It would soon be Christmas and Harry
Kenton, at his desk in the Pendleton Academy, saw
the snow falling heavily outside. The school
stood on the skirt of the town, and the forest came
down to the edge of the playing field. The great
trees, oak and ash and elm, were clothed in white,
and they stood out a vast and glittering tracery against
the somber sky.
The desk was of the old kind, intended
for two, and Harry’s comrade in it was his cousin,
Dick Mason, of his own years and size. They would
graduate in June, and both were large and powerful
for their age. There was a strong family resemblance
and yet a difference. Harry’s face was
the more sensitive and at times the blood leaped like
quicksilver in his veins. Dick’s features
indicated a quieter and more stubborn temper.
They were equal favorites with teachers and pupils.
Dick’s eyes followed Harry’s,
and he, too, looked at the falling snow and the white
forest. Both were thinking of Christmas and the
holiday season so near at hand. It was a rich
section of Kentucky, and they were the sons of prosperous
parents. The snow was fitting at such a time,
and many joyous hours would be passed before they returned
to school.
The clouds darkened and the snow fell
faster. A wind rose and drove it against the
panes. The boys heard the blast roaring outside
and the comfort of the warm room was heightened by
the contrast. Harry’s eyes turned reluctantly
back to his Tacitus and the customs and manners of
the ancient Germans. The curriculum of the Pendleton
Academy was simple, like most others at that time.
After the primary grades it consisted chiefly of
the classics and mathematics. Harry led in the
classics and Dick in the mathematics.
Bob Turner, the free colored man,
who was janitor of the academy, brought in the morning
mail, a dozen letters and three or four newspapers,
gave it to Dr. Russell and withdrew on silent feet.
The Doctor was principal of Pendleton
Academy, and he always presided over the room in which
sat the larger boys, nearly fifty in number.
His desk and chair were on a low dais and he sat facing
the pupils. He was a large man, with a ruddy
face, and thick hair as white as the snow that was
falling outside. He had been a teacher fifty
years, and three generations in Pendleton owed to
him most of the learning that is obtained from books.
He opened his letters one by one, and read them slowly.
Harry moved far away into the German
forest with old Tacitus. He was proud of his
Latin and he did not mean to lose his place as first
in the class. The other boys also were absorbed
in their books. It was seldom that all were
studious at the same time, but this was one of the
rare moments. There was no shuffling of feet,
and fifty heads were bent over their desks.
It was a full half hour before Harry
looked up from his Tacitus. His first glance
was at the window. The snow was driving hard,
and the forest had become a white blur. He looked
next at the Doctor and he saw that the ruddy face
had turned white. The old man was gazing intently
at an open letter in his hand. Two or three others
had fallen to the floor. He read the letter
again, folded it carefully, and put it in his pocket.
Then he broke the wrapper on one of the newspapers
and rapidly read its columns. The whiteness
of his face deepened into pallor.
The slight tearing sound caused most
of the boys to look up, and they noticed the change
in the principal’s face. They had
never seen him look like that before. It was
as if he had received some sudden and deadly stroke.
Yet he sat stiffly upright and there was no sound
in the room but the rustling of the newspaper as he
turned its pages.
Harry became conscious of some strange
and subtle influence that had crept into the very
air, and his pulse began to leap. The others
felt it, too. There was a tense feeling in the
room and they became so still that the soft beat of
the snow on the windows could be heard.
Not a single eye was turned to a book
now. All were intent upon the Doctor, who still
read the newspaper, his face without a trace of color,
and his strong white hands trembling. He folded
the paper presently, but still held it in his hand.
As he looked up, he became conscious of the silence
in the room, and of the concentrated gaze of fifty
pairs of eyes bent upon him. A little color
returned to his cheeks, and his hands ceased to tremble.
He stood up, took the letter from his pocket, and
opened it again.
Dr. Russell was a striking figure,
belonging to a classic type found at its best in the
border states. A tall man, he held himself erect,
despite his years, and the color continued to flow
back into the face, which was shaped in a fine strong
mold.
“Boys,” he said, in a
firm, full voice, although it showed emotion, “I
have received news which I must announce to you.
As I tell it, I beg that you will restrain yourselves,
and make little comment here. Its character is
such that you are not likely ever to hear anything
of more importance.”
No one spoke, but a thrill of excitement
ran through the room. Harry became conscious
that the strange and subtle influence had increased.
The pulses in both temples were beating hard.
He and Dick leaned forward, their elbows upon the
desk, their lips parted a little in attention.
“You know,” continued
Dr. Russell in the full voice that trembled slightly,
“of the troubles that have arisen between the
states, North and South, troubles that the best Americans,
with our own great Henry Clay at the head, have striven
to avert. You know of the election of Lincoln,
and how this beloved state of ours, seeking peace,
voted for neither Lincoln nor Breckinridge, both of
whom are its sons.”
The trembling of his voice increased
and he paused again. It was obvious that he
was stirred by deep emotion and it communicated itself
to the boys. Harry was conscious that the thrill,
longer and stronger than before, ran again through
the room.
“I have just received a letter
from an old friend in Charleston,” continued
Dr. Russell in a shaking voice, “and he tells
me that on the twentieth, three days ago, the state
of South Carolina seceded from the Union. He
also sends me copies of two of the Charleston newspapers
of the day following. In both of these papers
all despatches from the other states are put under
the head, ‘Foreign News.’ With the
Abolitionists of New England pouring abuse upon all
who do not agree with them, and the hot heads of South
Carolina rushing into violence, God alone knows what
will happen to this distracted country that all of
us love so well.”
He turned anew to his correspondence.
But Harry saw that he was trembling all over.
An excited murmur arose. The boys began to talk
about the news, and the principal, his thoughts far
away, did not call them to order.
“I suppose since South Carolina
has gone out that other southern states will do the
same,” said Harry to his cousin, “and that
two republics will stand where but one stood before.”
“I don’t know that the
second result will follow the first,” replied
Dick Mason.
Harry glanced at him. He was
conscious of a certain cold tenacity in Dick’s
voice. He felt that a veil of antagonism had
suddenly been drawn between these two who were the
sons of sisters and who had been close comrades all
their lives. His heart swelled suddenly.
As if by inspiration, he saw ahead long and terrible
years. He said no more, but gazed again at the
pages of his Tacitus, although the letters only swam
before his eyes.
The great buzz subsided at last, although
there was not one among the boys who was not still
thinking of the secession of South Carolina.
They had shared in the excitement of the previous year.
A few had studied the causes, but most were swayed
by propinquity and kinship, which with youth are more
potent factors than logic.
The afternoon passed slowly.
Dr. Russell, who always heard the recitations of
the seniors in Latin, did not call the class.
Harry was so much absorbed in other thoughts that
he did not notice the fact. Outside, the clouds
still gathered and the soft beat of the snow on the
window panes never ceased. The hour of dismissal
came at last and the older boys, putting on their
overcoats, went silently out. Harry did not
dream that he had passed the doors of Pendleton Academy
for the last time, as a student.
While the seniors were quiet, there
was no lack of noise from the younger lads.
Snowballs flew and the ends of red comforters, dancing
in the wind, touched the white world with glowing bits
of color. Harry looked at them with a sort of
pity. The magnified emotions of youth had suddenly
made him feel very old and very responsible.
When a snowball struck him under the ear he paid no
attention to it, a mark of great abstraction in him.
He and his cousin walked gravely on,
and left the shouting crowd behind them. Three
or four hundred yards further, they came upon the main
street of Pendleton, a town of fifteen hundred people,
important in its section as a market, and as a financial
and political center. It had two banks as solid
as stone, and it was the proud boast of its inhabitants
that, excepting Louisville and Lexington, its bar was
of unequalled talent in the state. Other towns
made the same claim, but no matter. Pendleton
knew that they were wrong. Lawyers stood very
high, especially when they were fluent speakers.
It was a singular fact that the two
boys, usually full of talk, after the manner of youth,
did not speak until they came to the parting of their
ways. Then Harry, the more emotional of the two,
and conscious that the veil of antagonism was still
between them, thrust out his hand suddenly and said:
“Whatever happens, Dick, you
and I must not quarrel over it. Let’s
pledge our word here and now that, being of the same
blood and having grown up together, we will always
be friends.”
The color in the cheeks of the other
boy deepened. A slight moisture appeared in
his eyes. He was, on the whole, more reserved
than Harry, but he, too, was stirred. He took
the outstretched hand and gave it a strong clasp.
“Always, Harry,” he replied.
“We don’t think alike, maybe, about the
things that are coming, but you and I can’t quarrel.”
He released the hand quickly, because
he hated any show of emotion, and hurried down a side
street to his home. Harry walked on into the
heart of the town, as he lived farther away on the
other side. He soon had plenty of evidence that
the news of South Carolina’s secession had preceded
him here. There had been no such stir in Pendleton
since they heard of Buena Vista, where fifty of her
sons fought and half of them fell.
Despite the snow, the streets about
the central square were full of people. Many
of the men were reading newspapers. It was fifteen
miles to the nearest railroad station, and the mail
had come in at noon, bringing the first printed accounts
of South Carolina’s action. In this border
state, which was a divided house from first to last,
men still guarded their speech. They had grown
up together, and they were all of blood kin, near
or remote.
“What will it mean?” said Harry to old
Judge Kendrick.
“War, perhaps, my son,”
replied the old man sadly. “The violence
of New England in speech and the violence of South
Carolina in action may start a flood. But Kentucky
must keep out of it. I shall raise my voice
against the fury of both factions, and thank God, our
people have never refused to hear me.”
He spoke in a somewhat rhetorical
fashion, natural to time and place, but he was in
great earnest. Harry went on, and entered the
office of the Pendleton News, the little weekly newspaper
which dispensed the news, mostly personal, within
a radius of fifty miles. He knew that the News
would appear on the following day, and he was anxious
to learn what Mr. Gardner, the editor, a friend of
his, would have to say in his columns.
He walked up the dusty stairway and
entered the room, where the editor sat amid piles
of newspapers. Mr. Gardner was a youngish man,
high-colored and with longish hair. He was absorbed
so deeply in a copy of the Louisville Journal that
he did not hear Harry’s step or notice his coming
until the boy stood beside him. Then he looked
up and said dryly:
“Too many sparks make a blaze
at last. If people keep on quarreling there’s
bound to be a fight some time or other. I suppose
you’ve heard that South Carolina has seceded.”
“Dr. Russell announced it at
the school. Are you telling, Mr. Gardner, what
the News will have to say about it?”
“I don’t mind,”
replied the editor, who was fond of Harry, and who
liked his alert mind. “If it comes to
a breach, I’m going with my people. It’s
hard to tell what’s right or wrong, but my ancestors
belonged to the South and so do I.”
“That’s just the way I feel!” exclaimed
Harry vehemently.
The editor smiled.
“But I don’t intend to
say so in the News tomorrow,” he continued.
“I shall try to pour oil upon the waters, although
I won’t be able to hide my Southern leanings.
The Colonel, your father, Harry, will not seek to
conceal his.”
“No,” said Harry. “He will
not. What was that?”
The sound of a shot came from the
street. The two ran hurriedly down the stairway.
Three men were holding a fourth who struggled with
them violently. One had wrenched from his hand
a pistol still smoking at the muzzle. About
twenty feet away was another man standing between two
who held him tightly, although he made no effort to
release himself.
Harry looked at the two captives.
They made a striking contrast. The one who fought
was of powerful build, and dressed roughly. His
whole appearance indicated the primitive human being,
and Harry knew immediately that he was one of the
mountaineers who came long distances to trade or carouse
in Pendleton.
The man who faced the mountaineer,
standing quietly between those who held him, was young
and slender, though tall. His longish black hair
was brushed carefully. The natural dead whiteness
of his face was accentuated by his black mustache,
which turned up at the ends like that of a duelist.
He was dressed in black broadcloth, the long coat
buttoned closely about his body, but revealing a full
and ruffled shirt bosom as white as snow. His
face expressed no emotion, but the mountaineer cursed
violently.
“I can read the story at once,”
said the editor, shrugging his shoulders. “I
know the mountaineer. He’s Bill Skelly,
a rough man, prone to reach for the trigger, especially
when he’s full of bad whiskey as he is now,
and the other, Arthur Travers, is no stranger to you.
Skelly is for the abolition of slavery. All the
mountaineers are. Maybe it’s because they
have no slaves themselves and hate the more prosperous
and more civilized lowlanders who do have them.
Harry, my boy, as you grow older you’ll find
that reason and logic seldom control men’s lives.”
“Skelly was excited over the
news from South Carolina,” said Harry, continuing
the story, which he, too, had read, as an Indian reads
a trail, “and he began to drink. He met
Travers and cursed the slave-holders. Travers
replied with a sneer, which the mountaineer could
not understand, except that it hurt. Skelly snatched
out his pistol and fired wildly. Travers drew
his and would have fired, although not so wildly,
but friends seized him. Meanwhile, others overpowered
Skelly and Travers is not excited at all, although
he watches every movement of his enemy, while seeming
to be indifferent.”
“You read truly, Harry,”
said Gardner. “It was a fortunate thing
for Skelly that he was overpowered. Somehow,
those two men facing each other seem, in a way, to
typify conditions in this part of the country at least.”
Harry was now watching Travers, who
always aroused his interest. A lawyer, twenty-seven
or eight years of age, he had little practice, and
seemed to wish little. He had a wonderful reputation
for dexterity with cards and the pistol. A native
of Pendleton, he was the son of parents from one of
the Gulf States, and Harry could never quite feel
that he was one of their own Kentucky blood and breed.
“You can release me,”
said Travers quietly to the young men who stood on
either side of him holding his arms. “I
think the time has come to hunt bigger game than a
fool there like Skelly. He is safe from me.”
He spoke with a supercilious scorn
which impressed Harry, but which he did not wholly
admire. Travers seemed to him to have the quiet
deadliness of the cobra. There was something
about him that repelled. The men released him.
He straightened his long black coat, smoothed the
full ruffles of his shirt and walked away, as if nothing
had happened.
Skelly ceased to struggle. The
aspect of the crowd, which was largely hostile, sobered
him. Steve Allison, the town constable, appeared
and, putting his hand heavily upon the mountaineer’s
shoulder, said:
“You come with me, Skelly.”
But old Judge Kendrick intervened.
“Let him go, Steve,” he said. “Send
him back to the mountains.”
“But he tried to kill a man, Judge.”
“I know, but extraordinary times
demand extraordinary methods. A great and troubled
period has come into all our lives. Maybe we’re
about to face some terrible crisis. Isn’t
that so?”
“Yes,” replied the crowd.
“Then we must not hurry it or
make it worse by sudden action. If Skelly is
punished, the mountaineers will say it is political.
I appeal to you, Dr. Russell, to sustain me.”
The white head of the principal showed above the crowd.
“Judge Kendrick is right,”
he said. “Skelly must be permitted to go.
His action, in fact, was due to the strained conditions
that have long prevailed among us, and was precipitated
by the alarming message that has come today.
For the sake of peace, we must let him go.”
“All right, then,” said Allison, “but
he goes without his pistol.”
Skelly was put upon his mountain pony,
and he rode willingly away amid the snow and the coming
dusk, carrying, despite his release, a bitter heart
into the mountains, and a tale that would inflame the
jealousy with which upland regarded lowland.
The crowd dispersed. Gardner
returned to his office, and Harry went home.
He lived in the best house in or about Pendleton and
his father was its wealthiest citizen. George
Kenton, having inherited much land in Kentucky, and
two or three plantations further south had added to
his property by good management. A strong supporter
of slavery, actual contact with the institution on
a large scale in the Gulf States had not pleased him,
and he had sold his property there, reinvesting the
money in his native and, as he believed, more solid
state. His title of colonel was real.
A graduate of West Point, he had fought bravely with
Scott in all the battles in the Valley of Mexico, but
now retired and a widower, he lived in Pendleton with
Harry, his only child.
Harry approached the house slowly.
He knew that his father was a man of strong temper
and he wondered how he would take the news from Charleston.
All the associations of Colonel Kenton were with the
extreme Southern wing, and his influence upon his son
was powerful.
But the Pendleton home, standing just
beyond the town, gave forth only brightness and welcome.
The house itself, large and low, built massively
of red brick, stood on the crest of a gentle slope
in two acres of ground. The clipped cones of
pine trees adorned the slopes, and made parallel rows
along the brick walk, leading to the white portico
that formed the entrance to the house. Light
shone from a half dozen windows.
It seemed fine and glowing to Harry.
His father loved his home, and so did he. The
twilight had now darkened into night and the snow still
drove, but the house stood solid and square to wind
and winter, and the flame from its windows made broad
bands of red and gold across the snow. Harry
went briskly up the walk and then stood for a few moments
in the portico, shaking the snow off his overcoat
and looking back at the town, which lay in a warm
cluster in the hollow below. Many lights twinkled
there, and it occurred to Harry that they would twinkle
later than usual that night.
He opened the door, hung his hat and
overcoat in the hall, and entered the large apartment
which his father and he habitually used as a reading
and sitting room. It was more than twenty feet
square, with a lofty ceiling. A home-made carpet,
thick, closely woven, and rich in colors covered the
floor. Around the walls were cases containing
books, mostly in rich bindings and nearly all English
classics. American work was scarcely represented
at all. The books read most often by Colonel
Kenton were the novels of Walter Scott, whom he preferred
greatly to Dickens. Scott always wrote about
gentlemen. A great fire of hickory logs blazed
on the wide hearth.
Colonel Kenton was alone in the room.
He stood at the edge of the hearth, with his back
to the fire and his hands crossed behind him.
His tanned face was slightly pale, and Harry saw that
he had been subjected to great nervous excitement,
which had not yet wholly abated.
The colonel was a tall man, broad
of chest, but lean and muscular. He regarded
his son attentively, and his eyes seemed to ask a question.
“Yes,” said Harry, although
his father had not spoken a word. “I’ve
heard of it, and I’ve already seen one of its
results.”
“What is that?” asked Colonel Kenton quickly.
“As I came through town Bill
Skelly, a mountaineer, shot at Arthur Travers.
It came out of hot words over the news from Charleston.
Nobody was hurt, and they’ve sent Skelly on his
pony toward his mountains.”
Colonel Kenton’s face clouded.
“I’m sorry,” he
said. “I fear that Travers will be much
too free with stinging remarks. It’s a
time when men should control their tongues. Do
you be careful with yours. You’re a youth
in years, but you’re a man in size, and you
should be a man in thought, too. You and I have
been close together, and I have trusted you, even
when you were a little boy.”
“It’s so, father,”
replied Harry, with affection and gratitude.
“And I’m going to trust
you yet further. It may be that I shall give
you a task requiring great skill and energy.”
The colonel looked closely at his
son, and he gave silent approval to the tall, well-knit
form, and the alert, eager face.
“We’ll have supper presently,”
he said, “and then we will talk with visitors.
Some you know and some you don’t. One
of them, who has come far, is already in the house.”
Harry’s eyes showed surprise,
but he knew better than to ask questions. The
colonel had carried his military training into private
life.
“He is a distant relative of
ours, very distant, but a relative still,” continued
Colonel Kenton. “You will meet him at supper.
Be ready in a half hour.”
The dinner of city life was still
called supper in the South, and Harry hastened to
his room to prepare. His heart began to throb
with excitement. Now they were to have visitors
at night and a mysterious stranger was there.
He felt dimly the advance of great events.
Harry Kenton was a normal and healthy
boy, but the discussions, the debates, and the passions
sweeping over the Union throughout the year had sifted
into Pendleton also. The news today had merely
struck fire to tinder prepared already, and, infused
with the spirit of youth, he felt much excitement
but no depression. Making a careful toilet he
descended to the drawing room a little before the regular
time. Although he was early, his father was there
before him, standing in his customary attitude with
his back to the hearth, and his hands clasped behind
him.
“Our guest will be down in a
few minutes,” said Colonel Kenton. “He
comes from Charleston and his name is Raymond Louis
Bertrand. I will explain how he is related to
us.”
He gave a chain of cousins extending
on either side from the Kenton family and the Bertrand
family until they joined in the middle. It was
a slender tie of kinship, but it sufficed in the South.
As he finished, Bertrand himself came in, and was
introduced formally to his Kentucky cousin.
Harry would have taken him for a Frenchman, and he
was, in very truth, largely of French blood.
His black eyes and hair, his swarthy complexion,
gleaming white teeth and quick, volatile manner showed
a descendant of France who had come from the ancient
soil by way of Hayti, and the great negro rebellion
to the coast of South Carolina. He seemed strange
and foreign to Harry, and yet he liked him.
“And this is my young cousin,
the one who is likely to be so zealous for our cause,”
he said, smiling at Harry with flashing black eyes.
“You are a stalwart lad. They grow bigger
and stronger here than on our warm Carolina coast.”
“Raymond arrived only three
hours ago,” said Colonel Kenton in explanation.
“He came directly from Charleston, leaving only
three hours after the resolution in favor of secession
was adopted.”
“And a rough journey it was,”
said Bertrand vivaciously. “I was rattled
and shaken by the trains, and I made some of the connections
by horseback over the wild hills. Then it was
a long ride through the snow to your hospitable home
here, my good cousin, Colonel Kenton. But I had
minute directions, and no one noticed the stranger
who came so quietly around the town, and then entered
your house.”
Harry said nothing but watched him
intently. Bertrand spoke with a rapid lightness
and grace and an abundance of gesture, to which he
was not used in Kentucky. He ate plentifully,
and, although his manners were delicate, Harry felt
to an increasing degree his foreign aspect and spirit.
He did not wonder at it when he learned later that
Bertrand, besides being chiefly of French blood, had
also been educated in Paris.
“Was there much enthusiasm in
South Carolina when the state seceded, Raymond?”
asked Colonel Kenton.
“I saw the greatest joy and
confidence everywhere,” he replied, the color
flaming through his olive face. “The whole
state is ablaze. Charleston is the heart and
soul of our new alliance. Rhett and Yancey of
Alabama, and the great orators make the souls of men
leap. Ah, sir, if you could only have been in
Charleston in the course of recent months! If
you could have heard the speakers! If you could
have seen how the great and righteous Calhoun’s
influence lives after him! And then the writers!
That able newspaper, the Mercury, has thundered daily
for our cause. Simms, the novelist, and Timrod
and Hayne, the poets have written for it. Let
the cities of the North boast of their size and wealth,
but they cannot match Charleston in culture and spirit
and vivacity!”
Harry saw that Bertrand felt and believed
every word he said, and his enthusiasm was communicated
to the colonel, whose face flushed, and to Harry,
too, whose own heart was beating faster.
“It was a great deed!”
exclaimed Colonel Kenton. “South Carolina
has always dared to speak her mind, but here in Kentucky
some of the cold North’s blood flows in our
veins and we pause to calculate and consider.
We must hasten events. Now, Raymond, we will
go into the library. Our friends will be here
in a half hour. Harry, you are to stay with
us. I told you that you are to be trusted.”
They left the table, and went into
the great room where the fire had been built anew
and was casting a ruddy welcome through the windows.
The two men sat down before the blaze and each fell
silent, engrossed in his thoughts. Harry felt
a pleased excitement. Here was a great and mysterious
affair, but he was going to have admittance to the
heart of it. He walked to the window, lifted
the curtain and looked out. A slender erect figure
was already coming up the walk, and he recognized
Travers.
Travers knocked at the door and was
received cordially. Colonel Kenton introduced
Bertrand, saying:
“The messenger from the South.”
Travers shook hands and nodded also
to signify that he understood. Then came Culver,
the state senator from the district, a man of middle
years, bulky, smooth shaven, and oratorical.
He was followed soon by Bracken, a tobacco farmer
on a great scale, Judge Kendrick, Reid and Wayne,
both lawyers, and several others, all of wealth or
of influence in that region. Besides Harry,
there were ten in the room.
“I believe that we are all here
now,” said Colonel Kenton. “I keep
my son with us because, for reasons that I will explain
later, I shall nominate him for the task that is needed.”
“We do not question your judgment,
colonel,” said Senator Culver. “He
is a strong and likely lad. But I suggest that
we go at once to business. Mr. Bertrand, you
will inform us what further steps are to be taken
by South Carolina and her neighboring states.
South Carolina may set an example, but if the others
do not follow, she will merely be a sacrifice.”
Bertrand smiled. His smile always
lighted up his olive face in a wonderful way.
It was a smile, too, of supreme confidence.
“Do not fear,” he said.
“Alabama, Mississippi, Florida and Louisiana
are ready. We have word from them all.
It is only a matter of a few days until every state
in the lower south goes out, but we want also and
we need greatly those on the border, famous states
like your Kentucky and Virginia. Do you not
see how you are threatened? With the triumph
of the rail-splitter, Lincoln, the seat of power is
transferred to the North. It is not alone a
question of slavery. The balance of the Union
is destroyed. The South loses leadership.
Her population is not increasing rapidly, and hereafter
she will merely hold the stirrup while the North sits
in the saddle.”
A murmur arose from the men.
More than one clenched his hands, until the nails
pressed into the flesh. Harry, still standing
by the window, felt the influence of the South Carolinian’s
words more deeply perhaps than any other. The
North appeared to him cold, jealous, and vengeful.
“You are right about Kentucky
and Virginia,” said Senator Culver. “The
secession of two such strong states would strike terror
in the North. It would influence the outside
world, and we would be in a far better position for
war, if it should come. Governor Magoffin will
have to call a special session of the legislature,
and I think there will be enough of us in both Senate
and House to take Kentucky out.”
Bertrand’s dark face glowed.
“You must do it! You must
do it!” he exclaimed. “And if you
do our cause is won!”
There was a thoughtful silence, broken
at last by Colonel Kenton, who turned an inquiring
eye upon Bertrand.
“I wish to ask you about the
Knights of the Golden Circle,” he said.
“I hear that they are making great headway in
the Gulf States.”
Raymond hesitated a moment.
It seemed that he, too, felt for the first time a
difference between himself and these men about him
who were so much less demonstrative than he.
But he recovered his poise quickly.
“I speak to you frankly,”
he replied. “When our new confederation
is formed, it is likely to expand. A hostile
union will lie across our northern border, but to
the south the way is open. There is our field.
Spain grows weak and the great island of Cuba will
fall from her grasp. Mexico is torn by one civil
war after another. It is a grand country, and
it would prosper mightily in strong hands. Beyond
lie the unstable states of Central America, also awaiting
good rulers.”
Colonel Kenton frowned and the lawyers looked doubtful.
“I can’t say that I like
your prospect,” the colonel said. “It
seems to me that your knights of the Golden Circle
meditate a great slave empire which will eat its way
even into South America. Slavery is not wholly
popular here. Henry Clay long ago wished it to
be abolished, and his is a mighty name among us.
It would be best to say little in Kentucky of the
Knights of the Golden Circle. Our climate is
a little too cold for such a project.”
Bertrand bit his lip. Swift
and volatile, he showed disappointment, but, still
swift and volatile, he recovered quickly.
“I have no doubt that you are
right, Colonel Kenton,” he said, in the tone
of one who conforms gracefully, “and I shall
be careful when I go to Frankfort with Senator Culver
to say nothing about it.”
But Harry, who watched him all the
time, read tenacity and purpose in his eyes.
This man would not relinquish his great southern dream,
a dream of vast dominion, and he had a powerful society
behind him.
“What news, then, will you send
to Charleston?” asked Bertrand at length.
“Will you tell her that Kentucky, the state
of great names, will stand beside her?”
“Such a message shall be carried
to her,” replied Colonel Kenton, speaking for
them all, “and I propose that my son Harry be
the messenger. These are troubled times, gentlemen,
and full of peril. We dare not trust to the mails,
and a lad, carrying letters, would arouse the least
suspicion. He is strong and resourceful.
I, his father, should know best and I am willing
to devote him to the cause.”
Harry started when he heard the words
of his father, and his heart gave a great leap of
mingled surprise and joy. Such a journey, such
an enterprise, made an instant appeal to his impulsive
and daring spirit. But he did not speak, waiting
upon the words of his elders. All of them looked
at him, and it seemed to Harry that they were measuring
him, both body and mind.
“I have known your boy since
his birth,” said Senator Culver, “and he
is all that you say. There is none stronger and
better. The choice is good.”
“Good! Aye, good indeed!”
said the impetuous Bertrand. “How they
will welcome him in Charleston!”
“Then, gentlemen,” said
Colonel Kenton, very soberly, “you are all agreed
that my son shall carry to South Carolina the message
that Kentucky will follow her out of the Union?”
“We are,” they said, all together.
“I shall be glad and proud to
go,” said Harry, speaking for the first time.
“I knew it without asking you,”
said Colonel Kenton. “I suggest to you,
friends, that he start before dawn, and that he go
to Winton instead of the nearest station. We
wish to avoid observation and suspicion. The
fewer questions he has to answer, the better it will
be for all of us.”
They agreed with him again, and, in
order that he might be fresh and strong for his journey,
Harry was sent to his bedroom. Everything would
be made ready for him, and Colonel Kenton would call
him at the appointed hour. As he withdrew he
bade them in turn good night, and they returned his
courtesy gravely.
It was one thing to go to his room,
but it was another to sleep. He undressed and
sat on the edge of the bed. Only when he was
alone did he realize the tremendous change that had
come into his life. Nor into his life alone,
but into the lives of all he knew, and of millions
more.
It had ceased snowing and the wind
was still. The earth was clothed in deep and
quiet white, and the pines stood up, rows of white
cones, silvered by the moonlight. Nothing moved
out there. No sound came. He felt awed
by the world of night, and the mysterious future which
must be full of strange and great events.
He lay down between the covers and,
although sleep was long in coming, it came at last
and it was without dreams.