you?” asked the
leader of the horsemen, a lieutenant.
“Elias Gardner of Wellsville,”
replied Prescott in a drawling, rural voice.
“That tells nothing,” said the Lieutenant.
“It’s my name, anyhow,”
replied Prescott coolly, “and if you don’t
believe it, here’s a pass they gave me when I
went into Richmond with a load of produce.”
The Lieutenant read the paper by the
moonlight and then handed it back to its temporary
owner.
“It’s all right,”
he said; “but I want to know, Mr. Elias Gardner
and Mrs. Elias Gardner, what you mean by feeding the
enemy.”
“I’d sell to you at the same price,”
replied Prescott.
Some of the troopers were looking
at the barrels and crates in the wagons to see if
they were really empty, and Prescott was in dread lest
they come upon the sleeping farmer; but they desisted
soon, satisfied that there was nothing left to eat.
The Lieutenant cocked a shrewd eye on Prescott.
“So you’ve been in Richmond,
Mr. Farmer; how long were you there?” he asked.
“Only a day.”
“Don’t you think it funny,
Mr. Farmer, that you should go so easily into a town
that armies of a hundred thousand men have been trying
for more than two years to enter and have failed?”
“Maybe I showed better judgment,”
Prescott replied, unable to restrain a gibe.
The Lieutenant laughed.
“Perhaps you are right,”
he said; “but we’ll have Grant soon.
Now, Mr. Gardner, you’ve been in Richmond, and
I’ve no doubt you used your eyes while you were
there, for you look to me like a keen, observant man.
I suspect that you could tell some interesting things
about their earthworks, forts and so forth.”
Prescott held up his hands in mock consternation.
“I ain’t no soldier,”
he replied in his drawling tone. “I wouldn’t
know a fort if I saw one, and I never get near such
things if I know it.”
“Then perhaps Mrs. Gardner took
notice,” continued the Lieutenant in a wheedling
tone. “Women are always observant.”
Miss Catherwood shook her head.
“See here, you two,” said
the Lieutenant, “if you’ll only tell me
about those fortifications I’ll pay you more
than you got for that load of produce.”
“We don’t know anything,”
said Prescott; “ain’t sure there are any
fortifications at all.”
“Confound it!” exclaimed
the Lieutenant in a vexed tone, “a Northern man
can never get anything out of these Virginia farmers!”
Prescott stared at him and grinned a little.
“Go on!” said the Lieutenant,
waving his hand in anger. “There’s
a camp of ours a mile farther ahead. They’ll
stop you, and I only hope they’ll get as much
out of you as I have.”
Prescott gladly obeyed the command
and the Northern horsemen galloped off, their hoof-beats
making little noise in the snow. But as he drove
on he turned his head slightly and watched them until
they were out of sight. When he was sure they
were far away he stopped his own horses.
“Will you wait here a moment
in the wagon, Miss Catherwood, until I go to the top
of the hill?” he asked.
She nodded, and springing out, Prescott
ran to the crest. There looking over into the
valley, he saw the camp of which the Lieutenant had
spoken, a cluster of tents and a ring of smoking fires
with horses tethered beyond, the brief stopping place
of perhaps five hundred men, as Prescott, with a practised
eye, could quickly tell.
He saw now the end of the difficulty,
but he did not rejoice as he had hoped.
“Beyond this hill in the valley,
and within plain view from the crest, is the camp
of your friends, Miss Catherwood,” he said.
“Our journey is over. We need not take
the wagon any farther, as it belongs to our sleeping
friend, the farmer, but you can go on now to this Northern
detachment a raiding party, I presume, but
sure to treat you well. I thank God that the
time is not yet when a woman is not safe in the camp
of either North or South. Come!”
She dismounted from the wagon and
slowly they walked together to the top of the hill.
Prescott pointed to the valley, where the fires glowed
redly across the snow.
“Here I leave you,” he said.
She looked up at him and the glow
of the fires below was reflected in her eyes.
“Shall we ever see each other again?”
she asked.
“That I cannot tell,” he replied.
She did not go on just yet, lingering there a little.
“Captain Prescott,” she asked, “why
have you done so much for me?”
“Upon my soul I do not know,” he replied.
She looked up in his face again, and
he saw the red blood rising in her cheeks. Borne
away by a mighty impulse, he bent over and kissed her,
but she, uttering a little cry, ran down the hill
toward the Northern camp.
He watched her until he saw her draw
near the fires and men come forward to meet her.
Then he went back to the wagon and drove it into a
side path among some trees, where he exchanged outer
clothing again with the farmer, awakening the amazed
man directly afterward from his slumbers. Prescott
offered no explanations, but soothed the honest man’s
natural anger with a gold eagle, and, leaving him
there, not three miles from his home, went back on
foot.
He slipped easily into Richmond the
next night, and before morning was sleeping soundly
in his own bed.