Prescott at three o’clock the
following afternoon knocked on the door of Mr. Sefton’s
private office and the response “Come in!”
was like his knock, crisp and decisive. Prescott
entered and shut the door behind him. The Secretary
had been sitting by the window, but he rose and received
his guest courteously, extending his hand.
Prescott took the proffered hand.
He had learned to look upon the Secretary as his enemy,
but he found himself unable to hate him.
“We had an interview in this
room once before,” said the Secretary, “and
it was not wholly unfriendly.”
“That is true,” replied
Prescott, “and as the subject that I have to
propose now is of a somewhat kindred nature I hope
that we may keep the same tone.”
“It rests with you, my dear
Captain,” said the Secretary meaningly.
Prescott was somewhat embarrassed.
He scarcely knew how to begin.
“I came to ask a favour,” he said at last.
“The willingness to bestow favours does not
always imply the power.”
“It is true,” said Prescott;
“but in this case the will may go with the power.
I have come to speak to you of Lucia Catherwood.”
“What of her?” asked the
Secretary sharply. He was betrayed into a momentary
interruption of his habitual calm, but settled himself
into his seat and looked keenly across the table at
his rival, trying to guess the young man’s plan
of campaign. Calculating upon the basis of what
he himself would do in the same position, he could
form no conclusion.
“I have come to speak on her
account,” continued Prescott, “and though
I may be somewhat involved, I wish it to be distinctly
understood that I am not to be considered. I
ask no favour for myself.”
“I see that you have brought
your pride with you,” said the Secretary dryly.
Prescott flushed a little.
“I trust that I always have it with me,”
he said.
“We are frank with each other.”
“It is best so, and I have come
for yet plainer speaking. I am well aware, Mr.
Sefton, that you know all there is to be known concerning
Miss Catherwood and myself.”
“‘All’ is a large statement.”
“I refer to the facts of Miss
Catherwood’s former presence in Richmond, what
she did while here, and how she escaped from the city.
You know that I helped her.”
“And by doing so you put yourself
in an extremely delicate position, should any one
choose to relate the facts to the Government.”
“Precisely. But again it
is Miss Catherwood of whom I am speaking, not myself.
You may speak of me, you may denounce me at any time
you choose, but I ask you, Mr. Sefton, to respect
the secret of Miss Catherwood. She has told me
that her acts were almost involuntary; she came here
because she had nowhere else to come to
her cousin, Miss Grayson. She admits that she
was once tempted to act as a spy that the
impulse was strong within her. You know the depth
of her Northern sympathies, the strength of her nature,
and how deeply she was moved but that is
all she admits. This impulse has now passed.
Would you ruin her here, as you can do, where she
has so many friends, and where it is possible for her
life to be happy?”
A thin smile appeared on the face of the Secretary.
“You will pardon me if I call
this a somewhat extraordinary appeal, Captain Prescott,”
he said. “You seem to show a deep interest
in Miss Catherwood, and yet if I am to judge by what
I saw the other night, and before, your devotion is
for another lady.”
Prescott flushed an angry red; but
remembering his resolve he replied quietly:
“It is not a question of my
devotion to anybody, Mr. Sefton. I merely speak
for Miss Catherwood, believing that she is in your
power.”
“And what induced you to believe
that I would betray her?”
“I have not indicated such a
belief. I merely seek to provide against a contingency.”
The Secretary pondered, lightly tapping
the table with the forefinger of his right hand.
Prescott observed his thin, almost ascetic face, smooth-shaven
and finely cut. Both General Wood and the Secretary
were mountaineers, but the two faces were different;
one represented blunt strength and courage; the other
suppleness, dexterity, meditation, the power of silent
combination. Had the two been blended here would
have been one of the world’s giant figures.
“We have begun by being frank;
we should continue so,” said the Secretary presently.
“We seem doomed to be rivals always, Captain
Prescott; at least we can give each other the credit
of good taste. At first it was Helen Harley who
took our fancy a fancy it was and nothing
more but now I think a deeper passion has
been stirred in us by the same object, Miss Catherwood.
You see, I am still frank. I know very well that
you care nothing for Mrs. Markham. It is but a
momentary folly, the result of jealousy or something
akin to it and here I am, resolved to triumph
over you, not because I would enjoy your defeat, but
because my own victories are sweet to me. If I
happen to hold in my hand certain cards which chance
has not dealt to you, can you blame me if I play them?”
“Will you spare Miss Catherwood?” asked
Prescott.
“Should I not play my cards?” repeated
the Secretary.
“I see,” said Prescott.
“You told me that I brought my pride with me.
Well, I did not bring all of it. I left at home
enough to permit me to ask this favour of you.
But I was wrong; I should not have made the request.”
“I have not refused it yet,”
said the Secretary. “I merely do not wish
to pledge myself. When a man makes promises he
places bonds on his own arms, and I prefer mine free;
but since I seek Miss Catherwood as a wife, is it
not a fair inference that her fame is as dear to me
as it is to you?”
Prescott was compelled to admit the
truth of this statement, but it did not cover all
the ground. He felt that the Secretary, while
not betraying Lucia, would in some way use his knowledge
of her for his own advantage. This was the thought
at the bottom of his mind, but he could not speak
it aloud to the Secretary. Any man would repel
such an intimation at once as an insult, and the agile
mind of James Sefton would make use of it as another
strong trump card in playing his game.
“Then you will make no promise?” asked
Prescott.
“Promises are poor coin,”
replied the Secretary, “hardly better than our
Confederate bills. Let me repeat that the fame
of Lucia Catherwood is as dear to me as it is to you.
With that you should be content.”
“If that is all, good-day,”
said Prescott, and he went out, holding his head very
high. The Secretary saw defiance in his attitude.
Mr. Sefton went the following evening
to the little house in the cross street, seeking an
interview with Lucia Catherwood, and she, holding
many things in mind, was afraid to deny him.
“It is your friend, Captain
Prescott, of whom I wish to speak,” he said.
“Why my friend rather than the
friend of anybody else?” she asked.
“He has been of service to you,
and for that reason I wish to be of service to him.
There has been talk about him. He may find himself
presently in a very dangerous position.”
The face of Lucia Catherwood flushed
very red and then became equally pale. The Secretary
noticed how her form stiffened, nor did he fail to
observe the single angry flash from her eyes.
“She cares very much for that man,” was
his mental comment. The Secretary was not less
frank with himself in his love than in other matters.
“If you have come here merely
to discuss Richmond gossip I shall beg you to leave
at once,” she said coldly.
“You misunderstand me,”
replied the Secretary. “I do not speak of
any affair of the heart that Captain Prescott may
have. It is no concern of mine where his affections
may fall, even if it be in an unlicensed quarter.
The difficulty to which I allude is of another kind.
There is malicious gossip in Richmond; something has
leaked out in some way that connects him with an affair
of a spy last winter. Connect is scarcely the
word, because that is too definite; this is exceedingly
vague. Harley spoke of it the other night, and
although he did not call Prescott by name, his manner
indicated that he was the man meant. Harley seems
to have received a little nebulous information from
a certain quarter, not enough upon which to take action
had one the malice to wish it, but enough to indicate
that he might obtain more from the same source.”
The Secretary paused, and his expression
was one of mingled concern and sympathy. A young
man whom he liked was about to fall into serious difficulties
and he would save him from them if he could. Yet
they understood each other perfectly. A single
glance, a spark from steel like that which had passed
between Prescott and the Secretary, passed now between
these two. The Secretary was opening another mine
in the arduous siege that he had undertaken; if he
could not win by treaty he would by arms, and now
he was threatening her through Prescott.
She did not flinch and therefore she
won his increased admiration. Her natural colour
returned and she met his glance firmly. The life
of Lucia Catherwood had been hard and she was trained
to repression and self-reliance.
“I do not understand why you
should speak of this to me,” she said.
“Merely that you might exert
your influence in his favour.”
She was measuring him then with a
glance not less penetrating than his own. Why
should she seek now to save Prescott? But she
would, if she could. This was a threat that the
Secretary might keep, but not at once, and she would
seek time.
“Captain Prescott has done me
a great service,” she said, “and naturally
I should be grateful to any who did as much for him.”
“Perhaps some one who will do
as much can be found,” he said. “It
may be that I shall speak to him of you later and
then he will claim the reward that you promise.”
It was on her lips to say that she
promised nothing except gratitude, but she withheld
the words. It suddenly seemed fair to a singularly
honest mind to meet craft with craft. She had
heard of the military phrase, “in the air”;
she would leave the Secretary in the air. So she
merely said:
“I am not in Captain Prescott’s
confidence, but I know that he will thank you.”
“He should,” said the Secretary dryly,
and left her.
Almost at the very moment that the
Secretary was going to the Grayson cottage Prescott
was on his way to Winthrop’s newspaper office.
There was little to be done, and a
group including General Wood, who had come that afternoon
from Petersburg, sat in the old fashion by the stove
and talked of public affairs, especially the stage
into which the war had now come. The heat of
the room felt grateful, as a winter night was falling
outside, and in the society of his friends Prescott
found himself becoming more of an optimist than he
had been for some days. Cheerfulness is riveted
in such a physical base as youth and strength, and
Prescott was no exception. He could even smile
behind his hand when he saw General Wood draw forth
the infallible bowie-knife, pull a piece of pine from
a rickety box that held fuel for the stove and begin
to whittle from it long, symmetrical shavings that
curled beautifully. This was certain evidence
that General Wood, for the evening at least, was inclined
to look on the bright side of life.
Unto this placid group came two men,
walking heavily up the wooden stairs and showing signs
of mental wear. Their eyebrows were raised with
surprise at the sight of Prescott, but they made no
comment. They were Harley and Redfield.
Harley approached Winthrop with a jovial air.
“I’ve found you a new
contributor to your paper and he’s ready to bring
you a most interesting piece of news.”
Winthrop flipped the ash off his cigar
and regarded Harley coolly.
“Colonel!” he said, “I’m
always grateful for good news, but I don’t take
it as a favour. If it comes to the pinch I can
write my newspaper all by myself.”
Harley changed countenance and his tone changed too.
“It’s in the interest
of justice,” he said, “and it will be sure
to attract attention at the same time.”
“I imagine that it must be in
the interest of justice when you and Mr. Redfield
take so much trouble to secure its publication,”
said Winthrop; “and I imagine that I’m
not risking much when I also say that you are the
brilliant author who has written the little piece.”
“It’s this,” said
Harley. “It’s about a man who has
been paying too ardent attentions to a married woman no
names given, of course; he is a captain, a young man
who is here on leave, and she is the wife of a general
who is at the front and can’t look after his
own honour. Gossip says, too, that the captain
has been concerned in something else that will bring
him up with a jerk if the Government hears of it.
It’s all written out here. Oh, it will
make a fine stir!”
Prescott half rose from his seat,
but sank back and remained quiet. Again he imitated
the Secretary’s example of self-repression and
waited to see what Winthrop would do. General
Wood trimmed off a shaving so long that it coiled
all the way around his wrist. Then he took it
off carefully, dropped it on the floor with the others,
and at once went to work whittling a new one.
“Let’s see the article,” said Winthrop.
Harley handed it to him and he read it carefully.
“A fine piece of work,” he said; “who
wrote it you or Redfield?”
“Oh, we did it together,” replied Harley
with a smile of appreciation.
Redfield uttered a denial, but it was too late.
“A fine piece of work,”
repeated Winthrop, “admirably adapted to the
kindling of fires. Unfortunately my fire is already
kindled, but it can help on the good cause.”
With that he cast the paper into the stove.
Harley uttered an oath.
“What do you mean?” he cried.
“I mean that you can’t
use my paper to gratify your private revenge.
If you want to do that sort of thing you must get
a newspaper of your own.”
“I think you are infernally impertinent.”
“And I think, Vincent Harley,
that you are a damned fool. You want a duel with
the man about whom you’ve written this card,
but for excellent reasons he will decline to meet
you. Still I hate to see a man who is looking
for a fight go disappointed, and just to oblige you
I’ll fight you myself.”
“But I’ve no quarrel with you,”
said Harley sullenly.
“Oh, I can give you ample cause,”
said Winthrop briskly. “I can throw this
water in your face, or if you prefer it I can give
you a blow on the cheek, a hard one, too. Take
your choice.”
Prescott arose.
“I’m much obliged to you,
Winthrop,” he said, “for taking up my quarrel
and trying to shield me. All of you know that
I am meant in that card which he calls such ‘a
piece of good news.’ I admire Colonel Harley’s
methods, and since he is so persistent I will fight
him on the condition that the meeting and its causes
be kept absolutely secret. If either of us is
wounded or killed let it be said that it was in a skirmish
with the enemy.”
“Why these conditions?” asked Redfield.
“For the sake of others.
Colonel Harley imagines that he has a grievance against
me. He has none, and if he had the one that he
imagines he is certainly in no position to call me
to account. Since he will have it no other way,
I will fight him.”
“I object,” said Winthrop
with temper. “I have a prior claim.
Colonel Harley has tried to use me, an unoffending
third party, as the instrument of his private revenge,
and that is a deadly offense. I have the reputation
of being a hot-blooded man and I intend to live up
to my reputation.”
A glass of water was standing by the
cooler. He lifted it and hurled the contents
into Harley’s face. The man started back,
strangling and coughing, then wiped the water from
his face with a handkerchief.
“Do you dispute the priority
of my claim over Captain Prescott?” asked Winthrop.
“I do not,” said Harley.
“Mr. Redfield will call on you again in my behalf
within an hour.”
Prescott was irresolute.
“Winthrop,” he said, “I can’t
permit this.”
“Oh, yes, you can,” said Winthrop, “because
you can’t help yourself.”
Then General Wood upreared his gigantic
form and ran the fingers of his left hand solemnly
through his black whiskers. He put his bowie-knife
in its sheath, brushed the last shaving off his trousers
and said:
“But there’s somebody
who can help it, an’ I’m the man.
What’s more, I mean to do it. Colonel Harley,
General Lee transferred your regiment to my command
yesterday and I need you at the front. I order
you to report for duty at once, and I won’t
have any delay about it either. You report to
me in Petersburg to-morrow or I’ll know the reason
why; I go myself at daylight, but I’ll leave
a request with the Government that Captain Prescott
also be despatched to me. I’ve got work
for him to do.”
The man spoke with the utmost dignity
and his big black eyes shot fire.
“The king commands,” said Raymond softly.
Wood put his hand on Harley’s arm.
“Colonel,” he said, “you
are one of my lieutenants, and we’re thinkin’
about a movement that I’ve got to talk over with
you. You’ll come with me now to the Spotswood
Hotel, because there’s no time to waste.
I don’t reckon you or I will get much sleep
to-night, but if we don’t sleep to-night we’ll
doze in the saddle to-morrow.”
“The king not only commands,
but knows what to command,” said Raymond softly.
It was the general of the battlefield,
the man of lightning force who spoke, and there was
none who dared to disobey. Harley, himself a
brilliant soldier though nothing else, yielded when
he felt the hand of steel on his arm, and acknowledged
the presence of a superior force.
“Very well, General,”
he said respectfully; “I am at your service.”
“Good-night, gentlemen,”
said Wood to the others, and he added laughingly to
the editors: “Don’t you boys print
anythin’ until you know what you’re printin’,”
and to Prescott: “I reckon you’d better
say good-by to-morrow to your friends in Richmond.
I don’t allow that you’ll have more’n
a couple of days longer here,” and then to Harley:
“Come along, Colonel; an’ I s’pose
you’re goin’ out with us, too, Mr. Redfield.”
He swept up the two with his glance
and the three left together, their footsteps sounding
on the rickety steps until they passed into the street.
“There goes a man, a real man,”
said Raymond with emphasis. “Winthrop,
it takes such as he to reduce fellows like you and
Harley to their proper places.”
“It is unkind of him to kidnap
Harley in that summary fashion,” said Winthrop
ruefully. “I really wanted to put a bullet
through him. Not in a vital place say
through the shoulder or the fleshy part of the arm,
where it would let blood flow freely. That’s
what he needs.”
But Prescott was devoutly thankful
to Wood, and especially for his promise that he, too,
should speedily be sent to the front. What he
wished most of all now was to escape from Richmond.
The promise was kept, the order to
report to General Wood himself in Petersburg came
the next day and he was to start on the following
morning.
He took courage to call upon Lucia
and found her at home, sitting silently in the little
parlour, the glow from the fire falling across her
hair and tinting it with deep gleams of reddish gold.
Whether she was surprised to see him he could not
judge, her face remaining calm and no movement that
would betray emotion escaping her.
“Miss Catherwood,” he
said, “I have come to bid you farewell.
I rejoin the army to-morrow and I am glad to go.”
“I, too, am glad that you are
going,” she said, shading her eyes with her
hands as if to protect them from the glow of the fire.
“There is one thing that I would
ask of you,” he said, “and it is that
you remember me as I was last winter, and not as I
have appeared to you since I returned from the South.
That was real; this is false.”
His voice trembled, and she did not
speak, fearing that her own would do the same.
“I have made mistakes,”
he said. “I have yielded to rash impulses,
and have put myself in a false position before the
world; but I have not been criminal in anything, either
in deed or intent. Even now what I remember best,
the memory that I value most, is when you and I fled
together from Richmond in the cold and the snow, when
you trusted me and I trusted you.”
She wished to speak to him then, remembering
the man, stained with his own blood, whom she had
carried in her strong young arms off the battlefield.
With a true woman’s heart she liked him better
when she was acting for him than when he was acting
for her; but something held her back the
shadow of a fair woman with lurking green depths in
her blue eyes.
“Lucia!” exclaimed Prescott
passionately, “have you nothing to say to me?
Can’t you forget my follies and remember at least
the few good things that I have done?”
“I wish you well. I cannot
forget the great service that you did me, and I hope
that you will return safely from a war soon to end.”
“You might wish anybody that,
even those whom you have never seen,” he said.
Then with a few formal words he went
away, and long after he was gone she still sat there
staring into the fire, the gleams of reddish gold in
her hair becoming fainter and fainter.
Prescott left Richmond the next morning.