A MEETING AT NIGHT
Dick heard above the thundering hoofbeats
only a single shout, and then, as he glanced backward,
the house was lost in the moonlight. When he
secured his own horse he had noticed that all the empty
stalls were now filled, no doubt by the horses of
the young Leffingwells and Kerins, but he was secure
in his confidence that none could overtake the one
he rode.
He felt of that inside pocket of his
vest. The precious dispatch was there, tightly
pinned into its hidden refuge, and as for himself,
refreshed, warm, and strong after food, rest, and sleep,
he felt equal to any emergency. He had everything
with him. The stout saddle bags were lying across
the saddle. He had thrust the holster of pistols
into them, but he took it out now, and hung it in
its own place, also across the saddle.
Although he was quite sure there would
be no pursuit—the elder Leffingwells would
certainly keep their sons from joining it—he
sent his great horse straight ahead at a good pace
for a long time, the road being fairly good.
His excitement and rapid motion kept him from noticing
at first the great bitterness of the cold.
When he had gone five or six miles
he drew his horse down to a walk. Then, feeling
the intensity of the cold as the mercury was far below
zero, he dismounted, looped the reins over his arms,
and walked a while. For further precaution he
took his blanket-roll and wrapped the two blankets
about his body, especially protecting his neck and
ears.
He found that the walking, besides
keeping him warmer, took all the stiffness out of
his muscles, and he continued on foot several miles.
He passed two brooks and a creek, all frozen over so
solidly that the horse passed on them without breaking
the ice. It was an extremely difficult task
to make the animal try the ice, but after much delicate
coaxing and urging he always succeeded.
He saw two more cabins at the roadside,
but he did not think of asking hospitality at either.
The night was now far advanced and he wished to put
many more miles between him and the Leffingwell home
before he sought rest again.
He mounted his horse once more, and
increased his speed. Now the reaction came after
so much exertion and excitement. He began to
feel depressed. He was very young and he had
no comrade. The loneliness of the winter night
in a country full of dangers was appalling. It
seemed to him, as his heart sank, that all things
had conspired against him. But the moment of
despair was brief. He summoned his courage anew
and rode on bravely, although the sense of loneliness
in its full power remained.
The moonlight was quite bright.
The sky was a deep silky blue, in which myriads of
cold stars shone and danced. By and by he skirted
for a while the banks of a small river, which he knew
flowed southward into the Cumberland, and which would
not cross his path. The rays of the moonlight
on its frozen surface looked like darts of cold steel.
He left the river presently and the
road bent a little toward the north. Then the
skies darkened somewhat but lightened again as the
dawn began to come. The red but cold edge of
the sun appeared above the mountains that he had left
behind, and then the morning came, pale and cold.
Dick stopped at a little brook, broke
the ice and drank, letting his horse drink after him.
Then he ate heartily of the cold bread and meat in
his knapsack. Pitying his horse he searched until
he found a little grass not yet killed by winter in
the lee of the hill, and waited until he cropped it
all.
He mounted and resumed his journey
through a country in which the hills were steadily
becoming lower, with larger stretches of level land
appearing between them. By night he should be
beyond the last low swell of the mountains and into
the hill region proper. As he calculated distances
his heart gave a great thump. He was to locate
Buell some distance north of Green River, and his
journey would take him close to Pendleton.
The boy was torn by great and conflicting
emotions. He would carry out with his life the
task that Thomas had assigned to him, and yet he wished
to stop near Pendleton, if only for an hour.
Yes an hour would do! And it
could not interfere with his duty! But Pendleton
was a Southern stronghold. Everybody there knew
him, and they all knew, too, that he was in the service
of the North. How could he pass by without being
seen and what might happen then? The terrible
conflict went on in his mind, and it was stilled only
when he decided to leave it to time and chance.
He rode that day almost without interruption,
securing an ample dinner, where no one chose to ask
questions, accepting him at his own statement of himself
and probably believing it. He heard that a small
Southern force was to the southward, probably marching
toward Bowling Green, where a great Confederate army
under Albert Sidney Johnston was said to be concentrated.
But the news gave him no alarm. His own road
was still leading west slightly by north.
When night came he was in the pleasant
and fertile hill country, dotted with double brick
houses, and others of wood, all with wide porticos,
supported by white pillars. It looked smiling
and prosperous even in winter. The war had done
no ravages here, and he saw men at work about the
great barns.
He slept in the house of a big farmer,
who liked the frank voice and eyes of the lad, and
who cared nothing for any errand upon which he might
be riding. He slept, too, without dreams, and
without awakening until the morning, when he shared
a solid breakfast with the family.
Dick obtained at the farmhouse a fresh
supply of cold food for his saddle bags, to be held
against an emergency, although it was likely now that
he could obtain all he needed at houses as he passed.
Receiving the good wishes of his hosts he rode on
through the hills. The intense cold which kept
troops from marching much really served him, as the
detachments about the little towns stayed in their
camps.
The day was quite clear, with the
mercury still well below zero, but his heavy clothing
kept him warm and comfortable. His great horse
showed no signs of weariness. Apparently his
sinews were made of steel.
Noon came, but Dick did not seek any
farmhouse for what was called dinner in that region.
Instead he ate from his saddle bags as he rode on.
He did not wish to waste time, and, moreover, he had
taken his resolution. He would go near Pendleton.
It was on his most direct route, but he would pass
in the night.
As the cold twilight descended he
came into familiar regions. Like all other young
Kentuckians he was a great horseman, and with Harry
Kenton and other lads of his age he had ridden nearly
everywhere in a circuit of thirty miles around Pendleton.
It was with many a throb of the heart
that he now recognized familiar scenes. He knew
the fields, the forests and the houses. But he
was glad that the night had come. Others would
know him, and he did not wish to be seen when he rode
on such an errand. He had been saving his horse
in the afternoon, but now he pushed him forward at
a much faster gait. The great horse responded
willingly and Dick felt the powerful body working
beneath him, smooth and tireless like a perfect machine.
He passed nobody on the road.
People hugged their fires on such a cold night, and
he rode hour after hour without interruption.
It was nearly midnight when he stopped on a high
hill, free of forest, and looked down upon Pendleton.
The wonderful clearness of the winter night helped
him. All the stars known to man were out, and
helped to illuminate the world with a clear but cold
radiance.
Although a long distance away Dick
could see Pendleton clearly. There was no foliage
on the trees now, and nearly every house was visible.
The great pulse in his throat throbbed hard as he looked.
He saw the steeples of the churches, the white pillars
of the court house, and off to one side the academy
in which he and Harry Kenton had gone to school together.
He saw further away Colonel Kenton’s own house
on another hill. It, too, had porticos, supported
by white pillars which gleamed in the moonlight.
Then his eyes traveled again around
the half circle before him. The place for which
he was looking could not be seen. But he knew
that it would be so. It was a low house, and
the evergreens about it, the pines and cedars would
hide it at any time. But he knew the exact spot,
and he wanted his eyes to linger there a little before
he rode straight for it.
Now the great pulse in his throat
leaped, and something like a sob came from him.
But it was not a sob of unhappiness. He clucked
to his horse and turned from the main road into a
narrower one that led by the low house among the evergreens.
Yet he was a boy of powerful will, and despite his
eagerness, he restrained his horse and advanced very
slowly. Sometimes he turned the animal upon the
dead turf by the side of the road in order that his
footsteps might make no sound.
He drew slowly nearer, and when he
saw the roof and eaves of the low house among the
evergreens the great pulse in his throat leaped so
hard that it was almost unbearable. He reached
the edge of the lawn that came down to the road, and
hidden by the clipped cone of a pine he saw a faint
light shining.
He dismounted, opened the gate softly,
and led his horse upon the lawn, hitching him between
two pines that grew close together, concealing him
perfectly.
“Be quiet, old fellow,”
he whispered, stroking the great intelligent head.
“Nobody will find you here and I’ll come
back for you.”
The horse rubbed his nose against
his arm but made no other movement. Then Dick
walked softly toward the house, pulses beating hard
and paused just at the edge of a portico, where he
stood in the shadow of a pillar. He saw the light
clearly now. It shone from a window of the low
second story. It came from her window and her
room. Doubtless she was thinking at that very
moment of him. His throat ached and tears came
into his eyes. The light, clear and red, shone
steadily from the window and made a band across the
lawn.
He picked a handful of sand from the
walk that led to the front door and threw it against
the window. He knew that she was brave and would
respond, but waiting only a moment or two he threw
a second handful fully and fairly against the glass.
The lower half of the window was thrown
open and a head appeared, where the moonlight fell
clearly upon it. It was the head of a beautiful
woman, framed in thick, silken yellow hair, the eyes
deep blue, and the skin of the wonderful fairness
so often found in that state. The face was that
of a woman about thirty-seven or eight years of age,
and without a wrinkle or flaw.
“Mother!” called Dick
in a low voice as he stepped from the shadow of the
pillar.
There was a cry and the face disappeared
like a flash from the window. But he had only
a few moments to wait. Her swift feet brought
her from the room, down the stairway, and along the
hall to the door, which she threw open. The
next instant Mrs. Mason had her son in her arms.
“Oh, Dick, Dicky, boy, how did
you come!” she exclaimed. “You were
here under my window, and I did not even know that
you were alive!”
Her tears of joy fell upon his face
and he was moved profoundly. Dick loved his beautiful
young mother devoutly, and her widowhood had bound
them all the more closely together.
“I’ve come a long distance,
and I’ve come in many ways, mother,” he
replied, “by train, by horseback, and I have
even walked.”
“You have come here on foot?”
“No, mother. I rode directly
over your own smooth lawn on one of the biggest horses
you ever saw, and he’s tied now between two of
the pine trees. Come, we must go in the house.
It’s too cold for you out here. Do you
know that the mercury is about ten degrees below zero.”
“What a man you have grown!
Why, you must be two inches taller than you were,
when you went away, and how sunburned and weather-beaten
you are, too! Oh, Dicky, this terrible, terrible
war! Not a word from you in months has got through
to me!”
“Nor a word from you to me,
mother, but I have not suffered so much so far.
I was at Bull Run, where we lost, and I was at Mill
Spring, where we won, but I was unhurt.”
“Perhaps you have come back to stay,”
she said hopefully.
“No, mother, not to stay.
I took a chance in coming by here to see you, but
I couldn’t go on without a few minutes.
Inside now, mother, your hands are growing cold.”
They went in at the door, and closed
it behind them. But there was another faithful
soul on guard that night. In the dusky hail loomed
a gigantic black figure in a blue checked dress, blue
turban on head.
“Marse Dick?” she said.
“Juliana!” he exclaimed. “How
did you know that I was here?”
“Ain’t I done heard Miss
Em’ly cry out, me always sleepin’ so light,
an’ I hears her run down the hail. An’
then I dresses an’ comes an’ sees you
two through the crack o’ the do’, an’
then I waits till you come in.”
Dick gave her a most affectionate
greeting, knowing that she was as true as steel.
She rejoiced in her flowery name, as many other colored
women rejoiced in theirs, but her heart inhabited
exactly the right spot in her huge anatomy.
She drew mother and son into the sitting-room, where
low coals still burned on the hearth. Then she
went up to Mrs. Mason’s bedroom and put out
the light, after which she came back to the sitting-room,
and, standing by a window in silence, watched over
the two over whom she had watched so long.
“Why is it that you can stay
such a little while?” asked Mrs. Mason.
“Mother,” replied Dick
in a low tone, “General Thomas, who won the
battle at Mill Spring, has trusted me. I bear
a dispatch of great importance. It is to go
to General Buell, and it has to do with the gathering
of the Union troops in the western and southern parts
of our state, and in Tennessee. I must get through
with it, and in war, mother, time counts almost as
much as battles. I can stop only a few minutes
even for you.”
“I suppose it is so. But
oh, Dicky, won’t this terrible war be over soon?”
“I don’t think so, mother. It’s
scarcely begun yet.”
Mrs. Mason said nothing, but stared
into the coals. The great negress, Juliana,
standing at the window, did not move.
“I suppose you are right, Dick,”
she said at last with a sigh, “but it is awful
that our people should be arrayed so against one another.
There is your cousin, Harry Kenton, a good boy, too,
on the other side.”
“Yes, mother, I caught a glimpse
of him at Bull Run. We came almost face to face
in the smoke. But it was only for an instant.
Then the smoke rushed in between. I don’t
think anything serious has happened to him.”
Mrs. Mason shuddered.
“I should mourn him next to
you,” she said, “and my brother-in-law,
Colonel Kenton, has been very good. He left orders
with his people to watch over us here. Pendleton
is strongly Southern as you know, but nobody would
do us any harm, unless it was the rough people from
the hills.”
Colonel Kenton’s wife had been
Mrs. Mason’s elder sister, and Dick, as he also
sat staring into the coals, wondered why people who
were united so closely should yet be divided so much.
“Mother,” he said, “when
I came through the mountains with my friends we stopped
at a house in which lived an old, old woman.
She must have been nearly a hundred. She knew
your ancestor and mine, the famous and learned Paul
Cotter, from whom you and I are descended, and she
also knew his friend and comrade, the mighty scout
and hunter, Henry Ware, who became the great governor
of Kentucky.”
“How strange!”
“But the strangest is yet to
be told. Harry Kenton, when he went east to
join Beauregard before Bull Run, stopped at the same
house, and when she first saw him she only looked
into the far past. She thought it was Henry
Ware himself, and she saluted him as the governor.
What do you think of that, mother?”
“It’s a startling coincidence.”
“But may it not be an omen?
I’m not superstitious, mother, but when things
come together in such a queer fashion it’s bound
to make you think. When Harry’s paths
and mine cross in such a manner maybe it means that
we shall all come together again, and be united as
we were.”
“Maybe.”
“At any rate,” said Dick with a little
laugh, “we’ll hope that it does.”
While the boy was not noticing his
mother had made a sign to Juliana, who had crept out
of the room. Now she returned, bearing food upon
a tray, and Dick, although he was not hungry, ate
to please his mother.
“You will stay until morning?” she said.
“No, mother. I can’t afford to be
seen here. I must leave in the dark.”
“Then until it is nearly morning.”
“Nor that either, mother.
My time is about up already. I could never
betray the trust that General Thomas has put in me.
My dispatches not only tell of the gathering of our
own troops, but they contain invaluable information
concerning the Confederate concentration which General
Thomas learned from his scouts and spies. Mother,
I think a great battle is coming here in the west.”
She shuddered, but she did not seek again to delay
him in his duty.
“I am proud,” she said,
“that you have won the confidence of your general,
and that you ride upon such an important errand.
I should have been glad if you had stayed at home,
Dick, but since you have chosen to be a soldier, I
am rejoiced that you have risen in the esteem of your
officers. Write to me as often as you can.
Maybe none of your letters will reach me, but at
least start them. I shall start mine, too.”
“Of course, mother,” said Dick, “and
now it’s time for me to ride hard.”
“Why, you have been here only a half hour!”
“Nearer an hour, mother, and
on this journey of mine time means a lot. I must
say good-bye now to you and Juliana.”
The two women followed him down the
lawn to the point where his horse was hitched between
the two big pines. Mrs. Mason patted the horse’s
great head and murmured to him to carry her son well.
“Did you ever see a finer horse,
mother?” said Dick proudly. “He’s
the very pick of the army.”
He threw his arms around her neck,
kissed her more than once, sprang into the saddle
and rode away in the darkness.
The two women, the black and the white,
sisters in grief, and yet happy that he had come,
went slowly back into the house to wait, while the
boy, a man’s soul in him, strode on to war.
Dick was far from Pendleton when the
dawn broke, and now he had full need of caution.
His horse was bearing him fast into debatable ground,
where every man suspected his neighbor, and it remained
for force alone to tell to which side the region belonged.
But the extreme delicacy of the tension came to Dick’s
aid. People hesitated to ask questions, lest
questions equally difficult be asked of them in return.
It was a great time to mind one’s own business.
He rode on, fortune with him for the
present, and his course was still west slightly by
north. He slept under roofs, and he learned that
in the country into which he had now come the Union
sympathizers were more numerous than the Confederate.
The majority of the Kentuckians, whatever their personal
feelings, were not willing to shatter the republic.
He heard definitely that here in the
west the North was gathering armies greater than any
that he had supposed. Besides the troops from
the three states just across the Ohio River the hardy
lumbermen and pioneers were pouring down from Michigan,
Wisconsin, and Minnesota. Hunters in deerskin
suits and buffalo moccasins had already come from the
far Nebraska Territory.
The power of the west and the northwest
was converging upon his state, which gave eighty thousand
of its men to the Northern cause, while half as many
more went away to the Southern armies, particularly
to the one under the brilliant and daring Albert Sidney
Johnston, which hung a sinister menace before the
Northern front. One hundred and twenty thousand
troops sent to the two armies by a state that contained
but little more than a million people! It was
said at the time that as Kentucky went, so would go
the fortunes of the Union and in the end it was so.
But these facts and reckonings were
not much in Dick’s mind just then. He was
thinking of Buell’s camp and of the message that
he bore. Again and again he felt of that little
inside pocket of his vest to see that it was there,
although he knew that by no chance could he have lost
it.
When he was within fifteen miles of
Buell’s camp a heavy snow began to fall.
But he did not mind it. The powerful horse that
had borne him so well carried him safely on to his
destination, and before the sundown of that day the
young messenger was standing before General Don Carlos
Buell, one of the most puzzling characters whom he
was to meet in the whole course of the war.
He had found Thomas a silent man, but he found Buell
even more so. He received Dick in an ordinary
tent, thanked him as he saluted and handed him the
dispatch, and then read General Thomas’ message.
Dick saw before him a shortish, thickset
man, grim of feature, who did not ask him a word until
he had finished the dispatch.
“You know what this contains?”
he said, when he came to the end.
“Yes, General Thomas made me
memorize it, that I might destroy it if I were too
hard pressed.”
“He tells us that Johnston is
preparing for some great blow and he gives the numbers
and present location of the hostile forces. Valuable
information for us, if it is used. You have done
well, Mr. Mason. To what force were you attached?”
“A small division of Pennsylvania
troops under Major Hertford. They were to be
sent by General Thomas to General Grant at Cairo, Illinois.”
“And you would like to join them.”
“If you please, sir.”
“In view of your services your
wish is granted. It is likely that General Grant
will need all the men whom he can get. A detachment
leaves here early in the morning for Elizabethtown,
where it takes the train for Louisville, proceeding
thence by water to Cairo. You shall go with
these men. They are commanded by Colonel Winchester.
You may go now, Mr. Mason.”
He turned back to his papers and Dick,
thinking his manner somewhat curt, left his tent.
But he was pleased to hear that the detail was commanded
by Colonel Winchester. Arthur Winchester was
a man of forty-one or two who lived about thirty miles
north of Pendleton. He was a great landowner,
of high character and pleasant manners. Dick
had met him frequently in his childhood, and the Colonel
received him with much warmth.
“I’m glad to know, Dick,”
he said familiarly, “that you’re going
with us. I’m fond of Pendleton, and I
like to have one of the Pendleton boys in my command.
If all that we hear of this man Grant is true, we’ll
see action, action hot and continuous.”
They rode to Elizabethtown, where
Dick was compelled to leave his great horse for Buell’s
men, and went by train to Louisville, going thence
by steamer down the Ohio River to Cairo, at its junction
with the Mississippi, where they stood at last in
the presence of that general whose name was beginning
to be known in the west.