When he swept out upon the sullen
bosom of the Potomac, Harry looked back only once.
He saw two dim figures going up the bank, and, at
its crest, a line of lights that showed the presence
of the Southern force. There was no sound of
firing, and he judged that the enemy had withdrawn
to a distance of two or three miles.
The night had turned darker since
the battle ceased, and not many stars were out.
Clouds indicated that flurries of rain might come,
but he did not view them now with apprehension.
Darkness and rain would help a herald to Lee.
The current was strong, and he did not have to pull
hard, but, observing presently that the far shore
was fringed with bushes, he sent the boat into their
shadow.
He did not anticipate any danger from
the southern shore, but the old inherited caution
of the forest runners was strong within him.
Under the hanging bushes he was well hidden, but,
in some places, the flood in the river had turned
the current back upon itself, and he was compelled
to pull with vigor on the oars.
The clouds that had threatened did
not develop much, and while the forests were dark,
the surface of the river showed clearly in the faint
moonlight. Any object upon it could be seen from
either bank, and Harry was glad that he had sought
the shelter of the overhanging bushes. He realized
now that in this region, which was really the theater
of war, many scouts and skirmishers must be about.
The bank above him was rather high
and quite steep, for which he was glad, as it afforded
protection. A half mile farther down he came
to the mouth of a creek coming in from the South,
and just as he passed it he heard voices on the bank.
He held his boat among the bushes on the cliff and
listened. Several men were talking, but he judged
them to be farmers, not soldiers. Yet they talked
of the battle that night, and Harry surmised that
they were looking at the lights in the Southern camp
which might yet be visible from the high point on
which they stood. He could not gather from their
words whether they were Northern or Southern sympathizers,
but it did not matter, as he had no intention of speaking
to them, hoping only that they would go away in a few
minutes and let him continue his journey unseen.
His hope speedily came to pass.
He heard their voices sinking in the distance, and
leaving the shelter of the bushes he pulled down the
stream once more. Then he found that he had
deceived himself about the clouds. If they had
retired, they had merely recoiled, to use the French
phrase, in order to gather again with greater force.
During his short stay among the bushes
at the foot of the cliff the whole heavens had blackened
and the air was surcharged with the heavy damp and
tensity that betoken a coming storm. The lightning
blazed across the river thrice, and he heard a mutter
which was not that of cannon. Then came rain
and a rushing wind and the surface of the river was
troubled grievously. It rose up in waves like
those of a lake, and Harry’s boat rocked and
tumbled so badly that in a few minutes it was half-full
of water.
Fearing he might sink, carrying with
him his great message, he pulled again, but fiercely
now, for the southern bank and the shelter of the
bushes, which, fortunately for him, grew here in the
water’s edge. He shoved his boat with all
his might among them, as their tops snapped and crackled
in the hurricane. But he knew he was safe there,
and he continued to push until it reached the edge
of the land.
The river would be swollen by another
storm, but for the present it did not bother him greatly.
He was more immediately concerned with his wish to
get back to Lee as soon as possible, and he was grateful
for that dense clump of bushes, growing in the very
water’s edge, because the wind was blowing like
a hurricane and the waves were chasing one another
on the Potomac, like the billows on a lake.
He was a fair oarsman, but it would have taken greater
skill than his to have kept his boat afloat in the
tempestuous river.
The bushes formed an absolute protection.
His boat swayed with them, which saved it from being
damaged, and the overhanging lee of the cliff kept
most of the rain from him. He also wrapped about
his body the pair of blankets that he always carried,
and he sat there not only in safety, but with a certain
physical pleasure.
Once more amid surroundings with the
like of which Henry Ware had been so familiar, the
soul of his great ancestor seemed to have descended
upon him. Most young officers, no matter how
brave or how skilled in war, would have been awed
and alarmed. He had no comrades at his elbow.
There was no light, no friendly sound to encourage
him, he was as truly alone, so far as his present
situation was concerned, as any pioneer had ever been
in the heart of the wilderness. But for him there
was pleasure at that moment in being alone.
He did not quiver when the thunder rolled and crashed
above his head, and the lightning blazed in one Titanic
sword slash after another across the surface of the
river. Rather, the wilderness and majesty of
the scene appealed to him. Leaning well back
in his boat with his blankets closely wrapped about
him, he watched it, and his soul rose with the storm.
Harry knew from its sudden violence
that the rain would soon pass, and if the waves abated
a little he would certainly take his boat into the
river and try his fortunes again. Yet a precious
hour was lost, and nothing could replace it.
The thunder ceased by and by and there was only dim
lightning on the far horizon. The waves began
to abate, and, taking off his blankets, he pushed
his boat once more into the stream.
It rocked prodigiously and shipped
water, but by strenuous effort he kept it afloat,
and as the wind sank still further he decided that
he would seek the northern shore and disembark as
soon as possible. It would be easier to steal
through the thickets than to navigate what amounted
to a wild sea. But the banks were yet too high
and steep for a landing, and he continued to row,
keeping now near the middle of the stream.
Wind and rain were dying fast, and
he heard a sound behind uncommonly like the distant
swish of oars. It sent an unpleasant thrill through
him, because he wished to be alone on the river at
that particular time, but his eyes, tracing a course
through all the dusk and gloom, rested upon another
boat, about two hundred yards away, containing a single
occupant.
A farmer or a riverman, Harry thought,
but to his great astonishment the man suddenly raised
himself up a little and shouted to him in a tremendous
voice to halt. Harry had not the least idea of
stopping for anybody. He bent to his oars and
rowed swiftly on. Again came that shout to halt,
and it seemed more insolent to him than before.
He put a few more ounces of strength into his arms
and shoulders and increased his speed.
The pursuer, suddenly drawing in his
oars, raised a rifle from the bottom of his boat,
and fired point blank at the fugitive. The bullet
whistled so near Harry that he felt his ear burn,
and at first thought he was hit. He would have
been glad to fire back, but his pistols could not carry
like his enemy’s rifle, and there was nothing
to do but flee. Once again he sought to draw
a few more ounces of energy from his body. But
the man behind him was a much greater oarsman than
he and gained rapidly. The stranger, shouting
another command to halt, to which no attention was
paid, fired a second time, and the bullet went through
the side of Harry’s boat, barely scraping his
knee as it passed.
His rage became intense. He
had been shot at many times in battle, and many times
he had fired his pistols into the opposing masses,
but here upon this river a man sought his life, as
the savages of old sought the hunter. Another
glance showed him that pursuer had closed up half
the distance between them, and, snatching one of the
pistols from his belt, he fired. He knew that
he had missed, as he saw the water spurt up beside
the boat, but he thought that his bullet and the probability
of more might delay the pursuit. Nevertheless
the man came on as boldly and as fast as ever.
If he fired a third time he could scarcely miss at
such short range.
It seemed to Harry the gift of Heaven,
that a whole pack of clouds should drift above them
at that moment, deepening the obscurity and making
the pursuing boat, although it was so near, a shapeless
form in the mist. He could not see the features
of the man, but he was able to discern his large and
powerful figure, and he noticed the rhythmic manner
in which his arms and shoulders worked at the oars.
Obviously he had no chance to escape him by flight,
and drawing his second pistol he fired. The bullet
struck the boat but did no damage. The man came
on faster than ever. Harry took a desperate resolution,
and, whirling his boat about, he rowed it straight
at his pursuer, who was now almost level with him.
He intended to ram and take his chances. His
movement was so quick and unexpected that it succeeded.
The bow of his boat, helped perhaps by a wave, struck
the other with such violence that both were shattered
and sank instantly.
Harry went down with his craft, but
in a few seconds came up again, his mouth and eyes
full of muddy water. He was a splendid swimmer,
and his eyes clearing in a moment he looked toward
the northern shore, seeking an easy place for landing.
They encountered ten feet away a large sun-browned
face and two burning eyes.
“Shepard!” Harry gasped.
“And so it was you, Lieutenant
Kenton. Perhaps if I had known it was you I
wouldn’t have fired upon you.”
“Don’t let that deter you. We’re
enemies.”
“I merely said ‘perhaps!’
I like you, but that wouldn’t keep me from
stopping you by any method I could from reaching Lee.”
“I’m sure it wouldn’t.
I like you, too, Mr. Shepard, but we’re enemies
here in this river, deadly enemies, and I mean to beat
you off.”
“One may mean to do a thing
and yet not do it. I’m the larger and the
more powerful. Besides, I’m toughened by
superior age. You’d better surrender,
Mr. Kenton. I don’t want to do you any
bodily harm.”
“I admit that you’re larger
and stronger, but on land only. I’m the
better swimmer. We’re both floating now,
but if you’ll make a comparison, Mr. Shepard,
you’ll find that I’m doing it with the
greatest ease. Take my advice, and swim to the
southern bank of the river while I go to the northern.
I say it in all good faith.”
“I’ve no doubt of that,
but the young are likely to over-estimate their powers.
I’m a good swimmer, and you can’t escape
me.”
“The important point is not
whether I can escape you, but whether you can escape
me. Since you have lost your boat and your rifle
and we’re in such a treacherous and unstable
element as water, I occupy the superior position.
The young may indeed over-estimate their powers, but
in swimming at least I’m a competent critic.
For instance, you’re holding your shoulders
too high, and you kick too much. You’re
splashing water, a useless waste of energy.
Now observe me. The surface of this river is
rough. Little waves are yet running upon it,
but I float as easily as a fish, come up to see by
the moon what time it is. It is not egotism on
my part, merely a recognition of the facts, but I warn
you, Mr. Shepard, to swim to the other shore and let
me alone.”
The two were not ten feet apart, and,
despite the lightness of their talk, their eyes burned
with eagerness and intensity. Harry knew that
Shepard would not dream of turning back. Yet
in the water he awaited the result with a confidence
that he would not have felt on land.
“It’s your move, Mr. Shepard,” he
said.
The intensity of Shepard’s gaze
increased, and Harry never took his eyes from those
of his enemy. He intended like a prize fighter
to read there what the man’s next effort would
be.
“I don’t see that it’s
my move,” said Shepard, as he floated calmly.
“You’re following me for the purpose of
capturing me.”
“To capture you, or delay you.
Meanwhile, it seems to me that I’m delaying
you very successfully. I can’t see that
you’re making much progress towards Lee.”
“That depends upon which way
this river is flowing. You note that we float
gently with the stream.”
“It’s a poor argument.
The Potomac flows directly by Washington, and if
we were to float on we’d float into the heart
of great Northern fortresses instead of Lee’s
camp.”
“That’s true as far as
it goes, but it doesn’t go far enough.
I’m leaving the river soon. You can have
it all then.”
“Thanks, but I think I’ll
go with you, Lieutenant Kenton.”
“Then come to the bottom!”
exclaimed Harry, as he dived forward like a flash,
seized Shepard by the ankles and headed for the bottom
of the river with him. The water gurgled in
his eyes and ears and nose, but he held on for many
seconds, despite the man’s desperate struggles.
Then he was forced to let go and rise.
As his head shot above the stream
he saw another shooting up in the same manner about
fifteen feet away. Both were choked and gasping,
but Harry managed to say:
“I didn’t intend for you to come up so
soon.”
“I suppose not, but perhaps
you didn’t pause to think that when you rose
I’d rise with you.”
“Yes, that’s true.
It seems to me that matters grow complicated.
Can’t you persuade yourself, Mr. Shepard, to
go and leave me alone? I really have no use for
you here.”
“I’d like to oblige you,
Lieutenant Kenton, but I intend to see that you don’t
reach General Lee.”
“Still harping upon that?
It seems to me that you’re a stupidly stubborn
man. Don’t you know that I’m going
anyhow?”
Harry had never ceased to watch his
eyes, and he saw there the signal of a coming movement.
Shepard dived suddenly for him, intending to repeat
his own trick, but the youth was like a fish in the
water, and he darted to the right. The man came
up grasping nothing. Harry laughed. The
chagrin of Shepard compelled his amusement, although
he liked the man.
“I wish you’d go away,
Mr. Shepard,” he said. “On land you
could, perhaps, overpower me, but in the water I think
I’m your master. All through my boyhood
I devoted a great deal of my time to swimming.
Dr. Russell of the Pendleton Academy but
you never knew him used to say that if
I would swim less and study more I could make greater
pretensions to scholarship.”
Shepard, swimming rather easily, regarded
him thoughtfully.
“While we talk to each other
in this more or less polite manner, Mr. Kenton,”
he said, “we must not forget that we’re
in deadly earnest. I mean to take you, and our
scouts mean to take every other messenger who goes
out from Colonel Sherburne’s camp. You
know, and I know, that if the Army of Northern Virginia
does not reach in a few days that camp, where there
is a ford in ordinary weather, it will be driven up
against the Potomac and we can accumulate such great
forces against it that it cannot possibly escape.
Even at Sherburne’s place its escape is more
than doubtful, if it has to linger long.”
“Yes, I know these things quite
well, Mr. Shepard. I know also, as you do, that
General Meade’s army is not in direct pursuit,
and, that in a flanking movement, he is advancing
across South Mountain and toward Sharpsburg.
It is a march well calculated and extremely dangerous
to General Lee, if he does not hear of it in time.
But he will hear of it soon enough. A comrade
of mine, George Dalton, will tell him. Others
from Colonel Sherburne’s camp will tell him,
and I mean to tell him too. I hope to be the
first to do so.”
Harry never deceived himself for a
moment. He knew that although Shepard liked
him, he would go to the uttermost to stop him, and
as for himself, while he had a friendly feeling for
the spy, he meant to use every weapon he could against
him. Realizing that he could not linger much
longer, as the chill of the water was already entering
his body, he swam closer to Shepard, still staring
directly into his eyes. How thankful he was
now for those innumerable swimmings in the little river
that ran near Pendleton! Everything learned
well justifies itself some day.
Although there was but little moonlight
they were so close together that they could see the
eyes of each other clearly, and Harry detected a trace
of uneasiness in those of Shepard. A good swimmer,
the water nevertheless was not his element, and although
a man of great physique and extraordinary powers,
he longed for the solid earth under his feet.
Harry drew himself together as if
he were going to dive, but instead of doing so suddenly
raised himself in the water and shot forth his clenched
tight fist with all his might. Shepard was taken
completely by surprise and he sank back under the
water, leaving a blood stain on its surface.
Harry watched anxiously, but Shepard came up again
in a moment or two, gasping and swimming wildly.
The point of his jaw was presented fairly and Harry
struck again as hard as he could in the water.
Shepard with a choked cry went under and Harry, diving
forward, seized his body, bringing it to the surface.
Shepard was senseless, but getting
an arm under his shoulders Harry was able to swim
with him to the northern shore, although it took nearly
all his strength. Then he dragged him out upon
the bank, and sank down, panting, beside him.
The great Civil War in America, the
greatest of all wars until nearly all the nations
of Europe joined in a common slaughter, was a humane
war compared with other wars approaching it in magnitude.
It did not occur to Harry to let Shepard drown, nor
did he leave him senseless on the bank. As soon
as his own strength returned he dragged him into a
half-sitting position, and rubbed the palms of his
hands. The spy opened his eyes.
“Good-by, Mr. Shepard,”
said Harry. “I’m bound to leave before
you recover fully because then I wouldn’t be
your match. I’m sorry I had to hit you
so hard, but there was nothing else to do.”
“I don’t blame you. It was man against
man.”
“The water was in my favor.
I’m bound to admit that on land you’d
have won.”
“At any rate I thank you for
dragging me out of the river.”
“You’d have done as much for me.”
“So I would, but our personal
debts of gratitude can’t be allowed to interfere
with our military duty.”
“I know it. Therefore I take a running
start. Good-by.”
“We’ll meet again.”
“But not on this side of the
Potomac. It may happen when the Army of Northern
Virginia and the Army of the Potomac go into battle
on the other side of the river.”
Harry darted into the forest, and
ran for a half-hour. He meant to put as much
distance as possible between Shepard and himself before
the latter’s full strength returned. He
knew that Shepard would follow, if he could, but it
was not possible to trail one who had a long start
through dark and wet woods.
He came through the forest and into
a meadow surrounded by a rail fence, on which he sat
until his breath came back again. He had forgotten
all about his wet uniform, but the run was really
beneficial to him as it sent the blood leaping through
his veins and warmed his body.
“So far have I come,”
said Harry, “but the omens promise a hard march.”
He had his course fixed very clearly,
and a veteran now in experience, he could guide himself
easily by the moon and stars. The clouds were
clearing away and a warm wind promised him dry clothing,
soon. Long afterward he thought it a strange
coincidence that his cousin, Dick Mason, in the far
South should have been engaged upon an errand very
similar in nature, but different in incident.
He crossed the meadow, entered an
orchard and then came to a narrow road. The presence
of the orchard indicated the proximity of a farmhouse,
and it occurred to Harry that he might buy a horse
there. The farmer was likely to be hostile,
but risks must be taken. He drew his pistols.
He knew that neither could be fired after the thorough
wetting in the river, but the farmer would not know
that. He saw the house presently, a comfortable
two-story frame building, standing among fine shade
trees. Without hesitation he knocked heavily
on the door with the butt of a pistol.
He was so anxious to hasten that his
blows would have aroused the best sleeper who ever
slept, and the door was quickly opened by an elderly
man, not yet fully awake.
“I want to buy a horse.”
“Buy a horse? At this time of the night?”
He was about to slam the door, but
Harry put his foot over the sill and the muzzle of
his pistol within six inches of the man’s nose.
“I want to buy a horse,”
he repeated, “and you want to sell one to me.
I think you realize that fact, don’t you?”
“Yes, I do,” replied the
man, looking down the muzzle of the big horse pistol.
“Come outside and close the
door behind you. I know you haven’t on
many clothes, but the night’s warm, and you
need fresh air.”
The man with the muzzle of the pistol
still near his nose, obeyed. But as he looked
at the weapon he also had a comprehensive view of the
one who held it.
“Wet ain’t you?” he said.
“Do you think it necessary to put it in the
form of a question?”
“I don’t like to say, unless I’m
shore.”
“Where do you keep your horses?”
“In the barn here to the left.
What kind of a horse did you think you’d keer
fur most, stranger?”
“The biggest, the strongest and fastest you’ve
got”
“I thought mebbe you’d
want one with wings, you ’pear to be in such
a pow’ful hurry. I wish you wouldn’t
keep that pistol so near to my nose. ‘Sides,
you’ve gethered so much mud an’ water ’bout
you that you ain’t so very purty to look at!”
“It’s your own mud and
water. I didn’t bring it into this country
with me.”
“Which means that you don’t
belong in these parts. I reckon lookin’
at you that you wuz one o’ them rebels that
went to Gettysburg and then come back ag’in.”
“Exactly right, Mr. Farmer.
I’m an officer in General Lee’s army.”
“Then I wuz right ‘bout
you needin’ a horse with wings. An’
I guess all the men in your army need horses with
wings. Don’t be in such a tarnal hurry.
You’re goin’ to stay right up here with
us, boarders, so to speak, till the war is over.”
Harry laughed.
“Kind of you,” he said,
“but here is the stable and do you open the stall
doors one by one, and let me see the horses.
At the first sign of any trick I pull the trigger.”
“Well, as I don’t like
violence I’ll show you the horses. Here’s
the gray mare, five years old, swift but can’t
last long. This is old Rube, nigh onto ten,
mighty strong, but as balky as a Johnny Reb hisself.
Don’t want him! No? Then I think
that’s about all.”
“No it’s not! You open that last
stall door at once!”
The farmer made a wry face, and threw
back the door with a slam. Harry still covering
the man with the pistol that couldn’t go off,
saw a splendid bay horse about four years old.
“Holding out on me, were you?”
he said. “Did you think a Confederate
officer could be fooled in that manner?”
“I reckon I oughtn’t to
have thought so. I’ve always heard that
the rebels had mighty good eyes for Yankee horseflesh.”
“I’ll let that pass, because
maybe it’s true. Now, saddle and bridle
him quicker than ever before in your life.”
The farmer did so, and Harry took
care to see that the girth was secure.
“At how much did you value this horse?”
he asked.
“I did put him down at two hundred
dollars, but I reckon he’s worth nothin’
to me now.”
“Here’s your money.
When General Lee goes through the enemy’s country
he pays for what he takes.”
He thrust a roll of good United States
bills into the astonished man’s hand, and sprang
upon the horse. Then he turned from the stable
and rode swiftly up the road, but not so swiftly that
he did not hear a bullet singing past his ears.
A backward glance showed him an elderly farmer in
his night clothes standing on his porch and reloading
his rifle.
“Well, I can’t blame you,
I suppose,” said Harry. “You can
guess pretty well what I am, and it’s your business
to stop me.”
But he rode fast enough to be far
beyond the range of a second bullet, and maintained
a good pace for a long time, through hilly and wooded
country. His uniform dried upon him, and his
hardy form felt no ill result from the struggle in
the river. The horse was strong and spirited,
and Harry knew that he could carry him without weariness
to Lee. He looked upon his mission as already
accomplished, but his ambition to reach the commander-in-chief
first was yet strong.
He rode throughout the rest of the
night and dawn and the pangs of hunger came together.
But he decided that he would not turn from his path
to seek food. He would go on straight for Lee
and let hunger have its way. He had a splendid
horse under him and he was faring quite as well as
he had a right to expect. He thought of Shepard,
and felt pity for him. The man had only striven
to do his duty, and while he had used force he had
been very courteous and polite about it. Harry
was bound to acknowledge that his had been a very
chivalrous enemy and only his superiority in swimming
had enabled him to win over Shepard. He was glad
that he had saved him and had left him on the bank,
so to speak, to dry.
Then Shepard faded away with the mists
and vapors that were retreating before a brilliant
dawn. The country was high, rolling, and the
foliage, although much browned by the July sun, which
was unusually hot that year, was still dense.
Most of the hills were heavy with forest, but all
the valleys between were fertile and well cultivated.
With the dew of the morning fresh upon it the whole
region was refreshing and soothing to the eye with
a look of peace, where in reality there was no peace.
Many thin columns of smoke lying blue against the
silver sky told where farmhouses stood, and hunger
suddenly seized upon Harry again.
Hunger is natural to youth, and his
severe exertions all through the night had greatly
increased it. It became both a pain and a weakness.
His shoulders drooped with fatigue, and he felt that
he must have food or faint by the way.
He was ashamed of his physical weakness,
but he knew that unless he found food his faintness
would increase, and hunger alone would stop him, where
so able a man as Shepard could not. His uniform,
faded anyhow, was so permeated with the dried mud
of the river that it would take a keen eye to tell
whether it was Federal or Confederate, and he need
not disclose his identity in this region, which was
so strongly for the Union. He made up his mind
quickly and rode for the nearest farmhouse.
Harry knew that he was inviting risks.
His pistols were still useless but they would be
handy for threats, and he should be able to take care
of himself at a farmhouse.
The house that he had chosen was only
a few hundred yards away, its white walls visible
among trees, and the clatter of his horse’s hoofs
brought a man from a barn in the rear. Harry
noted him keenly. He was youngish, stalwart
and the look out of his blue eyes was fearless.
He came forward slowly, examining his visitor, and
his manner was not altogether hospitable. Harry
decided that he had to deal with a difficult customer
but he had no idea of turning back.
“Good morning,” he said politely.
“Good morning.”
“I wish some breakfast and I
will pay. I’ve ridden all night in our
service.”
“You’ve so much dried
mud on you that you look as if you’d been passin’
through a river.”
“Correct. That’s exactly what happened.”
“But there’s none on your horse.”
“He didn’t pass with me.
I’m willing to answer any reasonable number
of questions, but, as I told you before, I ride on
an important service. I must have breakfast at
once, and I’ll pay.”
“Whose service? Ours or Reb’s?”
“A military messenger can’t
answer the chance questions of those by the roadside.
I tell you I want breakfast at once.”
“Fine horse you ride, stranger. How long
have you had him?”
“All this year.”
“Funny. When I saw him
last week he belonged to Jim Kendall down by the Potomac,
an’ livin’ on this very road, too.”
“It isn’t half as funny
as you think. Hands up! Now call to your
wife as loud as you can to bring me coffee and food
at the gate! I know they’re ready in the
kitchen. I can smell ’em here. Out
with it, call as fast as and as loud as you can, or
off goes the top of your head!”
Although a horse pistol held in a
firm hand was thrust under his nose, the man’s
blue eyes glared hate and defiance, and his mouth did
not open. Harry, in his excitement and anger,
forgot that the charge in his weapon was ruined and
hence it was no acting with him when his own eyes blazed
down at the other and he fairly shouted:
“I give you until I can count
ten to call your wife! One! two! three! four!
five! six! seven! eight! nine! ”
“Sophy! Sophy!”
cried the farmer, who saw death flaming in the eyes
that looked into his, “Come! Come a-runnin’!”
A good looking young woman threw open
a door and ran, frightened, toward the gate, where
she saw her husband under the pistol muzzle of a wild
and savage looking man on horseback.
“Sophy,” said the farmer,
“bring this infernal rebel a cup of coffee and
a plate of bread and meat. If it weren’t
for his pistol I’d drag him off his horse and
carry him to General Meade, but he’s got the
drop on me!”
“And Sophy,” said Harry,
who was growing cooler, “you make it a big tin
cup of coffee and you see that the plate is piled high
with meat and bread. Now don’t you make
one mistake. Don’t you come back with any
weapon in your hand in place of food, and don’t
you fire on me from the house with the family rifle.
You’re young and you’re good looking,
and, doubtless the widow of our friend here with the
upraised hands, wouldn’t have to wait long for
another husband just as good as he is.”
The woman paled a little, and Harry
knew that some thought of the family rifle had been
in her mind. The husband’s glare became
ferocious.
“You can take your hands down,”
said Harry. “I’ve no wish to torture
you, and I’m satisfied now that you’re
not armed.”
The man dropped his arms and the woman
hurried to the kitchen. Harry did not watch
her, but kept his eyes continually upon the man, who
he knew would take advantage of his first careless
moment, and spring for him like a tiger. A pistol
that he couldn’t fire wouldn’t be of much
use to him then.
But the woman returned with a big
tin cup of smoking coffee and a plate piled high with
bread and bacon and beefsteak. It was a welcome
sight. The aspect of the whole world became brighter
at once, and the pulse of hope beat high. But
happiness did not make him relax caution.
“Stand back about ten feet more,”
he said to the man, “I don’t like your
looks.”
“What’s the matter with my looks?”
“It’s not exactly your
looks I mean, though they’re scarcely worthy
of the lady, your wife, but it’s rather your
attitude or position which reminds me of a lion or
a tiger about to spring upon something it hates.”
The man, with a savage growl, withdrew a little.
“I’d like to put a bullet through you,”
he said.
“I’ve no doubt of it,
your eyes show it, but before I take a polite leave
of you I want to tell you that I did not steal this
horse from your friend, Jim Kendall. I paid
for it at his own valuation.”
“Confederate money that won’t be worth
a dollar a bale before long.”
“Oh, no, bills that were made
and stamped at Washington, and I pay for this breakfast
in silver.”
He dropped it into the hand of the
woman, as he took the huge cup of coffee from her.
Then he drank deep and long, and again and again,
draining the last drop of the brown liquid.
“I hope it’s burnt the
lining out of your throat,” said the man savagely.
“It was warm, but I like it
that way. It was good indeed, and I’m sorry,
Madame, that you have such a violent and ill-tempered
husband. Maybe your next will be a much better
man.”
“John is neither violent nor
ill-tempered. He’s never said a harsh word
to me since we were married. But he hates the
rebels dreadfully.”
“That’s too bad.
I don’t hate him and I’m glad you can
give him a good character. A man’s own
wife knows best. Now, I’m going to eat
this breakfast as I ride on. You’ll find
the plate on the fence a quarter of a mile ahead.”
He bowed to both, and still keeping
a wary eye on the man, thrust his pistol into his
belt, and as his horse moved forward at a swift and
easy gait he began to eat with a ravenous appetite.
A backward glance showed husband and
wife still gazing at him. But it was only for
a moment. They ran into the house and a little
further on Harry looked back again. They had
reappeared and he almost expected to hear again the
whistle of a rifle shot, fired from a window.
But the distance was much too great, and he devoted
renewed attention to the demands of hunger.
When he had finished his breakfast
he put the plate upon the fence as he had promised,
and, looking back for the last time, he saw an American
flag wave to and fro on the roof of the house.
He felt a thrill of alarm. It must be a signal
concerning him and it could be made only to his enemies.
Speaking sharply to his horse, he urged him into a
gallop.