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| author | nfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org> | 2025-03-08 22:42:41 -0800 |
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| committer | nfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org> | 2025-03-08 22:42:41 -0800 |
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diff --git a/40430-0.txt b/40430-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c2ca765 --- /dev/null +++ b/40430-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9866 @@ +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40430 *** + + THE BLUE AND THE GRAY--AFLOAT + + Two colors cloth Emblematic Dies Illustrated + Price per volume $1.50 + + TAKEN BY THE ENEMY + WITHIN THE ENEMY'S LINES + ON THE BLOCKADE + STAND BY THE UNION + FIGHTING FOR THE RIGHT + A VICTORIOUS UNION + + THE BLUE AND THE GRAY--ON LAND + + Two colors cloth Emblematic Dies Illustrated + Price per volume $1.50 + + BROTHER AGAINST BROTHER + IN THE SADDLE + A LIEUTENANT AT EIGHTEEN (IN PRESS) + + (Other volumes in preparation) + + + ANY VOLUME SOLD SEPARATELY. + + + LEE AND SHEPARD PUBLISHERS BOSTON + + + + +[Illustration: "Be you uns soldiers, mass'r?"] + + + + + THE + BLUE AND THE GRAY + ON LAND + + BY OLIVER OPTIC + + IN THE SADDLE + + + _The Blue and Gray Army Series_ + + + IN THE SADDLE + + BY + OLIVER OPTIC + + AUTHOR OF "THE ARMY AND NAVY SERIES" "YOUNG AMERICA ABROAD" FIRST + AND SECOND SERIES "THE BOAT-CLUB STORIES" "THE GREAT WESTERN + SERIES" "THE WOODVILLE STORIES" "THE ONWARD AND UPWARD + SERIES" "THE LAKE SHORE SERIES" "THE YACHT-CLUB SERIES" + "THE RIVERDALE STORIES" "THE BOAT-BUILDER SERIES" + "THE BLUE AND GRAY NAVY SERIES" "A MISSING MILLION" + "A MILLIONAIRE AT SIXTEEN" "A YOUNG + KNIGHT-ERRANT" "STRANGE SIGHTS ABROAD" + "AMERICAN BOYS AFLOAT" "THE + YOUNG NAVIGATORS" ETC. + + BOSTON + LEE AND SHEPARD PUBLISHERS + 10 MILK STREET + 1895 + + + COPYRIGHT, 1895, BY LEE AND SHEPARD + + _All Rights Reserved_ + + IN THE SADDLE + + + TO MY FRIEND + + WILLIAM R. BEATTY + + MY COMPANION IN MANY VERY AGREEABLE ASSOCIATIONS + THIS VOLUME + IS CORDIALLY DEDICATED + + + + +PREFACE + + +"In The Saddle" is the second of the "Blue and Gray--On Land." In the +first volume a New Hampshire family was transplanted to the southern +part of one of the Border States just before the breaking out of the +Great Rebellion, now happily an event of the somewhat distant past. An +attempt is made in that book to describe the condition of the region in +the progress of the story; and the material for it was diligently looked +up in the records of those stormy times, in those of official character +in the archives of the State in which the events transpired, as well as +in "The Record of the Rebellion," Congressional Reports, and the +multitude of histories, narratives, biographies, and miscellaneous works +on the shelves of public and private libraries. The writer believes his +material statements are correct, and that the pictures he has given of +the disorderly condition of the State of Kentucky, especially in +the southern portion, are not overdrawn. + +The story of the Lyon family introduces two branches of it, both from +the same Northern locality, though, unhappily, not of the same way of +thinking on the great question of loyalty to the national government and +Secession with the South. Plantation life and manners are presented to +some extent, as one of the brothers comes into possession of a large +estate and half a hundred slaves by the will of a Kentucky member of the +Lyon family. The first volume of the series is devoted to the "bringing +out" of the loyal element in the county where the plantation is located, +in opposition to the more demonstrative secession or neutral sentiment. +A Union meeting in a schoolhouse, disturbed by the "ruffians," as they +had come to be called, in which the loyal citizens vigorously defend +themselves, and expel the intruders, brings the affairs of the +neighborhood to a crisis. The planter is attacked by a mob, and with the +assistance of a few of his friends, and by arming a portion of his +negroes, successfully encounters the disturbers of the peace. Following +these stirring events, two companies of cavalry are enlisted by an +authorized officer, carefully drilled, and put in readiness to take the +field. + +In the present volume this battalion enters upon active service. The +same characters are presented in the uniform of cavalrymen, mounted on +the fine equine stock of the plantation. Noah Lyon, the head of the +family, obtains an actual military title, instead of the merely +complimentary one given to him by his friends and neighbors. His two +sons, Deck and Artie, appear in the front rank in the operations in +which the squadron is engaged, though both of them enter the service as +privates. The young men are of the loftiest moral character, actuated by +the purest and most devoted patriotism. They are of good physique, in +vigorous health, and do not seem to know the meaning of the word fear. +If their individual exploits seem to any to be extravagant, they have +been more than paralleled on the battle-field in hundreds of instances. +Both of them are exceedingly fond of their steeds; and Deck, in the +months devoted to drill, makes no insignificant figure as a +horse-trainer. His steed, one of the blood stock of his deceased uncle, +is so intelligent and so apt a scholar, that he enables his rider to +achieve some rather wonderful feats in action. He is modest, and, when +praised for his deeds, attributes them to "Ceph." This young soldier +wins and obtains a promotion which will supply the title for the next +volume. + +In contrast with the progressive fortunes of the loyal brother and his +two sons, the disloyal one, who had become, through the influence of his +money rather than his ability, the leader of the "ruffians," is again +introduced, with his two boys, who follow in the footsteps of their +father till they become disgusted with their lot. + +The operations of the loyal battalion of cavalry are confined to the +protection of the bridges on the railroads, and to repressing "partisan" +onslaughts and outrages upon towns and villages largely inhabited by +citizens who are faithful to the national government. But the officers +and privates are faithful where loyalty meant vastly more than in the +North; and their zeal and earnestness in the discharge of their duty +left a stirring record behind them wherever they went. + + WILLIAM T. ADAMS. + + DORCHESTER, Dec. 12, 1894. + + + + +CONTENTS + + + CHAPTER I. PAGE + COLLECTING A BILL BY FORCE OF ARMS 15 + + CHAPTER II. + REVELATIONS OF A YOUNG GUARDSMAN 27 + + CHAPTER III. + SOMETHING ABOUT THE LYON FAMILIES 39 + + CHAPTER IV. + THE DAY'S MARCH OF THE SQUADRON 52 + + CHAPTER V. + THE LEADER OF THE SCOUTING-PARTY 64 + + CHAPTER VI. + A VERY OBSTINATE PRISONER CAPTURED 76 + + CHAPTER VII. + PREPARING FOR ACTIVE OPERATIONS 88 + + CHAPTER VIII. + THE ACTION BY THE RAILROAD BRIDGE 100 + + CHAPTER IX. + AN ENCOUNTER WITH THE ENEMY'S SCOUTS 112 + + CHAPTER X. + THE BATTLE BEGUN AT THE CROSS-ROADS 124 + + CHAPTER XI. + A DESPERATE CHARGE ON BOTH SIDES 137 + + CHAPTER XII. + THE YOUNG HERO OF THE BATTLE 149 + + CHAPTER XIII. + THE PERPLEXING MOVEMENTS OF THE ENEMY 161 + + CHAPTER XIV. + A LONG WAIT FOR THE ENEMY 173 + + CHAPTER XV. + THE AMERICAN FLAG ON THE BRIDGE 185 + + CHAPTER XVI. + THE EXPLOSION ON THE BRIDGE 197 + + CHAPTER XVII. + THE CONFUSION OF THE DAY EXPLAINED 209 + + CHAPTER XVIII. + INTRODUCING MR. BROWN KIPPS 221 + + CHAPTER XIX. + THE CONSPIRACY ON THE BRIDGE 234 + + CHAPTER XX. + THE OPERATIONS OF THE BRIDGE-BURNERS 246 + + CHAPTER XXI. + A NEW DISPOSITION OF THE FORCES 258 + + CHAPTER XXII. + A DESPERATE DEED CONTEMPLATED 270 + + CHAPTER XXIII. + THE SKIRMISH ON THE HILL ROAD 282 + + CHAPTER XXIV. + CAPTAIN DINGFIELD'S STRATEGY 294 + + CHAPTER XXV. + SUNDRY FLANK MOVEMENTS ARRANGED 306 + + CHAPTER XXVI. + THE ENEMY'S BATTLE WITH THE MUD 318 + + CHAPTER XXVII. + AT THE CAMP-FIRE NEAR THE ROAD 330 + + CHAPTER XXVIII. + A MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCE 342 + + CHAPTER XXIX. + THE RIVERLAWN CAVALRY CHANGES BASE 354 + + CHAPTER XXX. + THE MAGNATE OF GREELTOP'S VISIT 366 + + CHAPTER XXXI. + LIFE KNOX ON THE MOUNTAIN ROAD 378 + + CHAPTER XXXII. + THE SKIRMISH IN THE GREAT CIRCLE 390 + + CHAPTER XXXIII. + CAPTAIN STINGER THE FIRE-EATER 402 + + CHAPTER XXXIV. + THE RE-ENFORCEMENT FOR PLAIN HILL 414 + + CHAPTER XXXV. + SURROUNDED AND TOTALLY DEFEATED 426 + + CHAPTER XXXVI. + CAPTAIN VINEGOLD OF THE GUERILLAS 439 + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS. + + + "BE YOU UNS SOLDIERS, MASS'R?" _Frontispiece._ + + ILLUSTRATED TITLE. + PAGE + "HELP! HELP! SHOUTED THE VICTIM" 18 + + "ONE OF THE TEXANS TUMBLED FROM HIS HORSE" 123 + + "SLING CARBINES! CHARGE THEM!" 207 + + "HALT WHERE YOU ARE, KIPPS!" 282 + + "WHAT ARE YOU UNS DOING HERE?" 317 + + "THE RUFFIAN SEEMED TO BE AS POWERLESS AS + AN INFANT IN HIS GRASP" 383 + + + + +IN THE SADDLE + + + + +CHAPTER I + +COLLECTING A BILL BY FORCE OF ARMS + + +"Help! Help!" + +This call for assistance came from a small house, poorly constructed by +those who had little skill in the art of carpentry. It stood near the +Spring Road, in a field of about ten acres of land, under cultivation, +though the rank weeds among the useful plants indicated that it had been +sorely neglected. + +Those familiar with the locality would have recognized it as the abode +of one of those small farmers found all over the country, who were +struggling to improve their worldly condition on a very insufficient +capital. The house was hardly finished, and the want of skill was +apparent in its erection from sill to ridgepole. + +Swinburne Pickford was the proprietor of the dwelling and land. He +worked for farmers, planters, and mechanics, for any one who would give +him employment, in addition to his labor in the cultivation of his land; +and with the sum he had been able to save from his wages, he had bought +the land, and started the small farm on his own account. He had a wife +and two small children; and, as his time permitted, he had built the +house with his own hands alone. + +The section of the State of Kentucky in which this little place was +located had been sorely disturbed by the conflicts and outrages of the +two parties at the beginning of the War of the Rebellion, one struggling +to drag the State out of the Union, and the other to prevent its +secession. As in the other States of the South, the advocates of +disunion were more violent and demonstrative than the loyal people, and +after the bombardment of Fort Sumter appeared to be in the ascendant for +this reason. + +The entire South had been in a state of excitement from the inception of +the presidential campaign which resulted in the election of Abraham +Lincoln, and the industries of this region suffered in consequence; and +it looked as though Pickford's house would never be entirely finished. +With the exception of the chimney, placed outside of the building, after +the fashion of the South, he had done all the work himself. Titus Lyon, +the mason of the village of Barcreek, had done this portion of the +labor, and the bill for its erection was still unpaid. + +Inside of the house two young men, the older about eighteen and the +younger sixteen, both armed with muskets, had dragged the proprietor of +the house to the floor. One of them had his foot on the chest of the +fallen farmer, and the other was pointing his gun at him. Pickford had +evidently endeavored to protect himself from the assault of his two +assailants, who had got the better of him, and had only given up the +battle when pinned to the floor by the foot of one of them. + +"Will you pay the bill I have brought to you?" demanded Sandy Lyon, who +was the principal aggressor in the assault. "Dr. Falkirk paid you over +fifty dollars to-day, and you have got the money to pay the bill, which +has been standing two years." + +Swin Pickford made no reply to this statement; but just at that moment +he heard the clippetty-clip of a galloping horse in the road in front of +the house. With the foot of one of his assaulters on his chest, and the +other with an old gun in his hand at his side, Pickford realized that +nothing could be done but submit. Shooting in that locality and at that +time was no uncommon occurrence; for there seemed to be no law in the +land, and men generally settled their own grievances, or submitted to +them. + +"Help! Help!" shouted the victim of the present outrage, with all the +strength of his lungs, which gave him voice enough to make him heard a +quarter of a mile distant. + +"Shut up your head!" savagely yelled Sandy Lyon, as he pressed his foot +down with all his might by throwing all his weight upon the breast of +the prostrate farmer. + +The sound of the horse's feet in the road seemed to give the victim a +new hope, and he tried to shout again. But Sandy flew at his throat like +a wolf, and choked him into silence. + +"Find a couple of ropes or cords, Orly, and we will tie his hands behind +him!" called Sandy to his brother. + +[Illustration: "'Help! Help!' shouted the victim."] + +The younger brother hastened to obey the order. Finding nothing of the +description required, he rushed into the rear room of the house. The +pressure of the assailant's hands upon his throat, and the hope of +assistance from outside, stimulated the victim to further resistance, +for the gun in the hands of Orly no longer threatened him. With a +desperate struggle he threw Sandy over backwards, and sprang to his +feet. His persecutor picked himself up, and was about to throw himself +upon him again. Pickford, who was nearly exhausted by the struggle and +the choking, rushed to the open door; and as he was about to pass out he +encountered a young man in the uniform of a cavalryman, with a sabre +dangling at his side, and a carbine slung on his back. + +At the moment when the cry for help came from the house, the young man, +mounted on a spirited horse, was riding along the Spring Road. He was a +stout fellow, not more than eighteen years old, with a pleasant face, +though a physiognomist would have observed upon it a look of +determination, indicating that he could not be trifled with on a serious +occasion. Neither the house nor the man who occupied it would have +tempted the soldier to enter it for any other reason than the call that +had just come from it. + +The cavalryman reined in his steed, and halted him with his head to a +post in front of the dwelling. Dismounting in haste, he threw the reins +over the hitching-hook and hurried to the front door, just in time to +encounter Pickford as he was rushing out. The victim of the outrage was +gasping for breath, and presented a really pitiable aspect to the young +soldier, to whom he was not a stranger, though they had met as enemies +and not as friends. + +"What's the trouble?" asked Deck Lyon, the cavalryman, as he encountered +the owner of the miniature plantation. + +"I have been set upon, and nearly killed by your cousins, Sandy and Orly +Lyon, and one of them has nearly choked me to death," gasped Pickford. + +"By my cousins!" exclaimed Deck Lyon, astonished at the reply of the +victim. + +"Yes; both on 'em," groaned Swin, as he was generally called. + +"I supposed you had gone to the county town with the Home Guards," added +Deck. + +"No; I never 'listed, 'cause I have a family to take care on." + +"Come in, and let me see what the trouble is," continued Deck, as he +pushed Swin in ahead of him. + +Sandy had been in the act of throwing himself upon his victim again, +when he discovered his cousin in the person of the cavalryman. The sight +of him caused the angry young man to fall back; and Deck entered the +room just as Orly appeared at the rear door with a piece of bed-cord in +his hand. + +"Good-morning, Sandy," said Deck, as pleasantly as though nothing had +called for his interference. "There seems to be some trouble here." + +"Trouble enough," replied Sandy in a sulky tone. + +"Swin Pickford calls for help as though you intended to murder him," +continued Deck, as he looked from one to the other of the belligerents, +and took in Orly with the cord at the same time. "You are all on the +same side of the national fight, and you ought to be friends." + +"We are not on the same side, for Pickford is a traitor," answered +Sandy. + +"I'm no traitor!" protested Swin. "But I should like to ask what you and +Orly are, if I'm one. I was willing to join the Home Guards for home +service; but when they started to go inter the Confederate army, I took +off my name, for I didn't j'in for no sech work. But Sandy and Orly went +off with the company, and then deserted and come home. What's the sense +of them callin' me a traitor when I'm not one, and they be." + +"If they deserted, they did a sensible thing," said Deck with a smile, +as he glanced at his two cousins. "But I am not here to settle any such +quarrel as this; for I don't care how much you ruffians fight among +yourselves." + +"The trouble here has nothing to do with politics or the Home Guards," +replied Sandy. + +"Nothing at all, Deck," added Orly. + +"What is it all about, then?" inquired Deck. "I came in because a cry +was heard from the house which made me think a murder was going on +here." + +"That's jest what was goin' on here!" exclaimed Pickford. + +"Nothing of the sort," protested Sandy. "Not a word has been said here +about the army or the Home Guards." + +"But your father has marched his company farther south, to join General +Buckner's army." + +"That had nothing to do with our business here. Swin Pickford owes +father twenty-seven dollars for building the chimney of this house, and +he has owed it for about two years, and it is time the bill was paid." + +"That's all so, Deck Lyon; I don't deny none on't," added Pickford, who +had recovered his breath and his temper by this time. "But I hain't had +the money to pay the bill. I'm an honest man, and I allus pay my debts +when I ken. Times have been hard with me for the last two years. Folks +has been all over inter politics, and I couldn't hardly git money enough +to pay for the bread and butter of my wife and children; for there +wasn't next to no work at all." + +"That's a poor excuse in your case, Swin," added Sandy. + +"I went to Cap'n Titus more'n a year ago, and talked to him about that +debt," continued Pickford, without heeding the remark of Sandy. "He got +heaps of money out of his brother's property, and I didn't s'pose he +needed the money. I offered him five dollars, and told him I'd try to +pay him five every month. But he didn't want me to do it that way, and +told me I could pay it all to once, when I had the money. Then he wanted +me to help him git up the company, and I did; I hoofed it all over the +county for him, sometimes when I might have worked." + +"But he has got money now!" Sandy broke in. "Dr. Falkirk paid him fifty +dollars this morning at the grocery; for I saw him do it, and heard him +say how much it was." + +"I don't deny that, nuther," said the unfortunate debtor. "But I haven't +got three dollars left of that money now. I paid Grunge the grocer +nineteen dollars on't; for he knows I'm an honest man, and trusted me. +Then I paid a man that's poorer'n I am for some work he done on my +place, seven dollars and a half, and I had to pay my taxes or lose my +farm." + +"I saw Dr. Falkirk pay him that money, and Orly and I tramped all the +way over here; for we have no horses at home now. He's got the money, +and won't pay the bill. Mother wants the money very much," added Sandy. + + +"She hasn't got a dollar in the house," Orly put in, perhaps telling +more than his brother wished to have revealed. + +"Then you came over here to collect the bill at the muzzle of your gun," +suggested Deck, who had seen the younger brother pick up his weapon, +which had fallen on the floor. + +"We meant to make him pay," said Sandy. "I believe he has the money, and +I meant to search the house till I found it." + +"You would have s'arched till the last gun fires, and you wouldn't found +it then," protested the victim, as he took an old wallet from his +pocket, which was found to contain about three dollars in silver. +"That's all I've got in this world, and none in the next." + +"I don't believe he has got any more money, Sandy," said Deck to his +cousin, as he stepped up to him, and spoke to him in a low tone. + +"I'm willin' to give him two dollars outen the little I got, though he +abused me wus'n any man ever did in this world, and sha'n't in the +next," interposed Pickford. + +"I will take what I can get," replied Sandy, as he took the bill from +his pocket. + +The debtor paid him two dollars in silver; and if his mother, as Orly +affirmed, had not a single dollar in the house, this small sum would be +gladly received by her. Deck led the way out of the house, and his two +cousins followed, just as Mrs. Pickford and her two small children came +into the room. The sight of them was enough to assure the visitors of +the poverty of the husband and father. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +REVELATIONS OF A YOUNG GUARDSMAN + + +Dexter Lyon was very much perplexed by the situation of his uncle's +family in Barcreek; for he owned his place, which had cost five thousand +dollars, unencumbered; and about two years before he had received from +the estate of his deceased brother twenty thousand dollars in cash and +stocks. + +"Of course the story that your mother had not a dollar in the house is a +fiction, such as people who collect money, or don't want to pay it out, +often tell," said the young cavalryman, as he went to the post where he +had secured his horse. + +"Fiction? What do you mean by that?" asked Sandy Lyon, the expression on +whose face was very sad and discontented. + +"You didn't mean that what you said was true?" + +"What did I say that was not true?" inquired Sandy, looking at his +cousin as though he was in doubt whether or not to conceal the correct +answer to the question. + +"Everybody in Barcreek knows that your father has gone to Bowling Green, +and you said that your mother had not a dollar in the house," replied +Deck, studying the expression on the face of his cousin. "You didn't +mean that, did you?" + +Sandy looked at his cousin, and each seemed to be considering the +meaning of the other's looks. They were own cousins, and their homes +were not more than a mile apart; but they had not met for three months. +Politics, as the people of this locality generally called the two great +questions of the day, Unionism and Secession, had created a great gulf +between the two families. Judging from the threadbare and semi-miserable +condition of the two sons of Captain Titus, times had gone hardly with +the family. + +"I did not say that mother had not a dollar in the house," said Sandy, +after a long silence. + +"Orly said so, and you did not contradict him; so it is all the same +thing," added Deck. + +"I did say so; and I said it because it was just as true as +Breckinridge's long letter," said Orly earnestly. + +"That is not saying much for the truth of it," answered Deck, with a +smile on his handsome face; for he had the reputation of being a +good-looking fellow, especially since he had donned his uniform. + +"Well, it is true as that the sun shines in the sky," added Orly; and +there was an expression of disgust on his face. + +"But your father has plenty of money," suggested the young soldier. + +"No, he hasn't," protested Orly. + +"You are talking too fast, Orly," interposed Sandy reproachfully. + +"We may as well let the cat out of the bag first as last, for she will +scratch her way out very soon," replied Orly. "Mother will be glad +enough to see that two dollars when Sandy offers it to her." + +Just at that moment the blast of a bugle, or several of them, was heard +in the direction of the Cross Roads, the way Deck was going when he was +arrested by the cry for help from Pickford's house. + +"What's that?" asked Sandy, as though he was glad to have the subject of +the conversation changed, however it may have been with his more +impulsive brother. + +"It must be my company, or the squadron to which it belongs," replied +Deck rather indifferently. + +"How many companies have you, Deck?" asked Orly. + +"Only two yet, hardly enough for a battalion." + +"Where are they going now?" + +"Probably they are out for drill; and I must fall in as soon as the +companies come up," said Deck, as he mounted his horse and straightened +himself up in the saddle, as though he wished to present a proper +appearance before his cousins. + +But the battalion or squadron was still at a considerable distance from +him, and the young cavalryman could not help looking at the pinched +faces of his cousins; for though they had ostensibly embraced the cause +of Secession, he was full of sympathy for them. They looked as though +they had been poorly fed, if not half-starved; and when the time had +come for them to have new suits of clothes, they had not obtained +them. But if Captain Titus's family was without money, it could be only +a temporary matter, for he could hardly have exhausted his twenty +thousand dollars in stocks and cash, though it was well known that he +had contributed five thousand dollars for the purchase of arms and +ammunition to be used by his company of Home Guards, which had now moved +south to join the Confederate army. + +"As I said before, your father had plenty of money," continued Deck, +though he was not disposed to be over-inquisitive. + +"He had at one time," Sandy admitted; and it was plain from his manner +that he was not willing to tell all he knew about his father's financial +affairs. + +"I don't understand how your mother should be so short of money, Sandy; +but it is none of my business, and I won't ask any more questions," +added the cavalryman, as he whirled his restive horse about. "I thought +you and Orly went with the company to Bowling Green, Sandy." + +"We did; but we came back again," replied the elder brother. But there +appeared to be something to conceal in regard to their return. + +"There wasn't any fun in soldiering without any pay, and without even +half enough to eat, with nothing to wear," added the plain-spoken +younger brother. + +"You needn't tell all you know, Orly," interposed Sandy, with a frown at +his brother. + +"You needn't snap at me, Sandy; for I told you before I had had enough +of this thing, and I shall never join the company again," returned Orly +earnestly. "Do you suppose I can enlist in one of your companies, Deck?" + +"Shut up, Orly!" exclaimed Sandy very sternly. "You don't know what you +are talking about." + +"I'll bet I know what I'm talking about, and my stomach knows too," +retorted Orly. + +"Don't make a fool of yourself! You don't mean to turn traitor to your +father and the cause, Orly?" pleaded Sandy; but he appeared to be trying +to keep up appearances. + +"Hang the cause!" exclaimed Orly, as though he meant all he said. "My +father got me into the scrape, and he will get enough of it before he is +many months older." + +"Use your reason and common-sense," counselled the elder brother. + +"That's what we just haven't been using the last two years, and now I'm +going to use my reason and common-sense on my own hook. If you like +soldiering without pay or rations, Sandy, you can join the company again +as soon as you like; but when you catch me there, you will find a +Kentuckian without any eye-teeth," replied Orly, who was only two years +younger than his brother, and was considered the brighter boy of the +two; and his tones and his manner were vigorous enough to indicate that +he meant all he said. + +"You are acting like a fool to talk like that before your cousin, who is +an abolition soldier." + +"Before my cousin! His father and himself have been sensible from the +first; and I only wonder that Deck don't quote Scripture to us, and +gently remind us that 'the way of transgressors is hard;' for he can't +help seeing the truth of the proverb in both of us." + +"I didn't know that things had become particularly hard with you," said +Deck. + +"Orly is as wild as a goat, Deck. Don't mind what he says," interposed +Sandy. + +"Or what Sandy says," interjected the younger of the two. + +"Our company has not been mustered in yet, and of course we could not +draw pay or rations," added Sandy, who felt called upon to defend his +father and the "cause" from the implied censure of his brother. "Father +spent all the ready money he had to pay for rations and tents, and some +other things the Confederate government will furnish, and will pay him +back for all he has expended. That is the reason why my mother is so +short of money just now." + +"That's all very good as far as it goes; but I don't believe the +Confederate government has got any more money than the Bank of England; +and it will be a long day before father gets his money back. We were +nearly starved when we left the company." + +"But we did not desert, as some folks say we did," added Sandy, who was +in favor of putting the best foot forward. "Father sent us home when we +spoke of leaving, and he gave us a sort of furlough, in so many words. +If he could hear you talk, Orly, he would be ashamed of you." + +"As I have been of him more than once," said the younger in a low tone, +as though he did not feel fully justified in speaking in that manner of +his father, who had a gross failing, which had recently been gaining +upon him. + +Sandy heard the remark; and he was disgusted, though he could not deny +the justness of it. He had been ashamed of his father, but his inborn +pride did not permit him to say so outside of the family. If he had been +as plain-spoken as his brother, he might have informed Deck, who was the +only listener to the conversation, that the furlough had grown out of a +quarrel between Captain Titus and his older son. + +The captain had always been what is known as a moderate drinker, but the +habit had grown upon him after he went to Kentucky. Some of the Home +Guard had been shot at while engaged in foraging among the farmers for +food in the outskirts of the county-seat where the company was encamped, +and it became a dangerous pursuit, as even the commander of the company +would not authorize it; for in the status of the body it was nothing but +plundering. + +Sandy noticed that his father had his whiskey ration in increased +proportions, and he knew that it cost money. He and Orly were not half +fed, and the father lived on his favorite beverage. It provoked him to +wrath, and in a fit of desperation he spoke out to him as plainly as +Orly could have done it. The quarrel followed; and when Sandy declared +that he and his brother would leave the company, he had driven them from +his presence, and ordered them not to return. This was the furlough, "in +so many words," as Sandy put it. + +Perhaps the approach of the squadron of cavalry was a relief to Sandy +Lyon, for it put an end to the conversation of a disagreeable nature to +him. He realized the truth of nearly all that Orly had said in regard to +the desperate situation of the Home Guard, and the family of its +commander; but his pride was still superior to the groans of his +stomach. + +"Mother and the girls are going back to Derry as soon as she can get +money enough to pay the bills," said Orly in a low voice. + +"I am ashamed of you, Orly!" protested Sandy, who had heard the remark; +for the bugle of the battalion had ceased its blast at that moment. "You +have no business to tell family secrets like that." + +"Confound your family secrets!" exclaimed his brother. "I don't want to +quarrel with you, my brother, as father has done with Uncle Noah; but I +am not in favor of starving to death for the benefit of the Southern +Confederacy. You have too much family pride when it don't pay, Sandy. +You said that our sister Mabel should not go out to work in the family +of Dr. Falkirk, when mother said she might." + +"Dr. Falkirk might have got a nigger woman to do his housework, instead +of paying double wages to Mabel," replied Sandy. + +"That is nothing to do with the question. Mabel's wages have been all we +had to live on since we got home," returned Orly, letting out more of +the secrets of the family without any compunction. + +"I wish you would hold your tongue, Orly," added Sandy fretfully. + +"I said what I did for a purpose; but I shall have to stop now, for the +squadron is nearly here," replied Orly. "When can I see you again, +Deck?" + +"Almost any time when I am not at drill, or absent on an errand, as I +have been to-day. You will find me at the camp or the house," replied +Deck, as he rode forward to a point where he could fall into his +position in his company. + +"Why, there is Uncle Noah at the head of the column!" said Sandy, as the +squadron came near enough for him to recognize the familiar face of his +relative, even in the midst of his present unwonted surroundings. "He +looks like an officer." + +"He is what people have been calling him since he came to Kentucky, and +is now actually Major Lyon," replied Deck, whom the boys had followed. + +"But are you not an officer, Deck?" asked Orly. + +"Not at all; Artie and I are high privates. They wanted to make us both +sergeants; but after we had talked with father, we declined all +positions," replied Deck, as he fell into his place. + +It is time to give something of the history of the two families who had +emigrated to Kentucky, the family secrets of one of which had been so +freely revealed to Deck by the young Home Guardsman with Union +aspirations. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +SOMETHING ABOUT THE LYON FAMILIES + + +The town of Derry in New Hampshire had contributed fourteen persons to +the population of Kentucky, all of them by the name of Lyon. Colonel +Duncan Lyon had gone there as a young man, and had made a very handsome +fortune. But he died at the age of fifty, and bequeathed his property, +consisting of a large plantation, which he had named Riverlawn, because +it had a delightful lawn, with great trees scattered over it, though +after the English fashion with none immediately in front of the large +mansion, to his two brothers and the children of one deceased ten years +before his death. + +The elder of the two living brothers was Titus Lyon. He had removed to +his new home eight years before, and he appeared to be the black sheep +of the fourteen who had departed from their native town. He was a mason +by trade, and had done fairly well in his former home at his business. +He was one of those men who believed that fate or circumstances had +misused him, as he compared his worldly condition with that of his +eldest brother, who had departed this life leaving a fortune behind him; +or even of his other brother, who had always been a prosperous farmer. + +Titus had been informed by Colonel Lyon that there was an opening for a +mason in the village of Barcreek, near which he resided, though he had +not advised him to remove to that locality, and was really opposed to +his coming. His discontent with his condition had induced him to change +his residence to this far-off section of the country, probably with a +motive which he concealed from both of his brothers. He had a wife, who +was an excellent woman, belonging to a very respectable family, and five +children, three girls and two boys, the latter already introduced. + +The mason did tolerably well at his trade in his new home for a few +years, though it was not a business at which a fortune could be easily +made in that rural section of the country. It was not a prohibition +State, which seemed to make it all the worse for the head of this +family; for he had contracted the habit of drinking moderately when, as +a young man, he had been a stage-driver, and it had grown upon him in +his new home. + +Titus had not become a sot, or even a very heavy drinker, before the +death of his brother; but he regularly imbibed his whiskey, and to some +extent his habit affected his manners and his morals. He had always +appeared to be extremely devoted to the colonel, and even fawned upon +him, during his residence in Barcreek; and he was always kindly treated +and assisted financially when he needed help. + +Colonel Lyon died suddenly at the age of fifty. He had never been +married, and had no children to whom he could leave his property. About +a year before his decease he paid a visit of a month to his brother +Noah, the youngest of the three brothers, in his native town. The latter +was a substantial man, who held a very respectable position in the town; +he had been somewhat distinguished among his fellow-citizens, and had +been the incumbent of several town officers. + +Noah Lyon was forty years old at the time of his brother's death, with +a good woman for a wife, who was in every sense a helpmate to her +husband. They had two children of their own, a boy and a girl, Dexter +and Hope. Cyrus, a fourth brother of the Lyons, had lost his life in a +freshet in Vermont, where he had settled as a farmer; and his wife had +perished with him, leaving two small children, Artemas and Dorcas. He +had not left property enough to pay his debts; but Noah promptly adopted +the little ones, and for ten years he had cared for and supported them +as though they had been his own. + +Noah had suggested to Titus that he should take one of them to his home, +while he received the other in his own family; but his brother pleaded +the poor health of his wife for not doing so, and the little ones had +reached the ages of seventeen and fifteen when they were removed to +Kentucky. Noah and his wife treated them in every respect as their own +children, and no one could have asked a better home for them. They +called their uncle and aunt by the endearing names of father and mother. + +At the death of Colonel Lyon, the telegraphic message announcing the sad +event had been immediately followed by a letter from Colonel Cosgrove, +summoning Noah to the late home of the deceased. To the intense +disappointment of Titus, the Riverlawn plantation had been left to Noah, +with the fifty-one slaves, and everything connected with the place. +Titus had set his heart upon the possession of the estate; for it would +give him a generous support without manual labor. + +He was one of those men who contrive to believe in and expect what they +most desire. He had been his wealthy brother's neighbor for eight years, +and knew something about the estate. For this reason, and because he was +next in age to the deceased, he had come to believe that the place +belonged to him. The colonel had other views; for he realized that Titus +was not an entirely reliable person, was not much of a business man, and +his drinking habit was continually growing upon him. + +The eldest brother had, however, endeavored to make a fair division of +his property among his nearest of kin. He had given some legacies to his +personal friends, including his faithful overseer, who had served him +for many years. + +Then he had given Noah ten thousand dollars in consideration of the fact +that he had supported the children of Cyrus for ten years. To him also +he bequeathed twenty-five thousand dollars in trust for these children. +He had left the same sum to Titus, less a mortgage note given at the +time the mason had purchased his residence in the village. The will was +accompanied by an inventory of the entire property, indicating that the +colonel had figured up his resources, and endeavored to make an +equitable division among his legal heirs. + +With the will also came into the possession of Noah two letters, one +enclosing the other. The open one directed him not to sell any of the +slaves on the plantation, and the other was not to be opened for five +years. The sum of money left to his successor on the plantation, in +payment for the support of the niece and nephew of the testator, and the +disposition of the negroes, were the principal grievances of Titus, +apparently, though the real one had been the giving of the plantation to +Noah. In some of his moments, when he had rather overcharged himself +with whiskey, he had furiously assailed his innocent brother for what +the dead one had done in his will. + +Noah was a mild and peaceful man under ordinary circumstances, and he +did his best to preserve intact his fraternal relations with his angry +and discontented brother. Some discussion had taken place between them, +and Titus was as unreasonable as a mule. The subject rendered him +furious, aided by the whiskey, and the difference on this matter became +a decided rupture. + +Colonel Lyon had sometimes been charged with over-indulgence to his +negroes; and it was true that he had treated them as kindly as though +they had been hired servants instead of slaves, perhaps more so. The +"people," as they were often called on the plantation, after the manner +of a man-of-war, had not been valued in the inventory of the deceased +planter, and had not been mentioned in the document, any more than the +horses, mules, and cows. + +By this omission Titus believed that he had been cheated out of his +share of about thirty thousand dollars. Noah exhibited the open letter +of the colonel to him; but this only fanned his wrath. He appeared to +believe that his deceased brother had no rights in his own property, all +of which he had accumulated himself. He had nursed himself into the +conviction that he was the victim of a gross injustice, and he had +little patience, or even toleration, with his mild-mannered brother, who +had never spoken to the colonel about his will, or the colonel to him. + +This family quarrel owed some of its bitterness, on the part of Titus, +to other circumstances than the naked merits of the case, if there was a +shadow of justice in the charges of his brother against him. Noah had +not a particle of it in his composition; for he was a true Christian, +and returned good for evil so far as he was permitted to do so. The +political situation in Kentucky had complicated the relations of the +brothers. + +Titus had belonged to one party, while his brother was an earnest member +of the other; though with a very wide difference of opinion, one had +proved to be as patriotic as the other. Probably because Noah was +emphatically devoted to the Union, Titus had taken the other side of the +question in Kentucky, where all was excitement and turmoil from the +nomination of the candidates for the presidency. The agitation became +that of Loyalty and Secession. + +The governor had issued his proclamation in favor of the neutrality of +the State, and Home Guards were organized to enforce it. But it never +amounted to anything; for the majority were demonstrated to be Union +men, and appealed to the traditions of the past as the first State to +join the original thirteen. Captain Titus had become the commander of +one of these companies, on his promise to uniform and equip his men. He +had expended a considerable portion of the money he had inherited in the +purchase of arms and ammunition for his command, though he had never +been able to supply his soldiers with uniforms. + +He had sent to New York for an abundant supply of weapons and +cartridges, including two brass field-pieces, over a hundred +breech-loading rifles, and nearly as many revolvers of several sizes. He +intended that his company should be the best equipped in the region, and +his newly acquired wealth made him very extravagant. But the Union +forces had begun to show themselves in the State, and the loyal element +exceeded in numbers the Secessionists; so that it was necessary for the +commander of the Home Guards to take extraordinary precautions for the +safety of the war material he had purchased. + +With some difficulty he had moved the cases from the train at Dripping +Spring, carted them to a point on Bar Creek, from which he had conveyed +them to one of the numerous sink-hole caverns which abound in this part +of the State. He had carefully disposed of them, with the aid of his two +sons and some trusted neighbors, intending to give them out to his men +in a few days. + +An indiscretion on the part of his wife had given a hint of the +existence of the arms at Riverlawn, which an exploration of Artie Lyon, +the adopted son, had worked into tangible evidence of the place where +the munitions had been concealed. Noah believed it was a duty he owed to +his country to obtain possession of these arms. He had already been +warned by his brother that he was regarded as an abolitionist, and that +a mob, consisting mainly of the Home Guards, were agitating the question +of burning his mansion and driving him out of the county. + +When the loss of the arms was discovered, Titus became absolutely +furious, and, either with or without sufficient evidence, accused Noah +of stealing the property. A very enthusiastic Union meeting was held at +the Big Bend schoolhouse, and was attended by some of the most prominent +citizens of the county. The action of Major Lyon, as he had come to be +called very generally as a title of respect, in accordance with a +prevailing custom, in securing the arms was heartily approved by the +assembly. + +That very night the ruffians of the Home Guard, for such they were, +which included most of the baser element of the locality, had made an +attack on the plantation of Major Lyon, intending to burn and destroy +it, if not, as was hinted, to hang the planter to one of the big trees +on his lawn. But a few of his neighbors had rallied to his assistance, +and his negroes were armed with the confiscated weapons, and the attack +was an utter failure. + +Colonel Belthorpe, who had been a soldier in his earlier years, +commanded the defenders of the estate, and the mob marched to his +plantation to wreak their vengeance upon him by the destruction of his +property; but the same forces defeated them there, with many wounds, and +the loss of a few lives. + +At the Union meeting Major Lyon had proposed to raise a company of +cavalry. He had offered to contribute a considerable number of horses +for the service, and his neighbors had followed his example; and over a +hundred steeds were pledged. Letters had been written to the commander +of the Union army in Kentucky, relating to this project, and Lieutenant +Burke Gordan had been sent to organize the company; and he was followed +later by several non-commissioned officers to assist in the drill. The +ruffians had made an attempt to stop the enlistments at Riverlawn, where +the camp was located; but they had been beaten off. + +The recruiting had progressed very successfully; and instead of one +company, two had been organized during the next three months. Major Lyon +and his two sons had drilled and studied the military art in the most +determined manner; for they were enthusiastic in the support of the +government. The two companies, though hardly entitled to the name, were +called a squadron. The planter, in spite of his protest, was made the +major of the command; and he had become competent for the position. This +was the squadron which marched by the house of Swin Pickford while Deck +was talking with the two sons of Titus about the strait of the captain's +family in Barcreek village. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +THE DAY'S MARCH OF THE SQUADRON + + +It seemed to be almost a miracle that Noah Lyon had been transformed +into a soldier; and those who had known him in the State of New +Hampshire could hardly have recognized him. He had always been a +dignified, peaceable, and quiet man--the very antipode of a fire-eater. +At his former home he had been a justice of the peace, and was regarded +as a person of eminent gravity. + +His anger, if he was ever stirred by any such passion, was nothing more +than indignation. But he was not a milk-and-water man; and, gentle as +were his manners, he was an earnest man. He had never developed any +military ambition in his earlier years, though he was sorry he had not +done so when he found himself on the very border of the Rebellion. He +was still of the military age, and was a hearty and vigorous man at +forty-two, when he was called into the service. + +He was an earnest and determined patriot; and nothing but the need of +the nation could have induced him to put on a uniform, and drill +laboriously for months in preparation for his new sphere. He belonged to +the class who were said to make the best soldiers, because they went +into the field as high-toned men, with whom a principle was at stake. +Such soldiers had not been hurried into the camp by the excitement of +the times, or by any motive but patriotic duty. + +Sandy and Orly Lyon stood in front of Pickford's house, and observed the +approaching column of cavalry; but the most of their attention was given +to Uncle Noah. It was a very strange sight for them to see him in the +uniform of a soldier, riding at the head of the squadron. These boys had +drilled and marched with the Home Guards, and their father had military +aspirations, though he was a little past the military age. They could +not help contrasting the appearance of Major Lyon's command with that of +Captain Lyon's. + +Not all the Home Guards in the State were of the character of the +ruffians forming the company which had marched to Bowling Green, and who +had been the principal participants in the outrages and the ruffianism +in the vicinity of Barcreek. Some of the companies were composed and +officered by Union men, who did some of the first fighting in the State +when the Confederates fortified Cumberland Gap in the eastern section. +Such as these wheeled into the Union army, while those of the Secession +stripe promptly joined the forces on the other side. + +No doubt many of these Home Guards believed sincerely in the neutrality +policy, which was advocated by some of the best men in the State; but it +afforded thousands of ruffians the advantages of an organization for +plunder and outrage. But its day had gone by. Major Lyon insisted from +the beginning that it was a fraud; and, in spite of the action of the +governor, Kentucky adhered to the Union. It cost something there to be +true to the old flag, and the State deserves all honor for the struggle +it made against the breaking up of the Union. + +Major Lyon sat erect upon his horse, a valuable animal, which had been +his favorite since his arrival. There was nothing like vanity in his +expression, as might have been excusable at the head of such a fine +body of men; but he looked as he always did, earnest and determined, his +soldierly character resting more on his devotion to the cause than on +any other motive. He wore a felt hat, ornamented with a black feather, +which the mustering officer had prevailed upon him to adopt. + +The squadron was composed of rather young men as a rule, and they were +the sons of farmers and others engaged in business. They were +fine-looking men, and they had been diligently drilled by the officers +sent to Riverlawn for the purpose. Perhaps the commander was the only +real planter enlisted; for most of them in the vicinity were past the +age for active service, though they had done their duty in repressing +outrages and keeping the peace. + +Captain Gordon, who had been charged with the organization of the first +company, was in command of it, while Captain Truman, a young lawyer, +whose eloquent voice had been raised for the Union in the important +meeting at the Big Bend schoolhouse, was in command of the second; but +he had proved in the Riverlawn battle that he was a brave man, and would +make a good soldier. Tom Belthorpe, who had taken part in the defence +of Lyndhall and of Riverlawn, was first lieutenant of the first company; +while Major Gadbury, whose military title was one of courtesy, held the +corresponding rank in the second company. + +It had required a great deal of persuasion to induce the proprietor of +Riverlawn to accept the position of major. He was a man of character; +and some of the planters in the neighborhood, especially Colonel +Cosgrove and Colonel Belthorpe, convinced him that it was his duty to +the cause to take the place. He had proved to them, in the engagements +with the ruffians, that he had the material in his composition of which +reliable commanders are made. + +Deck Lyon had a tremendous reputation for courage and skill at Lyndhall; +for he had rescued both of the daughters of its owner from the hands of +the ruffians, who had captured them for the purpose of assisting in the +recovery of the arms the major had secured. When it came to the matter +of electing officers for the second company, Tom had advocated the +choice of Deck as captain, though he was only eighteen years old, to the +position. + +Of course the young man was elated at the idea of being elevated to such +a position before he had been tried in the service; but it did not seem +to be quite right to him, and he went to his father for advice. The +major promptly advised him to accept no position in the company. He was +too young to be the commander of a company, which might be ordered on +duty by itself. As his father pointed out to him the difficulties in his +way, Deck went to the other extreme, and declined to take a place even +as a non-commissioned officer. Artie Lyon liked the stand he had taken +so well, that he followed his example, and both remained privates. + +Deck and Artie did not forget the favorable mention of their names, and +they electioneered very zealously for the choice of Tom Belthorpe as +first lieutenant. In the case of the former, perhaps Deck was +unconsciously influenced by the fact that he had a very pretty sister, +who had manifested no little interest in him since he had attacked the +ruffian who held her as a prisoner. In fact, Tom had two pretty sisters; +but this fact affected Lieutenant Gadbury more than any other person. + +When the squadron had advanced a short distance, Major Lyon wheeled his +horse, and faced his command, who were marching as usual on the road by +fours. He had learned his lesson well at the camp; for the squadron had +been thoroughly drilled from the beginning, up to the point where the +"school of the battalion" had been their practice. + +"Battalion, halt!" he commanded, with a voice loud enough and clear +enough to be heard far back of the place where the order was given. + +Captain Gordon declared that he had not caught the major in a single +error or slip since he had begun to exercise the squadron. The command +was repeated by the subordinate officers, and the force came to a full +halt. Deck had stopped by the side of the road, to await the coming up +of his section, and his father called him as soon as he had halted the +battalion. + +The young man had been on a military errand for the major, rather than +for his father, who insisted that his two sons should fare precisely the +same as other soldiers of the companies. There was to be no favoritism +on account of relationship. Deck could not report the result of his +errand while the commander was marching at the head of his column, for +the new companies had not reached the free-and-easy stage which came +later. + +Deck saluted the major as though they had never met before in their +lives, and his father acknowledged it. Then the private reported the +result of his mission. + +"You have been making some stay at this house we are passing," continued +Major Lyon, as he glanced back at the two boys who were still standing +there. + +"Found a fight going on in the house, and I went in on account of a call +for help," replied Deck. + +"But that is Pickford's house, and no ruffians would attack him," +suggested the major. "Are these Titus's boys standing here?" + +"They are. Uncle Titus has a bill against Pickford for twenty-seven +dollars for building his chimney, and Sandy and Orly were trying to +collect it by force of arms." + +"I will hear more of that another time, Dexter," added Major Lyon, +cutting short the story. "I declare, I hardly knew those boys!" + +"They have had a hard time of it; but I must fall in," said Deck, as he +began to turn his horse. "I suppose you are out for a drill, father." + +"We are not; we are going on duty this time. General Buckner is +somewhere in this vicinity, and evidently intends to occupy Bowling +Green. Colonel Cosgrove came over to see me this morning. He says +Captain Titus's company have got into the Confederate army at last, and +have been supplied with arms of a poor quality, though not with +uniforms." + +"His men have been about half-starved while waiting, and that is the +reason why Sandy and Orly came home," added the young soldier. + +"Another time for that, Dexter. Are you all ready to march with your +company?" asked the major. + +"I have my sabre, carbine, and pistols; but I have no blanket, as I see +the rest of the men have." + +"You can be supplied from the wagon in the rear. But fall in," said the +major, as he prepared to resume the march. + +Deck galloped back to the section in which he belonged, where he had +only to take his place at the side of Artie, though inside of him, for +he was a trifle taller than his cousin. In the infantry, the tallest men +are placed on the right, which is always the head of the column, while +in the cavalry the tallest are placed in the middle. + +"What does all this mean, Deck? Didn't I see Sandy and Orly Lyon by that +house?" asked Artie. + +"They are there, whether you saw them or not," replied Deck. + +"Battalion, at ease, march!" + +In the infantry, when the order for "route step!" is given, the men need +not even keep step, and the formalities are relaxed in some other +respects. In the cavalry, in which the horses take all the steps, the +strain of precise position and movement is removed, and the soldiers may +make the best of their journey. Artie wanted to know all about his two +cousins he had seen at Pickford's, and Deck told him the whole story of +what had occurred there. + +"Is it possible that Uncle Titus's family are reduced to such a strait?" +demanded Artie, his pity and sympathy apparent on his face. + +"The boys say Aunt Meely and the girls are going back to Derry; and +that looks as though the family were very hard up," replied Deck. "And +Mabel has gone out to work in the family of Dr. Falkirk." + +"I think Sandy and Orly must be in a desperate situation when they try +to collect a bill with a gun." + +"I have no doubt of it; though Sandy tried to put the best face on the +matter, and said the part of the Confederate army that was to come to +Bowling Green had not got there yet, and that they will be all right as +soon as the company is mustered in. Orly speaks out loud, and tells all +he knows about the condition of the family. He wants to join one of our +companies." + +"Orly Lyon!" exclaimed Artie. "Why, he was one of the loudest +Secessionists in the village!" + +"He has got enough of it, working without pay or rations," added Deck. +"But where are we going, Artie?" + +"I'm sure I don't know; why didn't you ask your father, if you want to +know?" + +"Ask my father! You know better than that, Artie; for you are aware that +commanding officers don't tell what they are going to do till they get +ready to do it," returned Deck. + +"We are provided with ammunition and rations, and very likely we have +come out to-day in order to get used to carrying them on a march," +suggested Artie. + +"Not at all; for father told me we were out on duty to-day, though he +did not say what it was," replied Deck. + +The march continued all day long, and it began to look as though it +would extend into the night. About nine o'clock in the evening Major +Lyon called a halt at a point where a railroad could be seen in the +gloom of the night. The column had just crossed a bridge of considerable +length over a creek, and the position of the railroad indicated that it +must be bridged over the same stream. + +While the commander and his officers were trying to make out the +surroundings, half a dozen muskets were discharged from a covert of +trees; but fortunately none of the cavalrymen appeared to be struck by +the bullets. But it was evident that the time for action had come. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +THE LEADER OF THE SCOUTING-PARTY + + +As the squadron came to a region where Major Lyon was no longer familiar +with the country, scouts had been sent out ahead of the column to give +information in regard to any possible enemy. Confederate troops had been +reported from several different directions by those who had occasion to +travel about the State. As indicated by some of their operations, their +present policy was to destroy the railroad bridges, so as to prevent the +government from forwarding troops by them. + +General Buckner, or his forces, had destroyed one at Rolling Creek; but +he was supposed to be falling back upon Bowling Green, as regiments from +Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois began to reach this part of the State. It +was possible that the squadron might come in contact with some of these +forces; and the men were very anxious to find them. + +Sergeant Knox was at the head of the scouts. He was a man of forty-two, +a tall, raw-boned Kentuckian, whose enterprise and love of adventure had +led him into the region beyond the Mississippi, where he had been a +regular soldier, a hunter, a trapper, and _voyageur_. For some reason he +had become a strong friend of Deck Lyon, who was never tired of +listening to his stories of the regions beyond the pale of civilization. +He was a bluff, good-natured man with those who pleased his fancy; and, +though he was not bitter or revengeful, he was capable of being a +terrible enemy. + +Firing at a target was part of the regular drill of the cavalrymen in +camp, and Life Knox always put his ball inside of every other. His name +was Eliphalet, and he sometimes laughed at his parents for giving him +such a long name. Captain Gordon had had no little difficulty in +inducing him to sign his name in full on the enlistment papers. He had +abbreviated it to "Life," and declared that he had never signed anything +but that to any document in all his life. + +He was born and "raised" in Warren County, though he had wandered far +from it at an early age, after the death of his father and mother. He +had a brother who was a prosperous planter, and with him he had lived +the last two years of his life. When he came to Riverlawn to enlist, he +brought with him a long rifle, which was a load for an ordinary man to +carry. He was told that he could make no use of it in the army; but he +asked Deck to take care of it for him, and he put it in his room. + +It was occasionally brought out when the soldiers were firing at a +target, and Life produced the most surprising results with it. He was +pretty sure to hit the bull's-eye with it every time; for he had been +trained where his daily existence depended upon the accuracy of his aim. +He could bring down a squirrel as far as he could see him; and he always +insisted that the rifle had as much to do with the result as himself. +His shooting was observed with interest by the officers and men; and he +was called, not simply a good, but a remarkable, shot. He was a dead +shot to any living thing at which he aimed. + +Life Knox was a good-hearted man; but there was a sort of inborn +aristocracy in him which would not permit him to associate intimately +with all his comrades in the ranks, though he treated them well, and +spoke pleasantly to them. Deck was always respectful to him, and Life +had taken a decided fancy to him. When the tall Kentuckian was ordered +upon the scout, he took care that Deck should be one of the party. They +had ridden together all the afternoon, and Life had made the time seem +short to the young man by relating all the details of a fight with a +party of Indians. + +As the darkness of the evening came on, Life ordered his men to keep a +sharp lookout on all sides, and suspended his thrilling narratives that +his own watchfulness might not be impaired. The scouts were passing +through what appeared to be a plantation, though they could not yet see +any buildings. Suddenly the light of a fire flashed up at a considerable +distance to the right of the scouts in the road. + +"A fire, Life!" shouted Deck, as he discovered the glare of the first +flame that rose in the darkness. + +"Hush, little one!" interposed Knox. "Don't tell the neighbors about it, +for it might astonish them." + +"I don't believe there are any neighbors very near us," replied Deck in +a low tone. "But there is something going on in this vicinity." + +"We won't tell 'em, whoever's at work round here, that we are coming. By +the light of the fire I can see a mansion or farmhouse over yonder." + +As he spoke, the report of the half-a-dozen muskets, more or less, that +had attracted the attention of the main body of the squadron, was heard, +though the scouts were half a mile distant. The building of the fire was +possibly a signal for the discharge which had so soon followed it; but +no other connection could be suggested between them. + +"One man can always do better in lookin' inter things than a dozen," +said Life, as he was trying to connect the fire and the firing in a +reasonable manner. "Ride over towards that fire, Deck, and see what you +can see." + +"Be you uns soldiers, Mars'r?" asked a negro, coming out of a cornfield +at the side of the road, where the stalks had concealed his coming. + +"Of course we are, Cato," replied Deck, who was nearest to him. + +"Who done tole you my name, Mars'r?" asked the negro, whose surprise +seemed to have driven everything else out of his head. + +"I guessed at it. But what do you want? I told you we were soldiers," +added Deck. "Do you come from that house beyond the cornfield?" + +"Yes, Mars'r; but if you uns is soldiers, which side was you on?" +inquired Cato very cautiously. + +"Not gone, Deck?" asked Knox, riding up to him. + +"This contraband has just come out of the field, and belongs to the +house we saw in the distance. I thought he could tell me better than I +could see for myself what is going on here," replied Deck. + +"You are right, Deck." + +"But he wants to know which side we are on before he says anything," +added Deck. + +"Then he is a sensible nigger. Of course we uns belong on the Union +side; and when you catch Life Knox on any other side, you'll catch a +coon asleep," replied the sergeant, decidedly enough to satisfy any +doubtful person. "What's gwine on at that fire, Minky?" + +"Bress de Lod if you was Union sodgers! and my name is Cato!" exclaimed +the visitor, earnestly enough for a camp-meeting. "Dey is a hull +regiment of Sesh sodgers ober dar!" he added, pointing in the direction +from which the report of the firing had come. + +Without waiting for any further information, Knox called Lane, one of +the scouts, and sent him back to report what the negro said to Major +Lyon. He was directed to move slowly after he had gone the eighth of a +mile; for the enemy were at some point on the right of the road, and he +would get a shot if he disturbed them. + +"What are the Sesh soldiers here for, Cato?" asked Knox, as soon as his +messenger had gone. + +"Gwine to burn de bridge ober dar," replied the man, pointing in the +direction in which the structure had been made out in the gloom of the +evening. + +"Well, why don't they burn it, then?" + +"Dey done got oder business at de mansion-house, sar." + +"What other business have they got there?" + +"I reckon de story's as long as Uncle Zeke's sarmints; but de fust thing +is, dey's gwine to hang Mars'r Barkland to one ob dem trees, if he don't +tell whar he hide his money," answered Cato, as he gave a hurried +glance at the fire. + +"How many men are there at the house, or near it, Cato?" asked Knox with +deep interest. + +"I done count six on 'em." + +"Then we won't allow a Union man to be hung to a tree. Scouts, +attention, march!" called the sergeant hurriedly. + +With this order, Life dashed into the cornfield, closely followed by +Deck and the others. The harvest had been gathered in the field, and +there was nothing but the stalks that remained to obstruct the passage +of the squad. The fire was at the edge of a grove, on ground slightly +elevated, and not far in the rear of the mansion, which could now be +distinctly seen. In approaching it, the cavalrymen came to a spot less +elevated than the grove, where Knox halted to reconnoitre. + +"There's a lot of the villains coming from the house!" exclaimed the +sergeant, as he brought his horse to a full stop all at once. + +"They have about finished hanging Union men in our county," said Deck, +"and I don't believe they will hang this one here." + +"You can bet your horse they won't," added Life. "They can't see us +yet, and I think we had better fix things a little before we begin +business." + +"We obey orders, Sergeant. There's a knoll over on the right covered +over with trees." + +"I was looking at that; and we will move over there, and take a position +behind it, where they can't see us," replied Knox, as he led the way +through a hollow, which brought the party to it. + +The mansion-house was on the highest ground in the vicinity, though it +was not on a hill. The fire seemed to be plentifully supplied with wood; +for it burned brightly, and shed its light on the road leading from the +house to the grove. A group of men could be seen approaching the +elevation where the fire burned. They moved very slowly, and appeared to +have considerable trouble in making any progress at all. There was a +prisoner in the midst of the party, and he was very unwilling to move in +the direction indicated by his oppressors. + +While they were observing the spectacle, Cato joined them, for he had +followed the cavalrymen as rapidly as he could on foot. He evidently +belonged on the plantation, and knew all about the nature of the affair +in progress, though the sergeant was not disposed to listen to a story +as "long as Uncle Zeke's sermons." + +"Do you know what those villains are doing there, Cato?" he asked, when +the negro had recovered his breath. + +"Dey drag ole Mars'r Barkland ober to de tree, whar dey will hang him," +answered Cato promptly. + +"Then your master has plenty of money?" + +"I dunno, Mars'r; he neber tole me notin' about dat." + +"I s'pose not. Are the men who came to the mansion in uniform, Cato?" + +"No, sar; no uniform but de rags dey wear. Cap'n Tites is out at bof +elbows, and a nigger'd be 'shamed to wear sich a coat." + +"Did you hear what they said when they came to the house?" + +"Hear ebery word dey say, Mars'r, 'cause I waits on de table when dey +done took supper." + +"Then they had supper at the mansion?" + +"Yes, sar; dey was all half-starbed, and dey eat more'n twenty men, and +done drink whiskey enough to float a canal-boat." + +"Did that captain you spoke of drink whiskey, Cato?" asked Deck. + +"He done drink more as all de rest on 'em. Mars'r Barkland willin' to +gib dem de supper and de whiskey, but he don't want to gib 'em any +money. Cap'n Tites tell him he done got million money; but mars'r say he +don't hab none. Den de cap'n say he hang 'im to a tree if he don't gib +up de money." + +"That will do, Cato; I think I understand the matter now," said Knox, as +he changed his position so that he could get a better view of the scene +of action. "They have got nearly to the tree. It is about time to make a +move." + +The sergeant questioned the negro in regard to the road which led to the +rear of the house, and some other matters relating to the locality. Knox +was a strategist in a small way, as he had been obliged to be in +defending himself from Indians and wild beasts. In a moment he had his +plan ready to put into operation. + +"I count nine men there, taking in the planter," said he. "Cato says +there is a whole regiment camped in here somewhar. I don't believe it, +Deck; but we don't want to stir 'em up just yet. You will take Owens +and Fox, and ride round to that road Cato tells about, and I will go in +on this side. I'll do most of the job with my four; but I don't want 'em +to git off to their main body. Major Lyon'll tend to them." + +Deck started at once with his two followers, directed by Cato again; and +the negro went himself with all the speed of his legs. He came to the +road, which was simply a driveway over the plantation, and soon reached +the house. He was galloping his steed; but when he came to the house he +reined him in at the plaintive supplication of an elderly woman and a +young lady, whose face he could not see in the gloom of the evening. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +A VERY OBSTINATE PRISONER CAPTURED + + +Deck Lyon's horse had been one of his father's best stock, and he had +been selected by Levi Bedford, the overseer, for his use. He was a very +spirited animal, and not every young fellow of eighteen would have felt +at home in a saddle placed on his back. As the ladies from the house +rushed forward to intercept him, Ceph, which was his abbreviated name, +was startled, reared, and faced the music, as he had been taught to do. + +"I didn't mean to scare your horse, sir," said the elder of the ladies; +"but for the love of Heaven, can't you do something for my husband?" +demanded Mrs. Barkland, as she proved to be. + +"Oh, save my father, if you can!" added the younger woman. "Oh, my +father! They are abusing him shamefully, and they have threatened to +hang him." + +"That is the business in which I am engaged; and, if you will excuse +me, I will attend to it," replied Deck, as he gave Ceph the signal to go +ahead again with his legs. + +"Do save him!" repeated the old lady, who wanted to talk some more about +the matter. + +But the young cavalryman waited to hear no more; and his horse went off +at a dead run, the other two following him as rapidly as their steeds +would permit, and he was several rods ahead of them. In a couple of +minutes he had reached a point which commanded a view of the place +chosen for the spectacle. The actors had evidently preferred to be at a +distance from the mansion, where the women could not interfere with +them, the better to carry their point with the owner of the plantation. + +They had the intended victim with a rope around his neck, and there +could be no doubt in regard to their purpose. One man had the other end +of the line, and was climbing a tree with it, to pass it over a branch. +Five men were on the ground, and their attention had already been +attracted by the approach of the horsemen from the direction of the +house; and they did not appear to have observed the others, with Knox at +their head, for they had passed behind a thicket of young trees on a +knoll. + +"Halt!" shouted one of the five men in a voice loud enough to be heard +half a mile. "If you come any nearer we will fire!" + +"Fire away!" yelled Deck with all the force of his lungs. + +But he reined in his steed; and Ceph obediently came to a full stop, +while he unslung his carbine, his companions doing the same without any +suggestion from him. They came up to him, and ranged their horses at his +side. The carbines were ready for use in a moment, and all three of them +were aimed at the five men surrounding the planter. The actors in the +tragedy very plainly did not like this demonstration; for they did not +fire, though all of them had aimed at the intruders on this side of +them. The distance was still considerable, and probably they had no +great faith in the arms in their hands. + +"Now we will go ahead, if you are ready, Fox and Owens," said Deck, +though he had no authority whatever to direct their movements. + +The speed and sagacity of Ceph appeared to have placed him in command of +the little squad, for his horse always kept away ahead of every other +when he was permitted to do so. Deck was a brave fellow; he seemed to +have no idea of anything like fear when he was required to face an +enemy; but his father, who thought his son was inclined to be reckless, +had carefully instilled into his mind the necessity of prudence. + +Knox had said that he intended to do most of the work on the present +occasion; but just now it looked as though the whole of it had fallen on +Deck's party. It was possible that he and his men had been entangled in +the bushes and young trees, or had come to some water they could not +easily pass. Deck led the way, and his companions kept close to him. The +man in the tree had passed the line over the branch, and thrown the end +down to the others. + +"Halt where you are!" shouted the man who had spoken before; and this +time his voice gave Deck a thrill which caused him to stop his horse. + +The two parties were not more than two hundred feet apart; and the +leader believed the speaker was his uncle, Captain Titus Lyon. This gave +him much to think of besides the identity of the commander of the +expedition upon which the squadron had fallen. It was evident to him +that the first work of the cavalry squadron raised at Riverlawn was to +be fighting the Home Guards, or "ruffians" as they had hitherto been +called. + +Deck was annoyed and disconcerted at the discovery he had made, and it +checked his enthusiasm; for the quarrel with Uncle Titus, which he +insisted upon carrying to extremes, was in the family. The forces at +Riverlawn had defeated and driven off him and his command three times, +and it was an old story. He had hoped and expected that the campaign +would present the war in a new aspect. + +It gave the young soldier his first lively impression of the results of +civil war. He was not at all inclined to shoot his father's brother; +though he was just as earnestly determined to do his whole duty to his +country, without regard to his relationship with any of the combatants +on the other side. They were there by their own choice, and were +responsible for the consequences. + +With his carbine ready for instant use, Deck rode forward very slowly; +and, more than at any time before, he wished Knox would arrive upon the +scene of action. Captain Titus could now be clearly identified; and he +had evidently made up his mind to proceed with the business in hand, as +only three men had appeared so far to interfere with the operation. He +had turned his attention from the intruders, and was talking to the +unfortunate planter he had captured in a brutal manner, and shaking his +fist frequently in his face. + +"Stand by the rope!" called he to the other men. "The fellow is as +obstinate as a mule, and we must make an end of him." + +"Aim at the men who are holding the rope," said Deck to his companions, +and the three carbines were promptly pointed at them. "This thing has +gone far enough!" continued he, addressing the principal actor in the +scene. + +"Who are you?" demanded Captain Titus, stopping long enough in his +operation to examine the intruders. + +"I don't want to shoot you, but if you proceed any farther with this +business we shall fire," replied Deck. + +Captain Titus was plainly astonished, if not confounded, when he +recognized his nephew in the uniform of the cavalry. He did not like the +looks of the three carbines pointed at his men. But Deck felt somewhat +ashamed of the delay he had made in relieving the terrified planter from +the extremity to which he had been reduced, and he decided to bring +matters to a head at once. Starting his horse, he dashed to the rope, +and seized it with one hand. + +"Fire at him!" yelled Captain Titus furiously, to two of the ruffians +with muskets in their hands. + +One of them raised his weapon to aim at Deck, who instantly fired at +him. He dropped his gun upon the ground, and grasped his right arm with +the left hand. The other man then raised his musket; but both of the +other horsemen fired at him at the same instant, and he dropped heavily +on the sod. + +The three cavalrymen reloaded their weapons, and were immediately ready +for the next move. The three men at the rope seemed to be appalled at +the fate of their associates, and released their hold upon it. A moment +later they began to skulk off in the direction of the grove. + +"Don't let them escape, Owens!" said Deck, to the one nearest to him. + +Both of them darted off at a gallop, and headed them off, driving them +back to the tree from which the rope was hanging. Again Deck seized the +line, and urged his horse up to the place where the planter was +standing. Reaching down from his seat in the saddle, he cut the cords +that bound the prisoner, and then directed him to remove the rope from +his neck. + +"I owe my life to you, young man," said Mr. Barkland, panting with +emotion and excitement. + +"I suppose you are a Union man, sir?" added Deck. + +"I am; and that is the reason why I am subjected to this outrage," +replied the intended victim. + +"What brought you here, Deck Lyon? Who sent you here to interfere with +my business?" demanded Captain Titus, confronting his nephew with a +savage frown. + +"We shall not allow any such business as this," answered Deck, who was +not at all inclined to parley with the captain of the late Home Guards, +now in the service of the Confederacy. "You and those with you will +consider yourselves as prisoners of war." + +"Prisoners of war!" exclaimed Captain Titus. "I reckon we ain't nothin' +of the sort. Do you mean to take six on us with only three?" + +"We shall not take the trouble to count your numbers. Mr. Barkland, you +can return to your house, for your wife and daughter are very anxious +about you. I hope you have not been injured, sir." + +"Only in my nerves," replied the planter, as he started for his mansion. + +At this moment Knox and his three men dashed upon the scene, to the +great astonishment of Captain Titus. + +"Well, Deck, is the business finished?" asked the sergeant, as he reined +up his steed. "We had to go about two miles to get here, and that is +what made it so late." + +Deck reported what had happened so far. The man who had dropped so +heavily on the ground was not killed; but he was bleeding from a wound +in the side of the head, and the ball had only stunned him. The other +man, with a bullet through his arm, was worse off. + +"This man who is in command of the company is my uncle, Captain Titus," +said Deck in a low voice to the sergeant. + +"What! Major Lyon's brother?" exclaimed Life. "I have heard all about +him, and he is a pesky troublesome fellow." + +"I don't want anything more to do with him, Life, and I wish you would +dispose of him," added Deck. + +"Do you want me to kill him? I can't do that; for"-- + +"Nothing of the sort!" interposed the nephew warmly. "Of course I don't +want you to do anything of the sort." + +"We have six prisoners of war, and we will march them down to the main +body," added Knox. + +The sergeant proceeded to form his prisoners in a single rank; but +Captain Titus appeared to have brought all his obstinacy and +unreasonableness with him, and he refused to take the place assigned to +him. + +"Where are you going?" demanded the prisoner, as though he still ruled +the roost, as he had doubtless done in his company. + +"None of your business where we are going," replied the sergeant. "If +you don't take your place I shall put you into it." + +"This thing won't last long, for my company will take a hand in the +business in the morning, and a battalion of Texan cavalry will make it +warm for you." + +"We are not talking about your company or any Texan cavalry. Will you +take your place in the line? That's the only question you have got to +settle," returned Knox. + +"I won't take any place!" replied the captain with a volley of oaths. + +"Swear not at all, my man," continued Life, as he seized the rebellious +prisoner by the back of his coat collar, lifted him clear of the ground, +and then brought him down in the place assigned to him. "Stay there!" + +"I won't stay there!" growled he, as he attempted to leave the spot. + +But Knox seized hold of him again, lifted him up, and slapped him down +across the pommel of his saddle, face down. + +"Any way you like, my man; but you are going with this crowd. Forward, +my men!" and he placed himself at the head of the squad, and started in +the direction of the road, in spite of the struggles of the prisoner. +But they had not reached the road where they had first seen Cato, when +the head of a column appeared in the act of turning into the field, +doubtless guided by Hart, the messenger who had been sent to report to +the major in command. + +Knox halted his little force, and threw his prisoner on the ground +without any ceremony, ordering Owens to take charge of him. The column +consisted of only the first company, the other having been sent to take +another position. Captain Truman had been ordered to hold himself in +readiness to cut off the retreat to the westward of the force which Lane +had reported upon. + +"What have you here?" asked Major Lyon, as he saw the six prisoners in +front of Knox's scouts. + +"Prisoners, Major; and I am sorry to say that your brother is one of +them," replied the sergeant. "They were about to hang the planter, Mr. +Barkland, who lives in the mansion yonder; but we saved him, and sent +him home." + +"My brother a prisoner!" exclaimed the major very sadly. + +He gave the order to march, and the first company proceeded towards the +planter's mansion. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +PREPARING FOR ACTIVE OPERATIONS + + +The discipline which Knox had administered to Captain Titus had taken +some of the obstinacy out of him, and he was willing to march with the +other prisoners. All of them had been engaged in the "Battle of +Riverlawn," as it was called, when the mob had been driven away from the +plantation. They were placed between a couple of ranks of troopers, and +no further attention was given to them till the company halted, a short +distance from the mansion. + +It was the camp for the night; and the horses were picketed, the tents +pitched, and a cordon of sentinels stationed around the whole. The +prisoners were provided for as comfortably as the soldiers, and the +major had an opportunity to inquire into the situation. He had reached +the point to which he had been ordered. The region in the vicinity of +the railroad bridge had been examined by a large body of scouts, and +nothing like an enemy had been discovered. A trio of negroes had been +seen, and they were always ready to tell all they knew to persons +wearing the national uniform. + +There was no military force near the bridge. After Knox had sent back a +messenger with the information obtained from Cato, that "a whole +regiment" was encamped at the right of the road, Major Lyon had sent a +couple of trusty men to examine the locality. These soldiers had crept +cautiously into the woods, and found the force indicated; but it +consisted of only a single company, as they could see by the light of +the camp-fires. They had no tents, and most of the men were lying about +on the ground. + +It was now evident that this was Captain Titus's company. They were +encamped near the railroad; but there were no bridges of any consequence +near them, and they had doubtless postponed the work of the expedition +till the next morning. Though the major had never even heard the name of +Mr. Barkland, the planter, his brother must have had some information in +regard to him, or he would hardly have visited his mansion and +attempted to extort money from him. + +Major Lyon did not care to meet his brother, for his conduct had been +explained to him, and he was in a bad frame of mind even for him; but he +ordered Knox to bring another of the party engaged in the outrage to his +tent. He had selected one who appeared to be a reasonable man, and his +manner was quite different from that of the captain. The major had seen +him before, but he knew nothing about him. + +"Do you belong to the company encamped in the woods farther down the +road?" asked the major. + +"How do you know there is any company there?" demanded the fellow, who +seemed to be somewhat surprised at the question. + +"I ask questions, but I don't answer them," replied Major Lyon with a +smile. + +"That's jest my case," replied the Home Guardsman with a capacious grin. +"I don't tell all I know every day 'n the week." + +"You don't know so much that you couldn't tell it as often as that," +added Captain Gordon, who was present at the interview, and thought the +major was more pleasant than the occasion required. + +"But I know sunthin' you want to know," chuckled the man. + +"Not at all; I know all about your company," said the major. + +"Then what did you ask me if I belonged to it for?" + +"Knox, this man thinks he knows too much, and you may take him away," +called the major to the sergeant, who stood at the door of the tent. + +"Oh, I'm willin' t' answer you," grinned the fellow. "I belong to that +company." + +"What were you doing up here, then?" + +"Cap'n Titus thought the man that lives on this plantation had more +money 'n he could manage, and he was willin' to help him take care +on't." + +"In other words, you intended to rob him." + +"I didn't intend nothin' o' the sort. I obey the orders of the cap'n. If +you want to know anything more about it, you'll have to ask him." + +"Is your company the only body of troops about here?" asked the major, +to whom Knox had reported what Captain Titus said about "Texan cavalry." + +"You'll have to ask the cap'n about that; for he didn't tell me all he +know'd." + +It was evident that the man knew nothing of any importance, and the +sergeant was directed to send him back to his quarters. At the entrance +to the tent a visitor was waiting, who proved to be Mr. Barkland, and he +was promptly admitted. He expressed his obligations for the important +service rendered to him, and commended the energy of the young man who +had been foremost in saving him from the fatal rope. + +"These ruffians must have known that you had your money concealed in the +house," suggested the major. + +"I haven't any great amount in the house," replied Mr. Barkland. "I have +a bank account in Louisville, and I had some money in the bank at +Munfordville; but there are so many marauding parties about in this +section of the State, that I took out the little I had in the latter, +and had it in the house." + +"Hardly a safe place in these troublous times," added Major Lyon. + +"Safer than that bank, I thought," said the planter, "I am a Union man +before anything else just now; and I think some Secessionist connected +with the bank spread the news about that I had withdrawn my money,--only +about thirty-five hundred dollars,--and the captain of this Home Guard +had heard it." + +"That was unfortunate." + +"It would have been for me if your company had not come along. About +dark half a dozen of them came to the house, and wanted to get some +supper, which I was willing to give them; for I never turn away any one +who wants something to eat. The captain wanted whiskey, and I gave it to +him; but it seemed to make him crazy, for he did not behave like a +gentleman." + +"That is apt to be the effect of whiskey," added the major, who was +thinking of its results in the case of his brother. + +"Then they told me I had money in the house, or the captain did; for +none of the rest of them said anything. I replied that I had no money +for them; and then the captain became abusive, and threatened me if I +did not give it up," continued the planter. "As I said, I am a Union +man, and I decided to let them hang me to a tree, as he threatened to +do, rather than give up my money to a lot of traitors, who would use it +to assist in pulling down the government I believe in. My wife and +daughter begged me to give up the money; but I was firm to the end, and +even when the rope was around my neck." + +"Your fate would not have been an uncommon one with Union men, +unhappily," added the major. + +"Could I see the young man that was foremost in saving me? I wish to +express my personal gratitude to him for the service; for he was a brave +fellow, and managed the affair well, or he would have failed. The +ruffians were six to three; but the young man hit in the right place +every time." + +"Who was he, Knox?" asked the major of the sergeant, who had listened to +the narrative while standing at the entrance of the tent. + +"It was Deck, Major," replied Knox, with a smile on his wiry face. + +"Send for him." + +Deck soon appeared in the tent; and the planter grasped his hand, +pouring out his thanks for what he had done. He desired to take him to +his mansion, that his wife and daughter might have an opportunity to +express their obligations to him; but Deck declined to go. + +"Now, Mr. Barkland, do you know of any other body of troops in this +vicinity?" asked the major, changing the subject of the conversation. + +"Nothing within my own knowledge, Major Lyon," replied the planter. +"Captain Tites and his men"-- + +"Captain who?" interposed the major. + +"Captain Tites; that is what the others called him, or, at least, the +name sounded like that." + +"Very well, Mr. Barkland, go on," replied the chief of the squadron. + +"They did not speak out very plainly; but they alluded to a body of +Texan Rangers, as they called them, as though they were somewhere in +this vicinity," the planter proceeded. + +"That captain spoke of them since we took him," said Knox. + +"I was just coming up to headquarters to report some information +obtained by Sergeant Decker at the road," interposed Deck. "He stopped +a negro on horse-back, who was going for a doctor. He said there was a +company of cavalry, or more of them, camped about three miles on the +road to Greensburg. He knew nothing at all about them." + +"It looks as though there was a considerable force in this vicinity," +added the major. + +"I have given you all the information in my power, Major Lyon, and I +will return to my house. If I can be of any service to you, call upon +me," said Mr. Barkland, as he took the hand of the commander. + +He left the tent, and Deck soon followed him, leaving the major and +Captain Gordon alone. On the table in the centre of the tent was a map, +which these two officers had been consulting when the guardsman was +brought in. On it the major had made several crosses with a red pencil, +indicating the location of the railroad bridge, which was believed to be +the objective point of Captain Titus's company, the camp of this force, +the mansion of the planter; and now he made another at the supposed +location of the cavalry camp of the enemy. + +"There is a prospect of some fighting in this vicinity by to-morrow," +said Captain Gordon, as he looked at the crosses on the map. + +"Colonel Cosgrove rode over to Riverlawn yesterday to inform me that +Captain Titus's company had left the day before, at an early hour in the +morning, marching on the railroad. He had just obtained some news, which +he considered reliable, to the effect that an order had come up for the +destruction of the railroad bridges," added Major Lyon, as he put his +pencil point on the road. "It was understood in Bowling Green that +General Buell was about to send troops to the southward, and this is an +attempt to break up the means of transportation by rail." + +"If there are any Texan Rangers about here, they must have been sent +from some other point," said Captain Gordon. "But we know where the +enemy are, and that is half the battle under present circumstances. The +cavalry and the infantry of the enemy are at least five miles apart." + +"Captain Truman has the infantry where he can put his hands on them in +the morning. His orders are to send Lieutenant Gadbury to the farther +side of the railroad, with half his company, and station the other half +behind this knoll, so that neither of them can be seen from the main +road, and to have both forces in position before daylight in the +morning. Neither force is to attack till the enemy begin operations upon +the railroad." + +"I wondered that you did not bag the whole of this company of Home +Guards while they were in camp," added the captain. + +"Under the name by which we know them, I am not quite sure of their +status; and I prefer to have them make a beginning, which will prove +them to be the enemies of the government," replied the major. "I gave +Truman the most explicit orders, and I have no doubt he will do his +whole duty. It is a part of my purpose to have the whole of Captain +Titus's company captured." + +The major put a good deal of stress on the name by which his brother had +been called, for he evidently did not like to pronounce his real name. + +"I think your plan of action will readily bring about such a result." + +"I put a low estimate upon the fighting character of the enemy in front +of Truman; but I have stood up before them, though I believe they are +better armed now than when they attempted to capture Riverlawn and +Lyndhall. Your company will be held in reserve for the Texans, if there +prove to be any." + +"I have no doubt, after all I have heard, that the information in regard +to them is correct," added the captain. "It appears from their locality +that they are likely to come to the railroad by the road which passes +Mr. Barkland's mansion." + +The major and the captain arranged a plan for the reception of the +Rangers, and then stretched themselves on their camp-bed, to obtain a +little sleep before the exciting events which were expected the next +day. At about midnight the sentinel awoke them, saying that the planter +desired to see the commander. He was admitted, and reported that two men +had just been to his house to inquire for "Captain Tites." One of them, +he said, was Lieutenant Lagger, in command of the company in the absence +of the captain. + +Major Lyon turned over and went to sleep again, satisfied that Buck +Lagger would begin operations in the morning. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +THE ACTION BY THE RAILROAD BRIDGE + + +It was hardly daylight the next morning when Major Lyon sprang from his +camp-bed. The first thing he recalled was the visit to his tent in the +night of Mr. Barkland. He thought it was rather strange that Captain +Titus had not brought his lieutenant, as it now appeared that he was in +reality, as he had been before only in appearance; for he was a ruffian +of the rudest stripe. + +Three months before he had attempted to shoot Levi Bedford, the major's +faithful overseer, as he drove past his house; and he had been his +brother's principal supporter in the attacks of the mob upon Riverlawn +and Lyndhall. He was just the desperado for such work as that in which +the commander of the Home Guards had engaged the evening before. + +"Sentinel!" called the major to the guard at headquarters. + +"Here, Major!" replied the soldier. + +"Send for Dexter and Artemas Lyon. Have them report at headquarters +mounted," added the major, as he proceeded to complete his simple +toilet. + +The "assembly" was not sounded that morning, lest the noise should be +heard in some other camp; but all the men had been called verbally, and +were getting ready for the business of the day. The troopers assigned to +that duty were watering the horses at a brook which flowed through the +plantation, and others were striking the tents. A number of pickets on +foot had patrolled the roads for a mile from the camp, but there had +been no alarm during the night. Deck and Artie promptly reported at the +major's tent as they had been ordered to do. + +"Good-morning, boys," said their father. "Do you know where the railroad +bridge over the creek is?" + +"I do," replied Deck. + +"I have a message for Captain Truman. You will find his company in two +divisions this morning, one on each side of the bridge, and both of them +are in concealment by this time in the morning. The captain is behind +the hill, just this side of the creek. Do you think you can find him?" + +"I know I can," replied Deck. + +"You must remember that he is keeping his men out of sight. My message +is for him alone. He is not aware that Captain Titus and his companions +at the mansion were captured last night. Whether the work will be +carried on by his first lieutenant or not, I don't know. This officer is +Buck Lagger; and I know that he will be glad to get the command of the +company, even for a short time. I believe he will begin the destruction +of the bridge early this morning; for, according to Levi Bedford, Buck +believes he is a bigger man and an abler captain than his superior +officer." + +"I have no doubt if there is any mischief to be done, Buck will do it as +soon as possible," added Deck. + +"But if he fails to do so, tell Captain Truman to move over to the camp +they occupied last night, and to keep his eye on the company. You will +also inform him that there is a company of Texan cavalry in camp about +three miles to the south-east of us, and they will probably be on the +move this morning," continued Major Lyon. + +"Texan cavalry!" exclaimed Deck. + +"Music somewhere here to-day," added Artie with a smile. + +"The first company will be between this enemy and the second company, +and you will tell Captain Truman to give no attention to them. Now go as +soon as possible," added the major; and the boys started on their +mission. + +The horses were in excellent condition, and the boys were pleased to +have something to do that brought them out of the ranks for a time. The +section of country which one could take in from the hill on which the +mansion of the planter was located, included the railway and two common +roads. South of the railroad, and extending in the same general +direction, was the road by which the command had marched from Riverlawn. + +The camp of the Home Guards was at the south of it, and half a mile from +it; for it appeared to have been a part of the purpose of Captain Titus +to conceal his force. The half-dozen shots which had been fired as the +troopers passed came from a party of strollers, it afterwards appeared; +and Buck Lagger, in charge of the camp, had not discovered the presence +of the cavalry from Riverlawn. + +At the point where Cato had been first seen, and who had given the +information in regard to the outrage at the mansion, the road to the +south branched off, or rather crossed the other at right angles. On this +one was the mansion of Mr. Barkland, and about three miles farther south +was the reported camp of the Texans. Deck had had no opportunity to +study the panorama of the region as it might be seen in the daytime from +the hill by the planter's house, for the darkness shut off his view. + +The camp of the first company was on the south road, and the boys rode +in the direction of the railroad bridge. The day was breaking in the +east, but it was not light enough to see distinctly the prominent object +in the vicinity. They could make out the hill where they expected to +find Captain Truman, but not the one on the other side of the railroad. + +"Hold on, Deck!" said Artie, when they came to the crossing of the +roads. "I hear a noise off towards the west." + +"It is the tramp of men's feet; but that is none of our affair," replied +Deck. + +"I have no doubt it is the Home Guards," added Artie. + +"I know it is; didn't father say they were to come over here to do their +work? We can report to Captain Truman that the enemy are approaching, +and he will be glad to get the information." + +Deck started his horse; but they had been directed to move with as +little noise as possible, and they could not hurry. They took the +cross-road, and the hill was on the right, and the railroad bridge on +the left of it. Leaving the road, they struck into the field, and moved +toward the station of the first half of the second company. + +"Who comes there?" called a voice from the grove that surrounded the +hill. + +"Friends," replied Deck. + +"Advance, friends, and give the countersign." + +"Riverlawn," answered Deck, giving the word that had been selected the +day before. "We have a message for Captain Truman from Major Lyon. Where +is he?" + +"Not far from here," replied Blenks, who was in charge of the picket +line. "I will conduct you to him." + +They found the captain seated on his horse, apart from his command, +eating his breakfast from his haversack. The men were all mounted, and +in readiness for immediate service, though they were standing at ease, +some of them taking their morning meal. + +"Good-morning, Deck," said Captain Truman, as he recognized his early +visitors. "You left your bunk in good time this morning." + +"We are the bearers of orders from Major Lyon," replied Deck, who was in +the habit of doing most of the talking, though Artie had a tongue of his +own; and he repeated all the orders and all the information with which +they had been charged. + +"Captain Titus a prisoner!" exclaimed the captain, when he had finished. +"Then it remains to be proved whether or not Lieutenant Buck Lagger will +execute the orders received by Captain Titus." + +"We heard them down the road as we came along," said Artie. + +"I have no doubt they will be at work within half an hour," added Deck. +"But we must hurry back, for our company will move farther to the south, +I think, judging from the message we brought to you." + +"But you can't go now, for you will meet the Home Guards by the time you +get to the south road. The ruffians would be glad to get a couple of +prisoners like you and Artie; for then Buck Lagger could exchange you +both for his captain." + +"Such an arrangement would not suit Buck Lagger at all," replied Deck. +"When Levi Bedford brought Buck to the fort at Riverlawn, after he +attempted to kill him on the road, the villain did not speak very +handsomely of his captain, but said he should soon be in command of the +company himself." + +"Be that as it may, you ought not to throw yourselves into the midst of +these ruffians," the captain insisted. "If they don't capture you, they +would take great pleasure in abusing you." + +"Mounted as we are, I think we could take care of ourselves against the +whole of them," answered Deck. + +The soldiers of the squadron had an utter contempt for the fighting +qualities of this company, and Deck and Artie shared it with the +others. But the captain protested so earnestly against their exposing +themselves to a needless peril, that they agreed to wait behind some +bushes near the south road till the company had passed. They would +gladly have learned something more in regard to the plan of the captain; +but he was as reticent as military men usually are, and kept his own +counsel. The messengers rode to the knoll covered with bushes which they +had observed near the road when they entered the field. + +"We shall have a chance to see something of this affair," said Deck, as +he stopped his horse at a point where the bushes would conceal them from +those passing in the road. + +"Do you suppose the first company will remain where they are for any +length of time?" asked Artie. + +"Father didn't say anything about that; but I imagine he will put the +company in a position to meet the Texans." + +"There they come!" exclaimed Artie. "They are just turning into the +south road. Buck Lagger looks big enough to be a brigadier-general." + +"But they are straggling along as though they were going to a picnic," +added Deck. "There are some of them half a mile in the rear." + +Then the boys observed two wagons drawn by mules, and the stragglers +appeared to be the guard for their protection. Buck Lagger led the +compact portion of his command, who were armed with axes as well as +muskets. The south road ran under the railroad bridge, and the Guard +halted there. The lieutenant lost no time in beginning his work. A +portion of the men went to work at the abutment, trying to remove some +of the stones in the wall, evidently with the intention of blowing up +the end of the structure when the wagons arrived with the powder. + +About one-half of the men were sent to the platform of the bridge, +climbing up the embankment a short distance beyond the wall. As soon as +they reached the wooden portion of the bridge, they began to pull up the +planks of the platform, and toss them over into the creek, a work which +would not at all interfere with the usefulness of the structure for the +passage of trains. These men were in so elevated a position that the +boys could distinctly see their operations. + +Then they heard the crack of a rifle, and one of the soldiers dropped +from the bridge into the creek. This single effective shot was followed +by a volley; and, though they could not be seen, it was clear that +Lieutenant Gadbury had led his command to the front, and they had opened +fire on the destroyers of the bridge. His men were good marksmen; for +not a few of them were hunters, and they had had abundant practice at +the camp. + +"They can't stand much of that sort of thing," said Deck, much excited +by what he saw. + +"Not they; they are coming down from the bridge now," added Artie. + +"Here come the rest of the company," exclaimed Deck, as Captain Truman, +followed by his fifty men by fours, dashed through the field at full +gallop. "I reckon I don't stay here any longer." + +"But the baggage-train of the enemy has not come up yet," suggested +Artie. + +"But I want to see what is going on, and we can't see anything in the +road from here, and that is where the fight is going to be," returned +Deck, who was far more excited than his brother. "I suppose Lieutenant +Gadbury is coming down to the bridge from the north, and now Captain +Truman is approaching it from the south. They will have it out there." + +Both divisions of the company halted at some distance from the enemy, +and began to pour a murderous fire into them, crushed as they were +between the upper and nether millstones. The plan of Major Lyon had been +carried out to the letter. The Guards returned the fire with all the +energy they could muster; but it was very soon evident that their +weapons were doing little harm to the cavalry. + +"This is little better than wholesale murder!" exclaimed Captain Truman; +and he sent the second lieutenant, with half his men, into the field, +with orders to charge the enemy in concert with him. + +This charge was made; and the enemy were ridden down by the horsemen, +till they cried out for quarter. Buck Lagger lay dead upon the ground, +with not less than a dozen others, while half the rest of them were +wounded. The victory was complete, and the cavalrymen were only sorry +they had not met a foe worthy of their steel. Eight of them were +wounded, two of them severely. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +AN ENCOUNTER WITH THE ENEMY'S SCOUTS + + +The baggage-train of the Guards had seen from a distance that the battle +had begun, and they had halted in the road. They still blocked the way +for Deck and Artie; but they could no longer remain as spectators to the +exciting scene which had just transpired, and had ridden down to the +field of action; but the fighting had ceased. The cavalrymen were +picking up their wounded; and Dr. Farnwright, the surgeon of the +battalion, was attending to their needs. + +"Well, boys, this affair seems to be finished; and we made very short +work of it," said Captain Truman, as they rode up to the spot where he +was observing the labors of the men. + +"We have seen the whole of it, and now we are ready to return to our +company," replied Deck. + +"The road is clear now, and there is nothing to prevent your return." + +"The wagons of the enemy have halted in the road, and there seems to be +half-a-dozen men or more in charge of them," said Deck. + +"I will send a squad to bring them in," replied the captain, as he +called a sergeant near him, and directed him to take ten men and perform +this duty. "You will go with Sergeant Langford, boys, and I think you +will be all right." + +"Have you any message for the major, Captain?" asked Deck. + +"You have seen the skirmish yourselves, and you can report it as it was. +We were fired upon smartly for a time; but the muskets of the enemy were +of all sorts and kinds, and most of them good for nothing. We have eight +men wounded, two of them badly, and the rest slightly. Sergeant Langford +has just reported to me that the enemy lost eight men killed, and +fifteen wounded, some of them fatally. The rest of the command are +prisoners." + +Sergeant Langford appeared with his ten men, and the boys went with him +on their return to their company. It was not yet sunrise, and the +principal task of the morning had been accomplished; for the action had +lasted hardly more than a quarter of an hour. Lieutenant Blenks was +compelling the Guards to pick up and care for their own wounded, and to +bury their dead. The men were sulky, and the cavalrymen were compelled +to drive them to this duty. + +"It was sharp work for a few minutes," said Langford to the boys, after +he had called them to his side. + +"It was; but the thing was very handsomely done," replied Deck. "I think +these ruffians have had quite enough of it." + +"They are as sulky as a bear that has lost her cubs. They were not +willing to pick up their own dead and wounded, and wanted our boys to do +it for them; but a few slaps with the flat of the sabres brought them to +the point," added the sergeant. "I suppose the work in this quarter is +done now." + +"I think not. I doubt whether we have finished," replied Deck; but he +said nothing about the Texan Rangers, for he did not feel at liberty to +use the information he had obtained as a messenger. + +The wagons of the enemy had halted where the men in charge of them could +see what had happened at the bridge; but when the sergeant's squad +approached them, they brought their muskets to their shoulders, as +though they intended to defend their property. + +"Unsling carbines!" called Langford to his men; and they promptly obeyed +the order. + +But the baggage guard did not fire; for some one among them seemed to +have more sense than the others, and had interposed to prevent a useless +sacrifice of life. A dispute followed among them, and the sergeant +advanced upon them. + +"No more jaw!" interposed Langford. "Start your mules, and go ahead!" + +"Where are we going? We ain't no use over there now," said one of the +men. + +"You are no use anywhere! Start your teams!" added Langford, as he +slapped the last speaker with the flat of his sabre. "Shove them along, +boys!" + +"We ain't goin' over there; we'll turn round and go back where we come +from," added the spokesman of the party. + +"Are you all idiots?" demanded Langford. "Your wagons are wanted over at +the bridge, and that is where you are going." + +The troopers soon started the teams with a vigorous use of the flat +sides of their sabres. The guardsmen were disposed to resist; but they +were vigorously pushed forward, and when a fellow hung back, he was +gently pricked with the point of the sharp weapons. + +"I believe a good part of these ruffians are idiots, as Langford +suggested," said Deck, as he and Artie rode forward. "They don't seem to +understand that they are taking part in the war." + +"That's so," replied Artie, laughing. "If they find they cannot destroy +the bridge, all they have to do is to go back where they came from, and +call it square. But Langford has brought them to their senses." + +A smart gallop of a few minutes brought the messengers in sight of the +mansion-house of the plantation. The first company was not where they +had left it in the early morning; but they soon discovered a couple of +the men, who seemed to be patrolling the south road. + +"Where is the company, Yowell?" asked Deck, when they came within +speaking distance. + +"Behind the mansion. We were sent down to look for you," replied the +soldier. "Major Lyon was afraid something had happened to you." + +"We are all right. Have you seen any of the enemy up this way?" + +"Not a man of them. If you take this path it will bring you to the +house, and you will find the major there." + +The boys took the path indicated, and put their horses to their best +speed. When they came to the house, they were greeted in the yard by the +planter and his family, and the ladies poured forth their gratitude to +Deck for the service he had rendered the evening before. But the young +cavalryman could not stop to listen long to them. + +"Where is Major Lyon?" he asked, looking about him. + +"He is on the top of the house," replied Mr. Barkland. + +"Come up here, both of you!" shouted the major from his elevated +position. + +Giving the reins of their bridles to the orderly, who was there with the +commander's horse, Mr. Barkland showed them the way to a platform on the +roof of the mansion, from which a full view of the surrounding country +was obtained; only the railroad bridge was shut out by a hill. + +"What makes you so late, boys?" asked the major, as they presented +themselves before him. + +"The baggage-train of the enemy stopped in the road, with half-a-dozen +men in charge of it, so that we could not pass it without a fight," +replied Deck. + +"Has anything been done at the bridge?" asked the commander anxiously. + +"Yes, sir; the battle has been fought and won, and the whole company of +Home Guards are prisoners," replied Deck, giving the entire story all in +a heap. + +"That is good news, though I expected no other result. What was our +loss?" + +"None killed; eight wounded, two of them seriously, the others slightly. +The enemy's loss is eight killed and fifteen wounded, some of them +fatally," replied Deck, who had studied over the report of the fight he +was to make; and then he proceeded to give the details of the affair. + +This was in the beginning of the war, and before any battle of magnitude +had been fought, so that the action at the railroad bridge seemed to be +a considerable affair. The major listened with deep interest to all the +particulars. Doubtless he was pleased with the report of the result; +but he frequently raised the field-glass in his hands to his eyes as he +listened, and it was evident that he was more concerned in regard to the +approach of the enemy from the south. + +He put several questions to the boys, which were answered by both of +them, and fully informed himself in regard to the situation at the +bridge, which was about three miles distant from the mansion. + +"You will both return to the bridge; give my order to Captain Truman to +leave a sufficient force on the ground to guard the prisoners, to +dispose of the dead and wounded, and then to join me at this place with +all the men that can be spared," said the major. + +The boys saluted him, and hastened to obey the order. In a few minutes +they were galloping over the road again. On their way down the stairs +they met Captain Gordon on his way to the roof. He had been the +recruiting officer sent by the commanding general of the department to +organize the first company, and the major had used all his influence to +elect him to the office he filled himself. He had declined the position, +for he thought it better that the planter of Riverlawn should fill that +place. He had an apartment at the major's mansion, and they had been on +the most intimate terms from the beginning. + +"I have posted Lieutenant Belthorpe behind the hill," said Captain +Gordon, as he saluted his superior officer. "I have given him full +instructions." + +"I have just sent for Captain Truman and as many of the second company +as can be spared," replied Major Lyon. "They have beaten Captain Titus's +command, and captured the whole of them." + +"Can you make out any movement of the enemy to the south of us, Major +Lyon?" asked the captain. + +"Nothing yet. Everything is in readiness, I suppose, to carry out our +plan." + +"Everything; and the men are in fine spirits." + +"The only thing I fear is that the Rangers will take the other road to +the bridge," suggested the major. + +"But that would make the distance at least two miles farther," replied +Captain Gordon. "Can it be possible that the commander of the Rangers +has obtained information of our presence here, and of the result of the +affair at the bridge?" + +"I think not; and yet it is possible, for not many in command could be +so neglectful of all reasonable precautions as Captain Titus was." + +"If they come this way, we are all ready for them. I have scouts out to +the eastward of our position, who will report to us the passage of any +force by the east road, as they call it here," continued the captain. +"The Texans are not early risers, or we should have seen them by this +time. I will return to my company, and await further orders." + +The boys understood the necessity of haste, and in less than fifteen +minutes their foaming steeds brought them into the presence of Captain +Truman, to whom they delivered their message. He had already reduced +everything to a condition of order. The wounded had been removed to a +deserted shanty, probably used by the railroad workmen, and the +prisoners were surrounded by a guard of twenty men. All was quiet on the +ground, and the captain was glad to receive the order brought by the +messengers. + +Lieutenant Blenks had already been placed in command of the camp, and +the captain gave the order for Lieutenant Gadbury to have his men in +marching order at once; and twenty men from the second platoon were +added to their number. But Deck and Artie did not wait for this body to +move, but started at once on their return; for they were anxious to be +present in any engagement that might take place. They had little +compassion for their horses, fond as they were of them, and dashed down +the road at their best speed. + +"Hi!" exclaimed Artie, as they reached the cross-road. + +"What is it, Artie?" asked Deck, who was looking to the right. + +"Don't you see? There are a couple of mounted men wearing the gray!" +exclaimed Artie with energy. + +"What are they?" asked Deck. + +"What are they? It is as plain as a stone wall to a blind man after he +has stumbled over it, that they are the Texans who are expected over +here." + +"Are there only two of them?" asked Deck facetiously. "Your head is +level, Artie, and they are a couple of scouts who are feeling the way +for a bigger body further back." + +[Illustration: "One of the Texans tumbled from his horse."] + +Just at that moment a bullet whistled between the two boys; for the +scouts could have no difficulty in making out the uniform of the two +messengers. Both of them unslung their carbines; and, without +considering what consequences might ensue, both of them fired, Artie +delivering the first shot. One of the Texans tumbled from his horse, and +Deck aimed at the other; but he was less fortunate in his discharge, for +the remaining man still clung to his horse. Raising his carbine, he +fired. + +"I am hit," said Deck, as he held up his left arm. + +The man who had delivered his fire wheeled his horse as soon as he had +done so, and galloped back by the way he came. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +THE BATTLE BEGUN AT THE CROSS-ROADS + + +Deck and Artie Lyon were not veterans in military service; but on +several occasions during the preceding six months they had been within +the reach of flying bullets. They had not become hardened to the +whizzing, boring sound they make in their passage through the air, for +they carried wounds and death in their train; but they had considered +and talked about the chances of being hit, and fully realized the +possible consequences. + +"We are in the hands of the good Lord," Noah Lyon used to say; "and if +it be his will that we suddenly pass the portals that divide the seen +from the unseen, or that we languish for weeks or months upon the couch +of pain, we can only submit to the divine will; and all we have to do is +faithfully to discharge our duty to God and our country. God and our +country! Let this be our watchword, boys; and with it on our tongues +and in our hearts, we ought to fear no danger." + +Some appear to be brave in mere bravado, and the pride of many gives +them courage: but the bravest men are those who are earnestly devoted to +the discharge of their duty; for principle generates courage when it is +founded upon religious faith. It was in this firm reliance that the +father had schooled his sons. He was a faithful apostle, and they were +loving disciples. + +"Where are you hit, Deck?" asked Artie, full of anxiety in regard to his +brother, though he could see that he was not very severely wounded. + +"Right in the arm, half-way between the wrist and the elbow," replied +Deck with a smile; for the time had come for him to feel something of +what had only been talked about before. "It won't amount to much, though +it doesn't feel good." + +"Let me see it, and I will fix it up as well as I can," added Artie, as +he wheeled his horse till he was at the side of his companion. + +The noble steeds stood as quietly as though they understood what had +occurred, while Artie rolled up the sleeve of the jacket, and disclosed +the wound. The fond and devoted mother had provided each of them with a +bandage and a handful of lint, and she had even practised them in doing +up a leg and an arm. Artie wiped away the blood, and then applied the +lint, around which he wound the bandage, as he had been instructed. + +"It is not a bad wound, as you say, Deck, and I hope you will never have +a worse one," said Artie, as he pinned the end of the bandage. + +"Thank you, Artie, and you are quite a surgeon," replied Deck, as he +straightened out his arm. "That feels better, though it is still rather +warm. But we have business on our hands, and we can't fool away any more +time. What do you suppose the presence of those two fellows here means?" + +"There is only one thing that it can mean," replied Artie, as he +strained his vision to take in whatever might be seen in the direction +from which the two scouts had come. "There must be a body of cavalrymen +not far behind them." + +"I don't understand this business," added Deck. "Let's ride up the +slope, and then we can see the enemy if there is any there." + +"It won't take both of us to do that. We know, if everybody in the +company does not, that there is a company of Texan Rangers camped about +three miles from Mr. Barkland's plantation. From their odd uniform we +have a right to believe these two scouts belonged to that company. Very +likely the captain of it is up to some mischief; and if a part of the +force should come over here after Captain Truman has departed to join +our first company, they could undo all that has been done, burn the +bridge, and recapture all the prisoners." + +"That's so!" exclaimed Deck, taking in the argument of his brother, and +fully agreeing with it. + +"As you are wounded, I will ride up the slope, and see what is to be +seen, while you hurry back as fast as Ceph will take you to Captain +Truman, and tell him all about it," suggested Artie. + +"All right; go ahead!" returned Deck, as he wheeled his horse, while +Artie galloped up the slope, which was quite gentle for half a mile. + +When the latter reached the spot where the Texan had fallen, he saw that +he was not dead, though the blood was oozing from a wound in his +breast. His horse was quietly feeding on the bushes at the side of the +road; but Artie could not stop to do anything for his wounded enemy, +though his heart was big enough to do everything in his power. He rode +on at the highest speed of Dolly, as he called her, though she had had +another name before he made her acquaintance. He reached the top of the +hill, if it could be called such, and the spot commanded a view of the +country for several miles. + +It was not a plain which opened to him, for the prospect was bounded by +a range of hills several miles distant, the intervening space having a +sort of rolling surface. The first object that attracted his attention +was a horseman, riding at full gallop up a slope about a mile distant +from him. He concluded that he was the scout whose companion had fallen +from his horse when he fired his carbine. He must have stopped by the +way, or ridden more slowly than at present, or he would have been out or +sight in the time he had taken. + +Artie had halted on the crown of the slope, for it was useless to go any +farther. He could see the country for at least two miles; and it was +not prudent for him to proceed alone. He sat upon his horse considering +what he should do next. The only course left open to him was to return +to the south road; but if an enemy was approaching by the east road, as +the presence of the two scouts indicated, it was important that he +should ascertain the fact. + +He kept his eyes busily engaged in wandering along the whole horizon to +the east and south of him. If Captain Truman's command were not wanted, +it would be an error to detain them. On the other hand, the result of +the morning's work would be all undone if the enemy should advance after +the larger portion of the second company had been withdrawn. It was a +perplexing question for a boy of eighteen to settle; and he realized the +responsibility that had accidentally, as it were, fallen upon him. + +If he was not at the cross-road when Deck returned from his visit to the +camp at the bridge, Captain Truman would march his men up the slope, +when they might be needed in the vicinity of the planter's house. He +decided to compromise with the circumstances, and wait a reasonable time +for some evidence of an advance on the part of the Texans. The two +scouts had come from beyond the elevation where he stood; and unless +they were simply messengers or spies, there must be a force behind them. +As spies, they would not have appeared in full uniform. + +When he had waited perhaps ten minutes, he discovered something moving +over the top of one of the hills south-east of him. With the utmost +eagerness he observed the spot. He could not make out anything that +looked like a road. But presently the moving object became more definite +to his gaze. He wished he had his father's field-glass; but all he could +do was to watch and wait. In a few minutes more the moving object +resolved itself into a body of mounted men. They were marching along the +summit of an elevation, and he saw them begin the descent. + +While still in sight the troop halted, and Artie concluded that the +scout who had escaped had come up with them, and was making his report. +But he could not leave yet; for it was important that he should report +the strength of the enemy, as well as his actual presence in the +vicinity. The young cavalryman had a full view of the valley into which +the troop were descending; and as soon as they marched again he +estimated, and even counted, the number of men. + +The Texans did not compel him to wait a great while, for they resumed +the march at full gallop. They had been moving at a very moderate gait +when Artie first saw them. The report of the scout doubtless assured the +officer in command that a force of Union cavalry was located near the +bridge, and he was hurrying his men forward to meet it. Artie had seen +enough to assure him of the approach of an enemy, and he started on his +return to the cross-road. He had seen the whole of the force, and had +estimated its number at forty-four men in the ranks; for he had counted +eleven sections of four in each. + +Dolly had had quite a rest while he was observing the approach of the +enemy; and, as soon as he had obtained the facts, he was in a hurry. He +urged his steed forward at her best speed. He reached the cross-road +just as Deck appeared there; for the information he brought perplexed +the captain not a little in regard to his duty under the changed +circumstances, and he had been detained to answer a great many +questions. + +"Where is Captain Truman?" shouted Artie, as soon as he was within +speaking distance of his brother. + +"He will be here in a few minutes with his men," replied Deck, who had +also remained, to have his wound properly dressed by the surgeon. "Have +you seen the enemy, Artie?" + +"I have; and they are within a mile and a half of here now," replied +Artie. "They are advancing with all speed, and they will be here in a +few minutes." + +"Here is the captain," added Deck; and a minute later the troopers were +halted. + +"Here is Artie, Captain Truman; and he has big news for you," said Deck, +who appeared to have forgotten that he was wounded. + +"Your report, Artie," demanded the captain. + +"The Texan Rangers--at least, that is what I suppose they are--will be +here in ten or fifteen minutes, if they don't stop by the way." + +"Is it a large force?" asked the captain, with some anxiety visible on +his face. + +"Forty-four men, as I estimated them, besides the officers." + +"We outnumber them, then. But I am ordered to report at the planter's +house," said the officer, who appeared to be musing upon the situation. + +He was not an experienced officer; and his mind was charged with the +idea that the soldier must obey his superior officer, though his +intellect was broad enough, and he had read in his military books that +one in command of a force must use judgment and discretion. This was +what he was thinking of when he alluded to his orders, which he would +not have done if the boys had not been the sons of the major, and he was +on very intimate terms with them. + +"But, if you obey your orders, the bridge will be destroyed, and the"-- + +"I don't intend to obey them; I am not quite blind, my boy," interposed +Captain Truman, with a smile on his face. "Less than fifty men, you say, +Artie. I made up my mind, from what Deck said, that if there was a force +approaching from that direction, the enemy were divided, and were coming +to the bridge by the two roads." + +"There must be more than forty-four men in the whole company, besides +the officers," added Artie. + +"No doubt of it," replied the captain, looking about him. + +Then he called for Lieutenant Gadbury, and sent him, with thirty men, +back to the field where they had been concealed to await the attack of +the Home Guards on the bridge. Then he ordered the rest of the men, +about forty in number, to unsling their carbines, and formed them across +the south road. In a somewhat longer time than Artie had predicted, the +head of the enemy's column, arrived at the top of the hill, where they +halted. + +A couple of officers appeared in front of the troop, and seemed to be +surveying the situation. They could see the railroad bridge, and that it +had not been destroyed by another division of the Confederates. But they +could not see the camp that had been established at the side of the +structure, for it was on much lower ground. They could also see the +cavalry of Captain Truman, stationed about six feet apart, so that they +extended both ways on the crossing along the south road. + +The Union cavalry doubtless looked like a small force to the officers +who observed it. They had the reputation of being bold and brave men, +and the order to attack was not long withheld. The officer in command +led his men down the hill at full gallop, the men yelling like so many +demons; for, at this early stage of the war, the troops of the enemy had +acquired the notion that these hideous cries would intimidate their +foes; but they did not in this instance. + +"Now, my boys, this will be no fool's play!" shouted Captain Truman at +the top of his lungs. "These troopers are not Home Guards; and there +will be fighting, and no child's play. Stand up to it like men--like +Kentuckians, and, above all, like Union men!" + +The soldiers responded with a hearty cheer; and they kept it up till the +enemy were within gunshot range, where they halted. They were formed +across the road, but with only half-a-dozen men in a rank, so that they +were still clustered in a rather solid mass. In this condition they +delivered their first volley. One of the Union men dropped from his +saddle, and only one. If others were wounded, they said nothing. The +fire was promptly returned; but, so far as could be seen, with no +greater effect than that of the Rangers. + +The Union men, as ordered, continued to fire at will; and it was soon +evident that their carbines were superior to those in the hands of the +enemy, for they discharged at least twice as many shots. The report of +the muskets had brought the force of Lieutenant Gadbury into the rear of +the enemy, and both divisions of the company were pouring bullets into +them. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +A DESPERATE CHARGE ON BOTH SIDES + + +The Texan Rangers were formed in a rather compact mass, while the Union +line was considerably extended. Captain Truman had ideas of his own; +and, though he was not a martinet, he was disposed to follow strictly +the rules and precedents of military practice. His men could not very +well fire into forty-five men huddled together in a small space without +hitting some of them. On the other hand, the enemy might discharge a +volley into his force, placed about six feet apart, with comparatively +little effect. + +He was surprised to observe how few of the Rangers fell from their +horses at the first discharge of his men; but their practice immediately +began to improve, and as soon as the detachment of Lieutenant Gadbury +dashed into the road in the rear of the enemy, the fire became very +destructive. Many of the enemy were killed and wounded, and it looked +as though they would all be destroyed. + +The Texans were brave men; they were impulsive and reckless, and they +seemed to be perfectly satisfied that they could overcome the Union +cavalry, and carry everything before them. In a few minutes it was +evident to the captain of the second company that the officer of the +enemy had made a fearful blunder, led into it by his impulsive ardor. He +had conducted his men into the fight without sufficiently understanding +the situation, and without taking the trouble to feel of the enemy +beforehand. He had rushed blindly into the engagement with a feeling of +contempt for his foe, and with the belief that the Texan cavalry could +carry everything before them. + +In a few minutes he had discovered his mistake, as he saw his men drop +before the fire in the front and rear of his force. He had been beyond +the crown of the elevation in the road when Captain Truman stationed his +flanking party behind the knoll, where they could not be seen by the +enemy. He had recklessly regarded the force in front of him as the +entire strength of his foe. + +The Rangers were between the upper and the nether millstone, as the +Home Guards had been early in the morning; and it was only a question of +time when they would all be shot down. In the village of Barcreek, +Captain Truman had won a reputation as a chess-player among the better +class of citizens who were fond of the game. He had reached the +conclusion that warfare was to be conducted on similar principles, and +he was on the lookout for an opportunity to "checkmate" his antagonist. +He had fought the battle in the morning on the plan laid down for him by +Major Lyon. + +By dividing his detachment, and placing forty of them in front of the +Texans, and spreading them out so that they appeared to be even a +smaller force, he had tempted the attack in which the enemy were +suffering so severely. It was not in the power or the nerve of any body +of soldiers to stand up against such a deadly fire from their front and +rear. They must either be shot down or surrender. It evidently had not +occurred to the lieutenant in command of the Rangers to resort to the +last expedient to save his men; but he was plainly making a movement to +extricate them from the trap into which he had so inconsiderately led +them. + +"Attention, company!" shouted Captain Truman at the top of his lungs, as +he interpreted the movement of the enemy. "Close order, march!" + +The file closed up in a more compact mass. The command was given to +sling their carbines, and to draw their sabres; and it was given none +too soon, for the captain had correctly divined the intention of the +lieutenant on the other side of attempting to cut his way through the +force in front of him. + +"Can you make out what Lieutenant Gadbury is doing, Deck?" asked the +captain, who was rather near-sighted. + +Deck and Artie had both remained near the captain; and they had not been +idle or indifferent, but acted as volunteers in the second company. + +"His men are slinging their carbines, as the enemy have done," replied +Deck. + +"We are going to have some hot work, my boy. If you are ready to return +to the first company"-- + +"I am not ready to return, Captain Truman!" exclaimed Deck. "I think you +need all the men you can have, and I shall add one to the number. I have +not heard any firing to the south of us, and I don't believe the first +company has been engaged yet." + +"But I am somewhat concerned about our prisoners at the bridge. There +are a hundred of them, or very nearly that number. They must have heard +our firing, and Lieutenant Blenks may have his hands full. You can +render better service by looking after this part of the field," added +the captain. + +"Of course I am ready to go wherever I can do the most good," replied +Deck, who could not help wondering if the captain was not sending him +out of the way because he was the major's son. + +"You are wounded, and you can be spared better than some other man. Some +of our poor fellows have bitten the dust. Ride over to the bridge; and, +if Blenks is having no trouble with the prisoners, go over to the rear +of the enemy, and direct Gadbury to follow up the charge of the Texans." + +Deck saluted the captain, and dashed down the road towards the bridge +with all the speed the willing Ceph could command. It was a few minutes +that he required to reach the position of Lieutenant Blenks, who had +heard the firing, and had drawn up his men for any duty that might be +before them. No movement on the part of the prisoners was apparent to +Deck, and they were surrounded by a guard, with their carbines in their +hands; for the officer had ordered them to be on the lookout for any +demonstration. + +"I am sent by Captain Truman to ascertain the condition of the +prisoners," said Deck, as he saluted the lieutenant. + +"The prisoners are all right," replied the officer with a smile. "As +soon as I heard heavy firing I strengthened the guards around them; for +I thought they might want to take a hand in the fight over yonder. I had +a talk with the second lieutenant of the Guards, now in command, and he +told me that a company of Texan cavalry were to have connected with his +force here." + +"But the force we have engaged cannot be more than half the company; and +all of them must have known that at least one of our companies was in +this vicinity," added Deck. + +"The lieutenant, whose name is Condor, tried to induce Lagger to wait +till they had joined their forces before he meddled with the bridge; but +he refused to do so." + +"Buck Lagger desired to win his spurs while the captain of the Guards +was absent. But you need no assistance here," added Deck, as he wheeled +his horse. + +"None at all; we could ride these fellows down in two minutes. But their +arms are loaded into our baggage wagon, and they could do nothing if +they tried," replied the officer. + +The messenger galloped up the road and into the field by the side of the +east road. It was not cultivated, though it had been years before, and +was now overgrown in places by small trees and bushes. Behind these Deck +made his way to a point abreast of the enemy. He was in time to hear the +order to charge upon the Union cavalry at the foot of the hill. The +lieutenant had evidently delayed this order for some time; for when his +men ceased to fire, the Union troopers had followed their example, and +prepared for the decisive event of the conflict. The messenger rode into +the road and saluted the officer in command of the flanking party. + +"Captain Truman's order is that you follow up the enemy in the rear as +they charge down the hill," said Deck. + +"I am all ready to do that," replied the officer, as he pointed to his +men, who sat upon their horses with their drawn sabres in their hands. + +They were not more than two hundred feet from the Texans, and Lieutenant +Gadbury had already addressed some inspiring words to them. The other +division could be plainly seen at the foot of the hill, and both parties +were observing the enemy with the most intense interest. Judging from +the impetuous and reckless conduct of the Rangers, the conclusion had +been reached on both sides to charge the foe; for any other movement +would be turning their backs to the enemy. + +During the tacit suspension of the conflict, both combatants had +improved the opportunity to care for their wounded. Two of the men only +had been killed so far, but half a dozen of them had been wounded; for +the Texans had given most of their attention to those at the foot of the +hill. Of these six, four kept in their saddles, and refused to take the +rear. The wounds were dressed as far as possible, and Dr. Farnwright was +a busy man at his post on the cross-roads. + +Suddenly the officer in command of the Texans appeared in the rear of +his force, and made a furious gesture with his sword, pointing in the +direction of Gadbury's men. This was not what was expected of the +Rangers; and for the moment all the advantage was in favor of the enemy, +so far as numbers were concerned. + +"Fours, right about, march!" shouted the Confederate lieutenant. "Now +charge with all the blood there is in you! Ride them down, and use your +sabres like men!" + +The order was promptly obeyed by the Texans, who appeared to be under +excellent discipline; but they had hardly whirled around before the +watchful eyes of Captain Truman discovered what they were doing, and his +energetic shouts of orders could be heard by the force now in front of +the Rangers. In another moment the main body of the company were +spurring their steeds with all their might up the hill. Their sabres +were in their hands, and they were using them in urging forward their +horses. They came like a whirlwind, with the captain in advance; and +there was not a man among them who would not have been ashamed to be a +laggard under such leadership. + +It was well known that there were two or more companies of cavalry from +Texas in this part of the State, and they had excited an unwholesome +dread among the citizens by their desperate bravery and their reported +prowess. In the squadron of Riverlawn cavalry, as it was sometimes +called, the troopers had talked about them a great deal, and an +emulation had been created among them to measure sabres with them. They +had the opportunity on this occasion, and the pride of every soldier had +been roused to the highest pitch. + +Though the flanking division of the company was now outnumbered for the +moment, all the Union men looked upon the change of front in the enemy +as something like the appearance of the white feather, and they were +encouraged by this phase of the combat. Lieutenant Gadbury, as soon as +he saw the change of front on the part of the Rangers, was disposed to +take the bull by the horns. + +"Open order, march!" he shouted. "Sergeant Lingall, march half the +column into the field on the left, and strike them on that side." + +With the twenty men left to him, he gave the order to move forward at a +gallop, imitating the example of the Texan lieutenant in taking his +place in advance. No mercy was shown to the poor horses, which were +goaded with sabre and spurs to their highest speed. The two divisions +were rushing upon each other with a fury that promised a tremendous +shock when they came together. Deck had placed himself in the front +rank, and added one to the number reduced by death and wounds. + +He was not a full-grown man; but he was a stout fellow, and as brave as +a lion, which he had proved on some former occasions. Ceph, his +intelligent horse, fully seconded him. The rider selected the point +where he was likely to hit. It looked to him just as though the two +officers in command would meet each other, and have a pass with their +sabres, for which they had exchanged their dress swords. But the Texan, +before the onslaught came, had moved over nearer the left flank of his +force, in order to obtain a better view of his men; but he had started +to regain his former position just as the crash of the two bodies +ensued. He was directly in front of Deck, when Captain Truman shouted to +his men to stand up to the work before them, and not yield a hair while +the breath of life was in them. + +Ceph had been ridden a great deal by his master before he became his +war-charger, and he had trained him to some tricks in which the other +horses had not been drilled. One of these was to leap over a high bar. +As the young cavalryman saw the lieutenant of the enemy directly in +front of him, he drew his rein, as Ceph had been instructed; and the +steed stood up on his hind-legs, Deck clinging with his wounded arm to +his holsters. + +The gallant charger understood that he was to leap over the object in +front of him; but it was more than he could do, and he came down with +his fore-legs over the neck of the smaller horse of the lieutenant. The +horse went down, the rider upon him, and Deck gave a sharp thrust with +his sabre at the same moment. The officer was disabled at least, and +Deck dashed over him into the thickest of the fight. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +THE YOUNG HERO OF THE BATTLE + + +The steed of the officer of the Texans was a diminutive animal, and was, +perhaps, a mustang from Mexico, a tough little beast with nearly the +endurance of a mule. Ceph, in the exercise through which his young +master put him when they were alone by themselves, had leaped quite as +high as the backbone of the officer's steed; but it was under favorable +circumstances. In the furious conflict both the rider and the steed were +excited in the highest degree. + +Ceph had failed to leap over the back of the mustang, but he had brought +him to the ground, and the lieutenant upon him; for he could do nothing +for himself, and Deck made a vigorous use of his sabre the moment the +enemy was under him, as his gallant charger sprang from the wreck he had +accomplished, and dashed forward into the _mêlée_. + +If Deck had won no prize for his sabre drill, it was only because none +was offered. He was as quick as a flash in his movements, and had a +strong arm. The Ranger nearest to his officer when the latter went down +aimed a tremendous blow at the head of the young soldier, which would +have cleft it in twain if Deck had not parried it skilfully and +powerfully. In return, he inflicted the same kind of a blow upon his +assailant, whose horse carried him out of the affray when he ceased to +direct him, and he fell to the ground at the side of the road. + +The ringing voice of the Texan officer was no longer heard in the +furious strife, and the Rangers were fighting each on his own +responsibility. Captain Truman had brought up his men, and they had made +a tremendous onslaught. The ten men sent to the flank had done their +whole duty, and Deck found not a single one of the enemy who was not +engaged in a hand-to-hand encounter with a Ranger. The enemy were +surrounded, hemmed in, and discouraged by the fall of their brave +leader. They were also outnumbered, and one of them was often engaged +with two of the Union cavalrymen. + +The Texans had assuredly done all that could be done, and it was soon +evident that they were only defending themselves till they could work +out of the desperate _mêlée_. On the flanks, as they could detach +themselves from the struggling mass, they fled into the field on the +south of the road. Such a conflict could last but a few moments, for +there was not breath enough in the human body to keep up such a strain. + +An observer would have supposed that more than half on both sides had +been killed; yet very few had fallen to the ground, and fewer still had +come out of it without wounds of greater or less magnitude. The Texans +fought to free themselves from the embrace of the Unionists, as it were; +and as soon as they had worked out of the confusion, they fled at the +best speed of their half-exhausted animals. Some one among them had +taken in the lay of the country; and they all fled in one direction, +which was towards the road by which they had come from their camp. + +The battle was fought, and the Union cavalrymen remained in possession +of the field. Most of the men were at least spotted with gore, and some +of them looked as though they had been at work in a slaughter-house. +Dr. Farnwright had already begun his work at the side of the road. Three +of the company were silent and motionless, and the surgeon had +pronounced them dead. The wagons were sent for, including those of the +Guards, and the few who were severely wounded were sent to the hospital +the surgeon had established. + +Deck had received no additional wound; and the bullet injury did not +trouble him much, for he could handle his reins with the left hand +nearly as well as ever. Artie had received three cuts upon his sword +arm, but they happened to be all slight. In fact, the soldier who had +not been damaged to some extent was hardly to be found. Only five men +had been killed, nine wounded seriously enough to disable them. + +"You seem to be all right, Deck," said Captain Truman, when they met at +the camp. + +"I am, Captain, and ready for another fight when you bring it along," +replied the young soldier, laughing, and putting a bold face on the +situation. + +"Don't be too ambitious, my boy," replied the officer, shaking his head. +"You have been reckless to-day." + +"But I have come out all right; and I don't think I was any more +reckless than the rest of the fellows," added Deck. + +"You have fought like a veteran; and I think we owe more to you for the +result of the action than to any other single individual, though all the +boys behaved like heroes, and proved that they were the equals of even +the Texan desperadoes." + +"I don't think I did anything more than the rest of our fellows," +suggested Deck; and he was not in this matter indulging in mere bravado: +he really believed he had done nothing except what came naturally to his +hands, as others had done. + +"Then I must differ in opinion from you; but while I commend your skill +and bravery, I cannot wholly approve of the gymnastics in which you +indulged at the beginning of the charge, for it was simply +recklessness," said the captain very seriously. "It is your duty to +fight courageously, my boy; but it is also a duty you owe to your +country, as well as to your father and all the members of your family, +to save your life and limbs with honor if you can." + +"Haven't I done so, Captain Truman?" asked Deck, with a very cheerful +smile on his face. "I came out with hardly a wound after the bullet hit +me in the arm at the beginning. I have nothing but half-a-dozen +scratches to show for it." + +"You were excited to the highest pitch in the affair, and you have not +got over it yet. When you do, you will feel your scratches more. But I +hope you will not be so reckless another time, my boy." + +"I didn't know I was reckless. Lieutenant Gadbury fired our blood so +that I could hardly hold in; and I went in for all I was worth, and only +did the best I knew how," replied Deck, trying to cool off his heated +blood. + +"You didn't know you were reckless, my boy!" exclaimed the captain. "You +were a volunteer in the second company, and you advanced ahead of the +first rank with the lieutenant. That was a bold exposure; but what I +particularly refer to as reckless was your attempt to leap your horse +over that of the Texan leader." + +"I did not intend to leap my horse over him; but I went for that +officer. When I came up with him, and was going to use my sabre, Ceph +thought I wanted him to leap over him, for he and I have practised +together at that a great deal. He meant right; but I knew he couldn't +clear the horse, small as he was, to say nothing of the rider. Ceph came +down upon both of them, and I drove my weapon into the officer before he +had a chance to stick me. That was the whole of it." + +"If you were not trying to make your steed leap over the horse and +rider, I will acquit you of recklessness in that particular." + +This conversation occurred as they were moving back to the camp. The +wounded on both sides were put into the wagons, the lieutenant in +command of the Rangers among the others. He was badly wounded, and his +chance of recovery was small. Those the doctor pronounced dead were +placed by the side of the road, to be disposed of later. + +"How are you now, Artie?" asked Deck, as he rode up to his brother at +the camp, and looked at him with anxiety, to ascertain the extent of his +injuries, though he looked as rosy and vigorous as usual. + +"I'm all right, Deck, though I have a lot of scratches, and a cut on the +sword arm which is beginning to make itself felt," replied his brother, +quite as cheerfully as the other. + +"I didn't see you till the affair was about over," added Deck. "But you +were putting in the dry licks as though you felt that your time for work +was very short." + +"But I saw you just us soon as we started from the cross-roads, and I +did not expect to see you come out of it alive, Deck," replied Artie; +and he could not wholly conceal the admiration he felt for his brother +since he saw him take his place in advance of his detachment, and +vanquish the Texan lieutenant almost in the twinkling of an eye. "The +captain said you were reckless at the time of it." + +"He don't say so now." + +"You tried to leap your horse over rider and steed." + +"Ceph did that on his own hook; and I could not very well help following +his lead, as I was on his back, though I had nearly slidden off when he +mounted in the air. I am not badly damaged, and I am ready to return to +the first company; I am only waiting for the captain to write a note to +the major." + +"I am all ready to go back, though I should like to have Dr. Farnwright +dress the cut on my arm before I go," added Artie. "But he is too busy +with the men who are worse off than I am, and I will let it go as it is. +But here comes the captain with a paper in his hand. I suppose father +will wonder what has become of us." + +"He must have heard the firing in this direction. Perhaps he has been +fully occupied himself, or he would have sent more men over this way." + +No effort had been used to make prisoners of any of the Texans, for the +captain had his hands full. He was satisfied that Major Lyon expected +warm work where he was, for he would not have sent for the additional +force otherwise. The rest of the company with which he had been engaged +might be at no great distance from him, and doubtless this was the force +the first company was expected to encounter. + +"Here is the letter, Deck, in which I have given a hasty statement of +the action," said Captain Truman, as he handed him the paper, which +could hardly be called a letter. "I believe we have met a portion of the +enemy he expected to engage; and probably he is not in a hurry, for we +have heard no firing at the south of us." + +"We are all ready to go; but Artie has a wound in his arm which troubles +him, and there is no surgeon with the first company," interposed Deck. + +"Farnwright!" shouted the captain, as he saw that he had just finished +his attention to one patient and was hastening to another. + +The surgeon came promptly at his call, and proceeded to dress the arm of +the wounded soldier without his dismounting from his horse. + +"I wish I had no worse cases than that, my boy," said the doctor. + +"I am sorry you have, sir," replied Artie. + +"You will be all right in a few days, my young friend; and I learn that +you have both fought like Trojans, though I believe Artie did not try to +leap his horse over any Texan's head," added Dr. Farnwright, with a look +of admiration at Deck, who appeared to have won the laurel of the day on +the field. + +"Neither did I, Doctor. If any one tried to do a big thing, it was +Ceph," protested the hero. + +"Ceph? Who is he?" + +"My horse;" and Deck hastily gave his version of the daring deed, as it +appeared to be to those who had observed it. + +But the dressing of the wound was finished, and the young soldiers +started on their return to the camp of the first company. The excitement +of the morning had subsided, and they began to feel the wear and tear to +which they had been subjected. + +"We don't get such a morning's work as this every day in the week," said +Artie as they crossed the east road. + +"But I imagine we shall get some worse days than this has been," added +Deck. "We haven't seen the end of this day yet, and we may be in another +fight before noon. I suppose these Texan troopers have been sent over +here to destroy the bridges on the railroad extending to Louisville." + +"It isn't a great while since the Confederates were trying to keep the +road open," added Artie. + +"The situation has changed since that, and we are farther along into the +war. Then they wanted to keep this road open, so that they could bring +provisions down for the use of the armies of the enemy. Now they want to +destroy them, to prevent the United States Government from sending +troops for the invasion of the Southern States," replied Deck. + +The conversation the rest of the way was in regard to the events of the +day, filled up with surmises as to what the first company was doing. +When they left Major Lyon he was on the top of the planter's house, +surveying the surrounding country, wishing to obtain the first +intelligence of the approach of the enemy. Both of the messengers +wondered that he had not seen the coming of the detachment with whom the +second company had engaged; but they concluded that the road they had +taken led them beyond certain hills in that direction. + +When the boys reached the mansion of Mr. Barkland, Major Lyon was still +on the house, and shouted to them to join him at once. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +THE PERPLEXING MOVEMENTS OF THE ENEMY + + +The commander of the squadron had not yet become familiar with the +trials, doubts, and anxieties of military life in the midst of actual +fighting; and though he was as calm and resolute as ever, he seemed to +the boys to be greatly disturbed about something. Thus far all the +fighting had been done by the second company; but before this time Major +Lyon had confidently expected to be engaged with the cavalry which had +encamped three miles from the mansion of the planter. + +The reputation of the Texans had been spread over this portion of the +State; and they were regarded as terrible soldiers, real fire-eaters, +and he had by no means underrated them. He had made the most careful +preparations to meet them, and had sent the two messengers to obtain a +re-enforcement from the second company, which had successfully +completed its work at the railroad bridge, and could spare a portion of +their strength. + +Deck handed his father the letter from Captain Truman as soon as he came +into his presence. The major opened it without saying a word, for he +expected it to give him the information he had been so anxiously +awaiting. The firing to which he had listened, though it was so faint +that he could hardly make it out, had assured him that something not +laid down in his programme had been in progress. While he was reading +the hurriedly written communication, Deck and Artie busied themselves in +examining the region lying to the eastward of the mansion. + +"The road by which the Texans came must be just beyond that hill, a +couple of miles from us," said Artie, as they went as far as they could +from the major. "I know I saw them come out from behind it; for I sat on +my horse, on the highest ground I crossed, watching them for some time." + +"There's father's map," added Deck, pointing to the sheet which lay on +the railing that surrounded the platform; and then he went for it. "I +wondered father did not see this force from his high perch on this +house." + +The young soldiers spread out the map, and examined it very closely. +They readily found the planter's house, and then a road, nearly parallel +to the east one, passing over several hills. The high ground, as they +made out the locality with the aid of the map, was covered with forest, +as marked and as they could see with their own eyes. + +"They went behind that highest hill, and of course they could not be +seen from the top of this house," said Deck, as he restored the map to +the place where he had found it. + +"I wonder he did not send more messengers down, to ascertain what had +become of the force he sent for," added Artie in a low tone. + +"He was expecting an engagement with the Texans all the time, and had +prepared for it, so that he did not want to spare any of his men." + +Major Lyon had finished the reading of the letter, which had evidently +given him some trouble, for it was written on horse-back with a pencil. +He had not heard the conversation of the sons, so deeply had he been +absorbed in the perusal of the missive from the bridge. + +"It appears that you have had a fight near the bridge," said he, as the +boys approached him. "Both of you are very highly commended for your +courage and steadiness, and I am glad to hear so good a report of you. +And both of you have been wounded." + +"Only some scratches, father," replied Deck. "I got one in the beginning +of the action; but it has hardly troubled me at all, and I was able to +do my duty through the whole of it. + +"Deck was the hero of the day, and the whole company are talking about +him down at the bridge," said Artie. + +"But I did no more than my brother. I think we both did our duty, if +saying that is not vanity; and we had better let it go at that," replied +Deck. + +"We will let the matter rest till another time, at least," added the +major; "for I have something else to think of just now." + +Major Lyon took his field-glass, and directed it to the south, as he had +done all the forenoon, looking for the approach of the main body of the +Texans. He scanned the region in detail, but nothing was to be +discovered. Then he proceeded to question his messengers respecting the +action, especially in regard to the manner in which it had been brought +about. + +"There is something concerning the situation here which I cannot +understand," said he, with the same perplexed look he had worn since the +arrival of the messengers. "I expected your return about two hours ago." + +"We started to come back as long ago as that," replied Deck. "When we +came to the cross-roads we discovered two mounted scouts on the east +road approaching us. One of them fired, and I was wounded in the arm. We +returned the fire, and Artie brought down one of them. The other went +back the way they had come. I returned to the camp to notify Captain +Truman, and Artie followed the retreating trooper." + +Artie related his experience in looking for the Texans, and the result +of his search. Between them both they gave the details of the fight. + +"Captain Truman stated that his orders were to join you here; but it was +plain enough to him that the camp at the bridge would be captured if he +took his force away," said Deck. + +"He did quite right; and the approach of the Texan detachment in that +roundabout way put an entirely new phase on the situation," added the +major, looking down at the roof of the building, while his brow was +wrinkled by his active reflection. "We have been waiting since daylight +for the coming of the enemy down this south road." + +"Do they know the Riverlawn Cavalry is here, father?" asked Deck. + +"Of course they know it; for it appears that they send out scouts a long +way ahead, and they must have found out that we are here. I directed +Captain Gordon to send scouts out till he discovered where the enemy +were; and it is time we had a return from them." + +"I have a return from my scouts," said Captain Gordon, springing to the +roof out of the skylight at this moment. + +"Where are the enemy now?" asked the major anxiously. + +"They were breaking camp when my men left," replied the captain. "I sent +six men, the most intelligent in the company, in charge of Sergeant +Knox, who has performed his duty very faithfully." + +"He always does. Have your six men returned?" asked Major Lyon. + +"No, sir; Knox returned alone to report. He left Sergeant Sluder and +the other four as pickets in the road a mile and a half from here, to +report the approach of the enemy if they came this way." + +"But if they were breaking camp, why have we not heard from them before +this time?" demanded the major. + +"Some of the troopers that escaped from the fight on the east road must +have reached the camp by this time," interposed Deck. "Of course they +have informed the captain of the company what happened over there." + +"What fight?" asked the captain sharply, as he turned to Deck. + +The captain had to be informed of what the major had already learned. + +"This puts an entirely different complexion on the situation," said +Captain Gordon, when he had heard something about the fight with the +Texan cavalry. "That detachment of forty-five men were sent over to the +bridge. Now, the question is, What were they sent for?" + +"I have no doubt the Texan captain is aware of the presence of the +Riverlawn squadron in this vicinity. He has found the road here picketed +by our men. It looks to me as though this detachment was sent round by +that back road to take us in the flank and rear when the main body came +down upon us in front. They have been waiting all this time for them to +get a position," said the major, with less anxiety on his face than +before. + +"But those who escaped from the fight have now given him full +information that they were beaten off by our men," suggested Captain +Gordon. "They were preparing for a move of some sort; for Knox left his +horse in the road, and made his way through fields and groves, till he +was in sight of their camp." + +"Have you anything to advise, Captain Gordon?" asked Major Lyon. + +"I think I should attack them where they are," he replied. + +"I cannot agree with you, Captain," added the superior officer. + +"But we are losing time whatever we do," said the captain. + +"We will march immediately, and with all the haste we can, to the +cross-roads. Give your orders to that effect without any delay. Send +the prisoners first, with a proper guard," said Major Lyon very +decidedly. + +By this time Captain Gordon had acquired a great deal of respect for the +judgment of the commander, even in military matters; for he had proved +himself equal to the position in which he had been placed; and, mild as +he was ordinarily, he had shown that he had a will of his own. But the +captain proceeded to obey his orders without offering any objection, and +the major had not time to explain his plans in detail. + +"Captain Truman and his detachment are coming," said Deck, who had been +using his father's field-glass for his amusement, while he listened to +the conversation at his side. + +"Mount your horse, Artie, and give him my order to return to the +cross-roads!" added Major Lyon sharply. + +Artie departed on the instant, and Deck remained on the roof. He could +see from his lofty position all that took place in the vicinity. He saw +the six prisoners, including his uncle, Captain Titus, marched down the +slope with an escort of half-a-dozen troopers. The baggage-wagons +followed them; and the company was formed in the road by fours. Captain +Gordon had hurried the preparations to the best of his ability. + +"The pickets are coming in, Dexter," said Major Lyon, as he returned the +field-glass to the case slung at his side. "You can take your place in +the ranks, my son. Whether the pickets have been sent for, or are driven +in by the enemy, I don't know. We will see when we reach the ground." + +The young man followed his father down the stairs. In the lower entry +they met the family; and the planter expressed regret that they were +about to leave the vicinity of his house. + +"I have felt that I was protected from insult and depredation while your +command was here, and I am sorry to have you go," said Mr. Barkland. + +"I am afraid we should do you more harm than good if we remained," +replied the major. "If we stayed here it might produce a fight, and that +would imperil your family. I think the enemy will be too much in a hurry +to stop to molest you if they march by this road, as they may or may +not." + +"I had hoped to see more of your son who rendered such a great service +last night," said Mrs. Barkland. + +"And I wanted to see him very much," said the daughter. + +"They have no time to meet you at present." + +"But what is the matter with your arm, Mr. Lyon?" asked Miss Barkland, +when she discovered the extra bandage which the doctor had put on +outside of his coat. + +"I got a scratch; but it wasn't the cat that did it," replied Deck, +laughing. + +"Both of my boys have been slightly wounded to-day in the action down by +the cross-roads; but they are still able to do their duty, and I thank +God it was no worse," added Major Lyon, as he took the hand of the +planter. + +They all took the hand of Deck, and repeated their thanks to him. He +followed his father out of the house, in front of which they met Knox. + +"The enemy are moving down this road, Major Lyon," said the Kentuckian +as he saluted. + +"All right; give the captain my order to march at a gallop," replied the +commander, as he mounted his own horse. + +The column moved; and the major soon reached the head of it, where he +took his place by the side of the captain. + +"The enemy have started upon this road," said he. "Whether or not they +have sent another detachment around by that back road can hardly be +known till we find them there." + +"The captain of the Texan Rangers does not seem to have any contempt for +strategy, as was reported of him," replied Captain Gordon. "I have no +doubt his scouts informed him that the Riverlawn Cavalry were in camp on +the plantation." + +"And I have no doubt now, from the way things have worked, that the +detachment were sent round to take us in the flank. They don't seem to +have made any connection with Captain Titus's company, and did not +expect to find one of our companies at the bridge." + +There was some confusion ahead, and the company were thrown back. The +column had overtaken the prisoners and the baggage. The captain sent +forward an order for both to take the side of the road. The major saw +his brother drawn up with the others, and he shouted "Noah!" as he was +passing; but the commander took no notice of him. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +A LONG WAIT FOR THE ENEMY + + +The only feeling Major Lyon had in regard to his unfortunate brother was +that of sorrow. If he had been disposed to do so, he could not leave his +soldiers to converse with him, as Titus evidently desired; for he was +hurrying the first company forward in order to unite his forces and +secure a favorable position before the enemy in his rear could overtake +him. Doubtless Titus desired to make a request of some kind; perhaps to +be set at liberty, perhaps only to demand a ration of whiskey. + +The captain was so imprudent that he was as likely as otherwise to +reproach him, call him a thief, or something of that kind, as he had +done before, in the presence of his command. He had been captured in the +act of committing a dastardly outrage, as well as being in the military +service of the enemy. He was willing to extend to him every reasonable +privilege; but he was a prisoner of war, to take the mildest view of his +condition, and the major was not a man who could be conveniently blind +to an obvious duty. + +The first company proceeded on its rapid march, and in a short time +reached the cross-roads, where it was halted, with the head of the +column near the camp at the railroad bridge. Captain Truman hastened to +the major as soon as he halted, and the commander extended his hand to +him. + +"I commend you, Captain Truman, for the good work you have accomplished; +and I thank you for the skill, courage, and devotion with which you have +done your duty. But the enemy are in motion in this direction on the +south road, and we have no time for anything but preparation for the +immediate future. It is possible that a detachment of the enemy may +approach by the east road." + +"I have a picket stationed a mile up that road, and we shall have early +notice of any force coming from that direction, Major Lyon," replied the +captain of the second company, which had just been sent back by the +order of which Artie had been the bearer. + +"Very well. You have fought a severe fight, Captain; in what condition +are your men?" inquired the commander. + +"They are in excellent condition; for they have found that they are +fully the equals of the Texans on fighting ground, and they are ready +and anxious to meet the enemy again. We have buried our dead, and our +wounded are doing well." + +Major Lyon had carefully studied the face of the country for several +miles in the vicinity of the planter's mansion, from his elevated +position on the building, and had observed it for the present situation +as he rode down from the plantation. He had confidently expected an +attack while he was near the house of Mr. Barkland. He had arranged his +plan to receive the assault; and Lieutenant Belthorpe, with one-third of +the company, had been sent around through the grove to a position behind +a knoll, which would effectually conceal him from the enemy till the +time came for him to assail the Texans in the flank and rear. + +Captain Gordon had heartily approved this plan, and they had force +enough to carry it out successfully. Major Lyon regretted very much that +the issue had not come in the manner he had anticipated. The plan +of the captain of the Rangers had evidently failed because he had not +heard from the detachment sent by the hill road, as the natives called +it. He must have had some means of knowing where this flanking party +were, or he would have moved sooner. Probably a swift rider was to have +been sent back when the force reached the cross-roads; but they had not +got so far as that. His first news must have been the defeat of this +portion of his command. + +"Captain Truman, have you noticed a considerable knoll on the left of +the south road, just above the cross-roads?" asked the major. + +"I have; and I thought of posting my reserve under Lieutenant Gadbury +there; but I found it was too far off for the time at my command," +replied the captain. + +"Can it be reached without going by the south road?" + +"Very easily; by riding through this field, where we were posted this +morning, crossing the east road, and then through a valley, which will +conceal the force till they reach the shelter of the knoll." + +"How many men can you muster in your company?" + +"About eighty, if you are to remain in this vicinity; for ten or fifteen +will be a sufficient guard for the prisoners." + +"Then you will march your available force to the point indicated. I see +that you have hoisted the American flag on the railroad bridge," added +the major. + +"It is the camp flag, and I wanted it in the most sightly place I could +find," replied the captain. + +"It will answer a double purpose, then. Could you see it from behind the +knoll?" + +"Perfectly; we did not get the flag-pole elevated till half an hour +ago." + +"I shall send Deck to lower that flag, and remain by the staff till I +give him the signal to hoist it again. Then you will march to the south +road with all speed, and attack the enemy in the rear or on the flank." + +"I understand you perfectly, Major Lyon, and your order shall be carried +out to the letter," replied Captain Truman, as he saluted, and hurried +to his company, which had been formed in the field by the side of the +road. + +"Dexter!" called the commander, when he had found his son in the ranks. + + +Both of the boys had been used as messengers during the morning, and +this service had led them into the most dangerous positions; and both of +them had fought like heroes as volunteers while their company was at the +plantation. + +Deck came out of his place in the ranks, saluted his father, and +expected to be called upon for more messenger service, hoping it would +lead him into the thickest of the action, as it had before. + +"Do you see that flag on the railroad bridge, Dexter?" asked his father, +pointing at the ensign. + +"I do; and I take off my cap to it," replied Deck, suiting the action to +the word. + +"You will go to it and haul it down, my son." + +"Haul down the American flag!" exclaimed Deck. + +"As long as it is not for a surrender or the abandonment of the camp, +you need have no scruples about it," replied the major, with a smile at +the boy's objection. "You will obey the order, and you will remain at +the staff. When you see me wave my handkerchief three times in the air, +you may set your conscience at ease by hoisting the flag again." + +The commander made the signal over his plumed hat, so that the +messenger would be able to recognize it when it was given in the fight, +if there should be one, of which he was not altogether sure after the +disappointment of the morning. + +"I shall see that signal from the bridge if it is made three miles off." + +"Keep your eyes wide open after the engagement begins; for it is a +signal, really an order from me, of the utmost importance, and the +result of the action may depend upon it," added the major very +impressively. "I have called upon you for this service because I know I +can depend upon you, Dexter." + +"Of course I shall do my duty and obey my orders to the best of my +ability," replied Deck; but judging from the expression on his face he +was not pleased with the mission assigned to him. + +"You can go to the bridge at once; but you will not haul the flag down +till I make the signal agreed upon to you," added Major Lyon. + +"But, father, do you expect to fight this battle without me?" asked +Deck, with a very cheerful smile on his face; and he would not have said +as much as that to any other person, even as a joke. + +"You have made yourself the hero of the day, and perhaps you ought to +have a little rest," replied his father, quite as cheerfully as the son, +for he took the question as it was intended. + +"I don't exactly like the idea of squatting on that bridge, and looking +on while there is any fighting going on," continued the young soldier. + +"But the position to which I have assigned you is one of the most +important on the field. I can trust you to be watchful, while another, +interested in the action, might neglect his duty." + +"I have nothing more to say, father," replied Deck, as he rode off in +the direction of the bridge. + +Major Lyon had made his dispositions and issued his orders before he +spoke to his son. Captain Truman was galloping over the field towards +the east road, with sixty men, which was the number finally designated +for the service at the knoll. Captain Gordon had posted his men along +the roads and the adjoining fields. The baggage-wagons and the prisoners +had arrived from the plantations, and Captain Titus had an opportunity +to rejoin his company; but the glory of his military life seemed to have +passed away. He was treated the same as the rest of the prisoners, and +no one took any notice of him. He was not in good odor even in his own +company; for his men declared that he had deserted them the night +before. + +The enemy had not yet appeared; and even the pickets that had been +posted a mile down the south road had not been driven in, which would be +the first indication that hostilities were at hand. Those from the +second company who were scouting the east road had not been heard from; +and they had been ordered to proceed as far as a certain hill, where +Artie had first seen the detachment sent that way. + +Noon came, and the soldiers ate their dinner from their haversacks, and +the horses took their oats from the grass. It was a very quiet time, and +the Riverlawn battalion would have been glad to receive an order to +march upon the enemy wherever they could be found. They were impatient +for something to do, especially the first company, which had not yet +seen any fighting. + +Major Lyon improved his time as he took his lunch with Captain Truman, +in listening to a fuller report of the action on the east road. The +commander asked particularly in regard to the lieutenant who had fallen +under the onslaught of Deck Lyon. He had been wounded in the chest by a +ball, and he had gone down from a cut of the young soldier's sabre. He +had been stunned by the blow, and left on the field. But he had been +conveyed to the camp in the wagon with other wounded men, and the +surgeon had dressed his wounds. He believed he would recover. + +"I should like to see that man," said the major. + +"I saw him walking about the shanty hospital not long ago. I spoke with +him, and he is a very gentlemanly fellow. You can send for him if you +wish, Major. But it is time for me to join my company, as I sent the men +in charge of Lieutenant Gadbury; for I had to give some orders in regard +to the prisoners." + +"I will not send for him; but I will ride down to the hospital, which is +only a few rods from the cross-roads. Captain Gordon, I wish to have +some one near me to carry my orders, if need be," said the commander, as +Captain Truman rode off. + +"Your orderly?" asked the captain. + +"I prefer Artie Lyon; I have already sent Dexter on duty upon the +bridge. I am going down to the hospital; send me notice at once if any +movement is apparent." + +Artie was sent to him at once; but Deck had told him where he was going, +and he hoped he would not be sent to join him. He followed his father to +the hospital, where Dr. Farnwright received him. He asked for the Texan +lieutenant; and the surgeon pointed him out, seated on a log at the side +of the road. + +"This is Major Lyon, commanding the squadron," said the doctor, +introducing him. + +The officer rose from his seat, and saluted the major very politely. + +"This gentleman is Lieutenant Makepeace, of the Texan Rangers," added +the surgeon. + +"That does not sound like a Southern name," replied Major Lyon, and he +took the hand of the wounded officer. + +"I am a Northern man; but my home has been in Texas for seven years, +though I came from a New England State." + +"I regret to see you on the wrong side in this war, though I am sorry +that you have been wounded." + +"I don't know exactly how I came in this service; but I was very near +being elected to the captaincy of this company, though I am not a +Texan." + +"Who is the commander of the company?" + +"Captain Dingfield." + +"There comes the picket down the hill!" exclaimed Artie, who had +discovered half-a-dozen men running their horses down the descent. + +"Then I must leave you; but I shall see you again," added the major, as +he dashed up the road at full speed. + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +THE AMERICAN FLAG ON THE BRIDGE + + +As Major Lyon rode out from the hospital he encountered Sergeant Sluder +pressing his horse to the best of his speed; but it was hardly necessary +for him to deliver the message of which he was the bearer, for there was +movement enough among the men to assure him that the enemy were +approaching, even if Artie had not seen the return of the pickets. + +The major waved his handkerchief three times above his plumed hat, and +the American flag came down at once on the bridge. Deck had not fallen +asleep at his post, though he found the situation very monotonous. The +sergeant reached the commander, and delivered a message from Captain +Gordon. The major had never been in a regular battle, only in the +affairs with the ruffians at Riverlawn and Lyndhall. + +In fact, there had been nothing in the present campaign which could +properly be called a battle. The second company had done all the +fighting so far. At the bridge a few shots had demoralized the Home +Guards; and though the action in the road had been severe, it was hardly +more than a skirmish. But the commander had proved before that he had +abundance of courage, though he had engaged in less actual fighting than +his two sons. + +Major Lyon reached the position of Captain Gordon just as the pickets +came in, headed by Life Knox. The men were all in position, and those of +the first company were eager for the conflict; for they had done +nothing, and rather envied their companions in the second company, who +had fought and won a victory against a portion of the enemy. They were +very much excited, and it would have suited them better if their captain +had led them in a charge at once against the Texans; for the most trying +position of the ordinary soldier is when he is in the presence of the +enemy, and is permitted to do nothing but wait; and they had been doing +that all day. + +"You have been driven in, Knox," said Captain Gordon, as the sergeant +saluted him. + +"Not exactly driven in, Captain," replied the Kentuckian with a cheerful +smile, as though events were not moving half fast enough for him. "The +Texicans are marching as though they were going to a funeral, and they +don't seem to be in no hurry to git here." + +"But you came down the slope as though you were not going to a funeral," +added the captain. + +"Where are the enemy now, Knox?" asked the major. + +"They are about half-way betwixt here and the mansion-house of the +planter. I didn't hurry up to tell you they were coming, but to let you +know that I had seen a force over on the road in the hills. I thought I +saw something moving; and I climbed to the top of the tallest tree I +could find, on the highest ground 'twixt here and the planter's house." + +"What did you see?" demanded the major. + +"I got a look through a small notch between two hills, and I saw some +cavalry pass along; but I reckon I saw only the tail end on 'em, for +they was out o' sight in two seconds, and I couldn't find nothin' more +on 'em. I knew then why the company wasn't in no hurry." + +"Then, I suppose we are in no hurry," added the major. "I see that +Captain Dingfield intends to carry out his plan as he laid it out for +this forenoon." + +"Who?" asked the captain. + +"Captain Dingfield, who commands the Texans; I learned his name from the +lieutenant who was wounded. I hardly supposed he would send another +flanking party by that road," replied Major Lyon, "This news calls for +some change in our plans." + +"I reckon that captain on the south road hain't got over fifty men with +him, if he has that," continued the sergeant. + +"How could you estimate the number, Knox," asked the captain. + +"When I am sent out scouting, I generally find out all I can," replied +the sergeant, who looked as though he felt that the correctness of his +information had been questioned. + +"We know you do, Knox; and we only want to know your means of arriving +at a conclusion, in order to judge of the accuracy of your report," the +captain explained. + +"I looked them over when I climbed the tree," continued the scout with +energy. "The force was just coming round a bend in the road down a hill, +and I counted in fours up to forty. I don't know how many scouts they +had out ahead, but I added ten to what I had counted." + +"I have no doubt you are quite correct, Sergeant," added the captain. "I +did not doubt your statement in the first place, and I was only curious +to know how you were able to make up your estimate." + +"I saw that six of you came down the hill together; have you left no +pickets in front of the company?" inquired the major. + +"The captain gave me nine men to scout the region over there, and six of +'em have come in, for I thought they might be wanted," answered Knox. + +"You knew that we had nearly two hundred men at this point," suggested +the major, who realized that the sergeant had something in his mind to +which he was slow to give utterance. + +"If this is a council of war, Major Lyon, I ain't in it, and I've told +all I know," replied Knox. "I have reported that the Texicans is divided +into two bodies, one on 'em comin' down the south road slower'n cold +molasses runs, and the other's movin' over the hill road; and I reckon +they ain't goin' to no funeral over yonder." + +"In other words, you think the two divisions of the enemy intend to +attack at the same time," added the major. + +"What be they goin' over that way for if that ain't what they mean?" +asked the Kentuckian in answer to the question. "But I don't feel sartin +that they mean to come down here by the east road." + +"What else can they do?" inquired the major, much interested in drawing +out the sergeant. + +"I don't reckon I'd better say anything more. I obey orders, but I don't +give none," answered Knox, who was evidently afraid of thrusting himself +into the counsels of his superiors. "Captain Dingbat"-- + +"Dingfield," interposed the captain with a smile. + +"Captain Dingfield sent them men over here to knock down and burn that +bridge; and I reckon he's go'n' to do it if he can." + +"And I am sent here to prevent him from doing it; and I shall do so if I +can. You may speak out loud, Knox, just what you wish to say," said the +major rather impatiently. + +"If you look at that map you had on the housetop, you will see that the +hill road crosses the east road, just as this south one does here. Ain't +that so, Artie? You have been over there, they say," said the sergeant, +appealing to the major's aid. + +"It does; I was up there some time this morning; but I don't know where +it leads to," replied Artie. + +"It stands to reason that it crosses this railroad somewhere within five +miles of this cross-road. That's the way the Texicans are coming down +here to destroy the bridge. I've said my say, and I hain't got nothin' +more to say," added Knox, wheeling his horse out of the circle that +surrounded the commander. + +"Artie, do you know where Captain Truman is posted with his command?" +asked the major in rather hurried tones. + +"I do not," replied the aid, as he had now practically become, though +the position was not regular for a private. + +The commander pointed out the knoll behind which the captain's force had +been sent. + +"Follow the east road till you can see behind that hill. Captain Truman +is there, and you can readily find him," continued Major Lyon. "Give +him my order to move his command out to the east road, and there await +further orders." + +Artie's steed was well rested after his several forenoon jaunts, and he +went up the slope of the road like the wind. Sergeant Knox had retired +from the immediate presence of the superior officers, afraid that he was +getting to be too forward for his rank. He believed that the force +moving by the hill road had been ordered to the railroad. While the +major was not disposed to accept his view in full, he intended to be +prepared for a movement of the kind suggested by the Kentuckian. + +"What do you think of the idea advanced by Knox, Captain Gordon?" asked +the commander. + +"Of course it is possible that he has correctly divined the intention of +the enemy," replied the captain. "But it would not be wise to ignore the +enemy in front of us." + +"I have no intention of doing so; for I have ordered Truman to the east +road, in readiness to act to the north of us, while we give our +attention to the enemy in front of us. We have men enough to annihilate +this force, if it is no larger than Knox states." + +"I believe he is entirely correct in his figures; and I am inclined to +have considerable confidence in his theory of Captain Dingfield's plan." + +"Probably we have double the force of the enemy in this vicinity; and it +would be a crying shame if the bridge were destroyed because we were +outmanoeuvred," said the major, with more than usual vigor in his +speech. "There is the structure within a quarter of a mile of us, and I +wonder if they intend to destroy it under our very eyes. But where are +the Texans in front of us? Even at a funeral march they ought to be near +enough by this time to send in our pickets." + +"It begins to look as though they were amusing us while they were making +arrangements to burn the bridge elsewhere," replied Captain Gordon, +quite as anxious about the situation as his superior. "Artie has made +quick work of his orders, for Captain Truman is half-way to the road, +just coming out from behind the hill." + +Major Lyon thought of Deck on the bridge in this connection, and looked +in that direction. The signal for Captain Truman's command to move into +the rear of the force advancing by the south road would not be needed. +If he deemed it advisable, he could send part of the first company to a +point near the road he had already selected. He rode to a place where +the ground was a little higher than where the conference had taken +place, and there made the signal above his plume upon which he had +agreed with Deck and the captain of the second company. He repeated it +till he had made it three times; and he could not help thinking what a +relief it would be to his son to be permitted to leave this solitary +post. + +"A cheer for the American flag, which will be hoisted on the railroad +again in a moment!" shouted Major Lyon to the soldiers near him; and the +word was passed along through the column. + +The cavalrymen were always ready to cheer the flag; and in a few moments +the eyes of the entire company were fixed upon the flagstaff on the +bridge. The major watched it with as much interest as any one present; +and he was ready to join in the cheer, and to lead it off. He waited +patiently for a couple of minutes, and then he wondered if his son had +gone to sleep at his solitary vigil; for the flag did not mount to the +proud position it had held before it was lowered. + +Major Lyon waited full five minutes, but no flag appeared. He could not +understand it after the careful charge he had given Deck in regard to +the importance of the position to which he had been assigned. It was +fortunate that the plan of receiving the assault had been changed; for +Captain Truman's command would have remained behind the hill, and out of +sight of the conflict, if there had been one, while his men were needed +in the road. + +As the hoisting of the flag was no longer needed as a signal, the major +was not inclined to say anything about his son's failure to do his duty; +for all his men might be needed at any moment to repel an attack on the +south road, and another on the east road. But he was very indignant, as +well as very much grieved, at Deck's neglect of duty; for it did not +occur to him that there could be any excuse for or justification of the +boy's conduct. + +Major Lyon used his field-glass diligently for some time, while he was +waiting for the appearance of the first company's pickets, as he had not +thought to do at first. With this aid he examined the top of the bridge +very closely; but he could see nothing of the absent soldier. It did not +enter his mind that anything could have happened to the young man, for +the bridge was a high one, and in sight of all in the ranks, and in the +camp on the shore of the creek; though the stream was large enough to be +called a river in any Northern State. + +Close by the flagstaff, over the abutment of the bridge, was a high +fence extending a short distance. Some thought it had been built where +the snow was troublesome in winter; others, that it was the side of a +shanty which had stood there, and only the roof and ends had been +removed. If Deck was not behind this fence, he was not on the bridge, +was the conclusion of his father. But a movement on the east road called +his attention away from the subject. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +THE EXPLOSION ON THE BRIDGE + + +The movement on the east road, where the fight of the morning with the +Texans had taken place, was occasioned by the simultaneous arrival of +the second company from behind the knoll, and the hasty return of the +pickets from the hill region. The former was there in accordance with +the order of which Artie was the bearer to Captain Truman; but the +latter event was the more important, inasmuch as it promised to reveal +the operations of the enemy, which had hitherto been concealed. + +The sergeant in charge of the picket reported in hot haste to the +captain of the second company, by whom he had been sent out; and a +moment later Artie was flying down the hill to the major, with the +substance, in a short sentence, of the intelligence brought in. The +commander had noticed the rapid movement on the road, though Captain +Truman had come out of the field half a mile from the cross-roads. The +pickets came at a furious gallop; for the sergeant, though not admitted +to the counsels of the officers, was intelligent enough to understand +the importance of his report. + +Major Lyon, though he had begun to be alarmed at the non-appearance of +Deck on the bridge, hastened back to the cross-roads, where Artie soon +rode up to him. The delay of the enemy on the south road was generally +understood to be caused by the non-arrival of an expected detachment +from the hills. The major knew what the report of the pickets would be +before it was brought to him; for his impression was that Life Knox was +correct in his interpretation of the intention of the enemy. The +disappearance of Deck confirmed his belief that operations had actually +commenced on the bridge. + +"The pickets report that a detachment of about fifty has marched north +by the hill road!" shouted Artie, as soon as he came within speaking +distance of his father. + +"Ride back; give Captain Truman my order to march his command to the +cross-roads!" added Major Lyon with more than usual energy, though he +was still as cool and self-possessed as he had been all day. + +Artie wheeled his horse, and in a moment he was running Miss Dolly up +the slope at a breakneck speed. + +"Captain Gordon!" called the major as he rode toward him. + +The captain dashed up to him on the instant. + +"Send Knox and his scouts to me!" added the commander. + +The Kentuckian and the men he had selected for the service in which he +had been engaged were at hand; and Knox saluted the major, in readiness +for any duty upon which he might be sent. + +"Ride to the bridge! Leave your horses below! Get up to the track with +all the haste you can make! Deck was stationed there to hoist the flag +at a signal from me, which I have made several times; but he does not +obey the order, and I begin to fear that something has happened to him," +said the major in hurried tones. + +"I'll find him if he is there!" exclaimed Knox, with an expression of +determination on his face. + +"I think you will find a small force of the enemy near the bridge, Knox. +Don't fall into any trap; I will have at least half a company up there +in a few minutes." + +"I will keep my eyes wide open, Major," replied the Kentuckian, as he +rode off towards the bridge. + +"Captain Gordon, send Lieutenant Belthorpe with half your company to the +bridge. Just beyond the camp he will find a practicable road up the +embankment. He will be in abundant season to receive the force +approaching by the hill road." + +The captain saluted his superior, and made no reply. It was evident +enough to the commander that Captain Dingfield had been on the alert, +and that he intended to destroy the bridge even in the face of, and +under the very eyes of, the Riverlawn Cavalry, of double his own +strength, though he might not be aware of its numbers. If Major Lyon did +not manifest his chagrin and annoyance at the present situation, he felt +it none the less. + +He realized that Captain Dingfield had been amusing him all day with the +prospect of a fight, while he was carrying out his plan for destroying +the bridge. It was all plain enough to him now, and he wondered that he +had not placed a guard on the bridge early in the morning. It looked now +like a serious omission; but he hoped it was not too late to remedy the +defect in his plan. What had become of Deck was a mystery he could not +fathom. + +After the hauling down of the flag, the major had been too fully +occupied elsewhere to think of the bridge, and he had not even glanced +at it till he made the signal. It had not occurred to him that the +structure could be in any danger while his squadron was in sight of it. +He watched the force of Lieutenant Belthorpe as they hurried by the road +to the point where they could ascend to the track, and he believed he +had done all that was necessary to save the bridge from destruction. + +Captain Truman was approaching the cross-roads with his company, and the +attack of Captain Dingfield might be expected very soon. It was +necessary to make a new arrangement of the troops. The major had already +formed his plan, and he wheeled his horse to join Captain Gordon and +give his orders. At this moment an explosion rent the air, which made a +great deal of noise, though it had not the volume of an earthquake. + +Major Lyon turned his head, expecting to see the bridge a wreck, with +the fragments of it flying in the air. He looked for Knox and his +companions, who had been ordered to climb upon the bridge without +waiting to ride around to the embankment. They had not yet mounted the +abutment, and were then securing their horses near the bank of the +creek. But the bridge was not a wreck, though some timbers and planks +had been elevated in the air; but most of the matter that was thrown up +appeared to be earth and stones. + +But where was Deck? Even with the pressure of duty upon him, he could be +excused for thinking of his son, who had so strangely disappeared. He +watched the movements of Knox and his men. If they had been a couple of +minutes later they might have been hurled from the high structure by the +force of the explosion. But he was greatly relieved when he saw that +they were not harmed, or at least not disabled; for he saw the tall +Kentuckian running with all his might to the abutment, followed by +his five men. They were all there, and they began to climb up the wall. + +[Illustration: "Sling carbines! Charge them!"] + +Something like a shout from the direction of the cross-roads attracted +the major's attention at this moment. Wheeling his horse again, he saw +the pickets rushing down the hill beyond which they had been observing +the enemy on their "funeral march." Their return could mean but one +thing, which was that Captain Dingfield's command were advancing. + +Lieutenant Belthorpe was hurrying his force to the embankment; and if +there were any Rangers there, he would soon confront them. Knox and his +companions had reached the top of the bridge, and all of them were +busily engaged about something; but the observer could not tell what it +was, though the appearance of several small volumes of smoke indicated +that the Texans had started several fires on the wooden structure. + +The head of the enemy's column had not yet appeared on the hill which +shut off the view of the planter's mansion, and there was time enough +for the major to make the dispositions of his force. Half of the first +company were left, and the whole of the second, except the twenty men +doing guard duty at the camp. The commander had in the neighborhood of +a hundred and twenty-five men on the spot; and with this force he could +soon annihilate the fifty troopers, more or less, who were marching to +the attack, or were supposed to be doing so. + +"Captain Gordon, take what is left of the first company, and make a +detour to that hill on the right of the road. It is nothing more than a +knoll; and you will attack them on the flank as soon as Truman engages +them in the road," said the major. + +"I was thinking of suggesting that as soon as you sent for Captain +Truman at the knoll on the other side of the road," replied the captain, +when he had ordered Gilder, his second lieutenant, to march the platoon +to the place indicated. + +"I have no doubt that explosion was the signal for the advance of +Captain Dingfield," added the major, as he looked back at the bridge, +where the sergeant and his men were still at work. + +"It looks so; and the Rangers must have had some men over near the +bridge who got up that attempt to blow it up. But it looks as though it +was a failure," replied Captain Gordon, as he rode off to join his +command. + +Captain Truman, with about seventy-five troopers, was at the +cross-roads, waiting for orders. The major directed the head of the +company to place the troopers in the road and at the side of it, with +their carbines unslung. The commander had sent Artie for a sabre; and he +had taken possession of it, indicating that he did not intend to be an +idle spectator to the conflict if his personal service was needed. + +"Can I take my place in the ranks where I belong, father?" asked Artie. + +"No, my son; I may want you at any moment to carry an order," replied +Major Lyon; and possibly he thought this might be the only son left to +him since the disappearance of Deck. + +"There comes the head of the column!" exclaimed Captain Truman. + +"Have your men all ready to fire, Captain," added the major. "But don't +be in a hurry to do so. I will give you the order." + +It was no longer a funeral march on the part of the enemy, for they were +forcing their steeds to the utmost. The captain was in front of his +platoon, and that was all the men he had. He had lost one lieutenant at +the first action, and probably he had been compelled to send the second +with the detachment by the hill road. + +"It looks as though they intended to begin with a charge," said Captain +Truman. + +"Perhaps the captain will change his mind before he has gone much +farther," replied the major very quietly. + +The soldiers acted as though they were very impatient. The major thought +the Texan captain was reckless, and was making use of fire-eating +tactics instead of cool military judgment. Possibly he expected to be +able to cut his way through the force in front of him, and join the one +he had sent to the bridge by the hills. + +Probably Captain Dingfield had not a little of the contempt for Northern +soldiers which pervaded the ranks of the Confederate army at the +beginning of the war. He was a brave and impulsive man, and doubtless +believed that a vigorous charge would drive the Riverlawn Cavalry out of +his way, as he would brush away the flies that annoyed him when he read +his newspaper. The fact that one portion of his company had been soundly +whipped and driven from the field appeared to have no influence over +him. + +"Now is your time, Captain Truman," said the major, who had waited till +the enemy were more than half-way down the hill. "Have your men take +good aim, and fire." + +The captain gave his orders with a vim which indicated his impatience to +begin his work. The carbines were all discharged almost as one, and the +road was filled with the smoke of the volley; but the breeze was fresh +enough to drive it away in a moment. At least seventy-five balls had +been sent into the midst of the fifty men, and the troopers had been +trained to do good work with their carbines. + +As the smoke cleared away, it was seen that a number of the Texans had +fallen from their horses, while others were reeling in their saddles. A +couple of minutes later another volley was heard at the right of the +road, and more of the cavalrymen went down. The major could not see the +command of Captain Gordon, but he had been prompt in the discharge of +the duty assigned to him. + +"Sling carbines! charge them!" said the major. + +The order was promptly obeyed, and the commander rode forward with the +captain of the second company. But in a minute more there was nothing +there to charge. What was left of the enemy suddenly wheeled their +horses and began a retreat in hot haste. If they had not done so not one +of them would have been left to contest the field in five minutes more. + +The first company were just breaking out of the field when the second +came up, and Major Lyon ordered the captain of the second to halt. +Riding forward, he directed Captain Gordon to pursue the discomfited +troopers, and capture them if he could. The fight was ended practically; +and it had been little better than a slaughter, all owing to the +reckless course of Captain Dingfield. + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +THE CONFUSION OF THE DAY EXPLAINED + + +A single volley from each company of the Riverlawn Cavalry proved to be +enough to settle the affairs of the enemy in front. Major Lyon looked +about him in the road, and he was surprised to find but eight forms +lying on the ground. How so many bullets could have been fired into +fifty men with no greater loss of life seemed strange to him; but he was +just beginning to obtain his experience. The result did not prove that +only that number had been hit; for the number lying in the road did not +fully indicate the enemy's loss. + +Captain Gordon began a vigorous pursuit of the retreating enemy; but +they had the start of him by at least a mile, for he had met with some +obstructions in reaching the road after his men had delivered their +fire. Both the pursuers and the pursued disappeared behind the hill, and +there was nothing more that the second company could do. The major had +looked over those left upon the field, to ascertain if the captain was +among them; but he was not. + +"Captain Dingfield was a bold and reckless officer; and, as he rode at +the head of his troop, I wonder that he is not lying here with the +others who dropped from their horses," said Major Lyon, as he surveyed +what had not yet ceased to be a sad sight. + +"He was exceedingly fortunate to escape, though he may have carried off +with him half-a-dozen bullets in his body," replied Captain Truman. + +"Either he had no idea of how many men we have, or he intended to make +only a demonstration against us, to enable the force he had sent to the +bridge to finish their work," added the major. "The explosion seems to +have been the signal for him to advance; and I am inclined to believe he +intended only to prevent me from using my force to interfere with the +work of those he had sent for the destruction of the bridge. Fortunately +that matter had been attended to, and Belthorpe has men enough to +overcome that sent by the hill road." + +"I should say that Dingfield had been thoroughly and completely routed," +replied Captain Truman with more enthusiasm than the major could feel; +for the latter realized that the bridge had narrowly escaped destruction +in the very face of his squadron, and under their very eyes. + +"I don't know yet," he returned. "We can tell better about that when we +have ascertained the condition of the bridge." + +"We can still see it, and it does not appear to have suffered any very +serious injury." + +"March your company back to the cross-roads, Captain Truman. We shall +soon learn what more we have to do. The bridge does not appear to have +suffered much, as you suggest," added the commander as he rode down the +hill, with Artie at his side. + +"What do you suppose has become of Deck, father?" asked the young man; +and there was a look of great anxiety on his face. + +"I don't know, and I cannot conjecture," replied the father with a blank +look at the inquirer. "I saw him lower the flag as I had ordered him to +do. It did not occur to me that there could be any movement in progress +there then. For the next hour or more I had enough to think of near the +cross-roads, and I don't know that I looked at the bridge once in that +time; certainly not with the expectation of seeing anything there." + +"I can't understand it at all, father," added Artie; and he looked as +though the tears might easily come into his eyes, for they had been +together from their childhood, and had always been greatly devoted to +each other. + +They had never been known to quarrel with each other, though each was +rather tenacious of his own opinion. Deck was not his own brother, only +his cousin, though the fraternal feeling had always been as warm and +earnest as though they had been born of the same father and mother. +Since the troubles in the vicinity of Riverlawn had begun, and they had +served side by side in the fights with the ruffians, as well as in +drilling together for three months, the tie that united them had become +even more intimate. Artie was fearfully anxious in regard to the fate of +his brother; and his father was not less so, though he was more +successful in concealing his feeling. + +"I cannot understand it any better than you can," replied the major. "If +I had thought of his safety at all, I should have considered him as +more secure on the bridge than at the cross-roads, where we were liable +to confront the enemy at any moment. Dexter had been so forward in the +action on the east road, that I felt rather relieved to think that he +was in a safe place. I wished him to do his duty faithfully; but he rode +into the front rank of the company, being a volunteer, and threw +himself, horse and all, upon the lieutenant in command of the enemy." + +"I saw him do that myself, though Deck says Ceph tried to leap over the +officer's horse of his own accord," added Artie. "There must have been +some of the enemy's men on the bridge when we supposed there was no one +there." + +"For my part, I did not suppose anything at all about it, as I have said +before; but I am confident now there must have been some of the Texans +there, or men in their employ," continued the major. "It appears that +the farther abutment of the bridge had been mined, though the work must +have been done at the top. It seems to have been badly done, as though +the workmen were laboring under great disadvantages." + +The father and son could explain nothing; for they had nothing to base +their opinions on, the explosion and the smoke of the fires being all +the facts in their possession. Life Knox and his scouts had doubtless +obtained some information by this time which would enable them to +conjecture the fate of poor Deck. They continued on their way, with the +second company just behind them. There was nothing to be done, unless it +was to send a re-enforcement to Lieutenant Belthorpe, though it was +doubtful if he had encountered the enemy. + +As soon as Major Lyon and Artie reached the hospital they heard a +vigorous yell, which seemed to come from the guards in charge of the +camp. It was immediately followed by a hearty cheer from the second +company. Both father and son looked about them without being able to see +anything to call forth these cheers. + +"Up goes the flag, father!" shouted Artie, who had directed his gaze +where others were looking, and saw that the American flag had just been +hoisted on the pole upon the bridge. + +"Always a welcome sight, but more so now than usual," added the major, +as he raised his field-glass and directed it to the flagstaff. "I see +the tall form of Sergeant Knox at the halyards, and he has done this +thing. I pray that it may be the herald of good news in regard to +Dexter." + +"Do you suppose the flag means that he has found Deck, father?" asked +Artie, as a flood of hope flashed through his mind. + +"It is impossible to tell what it means; but the sergeant seems to be +climbing down the wall, and he will soon be here," replied the major. + +Artie started his horse, with the evident intention of going to the +bridge; but the major called him back, and directed him to wait where he +was till Knox joined them. + +"I may want you at any moment," said the father. "I have been using you +and Dexter as my orderlies, and I appoint you to that position now." + +"Is there any news from up above, Major Lyon?" asked the wounded +lieutenant, who had walked to the spot where the commander stopped his +horse. "I heard a volley a little while ago; has there been another +engagement?" + +"A very brief one," replied the major. "It was very soon decided, for +Captain Dingfield retreated as soon as he had received our fire." + +"Captain Dingfield!" exclaimed the wounded lieutenant; "that is not at +all like him." + +"It was the only thing he could do. He left eight of his men in the +road, where they dropped from their horses; and of course he led away +many others with bullets in their bodies. I should say that Captain +Dingfield had been a very reckless commander, and I was almost sure I +should find his body among the killed; but it was not there, and I +suppose he is still carrying it with him." + +"We did not expect much of any difficulty in this expedition, and we +were satisfied that we could ride over the Home Guards we heard had been +sent here to protect the bridges," replied Lieutenant Makepeace rather +languidly, for he had been severely wounded. + +"I have a squadron of United States cavalry under my command," said the +major proudly. + +"So I discovered this forenoon; not that you had a squadron here, but +that the troopers were regular cavalrymen; and I must say that no men +ever fought better, for my command were beaten and driven off in less +time than it takes to tell of it," added the prisoner with an attempt to +smile. "But two full companies were sent over here, though I have not +yet been able to find the other." + +"But the other company is here," said Major Lyon. + +"Where?" + +"There they are," answered the commander, pointing to the camp. "They +are prisoners of war now." + +"That accounts for it." + +"That company were Home Guards in the first of it, but now they have +become regular Confederate soldiers." + +"They have made a mess of this expedition." + +"I suppose you have a force over at the north end of the railroad +bridge, lieutenant," said the major very quietly, and not expecting the +prisoner would answer the question. + +"If there is, it has been sent there since I was wounded. Everything has +worked very differently from what we expected; for Captain Dingfield +talked the whole thing over with me. We have fought the battle, and lost +it. I suppose there is no harm in comparing notes after the affair is +finished." + +"I should think not; for I don't believe you can give me any +information that will be useful to me now," replied the major. + +"We ascertained that your company was camped near that plantation; and +we had no idea that you had more than one. We believed the company sent +from Bowling Green, which we have not seen yet, for we have not been +there, was posted somewhere on what is called the east road. Dingfield's +plan was to march down by the south road, use up your company near the +plantation, and then effect a junction with the infantry company for the +destruction of the bridge, which is said to be a matter of great +importance to the South." + +"I should say that it was; and my orders came from the general in +command to prevent it," interposed the major. + +"I was sent by Captain Dingfield round by the hill road, to attack you +in the rear while he took you in front. As I said, we had no suspicion +that you had another company of cavalry here. One of my scouts was shot, +and is in this hospital with me. The other came back to me. But he had +seen only two troopers; and I decided to push on, especially as I had +four bridge-builders with me." + +"Four bridge-builders!" exclaimed the major, "And what became of them?" + +"I was ordered to send them by the nearest road to the bridge; and I was +told, when I inquired on the way, that the hill road was the shortest +cut to it. They had a six-mule wagon with them, containing their tools, +tents, blasting-powder, and provisions. I came down the east road with +my force, while they continued on their way by the hill road. My force +was defeated as we approached the cross-roads, where I was to turn up." + +"I waited all the forenoon and some of the afternoon for Captain +Dingfield to attack me," said the major. + +"The bridgemen made us late in starting, and the mules delayed us for +hours on the road. Our surprise was in finding a whole company waiting +for us at the cross-roads, where we had anticipated no obstacle." + +The arrival of Knox prevented the major from obtaining any further +information from the obliging lieutenant; but later in the day he +explained his own operations to him. The capture of Captain Titus's +company early in the morning, and the superior force of the loyal +troops, had saved the bridge, though there was still an enemy to fight +by the force of Lieutenant Belthorpe. + +The account of the bridge-builders threw some light on the disappearance +of Deck Lyon. It was evident that they had attempted to destroy the +bridge; but when Knox reported to the major, he was compelled to +acknowledge that he had been unable to find him, or to obtain any +intelligence of him. But Deck had had a lively experience, and it +becomes necessary to return to him while engaged in his solitary vigil +at the foot of the flagstaff. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII + +INTRODUCING MR. BROWN KIPPS + + +Deck Lyon did not like the service to which he had been assigned on the +bridge. The importance of the duty, as laid down to him by his father, +did not make the situation any pleasanter. + +Though his conscience approved his conduct in taking the place without +attempting to avoid the service, it would have suited him better to +remain in the ranks, and have a part in the action which was soon to +take place, as officers and privates all believed. + +He had nothing to do after he had hauled down the flag,--at least, +nothing but watch his father, whose plumed hat was the only one of the +kind on the field; and he had no difficulty in keeping it in sight all +the time. He was not obliged to keep his eyes fixed on him every moment, +for he knew when to expect the signal to hoist the flag; and it would +not be given till the first company had engaged the enemy somewhere on +the south road, between the top of the hill and the cross-roads. + +He was all alone, and he could speak to no one. He had rolled up the +flag with the halyards still attached to it, and placed it at the foot +of the pole. He had been sitting on his horse all day, and for a time he +amused himself in walking up and down the bridge. It did not occur to +him that there was a human being anywhere near him except those who were +in the camp below, and they were some distance from him. He looked at +the prisoners, and the cavalrymen who were keeping guard over them. They +were not an interesting sight to him, for the former consisted mostly of +the ruffians whom he had fought in the field and in the schoolhouse. + +"Nothing to do, and nobody to help me," said Deck to himself, as he +seated himself at the foot of the flagstaff, with his legs dangling over +the bank of the creek below. The pole had been set up where it was most +convenient to fasten it, and the place was about ten feet from the +abutment. The bridge spanned not only the stream of water, but the +valley through which it flowed. + +This valley was crossed by the embankment to within forty feet of the +creek; and the south road passed under the bridge, close to the +abutment. The high fence, or side of the shanty that had stood there, +was on the solid ground, which had been filled in, and Deck was hardly +more than a rod from it. He had walked about here, and he concluded that +some kind of a building had stood there; for he found a temporary +workbench, which had doubtless been used by the bridge-builders. + +The signalman at the flagstaff was fully armed, as when he dismounted; +and when he seated himself on the plank of the bridge, his sabre had +nearly tripped him over the side of it to the ground below; but he was +very active, and he saved himself. In this position he observed the +occupation of the prisoners, who appeared to have no interest whatever +in the impending fight at the cross-roads. Some of them were playing +cards, to which they were more accustomed than to the routine of the +soldier; some were asleep; and a few were mending their ragged garments. + +They were not an interesting sight to the watcher on the bridge. Among +them was his Uncle Titus, who sat on a log in front of his tent. He +wore a disgusted look, perhaps because he was deprived of his usual +whiskey rations; for Major Lyon refused to allow liquor to be served to +any prisoner. He had chosen for himself, and had joined the Confederate +army. He considered himself a sort of family martyr, because his brother +had chosen to give his plantation to Noah instead of to him; and this +feeling largely influenced him in his political choice. + +Deck had only one wish, as he sat with his legs over the side of the +bridge, and that was that the enemy would speedily appear on the south +road; for then his father would give him the signal to hoist the flag. +When he had done that his mission would be ended, and he could hasten +back to his place in the ranks, in season, he hoped, to take part in the +action. The more impatient he became, the more vigilant was his scrutiny +of the plumed head of his father. + +Several times he thought, when any movement was made by the soldiers, +that the time had come. The minutes seemed to be longer to him than any +he had ever known before. He looked at his watch, after he had refrained +from doing so several times by the thought of his own impatience, and +he found he had been on the bridge only half an hour; though it seemed +to him that he had been there four times as long as that. But just at +that moment, and before he had restored the watch to his pocket, he +heard sounds which turned his attention in another direction. + +He heard footsteps near him. No one but himself had been sent to the +bridge, and the sound gave him a decided sensation. They came from the +north end of the bridge; and the high fence prevented him from seeing +the person whose tramp he heard. He was not alarmed; and he listened to +the footsteps, waiting for the individual to come out from behind the +obstruction. Then the steps were accompanied by the whistling of a tune, +as though the person was an idler, who had no other means of employing +his time. + +Deck Lyon was not a musician, though he had done some singing before his +voice changed. The whistling began to have an interest to him, and he +listened with all his might. The person was either a Union man or a +Secessionist; and the young cavalryman thought the air he selected must +give him some information on this delicate point. If he whistled +"Dixie," either from choice or from the force of habit, it would not be +difficult to determine on which side he had cast his political lot. + +On the other hand, if he piped "The Star Spangled Banner," "Hail, +Columbia!" or "John Brown's Body," Deck thought he should be more +rejoiced to meet him at this particular moment. Possibly the whistler +had not kept up with the times in his musical education, for he piped +none of the airs named; but presently the signalman recognized the notes +of "Yankee Doodle," which answered his purpose even better than any of +the melodies named. Secessionists had no taste for this ancient air at +just this time. + +The man appeared to have stopped behind the high fence, and did not +immediately reward the expectant waiter with a sight of his person. He +heard some blows with an axe or heavy hammer upon the planks underfoot; +then he resumed his whistling, which became more vigorous than artistic. +It was evident even to Deck that the performer had not been trained in +the art he was practising, but he seemed to be plentifully supplied +with wind, and he had just doubled the quantity of sound he produced; +and the melody intended was unmistakably "Yankee Doodle," and this was +the important point to the listener. + +Still, the whistler did not show himself; though he was hardly more than +forty feet distant from his audience, and seemed to be unconscious that +he had a listener. Deck wanted to see that man, but he persistently kept +his body corporate behind the obstruction to his view. Arranging his +sabre, so that it should not trip him up and tumble him off the bridge, +he sprang lightly to his feet. He stepped back a couple of paces, and +then obtained a full view of the piper, who certainly was not skilful +enough to have "played before Moses." + +He did not wear a uniform, and therefore he did not belong to the Texan +Rangers; for Deck had fought them, and knew how they were clothed. This +struck him as an important point; for he had made sure before he rose +from his seat that his carbine, slung at his back, was in condition for +instant service. His regulation pistols were in the holsters on his +horse; but he had supplied himself with a small revolver at Fort +Bedford, for there was a tendency with fresh recruits to overload +themselves with weapons on entering active service, and thousands of +dollars worth of such were thrown away when they became a burden. + +The stranger was dressed like a mechanic; and he seemed to be examining +the planking of the bridge, which is not usually a matter of vital +importance in such a structure for railroad purposes. The man stopped +whistling, and began to use a middling-sized sledge-hammer, directing +his blows at the heads of the spikes under his feet. Then he dropped the +hammer, and picked up an adze, with which he trimmed off the projecting +edge of a plank. Deck thought this was very strange work for a man to be +doing at such a time, and in such a place. + +But the mechanic was whistling a Union air; and this fact seemed to make +it all right, and prevented him from having a suspicion that all was not +right in the presence of the man on the bridge. The railroad in Kentucky +was a loyal institution, as it was a disloyal one farther South. Deck +therefore came to the conclusion that he was an employee of the company. +He decided to interview the stranger, and ascertain more precisely who +and what he was. + +In matters of military duty Deck was a close constructionist; and the +first question he asked himself was whether or not he ought to leave his +post, even to go a distance of forty feet. His sole occupation till he +received the signal to hoist the flag, was to watch for it; and he kept +his father's plumed hat in sight all the time. But he could see the +handkerchief when it was waved as well from behind the fence as at the +flagstaff; or, at most, he had only to step back a few paces to enable +him to command a full view of the expected battle-ground, and of the +hill behind which Captain Truman was posted with his command. + +He did not for an instant lose sight of his sole duty; but he walked a +few paces at a time towards the fence, and then looked back, to make +sure that he could see the plume of the major. As it was in sight all +the time, he continued to advance very slowly. When he reached the end +of the fence the centre of his watch was still to be seen, and nothing +seemed to be in progress in any of the roads visible from his position. + +Just at the moment when he was almost within speaking distance of the +mechanic, who had ceased to whistle, the latter picked up his tools and +moved to the other end of the fence, where he began to hammer the spikes +again. The man appeared to take no notice of him, or even to be aware of +his presence. Assured that he could see the skirmishers who had been +sent beyond the hill if they were driven in, he continued to advance +still farther, though he went to the middle of the bridge, where the +fence did not obstruct his view. + +Deck wanted to know more about the man with the sledge and the adze. The +flag was to be hoisted as a signal for the second company to attack the +enemy in the flank or rear, while the first engaged them in front. The +fight must begin before the signal could be required, and the signalman +would have abundant notice when the firing began that his services would +soon be required. The fence was less than a hundred feet in length, and +he had not far to go to confront the mechanic. + +Keeping the cross-roads in view till the fence shut it out, he made a +quick movement to the immediate vicinity of the workman, who was +hammering away with the sledge with all his might. He made so much noise +that he could not hear the steps of the soldier. + +"What are you doing here?" shouted Deck. + +The mechanic took no notice of him, and did not seem to have heard him. +He repeated his inquiry, this time a great deal louder than before. The +man stopped in his work, and looked at him with apparent astonishment, +as though he had discovered his presence for the first time. + +"I am fixing the bridge, don't you see?" replied the workman, as though +he deemed it a foolish question. "What are you doing here?" + +"I am on duty on the bridge," replied Deck. + +But he could not see the soldiers near the cross-roads, where his father +had been most of the time, and his conscience smote him as though he had +stolen the brood in a chicken-coop. He did not wait to say any more, but +he ran with all his speed till he reached a point where he could see the +plume of the commander of the squadron. + +"What's the matter? What you runnin' off fur?" shouted the mechanic. +"You needn't run; I won't hurt you." + +Deck thought this was rather cool from a man apparently unarmed, to one +with a carbine slung on his back, and a sabre at his side; but he judged +that the fellow aspired to be a humorist, for he looked as good-natured +as though he had just perpetrated a first-class witticism. But the +cavalryman did not halt till he reached the end of the fence, where he +made a careful survey on the field of the expected combat. He was too +busy just then to notice the man. + +"What is the matter, Mr.----? I reckon I don't know your name," said +the man; and the sound indicated that he had followed the other nearly +to the end of the fence. + +"They call me Deck, those who know me best," replied the trooper, +willing to humor the mechanic. "Now, who are you?" + +"My name is Brown Kipps; but most folks don't take the trouble to call +me anything but Kipps, Mr. Deck." + +"My front name is Dexter; Deck for short," added the soldier. + +"What is your back name?" + +"Lyon." + +"You look like a lion," added Kipps. "Won't you take a seat on this old +bench, and let us talk it over?" + +Deck declined the invitation. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX + +THE CONSPIRACY ON THE BRIDGE + + +Kipps appeared to be a good-natured man, and Deck declined to take a +seat on the bench with him simply because it would place him where he +could not see the signal when his father made it. The man did not seem +to be so intent upon driving in the heads of the spikes in the planks as +he had been, and perhaps he thought he had worked hard enough to entitle +him to a rest. + +"Jest come and take a seat here, Deck Lyons; you look all worn out, and +you need a little rest," said Kipps, as Deck placed himself at the end +of the fence. + +"I'm not all worn out, and I think I can stand it to keep on my feet a +while longer," replied the signalman. + +"Well, you must git tired luggin' them things round all day," persisted +the mechanic. + +"What things?" + +"Why, that shooter on your back, and that broadsword a-danglin' agin +your shins." + +"They are not very heavy, and not so much of a load as your +sledge-hammer and adze." + +"I'm used to kerryin' them; but I'll bet a day's pay that gun on your +back is heavier'n my hammer." + +"I don't bet, but my carbine is lighter than your sledge," replied Deck; +and it seemed to him as though the workman was trying to accomplish some +object, though he could not make out what it was. "Besides, I don't have +to lug my arms without any help, for I am generally on horse-back." + +"Have you seen Tom Lobkill about here in your travels on this bridge?" +asked Kipps, suddenly changing the subject of the conversation. + +"I don't happen to know Tom Lobkill, and I don't know whether I have +seen him or not." + +"Don't you know Tom Lobkill? I thought every man in Tennessee knew Tom." + +"That may be; but as I never put foot in Tennessee yet, I never happened +to meet him," replied Deck. + +"I reckon this is Kentucky," added Kipps, with a mild horse-laugh. "You +see, we fellers that work on the railroad don't allers mind jest what +State we're in, for we keep shiftin' from one to another all the time." + +"But I think you don't have to do much shifting between Kentucky and +Tennessee at the present time," suggested Deck. + +"Not as much as we did a while ago. If you hain't seen Tom Lobkill, did +you come across Lank Rablan in your travels on the road?" asked Kipps, +as he rose from his seat, and walked to the end of the fence, though he +still remained behind it. + +"I don't know him any better than I do the other fellow, and I haven't +seen him. You seem to have a good many friends about here, Brown Kipps." + +"Not a great crowd; there ain't but four on us, and t'other is Sykes +Wimble. I s'pose you hain't seen nothin' o' him, nuther?" + +"I don't know him," replied Deck, more curious yet to know what the man +was driving at. "What are you four doing about here?" + +"We are on the railroad." + +"So I supposed; and I suppose one of you is the president of the +company, and perhaps the other three are the vice-presidents," said the +cavalryman, quite as good-natured as his companion. + +"Well, no, not exactly; I ought to be the president of the company, but +I ain't," answered Mr. Kipps. "If I was, some of us bridgemen would get +better pay, and a chance to sleep nights some o' the time." + +"Then you are bridgemen; and I saw you knocking in the heads of the +spikes over there. I suppose you were sent down here to rebuild this +bridge if the enemy destroyed it." + +"That's jest what we are here for; but I don't reckon the enemy'll +destroy it this time." + +"I should say not." + +"But I was lookin' for my gang-mates, and I don't see what's become on +'em;" and Kipps looked about him as though he really wished to find +them. "I had to go down below to git a hunk o' t'backer out'n the wagon, +and the t'other three went down this way;" and the bridgeman produced a +great twist of the native weed, and bit off enough to load two pipes. "I +reckon you hain't seen nothin' on 'em, hev yon, Deck Lyons? I reckoned +they went over the creek." + +"I have not seen any of them, and no one has crossed the bridge since I +came upon it," replied Deck. + +"I rather think I can fetch 'em if they are anywhere round here," added +Kipps, as he took a whistle from his pocket and applied it to his lips, +producing three short blasts. "All on us carries one o' these, because +we sometimes get scattered on the work." + +The whistle seemed to be as potent as that of the boatswain on board of +a man-of-war, for one after another three men mounted to the bridge just +beyond the abutment on the farther side. Each of them had a pipe in his +mouth, and they came upon the track as though they were in no hurry. +They were dressed like Kipps, in workingmen's clothes, and one of them +was about six feet and a half high. All of them had axes in their hands, +but none of them seemed to be provided with firearms. + +"They weren't fur off, and they kept awful still, or I should have hearn +them," said Kipps, as they crossed the track and placed themselves +behind the fence. + +Deck wondered how they had secured a place down the embankment without +being seen by him; but his attention had been directed the other way to +the position of the squadron. But he realized that they could have +crossed the track some distance farther up the road, and walked down +from there under the shadow of the road-bed. + +"Well, boys, I reckoned you'd got lost, for I couldn't find nothin' on +you," said Kipps, as the men approached the end of the fence at which +Deck stood. "What you been doin', Lank Rablan?" + +"When you went down to the wagon, we uns dropped down the bank to have a +smoke, and we got to talkin' about this business round here," replied +the tallest of the three, who was about as lofty in his upper works as +Life Knox, and about as spare in his filling up. "We consayted that this +bridge was go'n' to get burnt up last night; but it's all here yet, and +I reckon them so'diers down thar's done a big thing." + +"We hain't got no job on our hands for to-day," said another of them. + +"What was it that the nigger told you, Sykes Wimple?" asked Lank Rablan, +who was the tall fellow. + +"He told me the troopers had captured the whole company sent here to +destroy the bridge; and there they be down there, guarded by the horse +soldiers," replied Sykes, pointing in the direction of the camp. "I +suppose this fellow is one of them," he added, pointing to Deck. + +"I am one of them," replied the signalman. + +"What company do you belong to?" asked Lank. + +"To the Riverlawn Cavalry." + +"You hain't had no fightin', I reckon." + +"Yes, we have; the second company defeated the force that came here at +daylight this morning, and captured the whole of them. The same company +had a brush with the Texan Rangers, and they all took to the woods, +except those that were killed or badly wounded. The hospital over there +is full of them. If you stay on this bridge long enough, you will see +more fighting over on the south road." + +The bridgemen looked at each other, and said nothing for a few moments. +Deck began to feel as though he was neglecting his duty; for he had been +giving his whole attention to the talk of the men, with only an +occasional glance at the troopers below. He looked again, and for the +moment he did not see the plume of his father. He had changed his +position, though it was not likely that he had gone far, and he began a +search for him with his eyes. He did not discover the major at once; for +he had moved a short distance up the south road, to give his orders to +Captain Gordon. + +While he was continuing his search, he was suddenly and violently drawn +backwards behind the fence. If the bridgemen did not talk together in +words they did by their looks. If any one had been regarding the scene +described, it would have been sufficiently evident to him by this time +that the bridgemen were engaged in a conspiracy, the first act of which +was to secure the person of the Union soldier who had been posted at the +flagstaff. But there was no one to observe what transpired on the +bridge. + +At a nod from Brown Kipps, Lank Rablan sprang lightly forward; and, +seizing hold of the carbine which was slung on his back, he dragged him +into the shadow of the fence in the twinkling of an eye. As soon as Lank +had drawn him within reach of the others, they all laid hold of him. +Deck struggled with all his might, and struck out right and left with +his fists till his hands were secured, each by a man, while the other +two held his body. The tussle was quickly finished, for the young +soldier could do nothing against four full-grown mechanics. + +Of course Deck realized that he was the victim of a plot prepared while +none of the operators were in sight. His first feeling was one of +humiliation that he had allowed himself to be captured at his post, or +so near it. He blamed himself for leaving the flagstaff; but probably +the result would have been the same if he had not left it, for a +distance of fifty feet would not have prevented the conspirators from +securing him where he was. + +The four ruffians who had carried out their plan appeared to be what +they claimed; bridgemen, for they were all provided with the tools that +are used in such work. But it was evident to him when the question came +to his mind, that they were not Union men, and could not be in the +employ of the railroad company, which was now a loyal institution, after +a violent discussion with its Tennessee stockholders. + +"Don't kick, my little man," said Kipps, who appeared to be the foreman +of the gang, whatever they were. "It won't do no good." + +Deck was painfully conscious of what the leader said; for the others had +taken his carbine and sabre away from him, and laid them on the bench. +With the slings of his firearm they were securing his arms behind him, +while Lank Rablan held him by the collar of his jacket. It occurred to +him then that the ruffians had not taken his small revolver from him, +and had not even discovered that he had one; but it might as well have +been at the bottom of the creek so far as being of any service to him in +that important moment, for his hands were both in possession of the +enemy. + +He had kicked with his long boots, and endeavored to bring his spurs to +bear upon the shins of his antagonists; but Kipps had strapped his sabre +belt around his ankles, thus depriving him of his only remaining natural +means of defence. While they were securing his arms behind him, which +their evidently intended to do with the greatest care, he was faced to +the position of his company. Then it occurred to him that he had one +resource left. His voice could not be tied up like his legs and arms, +and he could use that if nothing else. + +"Help! Help! Help!" he shouted at the top of his lungs three times. +"Below, there! Sentinels! I am"-- + +This was as far as he was permitted to proceed; for Kipps caught his +handkerchief from the opening of his jacket, and stuffed it into his +mouth. If any of the sentinels around the prisoners' camp heard him, +they could make nothing of the cries. If they looked about them, they +could see nothing on the surface of the bridge, even if the shouts had +not come from behind the fence. + +"No use, my little beauty!" exclaimed Kipps, as the two men completed +the operation of strapping his arms behind him. "They can't hear you +down below, and you only worry yourself, without doin' a bit of good. +Now be a Christian, and keep quiet like a little lamb, as you are. We +are going to be busy now for a little spell, and we shall have to fasten +you to the bench. Be easy, and amuse yourself the best way you can. You +can whistle 'Yankee Doodle' if you like, and I reckon you can do it +better than I did." + +It was no use to say anything, or to attempt to do anything. He was +tied to the bench, facing the track; and Kipps was considerate enough to +take the handkerchief from his mouth, and return it to the inside of his +jacket. The other three men had already hastened over to the place where +they had come upon the bridge, and disappeared. The foreman took his +carbine from the bench, and started to follow the others. + +"It would break my heart, my pretty dove, to have to shoot you with your +own piece; but if you make a row, I shall have to do it. If you keep +quiet we won't hurt you." + +Saying this, Kipps left him. + + + + +CHAPTER XX + +THE OPERATIONS OF THE BRIDGE-BURNERS + + +Deck was alone, a prisoner, his ankles bound together, his wrists +strapped behind him, and his body made fast to the old bench against the +fence. He was not absolutely uncomfortable physically; for Brown Kipps +had extended some consideration to him, so that he suffered no pain from +the bonds which secured him. The fastenings were straps, taken from his +accoutrements; and they did not cut into his flesh, as cords might have +done if they had been tied too tight. + +All his pain was in the soul, which manacles are dramatically and +metaphorically said to pierce when the victim is a high-spirited person. +Deck had been captured at his post; and this fact humiliated him, though +a court-martial would have acquitted him of all blame. No one below +could possibly know that anything had happened to him, or a file of +troopers would have been sent to release him before this time. He was +almost in sight of his father and Artie; but they were busy watching and +waiting for the fight which all believed would certainly take place. + +But the prisoner was not left entirely without occupation other than his +needless and undeserved self-reproaches; for if any one was to blame it +was his father, who had placed him alone at such a distance from the +rest of the force, though no one suspected the presence of an enemy in +that direction. He had enough to do to observe the operations of the +bridgemen. The moment they had secured the prisoner to the satisfaction +of the foreman, the other three hastened to disappear over the +embankment. They were out of sight but a few minutes, and then one of +them returned, while the other two passed up to him several gallon cans. +By this time Kipps joined them; and a lot of small bundles of light +wood, such as is much used in the South in kindling fires, were tossed +up, and caught by the foreman. + +Deck understood that all these articles were combustibles, though he +could not make out the nature of some of them. All of them were left +where they had been received, on the platform of the bridge. It was +evident enough to the manacled observer that the structure was doomed, +and was to be burned in the very presence of the cavalry sent to protect +it. Deck twisted, squirmed, and struggled when he realized the +intentions of the bridgemen. + +It galled him to the inmost depths of the soul to think that the bridge +was to be destroyed before his eyes, and he had not the power to do +anything to save it. He did not believe he would be left to perish in +the flames, if they reached the place where he was secured, and he had +not a selfish fear. He was tempted to repeat the cries he had made +before; but the threat of Kipps to shoot him if he "made a row" +restrained him. It was folly to throw away his life; for he was vain +enough to believe it might be of some service to his country in its hour +of peril. + +When the men had finished passing up the material, which had plainly +been collected in this place for the destruction of the bridge, each of +them took a tin case under his arm, and they moved over to the shelter +of the fence where they had left their tools. They stopped there long +enough to obtain a couple of shovels and as many pickaxes, and then +went to the end of the fence next to the bridge. + +If the occasion had been less serious, Deck would have been amused at +the bridgemen's attempts to conceal themselves from the force below. +They worked like miners following a vein of ore deep down in the bowels +of the earth, as the witness had seen them in pictures, lying on their +backs, or curled up in a heap, using the pickaxe as they could. Between +the wall and the embankment the earth had settled so that there was a +considerable cavity. Two of the men worked in this hole for a while, the +others lying prone upon the ground and watching them. + +Then the four cans they had brought were deposited in the aperture, +Kipps adjusting and preparing them with his own hands. Deck did not +understand what they intended to accomplish by this operation, though he +concluded that they meant to blow up the abutment, and that the cans +contained powder or dynamite. Whatever the work was, it was soon +completed; and then the movements of the men became more amusing than +ever. They crawled about on their hands and knees, carrying the cans and +bundles of light wood. + +They unbound the packages of wood, arranged the little sticks in heaps, +and poured what Deck supposed was spirits of turpentine or kerosene over +them and on the planks of the structure. The work of preparation was +soon completed; for the men seemed to be skilled in the operation, as +though they had had experience in these details. They all crawled back +to the shelter of the fence, and straightened their backs again. + +"Now, my little lily of the valley, I shall have to put you under +marching orders," Kipps said, as he stopped before the prisoner. + +"What are you going to do with me?" asked Deck, though he hardly +expected a definite answer to the question. + +"I don't know, my butterfly; but I reckon you uns over there," he +replied, pointing to the soldiers below, "would make mischief for we uns +if we stay here a great while longer;" and he proceeded to release the +victim from the bench. + +"I judge that you intend to blow up and burn this bridge," added Deck. + +"The whole Yankee army couldn't save it now!" exclaimed the chief +bridgeman. "We uns, about two hundred so'diers along with us, was sent +over here to make an opening between these two hills; and if you think +we ain't go'n' to do it, why, you don't know Brown Kipps, that's all!" + +"I think I have been pretty well introduced to him," replied Deck, who +had become somewhat accustomed to the situation; and he thought he +should fare better with such a person as the foreman by being +good-natured than by growling and annoying him. "When you whistled +'Yankee Doodle,' I made up my mind that you were a true Union man, and +my heart went out to you." + +"I ain't much on 'Yankee Doodle,' and I could done better with 'Dixie;' +and I ain't none o' them carrion as whistles 'Yankee Doodle' for the fun +on't. It did well enough to still your nerves," said Kipps, as he +finished releasing the legs of his prisoner. "Now I want you to march up +to that place where you see the wagon standin' down by the side of the +railroad. You needn't keep step, nor nothin' o' that sort. I reckon the +cheese-knife and the shooter are too heavy for a young feller like you +to kerry, and I'll tote 'em for you," continued the bridge foreman, as +he began to examine the lock of the carbine. + +"You are very kind, Mr. Kipps," replied Deck. + +"That's me all over when you use me well; but, my little lion, if you +should take into that small coon's head o' yourn to be ongrateful for my +kindness to you, and make a row, or try to run away, I should have to +shoot you jest the same as I should a 'possum if I wanted a Christmas +dinner in the woods. Is this thing loaded with ball?" + +"Of course it is; it wouldn't be any better than a broomstick if it were +not," replied Deck. + +"I don't know as I see through this thing edzactly," said Kipps, as he +continued to study the mechanism of the lock. "I've got the cartridges, +but I don't see any ramrod. Won't you just show me how to work it?" + +"Teach you how to use a carbine to shoot me with!" exclaimed Deck, +trying to laugh. "You must excuse me, for that would be giving +information to the enemy in time of war, and I should be court-martialed +for it." + +"Jest as you like, Yank; but if there is one load in the pipestem, that +will be enough to put you out of the way of any court-martial. I reckon +I see into it now; you put the pill in here." + +"I haven't anything to say on that subject, Mr. Kipps; but if you +should happen to shoot yourself with it, that would save some Union +soldier the trouble of doing the job," added Deck. + +"But we uns hain't got no time to fool," said the foreman briskly. +"You'll let the cat out jest as soon as you see us by the wagon. You can +start things now, and open up the cat-bag as soon as you git 'em +started." + +"What's all that gwine on down below?" asked Lank Rablan, as he looked +cautiously by the end of the fence. + +"Well, what is it?" demanded Kipps impatiently. + +"They are all lookin' up hyer; and that feller with a squawrel's tail in +his hat is shaking a white rag over his head as though he'd lost his +senses, if he ever had any," Lank explained. + +"No matter what it is! Go to work, and hurry up, Sykes!" said Kipps in +vigorous tones. "Now, my little Yankee angel, jest move over to the +other side of the track, and march lively!" + +Sykes was already crawling along the bridge, lighting the fires he had +prepared. There were not more than half a dozen of them, and they were +soon blazing up, though in the bright sunshine they did not make much +show. Deck followed Lobkill and Rablan, as he was directed, while Kipps, +with the carbine in his hand, brought up the rear. The foreman changed +his plan when he found that the attention of the soldiers below was +directed to the bridge; and, still sheltered by the fence, the two in +advance left the level of the track, and made their way along the slope +of the embankment. + +Deck was ordered to follow them; but as his arms were still bound behind +him, he found it was a rather difficult matter to preserve his balance. +Kipps spoke to him quite savagely, perhaps believing he was making a +movement to slide down the slope to the field below. + +"If you think it is an easy matter to walk along this steep bank with +your hands tied behind you, just let Mr. Lobkill put you in the same +condition that I am, and see how you will get along," replied Deck, as +good-naturedly as before. + +"There may be sunthin' in that. Jest hold still a moment," said Kipps. + +Deck was glad enough to stop; for he was hardly able to keep on his +feet, as the earth slipped away under him. The foreman unstrapped the +fastening, and put the sling in his pocket, perhaps for the same use in +the future. + +"Now, little lovely, trot again; but don't you forget that I have got +the hang of this shooting-iron, and the ball can trot faster'n you can." + +The prisoner obeyed the order, and he was beginning to think that the +foreman was a tolerably good sort of a fellow, aside from his politics. +He followed his leaders; and he had now no difficulty in keeping up with +them, for he could retain his balance as well as any of them. In a short +time they reached the vicinity of the wagon, which stood in the field, +with the six mules that drew it there fastened to the pole. The +mule-driver was a negro, who was asleep on the grass by the side of the +vehicle. + +"Now, my little Yankee saint, we are all right, and in about three +minutes and three-quarters that bridge will go up the air; or some on't +will, and the rest on't will go the same way in smoke," said Kipps, as +he seated himself on a disused sleeper, and took a black pipe from his +pocket. "Don't you think we uns are right smart down this way?" + +"I suppose you are; + + 'For Satan finds some mischief still + For idle hands to do.'" + +"But Satan didn't find any for you uns in the ranks over yonder, fur +they've been idle all day," retorted Kipps with an explosive +horse-laugh. + +"But we whipped out a force of Texan Rangers over yonder, and I don't +believe they have done running yet," answered Deck. + +"Them Texicans is gwine to wipe you uns out 'fore they git done with +you," added Lank Rablan. "I consayt they see'd sunthin' on the bridge, +fur they was all lookin' that way when we left." + +"There comes Sykes, and I reckon he can tell us sunthin' about it," said +Kipps. "If anything's the matter down below there, I reckon we four had +better go down and lick the Yankees out of their boots." + +"Don't you do it, Mr. Kipps," interposed Deck. "They might hang you for +burning the bridge." + +"Wait till we hear what Sykes has got to say, and then"-- + +But the remark, brilliant as it might have proved to be, was interrupted +by the explosion which was heard on the south road, and which had been +the signal for Captain Dingfield to make the attack. + +"There goes your bridge!" exclaimed Kipps, looking at his prisoner with +a glow of exultation on his brown face. "Now I reckon you can see that +your Yankee cavalry couldn't save it." + +"I cannot see the bridge from here, and I don't know whether or not they +have been able to save it. Wait till we get further news, Mr. Kipps." + +"I reckon we don't stop here no longer, for we've done our work, and +that bridge is burning lively before this time," added the foreman, as +he shouted to the negro driver to hitch on his mules. + +In ten minutes more the bridgemen had loaded themselves in the covered +wagon, with all their tools and material. Deck was given a place under +the canvas, while the four men were seated at the forward end. The negro +started his team, and the prisoner had no idea where he was going. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI + +A NEW DISPOSITION OF THE FORCES + + +Major Lyon listened with the most intense interest to Lieutenant +Makepeace's statement in regard to the bridge-builders, as he called +them, though bridge-burners proved to be a more appropriate designation. +It was clear enough to him that his son had encountered these men; and +the disappearance of Deck appeared to be explained, though what had +become of him was still the vital question. + +Life Knox had returned alone, leaving his men to guard the bridge; and +if it had been in order for the sergeant to express an opinion on the +subject, he would have said that sentinels should have been placed on it +as soon as the company of Captain Titus had been captured. The major had +tardily arrived at this conclusion. As soon as he came to the vicinity +of the hospital, Knox discovered the plumed hat of the commander, which +Deck had watched all the time he was on the bridge. + +"I'm right sorry I don't bring you any good news of your son," said +Life, riding up to the commander, and saluting him as soon as he turned +away from the wounded prisoner. "The first thing we had to do was to put +out the fires, and then I went about a mile up the track to look for +Deck; but I could not find him." + +"Did you see anybody over there?" asked the major. + +"Not a solitary soul, Major Lyon." + +"The prisoner in the hospital, with whom I have been talking, said that +four bridge-builders, with a wagon and six mules, went over that way," +suggested the major. + +"I reckon they've been to the bridge, and set it afire; but none of them +was there when I come to it. If they had a wagon and six mules, they +left as soon as they'd done the job they come to do." + +"What was the condition of the bridge when you reached it, Knox?" asked +the major. + +"It was all afire, but it hadn't burnt much. If we'd got there ten +minutes later, nothin' could saved it; and we had to work lively as it +was." + +"But there was an explosion there." + +"That didn't amount to shucks. I reckon they stuck the cans of powder in +between the 'butment and the bankin', and it only blowed out a lot of +dirt, and knocked off a couple of stones from the top of the wall. They +brought half-a-dozen bundles of light wood with them, pulled them to +pieces, and then poured sperits turpentine over and all around 'em; for +we found the cans on the platform. The fires were blazin' lively when we +got there; but we poked the wood all off the bridge. We found some +barrels o' water they kept on the platform to put out fires, and it +didn't take long to make an end on't. That's all I know about it, +major." + +"But what do you suppose has become of Dexter, Knox?" asked the father, +concealing his feelings as much as he could. + +"The bridge-burners had gone when we got there, and I reckon they took +Deck with 'em," replied the sergeant. + +"I suppose there is no other way to account for his absence. Lieutenant +Belthorpe has been sent with half the first company to look out for the +enemy in that direction," added the major. "Return to the bridge, Knox, +and make sure that no further attempt is made to destroy it. The flag is +still there, and I see that you have hoisted it again. If you need any +assistance, haul down the flag as a signal to that effect." + +The sergeant hastened back to his post; and the major rode up to the +cross-roads, just in time to meet the scouts who had been sent up the +east road, coming down the hill at full speed. There were only two of +them; but they had left two others at the hill road. + +The pair of riders who came in as the major reached the cross-roads were +scouts; for they had been sent out with orders to go where they pleased +in the hills to obtain all the information they could, especially in +regard to the approach of any body of the enemy. They were not pickets +nor skirmishers, who are sent out to act on fixed lines. + +"We have just come from the hill road," said one of the scouts, as he +saluted the major. "A detachment of the Texans has just come down from +the hills, and all four of us retreated behind a knoll to see where they +were going." + +"And where were they going?" demanded the commander impatiently. + +"They kept on the hill road, going north." + +"How many of them were there?" + +"Forty-two, besides the officer in command, who had one arm in a sling, +and his head bound up so that he could not wear his cap." + +"That must have been the troop that we engaged on the south road," said +the major. "But how could they have got around to the point where you +saw them?" + +The scouts could not answer this question, and the commander sent them +back to the point from which they had come. The last he had seen of +Captain Dingfield's command was on the south road, retreating at the +best speed of their small horses. He had sent Captain Gordon in pursuit +as soon as his men were available. So far as he knew, there was no +highway by which the hill road could be reached short of six miles south +of the cross-roads, near the place where the Texans had camped the night +before. + +In order to have reached the position where they were reported to be by +the scouts, they must have found a way across the country. He opened his +map, and began to study it very diligently, to ascertain if there was a +road which he had failed to notice before. + +"More scouts coming in, father!" exclaimed Artie, who retained his +position near the field-officer, the only one present with the squadron, +for the regiment had not been fully organized. + +Major Lyon turned his attention in the direction of the east road. He +saw two riders galloping down the hill with all speed; and he folded up +his map, restoring it to his pocket. The coming of these men meant +something. The whole of the Texan company were accounted for, as half of +them had been sent to the north by Captain Dingfield, and now the other +half had been reported as having gone in hot haste in the same +direction. Had any re-enforcement been sent to the Texan cavalry? + +The major had no doubt the officer at the head of the troop reported was +Captain Dingfield. He had expected to find his body in the road after +the action, for he had been the most prominent person for the aim of the +men. The same bullet could hardly have hit him in the head and in the +arm, and it was plain that he had been wounded at least in two places. + +"Where is Major Lyon?" shouted the foremost of the two scouts. + +"Here!" shouted Artie, though it was a needless question, for the plume +of the commander distinguished him from all others. + +"Messenger from Captain Gordon," said the foremost scout, as he reined +in his foaming steed, and saluted the major. + +"Where did you see him?" demanded the commander. + +"On the hill road, where I rode half a mile at his side; for he was +chasing the enemy that went along just before, and Styles and Brehan +came down here to report them to you." + +"What is your message from Captain Gordon?" asked the major sharply. + +"He told me to tell you he had pursued the enemy without getting near +enough to fire at them." + +"But how came he on the hill road?" demanded the commander impatiently. + +"He told me to say to you that they had taken to the fields near the +planter's house, and, after a good deal of winding about, had come to +the hill road. When I told him we had seen the enemy, he wanted to know +how far they were ahead of him; and I told him as near as I could guess +they were about half a mile from him. That is all I know about it, Major +Lyon." + +"Where are Styles and Brehan now?" + +"We passed them on our way down, and I suppose they will stay at the +crossing till they get further orders." + +"Very well; return to your places in the company," added the commander, +as he proceeded to consider the information he had just received. + +The situation was clearly defined in his mind. One-half of the first +company, under Lieutenant Belthorpe, had been sent up the railroad; and +the other half, under Captain Gordon, was pursuing the enemy. Captain +Dingfield had sent half his force by the hill road to the north, and now +he was retreating in the same direction with the other half. But the +whole of the first company would come together somewhere in the vicinity +of the railroad, and then there would be another fight. + +The commander had with him at the cross-roads and at the camp the whole +of the second company, where they were not likely to be needed; for it +was evident that Captain Dingfield had left none of his force behind +him, as by this time he had realized the pressing need of all his men +farther north. It was plain enough to the commander that another action +was to be fought very soon, if it was not already in progress, though no +firing could be heard. + +"Artie, tell Captain Truman I wish to speak with him," said he, as he +took his map from his pocket again. It seemed to him that the seat of +the fighting had been transferred to the north a few miles. But the +bridge was still safe, and so far he had accomplished his mission. +Captain Truman had proved to be an excellent officer, though all in the +two companies had had no previous service in actual warfare; but they +had shown that the only thing they lacked was military experience, and +in that respect they were like a very large proportion of all the +officers in the field. + +"I was just coming to you, Major Lyon, when you sent for me," said the +captain, as he reined up his horse in front of the commander. "One of +my men has just informed me that there is a train coming down the +railroad from the north." + +"Artie," called the major, "hurry over to the bridge, and give Knox my +order to detain the train that is approaching till he receives further +orders from me." + +Artie did not wait an instant, but ran his horse down the road, calling +to the idlers and prisoners to get out of the way. He was fortunate +enough to find the sergeant where he could hail him from his horse, and +delivered the order. + +By this time the train was moving very slowly towards the bridge, and +Knox stopped it behind the fence which had done so much ill service in +concealing the bridgemen. In front of the engine was a platform car, on +which was a field-piece and half-a-dozen soldiers; but the messenger +could not stay to examine the provisions for the protection of the +train, which was doubtless a pioneer of another of more importance. He +reported to his father what he had seen. + +"The wounded and the prisoners have now become an incumbrance to me, and +I have decided to send them all back to our camp at Riverlawn," the +major began, as soon as Artie left him. "So far the enemy have failed +to destroy this bridge; but I have no doubt they will continue to +operate as they have begun, until they have disabled the railroad." + +"The one over the Green River in Hart County is likely to be the next +one threatened," added the captain. + +"That or some other. I have stopped this train because it affords me the +means of transportation for the wounded and prisoners. I shall place the +removal of them in your charge. You will have the train stopped where it +crosses the swamp road beyond Dripping Spring, and march those who are +able to walk to Riverlawn. Take the wagons of Captain Titus's company +with you, mules and all, and convey the wounded in them. How many men do +you require for this service?" + +"Twenty will be enough," replied Captain Truman, who appeared not to be +pleased with the service upon which he was ordered. + +The commander directed him to proceed with his arrangements at once, +communicating first with the officer of the troops on the train. In a +few minutes Lieutenant Blenks, in charge of the camp, who was to go with +the captain, had mustered the prisoners, while his superior was engaged +with the officer on the train. This gentleman was a quartermaster, with +the rank of lieutenant, who had been sent on a duty he did not explain; +but he put a veto on the plan of the major at once. He had to make some +observations near Bowling Green, and the train would return before +night. He suggested that Riverlawn was not a proper place to send the +prisoners or the wounded, and he proposed to convey them to Louisville. + +Captain Truman reported the result of his interview; and the major +accepted the compromise, and was better pleased with it than with his +own plan. The prisoners were marched to the railroad in charge of the +guard selected, and at dark the train took them on board. It was not +necessary for the captain to go with them, but the lieutenant was to +return as soon as possible with the soldiers. + +Not long after the train started, Major Lyon marched with all his +remaining force to the hill road, to form a junction, if possible, with +the two divisions of his first company. + + + + +CHAPTER XXII + +A DESPERATE DEED CONTEMPLATED + + +Deck Lyon was not at all satisfied with his situation in the wagon in +which he had been loaded with the tools and materials of the +bridge-burners; and from the bundles of light wood, cans of powder, +turpentine, and kerosene in the vehicle, this appeared to be the proper +name for the four men. With the men smoking their pipes on the front +seat, it did not appear to him to be a very safe position. + +The wagon would have been called a "prairie schooner" farther west; and +was of the kind used in Tennessee and North Carolina, and perhaps +elsewhere in the South. It had a high front and rear, with a sheer +between them like an ancient galley. It was provided with a canvas +cover; and the bows at either end carried it out about three feet beyond +the body, like an awning in front of a window. The driver rode on the +nigh wheel mule, with a long whip in his hand. He was a skilled +teamster, and did not soar to the refinement of reins, but did his +driving by word of mouth, and the application of the whip. + +Deck had no idea where he was, or where he was going, for he had not +studied the map of the present locality. He did not know where these men +had come from. Captain Truman was evidently unaware of their existence +in this section, or he would have set a guard over the bridge, after he +had captured it in the early morning. If the son had listened to his +father's conversation with the wounded prisoner, he would have learned +that the bridge-burners had been sent over with the flanking detachment +that had been defeated and driven off by the second company. They had +made their way to the vicinity of the bridge with their wagon, and had +watched for an opportunity to do their work. + +They had found the signalman in their way; and, doubtless, it had +required some time to arrange their plan for getting him out of the way. +Deck was alone, and was not a very dangerous opponent in himself; but he +could give an alarm by firing his carbine or otherwise, which would +bring an armed force to his assistance. It was necessary to resort to +strategy; and the proceedings of Brown Kipps to get the troublesome +signalman out of the way have already been detailed. If the young man +had had more experience of the ways of the world in general, and of the +methods of bridge-burners in particular, they would not have succeeded +so well. + +The combustible goods and other articles in the wagon seemed to have +been pitched into the vehicle at random; for they were not arranged in +anything like order, and everything was in confusion. It seemed to the +prisoner a piece of remarkably good fortune that he had not had his legs +and arms bound, as when he was first taken. He was only a boy, though a +stout one, and they did not seem to set a high estimate on his prowess +as a fighting character; for they had not seen him in the skirmish on +the east road, when he had given Lieutenant Makepeace the wounds which +had disabled him. + +The sabre and carbine which had been taken from him had been carelessly +thrown into the wagon, though they were within reach of the men. Deck +was a young man of too much enterprise to be mentally inactive in the +midst of his present misfortune, and the wagon had hardly started before +he began to consider his chances of escaping from the custody of the +four men. At the first glance he could see that the chances were all +against him. If it came to a fight, there was no chance at all for him; +and his inborn prudence did not permit him to think of such a thing as a +physical contest with a threefold odds against him. + +But he was not discouraged at the mountain of difficulty in front of +him, but proceeded to study the situation very carefully. It will be +remembered that his captors had neglected to take from him the revolver +he carried in one of his pockets; for, doubtless, it did not occur to +Kipps that he was supplied with such a weapon. Deck set a very high +value on the pistol in his present emergency. The trousers with which he +had been supplied by the government were not made with hip pockets, a +very serviceable improvement to the garment, not unknown even at the +beginning of the war. + +This kind of pocket was very useful to those who were in the habit of +carrying revolvers; but Deck's ingenuity had enabled him to provide for +the deficiency. He had arranged a sort of hook under one of the back +suspender buttons, about where the pocket would have been if the garment +had been supplied with one, so that he could readily produce the weapon +on occasion. He had a box of cartridges in his pocket, and the revolver +was fully loaded for instant service. + +His carbine and sabre lay on the merchandise behind the men, all of whom +were seated on a front seat under the projecting cover, and the wagon +was wide enough to provide close quarters for all of them. The canvas +could be drawn down so as to protect the contents of the body from the +weather; but now it was fastened up, so that the vehicle was open in +front. + +Deck thought he might work his way forward far enough to enable him to +reach his regular weapons; and at first he thought he would take this +step. If he succeeded in obtaining them, all the advantage he expected +to gain was in preventing his custodians from using them on an +emergency; for the revolver in his pocket was a more effective weapon in +the wagon. He looked over the miscellaneous loading of the vehicle, and +tried to find a place for each of his feet in his advance to the forward +part of the wagon. + +His survey of the ground was not at all satisfactory; for there was no +firm foundation for his feet. He must move noiselessly, or the attention +of his captors would be called to him. He could not expect to go three +feet without disturbing some of the articles; and his caution compelled +him to abandon the attempt to recover his arms. They were not essential +to his success in any plan he might adopt; and if Kipps discovered that +he was trying to escape, he would certainly have his arms tied behind +him again; and that might cut off all his chances. He was satisfied that +it was not prudent for him to attempt to reach and obtain his carbine +and sabre. + +Then a more desperate scheme occurred to him, and it seemed to be more +feasible than the other. He had his revolver; and, after a great deal of +practice with it, he had become quite skilful in its use. He had seated +himself on a box close to the rear curtains of the wagon when Kipps +committed him to his canvas prison. Though it seemed to him like +"fastening a door with a boiled carrot," he had seen the foreman adjust +and fasten a padlock on the curtains after he had drawn one over the +other. + +Doubtless this was done to prevent thieves from stealing any of the +stores in the vehicle in the night; but any enterprising robber, with a +sharp knife in his hand, could speedily make an opening in the canvas. +These men were not soldiers, so far as the prisoner knew; though perhaps +they were more effectively opposing the plans of the government than if +they had been, by destroying its facilities for the transportation of +troops and supplies for the suppression of the rebellion. They were +enemies as much as though they had worn the gray uniform. + +Deck sat on the box with his hand on his revolver. He could sit there, +and with the six bullets in his pistol he could shoot every one of his +captors, unless some of them fled before his fire. One of them might +seize and use his carbine; but he would have a barrel in his weapon +ready for him. This seemed to him to be the most promising scheme that +suggested itself, so far as mere success was concerned. It would rid +this vicinity of the State of four men who might do as much mischief to +the loyal cause as a whole company of soldiers, even if they were Texan +cavalry. + +Deck took the revolver from the hook inside his trousers, and assured +himself that all the barrels were charged. Then he looked the wagon over +again, and considered what he was about to do. Incidentally he asked +himself what the mechanics intended to do with him. Doubtless they would +hand him over to the military, and he would be sent to the South. It was +not a pleasant prospect, and he prepared to use his weapon. + +It was war in which his lot was cast; and the business of war was the +killing of men, and the more the better. He raised the weapon; but, in +spite of his reasoning, his soul revolted at the thought of the act he +had been ready to commit a few moments before. Brown Kipps had used him +as kindly as the circumstances would permit, and had not confined his +arms behind him when in his judgment it did not appear to require it. It +looked like a cold-blooded murder, and a cowardly deed besides, to shoot +these men in the back of the head. + +He believed that, if he committed the deed, the remembrance of it would +haunt him as long as he lived; and the Confederate prison was better +than such a black memory. He put the revolver in his pocket; and he felt +more like a Christian when he had decided not to be guilty of the +outrage to which he had been tempted. He wondered what his father, who +was a true Christian, would say when he related this incident to him, if +he ever saw him again. + +"Mr. Kipps," said he on an impulse which suddenly seized him. + +"Well, my little dandy, what now?" asked the foreman, as he turned his +head as far as his crowded seat would permit. + +"Don't you think you have carried me about far enough?" demanded Deck. + +"I reckon not jest yet. You are a Yankee soldier, and you may be wuth +sunthin' to us afore we get through with you," answered Kipps very +good-naturedly. "I reckon you uns down below there got some prisoners +out o' we uns." + +"No doubt of that," added Deck. + +"We know'd there had been a fight down there; but we don't know nothin' +more about it." + +Deck told him something more about it, including the fact that +Lieutenant Makepeace was a prisoner in the hospital. + +"You don't say so!" exclaimed Kipps, deeply interested in the statement. +"Makepeace brought us over here part of the way; and he's a right down +good feller, and I liked him better'n Dingfield. I'm sorry for him. Is +he in a bad way?" + +"I can't say how bad; but he has a bullet in his chest, and a sabre-cut +on the head," replied Deck. "Our surgeon is taking good care of him." + +"I'm glad you uns took care on him; and if you get hurt, we uns will do +as much for you," said the foreman. + +"But I have already done a great deal more than that for you; and you +may thank me that you four are not dead at this particular moment," +added the prisoner boldly, as he decided to adopt another method of +proceeding. + +"How's that, little sonny? I don't edzactly see it," answered Kipps, +standing up on the platform in front of the wagon, so that the other +three could turn round and see the prisoner. + +"Not ten minutes ago I had made up my mind to shoot all four of you, and +make my way back to my company," continued Deck, as he produced his +revolver, and held it up so all four of them could see it. + +At this moment the wagon went over some obstacle like a large log; and, +as the hind wheels descended from it with a heavy "jounce," Deck was +thrown forward, and only saved himself from a fall among the assorted +loading by grasping one of the bows. + +"We done com'd to de road, Mars'r Kipps!" shouted the driver, as he +stopped his team after a succession of yells at the mules. + +"Stay where you are, Jube!" called the foreman. "I want to know how my +life was saved, for one, afore we go any farther. What's the reason we +uns ain't not all dead, little 'possum?" + +"Because I didn't shoot you all," replied Deck, as he stood holding to +the bow with one hand, and the revolver with the other. + +"Do you expect, little po'k-eater, we uns should 'a' let you do such a +wicked deed as that?" + +"But I could have done it without asking your permission," replied Deck. +"I was sitting on that box, and I could have taken you first through the +back of your head; and if one of you had moved to resist, I could have +finished him in the twinkling of an eye. I don't like to boast, Mr. +Brown Kipps, but I am a dead shot with this particular revolver; and it +would have been ready for business again the instant I had disposed of +the second man. It fires six shots, and I had a chance to complete the +job, even if I missed my aim twice. Don't you see it?" + +"Where did you get that little shooter, Lyons?" + +"My name is Lyon; there is only one of us here. Of course I have had the +revolver about me all the time, and you were so considerate as not to +take it from me, simply because it did not come into your head to look +for it." + +"Why didn't you do the shootin' when you had the chance, little coon?" + +"Because I concluded that it would be mean and cowardly to shoot four +men in the back of the head, and that it would haunt me as long as I +lived." + +Kipps suddenly jumped over the seat, and began to make his way to the +place where the prisoner stood; but Deck pointed the revolver at him, +and commanded him to halt. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII + +THE SKIRMISH ON THE HILL ROAD + + +Brown Kipps leaped over the seat, and acted as though he was in a hurry +to reach Deck Lyon, after he had explained the desperate deed he had +contemplated; and the latter thought the movement indicated violence on +the part of the foreman. + +"Halt where you are, Kipps! Don't come any nearer!" exclaimed Deck; and +the revolver in his hand enforced his command. + +"Don't shoot, sonny! I only wanted to catch you by the hand, and shake +it with right good will," replied Kipps, as he halted where the carbine +and sabre of the young cavalryman were lying between his two feet. "I +b'lieve what you been tellin' on us; and I reckon it's right lucky some +on us on this front seat ain't all ready to be put in the ground." + +[Illustration: "Halt where you are, Kipps!"] + +"I assure you that I have told you the exact truth," said Deck, as he +dropped his revolver to his side. + +The moment he did so Kipps stooped as quick as a flash and picked up the +carbine. + +"Don't shoot, little one!" he continued, as the prisoner raised his +weapon again, ready to meet this new combination in front of him. + +Deck realized that he must act quick, and he was in the very act of +firing at the foreman when he spoke. He looked his opponent in the eye; +but the bridge-burner did not bring the carbine to his shoulder. He had +grasped it near the muzzle, and he held it with the stock hanging down; +but he proceeded no farther than this, and the revolver pointed at the +head of Kipps, ready to fire if he elevated the piece. He was in doubt. +The words of the foreman did not indicate that he meant violence; he +felt that he had chance enough to save himself by shooting his opponent +before he could bring the carbine to bear upon him. But perhaps this was +the most exciting moment in the lifetime of the young soldier. + +"Don't shoot, sonny!" repeated Kipps, still holding the carbine in a +position that rendered it entirely useless; and as he spoke he advanced +towards his prisoner. + +"Don't come any nearer, Kipps, or there will be a breathless body in +this wagon!" exclaimed Deck, with vim enough to convince the other that +he was in dead earnest. + +"I won't come no nearer, if you say so, Lyons. I was only go'n' to bring +this shootin'-iron and give it back to you, jest to show you that I was +right friendly-like to you; and I wanted to catch you by the hand, +'cause I believe you could 'a' killed some or all on us if you'd had a +mind to. I reckon we won't quarrel after you've held up when you mou't +have stuck some on us." + +"Drop that carbine, Kipps, and then I can better understand what you +mean," replied Deck. + +"That's what's the matter, is it? I was only go'n' to give it back to +you," protested the foreman, as he let go of the piece; and it dropped +upon the loading of the wagon. + +Deck lowered his revolver to his side; and Kipps climbed over the +bundles, boxes, tools, and cans, till he was within reach of his late +prisoner, for he seemed no longer to regard him as such. He extended his +big hand to the cavalryman, whose right still firmly held his weapon, +and he took the hand of the other with his left. + +"That's a right-down honest Tennessee fist, Lyons, and the gizzard +always goes with it," said he, as he squeezed the hand of Deck till he +was on the point of crying out with the pain of the cracking bones. +"There's that cheese-knife and shooter of yourn, and you can take 'em as +soon as you get ready. You're a Yankee; but you've sunthin' more'n a +rock for a gizzard." + +"There's my hand in yours, Kipps; it's the left, but that is nearest to +the heart," replied Deck, now fully trusting the Tennesseean, as he +thrust the revolver into his pocket, satisfied that he should have no +further use for it at present. + +"You've got a rayle Tennessee gizzard in your bowels, Lyons, and I like +you. If anybody wants to do you an ill turn, he's got to fight Brown +Kipps, sure," added the foreman. + +"And the rest on us," put in Tom Lobkill. + +"That's so," chimed in Lank Rablan. "We ain't none on us gone dead yet; +and if you hadn't got a gizzard tucked away somewhar in your bowels, +some on us mou't 'a' been on t'other side o' Jordan's swellin' flood." + +"Here's your tools, Lyons," continued Kipps, as he brought the sabre and +carbine to Deck. "Here's the trimmin's that goes along with 'em, and you +can rig yourself out jest as you was when I fust laid eyes on you." + +As he spoke he took from his pockets the belt, sling, and other articles +belonging to his equipment. Deck seated himself on the box again, and, +after he had adjusted them, he put them on. He turned his back to his +companions in the wagon, and restored his revolver to the hook where he +carried it; for he did not care to show them where it had been +concealed. + +"I suppose you don't intend to carry me any farther, Kipps," said Deck, +when he had fully accoutred himself for a march; and he hoped to be in +the ranks of his company within a couple of hours. + +With his companions, he believed the bridge had been destroyed, and that +his father had failed in the principal object of his mission, though he +had defeated the enemy in every engagement in which he had met them. + +"I reckon you can go jest where you like, and kerry that gizzard o' +yourn with you," replied Kipps. "I'm only sorry you're a Yankee, for +you've behaved handsome enough to be a Tennesseean." + +"I am equally sorry you are not all four Union soldiers, standing up +like true men for your country and its government," replied Deck. + +"I reckon we'd better not talk on that subject, for we can't agree, +nohow," answered the foreman, as he went to the front of the wagon. "Now +you can git out at this end, for t'other's locked." + +This was a happy conclusion of the whole matter; and Deck realized that +he had accomplished more by the course he had adopted than if he had +carried out his cold-blooded intention to shoot his custodians. He went +to the front, and Kipps assisted him to alight; for his weapons +interfered with his movements in descent. + +"Where are we now, my friends?" asked Deck, as he looked about him. + +"I don't know, no more'n a goose in a poke," replied Kipps. "We've come +some miles, more or less, from the railroad; and this is the road we +come down on. Where are we, Jube?" he demanded of the negro driver. + +"I reckon we's here, Mars'r Kipps," replied the driver with a grin from +ear to ear. + +"I reckon so too; but whar's here, Jupiter?" + +"Donno whar you be, Mars'r!" exclaimed the negro, who seemed to think +the foreman was joking with him. + +"I don't know whar I am, Jube; do you?" replied Kipps, looking about him +to identify anything in the surroundings. + +"I know for sartin; we done come dis way befo', Mars'r. Dis is jest de +place whar we done struck in de field to find de roleraid," replied the +driver confidently. "Dis wot de fo'kes here call de hill road." + +"But we didn't come over that log before." + +"No, sar; dis nigger runn'd ag'in it, and twis' it round." + +"I reckon we'd better camp here for the night, and wait for orders," +said Kipps, "You can go the way you come, Lyons." + +"I don't know that I can find my way," replied Deck. "I have been shut +up in your wagon all the way, so that I could see nothing." + +"You can foller the wagon-track, and that will fotch you out all right," +added Lank. + +But Deck was in doubt about returning to the railroad. He knew that +Lieutenant Belthorpe had been sent over to the railroad, and he had seen +the troopers ride up the embankment. He thought it strange that he had +not encountered his force; and he proceeded, Indian fashion, to examine +the road for horse-tracks in the sand. The sod was so tough that it bore +no indentation inside of the log; but in the road he found plenty of +horseshoe marks, and he proceeded to study them. + +They all indicated that the riders were headed to the south, or in the +direction of the east road, the latter of which led to the camp and +cross-roads. Was it possible that Belthorpe had returned to the camp? +This was what the marks suggested. Deck then walked by the log, and +found the track extended towards the north. He followed them for about a +quarter of a mile, and then he found where they began on the road. + +At this point he found the fence had been thrown down, and there were +plenty of horse-tracks in the cornfield which it surrounded. These led +up from the direction of the railroad. In the soft ground he found, on +the left of the great body of the marks, which indicated that the +detachment had marched by fours, the print of a bar shoe, often called a +round shoe. He was aware that Tom Belthorpe rode a horse shod in this +manner, for the steed had belonged in the stable of the planter of +Riverlawn. + +His investigation proved that not only a company of cavalry had come up +from the railroad to the highway, but that it was the force under +command of the first lieutenant of the first company. He returned to the +highway, wondering what had become of this detachment. But Deck did not +know that a portion of the Texan Rangers had come down the hill road, as +reported by the scouts of the squadron. He hastened back to the place +where he had left the wagon. As he approached it he saw two mounted +Rangers talking with the bridge-burners, or rather with the foreman of +them; and the other three were helping the driver to hitch on his mules, +for they had begun their preparations to camp there for the night. + +The two scouts turned their horses and rode away in the direction from +which they had come. Deck had halted when he saw them, and put himself +behind a big tree at the side of the road. But as soon as they rode off +at a gallop, as though they were in a hurry, he advanced. The +bridge-burners were all busy in getting the mules ready for a start. + +"You better make tracks with all your legs towards the railroad, sonny," +said Kipps earnestly. + +"What has turned up now?" asked Deck with interest. + +"Them men was the scouts of our company, and we are ordered to move to +the north with all the speed we can get out of the mules," continued +Kipps. "Our company, or a part on't, will be here soon; and I don't want +'em to ketch you, Lyons, for I can't do nuthin' for you if they get hold +on you." + +"All right, Kipps; and I am very much obliged to you for your kind +service. But where are you going?" asked Deck. + +"I don't know no more'n the dead. I'm to foller this road, and I hain't +the leastest idee whar it'll fetch out," replied the foreman, as he took +his place on the front seat, and Jube started the unwilling team. + +The driver plied his whip with cruel vigor, and the wagon soon +disappeared. Deck was perplexed. Belthorpe had marched up the hill road, +as indicated by the tracks of the horses, and the Rangers were marching +down the same road. How did it happen that they had not met, and a fight +had not ensued? He could not explain it. Just above him was a grove, or +a field covered with sparsely scattered trees. + +Deck was very anxious to ascertain the situation of affairs in this +section, and he hoped to be able to give his father some important +information when he met him. He placed himself behind a tree in the +grove. He had hardly secured his position before he heard the clatter of +horses' hoofs and the clangor of sabres in the road above him. In a +minute he obtained a view of them, and they were Rangers. They were +hurrying their horses as though they were engaged in some important +movement. + +The troops had not come abreast of the observer before he heard a +furious yell in the grove not far from him. The shout of "Riverlawn!" +was heard, with other yells; and a body of the Union cavalry dashed into +the road, and fired a volley from their carbines. + +"Sling carbines! Draw sabres!" shouted an officer; and Deck recognized +the well-known voice of Tom Belthorpe. Then they charged into the enemy +with a fury that promised to annihilate them in a very short time. + +Deck belonged in this portion of the first company; but he had no horse, +and he could not join in the charge; but he began to use his carbine. +The Texans fought bravely and desperately, and the two forces seemed to +be about equal. The interested observer saw one of his company topple +over from his horse, and the excited animal dragged him, with one foot, +in the stirrup, off the field. Deck caught the horse, and reduced him to +subjection with a vigorous arm. He released the soldier, who was +insensible, and placed him under a tree. Then he mounted the steed, and +dashed into the fight. + +He had hardly struck a blow with his sabre before he heard the clanging +of sabres some distance in the rear. At the head of it was the officer +in command, with one arm in a sling, and his head tied up with bandages. +They were Texan cavalry, without a doubt; and Deck called the attention +of the lieutenant to the fact. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV + +CAPTAIN DINGFIELD'S STRATEGY + + +The officer at the head of the approaching force, wounded in the head +and arm, could be no other than Captain Dingfield; but there was no one +present who knew anything about the brief action in which the commander +of the Texan force had been defeated, and from which he had made a very +hasty retreat. Major Lyon had sent Captain Gordon with half his company +in pursuit of the fleeing enemy; the passage of both the pursuers and +the pursued across the east road had been reported by the scouts at the +cross-roads. + +Deck had not been able to force his way into the thickest of the fight; +and, being near the side of the road, he was the first to discover the +approach of the second detachment of the enemy. The action was in +progress in a broad, open space in the road, where the trees had been +cut off from the land; and the ground occupied was partly in this +field. He could readily determine that Belthorpe had chosen this place +for the action because it presented more open space. + +Doubtless his scouts had reported to him the approach of the first +section of the enemy, and he had concealed his force in the grove to +which Deck had retreated to observe the movements of both parties in the +conflict. But he thought the lieutenant had made a mistake in delaying +his attack until the detachment of the enemy had advanced too far, and +he had thrown his men upon the rear instead of the flank. + +The lieutenant had less than fifty men, and the enemy fought with +desperate courage and determination. But his men were fresh; for they +had been moving leisurely about in quest of the foe, and had been +resting a short time in the grove, while the Rangers had ridden a long +distance. The arrival of the rest of their company would throw all the +advantage, both in position and numbers, over to the side of the enemy; +and Deck saw in an instant that the battle would be lost if it continued +under these unfavorable circumstances. + +"Lieutenant!" he shouted, flourishing his sabre to attract attention, +when he had approached as near as he could to the officer. + +Tom Belthorpe was using his sabre vigorously, and he had just smote to +the ground a trooper, when he heard the voice of Deck. He had not seen +him before, and was not aware of his presence. He concluded on the +instant that the son of the major was the bearer of an order from his +father; and he knew the young man well enough to understand that he +would not call him at such a time on an unimportant matter, and he rode +towards him. + +"What is it, Deck?" he demanded, full of the excitement of the conflict. + +"Yon are flanked and outnumbered!" shouted Deck; though in the noise and +fury of the action no one but the lieutenant heard or noticed his call. +"There is another detachment of the Rangers coming up the road. You are +beaten if you don't get out of it!" + +"I don't understand you, Deck," replied the officer, glancing at his men +still engaged in the furious strife. + +"There is a force of the enemy of at least fifty men coming up the road, +and in three minutes more they will fall upon your rear!" repeated +Deck, speaking as clearly as though he had been reading his piece in +school. + +"Where do they come from?" demanded Tom, as he looked back in the +direction indicated by the sabre of his friend, and they were the best +of friends. + +"I don't know anything at all about it," answered Deck impatiently. + +The fresh troopers of the lieutenant's command were driving the enemy +before them by the vigorous fighting they had put into the attack, and +they were somewhat superior in numbers. By the time Deck had given his +warning the enemy had been forced back to the point where the wagon had +emerged from the fields and woods. The lieutenant was obviously very +unwilling to give an order to retreat when victory was almost within his +grasp. It was the first action in which he had been engaged, and his +pride as a soldier was implicated. + +Tom looked again at the approaching re-enforcement of the enemy; and +then very reluctantly he summoned the bugler, and ordered him to sound +the call, "To the rear." It was given in the quickest of time; and the +faces of the troopers indicated their astonishment and chagrin at the +nature of the call, when victory was only a question of minutes. + +The men fell back; but the enemy were not disposed to follow them, and +perhaps believed they had gained a victory. They were facing down the +road, and they could not help seeing that a re-enforcement for their +side was approaching. The lieutenant in command reformed his men, but he +did not order them to charge upon their retiring foe. + +"I don't understand this business, Deck," said Tom Belthorpe, when he +realized that the officer in command of the enemy did not intend to +pursue him. + +"I don't understand anything beyond what I can see with my own eyes," +replied Deck. "I have just come over this region in a wagon, and I +advise you to retreat towards the railroad, if you will excuse me for +saying so." + +The lieutenant gave the order for his men to retire in the direction +indicated, and the officer and Deck followed them. + +"We were within two minutes of a victory, Deck," said Lieutenant +Belthorpe, still panting with the exertion he had put forth in the +combat. + +"But you would have lost it, and had the tables turned on you two +minutes later," replied Deck. + +"What next?" asked the officer, who, in his inability to understand the +situation, was perplexed and baffled. "I don't feel like running away +just as we were whipping those Texans." + +"But it is easier to run away before you have been whipped yourself than +it would be afterwards. I should judge that the force approaching is the +other half of the Rangers' company. There they come," added Deck, as the +furious riders seen in the distance halted in the road near where the +bridge-burners had proposed to camp for the night. + +Without consulting his friend and companion in regard to the expediency +of doing so, the lieutenant gave the order for his platoon to halt at +the moment when they had encircled one of the knolls so common in that +region. He and Deck were in the rear; and though the men could not see +the road, it was in full view from the position occupied by the officer. + +"I am not feeling like doing any more running away just yet," said Tom, +who was quite willing to forget that he was a lieutenant in the presence +of Private Deck Lyon. + +"They have halted, and there is no occasion to run away just yet; but it +is best to take the bull by the horns before he gores you," added the +private. "I think we had better rest under that big tree, and keep out +of sight till you get a better idea of this thing, Lieutenant." + +The suggestion was adopted, and they rode to a position under the tree +where they could see without being seen. + +"They have come together, and they don't seem to know where they are any +better than we do," said the lieutenant. "I should say they had had a +hard ride by the looks of their horses;" and the officer had looked at +the reunited company through a small opera-glass he carried in his +pocket, though the distance was hardly more than five hundred feet. + +"Hold on a minute, Tom!" exclaimed Deck, as he slid from his horse, and +fastened him to a branch. + +"What are you going to do now, Deck?" demanded the lieutenant. + +"I am going up there to find out what is going on," replied the private, +as he detached his sabre, and fastened it to his saddle. + +"But you will be picked up," suggested Tom. + +"If I am I will let you know; but I am determined to get posted, so that +I can give you reliable information," answered Deck. "But I obey your +orders; and, if you tell me not to go, of course I shall not." + +"Do as you think best, Deck," replied the lieutenant, who found it +difficult to realize that he was the military superior of his friend. + +Deck waited for nothing more. His carbine was still slung at his back; +but he had provided that the clang of his sabre as he walked should not +betray him. He had looked the ground over before that day, and knew +where he was locally, though he was ignorant of the positions of the +several bodies of troopers other than those before his eyes. He was on +the border of the grove, consisting of large trees, rather far apart. He +got behind the trunk of one of these, and then picked his way from one +to another, till he was within thirty feet of the officers in command +of the company. + +The lieutenant of the platoon which had done the fighting had ridden +away from his command a short distance; and when Deck first saw him he +was peering into the region between the railroad and the road, doubtless +anxious to ascertain what had become of the force with which he had just +been engaged. The man with his head tied up and his arm in a sling +called upon a sergeant to rearrange the bandage on his head; and he had +just completed his task when Deck reached the shelter of the tree he had +selected. The wounded officer, for such his uniform and shoulder-straps +indicated that he was, appeared to be ready for business. + +"Where is Lieutenant Redway?" he demanded very impatiently. + +"There he comes, Captain Dingfield," replied the sergeant at his side. + +The lieutenant hurried up his jaded steed, and saluted his captain. + +"I thought I saw a fight going on here," continued the commander of the +company, though Deck had never heard his name before. + +"So there was, Captain Dingfield; and a very sharp one at that," replied +Lieutenant Redway. "But we defeated the enemy, whipped them out of +their boots, and they fled like a flock of frightened sheep down that +opening;" and the reporter of this information pointed in the direction +in which Tom's command had retired. + +"If the Father of Lies, who is always swinging his caudal appendage over +the world in search of the biggest liars, should come here for one, +where could Captain Dingfield hide you, Lieutenant Redway?" said Deck to +himself; for it would not have been prudent to say it out loud. + +"Why didn't you follow them up?" demanded the captain, with some +indignation in his tones and manner. + +"Because you were in sight with the rest of the company; and I deemed it +my duty to wait for orders, especially as you had sent me directions to +hurry forward the bridge brigade," replied the lieutenant. + +"But I am closely pursued by a force in the rear; and it cannot be far +behind me by this time. How large was the detachment you fought, +Redway?" asked the captain, looking behind him at the road, as though he +believed his pursuers were close at hand. + +"About the size of my command; fifty men, I should say." + +"You ought to have wiped them out; and you have made a mess of it by not +doing so," added the captain. + +The two officers had withdrawn from the immediate vicinity of their men, +and chosen a place within twenty feet of Deck's tree, so that he could +hear them very distinctly. The conversation was exceedingly interesting +to him, especially the fact in regard to the pursuing force. + +"I acted upon my best judgment." + +"I had a rough fight in the road, on my way to the bridge, and I have +hardly forty men left, while the Yankees will have a full company when +the detachment behind me comes up," added the captain, who was evidently +in a contemplative mood. "The force you whipped must be at no great +distance from this road." + +"I think they will keep on running for the next three miles," said +Redway. "I went up the road to look for them, but I could see nothing of +them." + +"But we shall be outnumbered if we let the two parts of this company +come together. I have found that they fight like Texans. If we meet the +whole of them together, we shall be whipped, as Makepeace was. There is +only one thing to do. Form the whole company in column by fours, and we +must go back and beat our pursuers, before they get as far as this," +said Captain Dingfield, suddenly becoming very animated and energetic. + +Deck concluded that the time had come for him to leave his retreat; and +he felt that he had not lost his time in carrying out the plan he had +suggested. But it would be safer for him to retreat in five minutes more +than at that moment. He looked on while the Rangers formed, and saw them +march on their present mission. He had not a very high opinion of the +strategy of Captain Dingfield; and if his subordinate officer had given +him correct information, perhaps he would have adopted a different +course. + +The Rangers could no longer see him, and he broke into a run as soon as +they had gone. He found everything as he had left it, and he proceeded +to report his intelligence to Lieutenant Belthorpe. + + + + +CHAPTER XXV + +SUNDRY FLANK MOVEMENTS ARRANGED + + +Captain Dingfield, with the portion of his company with which he had +attacked Major Lyon near the cross-roads, where he had been badly beaten +at the first assault, had fled across the country, and was continuing +his flight along the hill road. Doubtless he did not intend to fight a +battle at the point mentioned, but had made the attack immediately after +the explosion on the bridge to occupy the attention of the force there +until his men had completed the destruction of the structure. + +He appeared to have discovered that the squadron of cavalry he had +encountered was not so easily annihilated as he had believed they would +be by his invincible Rangers. On the contrary, he found his troop in a +difficult situation, with a superior force near him. Doubtless he had +read in what manner Napoleon I. defeated an army of superior numbers by +taking it when divided into two parts, delivering battle to each in +turn. + +Captain Gordon, with half his company, had been sent in pursuit of him, +but had been somewhat delayed in his movements. Captain Dingfield had +united the two portions of his company after the skirmish of one of them +with Lieutenant Belthorpe, who was believed to have retreated to the +railroad. + +Deck Lyon had listened to the interview between the captain and +lieutenant of the Rangers, and fully understood their plan. As soon as +the company had departed on their mission to annihilate the detachment +of Captain Gordon, he hastened back to the big tree where he had left +Lieutenant Belthorpe. Tom had just crossed swords with the enemy for the +first time, and had fought like a lion; but he was nervous in regard to +the situation. He had no superior officer near him, and he felt the +responsibility of his position. + +"Well, Deck, what next?" he asked, before the young soldier could get +within talking distance of him. + +"There is work for you," replied Deck; and though he knew precisely what +ought to be done, he was very careful not to suggest anything. He did +not wish to overstep the line of his duty as a private, though he and +the lieutenant were on the most intimate and familiar terms of +friendship. He hurried his steps; and in as few words as possible he +related all he had seen and heard. + +"Then, Captain Dingfield has gone out with his whole company to +intercept Gordon?" said the officer. + +"Precisely so; and I don't know what force Captain Gordon has with him," +added Deck. "The Rangers believe your command has retreated to the +railroad, and are well out of the way." + +"We will convince them to the contrary very soon," said Tom with energy, +and darted off at the best speed of his horse for the knoll where he had +left his men. + +Deck restored his sabre to its place, and mounted his horse. He was +ready to return to the ranks; but Tom called him, and he took his place +at the side of his friend. The lieutenant asked him a great many +questions; for the troop could not move at their best speed on account +of the trees and bushes. + +"I suppose we have nothing to do but follow and pitch in when we find +the enemy," said Tom, when they came out on the hill road. "We can't see +anything of Dingfield's company yet." + +"He has not got over the top of that hill we see ahead, and is in the +valley this side. Neither of us has been over this road, and we know +nothing at all about it," replied Deck, careful not to wound the pride +of his officer. + +"Why don't you speak out, Deck, and tell me what you are thinking +about?" said the lieutenant somewhat impatiently. "You keep in your +shell as tight as a Baltimore oyster. You did not hesitate to tell me +what you had in your sconce when we were fighting that detachment in the +road." + +"I only intended to give you the information that Dingfield's company +was coming, and would then outnumber you," replied Deck. + +"You advised me to retreat, and I did so, for I saw that you were +right." + +"But you are my superior officer, and my business consists in obeying +your orders," replied the private with becoming humility. + +"None of that, Deck! We will keep up all the forms and ceremonies; but I +want you to be Deck Lyon, while I am Tom Belthorpe, when we are side by +side as we are at this moment. I say all we have to do is to ride ahead +till we find the enemy, and then pitch in. Is that your idea, Deck?" + +"With all due deference, Tom, it is not," replied the private. + +"Confound your deference!" exclaimed the lieutenant. "I asked your +advice, and you mumble about forms." + +"I will speak as plainly as I know how to speak. If you show yourself to +Captain Dingfield, he will run away if he can. He has been badly +punished to-day, and he can't stand much more of it. When he finds +himself pinched between Captain Gordon and yourself, I don't believe he +will feel like cutting his way out." + +"But he outnumbers Gordon just now," Tom objected. + +"Of course you will not let Captain Gordon suffer," continued Deck. "If +you will allow me to say it, I will suggest what I should do if I were +in your place." + +"Allow you! Confound you, Deck! Didn't I ask you point-blank what you +would do?" demanded Tom. + +"We are moving at a dog-trot now, and that is just right. Before we get +to the top of that hill yonder in the road, I should halt, and send a +scout ahead to report on what there is to be seen," said Deck. + +"All right! I detail you as the scout," answered the lieutenant very +promptly. + +"Then I will leave you. If I raise my cap over my head, hurry up. If I +make no sign, come along leisurely," added Deck, as he urged his steed +to a gallop, and dashed ahead. + +Just then he wished he had Ceph; but he had left him hitched near the +bridge when he ascended it to take in the flag, though the horse he had +was not a bad one. How far in the rear of Captain Dingfield's company +Captain Gordon had been he had no means of judging. Deck reached the +summit of the hill over which the road passed. He reined in his steed, +and walked him till his own head was high enough to see over the crest +in front of him. + +Captain Dingfield's company was not in sight. Not more than half a mile +ahead of him was another hill, beyond which the enemy had disappeared. +He took off his cap and waved it in the air above his head. Tom could +not help seeing it; and his command were immediately galloping towards +him. Deck did not wait for them, but ran his own horse till he reached +the summit of the second hill. Here he halted again. There was a third +hill, and probably one every mile or half-mile; for this was the hill +road. + +Captain Dingfield had not hurried his men, and Deck discovered his force +on the lowest ground between the two hills. He had halted there, and the +men appeared to be watering their horses. Deck was sorry he had not a +field-glass. He fell back a short distance, so that his horse should not +be seen by the enemy, hitched him to a sapling, and returned to the top +of the hill on foot. After examining the location of the enemy as well +as he could, he concluded that a road crossed that upon which both +forces were moving, though he was not sure. + +Returning to his horse, he mounted again, and descended the hill a few +rods. The lieutenant had reached the top of the first hill, and Deck +waved his cap again. As soon as Tom reached the spot where the private +was, he halted his command. He hastily informed his officer that the +enemy were at the foot of the hill on the other side. + +"I must not lose sight of them for long," said Deck. "I will go ahead +again, and make the same signal for you to advance." + +"But you expect there will be a fight, don't you, Deck?" asked the +lieutenant. + +"There will be if Captain Dingfield don't run away by a road I believe +extends through the valley. I think the captain of the Rangers is +waiting for Captain Gordon to come upon him in this place. I will keep a +lookout for our men," replied Deck, as he rode up the hill again. + +The private was a very enthusiastic soldier; and he thought it would be +a capital idea to bag the Rangers, and make prisoners of the whole +company. It would be a feather in Tom Belthorpe's cap, and he would have +been glad to place it there. He hitched his horse again, and then +climbed a tree. Some of the hills in the vicinity were cultivated, and +some were not. From his elevated perch he discovered a farmhouse on the +road, of whose existence he had not before been confident. He had no +doubt of the fact now. + +There was a cornfield on the left of the road where he was, but at some +distance from it. Between this tilled land and the hill road was a +considerable extent of wild land, covered with hillocks, and the whole +of it overgrown with small trees and bushes. Near the place where the +platoon had halted, Deck perceived a practicable passage through the +tanglewood; and he went down the tree in a desperate hurry, to the +imminent peril of his limbs, though he reached the ground in safety. + +A glance at the summit of the third hill assured him that Captain Gordon +was not yet in sight. Slinging his carbine, and buckling on his belt, he +hastened to the lieutenant, and, without any unnecessary manifestations +of deference, stated the plan he had brewed in the top of the tree. + +"I should like to see the whole of that company bagged, Tom," said he, +as he led the way to the opening he had seen. "I should like to see you +do it, I am only afraid Dingfield will escape by that road, and I should +like to have you block his way in that direction." + +"But if we shut up that road against him, we shall leave the hill road +open to him," replied Tom. + +[Illustration: "What are you uns doing here!"] + +Deck bit his lip, for he had not thought of this; for he was not a +full-fledged strategist any more than his officer. + +"You are right, Tom; and that is the end of my scheme," added Deck. + +"Not a bit of it, Deck. Why not compromise on your idea; send half our +force across the cornfield, and leave the other half to take care of +this road? I like that idea," said Tom with enthusiasm. + +"You would have but twenty-five men to hold this road against the whole +of Dingfield's company," said Deck. + +"But we don't intend to move till Captain Gordon is here to take a hand +in the game," answered Tom. "You will go with Sergeant Fronklyn to the +cross-road, and I will stay here. As soon as I see the rest of our +company coming down the hill, I will strike the enemy in the rear, while +the captain goes in on the front. You will sail in from the by-road as +soon as you hear the firing, Deck. That is fixed. Now have deference +enough for your officer to hold your tongue, and obey your orders." + +"I am as dumb as a dead horse," replied Deck. + +Both of them were laughing; and Deck hastened to a place where he could +see over the crest of the hill, while the lieutenant divided his force +for the two undertakings. In a few moments all was ready, and Tom joined +his friend. + +"It is time we were moving," said Deck. + +"All is ready for you; and Fronklyn will take counsel of you when +necessary," replied the lieutenant. + +"Don't show yourself on the top of the hill, Tom; for that might let the +cat out of the bag," added Deck. + +The scout, as Deck considered himself for the present, joined the +detachment detailed for the by-road, and led them into the wild region, +Fronklyn remaining some distance behind him. The enemy were in a deep +hollow, and the guide soon assured himself that the detachment could be +neither seen nor heard by them. The sergeant advanced in response to his +signals. A spur of the hill concealed them, and they galloped across the +field, from which the crop had been harvested. He guided the force to a +point beyond the farmer's house. Leaving the sergeant and his men where +the buildings shut off the view of the hill road, Deck rode cautiously +to the other side of the house. + +"What you uns doin' here?" asked the farmer, showing himself from behind +his barn. + +"We are attending to our own business, and it wouldn't be a bad idea for +you to do the same," replied Deck, who did not like the looks of the +man. + +"I reckon you uns is Confedrits," he added. + +"You are out of your reckoning." + +"There's some more on 'em over to the brook. I reckon I'll go over, and +let 'em know you're here," suggested the farmer. + +"If you do, you will get a bit of lead through your upper story," +replied Deck, as he rode on. + +He had hardly started his horse before a volley was heard in the +direction of the hill road. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI + +THE ENEMY'S BATTLE WITH THE MUD + + +The sound of the volley did not come from the top of the hill, and +Captain Gordon would not have been so simple as to waste the powder and +balls in the carbines of his men at an impracticable distance from the +object of his attack. Lieutenant Belthorpe must have seen his force as +soon as he reached the top of the hill; and no doubt he had hurried to +join in the attack at the right moment, so that it could be made in the +front and rear at the same time. + +But plans do not always work precisely as they are arranged beforehand. +Deck turned his steed as soon as he heard the volley, and hastened back +to notify the sergeant; but Fronklyn had heard the discharge, and +marched on the instant. For a non-commissioned officer, he was decidedly +a man of parts, though he had not been in a fight till that day. + +"Hurry up, Sergeant! I think we shall have warm work over on the hill +road as soon as we can reach it. They are firing lively now on both +hills," said Deck, as he took his place by the side of the officer. + +"We are all ready for it; and the men were as mad as a bull in a swarm +of hornets as the recall was sounded back there a while ago, when they +were licking the enemy out of his boots," replied Fronklyn. + +"They are likely to get enough of it now," added Deck, as they galloped +forward at the best speed they could get out of the horses. + +But the firing suddenly ceased, and there was a noise ahead other than +the sounds of battle, which attracted the attention of Deck and the +sergeant. It was the clang of sabres and the rattle of accoutrements, +and the sounds came from a less distance than to the hill road. + +"What does this mean?" asked Deck, as he reined in his horse. "Halt your +men here!" he added, as he obtained a full view ahead. + +Fronklyn promptly accepted the suggestion, and gave the order; but he +did not understand the reason for making it. The cross-road extended +through the wild region over which the detachment had passed farther up +the hill. In this part of it the surface was more irregular than above; +on the left was a meadow, through which flowed the brook that crossed +the main road. Just ahead of the force the road wound through a narrow +pass, between lofty pinnacles of rock. + +From a point in the road Deck had obtained a glance across the meadow at +the cross-road near the main highway. There he saw the Rangers +retreating vigorously, and coming directly towards him. He could not +quite understand this change in the programme, as laid down by +Lieutenant Belthorpe and himself. But it did not take him long to +explain the situation to his own satisfaction, whether correctly or not. + +Captain Gordon's men had made the attack with a volley from the +carbines. As soon as Tom Belthorpe heard the report, he dashed down the +hill to have a finger in the pie; for his men were eager for the affray. +Captain Dingfield had seen them coming, and probably mistook the force +for a much larger one, and ordered a retreat by the cross-road. +Doubtless he had chosen to await the attack of Captain Gordon in this +locality on account of this convenient outlet. The enemy had not waited +for a charge, and neither of the detachments from the two hills had +reached the brook. + +Deck hurriedly stated the situation to Sergeant Fronklyn. Then he +pointed out the narrow pass in the road, which would conceal the men for +a few moments. He advised him to advance to it, and then fall upon the +head of the column as it entered the narrow passage. The officer gave +the order to advance, and with it a few ringing words of encouragement. +Fronklyn placed himself at the head of his men, with Deck near him, and +they dashed into the pass at a breakneck speed. The enemy had not yet +reached the narrow defile. + +The troopers had their carbines all ready for use, and the sergeant +halted them at a point where they could see the Rangers as they +approached. At the right moment he gave the command to fire, and the +report was the first intimation to Captain Dingfield that an enemy was +in front of him. As soon as the Union soldiers had discharged their +pieces, they were ordered to sling their carbines, and draw their +sabres. + +"To the charge! March!" shouted Fronklyn. + +The volley had been a surprise to the Rangers, and they were evidently +staggered as some of their saddles were emptied. Captain Dingfield was +not at the front of his company; for the danger was supposed to be in +the rear, and he was as brave a man as ever sat on a horse. Of course he +could form no idea of the strength of the force in front of him, and he +must have realized that he had fallen into a trap. If he had not been +prudent before, he was so now, for the bugler immediately sounded the +recall. + +Sergeant Fronklyn did not wait to see what Captain Dingfield would do, +or where he would retreat. He led his men forward, and they charged +furiously upon what had been the right of the column. The Rangers +defended themselves with vigor and determination for a few minutes, and +the accounts of three of them were closed for this world. The next thing +that Deck saw, for he made a business of knowing all that was going on +around him, was a column of cavalry fleeing across the meadow. + +The captain of the Rangers, from his position near the rear, had +evidently found a means of escape. Deck fought with his sabre as long as +there was one of the enemy near him; but as fast as the Texans could get +out of the _mêlée_ they fled to the rear. The pass was so narrow that +the Union troopers, few as there were of them on the by-road, had not +room enough to do themselves justice. But Fronklyn urged them on, and +drove them before him, till he heard the clashing of arms in front of +him. + +Both Captain Gordon and Lieutenant Belthorpe dashed into the narrow +road, and followed up the enemy, till the last of them had taken to the +meadow. When the ground was examined later, it was found that there was +only one narrow causeway by which the descent to the low ground could be +made; and the Rangers covered and defended this pass till all of their +number had left the road. It was in vain that the fresh troopers pressed +forward from the hill road, for the way was blocked against them. In the +inability of the captain and the lieutenant to bring their numbers to +bear, the combat was on equal terms. + +The Rangers defended themselves bravely and skilfully. There were a +number of hand-to-hand struggles with which there was no space for the +interference of others. But it looked as though the Texans had leaped +from the frying-pan into the fire; for they had gone out but a short +distance from the by-road before their horses began to mire; for the +ground proved to be very soft. Several of the Texans were obliged to +dismount, and pull their steeds out of the mud. + +Captain Gordon had pressed forward, and engaged the rear of the +retreating column; and he was about to order a pursuit, when he +discovered the enemy was sinking in the mire, and that the meadow was no +place for horses. It was located all along the wild region; and, +doubtless, some of those sink-holes and caverns which abound in this +part of the State existed in this section of wild land. But the captain +was not willing to permit the escape of the enemy. + +Deck Lyon was reasonable enough to abandon the idea of "bagging the +game;" for the Rangers could now hardly be regarded as an organized +military company. The meadow proved to be nothing but a quagmire, though +the farmer appeared to get the hay from it, as there were two stacks of +it on the field; but he had to take the occasion when the ground was +frozen to obtain his crop. By this time the Texans were scattered all +over the meadow, wandering about in search of more solid ground. + +It would have been easy enough to shoot down the whole of them; but +Captain Gordon was too chivalrous a man to murder the defenceless +fellows. A few of them had crossed the brook, and were ascending the +hill on the other side. A number of them were making a road of the +bottom of the little stream, which seemed to be composed of sand washed +in from the hills. + +The first company were at ease all along the by-road, watching the +movements and the struggles of the enemy; and no doubt Captain Dingfield +wished he had fought it out, or surrendered on the hard ground. The +night was coming on; and even if the Texans extricated themselves from +their pitiable condition, they must be so demoralized that they could do +no further mischief till they had rested and recruited from the effects +of their battle with the mud. + +"What are them men doin' in there?" asked the farmer, who wandered as +far as the causeway, when it was safe to do so, and there encountered +Deck, whom he had met before. + +"They are trying to get out," replied Private Lyon. + +"They can't do it!" exclaimed the native, who indulged in much profane +speech. "They'll make a cemetry of the whole medder. It's nothin' but +muck in there till you git to the bottom on't, and that's where them +fellers will go. I had a colt git in there, and all on us couldn't git +him out; and I reckon his carcass is lyin' on the bottom now. They've +sp'ilt my medder," continued the farmer; and he heaped curses on the +unfortunate troopers, who were tearing up the soft sod at a fearful +rate. + +The native had picked up the three horses of the troopers who had been +killed in the affray, and they were some compensation for the damage +done him in the meadow, which looked as though it had been ploughed up. + +"Isn't there any way for those men to get out of that quagmire?" asked +Captain Gordon, as he encountered the farmer. + +"I don't know o' none," replied the man in a surly tone, "If they was +only Yankees, I'd like it better." + +"I like it better as it is," replied the captain. + +He knew of no way to extricate the troopers from their plight. It was +the dry season of the year, and probably there was less water and less +mud than in the wet season. The bodies of the horses seemed to be +resting on the sod, with their legs wholly plunged in the soft soil. The +riders had dismounted, and attacked two stacks of hay on the field, and +were placing it in front of their animals. It afforded a better +foundation for them than the oozy turf; and a couple of them were +already standing on their legs. + +The darkness was gathering rapidly, and Captain Gordon gave the order +for his men to form in column; and then he marched them out to the hill +road. He was satisfied that the Texans would escape from their miserable +plight, though it might require many hours for them to accomplish it. +They had already begun to build a sort of causeway of the hay, to +connect with the solid one by which they had fled from the fight. The +hay was of a coarse quality, abundantly mixed with weeds and bushes, and +it appeared to be substantial enough to support the horses. + +It was evident to the captain that the entire force of the enemy could +be easily captured as they came off the meadow; but it might require the +whole night to secure them. The first company, now united, marched to +the hill road, and halted in a field which had been selected before for +the camping-ground. The men proceeded to feed themselves and their +horses. A half-dozen scouts were left on the by-road to watch the mired +Texans. They had built a great fire to afford them light, and continued +their labors. + +A portion of the field where they had encamped consisted of a grove of +big trees, such as the company had frequently seen. The baggage-train +had been left at the bridge, and the men had no tents, but they were +provided with overcoats and blankets; and thus protected from the cold +of the chill night, it was not accounted a hardship to sleep on the +ground. Sentinels surrounded the camp, and two scouts had been sent out +in each direction on the hill road. + +"Scouts coming in from both ways!" shouted the sentinels in the road; +and the word was carried to the guard quarters. + +The captain was immediately informed. As Deck happened to be in the +detail for guard duty, he had been stationed in the road, and it was his +voice which first announced the return of the scouts. Captain Gordon, +who had stretched himself under a tree for a nap, hastened to the road +to ascertain the cause of the alarm. + +"Where are the scouts, Deck?" he asked, as he confronted the sentinel in +the road. + +"They have not got here yet," replied Deck, as he saluted the captain. +"I saw them at the top of the hills, coming in at full speed." + +"But there is no enemy in this vicinity, except the Texans in the +quagmire," added the captain. + +"I know of none, Captain." + +The two scouts came in almost at the same moment, before the captain and +the private could discuss the situation, and reported a detachment of +cavalry approaching from either direction. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII + +AT THE CAMP-FIRE NEAR THE ROAD + + +As Captain Gordon suggested, there was no enemy in the vicinity with the +exception of the Texan Rangers, half buried in the mud. The approach of +cavalry from both directions, and in the darkness, was rather an +alarming announcement; and if the scouts had not been close by, he would +have ordered the long roll, and prepared for defence. The camp-fires +were blazing near the road, and a weird light was cast upon the scene. + +"Well, Beck, what is your news?" demanded the captain, as the scout +saluted him. + +"A detachment of cavalry was coming up when I left the top of the hill," +replied the trooper. + +"What were they?" demanded the captain impatiently. + +"I don't know, Captain; we could not make them out in the darkness," +replied the scout; and he was the one who came from the south. + +"How many were there of them?" + +"We looked at them as they came down the hill, and Wilder and I reckoned +there were about fifty of them. They had a wagon train behind them." + +"Very well, Beck. What have you to say, Layder?" asked Captain Gordon, +turning to the scout from the north. + +"My report is just about the same as Beck's; though the detachment comes +from the other way. But they didn't have no baggage-train." + +"Did you make out how many there were, Layder?" + +"We made out about forty of 'em, Captain; we could not see very well, +and there may have been more of 'em." + +"Return to your mates, and ascertain, if you can, who and what they +are," added Captain Gordon. + +Deck Lyon had something to say, but he did not feel like saying it. He +was perfectly satisfied that there would be no fighting with the +approaching detachments. He had been reasoning over the situation, and +he had formed a decided opinion. He had heard the train on the railroad, +both when it went down and when it returned about dark; but he knew +nothing about the events which had transpired at the camp by the bridge. +The only fact that bothered him was that the detachment from the south +had a baggage-train. + +"Well, Deck, what do you make of it?" asked Captain Gordon, as he halted +in front of the sentinel. + +"The two detachments are the second company of Riverlawn Cavalry," +replied Deck without any hesitation; for this was the decided opinion he +had reached. + +"What makes you think so, Deck?" asked the captain with a smile. + +"Except the Texans in the mud, there is no other cavalry in these parts. +That's the first reason. The second is, that Major Lyon sent half the +first company under Lieutenant Belthorpe up the railroad, and he can +have heard nothing from this force since; and he would naturally get a +little anxious about it. The third reason is, that he sent you and the +rest of the first company in pursuit of the Texans. If you have not +sent any messenger to him, I shouldn't wonder if the major had worried a +little about you, Captain," said Deck. + +"I sent no messenger to him; I could not spare a single man, for I was +liable to meet the whole company of Texans," added the captain. "But I +think you are right, and the same suggestions came to my mind." + +Half an hour later the same scouts returned to the camp, and reported +that the captain and Deck were correct in their suppositions. In a +quarter of an hour more the second company rode into the camp. Major +Lyon was with the detachment from the south. The moment he saw Deck, he +leaped from his horse as lightly as his son could have done it, and +grasped both of the hands of the sentinel. + +"I am glad to see you again. Dexter!" exclaimed the father. "I have had +a deal of worry over your disappearance, and I was afraid I should have +to send bad news to your mother and your sister." + +"No use of worrying about me, father," replied Deck, still holding the +hand of the major. "I have had considerable experience to-day, but I +have worked through it all." + +"But what became of you?" asked the anxious father. + +"I was captured by the bridge-burners, and I was only sorry that I could +not prevent them from setting the bridge afire. I suppose it was all +burnt up, and your business here is all a failure." + +"Not at all, my son; the bridge was hardly damaged at all, and a train +has been over it twice since they tried to burn it. But I will see you +later," added the major, as he pressed the hand of his son again. + +Captain Gordon was considerate enough to relieve the sentinel from duty, +and he went with his father to the nearest camp-fire. The wagons were +driven into the field, and a few minutes later the headquarters tent was +pitched. Stools were placed before the fire, and all the commissioned +officers of both companies were sent for. It looked like a council of +war, though the object of the meeting was to receive the reports of the +officers. For the first time since the arrival of the squadron, the two +companies were united. + +Captain Gordon, as the senior, was called upon first for his report; and +he recited it at length, ending with the skirmish at the cross-roads +near the camp. Lieutenant Belthorpe described his wanderings with half +the company, including his brief engagement with the Rangers. + +"I feel as though I should be mean if I failed to inform the officers of +the squadron how much service Deck Lyon has rendered to me since I found +him on the road," said Tom. "We are not on parade just now, and I +suppose I may say it." + +"Dry up, Tom!" exclaimed Deck, loud enough to be heard by the speaker, +though hardly by the others. + +"Not just yet, Lieutenant," interposed the major. "I don't understand +how you happened to meet Dexter in the road; for the last he told me of +himself was that he was taken prisoner by the enemy. I should like to +hear his narrative first, for it may throw some light on other matters." + +Deck was admonished by his father to tell the whole story, without any +omissions; and he related his adventure from the time he had first seen +Brown Kipps. He explained how he had been duped by that worthy +Tennesseean, and in what manner he had been tempted to shoot his four +custodians through the back of the head. + +"I hope you didn't do it, Dexter," interposed his father, before he had +come to the sequel of the affair. + +"I did not, father; for I feared the deed would haunt me to the last day +of my life, be it long or short," replied Deck. "It looked like +cold-blooded murder to me." + +The assembled officers applauded him vigorously with their hands; and +the young soldier was glad to receive this testimonial of his officers, +for to him it seemed to settle the moral question involved in his +action. + +"I do not believe in carrying on the war upon peace principles; but I do +believe that soldiers should not become assassins," added the major. + +The officers likewise applauded this sentiment of their commander. + +"We are ready to hear you now, Lieutenant Belthorpe, as I know how +Dexter came into your path. It is important to remember that the +bridge-burners, with their wagon and supplies of combustibles, +proceeded to the north by the hill road. Go on, Lieutenant." + +Tom Belthorpe described the action with half the Rangers under +Lieutenant Redway, and the interposition of Deck when he discovered the +approach of the other half of the Rangers. He had retreated rather +against his will by Deck's advice. + +"I think his advice was good, if he is my son," added the major. + +"No doubt of it; you would have been pinched between the two portions of +the Confederate force, and outnumbered nearly two to one," added Captain +Gordon. + +"I was quite satisfied in regard to the wisdom of the advice, badly as +we desired to fight out the action, as soon as I had a chance to think +of it," continued Tom. "Then Deck did a very neat piece of spy-work, +which enabled us to follow the enemy without being seen or heard. The +whole of the Rangers had come together, and they outnumbered Captain +Gordon's command. It was Deck's suggestion to strike across lots, and +reach the by-road; but I did not follow it in full, and divided my +force, so that the Texans should not retreat by the way we came." + +"And when you came down the hill with hardly more than twenty men, the +Texans took fright, and retreated up that by-road, where they were +received by Sergeant Fronklyn," added Captain Gordon. "This caused them +to seek a new avenue of escape; and they plunged into the quagmire, +where they are now." + +"What you say of Deck leads me to indorse his conduct in the action on +the east road this morning," said Captain Truman, who had said nothing +before; and he proceeded to describe what the young man had done in that +affair. + +"Pleasant as it is to hear such excellent reports of the behavior of my +son, I must add that his brother has behaved equally well, though he has +not had the opportunity to distinguish himself except in doing his +simple duty," said the major. "But I have more important business than +this, for I received new orders before I left the camp at the bridge. I +am required to assure the safe passage of trains on the railroad first; +but it appears that the State has been invaded in the south-east, or is +liable to further invasion in that direction. + +"The worst feature of this aspect of the situation is that hordes of +guerillas have been turned loose upon us; and even now they are engaged +in their work of plundering and destroying the property of Union men, +not to speak of the outrages committed upon the citizens. These +guerillas, or some of them, take the name of 'Partisan Rangers.' Indiana +and Ohio troops are moving in the direction mentioned; but the enemy are +still busy there. 'The Confederate cavalry,'" continued the commander, +reading from a letter he had taken from his pocket, "'scoured the +country in the vicinity of their camp, arrested prominent Union men, and +destroyed their property.' This is the situation for a hundred miles +east of us; and I am ordered to check these raids of the guerillas with +all my available force. + +"I am ordered to move without any unnecessary delay, and I shall march +to-morrow morning. I expect a company of Union Home Guards here by +to-morrow; and I shall be obliged to leave Captain Truman and half his +company; but as soon as he is relieved by the infantry company, he will +rejoin the squadron." + +"We have been unable to make out that there is any Confederate force in +this vicinity, with the exception of the Rangers who are just now +struggling with the mud in the bog meadow near us," said Captain Gordon. + +"How many of them are there?" asked the major. + +"I am sure I don't know," replied the captain. + +"I counted eighty-one of them, including Captain Dingfield; but some few +of them had escaped through the mud to the hill on the other side of the +bog," said Deck, who was always doing some useful work when he found a +chance. + +"As many as that; perhaps half a company is not force enough to leave +with you, Captain Truman," suggested the major. + +"Quite enough, Major Lyon; for we should have to act mainly on the +defensive," replied the captain of the second company. "My men have +fought the Texans once to-day; and though they are brave and daring +fellows, they are not such terrible bugbears as they have been +represented to be. But infantry can guard the bridge better than +cavalry." + +"The infantry will probably relieve you by to-morrow. If the Texans, +with their bridge-burners, were out of the way, I need leave no force," +added the major. + +"But we can put them out of the way very easily," suggested Captain +Gordon. + +"Do you mean to shoot them down as they stick in the mud there? We are +not murderers, Captain," replied the major sternly. + +"I meant nothing of the kind," returned the captain with a blush. "I +could have ordered my men to do that before it appeared that the action +was finished." + +"Pardon me, Captain; I know you are not a murderer." + +"They are stuck fast there, eighty-one of them, according to Deck's +figures; and we can make prisoners of them as they get out of the bog, +as I think they will before morning, for they have hit upon an effective +plan." + +"It would take one of our companies to capture them, and to dispose of +them as prisoners, so that we should gain nothing," replied the major, +vetoing the plan at once. "The Union Home Guards may be here early in +the morning, for they have had time enough to make the march." + +The meeting closed; and officers and privates were tired enough after +the long day to wrap themselves in their blankets and sleep. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII + +A MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCE + + +The night passed without any alarm. The sentinels were relieved at +regular intervals, including the two who patrolled the by-road. The +latter complained, when others were put in their places, that they might +as well be asleep in the camp, for they could see nothing of the Texans. +There was only one place where they could obtain a view of them when it +was light enough for them to see anything. + +The night was unusually dark, for a heavy mass of black clouds had +rolled up from the west, promising a smart shower. The Rangers had +extinguished their fires at an early hour in the evening, for what +reason the guards were unable to determine; but the fact was suspicious, +and they redoubled their vigilance. The last that had been seen of the +bemired troopers, they were building the causeway of hay to unite with +the one of solid rocks and earth built by the farmer to obtain access +to his hay-field. + +This causeway was believed to be the only possible way to get on or off +the meadow. Captain Gordon had made a survey of the locality in person, +and had gone up the road as far as the house of the farmer, the only one +in the vicinity. He had met the native in his walk, and had questioned +him with all the skill he possessed in regard to the surroundings; for +the fellow was not disposed to give any information. The only statement +of any importance he could drag out of him was that the causeway was the +only way by which the Texans could leave the meadow. The captain could +see none himself, though he believed from his manner that the man was +lying to him. + +The place looked as though there had been an immense sink-hole there at +some remote period in the past, which had been filled up by the wash +from the hills around it. This flow had brought down quantities of dry +leaves and other vegetable matter; and this, with the growth of rank +grass and weeds decaying on the spot, had formed what is called a bog in +Ireland, and a peat meadow in the Northern States. + +There was fuel enough in it to supply a village for a hundred years; but +wood was so plentiful in this region that it would not pay to cut, dry, +and carry it to more solid ground. Whether the captain was satisfied or +nor with his investigations, he could obtain no further information. The +meadow seemed to be surrounded with rocky formations; though his +knowledge of it, obtained in the darkness, was very imperfect. But he +and his men had seen the troopers laying the causeway of hay to the one +of earth, as though they believed this was the only avenue of escape. + +The two sentinels extended their beat as far as the farmer's house. +After nine o'clock in the evening its windows were dark, and the people +within appeared to have retired. But the big dog of the native did not +retire with the rest of the family, and he made a rude attack upon the +guards every time they approached the house. About midnight he had +assailed one of the men so furiously that he was obliged to defend +himself with his sabre; and the brute was so badly wounded that nothing +more was seen of him. His dead body was found the next morning near the +house; and the farmer was as furious as the canine had been, though he +had a proper respect for carbines and sabres. + +When the guard was relieved after midnight, all was quiet on the meadow, +and it was believed that the troopers had taken to their blankets. One +of the sentinels declared that he could hear them snore; but this was +doubtless a camp-fire exaggeration. They watched the causeway, as they +had been instructed to do; and certainly none of the Texans came out +that way. One of them proposed to explore the space between the by-road +and the position of the troopers; but the other insisted that such an +enterprise would result in certain death, for no doubt the enemy had +sentinels whose carbines were loaded with ball cartridges. + +So far as the guards could report, there was no change at the by-road +during the night. The headquarters tent had been pitched, and Major Lyon +had been up half the night studying his maps, and repeatedly reading the +written orders he had received, as well as a mass of newspaper cuttings +which had been sent with them. The latter were, for the most part, +accounts of outrages committed by Confederate cavalry of companies of +"Partisan Rangers," and of bands who were not provided with even the +doubtful authority of the insurrectionary government. + +Before daylight in the morning Major Lyon was on his feet; for he felt +that he was loaded with a heavy responsibility. He was charged with the +protection of the railroad bridges in the vicinity, though he was to be +immediately relieved from this duty to enable him to assist with the +more vigor in suppressing the guerillas and other predatory bands. +Artie, now his orderly, slept in the tent with him, and he was sent to +have "The Assembly of Buglers" sounded; and this is the call for the +troopers to appear on the parade. + +There was a commotion at the guard quarters; and before Artie had roused +the bugler from his slumbers, he was called by the officer of the day. +Was Major Lyon awake? He was, for he had called his orderly. + +"Inform him at once that the sentinel from the by-road reports the +disappearance of the enemy in the bog," said the officer. + +As soon as he received the information, the major hastened to the guard +tent, where the sentinel who had brought the news was detained. The +trooper repeated his information to the commander. It was hardly light +enough in the bog to see anything, but he and his mate had satisfied +themselves that the Rangers had all disappeared; but of how or where +they had made their escape he had no knowledge. + +"Did you hear no noise of any kind?" asked the major. + +"Nothing at all; it was as still as a tomb all the time I was on guard," +replied the sentinel. "We were not sure they were gone till we walked +out a piece on the meadow, and found the hay, of which they had made a +road to solid ground; but it did not lead to the causeway." + +"Where did it lead?" demanded the major. + +"In the direction of the farmer's house; but we did not follow it, for +it was decided that I should come up to the camp and report what we had +found out." + +"Who was with you, More?" asked the officer of the guard. + +"Bunch; and he was to follow the hay-road after I left him," replied the +sentinel. + +Major Lyon was very prompt in deciding upon his action, and the first +company was soon in line, and ready to march. Deck belonged in one of +its ranks, and Artie was in close attendance upon the commander. As the +former had conducted the detachment "across lots" the afternoon before, +the major sent for him; and the two young soldiers rode side by side +behind their father, who had Captain Gordon at his side. + +"It seems that we are to have a long tramp of it after this; and we are +not likely to be at home Christmas or Thanksgiving this year," said +Artie, as the column descended the hill to the by-road. + +"Wherever we may be, it looks like a lively time ahead; for things seem +to be very much mixed in the State," replied Deck. + +"How do you suppose the Texans got out of the mud-hole, Deck?" + +"I don't know; but I have no doubt the farmer who lives near it and owns +the farm helped them out of it. He is a surly fellow, and I saw that he +was a Secessionist when I met him." + +"What do these two darkies want?" asked Artie, pointing to a couple of +colored men, who were running down the hill from the northward as though +their very lives depended upon their speed. + +"Probably they are messengers who have come from the vicinity of the +bridge by the same route I did," replied Deck, as he noticed that one +of them was flourishing what looked like a letter in the air. + +The two men reached the brook before the column turned in at the +by-road, and had a chance to catch their breath before the officers came +up to them. They had probably seen the column come out from the camp, +and had hurried to intercept it before it turned into the highway they +saw ahead; and it was probable that they were familiar with the +locality. + +"W'ich o' you uns is Mars'r Major Lyon?" asked the man with the letter +of the first one he met, who happened to be Deck. + +"The one with the plume in his hat," replied the private. "Where do you +come from, Cæsar?" + +"From de souf road; more'n a t'ousand so'diers dar. De man wid de feder +in his hat," replied the negro, as he rushed forward to the major and +delivered his letter, with a jumbled speech, of which the recipient took +no notice. + +Major Lyon drew up his horse at the side of the brook, his sons +remaining with him, while the column continued on the march. He tore +open the envelope, and read the epistle written with a pencil. + +"Be'n a-lookin' fo' you all night, Mars'r," said the bearer. "De gin'ral +done gib me de letter 'fo' dark, an done tell me to find you. Done tramp +seben miles on de roleraid; but we done couldn't found you." + +"Where did you sleep?" asked the major, who was evidently pleased with +the information contained in the letter. + +"In a swotch-house," replied the messenger, who was very much confused, +and his small stock of English was badly mixed. "In a swotch-house on de +roleraid." + +"He means a switch-house," laughed Deck, who could not see why the +fellow upset his words so badly. + +The major read the missive a second time, and then took a sort of +portfolio from his pocket, and hastily wrote a reply to it, which he +folded and pinned together in the absence of an envelope. + +"How did you find us this morning?" asked the major. + +"We done find de hoss-tracks an' de wagon-tracks, an' we follers dem." + +"Here's a dollar for your service; but don't spend it for apple-jack, my +boy," said the major, as he handed a couple of half-dollars to the +messengers. "You may go to the camp yonder, and get something to eat, if +you like, before you return." + +The men were grateful; and the one who received the money gave half of +it to his companion. The major and his orderlies hurried forward, and +found that Captain Gordon had halted the company at the causeway, where +the inquiry must begin. + +"The Home Guards arrived at the bridge last night, and the captain of +the company reports to me as directed. I have written out what +information I have to give him, and you will send a couple of your men +to deliver the paper." + +Two troopers were despatched at once as the bearers of the order. It was +possible that the men might encounter some of the Rangers who had +escaped from the other side of the meadow; and they were cautioned by +the major to be on the lookout for them, and to return as soon as +possible. They departed at a gallop, which promised a speedy return. + +"One thing is plain enough: the Texans did not come out of the mire by +this causeway," said the major, as he turned his attention to the +question under consideration. + +"The sentinels were here all night," replied Captain Gordon. + +"But we can easily discover where they did escape," added the commander +as he dismounted, indicating that he intended to conduct the inquiry +personally; and Deck and Artie followed his example. "Detail ten men to +go with us, dismounted, and you will go with us, Captain." + +Deck and Artie were directed to go ahead as guides. They descended the +causeway, and came to the sod that covered and concealed the mud +beneath. The turf was strong enough to support men on foot, as had been +seen the afternoon before in the movements of the Rangers. But the hoofs +of the horses cut through it, and they were mired as soon as they +advanced, though some of them wallowed a considerable distance before +they gave up the struggle. + +The meadow was nearly round in form, and about half a mile in diameter. +The orderlies, as both of them soon came to be called, advanced safely, +though they were compelled to avoid the places where the Texans' horses +had cut up the sod and brought the mud to the surface. The material of +the hay causeway, which had at first been extended in the direction of +the solid one, had been removed; but leading from the brook, towards a +point above the farmer's house, they saw the one that must have been +used by the Rangers. + +The two haystacks seen the day before had been entirely removed, and the +road built of it was about a foot deep of hay. The officers and the ten +men followed the guides; and the hay causeway conducted them to an +inclined plane built of old boards and planks, which the party mounted, +and came to a field near the road. The mysterious disappearance of the +Texans was fully explained. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX + +THE RIVERLAWN CAVALRY CHANGES BASE + + +The first thing Major Lyon did when he reached the road, and the +disappearance of the Texans was no longer mysterious, was to take from +his pocket his map of the county. He found the hill road, and the one +where they stood. + +"If the sentinel who reported that he could hear the Rangers snore in +the bog told the truth, the enemy got some rest last night," said the +major, addressing Captain Gordon. + +"But he did not hear them snore; that was absurd," replied the captain. +"If they had been snoring, he could not have heard them; for they were +at work too far from him. If he heard anything, it must have been the +bubbling of the brook; but probably it was all in his imagination. But +what is the point in regard to the snoring, Major Lyon?" + +"If the Rangers worked all night, and did not get any sleep, they are +too tired and sleepy this morning to make a long march," replied the +commander. + +"Then you think they have camped at some place not far from us?" asked +the captain. + +"I only think it is possible they have done so. Captain Dingfield +appeared to be badly wounded, from all reports; and I doubt if there is +as much strategy in his brain to-day as he had yesterday. I shall not +make a business of pursuing him." + +"It would be a good thing for this part of the State if he could be +cleaned out entirely, bagged, and his company sent to Louisville as +prisoners," suggested Captain Gordon. + +"No doubt of it; but it would be hardly consistent with the orders I +have just received for me to delay in this section to carry out your +idea. We are more needed elsewhere than here." + +"Then we are to march on a sort of roving commission to the eastward, +where the Confederates are breaking through from Tennessee, it appears." + +"It amounts to that, though my orders are very explicit," replied the +major, as he led the way back to the narrow pass where the company had +been halted. "The situation here is not so bad as it was. We have saved +the bridge; and the Home Guards which arrived there last night are +described as consisting of good men, who will be mustered into a +Kentucky regiment as soon as circumstances permit; and Captain Woodward, +who commands it, is an old soldier, and likely to be made a colonel." + +"Then the bridge will be safe." + +"It can be better defended by infantry than by cavalry alone; both would +do better than either. Captain Dingfield and his bridge-burners have +been sent to the north, and I have no doubt he intends to join them +there. To follow him would keep me some days, if not a week, from the +more pressing duty assigned to me," reasoned the commander. + +"I understand it better now," added the captain. + +"I have been informed that troops have been sent to the vicinity of +Munfordville, in Hart County, where the railroad bridge has been partly +destroyed, though a temporary structure has been built to replace it. I +think Dingfield means to go there, and complete the work others failed +to finish." + +"I hope we shall find the guerillas, or whatever they are; and I believe +our boys will soon make an end of them," said the captain with +enthusiasm. "Your orders permit you to go where you please, Major." + +"They do; for it was not possible for those charged with the protection +of the State to inform me definitely where the guerillas were to be +found, as they are continually changing their locality, though I have +some papers to aid me. I am not a little surprised at the confidence +placed in me by my superiors, who send me on a mission with no definite +instructions." + +"All the details of the fights at Riverlawn and its vicinity are known +to them; for I have taken care that they should not be ignorant in +regard to you." + +"But I have just become a soldier," added the major modestly. + +"Then it runs in the blood, and it has got as far down as Deck," said +Captain Gordon, laughing, as they came to the company. + +The party mounted, and rode back at a gallop to the camp. The cooks of +the company had prepared an unusually good breakfast, which was disposed +of with a relish, stimulated by three days' feeding from the haversacks +of the troopers. As soon as it was finished, the order was given to +"break camp;" and, as it had been hardly more than a bivouac, the work +was speedily accomplished, and the two companies were soon in line. + +While these preparations were in progress, the major was studying his +county map. What little baggage had been taken from the wagons was soon +loaded again. There was little for the officers to do, after the orders +had been given. + +"We are about ready to march," said Captain Gordon, approaching the +commander, who had seated himself on a log near the road. + +"I am all ready," replied the major, as he glanced at Artie, who was +holding his horse near him. "Of course Dingfield followed this by-road, +which will take him to another by which he can reach Munfordville, if he +is going there. We will take the same road; and if the Rangers are +resting themselves in camp after the fatigues of the day and night, we +may have a chance to pay our respects to them." + +"I should like one more slap at them; for they ran away so rapidly that +I did not get a fair hit at them," added the captain. + +"But they are brave men, and we outnumber them two to one. Truman says +they fought like tigers on the east road." + +"That is true, and that is the reason I should like to meet them again; +for I believe there is not a braver or more reliable body of men in the +Union army than the Riverlawn Cavalry; and I am not a Kentuckian +either." + +"Neither am I by birth, though I am by adoption; and I am precisely of +your opinion in regard to our men," added the major as he mounted his +horse; and his orderlies did the same. + +Deck was at home again in the saddle; for Ceph had come to the camp with +the second company. After the prisoners at the bridge had been disposed +of, the wounded had been cared for by sending them in one of the +captured wagons to Riverlawn, consigned to the care of Levi Bedford; for +a hospital had been established there for the wounded in the battles +with the ruffians. + +The column moved down the road, and turned into that which the Rangers +had used in their escape. As the right of the line approached the house +of the farmer, that worthy presented himself before the officers; and he +appeared to be mad enough to swallow half-a-dozen Yankees. Possibly he +thought the squadron had started in pursuit of the Texans. + +"I want to know who's ter pay me for that dog o' mine some o' you uns +killed last night," he broke out, walking along by the side of the major +and Captain Gordon. "That critter was wuth a hund'ed dollars, and that's +what I want you uns to pay me before you go any furder." + +"Are you a loyal citizen of the United States?" asked Major Lyon. + +"I'm nothin' o' that sort!" replied the native, who began to heap curses +and maledictions on the government. "The' ain't no United States! She's +done busted all to pieces!" + +The major made no reply, and had not even stopped his horse. The fellow +followed him; but he took no further notice of the irate Secessionist, +rather to the amusement of Captain Gordon and others within hearing. But +the farmer was soon tired of addressing one who treated him with silent +contempt, and seated himself on a stump to observe the procession. + +Two skilful scouts, one of whom was Life Knox, had already been sent +forward to search for any indications of the camp of the Texans. The +squadron soon reached another road running through a valley. The major +had learned from his map that it connected with the east road in one +direction, and the hill-road in the other. + +The column halted to wait for the return of the scouts. Knox and his +companion soon appeared, and reported that he had followed this road to +its junction with the hill-road, without seeing anything of the enemy. + +"They ain't within ten miles of here," added the Kentuckian. "I got so I +know the tracks o' them Texas hosses, and I follered 'em five miles. +They don't want nothin' more o' the Riverlawn Cavalry." + +This information settled the point so far as the Rangers were concerned, +and nothing was seen of them, though they appeared in some skirmishes +farther north. The Indian craft of Knox had proved to be very useful, +and he was a great favorite with both officers and men. The march was +resumed; but the events of the next two days on the road are not of +interest enough to be reported. At the end of this time the squadron +were in the territory described in the orders of the commander, and +active work was expected. + +Just before sunset the battalion halted on the outskirts of a small +village, and went into camp there. The American flag was hoisted on a +pole planted for the purpose, in order that the inhabitants of the +vicinity might make no mistake in regard to the character of the force. +Not only the negroes and loungers to be found in every village flocked +to the camp, but some of the influential citizens appeared on the +ground. The guard kept them outside of the lines. A person on +horse-back, who had the air and manner of the genuine Kentucky +gentleman, attracted the attention of Major Lyon, who was desirous of +obtaining information on the spot in regard to the sentiments of the +people. + +"Who is the gentleman on horse-back?" he asked of a well-dressed negro, +who looked like an intelligent man; for the commander suspected that he +was a Secessionist, though he had no reason for supposing that he was +such. + +"That is Colonel Coffee, sir, the biggest man in these parts," replied +the colored man. + +"How does he stand on the war question? Do you happen to know?" +continued the major. + +"Yes, sir," replied the man with a smile; "everybody within twenty miles +of this village knows which side Colonel Coffee is on, sir." + +"Well, which side is he on?" demanded the commander, who saw that the +gentleman was approaching him. + +"He's a Union man all over and all through; and the people are trying to +get up a Home Guard to protect his place--that's the one you see on the +side of the hill. We expect the gorillas down here." + +"You have named them well, my friend," added the major with a laugh. "Do +you know where there are any of them?" + +"No, sir; they are like flies, and don't make nests anywhere. I reckon +Colonel Coffee wants to speak to you, sir; for I suppose you are an +officer of this company," added the man, who retired at the approach of +the great man of the locality. + +The magnate of the county rode up to the major, and saluted him with +courtly grace; and though the latter was not brought up in a +drawing-room, he was as polite as the occasion required. + +"I am exceedingly happy to see that flag hoisted over a body of military +in this county," said the colonel, with a cheerful smile, as he pointed +with his riding-whip at the emblem of the Union. + +"I am very glad to be where there are those who appreciate the flag," +added the major. + +"I am only sorry that you will find so few of them in this +neighborhood," returned the dignified Kentuckian. "We are threatened by +roving bands of plunderers to the east and south of us, and for the last +week I have expected to walk away from my place by the light of my +burning house. I live in that one on the side of the hill." + +"I hope we shall be able to put an end to this state of affairs at once, +Colonel Coffee," replied the major. + +"You know my name," said the magnate with a smile. + +"I asked it of that negro." + +"He is the village barber, and a very intelligent man. May I ask whom I +have the honor to address?" inquired the colonel. + +"Major Lyon, in command of a squadron of United States cavalry," replied +the officer. + +"I am very glad to see you, Major, personally, and especially to see you +at Greeltop; for we are greatly in need of efficient protection," +returned the colonel. "I have heard all about you before." + +"I am equally happy to meet you, Colonel Coffee; for I am at present in +urgent need of full information in regard to the condition of affairs in +this section." + +"I shall be pleased to have you dine with me, and we can talk over +matters at our leisure in my library." + +Major Lyon excused himself from the dinner, and invited the colonel to +his tent, which had been set up by this time. + + + + +CHAPTER XXX + +THE MAGNATE OF GREELTOP'S VISIT + + +The cavalrymen had been duly drilled in all the details of forming a +camp; and in a short time the tents were pitched, the pickets set up for +the horses, and the cooks were busy in preparing supper. The +headquarters tent was the first to be arranged, as soon as the major had +indicated its location. Colonel Coffee was invited to take a camp-stool; +for they do not have sofas and armchairs in a camp. + +"I have been pleading with the officials for the last two weeks to +attend to the security of this region," said the colonel, as he seated +himself. "I have wondered every day during the last week that Greeltop +has not been sacked, and all our houses burned down; for there is a +great deal of Union sentiment in the place." + +"Then the place must be particularly liable to an assault from the +guerillas," suggested the major. + +"We have tried to form a Home Guard here for the protection of the +village, and we have a little band of about twenty men; but most of our +young and middle-aged men have left the place to enlist in the loyal +army, so that we have not much stock of which to form a company. But our +little band keep a picket of five or ten of their number in the +outskirts of the village, to warn us of the approach of an enemy." + +"We shall soon relieve them of that duty." + +"Our men are not soldiers, for they have had no training; but they are +made up of fighting material. Though I am sixty-five years old, I belong +to the company; and I have just returned from patrolling the region to +the eastward of us." + +While he listened to the visitor, Major Lyon had spread out his map, +which included the locality; and with the assistance of the colonel he +obtained a clear idea of the surface of the country, the first requisite +for a military commander. While they were still busy over the map, the +sentinel at the entrance to the tent drew aside the curtain, and saluted +the commander. + +"A messenger in a great hurry to see Colonel Coffee," said he. + +"Admit him," replied the major promptly. + +A gentleman dressed in a black coat with a standing collar to it, +encircled with a belt, in which was secured a pair of navy revolvers, +entered the tent, out of breath with excitement of running. + +"The Rev. Mr. Elbroon, Major Lyon, one of our Home Guard," said the +colonel as soon as the clergyman appeared at the entrance. + +There was nothing clerical in his appearance except the standing collar +of his coat; and the revolvers especially belied his profession. + +"The Lord be praised for his great mercy!" exclaimed the minister, as +soon as he could get breath for utterance. + +"What is the matter, Joseph?" asked the magnate of Greeltop very +familiarly. + +"The guerillas are coming!" exclaimed the reverend gentleman. + +"Where are they?" asked the colonel, as coolly as though he had been in +command of a regiment for years. + +"They are coming down by the mountain road back of your mansion!" +gasped Mr. Elbroon, who was evidently very much alarmed, and could +hardly speak in his fatigue and excitement. + +"Sentinel!" called the major sharply. + +The man appeared at once. + +"Where is Captain Gordon?" + +"He is close by, Major." + +"Ask him to come to my tent." + +"Sit down, Joseph," said the colonel, giving his stool to his friend and +his fellow-soldier, it appeared. "You don't gain anything by blowing +yourself out." + +"But this is no time to sit down," replied the excited minister, though +he took the proffered seat. + +Captain Gordon appeared immediately. + +"A raid of guerillas on the place, Captain! Have the first company ready +to march in three minutes!" said the commander in hurried tones. + +The captain retired in haste, without asking any questions; and a moment +later the bugles were heard sounding the assembly. The major buckled on +his sword, and sent out an order for his horse. + +"Thank the good Lord that the military have come at last!" exclaimed +Mr. Elbroon, as he crossed his arms on his breast, and looked up to +heaven in earnest prayer. "But we are wasting time, Colonel; and I am +afraid we shall see your beautiful mansion in flames before we can get +there." + +"If we do, it will go up in a good cause," replied the magnate, with a +smile on his dignified face. "I can afford to lose it better than some +of the poor people of the village could their houses. But cool off, +Joseph; you are still all in a flutter." + +"I will try to do so," replied the clerical soldier, "I saw them coming +when I was on the top of the mountain. I hurried my poor horse till he +broke down under me; and I had to run on foot the rest of the way." + +"Rest yourself, Joseph. If you saw the guerillas from the top of the +mountain, there is no hurry; for they will not reach my house this +half-hour," added the colonel. + +"You shall have another horse, my reverend friend," interposed the +commander, as he ordered the sentinel to send for a spare steed. + +"Now, Joseph, where were the guerillas when you saw them?" inquired the +magnate. + +"They were on the Cliff Road, just coming around the bend." + +"That is four miles from my house, and five from here," continued the +colonel. + +"But I have been a long time coming here," suggested Mr. Elbroon. + +"Excuse me, Colonel Coffee; I should like a little more definite +information in regard to the road by which these guerillas will approach +the village," interposed the commander. + +"I don't think they will approach the village at all, Major Lyon. I have +not the remotest doubt that my mansion is their objective point; and +they will first plunder that." + +"We will take care that they don't do anything of the sort. Have you any +idea how many there were in the company you saw, Mr. Elbroon?" + +"I could see them marching along under the cliff; I should say there +were not less than fifty of them," replied the clergyman. "I did not +wait to count them, but hurried to the village, where I inquired of +everybody for Colonel Coffee. The barber told me he was here." + +"Company formed," reported the sentinel at the door. + +"We are ready now, gentlemen," said the major, as he passed out of the +tent, followed by the others. + +"The spare horse ordered, Major," said the sentinel, as he led him up. + +The clerical gentleman was invited to mount this animal, which had been +ridden by one of the men killed; and the colonel mounted his own steed. +The commander took his horse, which was led by Deck, while Artie had +brought up the spare steed. The animal was a higher-spirited beast than +the parson had been in the habit of riding, and Artie had to take him by +the head to prevent him from running away; for he was one of the colts +of the Riverlawn planter's stock. + +"My orderlies will ride with me," said the major; "I may want them. +Captain Truman, you will have the second company in marching order, in +case I send for them, though I don't know what this affair will amount +to; and you will leave a guard at the camp if you are called away." + +The order was given to Captain Gordon to march. The commander led the +column at full gallop, with the colonel at his side, and the orderlies +in the rear of them. In less than a minute they came to a road turning +off at the left, leading in the direction of the magnate's mansion. It +was situated on the side of a hill, and near the top of it. The +elevation was elliptical in form, and the loftiest part was not more +than sixty feet high, at the summit of which was a Chinese pagoda, +painted in gaudy colors. + +There was a valley behind it; for the major could see the tops of some +tall trees, whose roots must be far below the top of the elliptical +hill. Beyond it were what the colonel called the mountains, though +probably not one of them was more than five hundred feet high. The +column followed the road into which it had turned till it came to +another; and here the major ordered the captain to halt his company. + +"Here is another road, Colonel Coffee; and it passes behind the hill +which you call Greeltop," said the commander. + +"Precisely so," replied the magnate, who thought the major had acquired +a very good knowledge of the locality when he had been there hardly more +than an hour. + +"Captain Gordon, you will go that way with half your company, and +Lieutenant Gilder will follow me," said Major Lyon. "The road through +the valley unites with the one from the mountains, by which the +guerillas must approach the village. You will move cautiously as you +come near this road, and halt there till you hear firing on your right." + +"You can hardly call it a road through the valley, though the captain +can get through without any difficulty," interposed the magnate. "It is +all a grove, but the ground has been cleared off." + +"Dexter, you will call Knox, and scout the road ahead of us. Don't let +the enemy see you, and obey the orders of the sergeant," continued the +major, as the first platoon rode off. + +Life Knox was called from his place in the ranks, and the order of the +commander given to him. It was the kind of duty the sergeant liked; for +he was more at home there than in following military forms; though he +was a faithful and obedient soldier, and his captain wished he had a +hundred more like him. + +"Here we go again, Deck," said the sergeant, as they galloped up the +road, by the entrance to Colonel Coffee's estate. "Your pa does well to +send me along with you this time, and not leave you alone as he did on +that bridge." + +"But I can take care of myself, and I did that time; for I came back +like a bad penny," replied Deck. + +"You managed fust-rate, my boy; and if you live to be as old as the +white-haired owner of this place, you will be a brigadier-general; and I +hope I shall be an orderly sergeant under you." + +"You are a good deal more likely to become a brigadier-general than I +am, though I may get to be a corporal some time. You may be +major-general; for you understand war much better than most of us." + +"That can't never be, Deck. I hain't got the eddication to be anything +more than a non-commissioned officer," said Knox, shaking his head, and +hurrying on his horse. + +"It wouldn't be just the thing for a brigadier-general to say +'eddication,'" replied Deck. + +"What would you call it? I didn't pay much attention to my eddication +when I was a young cub, and have been sorry for it ever sence. What do +you call it, Deck?" + +"Ed-u-ca-tion." + +"But I can't say it like that." + +"Yes, you can. You have a brother named Edward, and you call him Ed when +you speak of him. Now say this, Life, 'Ed, you can.'" + +"'Ed, you can.'" + +"Good! Now say, 'Ed, you, Kate,'" which was the name he had given the +mare he rode. + +"'Ed, you, Kate.'" + +"Exactly; and it is just as easy to say 'educate' as 'eddicate.' Try +it." + +He did it as well as though he had been to college. + +"You will be a brigadier-general if you keep on; for you know more now +than half of them who pronounce their words correctly," added Deck, +reining in his horse as they came to another road. "This is the one we +are to follow, I think." + +"I reckon 'tis; and we won't edicate--ed-u-cate--no more jest now." + +"I don't see anything of any guerillas yet." + +"They hain't got along," replied Knox, as he reined in his horse and +looked about him. + +There was something peculiar about the place which attracted the +attention of the Kentuckian. The road passed through a round open +space. On one side was a broad gateway that led by a winding driveway to +the front door of the colonel's mansion. + +"This would be a nice place to meet them gorillas," said Knox, as he +looked about him. "Now get in there, Deck," and he pointed to the open +gateway, and led his mate into it. "You hold Kate while I look inter +this thing afoot;" and he slid from his horse to the ground. + +He followed the road, concealing himself as much as possible in the +shadow of the trees. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXI + +LIFE KNOX ON THE MOUNTAIN ROAD + + +Life Knox contrived in one way or another to keep his tall form out of +sight of any person who happened to be in the vicinity of his +operations. Deck Lyon had told him the nature of the present enterprise, +so that he understood perfectly the work in which he was engaged. When +he reached the east end of the valley, behind the colonel's mansion, he +was aware that Captain Gordon, with Lieutenant Belthorpe's platoon of +the company, was posted here; but they were so well concealed, in +accordance with the orders, that he could not see them, or even the +pickets sent out by the officer. + +It was nearly dark, and Knox thought it was time for the enemy to +appear, if they intended to accomplish anything that day; but it +occurred to the Kentuckian that they "chose darkness because their deeds +were evil." He could neither see nor hear anything that indicated the +approach of mounted men. He walked up the gentle declivity of the +mountain road, and found a country better adapted to his work than +nearer the village. He found one of the knolls which abound in this +region, and he cut his way through the brambles and bushes to the top of +it; for he saw that it commanded a view of what was called the Cliff +Road, though he did not know it by this name. + +The marauders had passed the cliffs, and had halted on a little hill in +the road, evidently to make their final preparations for the assault +upon the village. He counted twenty-eight mounted men,--for the +guerillas were not more than a hundred yards from him,--and there was a +considerable number of men on foot, among whom the scout noted two or +three negroes. He looked upon them with interest, and had an excellent +opportunity to observe them. The mounted men seemed to be engaged in a +discussion which became warm, judging from the gestures of some of those +engaged in it. + +Knox made up his mind that these ruffians were not regular troops, +though they might be one of the "Partisan" bands, of which he had heard +something from Deck. The men on foot appeared to be vagabonds and +"bummers," eager to share in the spoils of the expedition. The colonel +and the clergyman were perfectly confident that the mansion of the +former was the objective point of the Partisans. They knew it would be +rich in plunder, which was doubtless the sole purpose of the marauders; +for they could do nothing in this manner to advance the cause of the +Confederate States. + +Knox had a distinct method of treating the present problem; and though +he commanded nothing, he thought he could bring it about. If he had been +in communication with one of the principal officers of the squadron, he +would have stated his plan to him. He had observed a portion of the +ground not seen by the others, and could easily divine the intended +movements of the commander of the guerillas, if there was any such +personage among them. They had begun to move; and Life thought it was +time for him to do the same. He descended the knoll, and took a position +by the side of the mountain road, in a clump of bushes. + +He had hardly taken a favorable place to observe the approach of the +brigands, when he discovered a couple of men approaching from the town, +mounted and armed. They were hard-looking ruffians, and the sergeant did +not like the appearance of them. He had but a moment to consider, and he +did his thinking on the double-quick. The guerillas could not be aware +that a squadron of United States cavalry had just arrived at Greeltop. +If they had known this fact they would not have come; and if informed of +it now, they would take to their heels, and make the dust fly till they +reached a safe retreat. + +The two mounted men coming from the village looked ugly and reckless +enough to be brigands; and Life promptly concluded that they had heard +of the approach of the marauders, and were going out to warn them of the +presence of the troops in the place. Each of them carried an old +flintlock gun, which might have seen service in the time of Daniel +Boone, and had a package strapped on behind his saddle. Possibly they +belonged to the band of mounted men, and were going out to join them +with the important news they had obtained. + +"Where are you uns bound?" demanded Knox, breaking out of his covert, +and planting himself in the road in front of them. + +The Kentuckian was as prudent as he was brave; but if these brigands +were permitted to proceed, the business of the Riverlawn Cavalry would +be ended in this immediate locality for the present. The enemy before +him were two to his one; but he did not appear to take this fact into +consideration. + +"Who are you?" shouted the foremost of the pair in a ferocious tone, as +though he expected to frighten the stalwart inquirer, and with a volley +of oaths which startled the Kentuckian, who, maugre his varied +experience, was a high-toned man morally, and never used any profane +expletives. + +"I am in command of this road jest now; and no one, not even Gov'nor +McGoffin hisself, could pass out the way you uns is go'n'," replied +Life. + +"I reckon we uns is gwine out," replied the spokesman of the pair. + +"I reckon not," added the sergeant, as he seized the bridle of the +fellow's Rosinante, whisked him around, pointing him to the village, and +giving him a slap to set him going. + +If the brigand had any bad blood in his veins, this decided action was +sufficient to make it boil; and he brought up his old flintlock, and +began to point it at the "commander of that road just then," and would +no doubt have put some of the contents of the rusty barrel through his +head or chest, if Life had waited for him to do so. He did not; and he +did not even take the trouble to unsling the loaded carbine at his back, +but, reaching up, seized the brigand by the throat, and dragged him from +his horse, planting him very solidly on the ground. + +The ruffian seemed to be as powerless as an infant in his grasp. Knox +then snatched the gun from his hands; but the man, clinging to it, came +up with it. The sergeant shook him off as he would a fly, and he fell +all in a heap on the ground again. Life tossed the weapon over the fence +into the bushes. The brigand sprang to his feet, and with a long knife +in his hand rushed upon his herculean assailant. + +Knox bestowed a blow on the arm with the blade at the end of it, which +was heavy enough to break the bone; and the weapon dropped in the road. +Then he seized the brigand by the throat again, and batted him over the +head with his iron fist, causing him to drop limp and senseless on the +ground. The other ruffian, who did not seem to be so desperate a +character, looked as though he were paralyzed by the vigorous treatment +of his companion; but he had by this time recovered enough of his +self-possession to think of his own safety; and he attempted to run by +the Kentuckian, in the direction of the guerillas. + +"You're go'n' the wrong way, Chopsticks," said Life, seizing the bridle +of the horse, and bringing him up with a shock which nearly unseated the +rider. "You're bound for the village, and that's the way your go'n'," +continued Knox, as he unslung his carbine, standing in front of the +horse. + +"I want to go the other way; and I reckon you'll git hung to one o' +these big trees for what you've jest did," said the second ruffian. + +"I ain't go'n' to hang jest yet; and you're go'n' back to the village +whether you want to or not," replied Knox. "If you move without leave +from the commander of this road, a ball from his carbine will worry its +way through that head o' yourn." + +[Illustration: "The ruffian seemed to be as powerless as an infant in +his grasp."] + +As he spoke, the sergeant wrenched the gun from the hand of the +ruffian, and tossed it after the other. He seemed to be enjoying the +little scene in which he was the principal actor, and he was as unmoved +as though he had been taking his coffee and hard-tack at a camp-fire. +The horse of the disabled brigand still stood within reach; and, picking +up his first victim, he laid him, face down, across the saddle, as he +would have done a bag of grain. Then he led the steed, with his load, to +the side of the uninjured ruffian, and handed the rein to him. + +"Now you can go back to the village where you kim from, and take this +load of carri'n with you. If you feel as if you wanted to jine that band +of ruffins as is comin' this way, the lead from this little piece will +ketch you." + +He hit the horse of the rider a slap with the breech of his carbine, and +started him on his way. The sergeant was not a reckless man; though for +the sake of the old flag he worshipped he would have attacked any six +men that assailed it. He had time now to look out for the business of +his mission, though the scene described had occupied but a few minutes +of his time. Taking the side of the road, he walked a short distance in +the direction of the mountains, when he heard the tramp of the horses +of the ruffian band. + +A moment later he saw the head of the column appear at a bend in the +road; and it was time for him to begin his retreat. Taking to the bushes +in the field, he made his way back to the valley where Captain Gordon +was posted; but he could see nothing of him. He was in no hurry, and he +walked a short distance into the valley. One of the pickets showed +himself then; and Knox sent word to the captain that the guerillas would +arrive in about fifteen minutes. + +Then he returned to the road, and followed it as long as he could see +the column of brigands approaching. He came to a bend in the highway; +and there he discovered the ruffian with the "load of carrion" on the +led horse, with Deck interviewing him. + +"You don't want nothin' o' that piece o' rot, Deck!" he shouted to his +mate on the scout. + +"But he says he and his friend have been nearly killed by the ruffians +that are coming to take the village, and been robbed of their guns," +replied Deck, when the sergeant came up to him. + +"He is a liar, and so is the feller that is takin' a nap on the hoss. I +did all the mischief that was done to them; for they was go'n' to tell +the cutthroats yonder the last news from Greeltop, and I thought it +wasn't best for them to go that way. Drive on, Be'lzebub!" said the +sergeant, as he gave the horse a slap; and he went on, dragging the +"load of carrion" along with him. + +"Have you seen anything of the guerillas, Life?" asked Deck. + +"Seen the whole on 'em; and I wish we had a meal-bag big enough to hold +the whole on 'em, and I'd put 'em into it; but I reckon we shall bag the +whole on 'em, if we hain't got no sack." + +"How many of them are there, Life?" + +"I reckon them two swinktoms I sent back belonged to the gang; and if +they had j'ined the rest of the crowd, it would 'a' made thirty mounted +men," replied Knox. "But they've got as many more without hosses or +mules. They're a jolly lot o' rag'muffins. You'll see 'em in a few +minutes; but I'll ride back and tell the major about it. You stay here, +and keep out o' sight; for we don't want any of the blocusses to see one +of our uniforms, for that would sp'ile the stew all to onct." + +Knox arranged this matter with Deck while he was mounting his horse. He +went off at full gallop down the slope, and turned into the road that +led by the front of Colonel Coffee's house. He found the second platoon +of his company posted a short distance from the corner. He saw the major +and his party, including Mr. Elbroon and some other citizens of the +place, and dashed up to them with a grand flourish, saluting his +commander as he did so. Life was in high feather, and thought it in +order to make a proper impression upon the spectators, of whom not a few +had gathered near the spot, perhaps expecting to see a battle. + +The sergeant reported to the major, who had withdrawn himself from his +friends, giving the number and present location of the advancing gang; +but no one else was permitted to hear him. + +"I reckon I oughtn't to say nothin' more, Major Lyon; but I'm afeerd +some o' them blocusses will git off; and it would do the whole crowd +good to hang 'em higher'n Haman." + +"We will attend to the hanging, if there is to be any, after the fight; +but if you have any suggestion to make, Knox, I will hear it," replied +the commander. + +"I left Deck squarin' the great circle round the corner; and he'll let +you know jest as soon as the gang comes in sight." + +"We will attend to them as soon as we get the opportunity," added the +major rather impatiently. + +"I'm afeerd you won't hit 'em jest right; for I believe you can bag the +whole on 'em. That circle's a holy good place for a fight, and"-- + +"Station yourself at the corner, Knox, and make a signal when it is the +right time for the platoon to advance," interposed the commander, who +thought the Kentuckian was making a long story of it. + +"Good, Major!" exclaimed Life, who had the matter as he wanted it now; +and he dashed off for the corner. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXII + +THE SKIRMISH IN THE GREAT CIRCLE + + +Probably the leader of the marauders hurried the march of his followers +as the Falstaffian column approached the village, in order to prevent +the news of their coming from being circulated too soon. At any rate, +Deck came down the slope at the best speed Ceph could make some time +before the sergeant expected to see him. + +"Coming, be they, Deck?" inquired he when Deck reined in before him. + +"They are hurrying up, pounding their horses with their heels and the +butts of their guns," replied Deck. "I don't believe there is a nag in +the procession that can make over six miles an hour." + +"Have they left the blocusses on foot behind?" + +"No; but I fancy they are about out of wind by this time, for they are +running to keep up." + +"All right, Deck. I have seen your pa, and you can go down and tell him +all you know; for I am posted here to signal him when the right time +for him to move has come." + +Deck obeyed the order; but he had nothing special to report, except the +nearer approach of the ruffians. He fell back when he had said what he +had to say, and watched eagerly for the signal from the sergeant. He was +to keep near the major, to carry his orders if any were to be sent out; +but this would not prevent him from taking part in the fight. Even his +father had provided himself with a sabre, which he was ready to wield in +the conflict if occasion required; not otherwise. The carbines of the +platoon had been unslung, and the men were in readiness to fire a volley +when the time came. + +"There is Knox's signal, father!" exclaimed Deck, as the major had +turned away to answer a question of the colonel. + +The commander had seen the sergeant waving his cap very vigorously at +the corner. The time had come. The colonel and the clergyman, with those +surrounding them, were the only ones who were excited. The platoon was +as steady as though it was to march to a prayer-meeting. + +"Gallop--march!" said the major to Lieutenant Gilder, who was in command +of the body. + +Both the magnate and the minister had provided themselves with rifles, +and insisted upon doing their share of the fighting, though Major Lyon +assured them that he had force enough to handle double that of the +enemy. The lieutenant gave the orders in detail, and the command was off +in a moment. The major rode on the flank of the platoon, and the +citizens followed him. Deck kept at the side of his father. Artie was +with the captain; and his office was to carry any report or information +to the major, if the circumstances should require. + +We prefer to look through the eyes of Deck at the scene that followed. +As soon as he reached the corner, somewhat in advance of the body of the +company, he discovered the enemy. The mounted men were riding at the +best speed of the miserable animals on which they were mounted; and very +soon they reached what Knox called "the great circle," which was laid +out to set off the grand entrance to Greeltop, the name of the estate of +the colonel; and the village had taken its designation from the stately +mansion and grounds. Before they reached this arena, they set up a +series of frightful yells, evidently intended to intimidate the people +of the village, and make them believe that the imps of the infernal +regions had all broken in upon them at once. + +The avenue was very wide, and the platoon resolved itself into "company +front" at the command of the lieutenant. This was the first view the +enemy had of the Union force waiting for them. The body advanced at a +gallop, till the officer reduced the speed, and then formed them in a +double rank. Lieutenant Gilder gave the orders in detail, which resulted +in a volley, before which half-a-dozen saddles were emptied. + +"Sling--carbine!" shouted the lieutenant before the smoke enabled the +men to see what execution they had executed. "Draw--sabre!" + +As the smoke rolled away the enemy was seen to be badly broken up, and +the leader was using his best efforts to rally his undisciplined +soldiers. But his men had fired as soon as they saw the troopers in +front of them, and two of the latter had been wounded. The volley had +hardly been discharged by the portion of the company in front of the +marauders, when Captain Gordon was seen at the head of his men. He drew +them up in such a position as to avoid sending the bullets into the +midst of the other portion of his company. + +Another volley followed from his men; and more of the wretches in front +of them dropped from their saddles, or fell over if they were not +mounted. A panic seized the enemy; and the major ordered his lieutenant +not to charge upon the guerillas in accordance with the usual programme +of the squadron. + +"Dexter!" called the commander. + +"Here, Major!" replied the orderly promptly, as he saluted the +commander, with his drawn sabre ready for the charge. + +"Ride around the flank of the enemy as quick as you can, and give +Captain Gordon my order not to charge till I send him word," said the +major. "Be careful of yourself, and return if you find the passage +dangerous." + +It did not look like a perilous undertaking to the father, or he would +not have sent his son with the message. The action had come to look like +a mere butchery to him, and he was not willing to engage in any inhuman +slaughter. Deck dashed along the front of the company; for there was a +space of at least a hundred feet between them and the enemy. The +unmounted men were crushing in a mass to get behind the horses; for they +expected another murderous volley. + +Deck forced his horse into the broad gutter; for Ceph was more inclined +to leap into the crowd of guerillas, as he had been trained to do. He +saw the captain several rods from him, and he urged his steed forward to +reach him. His uniform seemed to be a hateful sight to the banditti; and +a couple of them rushed in front of him to intercept his passage. One of +them raised his musket to fire at him; but the intrepid trooper struck +it down with his sabre. The other did not attempt to shoot him, and +probably his gun was not loaded. Both of the men kept their places in +front of him, and were trying to beat him down with their clubbed +weapons. + +This was just the sport for Ceph; and, at the right signal from his +rider, he made a spring into the air, with the evident intention of +leaping over the obstacle in front of him. At the same time Deck made a +vigorous use of his sabre, and hit the foremost of the men in the head, +which caused him to spread himself out on the ground. Ceph went clear +over the other, and the rider gave him a blow with the weapon in his +hand as he did so. + +Ceph went flying the rest of the way; and the guerillas did not attempt +to stop him. The young horseman had a good chance to see the condition +of the enemy at a glance. The footmen had hemmed in the horses in their +efforts to escape the expected bullets; and there was no question in his +mind that the horde had already been effectually defeated. If the +sergeant's big bag had been ready, they were all ready to go into it. + +"Good Heaven, Deck!" exclaimed Captain Gordon, rushing up to him with +all the speed of his horse. "Did you cut through the enemy?" + +"Not exactly, Captain," replied Deck. "I am here to deliver to you Major +Lyon's order not to charge the enemy without a special order to that +effect." + +"I haven't given that order yet, for the enemy are about crushed +already; but I intended to follow up the charge of the rest of the +company on the other side. But I saw you, Deck, engaged against two men +in front of you only a few minutes ago; and I was about to order the +platoon to charge in order to rescue you. I thought the first company +had lost one of its best soldiers then." + +"But I have come through all right, Captain," added Deck, laughing at +the excitement of his officer. "Ceph always does me a good turn when I +get into a tight place, and he did this time." + +"There come some more of the men from the other side of the house," +added the captain, as he pointed to the way the orderly had come. + +Deck looked, and saw Life Knox, with a dozen troopers, rushing along the +gutter through which he had come; but the guerillas did not attempt to +molest them, for they were formidable enough to have beaten the whole +squad of the enemy, even before they had lost a man. + +"Major Lyon sent me after you, Deck," said the sergeant, as he stopped +his horse in front of him. "You had a narrow squeak of it that time, my +boy." + +"No, I didn't, Life; what's the use of making such a to-do about +nothing? I'm all right," replied Deck, who thought his father and the +rest of them were treating him like an infant. + +"But your pa was tearing his hair like a mother that had lost her baby, +to think he had sent you into such a tight place," added Knox. "He would +'a' sent the whole company after you in two minutes more. But you are +safe, and I thought you'd gone to feed the worms sure." + +"The worms will not dine on me just yet. I am going back now to my place +on the other side of the enemy," said Deck. "You can come when you get +ready, Life." + +As he spoke he wheeled his trusty steed, and intimated to him that he +was ready; whereupon Ceph made a spring, and darted off at a breakneck +speed. + +"Hold on, Baby!" shouted the sergeant, calling him by a name he had used +before, to which Deck did not object as long as the Kentuckian did not +treat him like an infant. "We uns kim over to escort you back!" + +"Obey your orders, Life," returned the furious young rider, without even +looking behind him. + +Knox started after him with all the hurry there was in his steed; but +there was hardly a horse in the squadron that could run as fast as +Ceph, for he had been trained to this branch of his equine profession as +a racer. But none of the guerillas were disposed to meddle with him +again; and perhaps the two who had attacked him before had mistaken his +intentions. He rode into the presence of the major, saluted him +gracefully; and the cavalrymen who had witnessed his encounter broke out +in a cheer. + +"Captain Gordon replied that he did not give the order to charge, +because he was waiting for you to begin on this side of the enemy," said +Deck. + +"Thank Heaven that you are safe, Dexter!" replied the father devoutly. + +"Heaven and Ceph," added the young hero. + +The father was busy just then, and he said no more. As soon as Deck had +started with his message, Major Lyon realized that the action would +become a slaughter, and he was anxious to stay the flow of blood. He was +not willing to cut down the men in front of him with the sabres of his +soldiers; for they appeared to be helpless, as much from panic as from +the want of proper arms. + +"Do you surrender?" he shouted at the top of his lungs, directing his +voice to the mass of the wretches gathered in the centre of the great +circle. + +No one answered him, and probably no one heard him. He ordered +Lieutenant Gilder to move his men forward very slowly. This officer was +in front of his troopers; and he led the way as directed, the major +remaining on the flank. + +The lieutenant raised his white handkerchief on his sabre, and waved it +in the air to indicate his peaceful intentions. When he had gone half +the distance to the enemy, he halted the platoon. + +"Do you surrender?" he shouted at the top of his voice. + +The answer was the discharge of half-a-dozen muskets by the mounted +guerillas who held the front of the mass. Lieutenant Gilder dropped from +his horse to the ground; and something like a confused cheer went up +from the men who had fired the volley. Sergeant Knox was the next in +command; and, pushing his horse to the front, he waved his sabre in the +air. + +"Draw--pistol!" he cried. "Ready--aim--fire!" + +The pistols were all ready for use, and the men fired them into the +front rank of the enemy, which seemed to contain all the fighting +ability there was left in the band. They were reloading their old guns; +but some of them did not live to complete the operation. Dr. Farnwright, +who had been near the major, rushed forward, and Knox sent two men to +assist him. Regardless of the danger of the position, the surgeon rushed +to the front to attend to the lieutenant. + +"Platoon--charge!" shouted the sergeant, afraid that the work of the +doctor would be impeded by the senseless operations of the mob. + +The troopers, with the sergeant in front of them, darted at the mass of +banditti in the circle; but they fell back only to precipitate +themselves upon the command of Captain Gordon behind them. At this +moment Major Lyon ordered his bugler to sound the recall. The soldiers +fell back only a very short distance in obedience to the signal, and +they had hardly struck a blow. They held the enemy where they were. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIII + +CAPTAIN STINGER THE FIRE-EATER + + +As soon as Dr. Farnwright reached the prostrate form of Lieutenant +Gilder, he shook his head as he glanced at the major; for the advance of +the platoon had left them in the rear. He examined his patient, who had +passed beyond human aid. The ball had struck him in the chest, and had +doubtless penetrated his heart. His body was borne to the rear. Major +Lyon was sad; but the loss of the noble young man did not affect him as +it did the sergeant, for there was nothing revengeful in his nature. + +Knox was disposed to annihilate the rabble in front, of him; but he was +an obedient soldier, though he had ordered the discharge of pistols +without orders; for the firing of the ruffians, and especially the fall +of the gallant lieutenant, seemed to render any commands unnecessary. +The major directed him to move his platoon forward, and he kept on the +flank himself as he did so. + +Half-a-dozen of the enemy attempted to run by the troopers on the side +of the colonel's house, where Deck had passed the mob; and the sergeant +ordered a file of his men to arrest them. Only two of them had a musket +in their hands, and one of them had a sword at his side. Major Lyon +observed the movement, and ordered the man with the side arm to be +brought to him. Most of the soldiers thought the commander was too +tender of such a horde of ruffians; but he regarded it as little better +than murder to shoot or cut down the enemy, now entirely in his power. + +The man wearing the sword appeared to be of a better class of citizens +than the majority of the freebooters. He wore a neat business suit, and +was rather small in stature. He held his head up with something like +dignity in his bearing, and bestowed frequent glances upon his +companions in arms whom he had deserted. The five others were put under +guard where they were captured, and informed that they would be shot if +they attempted to escape. A couple of soldiers drove the one called for +over to the commander. + +"Who and what are you?" demanded the major, without any savagery in his +voice or manner. + +"I am Lieutenant Garbold; and I am second in command of the force in +front of you," replied the prisoner civilly enough. + +"And you have deserted your companions in arms?" added the commander. + +"Yes, if you choose to call it by that name; but Captain Stinger and +myself disagreed, and I was not willing to stand there and be shot down +by about three times our own number," replied Garbold. + +"Are you and the other man provided with commissions from any source?" + +"Not yet; but we claim to be in the service of the Confederate States of +America, waiting for our commissions, and for our men to be mustered in. +We belong to the regular service." + +"Hardly," added the major, with something as near like a sneer as he +could gather about his mouth. "You will excuse me if I regard you simply +as unorganized freebooters, land pirates. Your mission is to rob and +outrage the citizens of this village; and the ringleaders ought not to +object to being hung on the first convenient tree." + +"We don't rob nor injure any true citizens of Kentucky," replied Garbold +rather sullenly. "As to hanging any of us, we are willing to die in the +good cause; and two Yankee officers will swing for every one of us you +serve in that way." + +"That question can be settled later in the day, and our business is with +the present moment," added Major Lyon with becoming dignity. "Who +commands that rabble in front of us?" + +"Captain Jeruel Stinger." + +"Upon what did you disagree with him?" + +"To explain my own action, and not to gratify your curiosity, I will +answer the question," replied Garbold, who evidently intended to be as +"gamy" as one who had run away from his command could be. "I was not in +favor of standing there and allowing our men to be butchered after +resistance was useless. I said as much to Stinger, and I told him I +should step out." + +"You were sensible," replied the major. "I am not disposed to sacrifice +your men if it can be avoided. Is Captain Stinger still of the same +mind?" + +"I presume he is. He is an out-and-out fire-eater; and there is no more +reason in him than there is in a mule." + +"The night is coming on, and we have no time to trifle with the +question. If you will return to Captain Stinger with a squad of troopers +under a flag of truce, I"-- + +"Me!" exclaimed Garbold. "Stinger would shoot me at sight. I will not +go. I had rather be hanged by the enemy than shot by my friends," +interposed Garbold. + +"Then the loss of any more of your men must rest on your shoulders, and +not on mine. Take him away," replied the commander. + +Major Lyon was still unwilling to charge upon the rabble; for they had +ceased to fire their rusty firelocks. It was getting dark, and something +must be done. He called Deck, and gave him a mass of instructions, which +the orderly took in without any repetitions, for Captain Gordon. Colonel +Coffee volunteered to conduct the messenger though his grounds to a gate +near the position of the other portion of the company; and Deck +delivered his message. He was rather sorry he was not permitted to +proceed as he had before; for he had abundant confidence in his ability +to take care of himself. + +The commander rode up a bank at the side of the road, where he could see +over the heads of the enemy as soon as his son returned to him. A moment +later he saw Captain Gordon deploy a line of skirmishers, which extended +entirely across the broad avenue, with another rank behind them. Both +advanced in slow time, with none of the fury of a regular charge; but it +was soon evident that they "meant business." + +Captain Stinger seemed to be confused, and failed to understand the slow +movement of his foe, and gave no orders. At the same time, and in the +same manner, Sergeant Knox led his men forward; and the "fire-eater" in +command of the rabble could not help seeing that his command was to be +pinched between the two approaching bodies of troopers. Life kept +himself well in advance of his skirmishers; and possibly he felt more +like a brigadier-general than ever before in his life. He watched the +enemy with the eye of an eagle ready to swoop down upon his prey. + +Captain Stinger evidently realized that if his men fired in either +direction, the troopers would charge upon them, and it would be but the +work of a minute or two to slaughter the whole of them. He was seen to +make a gesture to a man who was preparing to fire without orders, and +the ruffian refrained from doing so. He plainly knew not what to do, +since there was nothing he could do. But when the front rank of Knox was +within twenty feet of him, with the sergeant ahead of it, he seemed to +be unable to "hold in" any longer, and unslung the rifle at his back. + +Knox saw that he was to be the first victim of the irate fire-eater; and +he jammed his heels into the flanks of his spirited steed, the animal +making a long spring, which brought him up with the front line of the +enemy. Still pressing the steed forward, he upset two or three men, and +brought up, when the horse could go no farther, alongside the captain. + +The doughty sergeant did not wait to trifle with any weapons, but, +leaning over, he seized the captain by the collar of his coat, dragged +him from his horse, and placed him across his holsters. Bending over his +victim, he held him in his place by the pressure of his body, while he +wheeled his horse, and made his way out of the crowd. + +"Take 'em that way!" he shouted to the men. + +But there was hardly one of them who had the physical strength to +accomplish such a feat, though they soon grappled with the guerillas, +and dragged them out of the _mêlée_. The men on the other side of the +enemy resorted to the same sort of tactics, which was not laid down in +the regular manual for the instruction of the cavalry. + +Captain Stinger was not a model Kentuckian physically any more than his +lieutenant; if he had been, Knox could hardly have handled him so +conveniently. The pressure of the sergeant's chest upon his backbone had +a tendency to tame him; but he was trying to get at some weapon +concealed upon his person. Knox had his pockets under command, and took +two revolvers from them, which he thrust into his breast. He had his +sabre dangling by the tassel knot at his right wrist, while he held the +reins with his left hand. His right was at liberty to seize the pistols. + +He hurried his horse to the place where the guards had the six prisoners +in charge. There he hurled his victim to the ground, and ordered the men +to look out for him, and not let him escape, if they had to put a bullet +through him. The sentinels were all mounted; and, as the last prisoner +had been disarmed, there was no danger that he would run away. + +Knox returned to his command; but, as he expressed it, "the fun had all +gone out of the guerillas," and it was hardly necessary to drag out any +more of them, for they were all as tame as sick kittens. The men had +secured about a dozen of them, taking them to the guard-house, as they +called the locality of the captives. The major had followed up the +movement, and he could not refrain from laughing at the novel tactics of +the first sergeant. + +He directed Knox to fall back with his men, and sent Deck to the captain +to drive the remaining freebooters before him. The ruffians moved before +them at the order of the officer. They were halted in the middle of the +square, and there disarmed, those who had not thrown away their weapons. +While the commander was observing this ceremony, a trooper rode up, and +saluted him. + +"A message from Captain Truman," said the cavalryman as he did so. + +"What is it?" demanded the major, fearful that the second company had +been attacked by a superior force, and needed a re-enforcement. + +"A messenger came from a place called Plain Hill, saying that a band of +mounted men was approaching the village, and they feared the place would +be plundered," replied the messenger. "Captain Truman has just marched +for the place, leaving only a guard at the camp." + +"All right; his action is approved, and I hope he will get there in +season to capture the enemy, as we have done here," replied Major Lyon, +as he looked about him for Colonel Coffee and Mr. Elbroon. "Where is the +colonel, Dexter?" + +"He is looking over the prisoners as they bring them in," replied Deck. + +The major rode over to him. Most of the prisoners were tame and +submissive; but the fire-eater and his lieutenant were figuratively at +swords' points: and it was fortunate for one or both of them that they +had been disarmed, for the former had pitched into the latter with his +fists, and the guards had been obliged to pull them apart. + +"That Captain Stinger wanted to be sent to Congress before the war; but +the people wouldn't do it. He is a politician, and a mischievous cur," +said the colonel, when he saw the major at his side. + +"Put him in irons, or tie his arms behind him, Styles," said the +commander, addressing the sergeant of the guard, "if he don't behave +himself. I have a message from the camp, Colonel Coffee," continued he, +turning to the magnate of Greeltop. "Where is Plain Hill, sir?" + +"Five miles to the south of us, Major; a village about the size of +Greeltop. Any news from there?" inquired the colonel with decided +interest. + +"Captain Truman, of our second company, whom I left at the camp, has had +a message from the place, to the effect that a band of guerillas were +approaching the place; and he marched at once with all his company but a +camp-guard." + +"Good!" exclaimed the magnate. + +"Heaven be praised!" added the reverend gentleman with a gun in his +hand. "It is a mercy that your company was at hand." + +"Good! I say," almost shouted Captain Stinger. "Heaven be praised that +Vinegold is getting there! Our prayers will all go the same way!" + +The fire-eater was near enough to hear what the major said. + +"I only hope he will burn every house in the place," added the captain. +"There is not such another nest of traitors in Kentucky, unless Greeltop +is the other." + +"Who is Vinegold, Captain Stinger?" asked the commander. + +"Major Vinegold is a man after my own heart," answered the prisoner. + +"If he is your friend, you will be likely to see him before morning," +added the major, as he turned away. + +The prisoners were placed in the centre of the united company, and +marched to the camp just as the darkness was beginning to gather on the +landscape. All the people in Greeltop were in the roads, and greeted the +soldiers with applause and cheers as they marched by them. The officers +and most of the privates were loaded with bouquets on the way. + +Several times the magnate, who returned to the camp with the troopers, +began to tell the commander something about Plain Hill; but the cheers +he was obliged to acknowledge prevented him from giving attention, and +the subject was delayed to another time. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIV + +THE RE-ENFORCEMENT FOR PLAIN HILL + + +It was not strange that the loyal people of Greeltop were grateful to +their deliverers. Reports of similar occurrences within twenty or thirty +miles of them had fully informed them of the nature of such raids, +doubtless with many exaggerations; but they had every reason to expect +more severe treatment than most other places, for the residents were +Unionists to a greater extent than in other villages in that section. +The magnate was an intensely loyal citizen, and he had largely built up +the place. + +Colonel Coffee was a Kentuckian, born in the county where he now lived; +but he had not amassed his million there. His father had been a planter, +and left a moderate fortune to his children at his death. With his share +the colonel had gone to New York, and embarked in business. This had led +him to China, where he had made his million when he was fifty. He +retired, purchased the plantation which had been his father's, and +another. He built the elegant mansion where he now resided. + +His partner, equally wealthy, had retired at the same time, and had +purchased another, five miles from it. He had married the sister of the +colonel, and they had always been strong friends. The China merchant had +built up Greeltop, and his brother-in-law had done the same for Plain +Hill. Both of them had lived on the other side of the globe a large +portion of their lives; and when they saw the American flag at the port +of Hong-Kong, it meant more to them than if they had seen it every day +of their existence. One of the effects of foreign travel, or a foreign +residence, is to make American citizens love their own country all the +more. + +The influence of these two men, with the liberal expenditure of their +money, had built up the villages, and increased the population of the +surrounding region, so that they were in condition to establish a city +government, which is done on a small number of inhabitants in the South. +This was the substance of what Colonel Coffee wished to tell the +commander of the squadron of cavalry; especially that Mr. Hasbrook, the +magnate of Plain Hill, was his brother-in-law. + +Both of them were loyal men; and their example, as well as their +positive efforts, had kept alive the Union sentiment of the +surroundings. This loyalty of the people had aroused the enmity of the +Secessionists of the neighboring counties. They were in especial danger +when the guerillas and partisan hordes began their work of pillage and +outrage. + +The people of each of these places had raised a small Home Guard. The +magnates had provided them with excellent arms, and they served rather +as a police than as a military body. Most of the young men had gone into +the army on one side or the other; and fifty men in both villages was +the most they could organize. For two weeks the inhabitants had been +dreading a raid; and day and night mounted patrolmen had surrounded both +places. Probably the existence of the body of Home Guards had had some +influence in preventing an assault. + +The column of cavalrymen reached the camp, and the prisoners were +disposed of. Colonel Coffee was very anxious to obtain further +information in regard to the raid upon Plain Hill. Lieutenant Blenks was +in charge of the camp, with only ten men; for the first company was not +far distant, and there was no considerable body of Confederate troops +within twenty-five miles of the village, according to the best +information to be obtained. + +"What do you know about this attack upon Plain Hill, Lieutenant?" +demanded Major Lyon, as the officer saluted him on his arrival. + +"Very little," replied the lieutenant, as he took a paper from his +pocket, and handed it to the commander. "This note was brought here by a +negro, who had run his horse all the way, I judged by the looks of the +animal." + +"'The enemy are down upon us--within four miles of us.--HASBROOK,'" the +major read from the paper, which was not a sealed letter. "It is +addressed to you, Colonel Coffee," he added, as he turned it over and +saw the name on the outside. + +"It has come to the right place," replied the magnate. + +"Who is Hasbrook?" asked the commander; for he had not yet heard the +story of Plain Hill. + +"He is my brother-in-law, standing in about the same relation to Plain +Hill that I do to Greeltop." + +"The negro that brought the paper is still here," said the lieutenant. + +The man was sent for at the request of the colonel. Major Lyon directed +Captain Gordon to have all the horses fed, and to let the men have their +suppers as soon as possible. Captain Truman had marched with nearly the +whole of his company half an hour before, and must be near his +destination by this time. The major and his companions had dismounted, +and retired to the headquarters tent. + +"It is you who have brought this message, is it, Clover?" asked Colonel +Coffee, as the man was shown into the tent by a sentinel. "This man is +Hasbrook's steward," he added, turning to the commander. + +He was a mulatto of rather dark shade, was well-dressed, and looked like +an intelligent person. + +"I brought the paper, sir," replied Clover. "Mr. Hasbrook sent me over +with it, and told me to carry it to your house; but when I came to this +camp I asked the soldier in front about it, and he sent for the +officer. When I found the camp was of a Union company, I asked the +captain to read the note, and he did so." + +"You did well, Clover; to have gone to my house would have delayed the +relief," added the magnate. + +"The company started off at full gallop, and I stopped to see you," +continued the steward. + +"But what do you know about the approach of the guerillas, Clover?" +asked the colonel impatiently. + +"I don't know anything, sir. One of the Home Guards came to the mansion +with the news that the guerillas were coming, and he sent me off with +the best horse in the stable. I run him all the way, and I hope I have +not hurt him." + +"No matter if you have. If the second company is like the first, they +will bag the whole of the villains," said the colonel. + +"The Home Guard were all mounted and gathering in the square when I +left. They said there was a hundred men coming down on the village," +Clover concluded. + +Major Lyon had ordered supper for his party to be brought to his tent. +It was camp-fare, but he invited the colonel and the clergyman to join +him. + +"Do you suppose there is any danger of another invasion of Greeltop +to-night from the north, Colonel Coffee?" asked the major, as the party, +including Deck, were hastily disposing of the meal. + +"Certainly not. I am of the opinion that the two raids upon our villages +were planned to take place at the same time, so that neither of them +could send its Home Guard to the assistance of the other. Your coming, +Major Lyon, was most opportune." + +"It so happens. Dexter, tell Captain Gordon to detail ten men from his +company to remain in the camp under command of Lieutenant Blenks, and +have the rest of his men ready to march as soon as they have finished +their supper," said Major Lyon. + +"Then you propose to go to Plain Hill, Major?" asked the colonel. + +"I have no doubt Captain Truman has force enough to protect the place; +but I desire to capture as many of the ruffians as possible," replied +the major. "Who is the captain of your Home Guard?" + +"I am," replied the colonel with a smile. + +"Then I wish you would order them to this camp, and relieve my men of +the duty of guarding our prisoners." + +"It shall be done at once. Mr. Elbroon, will you attend to this matter?" + +"Certainly. Do you go to Plain Hill, Colonel?" replied the clergyman. + +"I desire to look after the safety of my sister and her children." + +"And I need the assistance of the colonel to show me the way, and point +out the localities in the town," added the major. + +Mr. Elbroon mounted his horse, and hastened to the armory of the local +force. The first company had formed in the parade. Colonel Coffee had +taken a fresh horse while near his residence. The commander and his +orderly mounted their horses. + +"Lieutenant," said the major, addressing the officer of the camp, "it is +remotely possible that this place may be attacked in my absence with the +company. If such should be the case, you will make a bonfire on the +knoll the other side of the road, and I think we shall be able to see +it. Have it ready to light whether it is needed or not." + +The horses had been watered and fed, and they were in fair condition, +though they had been on the march all day. The commander led off at a +smart gallop, and the company kept up with him. Life Knox was in +temporary command of the second platoon. The column moved too rapidly +for any connected conversation, and in half an hour was approaching +Plain Hill. + +"What can that mean, Colonel?" asked the major, as they reached the top +of a hill, where a brilliant light suddenly flashed upon them. "Can it +be that the ruffians are burning the houses." + +"Possibly; I don't know: but they have not yet fired Hasbrook's mansion, +for I can see it on the top of Plain Hill," replied Colonel Coffee; and +his tones indicated the anxiety he felt. + +"You know the place, and perhaps you can tell from the direction where +the fire is located," added the commander. + +"It appears to be right in the square." + +"And what and where is the square?" + +"The village is just the counterpart of Greeltop; for Hasbrook and +I laid it out together. You can see his mansion on the top of the hill. +The square is on the level in front of it, with the houses all around +it." + +"Then perhaps they are burning these houses," suggested the major. + +"I think not. There is not volume enough in the blaze for a burning +house, much less for several of them." + +"And where is the road by which the guerillas will or have arrived at +the place?" + +"It comes in on the east end of Plain Hill, behind Hasbrook's house. I +think they would burn his mansion first; but they cannot approach it in +the rear with horses. There are about thirty men in the Home Guard here, +and there will be a fight before any houses are burned," said the +colonel very decidedly. + +The column descended the hill from which the light of the fire had been +seen, and dashed up another, which brought them into the village. Then +it was ascertained that a bonfire was blazing in the square, and that +the houses were all safe. + +"Who comes there?" demanded a man with a musket in his hand, as the +company reached a broad avenue which appeared to be the principal +street of the village. + +"Friends!" returned the major. + +"Who is it?" demanded the colonel. + +"Walkall," replied the man, who evidently recognized the magnate of +Greeltop. + +"All right, Walkall; this is another company of United States cavalry. +Where are the enemy?" + +"Behind Mr. Hasbrook's mansion. They have halted there; but we are all +ready for them." + +"Where is the company of cavalry which must have arrived an hour or two +since?" inquired the major. + +"I don't know just where the troopers are now; we turned over everything +to Captain Truman, and he is managing the matter," replied Walkall. "He +stationed me here to report if an enemy came in on the Greeltop road." + +Captain Gordon had been ordered to halt the company. Deck was sent with +the sentinel to find the captain of the second company, and the first +was to remain at the corner. They followed the road leading to the home +of the magnate, which crossed the principal avenue of the village, and +came to another, parallel to it, along the rear of the square. At this +point they were challenged; and it could be seen by the light of the +fire that sentinels were stationed all along this street. + +"Who comes there?" demanded the sentinel. + +"Messenger from the major of the squadron, directed to find Captain +Truman." + +"Can't pass here," added the sentinel decidedly. + +"Where is Captain Truman?" asked Deck. + +"I don't know no more'n the dead." + +At this moment a trooper rode up, and recognized the messenger. + +"All right, Deck; you can pass, but the other man cannot," said the +cavalryman, when he had stated his business. + +Deck thought the captain had adopted some singular strategy. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXV + +SURROUNDED AND TOTALLY DEFEATED + + +"What does all this mean, Withers?" asked Deck, as the trooper conducted +him inside of the grounds of Mr. Hasbrook. + +"I don't know anything at all about it; you must ask Captain Truman," +replied Withers with a laugh. "He's got a big head, and I reckon he +knows what he is about. But how come you over here, Deck?" + +"I came over with the first company; and I have a message for Captain +Truman from Major Lyon." + +"All right; and he will be glad to see you. He will not let a single +person come up the hill, or a single one go from the house. He's got +some strategy on his brain." + +"Have you seen the enemy, Withers?" + +"I have not; but the cap'n appears to know jest where they are." + +They followed the handsome driveway up a hill; and the light of the +bonfire enabled Deck to get a view of the surroundings. When they had +reached an elevation of about fifty feet, the summit was a plain, very +nearly level, in the middle of which stood the mansion. This was +evidently where the name of "Plain Hill" came from. Before the door of +the house was a mounted sentinel, and there were others on the hill. + +The elevation was sprinkled over with large trees, and at the west end +of the mansion was a considerable grove of them. In front of this shady +place there were two sentinels. + +"Advance, friends, and give the countersign." + +"Barcreek," replied Withers. "This is Deck Lyon, with a message from the +major." + +One of the sentinels conducted them to the heart of the grove, where +they found the whole of the second company. The arrival of the messenger +was duly reported to the captain, and he was ushered into his presence. +He was seated on his horse, ready to move at any moment. + +"Is that you, Deck? I am glad to see you, though this visit is very +unexpected," said he. + +"The first company is down at the avenue in front of the square, with +Major Lyon, who desires a report from you in regard to the condition of +things in this village, and especially as to the locality of the enemy," +continued the orderly, delivering the substance of his message. + +"Come with me, Deck, and I will give you my report verbally; for I +cannot see to write," added the captain, as he led the orderly to the +south side of the hill. "Do you see that little knoll not fifty rods +from us?" + +"I see it." + +"It is covered with trees, and the enemy are concealed among them. One +of my men has been over there, and reports about seventy-five guerillas, +and I am very anxious to bag the whole of them." + +"No doubt of it, as we did the other company of them." + +"I supposed you would; but I haven't the news. Just now, Deck, this +company in front of us are waiting for the one that swooped down on +Greeltop. I suppose they were to clean out that village, and then come +over here and finish up this one." + +"It was not much of a swoop; and we have every one of them, from Captain +Stinger down to the vagabonds who followed the mounted men on foot, +under guard at the camp. But how do you know that they are waiting for +the other gang, Captain?" asked Deck. + +"I captured a messenger of the leader of this horde, scared him out of +his wits, and he told me all about it," replied the captain with a +smile. "The only thing that I am afraid of now, is that the leader of +this gang will not bring on his men, so that I can bag them. Mr. +Hasbrook, who lives in this house, has sent down for some one who will +take the place of this messenger, and inform the captain of the ruffians +that a force of mounted men has just come up the Greeltop road." + +"I will do that myself," replied Deck promptly. + +"You, Deck!" exclaimed the captain. + +"I should like the fun of it; and I could not do my country any greater +service than in helping out the capture of that gang of +ruffians." + +"But it would cost you your life if you were discovered. They would hang +you like a dog. No, no, Deck! Your father would never forgive me if I +sent you on such a perilous mission." + +"My father believes that I ought to do my duty; and I believe so also. +Where is the fellow you captured? I might borrow his clothes, and they +wouldn't know me from Jeff Davis in the dark. Let me hear the fellow +speak, and I can imitate his voice; and I will promise to come back all +right," pleaded Deck, who was very anxious to undertake the mission. + +"No, no, Deck! I cannot send you on such an errand. I gave Mr. Hasbrook +a pass to go down among the Home Guards, and he may find a man to do the +business," said the captain very decidedly. "If he does not find some +one who is better acquainted with this vicinity than you are, Deck, we +will look the matter over again, if your father will consent that you +should go." + +"If the bagging of those ragamuffins depends upon your plan, I think he +will consent," added Deck. + +"But you must return to your father with my report, and I will explain +to you my plan to capture the enemy." + +When he had done so, Deck returned to the great road, and reported +everything to the commander, informing him why the movement was +delayed. He stated the plan of the captain to send a man disguised as +the messenger or spy of Captain Vinegold. The major did not like the +plan, and utterly refused to have his son undertake such an enterprise. + +The young soldier was disappointed; but he did not rebel against the +decision of the commander, who was also his father. Later in his career, +when he had a couple of gold bars on his shoulders, he rendered some +important service of this kind; for he was even more fond of an +adventure than the average boy. + +"Colonel Coffee, is there any other road than the one by which we have +come from Greeltop that leads to the south?" asked the major, after he +had digested the report sent by his son. + +"There is, and a better one than that by which the ruffians came," +replied the magnate. "As nearly as I can make it out, the enemy are +concealed not more than half a mile from this cross-road; but you could +not get to them without going at least three miles." + +"That is not a great distance for mounted men. Is the distance about +three miles?" + +"It will not vary half a mile from it." + +"Have you your watch with you, Dexter?" asked the major. + +"I have, sir; I never leave it in the baggage-wagons," replied Deck. + +"What time is it now?" continued the major, as he consulted his own +time-keeper. + +"Ten minutes past seven," answered Deck, after he had held his watch up +so that he could see the face by the light of the fire in the square. + +"About right. How long will it take you to reach the spot on the hill +where the second company is posted?" + +"Ten minutes." + +The major had taken a piece of paper from his pocket, and by this time +had written something on it to which he had signed his name. + +"Is there any open place at the end of the hill where the captain is, to +the right of the grove?" + +"I don't know; I did not look about me much," replied Deck. + +"The west end of the hill is a bare rock," interposed Colonel Coffee. + +"On this paper I have written, 'Obey the verbal orders sent by Dexter +Lyon.' That is all, except the captain's name and mine. Tell Captain +Truman to prepare a fire, a large fire, on the rock at the west end of +the hill, ready to light. Can the enemy see what he is doing, Colonel?" + +"Not at all; the fire in the square sends no light beyond the grove." + +"In precisely thirty minutes from the time you reach the top of the +hill, Dexter, tell him to march upon the enemy, leaving a man to light +the fire ten minutes later. Let him attack them vigorously," said the +commander. "Do you understand it all, Dexter?" + +"Understood." + +"Then hasten to the hill." + +The major had taken the colonel and his son one side for this +conference, so that no other person should know anything about it. Deck +ran his horse; and this time the sentinel did not stop him, for his +character was known. As a last word, his father had directed him to +remain with the captain. + +Before the messenger reached the hill, the company was moving along the +road to the west, with the magnate as a guide. By his advice the company +marched slowly for the first half-mile, in order to avoid making any +noise which the enemy could hear. Then they galloped at the best speed +of the horses. At the end of twenty minutes they were near the knoll on +which the guerillas were concealed. The major ordered the captain to +halt here, and they waited for further events. + +They had not long to wait, for the fire on the rock flashed up with a +brilliant light; and it was evident that Mr. Hasbrook had assisted in +preparing the fuel, and that no little pitch and light wood had been +used. Captain Truman, as the illumination indicated, was in the road, +and marching to the south; while the first company had halted, facing to +the north. + +"Mr. Hasbrook must have robbed his woodshed of most of its contents," +said the captain, who had taken Deck under his wing. + +"All his house and stable servants were lugging wood to the rock; and +they must have piled up about a cord of it, Captain," replied Deck. + +"The fire not only serves as a signal, but it gives no little light on +the subject before the house," replied the officer. + +Skirmishers had been sent out ahead. The place where the enemy was +concealed was a wooded knoll, according to the description given of it +by a scout; and by the light of the huge bonfire it was in plain sight. +Twenty men had been sent out on this service under Sergeant Fronklyn. +When he came near enough, he opened fire upon the knoll, the object +being to draw the enemy from his covert. + +"The fire sheds its light for the benefit of the enemy as well as for +our side of the question. Like an impartial judge, it serves both +parties alike," said the captain. "The skirmishers will bring them out, +and that is all we want. So far as our operations are concerned, I think +the enemy must be in perfect darkness; for I have not permitted a single +one of the town's people to come this side of the square." + +"They have waked up now," added Deck, as a volley of musketry came out +of the grove on the knoll, which was quite near the road. + +"I hope they will not recognize the uniforms of the skirmishers," +continued the captain. + +The main body of the company had slowly followed the advance all the +time, and the crisis of the affair was at hand. The captain reasoned +that the guerillas could not be aware of the combination made by the +major, or they would have retired; and they were likely to mistake the +skirmishers for the Home Guards, if they did not make out the uniform. +After the volley from the knoll, the enemy made a sortie from his +position, and rushed furiously upon the assailants, firing at will all +the time. + +Captain Truman gave the order for his men to charge the foe; and the +troopers darted ahead at full gallop. They could see the uniforms of the +skirmishers, and for a moment there was a hot hand-to-hand fight, for +the enemy were plucky enough for the occasion. But if the company could +distinguish the uniforms of the skirmishers, so also could the enemy by +this time; and they could see that the road between them and the village +was full of troopers. + +Major Vinegold could not help seeing that he was caught in a trap, and +his bugle sounded the recall. Doubtless his guerillas saw the situation +also; for they were not slow to obey the signal. They detached +themselves from the conflict, and retreated. The voice of Captain Gordon +could be heard above the din; and the enemy was headed to the south at a +gallop. Doubtless the guerilla commander was astounded to find himself +confronted by a company of cavalry in full uniform, instead of a band of +Home Guards. + +The signal-fire on the rock of Plain Hill had done its perfect work, and +the first company had moved forward slowly, with skirmishers in front, +and soon came upon the retreating enemy. Captain Gordon charged upon +them, and they fought bravely on both sides. Doubtless the commander of +the guerillas was appalled when he discovered another company in front +of him. Probably he was outnumbered three to one. He fought like a tiger +himself, but his men began to break into the fields on either side. The +officers soon stopped this means of escape by extending their lines +entirely around their hapless foe. + +"Do you surrender?" demanded Captain Truman. + +"Never!" yelled Major Vinegold, in front of his company. + +Deck dashed at him as he made this emphatic reply, and their sabres +flashed fire. Ceph made one of his furious leaps, and the commander of +the enemy sank to the ground as his rider struck a desperate blow. + +"We surrender!" shouted the second in command. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVI + +MAJOR VINEGOLD OF THE GUERILLAS + + +The second in command of the guerillas was a more sensible man than +Major Vinegold, who appeared to be a fire-eater, like Captain Stinger; +and when resistance was utterly hopeless, he announced his surrender in +a voice loud enough to be heard a long distance, and neither side struck +a blow afterwards. Deck Lyon appeared to have delivered the last +sabre-stroke; for as soon as his lieutenant saw his chief topple from +his horse, he uttered the words that ended the conflict. + +"You gave the finishing touch to the fight, Deck!" exclaimed Captain +Truman in a loud voice, so that all the company could hear him. + +"Three cheers for Deck Lyon!" shouted an enthusiastic trooper; and they +were given. + +Of course Deck blushed; for he was a reasonably modest young man. He had +not made up his mind to do "a big thing," but simply to do his duty; +and he was doing it like any other member of the company when his +opportunity was presented to him. Major Vinegold was the bone and sinew +of the fight on his own side; and when the young cavalryman saw him +disengaged for the moment, he urged his horse forward to cross swords +with the commander. + +Ceph's training seemed to be a part of his being; and when he was +pressed up to him, he rose on his hind-legs for a spring. An indifferent +rider could not have kept his seat in the saddle; but Deck had trained +himself and his steed to the manoeuvre, and each supplemented the +action of the other. The rider leaned forward, grasping the forward horn +of his saddle with the rein hand, while he kept his sabre in readiness +for use in the right. In the present instance, while the animal was in +this flying attitude, Deck struck at the head of his adversary; and the +shock carried him from his saddle to the ground. + +"Ceph deserves three cheers quite as much as or more than I do," said +the young rider, while the company were waiting for further orders. + +"He would not appreciate the compliment," replied the captain. + +"Halloo, Artie!" exclaimed Deck, as his brother dashed into the presence +of the captain. + +"Bully for you, Deck! We heard the company cheering you; what mighty +deed have you done now?" demanded the messenger, for such he was, from +the major, as he saluted Captain Truman. "It is Major Lyon's order that +you proceed to disarm the prisoners, as they are doing on the other +side." + +"Order understood," replied the captain. "You can tell the major that +Deck gave the finishing touch to the fight, Artie;" and he described the +fall of Major Vinegold, and the immediate surrender that followed. + +Artie hastened back to headquarters; and the captain formed the +guerillas near him in line, and took from them all their arms. The major +had ordered a large fire to be started at the side of the road, and the +scene was already well lighted. The prisoners had been formed in line in +the same manner on the south end of the battle-field, and their arms +taken from them. On the road, and beside it, seven men lay silent and +motionless; and perhaps there were others on the wooded knoll. + +The squadron had not had a man killed, though about a dozen had been +wounded; and Dr. Farnwright and his assistants were attending to them. +Among the prisoners the men were binding up the wounds of each other. +The form of the fire-eater commander lay where he had fallen; and Deck +saw him move as he was about to report to the major. He felt more +interest in this man than in the others; and he dismounted from his +horse. + +Ceph was as fond of his master as a kitten of the child that pets it; +and there was no need to secure him, for he would have stood there all +night. Deck was even more devoted to him than he was to pretty Miss Kate +Belthorpe, which is saying a great deal. He had fed him on dainties, and +made him his constant associate in the months when he was drilling. Ceph +was very intelligent, and seemed to understand his master's humor as +though he had been human. + +The rider went to the fallen guerilla. He was not dead. He had been +stunned, and was just coming to his senses. By the light of the fire +Deck could see that his head was covered with blood. Looking closer, he +found that his left ear had been smitten entirely from the side of his +head. The sabre appeared to have struck him sideways, giving the blow +that stunned him, and then glancing off so as to take the ear with it. +If the blade had struck him fairly, it would have split his head open; +as it was, his brains were saved at the expense of his ear. + +"How do you feel, Major Vinegold?" asked Deck in sympathetic tones,--for +a wounded or dying enemy was no longer a foe to him,--as he took the +handkerchief of the sufferer from his pocket and bound it over his head, +so as to cover the wound. + +"I'm better, I think," replied the major, as Deck assisted him to sit +up. "Have we licked that Home Guard?" + +"There is no Home Guard here. You have been fighting with a squadron of +United States cavalry, and your successor in command has surrendered." + +"Strivers is a coward!" + +"We were nearly three to your one; and your lieutenant was no coward, +but a brave fellow, and a sensible man." + +"Who's we?" + +"I am a loyal soldier, and the one that gave you your wound," replied +Deck. + +"You!" exclaimed the major. "Then what are you doing with me now?" + +"I am trying to assist you, if I can. I have bound up your wound, and +our surgeon will soon be able to attend to your case." + +"Give me a drink of brandy out of your flask," added the wounded man +faintly. + +"I have no brandy; but here is some fresh water; for I filled my canteen +at Plain Hill," answered Deck, as he presented it to his patient. + +He drank freely; and perhaps it did as much good as the same quantity of +brandy would have done. + +"I feel better now," said the major, as Deck assisted him to his feet. +"Where is my horse?" + +"But you are a prisoner now. If you will give me your sword and pistols, +it will save you from any further annoyance," replied Deck. + +"A prisoner!" he exclaimed bitterly. "Strivers surrendered." + +"To three times his own force; and he could not do otherwise," added the +Union soldier very gently. "He would have murdered his own men if he +had fought any longer." + +"I cannot help myself," continued the major, as he unbuckled his sword +and gave it to his conqueror. "I did not do it. Strivers did it; and I +am much obliged to you, young man, for striking me down before it was +done." + +Dr. Farnwright dressed his wound; Deck found his horse, then assisted +him to mount, and placed him in the rank with the other prisoners. The +dead were ranged in a field, with two more found on the wooded knoll. + +"Well, Dexter, you have been playing the hero again, have you?" said the +major, when he rode that way. + +"Ceph and I have been doing our duty, and Major Vinegold is the +sufferer, father. I couldn't help doing what I did," replied Deck. + +"And he ended the fight!" exclaimed Captain Truman with enthusiasm. "If +he had his proper reward he would be made a captain on the spot." + +"A captain at eighteen!" exclaimed the major, who was somewhat +conservative in his ideas. "There is no authority here to make him a +captain, even if it were desirable, as I think it is not. Don't spoil +the boy, Captain Truman." + +While they were waiting for the arrangements for the march to be +completed, Deck told his father about his interview with the fallen +leader of the guerillas; and it ended in introducing the major to him. + +"I am sorry you are wounded, my friend," said the commander. + +"Why do you call me your friend?" asked the prisoner, apparently +astonished. "You are not just our idea of the Yankees." + +"On the battle-field we are enemies, and we do our best to kill each +other; but here we are friends, and we do what we can to save each +other. I am glad my son assisted you." + +"He is the one-eared man's friend for life, except on the battle-field, +though he struck off that ear." + +It was quite evident that he was not such a fire-eater as Captain +Stinger. But the column was ready to move. It was but a short distance +to the village; and when they arrived there, they found the fire in the +square burning even more vigorously, and all the houses lighted. They +were received with tremendous cheers, in which the ladies joined, while +they flourished their handkerchiefs in the absence of so many of the +male population. + +The news of the battle and victory had been brought to the village by +Colonel Coffee; and the two magnates had provided a bountiful collation +for the soldiers, though it was in the small hours of the night. The +troopers were petted by the ladies, and Deck was a hero of the first +magnitude. The work of the day and night was finished, and the people +and the soldiers slept after their fatigues, while a portion of the Home +Guards guarded the approaches to the place. + +The prisoners were marched under a strong guard to a railroad town, and +sent to Louisville. All was quiet at Greeltop and Plain Hill, and no +further attempt was made to molest these places. The discipline +administered to the guerillas was severe enough to put an end to their +operations in that part of the State. The squadron remained three weeks +in camp at Greeltop, occasionally sending out detachments where they +were needed. + +Later in the year it was ordered to Munfordville, where a sharp little +battle was fought, in which the Riverlawn Cavalry had an opportunity to +meet again the old enemies, the Texan Rangers. It was while at this +place that a huge envelope came by special messenger, with other orders, +directed to "Mr. Dexter Lyon, Care of Major Noah Lyon." His father gave +it to him, and Deck opened it, wondering with all his might what it +could contain. It was a lieutenant's commission, and the recipient would +not have been more astonished if the sky had fallen upon him. + +The two captains in the squadron had been the principal movers in +obtaining the commission. They had a paper recommending it signed by +every member of the first company; but the business had been done while +the command was waiting at Greeltop, fearful that Major Lyon would veto +or discountenance the measure for family reasons, or because he thought +his son was too young to be "A Lieutenant at Eighteen." With the +commission came a furlough for two weeks, to enable him to prepare for +his new duties. + +Deck was astonished and confounded to find himself an officer; for he +had never sought such a position, and honestly and sincerely believed +that he had done only his duty, like every other private in the ranks. +He was overwhelmed with congratulations by the members of both +companies, and especially by the two captains. + +"It hasn't come any sooner than I expected it, Deck," said Life Knox, as +he grasped the hand of the young cavalryman. + +"I don't think I have deserved it," protested the recipient of the +commission. + +"Ask Miss Kate Belthorpe," chuckled the Kentuckian, _par excellence_. + +"She is not a military character, and don't understand the matter," +replied Deck with a very heavy blush. + +"She stuck to't that you ought to been made cap'n o' the fust company. I +didn't think so then, but I think you ought to be made a lieutenant as +you have been." + +"I don't see why I was selected for this place; for I am appointed +second lieutenant of the first company, in place of poor Gilder." + +"Everybody else can see it if you can't. Who brought Major Vinegold to +the ground? Who served Lieutenant Makepeace in the same way? And"-- + +"Ceph!" exclaimed Deck. "Don't say anything more about it, and we will +call it square;" but the tall and wiry cavalry sergeant was as fond of +Deck as though he had been his own son. + +The young lieutenant procured his uniform at Munfordville; and when he +put it on, the whole of both companies cheered him, and the ladies +declared that he was the handsomest officer in the squadron, which was, +perhaps, saying much, for Captain Gordon was a remarkably good-looking +man. + +Deck was going home for a part of his furlough; for his father wished +him to do so. He talked with his son full two hours before his +departure, giving him instructions about the plantation, and especially +about the family of Captain Titus Lyon, then a prisoner somewhere. + +Of course his mother and sisters were extremely glad to see him, and +were prouder of his uniform than he was himself. Levi Bedford actually +hugged him; and the fifty-one negroes treated him as though he had been +an angel from the realms of bliss. Orly Lyon still desired to join the +Riverlawn Cavalry; and even Sandy had been so far cured of his Secession +tendencies as to be of the same mind. + +Mrs. Noah had provided for the family of her husband's brother. She +consented, in the absence of her husband, that her boys should enlist on +the right side. The major had sent money for her to return to her father +in New Hampshire, if she still desired to go there. When Lieutenant Lyon +returned to Munfordville, Sandy and Orly went with him, wearing the +uniform of the squadron. + +During his absence the command had been ordered to Somerset; and about a +month later had their first experience in a considerable battle at Mill +Spring. But our story for the present is told; and another volume will +relate the experience of Deck as an officer. His service was not +confined to his duty in command of a platoon, but an abundant +opportunity was given him to gratify to some extent his inborn desire +for stirring adventure in the service of his country, as will be found +in "A LIEUTENANT AT EIGHTEEN." + + + * * * * * + + + OLIVER OPTIC'S BOOKS + + ALL-OVER-THE-WORLD LIBRARY + + Illustrated Per Volume $1.25 + + + FIRST SERIES + + + A MISSING MILLION or The Adventures of Louis Belgrave + + A MILLIONAIRE AT SIXTEEN or The Cruise of the Guardian-Mother + + A YOUNG KNIGHT ERRANT or Cruising in the West Indies + + STRANGE SIGHTS ABROAD or A Voyage in European Waters + + + SECOND SERIES + + + THE AMERICAN BOYS AFLOAT or Cruising in the Orient + + THE YOUNG NAVIGATORS or The Foreign Cruise of the Maud + + UP AND DOWN THE NILE or Young Adventurers in Africa + + ASIATIC BREEZES or Students on the Wing (in press) + + +"The bare announcement of a new series of books by Oliver Optic will +delight boys all over the country. When they farther learn that their +favorite author proposes to 'personally conduct' his army of readers on +a grand tour of the world, there will be a terrible scramble for +excursion tickets--that is, the opening volume of the 'Globe Trotting +Series.' Of one thing the boys may be dead sure, it will be no tame, +humdrum journey, for Oliver Optic does not believe that fun and +excitement are injurious to boys, but, on the contrary, if of the right +kind he thinks it does them good. Louis Belgrave is a fortunate lad, +because, at the age of sixteen, he was the possessor of a cool million +of dollars. No one, not even a young boy, can travel without money, as +our author well knows, therefore he at once provided a liberal supply. +Louis is a fine young fellow with good principles and honor, so he can +be trusted to spend his million wisely. But he does not have entirely +smooth sailing. In the first place he has a rascally step-father whom he +had to subjugate, a dear mother to protect and care for, and the missing +million to find before he could commence his delightful travels. They +are all accomplished at last, and there was plenty of excitement and +brave exploits in the doing of them, as the boy readers will find. The +cover design shows many things--a globe, the Eiffel tower, mountains, +seas, rivers, castles and other things Louis will see on his +travels.--_Current Review._" + +LEE AND SHEPARD Publishers Boston + + + _OLIVER OPTIC'S BOOKS._ + + THE BLUE AND THE GRAY + +Illustrated. With Emblematic Dies. Each volume bound in Blue and Gray. +Per volume, $1.50. + + * * * * * + + AFLOAT + + + TAKEN BY THE ENEMY + + WITHIN THE ENEMY'S LINES + + A VICTORIOUS UNION + + ON THE BLOCKADE + + STAND BY THE UNION + + FIGHTING FOR THE RIGHT + + * * * * * + + ON LAND + + + BROTHER AGAINST BROTHER + + IN THE SADDLE + + A LIEUTENANT AT EIGHTEEN + + _Other volumes in preparation_ + + * * * * * + +The opening of a new series of books from the pen of Oliver Optic is +bound to arouse the highest anticipation in the minds of boy and girl +readers. There never has been a more interesting writer in the field of +juvenile literature than Mr. W. T. Adams, who under his well-known +pseudonym, is known and admired by every boy and girl in the country, +and by thousands who have long since passed the boundaries of youth, yet +who remember with pleasure the genial, interesting pen that did so much +to interest, instruct and entertain their younger years. The present +volume opens "The Blue and the Gray Series," a title that is +sufficiently indicative of the nature and spirit of the series, of which +the first volume is now presented, while the name of Oliver Optic is +sufficient warrant of the absorbing style of narrative. "Taken by the +Enemy," the first book of the series, is as bright and entertaining as +any work that Mr. Adams has yet put forth, and will be as eagerly +perused as any that has borne his name. It would not be fair to the +prospective reader to deprive him of the zest which comes from the +unexpected, by entering into a synopsis of the story. A word, however, +should be said in regard to the beauty and appropriateness of the +binding, which makes it a most attractive volume.--_Boston Budget._ + +"Taken by the Enemy" has just come from the press, an announcement that +cannot but appeal to every healthy boy from ten to fifteen years of age +in the country. "No writer of the present day," says the Boston +_Commonwealth_, "whose aim has been to hit the boyish heart, has been as +successful as Oliver Optic. There is a period in the life of every +youth, just about the time that he is collecting postage-stamps, and +before his legs are long enough for a bicycle, when he has the Oliver +Optic fever. He catches it by reading a few stray pages somewhere, and +then there is nothing for it but to let the matter take its course. +Relief comes only when the last page of the last book is read; and then +there are relapses whenever a new book appears until one is safely on +through the teens."--_Literary News._ + + + + +Transcriber's Note. The punctuation and spelling are as printed in the +original publication. The oe ligature has been expanded. The character +Vinegold is referred to as both 'Captain' and 'Major' in the original +version of this book. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of In The Saddle, by Oliver Optic + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40430 *** |
