THE OPEN DOOR
“Dick,” said Colonel Winchester
the next morning, “I think you are the best
scout and trailer among my young officers. Mr.
Pennington, you are probably the best on the plains,
and I’ve no doubt, Warner, that you would do
well in the mountains, but for the hills, forests and
rivers I’ll have to choose Dick. I’ve
another errand for you, my boy. You’re
to go on foot, and you’re to take this dispatch
to Admiral Porter, who commands the iron-clads in
the river near the city. Conceal it carefully
about you, but I anticipate no great danger for you,
as Vicksburg is pretty well surrounded by our forces.”
The dispatch was written on thin,
oiled paper. Dick hid it away in the lining
of his coat and departed upon another important mission,
full of pride that he should be chosen for it.
He had all the passwords and carried two good pistols
in his belt. Rich in experience, he felt able
to care for himself, even should the peril be greater
than Colonel Winchester had expected.
The sun was not far above the horizon
but it was warm and brilliant, and it lighted up the
earth, throwing a golden glow over the plateau of
Vicksburg, the great maze of ravines and thickets and
the many waters.
He passed along the lines, walking
rapidly southward, and saw more than one officer of
his acquaintance. Hertford’s cavalry were
in a field, and the colonel himself sat on a portion
of the rail fence that had enclosed it. He hailed
the lad pleasantly.
“Into the forest again, Dick,” he said.
“Not this time, sir,”
Dick replied. “It’s just a little
trip, down the river.”
“Success to the trip and a speedy return.”
Dick nodded and walked on. He
was quite sure that his dispatch was an order from
Grant for Porter to come up the stream and join in
a general attack which everybody felt sure was planned
for an early date.
As he passed through the regiments
and brigades he received much good-humored chaff.
The great war of America differed widely from the
great wars of Europe. The officers and men were
more nearly on a plane of equality. The vast
majority of them had been volunteers in the beginning
and perhaps this feeling of comradeship made them fight
all the better. North and South were alike in
it.
“Which way, sonny?” called
a voice from a group. “You don’t
find the fighting down there. It’s back
toward Vicksburg.”
Dick nodded and smiled.
“Maybe he’s out walking for exercise.
These officers ride too much.”
Dick walked on with a steady swinging
step. He regarded the sunbrowned, careless youths
with the genuine affection of a brother. Many
of them were as young as he or younger, but they were
now veterans of battle and march. Napoleon’s
soldiers themselves could not have boasted of more
experience than they.
He was coming to the last link in
the steel chain, and the colonel of a regiment, an
old man, warned him to be careful as he approached
the river.
“Southern sharpshooters are
among the ravines and thickets,” he said.
“They fired on our lads about dawn and then escaped
easily in the thick cover.”
“Thank you, sir,” said
Dick, “I’ll be on my guard.”
Yet he did not feel the presence of danger.
Youth perhaps becomes more easily hardened in war
than middle age, or perhaps it thinks less of consequences.
The Union cannon, many of great weight and power,
had begun already to fire upon Vicksburg. Huge
shells and shot were rained upon the city. Pemberton
had two hundred guns facing the river and the army,
but to spare his ammunition they made little reply.
Dick looked back now and then.
He saw flakes of fire on the northern horizon, puffs
of smoke and the curving shells. He felt that
Vicksburg was no pleasant place to be in just now,
and yet it must be full of civilians, many of them
women and children. He was sorry for them.
It was Dick’s nature to see both sides of a quarrel.
He could never hate the Southerners, because they
saw one way and he another.
It was a passing emotion. It
was too fine a morning for youth to grieve. At
the distance the plumes of smoke made by the shells
became decorative rather than deadly. From a
crest he saw upon the plateau of Vicksburg and even
discerned the dim outline of houses. Looking
the other way, he saw the smoke of the iron-clads
down the river, and he also caught glimpses of the
Mississippi, gold in the morning sun over its vast
breadth.
Then he entered the thickets, and,
bearing in mind the kindly warning of the old colonel,
proceeded slowly and with extreme caution. The
Southerners knew every inch of the ground here and
he knew none. He came to a ravine and to his
dismay found that a considerable stream was flowing
through it toward the bayou. It was yellow water,
and he thought he might find a tree, fallen across
the stream, which would serve him as a foot log, but
a hunt of a few minutes disclosed none, and, hesitating
no longer, he prepared to wade.
He put his belt with the pistols in
it around his neck and stepped in boldly. His
feet sank in the mud. The water rose to his knees
and then to his waist. It was, in truth, deeper
than he had expected—one could never tell
about these yellow, opaque streams. He took another
step and plunged into a hole up to his shoulders.
Angry that he should be wet through
and through, and with such muddy water too, he crossed
the stream.
He looked down with dismay at his
uniform. The sun would soon dry it, but until
he got a chance to clean it, it would remain discolored
and yellow, like the jeans clothes which the poorer
farmers of the South often wore. And yet the
accident that he bemoaned, the bath in water thick
with mud, was to prove his salvation.
Dick shook himself like a big dog,
throwing off as much of the water as he could.
He had kept his pistols dry and he rebuckled his belt
around his waist. Then he returned to his errand.
Among the thickets he saw but little. Vicksburg,
the Mississippi, and the Union camp disappeared.
He beheld only a soft soil, many bushes and scrub forest.
After going a little distance he was compelled to
stop again and consider. It was curious how
one could lose direction in so small a space.
He paused and listened, intending
to regain his course through the sense of hearing.
From the north and east came the thunder of the siege
guns. It had grown heavier and was continuous
now. Once more he was sorry for Vicksburg, because
the Union gunners were unsurpassed and he was sure
that bombs and shells were raining upon the devoted
town.
Now he knew that he must go west by
south, and he made his way over difficult country,
crossing ravines, climbing hills, and picking his
path now and then through soft ground, the most exhausting
labor of all. The sun poured down upon him and
his uniform dried fast. He had just crossed
one of the ravines and was climbing into the thicket
beyond when a voice asked:
“See any of the Yanks in front?”
Dick’s heart stood still, and
then all his presence of mind came back. Not
in vain had the kindly colonel warned him of the Southern
sharpshooters in the bush.
“No,” he replied.
“They seem to be farther up. One of our
fellows told me he saw a whole regiment of them off
there to the right.”
He plunged deeper into the bush and
walked on as if he were among his own comrades.
He realized that his faded uniform with its dye of
yellow mud had caused him to be mistaken for one of
Pemberton’s men. His accent, which was
Kentuckian and therefore Southern, had helped him also.
He passed three or four other men, bent over, rifle
in hand and watching, and he nodded to them familiarly.
In such a crisis he knew that boldness and ease were
his best cards, and he said to one of the men, with
a laugh:
“You’ll have to tell us
Tennesseeans about all your bayous and creeks.
I’ve just fallen into one that had no right to
be there.”
“You Tennesseeans need a bath
anyhow,” replied the man, chuckling.
“We’d never choose a Mississippi
stream for it,” said Dick in the same vein,
and passed on leaving the rifleman in high good humor.
How wonderfully these Southerners were like the Northerners!
He noticed presently a half-dozen other sharpshooters
in the Confederate butternut, prowling among the bushes,
and through an opening he saw his own people to the
west, but too far away to be reached by anything but
artillery. The slow, deep music of the Northern
guns came steadily to his ear, but their fire was
always turned toward Vicksburg.
Dick knew that his position was extremely
critical. Perhaps it was growing more so all
the while, but he was never cooler. A quiet lad,
he always rose wonderfully to an emergency. He
was quite sure that he was among Mississippi troops,
and they could not possibly know all the soldiers
from the other states gathered for the defense of Vicksburg.
He did not differ from those around him in any respect,
except that he did not carry a rifle.
He paused and looked back thoughtfully
at the distant Union troops.
“Can you tell me how they’re
posted?” he said to a tall, thin middle-aged
man who had a chew of tobacco in his cheek. “I
carry dispatches to General Pemberton, and the more
information I can give him the better.”
“Yes, I kin tell you,”
replied the man, somewhat flattered. “They’re
posted everywhere. What, with their army and
them boats of theirs in the river, they’ve got
a high fence around us, all staked and ridered.”
“It doesn’t take any more
work to tear a fence down than it does to build it
up.”
“I reckon you’re right
thar, stranger. But was you at Champion Hill?”
“No, I missed that.”
“Then it was a good thing for
you that you did. I didn’t set much store
by the Yanks when this war began. One good Southerner
could whip five of ‘em any time, our rip-roarin’,
fire-eatin’ speech-makers said. I knowed
then, too, that they was right, but I was up thar in
Kentucky a while, an’ after Donelson I reckoned
that four was about as many as I wanted to tackle
all to oncet. Then thar was Shiloh, an’
I kinder had a thought that if three of ’em
jumped on me at one time I’d hev my hands purty
full to lick ’em. Then come Corinth, an,’
reasonin’ with myself, I said I wouldn’t
take on more’n two Yanks at the same time.
An’ now, since I’ve been at Champion
Hill, I know that the Yank is a pow’ful good
fighter, an’ I reckon one to one jest about
suits me, an’ even then I’d like to have
a leetle advantage in the draw.”
“I feel that way about it, too.
The Yankees are going to make a heap of trouble for
us here. But I must be going. What’s
the best path into Vicksburg?”
“See that little openin’
in the bushes. Follow it. Jest over the
hill you’ll run into a passel of our fellers,
but pay no ’tention to ’em. If they
ask you who you are an’ whar you’re boun’
tell ’em to go straight to blazes, while you
go to Vicksburg.”
“Thank you,” said Dick,
“I like to meet an obliging and polite man like
you. It helps even in war.”
“Don’t mention it.
When I wuz a little shaver my ma told me always to
mind my manners, an’ when I didn’t she
whaled the life out of me. An’, do you
know, stranger, she’s just a leetle, withered
old woman, but if she could ‘pear here right
now I’d be willin’ to set down right in
these bushes an’ say, ‘Ma, take up that
stick over thar an’ beat me across the shoulders
an’ back with it as hard as you kin.’
I’d feel good all over.”
“I believe you,” said Dick, who thought
of his own mother.
He followed the indicated path until
he was out of sight of everybody, and then he plunged
into the bushes and marsh toward the river. When
he was well hidden he stopped and considered.
It was quite evident that he had wandered
from the right road, but it was no easy task to get
back into it. There was an unconscious Confederate
cordon about him and he must pass through it somewhere.
He moved farther toward the river, but only went
deeper into the swamp.
He turned to the south and soon reached
firm ground, but he heard Confederate pickets talking
in front of him. Then he caught glimpses of
two or three men watching among the trees, and he lay
down in a clump of bushes. He might pass them
as he had passed the others, but he thought it wiser
not to take the risk.
He was willing also to rest a little,
as he had done a lot of hard walking. His clothing
was now dry, and the mud had dried upon it.
He turned aside into one of the deep
ravines and then into a smaller one leading from it.
The bushes were dense there and he lay down among
them, so completely hidden that he was invisible ten
feet away. Here he still heard the mutter of
the guns, which came in a long, droning sound, and
occasionally a rifle cracked at some point closer by.
The Union army was still busy and he felt a few moments
of despondency. His dispatch undoubtedly was
of great importance, and yet he was not able to deliver
it. It was highly probable that for precaution’s
sake other messengers bore the same dispatch, but
he was anxious to arrive with his nevertheless, and
he wanted, too, to arrive first. The last now
seemed impossible and the first improbable.
The crackling fire came nearer.
Owing to the lack of percussion caps, Pemberton had
ordered his men to use their rifles sparingly, but
evidently a considerable body of sharpshooters near
Dick were attempting a flanking movement of some kind,
and meant to carry it out with bullets. He was
impatient to see, but prudence kept him in his covert,
a prudence that was soon justified, as presently he
heard voices very near him and then the sound of footsteps.
He rose up a little and saw several
hundred Confederate soldiers passing on the slopes
not more than a hundred yards away. They went
south of him, and he recognized with growing alarm
that the wall across his way was growing higher.
When they were gone and he could no longer hear their
tread among the bushes he slipped from his hiding place
and went directly toward Vicksburg. Being within
an iron ring he thought that perhaps he would be safer
somewhere near the center. He might make his
way without much trouble through the vast confused
crowd in Vicksburg, and then in the night go down
the river’s edge and to the fleet.
It was a daring idea, so very daring
that it appealed to the strain of high adventure in
the lad. He was encouraged, too, by his earlier
and easy success in passing among the Confederate
soldiers. But in order not to appear reckless
and to satisfy his own conscience he tried once more
for the way to the south. But the soldiers entirely
barred the path there, and, being on some duty that
required extreme vigilance, they were likely to prove
exacting.
He advanced with a clear mind toward
Vicksburg, picking his way among the forests and ravines,
but, after long walking over most difficult ground,
he saw before him extensive earthworks thronged with
Southern troops. When he turned westward the
result was the same, and then it became evident that
there was no flaw in the iron ring. He could
not go through to Porter, he could not go back to
his own army, but Vicksburg invited him as a guest.
He would make the trial at night.
It was a long wait, but he dared not risk it by day,
and, going back into one of the ravines, he sought
a secluded and sheltered place. Threshing the
bushes to drive away possible snakes, he crawled into
a clump and lay there. Resolved to be patient
in spite of everything, he did not stir, but listened
to the far throbbing of the cannon which poured an
incessant storm of missiles upon unhappy Vicksburg.
The warmth and the heavy air in the
ravine were relaxing. His brain grew so dull
and heavy that he fell asleep, and when he awoke the
twilight was coming. And yet he had lost nothing.
He had gained rather. The time had passed.
His body had been strengthened and his nerves steadied
while he slept.
The distant booming of the guns still
came. He had expected it. That was Grant.
He had wrapped the coil of steel around Vicksburg
and he would never relax. Dick felt that there
was no hope for the town, unless Johnston outside
could gather a powerful army and fight Grant on even
terms. But he considered it impossible, and there,
too, was the great artery of the river along which
flowed men and supplies of every kind for the Union.
The Southern twilight turned swiftly
into night and, coming from his lair, Dick walked
boldly toward the town. He had eaten nothing
since morning, but he had not noticed it, until this
moment, when he began to feel a little faintness.
He resolved that Vicksburg should supply him.
It was curious how much help he expected of Vicksburg,
a hostile town.
He saw lights soon both to right and
to left and he strengthened his soul. He knew
that he must be calm, but alert and quick with the
right answer. With his singular capacity for
meeting a crisis he advanced into the thick of danger
with a smiling face, even as his great ancestor, Paul
Cotter, had often done.
His calm was of short duration.
There was a rushing sound, something struck violently,
and a tremendous explosion followed. Fire flashed
before Dick’s eyes, pieces of red hot metal whistled
past his head, earth spattered him and he was thrown
to the ground.
He sprang up again, understanding
all instantly. A shell from his own army had
burst near him, and he had been thrown down by the
concussion. But he had not been hurt, and in
a few seconds his pulse beat steadily.
He heard a shout of laughter as he
stood, brushing the fresh dirt from his clothing.
He glanced up in some anger, but he saw at once that
the arrival of the shell had been most fortunate for
his plan. To come near annihilation by a Federal
gun certainly invested him with a Confederate character.
It was a group of young soldiers who
were laughing and their amusement was entirely good-natured.
They would have laughed the same way had the harmless
adventure befallen one of their own number. Dick
judged that they were from the Southwest.
“Close call,” he said,
smiling that attractive smile, which was visible even
in the twilight.
“It was a friendly shell,”
said one of the youths, “and it concluded not
to come too close to you. These Yankee shells
are so loving that sometimes they spray themselves
in little pieces all over a fellow, like a shower
of rice over a bride at a wedding.”
“How long do you think the Yankees
will keep it up?” asked Dick, putting indignation
in his tone. “Haven’t they any respect
for the night?”
“Not a bit. That fellow
Grant is a pounder. They say he’ll blow
away the whole plateau of Vicksburg if we don’t
drive him off.”
“Well, we’ll do it.
You wait till old Joe Johnston comes up. Then
we’ll shut him between the jaws of a vise and
squeeze the life out of him.”
“Hope so. Where’ve you been?”
“Down below the town. I’m coming
back with messages.”
“So long. Good luck.
Keep straight ahead, and you’ll find all the
generals you want.”
The lights increased and he went into
a small tavern, where he bought food and a cup of
coffee, paying in gold. The tavern keeper asked
no questions, but his eyes gleamed at sight of the
yellow coin.
“Mighty little of this comes
my way now,” he said frankly, “and our
own money is worth less and less every day. If
things keep on the way they’re headed it’ll
take a bale of it as big as a bale of cotton to pay
for one good, square meal.”
Dick laughed.
“Not so bad as that,”
he said. “You wait until we’ve given
Grant a big thrashing and have cleared their boats
out of the river. Then you’ll see our
money becoming real.”
The man shook his head.
“Seein’ will be believin’,”
he said, “an’ as I ain’t seein’
I ain’t believin’.”
Dick with a friendly good night went
out. Grant, the persistent, was still at work.
His cannon flared on the dark horizon and the shells
crashed in Vicksburg. Scarcely any portion of
the town was safe. Now and then a house was smashed
in and often the shells found victims.
The town was full of terror and confusion.
Many of the rich planters had come there with their
families for refuge. Women and children hid
from the terrible fire, and the civilians already had
begun to burrow. Caves had been dug deep into
the sides of the ravines and hundreds found in them
a rude but safe shelter.
Dick now found that his plans were
going wrong. He could wander about almost at
will and to any one to whom he spoke he still claimed
to be a Tennesseean, but he knew that it could not
last forever. Sooner or later, some officer
would question him closely, and then his tale would
be too thin for truth.
Unable to make a way toward the river,
he returned to the slopes and ravines, where they
were digging the caves, and then fortune which had
been smiling upon him turned its face the other way.
A small man in butternut and an enormous felt hat
passed near. He did not see Dick, but his very
presence gave the lad a shiver. He believed afterward
that before he saw him he had felt the proximity of
Slade.
The man, carrying a rifle, was hurrying
toward the center of the town, and Dick, after one
long look, hurried at equal speed the other way.
He knew that Slade, if he saw him, would recognize
him at once. Dusk and a muddy uniform would
not protect him.
It was his idea now to go down through
the ravines and make another trial toward the South.
He saw ahead of him a line of intrenchments, which
he was resolved to pass in some fashion, but the face
of fortune was still away from him. The unknown
officers who at any time might ask too many questions
appeared.
A captain, a sunbrowned, alert man,
stopped him at the edge of the bushes which clothed
the slopes of the ravine.
“Your regiment?” he asked sharply.
“Tennessee regiment, sir,”
replied Dick, afraid to mention any number, since
this officer might be a Tennesseean himself, and would
want further identification. But the man was
not to be put off—Dick judged from his
uniform that he was a colonel—and demanded
sharply his regiment’s number and his business.
The lad mumbled something under his
breath, hopeful that he would pass on, but the officer
stepped forward, looked at him closely and then suddenly
turned back the collar of his army jacket, disclosing
a bit of the under side yet blue.
“Thunderation, a Yankee spy!” he exclaimed.
Dick always believed that his life
was due to a sudden and violent impulse, or rather
a convulsive jerk, because he had no time to think.
He threw off the officer’s hand, dashed his fist
into his face, and, without waiting to see the effect,
ran headlong among the bushes down the side of the
ravine. He heard a shouting behind him, the reports
of several shots, the rapid tread of feet, and he
knew that the man-hunt was on.
He had all the instincts of the hunted
to seek cover, and the night was his friend.
But few lights glimmered in that portion of Vicksburg,
and in many parts of the ravine the bushes were thick.
He darted down the slope at great speed, then turned
and ran along its side, still keeping well under cover.
Where the shadows were darkest and the bushes thickest
he paused panting.
He heard his pursuers calling to one
another, and he also heard the excited voices of people
in the ravine. The civilians had been aroused
by the shots so close by and he thought the confusion
would help him. He stood in the deep shadow,
his breath gradually growing easier, and then he started
down the ravine, coming to a little path that led along
the side of the slope. He noticed a dark opening,
and as the voices of pursuers were now coming nearer,
he popped into it, trusting to blind luck.
Dick had thought it was a mere wash-out
or deep recess, but at the third step his foot struck
upon a carpet and he saw ahead a dim light. He
paused, amazed, and then he remembered that he had
heard about the civilians digging caves for shelter
from the shells and bombs. Evidently some forethoughtful
man had prepared his cave early.
Uncertain what to do he did nothing,
pressing his back against the earth and listening.
No sound came, and the dim light still flickering
ahead reassured him.
The opening through which he had come
was large, and admitted plenty of fresh air.
As he stood four or five feet from the entrance he
saw several soldiers hurrying along the path, and
he knew they were hunting for him. He realized
then his fortune in finding this improvised cave-house.
After the soldiers passed he walked gently toward
the light. Apparently the regular occupants were
gone away for the time, and he might find a hiding
place there until it was safe to go out.
The passage was narrow, but the carpet
was still under his feet, and further in, the sides
and roof of the earthen walls had been covered with
planks. The light grew brighter and he was quite
sure that a room of some size was just ahead.
His curiosity became so great that it smothered all
apprehension, and he stepped boldly into the room,
where the lamp burned on a table.
He would have stepped back as quickly,
but a pair of great burning eyes caught his and held
them. A bed was standing against the board wall
of the cave, and in this bed lay an old man with a
huge bald head, immense white eyebrows and eyes of
extraordinary intensity.
Once more did Colonel Charles Woodville
and Richard Mason stare into the eyes of each other,
and for a long time neither spoke.
“I managed to escape from Jackson
with my little family,” said the colonel at
length, “and I thought that in this, so to say,
sylvan retreat I might drop all undesirable acquaintances
that I made there.”
The whole scene was grotesque and
wild to Dick. It was like a passage out of the
Arabian Nights, and an extraordinary spirit of recklessness
seized him.
“I appreciate your words, sir,”
he said, “and I can understand your feelings.
I have felt myself that it was never wise to go where
one might not be welcome, and yet chance plays us
such tricks that neither your wish nor mine is granted.”
The old man then raised his head a
little higher on the pillow. A spark leaped
from the burning eyes.
“A lad of spirit,” he
said. “I would not withhold praise where
praise is due. I recall meeting some one who
resembled you very much. Perhaps a brother of
yours, eh?”
“No, he was not my brother.”
“Well, it does not matter and
we will not pursue the subject. How does it
happen that you have come into this hillside castle
of mine?”
Young Mason saw a flicker of amusement
in the eyes of the old man. He was aware that
in his muddy uniform he made no imposing figure, but
his spirit was as high as ever, and the touch of recklessness
was still there.
“I saw some men coming down
the path,” he replied; “men with whom I
do not care to associate, and I turned aside to avoid
them. I beheld the open door and stepped within,
but I did not know the chamber was occupied, and it
was far from my purpose to intrude upon you or any
one. I trust, sir, that you will believe me.”
The lad took off his cap and bowed.
His face was now revealed more clearly, and it was
a fine one, splendidly molded, intellectual, and with
noble blue eyes. After all, despite the mud and
stains, he made a graceful figure as he stood there,
so obviously confident of himself, but respectful.
The spark leaped again from the eyes
of Colonel Woodville, and, remembering something,
there was a slight warmth about the heart which lately
had been so cold and bitter.
“I do not blame you,”
he said. “A lad, one in his formative years,
cannot be too careful about his associates. Doubtless
you were justified in taking advantage of the open
door. But now that you are here may I ask you
what you purpose next to do?”
“I admit, sir, that the question
is natural,” replied Dick, suiting his tone
and manner to those of the old man. “I
have scarcely had time yet to form a purpose, but,
since the danger of contamination of which we spoke
still exists, it occurs to me that perhaps I might
stay here a while. Is there some nook or a cover
in which I might rest? I hope I do not trespass
too much upon your hospitality.”
Colonel Woodville pondered.
His great white eyebrows were drawn together and,
for a moment or two, he gazed down the beak of his
nose.
“I confess,” he said,
“that the appeal to hospitality moves me.
I am stirred somewhat, too, by pleasant recollections
of the lad who looked like you. But wait, my
daughter is coming. We will confer with her.
Margaret is a most capable woman.”
Dick heard a light step in the passage
and he wheeled quickly. Miss Woodville was before
him, a plain, elderly figure in a plain black dress,
with a basket on her arm. The basket contained
a fowl and some eggs which she had just bought at
a great price. When she saw Dick her hand flew
to her throat, but when the pulse ceased to beat so
hard it came away and she looked at him fixedly.
Then a slow smile like the dawn spread over the severe,
worn face.
“Come in, Margaret, and put
down your basket,” said the colonel in a genial
tone. “Meanwhile bid welcome to our unexpected
guest, a young man of spirit and quality with whom
I was holding converse before you came. He does
not wish to go out to-night, because there are many
violent men abroad, and he would avoid them.”
Then he turned to Dick, and asked
in a tone, sharp and commanding:
“I have your word, young sir,
that your unexpected visit to our city was not of
a secret nature; that is, it was not of a lawless character?”
“An accident, sir, an accident
pure and simple. I answer you on my honor.
I have seen nothing and I shall not seek to see anything
which I should not see.”
“Margaret,” continued
the colonel, and now his tone became deferential as
behooved a gentleman speaking to a lady, “shall
we ask him to share our simple quarters to-night?”
The lad slowly turned his gaze to
the face of the woman. He felt with all the
power of intuition that his fate rested on her decision.
But she was a woman. And she was, too, a true
daughter of her father. A kindred spark leaped
up in her own soul, and she met Dick’s gaze.
She noted his fearless poise, and she saw the gallant
spirit in his eye. Then she turned to her father.
“I think you wish him to stay,
sir,” she said, “and the wish seems right
to me. Our narrow quarters limit our hospitality
in quality, but not in intent. We can offer
him nothing but the little alcove behind the blanket.”
She inclined her head toward the blanket,
which Dick had not noticed before. It hung near
the bed and, wishing to cause this household little
trouble, he said:
“Then I assume that you will
shelter me for the night, and, if I may, I will go
at once to my room.”
Colonel Woodville lowered his head
upon the pillow and laughed softly.
“A lad of spirit. A lad
of spirit, I repeat,” he said. “No,
Margaret, you and I could not have turned him from
our earthen roof.”
Dick bowed to Miss Woodville, and
that little ghost of a tender smile flitted about
her thin lips. Then he lifted the blanket, stepped
into the dark, and let the curtain fall behind him.
He stood for a space until his eyes,
used to the dusk, could see dimly. It was a tiny
room evidently used as a place of storage for clothing
and bedding, but there was space enough for him to
lie down, if he bent his knees a little.
The strain upon both muscle and nerve
had been very great, and now came collapse.
Removing his shoes and outer clothing he dropped upon
a roll of bedding and closed his eyes. But he
was grateful, deeply and lastingly grateful.
The bread that he had cast upon the waters was returning
to him fourfold.
He heard low voices beyond the blanket,
and he did not doubt that they were those of Colonel
Woodville and his daughter. The woman in plain
black, with the basket on her arm, had seemed a pathetic
figure to him. He could not blame them for feeling
such intense bitterness. What were the causes
of the war to people who had been driven from a luxurious
home to a hole in the side of a ravine?
He slept, and when he woke it seemed
to be only a moment later, but he knew from the slender
edge of light appearing where the blanket just failed
to touch the floor that morning had come. He
moved gently lest he disturb his host in the larger
room without, and then he heard the distant thunder,
which he knew was the booming of Grant’s great
guns. And so the night had not stopped them!
All through the hours that he slept the cannon had
rained steel and death on Vicksburg. Then came
a great explosion telling him that a shell had burst
somewhere near. It was followed by the voice
of Colonel Woodville raised in high, indignant tones:
“Can’t they let a gentleman
sleep? Must they wake him with one of their
infernal shells?”
He heard a slight rustling sound and
he knew that it was the great bald head moving impatiently
on the pillows. Inferring that it was early,
he would have gone back to sleep himself, but slumber
would not come. He remained a while, thoughtful,
for his future lay very heavy upon him, and then he
heard the sound of several voices beyond the blanket.
He listened closely, trying to number
and distinguish them. There were three and two
belonged to Colonel Woodville and his daughter.
The third repelled and puzzled him. It seemed
to have in it a faint quality of the fox. It
was not loud, and yet that light, snarling, sinister
note was evident.
The sensitive, attuned mind can be
easily affected by a voice, and the menace of the
unknown beyond the blanket deepened. Dick felt
a curious prickling at the roots of his hair.
He listened intently, but he could not understand
anything that was spoken, and then he drew himself
forward with great caution.
They must be talking about something
of importance, because the voices were earnest, and
sometimes all three spoke at once. He reached
a slow hand toward the blanket. The danger would
be great, but he must see.
He drew back the blanket slightly,
a quarter of an inch, maybe, and looked within the
room. Then he saw the owner of the sinister voice,
and he felt that he might have known from the first.
Slade, standing before Colonel Woodville’s
bed, his hat in his hand, was talking eagerly.