It was a bleak, cold night and Prescott’s
feelings were of the same tenor. The distant
buildings seemed to swim in a raw mist and pedestrians
fled from the streets. Prescott walked along in
aimless fashion until he was hailed by a dark man
on a dark horse, who wished to know if he were going
“to walk right over us,” but the rough
words were belied by joviality and welcome.
Prescott came out of his cloud and,
looking up, recognized the great cavalryman, Wood.
His huge beard seemed bigger than ever, but his keen
eyes shone in the black tangle as if they were looking
through the holes in a mask.
“What ails you, boy?”
he asked Prescott. “You were goin’
to walk right into me, horse an’ all, an’
I don’t believe you’d have seen a house
if it had been planted right in your path!”
“It’s true I was thinking
of something else,” replied Prescott with a
smile, “and did not see what was about me; but
how are you, General?”
Wood regarded him closely for a moment
or two before replying and then said:
“All right as far as that goes,
but I can’t say things are movin’ well
for our side. We’re in a deadlock down there
at Petersburg, and here comes winter, loaded with
snow an’ hail an’ ice, if signs count for
anythin’. Mighty little for a cavalryman
to do right now, so I just got leave of absence from
General Lee, an’ I’ve run up to Richmond
for a day or two.”
Then the big man laughed in an embarrassed
way, and Prescott, looking up at him, knew that his
face was turning red could it but be seen.
“A man may employ his time well
in Richmond, General,” said Prescott, feeling
a sudden and not unsympathetic desire to draw him out.
The General merely nodded in reply
and Prescott looked at him again and more closely.
The youth of General Wood and himself had been so
different that he had never before recognized what
there was in this illiterate man to attract a cultivated
woman.
The crude mountaineer had seemed to
him hitherto to be a soldier and nothing else; and
soldiership alone, in Prescott’s opinion, was
very far from making up the full complement of a man.
The General sitting there on his horse in the darkness
was so strong, so masterful, so deeply touched with
what appeared to be the romantic spirit, that Prescott
could readily understand his attraction for a woman
of a position originally different in life. His
feeling of sympathy grew stronger. Here at least
was a man direct and honest, not evasive and doubtful.
“General,” he said with
abrupt frankness, “you have come to Richmond
to see Miss Harley and I want to tell you that I wish
you the utmost success.”
He held out his hand and the great
mountaineer enclosed it in an iron grasp. Then
Wood dismounted, threw his bridle over his arm and
said:
“S’pose we go along together for awhile?”
They walked a minute or two in silence,
the General running his fingers nervously through
his thick black beard.
“See here, Prescott,”
he said at last, “you’ve spoke plain to
me an’ I’ll do the same to you. You
wished me success with Miss Harley. Why, I thought
once that you stood in the way of me or any other man.”
“Not so, General; you credit
me with far more attractions than I have,” replied
Prescott deliberately. “Miss Harley and
I were children together and you know that is a tie.
She likes me, I am sure, but nothing more. And
I well I admire her tremendously, but ”
He hesitated and then stopped.
The mountaineer gave him a sudden keen glance and
laughed softly.
“There’s somebody else?” he said.
Prescott was silent but the mountaineer was satisfied.
“See here, Prescott,”
he exclaimed with great heartiness. “Let’s
wish each other success.”
Their hands closed again in a firm grasp.
“There’s that man Sefton,”
resumed the mountaineer, “but I’m not so
much afraid of him as I was of you. He’s
cunnin’ and powerful, but I don’t think
he’s the kind of man women like. He kinder
gets their teeth on edge. They’re afraid
of him without admirin’ his strength. There’s
two kinds of strong men: the kind that women
are afraid of an’ like and the kind that they’re
afraid of an’ don’t like; an’ I think
Sefton falls into the last class.”
Prescott’s liking for his companion
increased, and mingled with it was a growing admiration
wholly aside from his respect for him as a soldier.
He was showing observation or intuition of a high order.
The General’s heart was full. He had all
of the mountaineer’s reserve and taciturnity,
but now after years of repression and at the touch
of real sympathy his feelings overflowed.
“See here, Prescott,”
he said abruptly, “I once thought it was wrong
for me to love Helen Harley the difference
between us is so great and maybe I think
so yet, but I’m goin’ to try to win her
anyhow. I’m just that deep in love, and
maybe the good God will forgive me, because I can’t
help it. I loved that girl the first time I ever
set eyes on her; I wasn’t asked about it, I
just had to.”
“There is no reason why you
should not go ahead and win her,” said the other,
warmly.
“Prescott,” continued
the mountaineer, “you don’t know all that
I’ve been.”
“It’s nothing dishonest, that I’d
swear.”
“It’s not that, but look
where I started. I was born in the mountains
back there, an’ I tell you we weren’t much
above the wild animals that live in them same mountains.
There was just one room to our log house one
for father, mother and all of us. I never was
taught nothin’. I didn’t learn to
read till I was twenty years old and the big words
still bother me. I went barefoot six months every
year till I was a man grown. Why, my cavalry
boots pinch me now.”
He uttered the lamentation of the
boots with such tragic pathos that Prescott smiled,
but was glad to hide it in the darkness.
“An’ I don’t know
nothin’ now,” resumed the mountaineer sadly.
“When I go into a parlour I’m like a bear
in a cage. If there’s anythin’ about
to break, I always break it. When they begin talkin’
books and pictures and such I don’t know whether
they are right or wrong.”
“You are not alone in that.”
“An’ I’m out of
place in a house,” continued the General, not
noticing the interruption. “I belong to
the mountains an’ the fields, an’ when
this war’s over I guess I’ll go back to
’em. They think somethin’ of me now
because I can ride an’ fight, but war ain’t
all. When it’s over there’ll be no
use for me. I can’t dance an’ I can’t
talk pretty, an’ I’m always steppin’
on other peoples’ feet. I guess I ain’t
the timber they make dandies of.”
“I should hope not,” said
Prescott with emphasis. He was really stirred
by the big man’s lament, seeing that he valued
so much the little things that he did not have and
so little the great things that he did have.
“General,” he said, “you
never shirked a battle and I wouldn’t shirk
this contest either. If I loved a woman I’d
try to win her, and you won’t have to go back
to the mountains when this war is over. You’ve
made too great a name for that. We won’t
give you up.”
Wood’s eyes shone with satisfaction and gratitude.
“Do you think so?” he asked earnestly.
“I haven’t a doubt of
it,” replied Prescott with the utmost sincerity.
“If fortune was unkind to you in the beginning
nature was not so. You may not know it, but I
think that women consider you rather good to look
at.”
Thus they talked, and in his effort
to console another Robert forgot some of his own pain.
The simple, but, on the whole, massive character of
Wood appealed to him, and the thought came with peculiar
force that what was lacking in Helen Harley’s
nature the tougher fiber of the mountaineer would
supply.
It was late when they separated and
much later before Prescott was able to sleep.
The shadow of the Secretary was before him and it was
a menacing shadow. It seemed that this man was
to supplant him at every turn, to appear in every
cause his successful rival. Nor was he satisfied
with himself. A small but audible voice told him
he had behaved badly, but stubborn pride stopped his
ear. What right did he have to accuse her?
In a worldly sense, at least, she might fare well if
she chose the Secretary.
There was quite a crowd in the lobby
of the Spotswood Hotel next morning, gathered there
to talk, after the Southern habit, when there is nothing
pressing to be done, and conspicuous in it were the
editors, Raymond and Winthrop, whom Prescott had not
seen in months and who now received him with warmth.
“How’s the Patriot?” asked
Prescott of Raymond.
“The Patriot is resting just now,”
replied Raymond quietly.
“How is that no news?”
“Oh, there’s plenty of
news, but there’s no paper. I did have a
little, but Winthrop was short on a supply for an
edition of his own sheet, and he begged so hard that
I let him have mine. That’s what I call
true professional courtesy.”
“The paper was so bad that it
crumbled all to pieces a day after printing,”
said Winthrop.
“So much the better,”
replied Raymond. “In fact, a day is much
too long a life for such a sheet as Winthrop prints.”
The others laughed and the talk returned
to the course from which it had been taken for a moment
by the arrival of Prescott. Conspicuous in the
crowd was the Member of Congress, Redfield, not at
all improved in appearance since the spring.
His face was redder, heavier and coarser than ever.
“I tell you it is so,”
he said oratorically and dogmatically to the others.
“The Secretary is in love with her. He was
in love with Helen Harley once, but now he has changed
over to the other one.”
Prescott shifted uneasily. Here
was the name of the Secretary dogging him and in a
connection that he liked least of all.
“It’s the ‘Beautiful
Yankee,’ then,” said another, a young man
named Garvin, who aspired eagerly to the honours of
a ladykiller. “I don’t blame him.
You don’t see such a face and figure more than
once in a lifetime. I’ve been thinking
of going in there myself and giving the Secretary
something to do.”
He flecked a speck of dust off his
embroidered waistcoat and exuded vanity. Prescott
would have gone away at once, but such an act would
have had an obvious meaning the last thing
that he desired, and he stayed, hoping that the current
of talk would float to a new topic. Winthrop
and Raymond glanced at him, knowing the facts of the
Wilderness and of the retreat that followed, but they
said nothing.
“I think that the Secretary
or anybody else should go slow with this Yankee girl,”
said Redfield. “Who is she and
what is she? Where did she come from? She
drifted in with the army after the battles in the
Wilderness and that’s all we know.”
“It’s enough,” said
Garvin; “because it makes a delightful mystery
which but adds to the ‘Beautiful Yankee’s’
attractions. The Secretary is far gone there.
I happen to know that he is to take her to the President’s
reception to-morrow night.”
Prescott started. He was glad
now that he had not humbled himself.
“At any rate,” said Redfield,
“Mr. Sefton can’t mean to marry her an
unknown like that; it must be something else.”
Prescott felt hot pincers grip him
around the heart, and a passion that he could not
control flamed to his brain. He strode forward
and put his hand heavily on the Member’s shoulder.
“Are you speaking of Miss Catherwood?”
he demanded.
“I am,” replied Redfield,
throwing off the heavy hand. “But what
business is that of yours?”
“Simply this; that she is too
good and noble a woman to be spoken of slightingly
by you. Such remarks as you have just made you
repeat at your risk.”
Redfield made an angry reply and there
were all the elements of a fierce encounter; but Raymond
interfered.
“Redfield,” he said, “you
are wrong, and moreover you owe all of us an apology
for speaking in such a way of a lady in our presence.
I fully indorse all that Captain Prescott says of
Miss Catherwood I happen to have seen instances
of her glorious unselfishness and sacrifice, and I
know that she is one of God’s most nearly perfect
women.”
“And so do I,” said Winthrop,
“and I,” “and I,” said the
others. Redfield saw that the crowd was unanimously
against him and frowned.
“Oh, well, perhaps I spoke hastily
and carelessly,” he said. “I apologize.”
Raymond changed the talk at once.
“When do you think Grant will advance again?”
he asked.
“Advance?” replied Winthrop hotly.
“Advance? Why, he can’t advance.”
“But he came through the Wilderness.”
“If he did he lost a hundred
thousand men, more than Lee had altogether, and now
he’s checkmated.”
“He’ll never see Richmond
unless he comes to Libby,” said Redfield coarsely.
“I’m not so sure,”
said Raymond gravely. “Whatever we say to
the people and however we try to hold up their courage,
we ought not to conceal the facts from ourselves.
The ports of the Confederacy are sealed up by the
Yankee cruisers. We have been shattered down South
and here we are blockaded in Richmond and Petersburg.
It takes a cartload of our money to buy a paper collar
and then it’s a poor collar. When I bring
out the next issue of my newspaper and
I don’t know when that will be I shall
say that the prospects of the Confederacy were never
brighter; but I warn you right now, gentlemen, that
I shall not believe a single one of my own words.”
Thus they talked, but Prescott did
not follow them, his mind dwelling on Lucia and the
Secretary. He was affected most unpleasantly by
what he had heard and sorry now that he had come to
the hotel. When he could conveniently do so he
excused himself and went home.
He was gloomier than ever at supper
and his mother uttered a mild jest or two on his state
of mind.
“You must have failed to find
any friends in the city,” she said.
“I found too many,” he
replied. “I went to the Spotswood Hotel,
mother, and I listened there to some tiresome talk
about whipping the Yankees out of their boots in the
next five minutes.”
“Aren’t you going to do it?”
Prescott laughed.
“Mother,” he said, “I
wouldn’t have your divided heart for anything.
It must cause you a terrible lot of worry.”
“I do very well,” she
said, with her quiet smile, “and I cherish no
illusions.”