CHAPTER I
AT BELLEVUE
“You have the keenest eyes in
the troop. Can you see anything ahead?”
asked Colonel Winchester.
“Nothing living, sir,”
replied Dick Mason, as he swept his powerful glasses
in a half-curve. “There are hills on the
right and in the center, covered with thick, green
forest, and on the left, where the land lies low,
the forest is thick and green too, although I think
I catch a flash of water in it.”
“That should be the little river
of which our map tells. And you, Warner, what
do your eyes tell you?”
“The same tale they tell to
Dick, sir. It looks to me like a wilderness.”
“And so it is. It’s
a low-lying region of vast forests and thickets, of
slow deep rivers and creeks, and of lagoons and bayous.
If Northern troops want to be ambushed they couldn’t
come to a finer place for it. Forrest and five
thousand of his wild riders might hide within rifle
shot of us in this endless mass of vegetation.
And so, my lads, it behooves us to be cautious with
a very great caution. You will recall how we
got cut up by Forrest in the Shiloh time.”
“I do, sir,” said Dick
and he shuddered as he recalled those terrible moments.
“This is Mississippi, isn’t it?”
Colonel Winchester took a small map
from his pocket, and, unfolding it, examined it with
minute care.
“If this is right, and I’m
sure it is,” he replied, “we’re far
down in Mississippi in the sunken regions that border
the sluggish tributaries of the Father of Waters.
The vegetation is magnificent, but for a home give
me higher ground, Dick.”
“Me too, sir,” said Warner.
“The finest state in this Union is Vermont.
I like to live on firm soil, even if it isn’t
so fertile, and I like to see the clear, pure water
running everywhere, brooks and rivers.”
“I’ll admit that Vermont
is a good state for two months in the year,”
said Dick.
“Why not the other ten?”
“Because then it’s frozen up, solid and
hard, so I’ve heard.”
The other boys laughed and kept up
their chaff, but Colonel Winchester rode soberly ahead.
Behind him trailed the Winchester regiment, now reorganized
and mounted. Fresh troops had come from Kentucky,
and fragments of old regiments practically destroyed
at Perryville and Stone River had been joined to it.
It was a splendid body of men, but
of those who had gone to Shiloh only about two hundred
remained. The great conflicts of the West, and
the minor battles had accounted for the others.
But it was perhaps one of the reliefs of the Civil
War that it gave the lads who fought it little time
to think of those who fell. Four years crowded
with battles, great and small, sieges and marches
absorbed their whole attention.
Now two men, the dreaded Forrest and
fierce little Joe Wheeler, occupied the minds of Winchester
and his officers. It was impossible to keep
track of these wild horsemen here in their own section.
They had a habit of appearing two or three hundred
miles from the place at which they were expected.
But the young lieutenants while they
watched too for their redoubtable foes had an eye
also for the country. It was a new kind of region
for all of them. The feet of their horses sank
deep in the soft black soil, and there was often a
sound of many splashings as the regiment rode across
a wide, muddy brook.
Dick noted with interest the magnolias
and the live oaks, and the great stalks of the sunflower.
Here in this Southern state, which bathed its feet
in the warm waters of the Gulf, spring was already
far along, although snows still lingered in the North.
The vegetation was extravagant in
its luxuriance and splendor. The enormous forest
was broken by openings like prairies, and in every
one of them the grass grew thick and tall, interspersed
with sunflowers and blossoming wild plants.
Through the woods ran vast networks of vines, and
birds of brilliant plumage chattered in the trees.
Twice, deer sprang up before them and raced away
in the forest. It was the wilderness almost
as De Soto had traversed it nearly four centuries
before, and it had a majesty which in its wildness
was not without its sinister note.
They approached a creek, deeper and
wider than usual, flowing in slow, yellow coils, and,
as they descended into the marsh that enclosed its
waters, there was a sharp crackling sound, followed
quickly by another and then by many others.
The reports did not cease, and, although blood was
shed freely, no man fell from his horse, nor was any
wounded mortally. But the assault was vicious
and it was pushed home with the utmost courage and
tenacity, although many of the assailants fell never
to rise again. Cries of pain and anger, and imprecations
arose from the stricken regiment.
“Slap! Slap!”
“Bang! Bang!”
“Ouch! He’s got his bayonet in my
cheek!”
“Heavens, that struck me like
a minie ball! And it came, whistling and shrieking,
too, just like one!”
“Phew, how they sting! and my neck is bleeding
in three places!”
“By thunder, Bill, I hit that
fellow, fair and square! He’ll never trouble
an honest Yankee soldier again!”
The fierce buzzing increased all around
them and Colonel Winchester shouted to his trumpeter:
“Blow the charge at once!”
The man, full willing, put the trumpet
to his lips and blew loud and long. The whole
regiment went across the creek at a gallop—the
water flying in yellow showers—and did
not stop until, emerging from the marsh, they reached
the crest of a low hill a mile beyond. Here,
stung, bleeding and completely defeated by the enemy
they stopped for repairs. An occasional angry
buzz showed that they were not yet safe from the skirmishers,
but their attack seemed a light matter after the full
assault of the determined foe.
“I suppose we’re all wounded,”
said Dick as he wiped a bleeding cheek. “At
least as far as I can see they’re hurt.
The last fellow who got his bayonet in my face turned
his weapon around and around and sang merrily at every
revolution.”
“We were afraid of being ambushed
by Forrest,” said Warner, speaking from a swollen
countenance. “Instead we struck something
worse; we rode straight into an ambush of ten billion
high-powered mosquitoes, every one tipped with fire.
Have we got enemies like these to fight all the way
down here?”
“They sting the rebels, too,” said Pennington.
“Yes, but they like newcomers
best, the unacclimated. When we rode down into
that swamp I could hear them shouting, to one another:
’That fat fellow is mine, I saw him first!
I’ve marked the rosy-cheeked boy for mine.
Keep away the rest of you fellows!’ I feel
as if I’d been through a battle. No more
marshes for me.”
Some of the provident produced bottles
of oil of pennyroyal. Sergeant Daniel Whitley,
who rode a giant bay horse, was one of the most foreseeing
in this respect, and, after the boys had used his soothing
liniment freely, the fiery torment left by the mosquito’s
sting passed away.
The sergeant seemed to have grown
bigger and broader than ever. His shoulders
were about to swell through his faded blue coat, and
the hand resting easily on the rein had the grip and
power of a bear’s paw. His rugged face
had been tanned by the sun of the far south to the
color of an Indian’s. He was formidable
to a foe, and yet no gentler heart beat than that
under his old blue uniform. Secretly he regarded
the young lieutenants, his superiors in military rank
and education, as brave children, and often he cared
for them where his knowledge and skill were greater
than theirs or even than that of colonels and generals.
“God bless you, Sergeant,”
said Dick, “you don’t look like an angel,
but you are one—that is, of the double-fisted,
fighting type.”
The sergeant merely smiled and replaced
the bottle carefully in his pocket, knowing that they
would have good use for it again.
The regiment after salving its wounds
resumed its watchful march.
“Do you know where we’re going?”
Pennington asked Dick.
“I think we’re likely
if we live long enough to land in the end before Vicksburg,
the great Southern fortress, but as I gather it we
mean to curve and curl and twist about a lot before
then. Grant, they say, intends to close in on
Vicksburg, while Rosecrans farther north is watching
Bragg at Chattanooga. We’re a flying column,
gathering up information, and ready for anything.”
“It’s funny,” said
Warner thoughtfully, “that we’ve already
got so far south in the western field. We can’t
be more than two or three hundred miles from the Gulf.
Besides, we’ve already taken New Orleans, the
biggest city of the South, and our fleet is coming
up the river to meet us. Yet in the East we
don’t seem to make any progress at all.
We lose great battles there and Fredericksburg they
say was just a slaughter of our men. How do
you make it out, Dick?”
“I’ve thought of several
reasons for it. Our generals in the West are
better than our generals in the East, or their generals
in the East are better than their generals in the
West. And then there are the rivers. In
the East they mostly run eastward between the two armies,
and they are no help to us, but a hindrance rather.
Here in the West the rivers, and they are many and
great, mostly run southward, the way we want to go,
and they bring our gunboats on their bosoms.
Excuse my poetry, but it’s what I mean.”
“You must be right. I
think that all the reasons you give apply together.
But our command of the water has surely been a tremendous
help. And then we’ve got to remember, Dick,
that there was never a navy like ours. It goes
everywhere and it does everything. Why, if Admiral
Farragut should tell one of those gunboats to steam
across the Mississippi bottoms it would turn its saucy
nose, steer right out of the water into the mud, and
blow up with all hands aboard before it quit trying.”
“You two fellows talk too much,”
said Pennington. “You won’t let
President Lincoln and Grant and Halleck manage the
war, but you want to run it yourselves.”
“I don’t want to run anything
just now, Frank,” rejoined Dick. “What
I’m thinking about most is rest and something
to eat. I’d like to get rid, too, of about
ten pounds of Mississippi mud that I’m carrying.”
“Well, I can catch a glint of
white pillars through those trees. It means
the ‘big house’ of a plantation, and you’ll
probably find somewhere back of it the long rows of
cabins, inhabited by the dark people, whom we’ve
come to raise to the level of their masters, if not
above them. I can see right now the joyous welcome
we’ll receive from the owners of the big house.
They’ll be standing on the great piazza, waving
Union flags and shouting to us that they have ready
cooling drinks and luxurious food for us all.”
“It’s hardly a joke to
me. Whatever the cause of the war, it’s
the bitterness of death for these people to be overrun.
Besides, I remember the words of that old fellow
in the blacksmith shop before we fought the battle
of Stone River. He said that even if they were
beaten they’d still be there holding the land
and running things.”
“That’s true,” said
Warner. “I’ve been wondering how
this war would end, and now I’m wondering what
will happen after it does end. But here we are
at the gate. What big grounds! These great
planters certainly had space!”
“And what silence!” said
Dick. “It’s uncanny, George.
A place like this must have had a thousand slaves,
and I don’t see any of them rushing forward
to welcome their liberators.”
“Probably contraband, gone long
ago to Ben Butler at New Orleans. I don’t
believe there’s a soul here.”
“Remember that lone house in
Tennessee where a slip of a girl brought Forrest down
on us and had us cut pretty nearly to pieces.”
“I couldn’t forget it.”
Nor could Colonel Winchester.
The house, large and low, stood in grounds covering
an area of several acres, enclosed by a paling fence,
now sagging in many places. Great stone posts
stood on either side of the gateway, but the gate
was opened, and it, too, sagged.
The grounds had evidently been magnificent,
both with flowers and forest trees. Already
many of the flowers were blooming in great luxuriance
and brilliancy, but the walks and borders were untrimmed.
The house was of wood, painted white with green shutters,
and as they drew nearer they appreciated its great
size, although it was only two stories in height.
A hundred persons could have slept there, and twice
as many could have found shade in the wide piazzas
which stretched the full length of the four sides.
But all the doors and shutters were
closed and no smoke rose from any chimney. They
caught a glimpse of the cabins for the slaves, on lower
ground some distance behind the great house.
The whole regiment reined up as they approached the
carriage entrance, and, although they were eight hundred
strong, there was plenty of room without putting a
single hoof upon a flower.
It was a great place. That leaped
to the eye, but it was not marked upon Colonel Winchester’s
map, nor had he heard of it.
“It’s a grand house,”
he said to his aides, “and it’s a pity
that it should go to ruin after the slaves are freed,
as they certainly will be.”
“But it was built upon slave labor,” said
Warner.
“So it was, and so were many
of the most famous buildings in the world. But
here, I’m not going to get into an argument about
such questions with young men under my command.
Besides, I’m fighting to destroy slavery, not
to study its history. Sergeant Whitley, you’re
an experienced trailer: do you see any signs
that troops have passed here?”
“None at all, sir. Down
near the gate where the drive is out of repair I noticed
wheel tracks, but they were several days old.
The freshest of them were light, as if made by buggies.
I judge, sir, that it was the family, the last to
leave.”
“And the wagons containing their
valuables had gone on ahead?”
“It would seem so, sir.”
Colonel Winchester sighed.
“An invader is always feared and hated,”
he said.
“But we do come as enemies,”
said Dick, “and this feeling toward us can’t
be helped.”
“That’s true. No
matter what we do we’ll never make any friends
here in one of the Gulf states, the very core of Southern
feeling. Dick, take a squad of men and enter
the house. Pennington, you and Warner go with
him.”
Dick sprang down instantly, chose
Sergeant Whitley first and with the others entered
the great portico. The front door was locked
but it was easy enough to force it with a gun butt,
and they went in, but not before Dick had noticed
over the door in large letters the name, “Bellevue.”
So this was Bellevue, one of the great cotton plantations
of Mississippi. He now vaguely remembered that
he had once heard his uncle, Colonel Kenton, speak
of having stopped a week here. But he could not
recall the name of the owner. Strong for the
Union as he was Dick was glad that the family had
gone before the Northern cavalry came.
The house was on a splendid scale
inside also, but all the rugs and curtains were gone.
As they entered the great parlor Dick saw a large
piece of paper, and he flushed as he read written upon
it in tall letters:
Tothe Yankee raiders:
You need not
look for the silver.
It has
been taken to Vicksburg.
“Look at that!” he said
indignantly to Warner. “See how they taunt
us!”
But Warner laughed.
“Maybe some of our men at New
Orleans have laid us open to such a stab,” he
said. Then he added whimsically:
“We’ll go to Vicksburg
with Grant, Dick, and get that silver yet.”
“The writing’s fresh,”
said Sergeant Whitley, who also looked at the notification.
“The paper hasn’t begun to twist and curl
yet. It’s not been posted up there many
hours.”
Colonel Winchester entered at that
moment and the notice was handed to him. He,
too, flushed a little when he read it, but the next
instant he laughed. Dick then called his attention
to the apparent fact that it had been put there recently.
“May I speak a word, Colonel,”
said Warner, who had been thinking so hard that there
was a line the full length of his forehead.
“Yes, George, a dozen if you
like. Go ahead. What is it?”
“The sergeant, who has had much
experience as a trailer, told us that the tracks made
by the buggy wheels were several days old. The
slaves probably had been sent southward before that
time. Now some one who saw our advance has come
back, and, whoever it was, he was thoroughly familiar
with the house. He couldn’t have been a
servant. Servants don’t leave taunts of
that kind. It must have been somebody who felt
our coming deeply, and if it had been an elderly man
he would have waited for action, he wouldn’t
have used saucy words. So, sir, I think it must
have been a boy. Just like Pennington there,
for instance.”
“Good, George, go on with your reasonings.”
“As surely, sir, as z plus y
equals the total of the two, the one who put up the
placard was a son of the owner. He alone would
feel deeply enough to take so great a risk.
The conditions absolutely demand that the owner has
such a son and that he has done it.”
“Very good, George. I
think you’re right, and this youth in giving
way to a natural burst of anger, although he did not
mean to do so, has posted up for us a warning.
A lad of his spirit would go in search of Forrest,
and we cannot forget our experience with that general
in Tennessee. Now, boys, we’ll make ready
for the night, which is not far away.”
The house was built for a Southern
climate, although Dick had learned that it could be
cold enough in Central Mississippi in midwinter.
But it was spring now and they opened all the doors
and windows, letting the pleasant air rush through
the musty house.
“It may rain,” said Colonel
Winchester, “and the officers will sleep inside.
The men will spread their blankets on the piazzas,
and the horses will be tethered in the grounds.
I hate to see the flowers and grass trodden down,
but nature will restore them.”
Some of the soldiers gathered wood
from heaps nearby and fires were kindled in the kitchen,
and also on the hearths in the slave quarters.
Colonel Winchester had been truly called the father
of his regiment. He was invariably particular
about its health and comfort, and, as he always led
it in person in battle, there was no finer body of
men in the Union service.
Now he meant for his men to have coffee,
and warm food after this long and trying ride and
soon savory odors arose, although the cooking was not
begun until after dark, lest the smoke carry a signal
to a lurking enemy. The cavalrymen cut the thick
grass which grew everywhere, and fed it to their horses,
eight hundred massive jaws munching in content.
The beasts stirred but little after their long ride
and now and then one uttered a satisfied groan.
The officers drank their coffee and
ate their food on the eastern piazza, which overlooked
a sharp dip toward a creek three or four hundred yards
away. The night had rushed down suddenly after
the fashion of the far South, and from the creek they
heard faintly the hoarse frogs calling. Beyond
the grounds a close ring of sentinels watched, because
Colonel Winchester had no mind to be surprised again
by Forrest or by Fighting Joe Wheeler or anybody else.
The night was thick and dark and moist
with clouds. Dick, despite the peace that seemed
to hang over everything, was oppressed. The desolate
house, even more than the sight of the field after
the battle was over, brought home to him the meaning
of war. It was not alone the death of men but
the uprooting of a country for their children and their
children’s children as well. Then his mind
traveled back to his uncle, Colonel Kenton, and suddenly
he smote his knee.
“What is it, Dick,” asked
Colonel Winchester, who sat only two or three yards
away.
“Now I remember, sir.
When I was only seven or eight years old I heard my
uncle tell of stopping, as I told you, at a great plantation
in Mississippi called Bellevue, but I couldn’t
recall the name of its owner. I know him now.”
“What is the name, Dick?”
“Woodville, John Woodville.
He was a member of the Mississippi Senate, and he
was probably the richest man in the State.”
“I think I have heard the name.
He is a Confederate colonel now, with Pemberton’s
army. No doubt we’ll have to fight him
later on.”
“Meanwhile, we’re using his house.”
“Fortune of war. But all
war is in a sense unfair, because it’s usually
a question of the greater force. At any rate,
Dick, we won’t harm Colonel Woodville’s
home.”
“Yet in the end, sir, a lot
of these great old country places will go, and what
will take their place? You and I, coming from
a border state, know that the colored race is not
made up of Uncle Toms.”
“Well, Dick, we haven’t
won yet, and until we do we won’t bother ourselves
about the aftermath of war. I’m glad we
found so large a place as this. At the last
moment I sent part of the men to the cabins, but at
least three or four hundred must lie here on the piazzas.
And most of them are already asleep. It’s
lucky they have roofs. Look how the clouds are
gathering!”
As much more room had been made upon
the piazzas by the assignment of men to the cabins,
Colonel Winchester and some of his officers also rested
there. Dick, lying between the two blankets which
he always carried in a roll tied to his saddle, was
very comfortable now, with his head on his knapsack.
The night had turned cooler, and, save when faint
and far lightning quivered, it was heavy and dark
with clouds. But the young lieutenants, hardened
by two years of war and life in the open, felt snug
and cosy on the broad, sheltered piazza. It was
not often they found such good quarters, and Dick,
like Colonel Winchester, was truly thankful that they
had reached Bellevue before the coming storm.
It was evident now that the night
was going to be wild. The lightning grew brighter
and came nearer, cutting fiercely across the southern
sky. The ominous rumble of thunder, which reminded
Dick so much of the mutter of distant battle, came
from the horizon on which the lightning was flashing.
Colonel Winchester, Pennington and
Warner had gone to sleep, but Dick was wakeful.
He had again that feeling of pity for the people who
had been compelled to flee from such a house, and
who might lose it forever. It seemed to him that
all the men, save himself and the sentinels, were
asleep, sleeping with the soundness and indifference
to surroundings shown by men who took their sleep
when they could.
The horses stamped and moved uneasily
beneath the threat of the advancing storm, but the
men slept heavily on.
Dick knew that the sentinels were
awake and watchful. They had a wholesome dread
of Forrest and Wheeler, those wild riders of the South.
Some of them had been present at that terrible surprise
in Tennessee, and they were not likely to be careless
when they were sure that Forrest might be near, but
he remained uneasy nevertheless, and, although he
closed his eyes and sought a soft place for his head
on the saddle, sleep did not come.
He was sure that his apprehension
did not come from any fear of an attack by Forrest
or Wheeler. It was deeper-seated. The inherited
sense that belonged to his great grandfather, who
had lived his life in the wilderness, was warning
him. It was not superstition. It seemed
to Dick merely the palpable result of an inheritance
that had gone into the blood. His famous great-grandfather,
Paul Cotter, and his famous friend, Henry Ware, had
lived so much and so long among dangers that the very
air indicated to them when they were at hand.
Dick looked down the long piazza,
so long that the men at either end of it were hidden
by darkness. The tall trees in the grounds were
nodding before the wind, and the lightning flashed
incessantly in the southwest. The thunder was
not loud, but it kept up a continuous muttering and
rumbling. The rain was coming in fitful gusts,
but he knew that it would soon drive hard and for
a long time.
Everybody within Dick’s area
of vision was sound asleep, except himself. Colonel
Winchester lay with his head on his arm and his slumber
was so deep that he was like one dead. Warner
had not stirred a particle in the last half-hour.
Dick was angry at himself because he could not sleep.
Let the storm burst! It might drive on the wide
roof of the piazza and the steady beating sound would
make his sleep all the sounder and sweeter.
He recalled, as millions of American lads have done,
the days when he lay in his bed just under the roof
and heard hail and sleet drive against it, merely
to make him feel all the snugger in the bed with his
covers drawn around him.
The fitful gusts of rain ceased, and
then it came with a steady pour and roar, driving
directly down, thus leaving the men on the outer edges
of the piazzas untouched and dry. Still, Dick
did not sleep, and at last he arose and walked softly
into the house. Here the sense of danger grew
stronger. He was reminded again of his early
boyhood, when some one blindfolded was told to find
a given object, and the others called “hot”
when he was near or “cold” when he was
away. He was feeling hot now. That inherited
sense, the magnetic feeling out of the past, was warning
him.
Dick felt sure that some one not of
their regiment was in the building. He neither
saw nor heard the least sign of a presence, but he
was absolutely certain that he was not alone within
Bellevue. Since the lightning had ceased it
was pitchy dark inside. There was a wide hall
running through the building, with windows above the
exits, but he saw nothing through them save the driving
rain and the dim outline of the threshing trees.
He turned into one of the side rooms,
and then he paused and pushed himself against the
wall. He was sure now that he heard a soft footstep.
The darkness was so intense that it could be felt like
a mist. He waited but he did not hear it again,
and then he began to make his way around the wall,
stepping as lightly as he could.
He had gone through most of the rooms
at their arrival and he still retained a clear idea
of the interior of the house. He knew that there
was another door on the far side of the chamber in
which he stood, and he meant to follow the wall until
he reached it. Some one had been in the room
with him and Dick believed that he was leaving by the
far door.
While he heard no further footsteps
he felt a sudden light draught on his face and he
knew that the door had been opened and shut.
He might go to Colonel Winchester and tell him that
a lurking spy or somebody of that character was in
the house, but what good would it do? A spy at
such a time and in such a place could not harm them,
and the whole regiment would be disturbed for nothing.
He would follow the chase alone.
He found the door and passed into
the next room. Its windows opened upon the southern
piazza and two or three shutters were thrown back.
A faint light entered and Dick saw that no one was
there but himself. He could discern the dim
figures of the soldiers sleeping on the piazza and
beyond a cluster of the small pines grown on lawns.
Dick felt that he had lost the trail
for the time, but he did not intend to give it up.
Doubtless the intruder was some one who knew the house
and who was also aware of his presence inside.
He also felt that he would not be fired upon, because
the stranger himself would not wish to bring the soldiers
down upon him. So, with a hand upon his pistol
butt, he opened the side door and followed once more
into the darkness.
The ghostly chase went on for a full
half-hour, Dick having nothing to serve him save an
occasional light footfall. There was one period
of more than half an hour when he lost the fugitive
entirely. He wandered up to the second floor
and then back again. There, in a room that had
been the library, he caught a glimpse of the man.
But the figure was so shadowy that he could tell
nothing about him.
“Halt!” cried Dick, snatching
out his pistol. But when he leveled it there
was nothing to aim at. The figure had melted
away, or rather it had flitted through another door.
Dick followed, chagrined. The stranger seemed
to be playing with him. Obviously, it was some
one thoroughly acquainted with the house, and that
brought to Dick’s mind the thought that he himself,
instead of the other man, was the stranger there.
He came at last to a passage which
led to the kitchen, a great room, because many people
were often guests at Bellevue, and here he stopped
short, while his heart suddenly beat hard. A
distinct odor coming from different points suddenly
assailed his nostrils. He had smelled it too
often in the last two years to be mistaken. It
was smoke, and Bellevue had been set on fire in several
places.
He inhaled it once or twice and then
he saw again the shadowy figure flitting down to the
passage and to a small door that, unnoticed by the
soldiers, opened on the kitchen garden in the rear
of the house.
Dick never acted more promptly.
Instantly he fired his pistol into the ceiling, the
report roaring in the confined spaces of the house,
and then shouting with all his might: “Fire!
Fire! Fire!” as he dashed down the passage
he ran through the little door, which the intruder
had left open, and pursued him in the darkness and
rain into the garden. There was a flash ahead
of him and a bullet whistled past his ear, but he merely
increased his speed and raced in the direction of the
flash. As he ran he heard behind him a tremendous
uproar, the voices and tread of hundreds of soldiers,
awakened suddenly, and he knew that they would rush
through Bellevue in search of the fires.
But it was Dick’s impulse to
capture the daring intruder who would destroy the
house over their heads. Built of wood, it would
burn so fast, once the torches were set, that the
rain would have little effect upon the leaping flames,
unless measures were taken at once, which he knew
that the regiment would do, under such a capable man
as Colonel Winchester. Meanwhile he was hot
in pursuit.
The trail which was not that of footsteps,
but of a shadowy figure, ran between tall and close
rows of grapevines so high on wooden framework that
they hid any one who passed. The suspicion that
Dick had held at first was confirmed. This was
no stranger, no intruder. He knew every inch
of both house and grounds, and, after having set the
house on fire, he had selected the only line of retreat,
but a safe one, through the thick and lofty vegetation
of the garden, which ran down to the edge of the ravine
in the rear, where he could slip quietly under the
fence, drop through the thick grass into the ravine
unseen by the pickets, and escape at his leisure in
the darkness.
Dick was so sure of his theory that
he strained every effort to overtake the figure which
was flitting before him like a ghost. In his
eagerness he had forgotten to shout any alarm about
the pickets, but it would have been of no avail, as
most of them, under the impulse of alarm, had rushed
forward to help extinguish the fires.
He saw the fugitive reach the end
of the garden, drop almost flat, and then slip under
a broken place in the palings. At an ordinary
time he would have stopped there, but all the instincts
of the hunter were aroused. It was still raining,
and he was already soaked. Wet branches and
leaves struck him in the face as he passed, but his
energy and eagerness were undimmed.
He, too, dropped at the hole under
the broken palings and slid forward face foremost.
The wet grass was as slippery as ice, and after he
passed through the hole Dick kept going. Moreover,
his speed increased. He had not realized that
the garden went to the very edge of the ravine, and
he was shooting down a steep slope to the depth of
thirty feet. He grasped instinctively at weeds
and grass as he made his downward plunge and fetched
up easily at the bottom.
He sprang to his feet and saw the
shadowy fugitive running down the ravine. In
an instant he followed headlong, tripped once or twice
on the wet grass, but was up every time like lightning,
and once more in swift pursuit. The fugitive
turned once, raised his pistol and pulled the trigger
again, evidently forgetful that it was empty.
When the hammer snapped on the trigger he uttered
a low cry of anger and hurled the useless weapon into
the grass. Then he whirled around and faced Dick,
who was coming on, eager and panting.
Dick’s own pistol was empty
and he did not carry his small sword. He stopped
abruptly when the other turned, and, in the dim light
and rain, he saw that his opponent was a young man
or rather youth of about his own size and age.
When he saw the lad cast the pistol aside Dick, moved
by some chivalrous impulse, dropped his own in the
grass.
Then the two stared at each other.
They were far beyond the line of the pickets, and
as they stood in the deep ravine there was no chance
that any one would either see or hear them.
As Dick gazed intently, the face and figure of his
antagonist shaped themselves more distinctly in the
dim light. He beheld before him a tall youth,
extremely well built, fair of face, his brown hair
slightly long. He wore rain-soaked civilian’s
garb.
He saw that the youth was panting
like himself, but it was not wholly the result of
flight. His face expressed savage anger and indignation.
“You dirty Yankee!” he said.
Dick started. No one had ever before addressed
him with such venom.
“If by Yankee you mean loyalty
to the Union then I’m one,” he said, “and
I’m proud of it. What’s more I’m
willing to tell who I am. My name is Richard
Mason. I’m from Kentucky, and I’m
a lieutenant in the regiment of Colonel Arthur Winchester,
which occupies the building behind us.”
“From Kentucky and consorting
with Yankees! A lot of you are doing it, and
you ought to be on our side! We hate you for
it more than we do the real Yankees!”
“It’s our right to choose,
and we’ve chosen. And now, since you’re
talking so much about right and wrong, who may you
be, Mr. Firebug?”
Even in the dark Dick saw his opponent’s
face flush, and his eyes flash with deadly hostility.
“My name is Victor Woodville,”
he replied, “and my father is Colonel John Woodville,
C.S.A. He is the owner of the house in which
your infamous Yankee regiment is encamped.”
“And which you have tried to burn?”
“I’d rather see it burn
than shelter Yankees. You’d burn it anyway
later on. Grant’s troops have already
begun to use the torch.”
“At any rate you’ll go
before our colonel. He’ll want to ask you
a lot of questions.”
“I’m not going before your colonel.”
“Oh, yes, you are.”
“Who’s going to take me?”
“I am.”
“Then come on and do it.”
Dick advanced warily. Both had
regained their breath and strength now. Dick
with two years of active service in the army had the
size and muscles of a man. But so had his opponent.
Each measured the other, and they were formidable
antagonists, well matched.
Dick had learned boxing at the Pendleton
Academy, and, as he approached slowly, looking straight
into the eyes of his enemy, he suddenly shot his right
straight for Woodville’s chin. The Mississippian,
as light on his feet as a leopard, leaped away and
countered with his left, a blow so quick and hard
that Dick, although he threw his head to one side,
caught a part of its force just above his ear.
But, guarding himself, he sprang back, while Woodville
faced him, laughing lightly.
Dick shook his head a little and the
singing departed. Just above his ear he felt
a great soreness, but he was cool now. Moreover,
he was losing his anger.
“First blow for you,”
he said. “I see that you know how to use
your fists.”
“I hope to prove it.”
Woodville, stepping lightly on his
toes and feinting with his left, caught Dick on his
cheek bone with his right. Then he sought to
spring away, but Dick, although staggered, swung heavily
and struck Woodville on the forehead. The Mississippian
went down full length on the slippery grass but jumped
to his feet in an instant. Blood was flowing
from his forehead, whence it ran down his nose and
fell to the earth, drop by drop. Dick himself
was bleeding from the cut on his cheek bone.
The two faced each other, cool, smiling,
but resolute enemies.
“First knockdown for you,”
said Woodville, “but I mean that the second
shall be mine.”
“Go in and try.”
But Woodville drew back a little,
and as Dick followed, looking for an opening he was
caught again a heavy clip on the side of the head.
He saw stars and was not able to return the blow, but
he sprang back and protected himself once more with
his full guard, while he regained his balance and
strength.
“Am I a firebug?” asked Woodville tauntingly.
Dick considered. This youth
interested him. There was no denying that Woodville
had great cause for anger, when he found his father’s
house occupied by a regiment of the enemy. He
considered it defilement. The right or wrong
of the war had nothing to do with it. It was
to him a matter of emotion.
“I’ll take back the epithet
‘firebug,’” he said, “but I
must stick to my purpose of carrying you to Colonel
Winchester.”
“Always provided you can: Look out for
yourself.”
The Mississippian, who was wonderfully
agile, suddenly danced in—on his toes it
seemed to Dick—and landed savagely on his
opponent’s left ear. Then he was away so
quickly and lightly that Dick’s return merely
cut the air.
The Kentuckian felt the blood dripping
from another point. His ear, moreover, was very
sore and began to swell rapidly. One less enduring
would have given up, but he had a splendid frame, toughened
by incessant hardship. And, above all, enclosed
within that frame was a lion heart. He shook
his head slightly, because a buzzing was going on there,
but in a moment or two it stopped.
“Are you satisfied?” asked young Woodville.
“You remember what Paul Jones said: ‘I’ve
just begun to fight.’”
“Was it Paul Jones? Well,
I suppose it was. Anyhow, if you feel that way
about it, so do I. Then come on again, Mr. Richard
Mason.”
Dick’s blood was up. The
half-minute or so of talk had enabled him to regain
his breath. Although he felt that incessant pain
and swelling in his left ear, his resolution to win
was unshaken. Pride was now added to his other
motives.
He took a step forward, feinted, parried
skillfully, and then stepped back. Woodville,
always agile as a panther, followed him and swung for
the chin, but Dick, swerving slightly to one side,
landed with great force on Woodville’s jaw.
The young Mississippian fell, but, while Dick stood
looking at him, he sprang to his feet and faced his
foe defiantly. The blood was running down his
cheek and dyeing the whole side of his face.
But Dick saw the spirit in his eye and knew that he
was far from conquered.
Woodville smiled and threw back his
long hair from his face.
“A good one for you. You
shook me up,” he admitted, “but I don’t
see any sign of your ability to carry me to that Yankee
colonel, as you boasted you would do.”
“But I’m going to do it.”
The rain increased and washed the
blood from both their faces. It was dark within
the ravine, but they had been face to face so long
that they could read the eyes of each other.
Those of Woodville like those of Dick ceased to express
great anger. In the mind of each was growing
a respect for his antagonist. The will to conquer
remained, but not the desire to hate.
“If you’re going to do
it, then why don’t you?” said Woodville.
Dick moved slowly forward, still watching
the eyes of the Mississippian. He believed now
that Woodville, agile and alert though he might be,
had not fully recovered his strength. There was
terrific steam in that last punch and the head of
the man who had received it might well be buzzing
yet.
Dick then moved in with confidence,
but a lightning blow crashed through his guard, caught
him on the chin and sent him to earth. He rose,
though still half-stunned, and saw that the confident,
taunting look had returned to Woodville’s face.
Fortunate now for Dick that the pure blood of great
woods rangers flowed in his veins, and that he had
inherited from them too an iron frame. His chin
was cut and he had seen a thousand stars. But
his eyes cleared and steadily he faced his foe.
“Do I go with you to your colonel?”
asked Woodville, ironically.
“You do,” replied Dick firmly.
He looked his enemy steadily in the
eye again, and he felt a great sense of triumph.
After such severe punishment he was stronger than
ever and he knew it.
Therefore he must win. He struck
heavily, straight for the angle of Woodville’s
chin. The Mississippian evaded the blow and flashed
in with his left. But Dick, who was learning
to be very wary, dodged it and came back so swiftly
that Woodville was caught and beaten to his knees.
But the son of the house of Bellevue
was still so agile that he was able to recover his
feet and spring away. Dick saw, however, that
he was panting heavily. The blow had taken a
considerable part of his remaining strength.
He also saw that his antagonist was regarding him
with a curious eye.
“You fight well, Yank,”
said Woodville, “although I ought not to call
you Yank, but rather a traitor, as you’re a
Kentuckian. Still, I’ve put my marks on
you. You’re bleeding a lot and you’d
be a sight if it weren’t for this cleansing
rain.”
“I’ve been putting the
map of Kentucky on your own face. You don’t
look as much like Mississippi as you did. You’ll
take notice too that you didn’t burn the house.
If you’ll glance up the side of this ravine
you’ll see just a little dying smoke. Eight
hundred soldiers put it out in short order.”
Woodville’s face flushed, and
his eyes for the first time since the beginning of
the encounter shone with an angry gleam. But
the wrathful fire quickly died.
“On the whole, I’m not
sorry,” he said. “It was an impulse
that made me do it. Our army will come and drive
you away, and our house will be our own again.”
“That’s putting it fairly.
What’s the use of burning such a fine place
as Bellevue? Still, we want you. Our colonel
has many questions to ask you.”
“You can’t take me.”
Dick judged that the crucial moment
had now come. Woodville was breathing much more
heavily than he was, and seemed to be near exhaustion.
Dick darted boldly in, received a swinging right and
left on either jaw that cut his cheeks and made the
blood flow. But he sent his right to Woodville’s
chin and the young Mississippian without a sound dropped
to the ground, lying relaxed and flat upon his back,
his white face, streaked with red, upturned to the
rain.
He was so still that Dick was seized
with fear lest he had killed him. He liked this
boy who had fought him so well and, grasping him by
both shoulders, he shook him hard. But when
he loosed him Woodville fell back flat and inert.
Dick heard the waters of a brook trickling
down the ravine, and, snatching off his cap, he ran
to it. He filled the cap and returned just in
time to see Woodville leap lightly to his feet and
disappear with the speed of a deer among the bushes.