THE MESSENGER
Victory, overwhelming and complete,
had been won, but General Thomas could not follow
into the deep mountains where his army might be cut
off. So he remained where he was for a little
while and on the second day he sent for Dick.
The general was seated alone in a
tent, an open end of which faced a fire, as it was
now extremely cold. General Thomas had shown
no undue elation over his victory. He was as
silent as ever, and now, as always, he made upon Dick
the impression of strength and indomitable courage.
“Sit down,” he said, waving his hand toward
a camp stool.
Dick, after saluting, sat down in silence.
“I hear,” said the general,
“that you behaved very well in the battle, and
that you are a lad of courage and intelligence.
Courage is common, intelligence, real intelligence,
is rare. You were at Bull Run also, so I hear.”
“I was, and the army fought
well there too, but late in the day it was seized
with a sudden panic.”
“Something that may happen at
any time to raw troops. But we’ll pass
to the question in hand. The campaign here in
the mountains is ended for this winter, but great
matters are afoot further west. A courier arrived
last night stating that General Grant and Commodore
Foote were preparing to advance by water from Cairo,
Illinois, and attempt the reduction of the Confederate
forts on the Cumberland and Tennessee. General
Buell, one of your own Kentuckians, is advancing southward
with a strong Union force, and in a few days his outposts
will be on Green River. It will be of great
advantage to Buell to know that the Confederate army
in the eastern part of the state is destroyed.
He can advance with freedom and, on the other hand,
the Southern leader, Albert Sidney Johnston, will
be compelled to throw a portion of his force to the
eastward to protect his flank which has been uncovered
by our victory at Mill Spring. Do you understand?”
“I do, sir.”
“Then you are to carry dispatches
of the utmost importance from me to General Buell.
After you reach his camp—if you reach it—you
will, of course, be subject to his orders. I
have learned that you know the country well between
here and Green River. Because of that, and because
of your intelligence, real intelligence, I mean, you
are chosen for this task. You are to change
to citizen’s clothes at once, and a horse of
great power and endurance has been selected for you.
But you must use all your faculties all the time.
I warn you that the journey is full of danger.”
“I can carry it out,”
replied Dick with quiet confidence, “and I thank
you for choosing me.”
“I believe you will succeed,”
said the general, who liked his tone. “Return
here in an hour with all your preparations made, and
I will give you the dispatches.”
Warner was filled with envy that his
comrade was to go on a secret mission of great importance,
but he generously wished him a full measure of success.
“Remember,” he said, “that
on an errand like yours, presence of mind counts for
at least fifty per cent. Have a quick tongue.
Always be ready with a tale that looks true.”
“An’ remember, too,”
said Sergeant Whitley, “that however tight a
place you get into you can get into one tighter.
Think of that and it will encourage you to pull right
out of the hole.”
The two wrung his hand and Major Hertford
also gave him his warmest wishes. The horse
chosen for him was a bay of tremendous power, and
Dick knew that he would serve him well. He carried
double blankets strapped to the saddle, pistols in
holsters with another in his belt, an abundance of
ammunition, and food for several days in his saddle
bags. Then he returned to General Thomas, who
handed him a thin strip of tissue paper.
“It is written in indelible
ink,” he said, “and it contains a statement
of our forces and their positions here in the eastern
part of the state. It also tells General Buell
what reinforcements he can expect. If you are
in imminent danger of capture destroy the paper, but
to provide for such a chance, in case you escape afterward,
I will read the dispatches to you.”
He read them over several times and
then questioned Dick. But the boy’s memory
was good. In fact, every word of the dispatches
was burnt into his brain, and nothing could make him
forget them.
“And now, my lad,” said
General Thomas, giving him his hand, “you may
help us greatly. I would not send a boy upon
such an errand, but the demands of war are terrible
and must be obeyed.”
The strong grasp of the general’s
hand imparted fresh enthusiasm to Dick, and for the
present he did not have the slightest doubt that he
would get safely through. He wore a strong suit
of home-made brown jeans, a black felt cap with ear-flaps,
and high boots. The dispatch was pinned into
a small inside pocket of his vest.
He rode quickly out of camp, giving
the sentinels the pass word, and the head of the horse
was pointed west slightly by north. The ground
was now frozen and he did not have the mud to hold
him back.
The horse evidently had been longing
for action. Such thews and sinews as his needed
exercise. He stretched out his long neck, neighed
joyously, and broke of his own accord into an easy
canter. It was a lonely road, and Dick was glad
that it was so. The fewer people he met the
better it was in every way for him.
He shared the vigor and spirit of
his horse. His breath turned to smoke, but the
cold whipped his blood into a quicker torrent.
He hummed snatches of the songs that he had heard
Samuel Jarvis sing, and went on mile after mile through
the high hills toward the low hills of Kentucky.
Dick did not pass many people.
The ancient name of his state—the Dark
and Bloody Ground—came back to him.
He knew that war in one of its worst forms existed
in this wild sweep of hills. Here the guerillas
rode, choosing their sides as suited them best, and
robbing as paid them most. Nor did these rough
men hesitate at murder. So he rode most of the
time with his hand on the butt of the pistol at his
belt, and whenever he went through woods, which was
most of the time, he kept a wary watch to right and
to left.
The first person whom he passed was
a boy riding on a sack of grain to mill. Dick
greeted him cheerfully and the boy with the fearlessness
of youth replied in the same manner.
“Any news your way?” asked Dick.
“Nothin’ at all,”
replied the boy, his eyes enlarging with excitement,
“but from the way you are comin’ we heard
tell there was a great battle, hundreds of thousands
of men on each side an’ that the Yankees won.
Is it so, Mister?”
“It is true,” replied
Dick. “A dozen people have told me of it,
but the armies were not quite so large as you heard.
It is true also that the Yankees won.”
“I’ll tell that at the
mill. It will be big news to them. An’
which way be you goin’, Mister?” said
the boy with all the frankness of the hills.
“I’m on my way to the
middle part of the state. I’ve been looking
after some land that my people own in the mountains.
Looks like a lonesome road, this. Will I reach
any house soon?”
“Thar’s Ben Trimble’s
three miles further on, but take my advice an’
don’t stop thar. Ben says he ain’t
goin’ to be troubled in these war times by visitors,
an’ he’s likely to meet you at the door
with his double-barreled shotgun.”
“I won’t knock on Ben’s
door, so he needn’t take down his double-barreled
shotgun. What’s next beyond Ben’s
house?”
“A half mile further on you
come to Hungry Creek. It ain’t much in
the middle of summer, but right now it’s full
of cold water, ’nough of it to come right up
to your hoss’s body. You go through it
keerful.”
“Thank you for your good advice,”
said Dick. “I’ll follow it, too.
Good-bye.”
He waved his gauntleted hand and rode
on. A hundred yards further and he glanced back.
The boy had stopped on the crest of a hill, and was
looking at him. But Dick knew that it was only
the natural curiosity of the hills and he renewed
his journey without apprehension.
At the appointed time he saw the stout
log cabin of Ben Trimble by the roadside with the
warm smoke rising from the chimney, but true to his
word he gave Ben and his shotgun no trouble, and continued
straight ahead over the frozen road until he came
to the banks of Hungry Creek. Here, too, the
words of the boy came true. The water was both
deep and cold, and Dick looked at it doubtfully.
He urged his great horse into the
stream at last, and it appeared that the creek had
risen somewhat since the boy had last seen it.
In the middle the horse was compelled to swim, but
it was no task for such a powerful animal, and Dick,
holding his feet high, came dry to the shore that
he sought.
The road led on through high hills,
covered with oak and beech and cedar and pine, all
the deciduous trees bare of leaves, their boughs rustling
dryly whenever the wind blew. He saw the smoke
of three cabins nestling in snug coves, but it was
a full three hours before he met anybody else in the
road. Then he saw two men riding toward him,
but he could not tell much about them as they were
wrapped in heavy gray shawls, and wore broad brimmed
felt hats, pulled well down over their foreheads.
Dick knew that he could not exercise
too much caution in this debatable land, and his right
hand dropped cautiously to the butt of his pistol
in such a manner that it was concealed by his heavy
overcoat. His left hand rested lightly on the
reins as he rode forward at an even pace. But
he did not fail to take careful note of the two men
who were now examining him in a manner that he did
not like.
Dick saw that the strangers openly
carried pistols in their belts, which was not of overwhelming
significance in such times in such a region, but they
did not have the look of mountaineers riding on peaceful
business, and he reined his horse to the very edge
of the road that he might pass them.
He noted with rising apprehension
that they checked the pace of their horses as they
approached, and that they reined to either side of
the road to compel him to go between them. But
he pulled his own horse out still further, and as
they could not pass on both sides of him without an
overt act of hostility they drew together again in
the middle of the road.
“Mornin’ stranger,”
they said together, when they were a few yards away.
“Good morning,” said Dick,
riding straight on, without checking his speed.
But one of the men drew his horse across the road
and said:
“What’s your hurry?
It ain’t friendly to ride by without passin’
the time o’ day.”
Now at close range, Dick liked their
looks less than ever. They might be members
of that very band of Skelly’s which had already
made so much trouble for both sides, and he summoned
all his faculties in order to meet them at any game
that they might try to play.
“I’ve been on land business
in the mountains,” he said, “and I’m
anxious to get back to my home. Besides the
day is very cold, and the two facts deprive me of
the pleasure of a long conversation with you, gentlemen.
Good-day.”
“Wait just a little,”
said the spokesman, who still kept his horse reined
across the road. “These be war times an’
it’s important to know what a fellow is.
Be you for the Union or are you with the Secesh?”
Dick was quite sure that whatever
he answered they would immediately claim to be on
the opposite side. Then would follow robbery
and perhaps murder.
“Which is your side?” he asked.
“But we put the question first,” the fellow
replied.
Dick no longer had any doubts.
The second man was drawing his horse up by the side
of him, as if to seize him, while the first continued
to bar the way. He was alarmed, deeply alarmed,
but he lost neither his courage nor his presence of
mind. Luckily he had already summoned every
faculty for instant action, and now he acted.
He uttered a sudden shout, and raked the side of
his horse with both spurs.
His horse was not only large and powerful
but of a most high spirit. When he heard that
shout and felt the burning slash of the spurs he made
a blind but mighty leap forward. The horse of
the first stranger, smitten by so great a weight,
fell in the road and his rider went down with him.
The enraged horse then leaped clear of both and darted
forward at headlong speed.
As his horse sprang Dick threw himself
flat upon his neck, and the bullet that the second
man fired whistled over his head. By impulse
he drew his own pistol and fired back. He saw
the man’s pistol arm fall as if broken, and
he heard a loud cry. That was a lucky shot indeed,
and rising a little in his saddle he shouted again
and again to the great horse that served him so well.
The gallant animal responded in full.
He stretched out his long neck and the road flew
fast behind him. Sparks flashed from the stones
where the shod hoofs struck, and Dick exulting felt
the cold air rush past. Another shot was fired
at long range, but the bullet did not strike anywhere
near.
Dick took only a single backward glance.
He saw the two men on their horses, but drooping
as if weak from hurts, and he knew that for the present
at least he was safe from any hurt from them.
But he allowed his horse his head for a long time,
and then he gradually slowed him down. No human
being was in sight now and he spoke to the noble animal
soothingly.
“Good old boy,” he said;
“the strongest, the swiftest, the bravest, and
the truest. I was sorry to make those red stripes
on your sides, but it had to be done. Only quickness
saved us.”
The horse neighed. He was still
quivering from excitement and exertion. So was
Dick for that matter. The men might have been
robbers merely— they were at least that
bad—but they might have deprived him also
of his precious dispatch. He was proud of the
confidence put in him by General Thomas, and he meant
to deserve it. It was this sense of responsibility
and pride that had attuned his faculties to so high
a pitch and that had made his action so swift, sudden
and decisive.
But he steadied himself presently.
The victory, for victory it certainly was, increased
his strength and confidence. He stopped soon
at a brook—they seemed to occur every mile—and
bathed with cold water the red streaks his spurs had
made on either side of his horse. Again he spoke
soothing words and regretted the necessity that had
caused him to make such wounds, slight though they
were.
He also bathed his own face and hands
and, as it was now about noon, ate of the cold ham
and bread that he carried in his knapsack, meanwhile
keeping constant watch on the road over which he had
come. But he did not believe that the men would
pursue, and he saw no sign of them. Mounting
again he rode forward.
The remainder of the afternoon went
by without interruption. He passed three or
four people, but they were obviously natives of that
region, and they asked him only innocent questions.
The wintry day was short, and the twilight was soon
at hand. He was riding over one of the bare
ridges, when first he noticed how late the day had
grown. All the sky was gray and chill and the
cold sun was setting behind the western mountains.
A breeze sprang up, rustling among the leafless branches,
and Dick shivered in the saddle. A new necessity
was pressed suddenly upon him. He must find
shelter for the night. Even with his warm double
blankets he could not sleep in the forest on such a
night. Besides the horse would need food.
He rode on briskly for a full hour,
anxiously watching both sides of the road for a cabin
or cabin smoke. By that time night had come fully,
though fortunately it was clear but very cold.
He saw then on the right a faint coil of smoke rising
against the dusky sky and he rode straight for it.
The smoke came from a strong double
cabin, standing about four hundred yards from the
road, and the sight of the heavy log walls made Dick
all the more anxious to get inside them. The
cold had grown bitter and even his horse shivered.
As he approached two yellow curs rushed
forth and began to bark furiously, snapping at the
horse’s heels, the usual mountain welcome.
But when a kick from the horse grazed the ear of one
of them they kept at a respectful distance.
“Hello! Hello!” called Dick loudly.
This also was the usual mountain notification
that a guest had come, and the heavy board door of
the house opened inward. A man, elderly, but
dark and strong, with the high cheek bones of an Indian
stood in the door, the light of a fire blazing in
the fireplace on the opposite side of the wall throwing
him in relief. His hair was coal black, long
and coarse, increasing his resemblance to an Indian.
Dick rode close to the door, and,
without hesitation, asked for a night’s shelter
and food. This was his inalienable right in the
hills or mountains of his state, and he would be a
strange man indeed who would refuse it.
The man sharply bade the dogs be silent
and they retreated behind the house, their tails drooping.
Then he said to Dick in a tone that was not without
hospitality:
“‘Light, stranger, an’
we’ll put up your horse. Mandy will have
supper ready by the time we finish the job.”
Dick sprang down gladly, but staggered
a little at first from the stiffness of his legs.
“You’ve rid far, stranger,”
said the man, who Dick knew at once had a keen eye
and a keen brain, “an’ you’re young,
too.”
“But not younger than many who
have gone to the war,” replied Dick. “In
fact, you see many who are not older than fifteen or
sixteen.”
He had spoken hastily and incautiously
and he realized it at once. The man’s keen
gaze was turned upon him again.
“You’ve seen the armies,
then?” he said. “Mebbe you’re
a sojer yourself?”
“I’ve been in the mountains,
looking after some land that belongs to my family,”
said Dick. “My name is Mason, Richard Mason,
and I live near Pendleton, which is something like
a hundred miles from here.”
He deemed it best to give his right
name, as it would have no significance there.
“You must have seen armies,”
persisted the man, “or you wouldn’t hev
knowed ‘bout so many boys of fifteen or sixteen
bein’ in them.”
“I saw both the Federal and
Confederate armies in Eastern Kentucky. My business
took me near them, but I was always glad to get away
from them, too.”
“I heard tell today that there was a big battle.”
“You heard right. It was
fought near a little place called Mill Spring, and
resulted in a complete victory for the Northern forces
under General Thomas.”
“That was what I heard.
It will be good news to some, an’ bad news to
others. ’Pears to me, Mr. Mason, that you
can’t fight a battle that will suit everybody.”
“I never heard of one that did.”
“An’ never will, I reckon.
Mighty good hoss that you’re ridin’.
I never seed one with better shoulders. My name’s
Leffingwell, Seth Leffingwell, an’ I live here
alone, ‘ceptin’ my old woman, Mandy.
All we ask of people is to let us be. Lots of
us in the mountain feel that way. Let them lowlanders
shoot one another up ez long ez they please, but up
here there ain’t no slaves, an’ there ain’t
nothin’ else to fight about.”
The stable was a good one, better
than usual in that country. Dick saw stalls
for four horses, but no horses. They put his
own horse in one of the stalls, and gave him corn
and hay. Then they walked back to the house,
and entered a large room, where a stalwart woman of
middle age had just finished cooking supper.
“Whew, but the night’s
goin’ to be cold,” said Leffingwell, as
he shut the door behind them, and cut off an icy blast.
“It’ll make the fire an’ supper
all the better. We’re just plain mountain
people, but you’re welcome to the best we have.
Ma, this is Mr. Mason, who has been on lan’
business in the mountains, an’ is back on his
way to his home at Pendleton.”
Leffingwell’s wife, a powerful
woman, as large as her husband, and with a pleasant
face, gave Dick a large hand and a friendly grasp.
“It’s a good night to
be indoors,” she said. “Supper’s
ready, Seth. Will you an’ the stranger
set?”
She had placed the pine table in the
middle of the room, and Dick noticed that it was large
enough for five or six persons. He put his saddle
bags and blankets in a corner and he and the man drew
up chairs.
He had seldom beheld a more cheerful
scene. In a great fireplace ten feet wide big
logs roared and crackled. Corn cakes, vegetables,
and two kinds of meat were cooking over the coals
and a great pot of coffee boiled and bubbled.
No candles had been lighted, but they were not needed.
The flames gave sufficient illumination.
“Set, young man,” said
Leffingwell heartily, “an’ see who’s
teeth are sharper, yourn or mine.”
Dick sat down gladly, and they fell
to. The woman alternately waited on them and
ate with them. For a time the two masculine human
beings ate and drank with so much vigor that there
was no time for talk. Leffingwell was the first
to break silence.
“I kin see you growin’,” he said.
“Growing?”
“Yes, growin’, you’re
eatin’ so much, you’re enjoyin’ it
so much, an’ you’re digestin’ it
so fast. You are already taller than you was
when you set, an’ you’re broader ’cross
the chest. No, ’tain’t wuth while
to ‘pologize. You’ve got a right
to be hungry, an’ you mustn’t forget Ma’s
cookin’ either. She’s never had her
beat in all these mountains.”
“Shut up, Seth,” said
Mrs. Leffingwell, genially, “you’ll make
the young stranger think you’re plum’
foolish, which won’t be wide of the mark either.”
“I’m grateful,”
said Dick falling into the spirit of it, “but
what pains me, Mrs. Leffingwell, is the fact that
Mr. Leffingwell will only nibble at your food.
I don’t understand it, as he looks like a healthy
man.”
“’Twouldn’t do for
me to be too hearty,” said Leffingwell, “or
I’d keep Mandy here cookin’ all the time.”
They seemed pleasant people to Dick,
good, honest mountain types, and he was glad that
he had found their house. The room in which they
sat was large, apparently used for all purposes, kitchen,
dining-room, sitting-room, and bedroom. An old-fashioned
squirrel rifle lay on hooks projecting from the wall,
but there was no other sign of a weapon. There
was a bed at one end of the room and another at the
other, which could be hidden by a rough woolen curtain
running on a cord. Dick surmised that this bed
would be assigned to him.
Their appetites grew lax and finally
ceased. Then Leffingwell yawned and stretched
his arms.
“Stranger,” he said, “we
rise early an’ go to bed early in these parts.
Thar ain’t nothin’ to keep us up in the
evenin’s, an’ as you’ve had a hard,
long ride I guess you’re just achin’ fur
sleep.”
Dick, although he had been unwilling
to say so, was in fact very sleepy. The heavy
supper and the heat of the room pulled so hard on his
eyelids that he could scarcely keep them up.
He murmured his excuses and said he believed he would
like to retire.
“Don’t you be bashful
about sayin’ so,” exclaimed Leffingwell
heartily, “’cause I don’t think
I could keep up more’n a half hour longer.”
Mrs. Leffingwell drew the curtain
shutting off one bed and a small space around it.
Dick, used to primitive customs, said good-night and
retired within his alcove, taking his saddle bags.
There was a small window near the foot of the room,
and when he noticed it he resolved to let in a little
air later on. The mountaineers liked hot rooms
all the time, but he did not. This window contained
no glass, but was closed with a broad shutter.
The boy undressed and got into bed,
placing his saddle bags on the foot of it, and the
pistol that he carried in his belt under his head.
He fell asleep almost immediately and had he been asked
beforehand he would have said that nothing could awake
him before morning. Nevertheless he awoke before
midnight, and it was a very slight thing that caused
him to come out of sleep. Despite the languor
produced by food and heat a certain nervous apprehension
had been at work in the boy’s mind, and it followed
him into the unknown regions of sleep. His body
was dead for a time and his mind too, but this nervous
power worked on, almost independently of him.
It had noted the sound of voices nearby, and awakened
him, as if he had been shaken by a rough hand.
He sat up in his bed and became conscious
of a hot and aching head. Then he remembered
the window, and softly drawing two pegs that fastened
it in order that he might not awaken his good hosts,
he opened it inward a few inches.
The cold air poured in at the crevice
and felt like heaven on his face. His temples
quit throbbing and his head ceased to ache. He
had not noticed at first the cause that really awakened
him, but as he settled back into bed, grateful for
the fresh air, the same mysterious power gave him
a second warning signal.
He heard the hum of voices and sat
up again. It was merely the Leffingwells in
the bed at the far end of the room, talking!
Perhaps he had not been asleep more than an hour,
and it was natural that they should lie awake a while,
talking about the coming of this young stranger or
any other event of the day that interested them.
Then he caught a tone or an inflection that he did
not remember to have been used by either of the Leffingwells.
A third signal of alarm was promptly registered on
his brain.
He leaned from the bed and pulling
aside the curtain a half an inch or so, looked into
the room. The fire had died down except a few
coals which cast but a faint light. Yet it was
sufficient to show Dick that the two Leffingwells
had not gone to bed. They were sitting fully
clothed before the fireplace, and three other persons
were with them.
As Dick stared his eyes grew more
used to the half dusk and he saw clearly. The
three strangers were young men, all armed heavily,
and the resemblance of two of them to the Leffingwells
was so striking that he had no doubt they were their
sons. Now he understood about those empty stalls.
The third man, who had been sitting with his shoulder
toward Dick, turned his face presently, and the boy
with difficulty repressed an exclamation. It
was the one who had reined his horse across the road
to stop him. A fourth and conclusive signal of
alarm was registered upon his brain.
He began to dress rapidly and without
noise. Meanwhile he listened intently and could
hear the words they spoke. The woman was pleading
with them to let him go. He was only a harmless
lad, and while these were dark days, a crime committed
now might yet be punished.
“A harmless boy,” said
the strange man. “He’s quick, an’
strong enough, I tell you. You should have seen
how he rode me down, and then shot Garmon in the arm.”
“I’d like to have that
hoss of his,” said the elder Leffingwell.
“He’s the finest brute I ever laid eyes
on. Sech power an’ sech action. I
noticed him at once, when Mason come ridin’ up.
S’pose we jest take the hoss and send the boy
on.”
“A hoss like that would be knowed,”
protested the woman. “What if sojers come
lookin’ fur him!”
“We could run him off in the
hills an’ keep him there a while,” said
Leffingwell. “I know places where sojers
wouldn’t find that hoss in a thousand years.
What do you say to that, Kerins?”
“Good as fur as it goes,”
replied Kerins, “but it don’t go fur enough
by a long shot. The Yanks whipped the Johnnies
in a big battle at Mill Spring. Me an’
my pardners have been hangin’ ‘roun’
in the woods, seein’ what would happen.
Now, we know that this boy rode straight from the
tent of General Thomas hisself. He’s a
Union sojer, an’ young as he is, he’s
an officer. He wouldn’t be sent out by
General Thomas hisself ’less it was on big business.
He’s got messages, dispatches of some kind
that are worth a heap to somebody. With all the
armies gatherin’ in the south an’ west
of the state it stands to reason that them dispatches
mean a lot. Now, we’ve got to get ’em
an’ get the full worth of ’em from them
to whom they’re worth the most.”
“He’s got a pistol,”
said the elder Leffingwell, “I seed it in his
belt. If he wakes before we grab him he’ll
shoot.”
The man Kerins laughed.
“He’ll never get a chance
to shoot,” he said. “Why, after all
he went through today, he’ll sleep like a log
till mornin’.”
“That’s so,” said
one of the young Leffingwells, “an’ Kerins
is right. We ought to grab them dispatches.
Likely in one way or another we kin git a heap fur
’em.”
“Shut up, Jim, you fool,”
said his mother sharply. “Do you want murder
on your hands? Stealin’ hosses is bad enough,
but if that boy has got the big dispatches you say
he has, an’ he’s missin’, don’t
you think that sojers will come after him? An’
they’ll trace him to this house, an’ I
tell you that in war trials don’t last long.
Besides, he’s a nice boy an’ he spoke
nice all the time to pap an’ me.”
But her words did not seem to make
any impression upon the others, except her husband,
who protested again that it would be enough to take
the horse. As for the dispatches it wasn’t
wise for them to fool with such things. But
Kerins insisted on going the whole route and the young
Leffingwells were with him.
Meanwhile Dick had dressed with more
rapidity than ever before in his life, fully alive
to the great dangers that threatened. But his
fear was greatest lest he might lose the precious
dispatches that he bore. For a few moments he
did not know what to do. He might take his pistols
and fight, but he could not fight them all with success.
Then that pleasant flood of cold air gave him the
key.
While they were still talking he put
his saddle bags over his arm, opened the shutter its
full width, and dropped quietly to the ground outside,
remembering to take the precaution of closing the shutter
behind him, lest the sudden inrush of cold startle
the Leffingwells and their friends.
It was an icy night, but Dick did
not stop to notice it. He ran to the stable,
saddled and bridled his horse in two minutes, and in
another minute was flying westward over the flinty
road, careless whether or not they heard the beat
of his horse’s hoofs.