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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The war of the Carolinas, by Meredith
-Nicholson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The war of the Carolinas
-
-Author: Meredith Nicholson
-
-Illustrator: Stephen Reid
-
-Release Date: June 9, 2022 [eBook #68275]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
- produced from images made available by the HathiTrust
- Digital Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WAR OF THE
-CAROLINAS ***
-
-
-
-
-
-_UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME_
-
- THE PRIMROSE PATH. _Mrs. Oliphant._
- THOMPSON’S PROGRESS. _C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne._
- LOVE AND MR. LEWISHAM. _H. G. Wells._
- THE FOOD OF THE GODS. _H. G. Wells._
- KIPPS. _H. G. Wells._
- CYNTHIA’S WAY. _Mrs. A. Sidgwick._
- CLARISSA FURIOSA. _W. E. Norris._
- RAFFLES. _E. W. Hornung._
- FRENCH NAN. _Agnes & Egerton Castle._
- SPRINGTIME. _H. C. Bailey._
- MOONFLEET. _J. Meade Falkner._
- WHITE FANG. _Jack London._
- MAJOR VIGOUREUX. “_Q._”
- EIGHT DAYS. _R. E. Forrest._
- THE TRANSLATION OF A SAVAGE. _Sir G. Parker._
- A LAME DOG’S DIARY. _S. Macnaughtan._
- FORTUNE OF CHRISTINA M’NAB. _S. Macnaughtan._
- THE RECIPE FOR DIAMONDS. _C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne._
- OLD GORGON GRAHAM. _George Horace Lorimer._
- MRS. GALER’S BUSINESS. _W. Pett Ridge._
- THE DUENNA OF A GENIUS. _M. E. Francis._
- THE OCTOPUS. _Frank Norris._
- THE PIT. _Frank Norris._
- MATTHEW AUSTIN. _W. E. Norris._
- HIS GRACE. _W. E. Norris._
- MARCELLA. _Mrs. Humphry Ward._
- THE INTRUSIONS OF PEGGY. _Anthony Hope._
- THE PRINCESS PASSES. _C. N. & A. M. Williamson._
-
-_And Many Other Equally Popular Copyright Novels._
-
-_NELSON’S LIBRARY._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: She loosed his horse’s rein, and led it rapidly towards
-her own horse.]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- The War
- of the
- Carolinas
-
- By
- MEREDITH
- NICHOLSON
-
- THOMAS NELSON
- AND SONS]
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Oh, for you that I never knew,
- Only in dreams that bind you!--
- By Spring’s own grace I shall know your face
- When under the may I find you!
-
- _H. C. Bunner._
-
-
-
-
-TO YOU AT THE GATE.
-
-
-There was a daisy-meadow, that flowed brimming to the stone wall at
-the roadside, and on the wooded crest beyond a lamp twinkled in a
-house round which stole softly the unhurried, eddyless dusk. You stood
-at the gate, your arms folded on the top bar, your face uplifted,
-watching the stars and the young moon of June. I was not so old but
-that I marked your gown of white, your dark head, your eyes like the
-blue of mid-ocean sea-water in the shadow of marching billows. As
-my step sounded you looked up startled, a little disdainful, maybe;
-then you smiled gravely; but a certain dejection of attitude, a sweet
-wistfulness of lips and eyes, arrested and touched me; and I stole
-on guiltily, for who was I to intrude upon a picture so perfect, to
-which moon and stars were glad contributors? As I reached the crown of
-the road, where it dipped down to a brook that whispered your name, I
-paused and looked back, and you waved your hand as though dismissing me
-to the noisy world of men.
-
-In other Junes I have kept tryst with moon and stars beside your gate,
-where daisies flow still across the meadow, and insect voices blur the
-twilight peace; but I have never seen again your house of shadows among
-the trees, or found you dreaming there at the gate with uplifted face
-and wistful eyes. But from the ridge, where the road steals down into
-the hollow with its fireflies and murmuring water, I for ever look back
-to the star- and moon-hung gate in the wall, and see your slim, girlish
-figure, and can swear that you wave your hand.
-
- KATONAH, _June 30, 1908_. M. N.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- I. TWO GENTLEMEN SAY GOOD-BYE 7
-
- II. THE ABSENCE OF GOVERNOR OSBORNE 29
-
- III. THE JUG AND MR. ARDMORE 40
-
- IV. DUTY AND THE JUG 55
-
- V. MR. ARDMORE OFFICIALLY RECOGNIZED 71
-
- VI. MR. GRISWOLD FORSAKES THE ACADEMIC LIFE 89
-
- VII. AN AFFAIR AT THE STATE HOUSE 100
-
- VIII. THE LABOURS OF MR. ARDMORE 115
-
- IX. THE LAND OF THE LITTLE BROWN JUG 129
-
- X. PROFESSOR GRISWOLD TAKES THE FIELD 138
-
- XI. TWO LADIES ON A BALCONY 149
-
- XII. THE EMBARRASSMENTS OF THE DUKE OF BALLYWINKLE 160
-
- XIII. MISS DANGERFIELD TAKES A PRISONER 175
-
- XIV. A MEETING OF OLD FRIENDS 191
-
- XV. THE PRISONER IN THE CORN-CRIB 209
-
- XVI. THE FLIGHT OF GILLINGWATER 228
-
- XVII. ON THE ROAD TO TURNER’S 237
-
- XVIII. THE BATTLE OF THE RACCOON 246
-
- XIX. IN THE RED BUNGALOW 255
-
- XX. ROSÆ MUNDI 269
-
- XXI. GOOD-BYE TO JERRY DANGERFIELD 281
-
-
-
-
-THE WAR OF THE CAROLINAS.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-TWO GENTLEMEN SAY GOOD-BYE.
-
-
-“If anything really interesting should happen to me I think I should
-drop dead,” declared Ardmore, as he stood talking to Griswold in the
-railway station at Atlanta. “I entered upon this life under false
-pretenses, thinking that money would make the game easy, but here I am,
-twenty-seven years old, stalled at the end of a blind alley, with no
-light ahead; and to be quite frank, old man, I don’t believe you have
-the advantage of me. What’s the matter with us, anyhow?”
-
-“The mistake we make,” replied Griswold, “is in failing to seize
-opportunities when they offer. You and I have talked ourselves hoarse a
-thousand times planning schemes we never pull off. We are cursed with
-indecision, that’s the trouble with us. We never see the handwriting
-on the wall, or if we do, it’s just a streak of hieroglyphics, and we
-don’t know what it means until we read about it in the newspapers. But
-I thought you were satisfied with the thrills you got running as a
-reform candidate for alderman in New York last year. It was a large
-stage, and the lime-light struck you pretty often. Didn’t you get
-enough? No doubt they’d be glad to run you again.”
-
-Ardmore glanced hastily about and laid his hand heavily on his friend’s
-shoulder.
-
-“Don’t mention it--don’t think of it! No more politics in mine. The
-world may go hang if it waits for me to set it right. What I want is
-something different, a real adventure--something with spice in it. I
-have bought everything money can buy, and now I’m looking for something
-that can’t be tagged with a price.”
-
-“There’s your yacht and the open sea,” suggested Griswold.
-
-“Sick of it! Sick to death of it!”
-
-“You’re difficult, old man, and mighty hard to please. Why don’t you
-turn explorer and go in for the North Pole?”
-
-“Perfectly bully! I’ve thought of it a lot, but I want to be sure I’ve
-cleaned up everything else first. It’s always up there waiting--on ice,
-so to speak--but when it’s done once there will be nothing left. I want
-to save that for the last call.”
-
-“You said about the same thing when we talked of Thibet that first
-evening we met at the University Club, and now the Grand Lama sings in
-all the phonographs, and for a penny you can see him in a kinetoscope,
-eating his luncheon. I remember very well that night. We were facing
-each other at a writing-table, and you looked up timidly from your
-letter and asked me whether there were two _g’s_ in aggravate; and I
-answered that it depended on the meaning--one _g_ for a mild case, two
-for a severe one--and you laughed, and we began talking. Then we found
-out how lonesome we both were, and you asked me to dinner, and then
-took me to that big house of yours up there in Fifth Avenue and showed
-me the pictures in your art gallery, and we found out that we needed
-each other.”
-
-“Yes, I had needed you all right!” And Ardmore sniffed dolefully, and
-complained of the smoke that was drifting in upon them from the train
-sheds. “I wish you wouldn’t always be leaving me. You ought to give
-up your job and amuse me. You’re the only chap I know who doesn’t
-talk horse or automobile or yacht, or who doesn’t want to spend whole
-evenings discussing champagne vintages; but you’re too good a man to be
-wasted on a college professorship. Better let me endow an institution
-that will make you president--there might be something in that.”
-
-“It would make me too prominent, so that when we really make up our
-minds to go in for adventures I should be embarrassed by my high
-position. As a mere lecturer on ‘The Libelling of Sunken Ships’ in a
-law school, I’m the most obscure person in the world. And for another
-thing, we couldn’t risk the scandal of tainted money. It would be nasty
-to have your great-grandfather’s whisky deals with the Mohawk Indians
-chanted in a college yell.”
-
-The crowd surged past them to the Washington express, and a waiting
-porter picked up Griswold’s bags.
-
-“Wish you wouldn’t go. I have three hours to wait,” said Ardmore,
-looking at his watch, “and the only Atlanta man I know is out of town.”
-
-“What did you say you were going to New Orleans for?” demanded
-Griswold, taking out his ticket and moving towards the gate. “I thought
-you exhausted the Creole restaurants long ago.”
-
-“The fact is,” faltered Ardmore, colouring, “I’m looking for some one.”
-
-“Out with it--out with it!” commanded his friend.
-
-“I’m looking for a girl I saw from a car window day before yesterday. I
-had started north, and my train stopped to let a south-bound train pass
-somewhere in North Carolina. The girl was on the south-bound sleeper,
-and her window was opposite mine. She put aside the magazine she was
-reading and looked me over rather coolly.”
-
-“And you glanced carelessly in the opposite direction and pulled down
-your shade, of course, like the well-bred man you are----” interrupted
-Griswold, holding fast to Ardmore’s arm as they walked down the
-platform.
-
-“I did no such thing. I looked at her and she looked at me. And then my
-train started----”
-
-“Well, trains have a way of starting. Does the romance end here?”
-
-“Then, just at the last moment, she winked at me!”
-
-“It was a cinder, Ardy. The use of soft coal on railways is one of the
-saddest facts of American transportation. I need hardly remind you,
-Mr. Ardmore, that nice girls don’t wink at strange young men. It isn’t
-done!”
-
-“I would have you know, Professor, that this girl is a lady.”
-
-“Don’t be so irritable, and let me summarize briefly on your own
-hypothesis. You stared at a strange girl, and she winked at you, safe
-in the consciousness that she would never see you again. And now you
-are going to New Orleans to look for her. She will probably meet you
-at the station, with her bridesmaids and wedding cake all ready for
-you. And you think this will lead to an adventure--you defer finding
-the North Pole for this--for this? Poor Ardy! But did she toss her
-card from the window? Why New Orleans? Why not Minneapolis, or Bangor,
-Maine?”
-
-“I’m not an ass, Grissy. I caught the name of the sleeper--you know
-they’re all named, like yachts and tall buildings--the name of her car
-was the _Alexandra_. I asked our conductor where it was bound for, and
-he said it was the New Orleans car. So I took the first train back, ran
-into you here, and that’s the whole story to date.”
-
-“I admire your spirit. New Orleans is much pleasanter than the polar
-ice, and a girl with a winking eye isn’t to be overlooked in this vale
-of tears. What did this alleviating balm for tired eyes look like, if
-you remember anything besides the wicked wink?”
-
-“She was bareheaded, and her hair was wonderfully light and fluffy,
-and it was parted in the middle and tied behind with a black ribbon
-in a great bow. She rested her cheek on her hand--her elbow on the
-window-sill, you know--and she smiled a little as the car moved off,
-and winked--do you understand? Her eyes were blue, Grissy, big and
-blue--and she was perfectly stunning.”
-
-“There are winks and winks, Ardy,” observed Griswold, with a judicial
-air. “There is the wink inadvertent, to which no meaning can be
-attached. There is the wink deceptive, usually given behind the back
-of a third person, and a vulgar thing which we will not associate with
-your girl of the _Alexandra_. And then, to be brief, there is the wink
-of mischief, which is observed occasionally in persons of exceptional
-bringing up. There are moments in the lives of all of us when we lose
-our grip on conventions--on morality, even. The psychology of this
-matter is very subtle. Here you are, a gentleman of austerely correct
-life; here is a delightful girl, on whom you flash in an out-of-the-way
-corner of the world. And she, not wholly displeased by the frank
-admiration in your eyes--for you may as well concede that you stared at
-her----”
-
-“Well, I suppose I did look at her,” admitted Ardmore reluctantly.
-
-“Pardonably, no doubt, just as you would look at a portrait in a
-picture gallery, of course. This boarding-school miss, who had never
-before lapsed from absolute propriety, felt the conventional world
-crumble beneath her as the train started. She could no more have
-resisted the temptation to wink than she could have refused a caramel
-or an invitation to appear as best girl at a church wedding. Thus
-wireless communication is established between soul and soul for an
-instant only, and then you are cut off for ever. Perhaps, in the next
-world, Ardy----”
-
-Griswold and Ardmore had often idealized themselves as hopeless
-pursuers of the elusive, the unattainable, the impossible; or at least
-Ardmore had, and Griswold had entered into the spirit of this sort
-of thing for the joy it gave Ardmore. They had discussed frequently
-the call of soul to soul--the quick glance passing between perfect
-strangers in crowded thoroughfares--and had fruitlessly speculated
-as to their proper course in the event the call seemed imperative. A
-glance of the eye is one thing, but it is quite another to address a
-stranger and offer eternal friendship. The two had agreed that, while,
-soul-call or no soul-call, a gentleman must keep clear of steamer
-flirtations, and avoid even the most casual remarks to strange young
-women in any circumstances, a gentleman of breeding and character
-may nevertheless follow the world’s long trails in search of a
-never-to-be-forgotten face.
-
-The fact is that Ardmore was exceedingly shy, and a considerable
-experience of fashionable society had not diminished this shortcoming.
-Griswold, on the other hand, had the Virginian’s natural social
-instinct, but he suffered from a widely-diffused impression that much
-learning had made him either indifferent or extremely critical where
-women are concerned.
-
-Ardmore shrugged his shoulders and fumbled in his coat pockets as
-though searching for ideas. An austere composure marked his countenance
-at all times, and emphasized the real distinction of his clean-cut
-features. His way of tilting back his head and staring dreamily into
-vacancy had established for him a reputation for stupidity that was
-wholly undeserved.
-
-“Please limit the discussion to the present world, Professor.”
-
-When Ardmore was displeased with Griswold he called him Professor, in
-a withering tone that disposed of the academic life.
-
-“We shall limit it to New Orleans or the universe, as you like.”
-
-“I’m disappointed in you, Grissy. You don’t take this matter in the
-proper spirit. I’m going to find that girl, I tell you.”
-
-“I want you to find her, Ardy, and throw yourself at her feet. Be it
-far from me to deprive you of the joy of search. I thoroughly admire
-your resolute spirit. It smacks of the old heroic times. Nor can I
-conceal from you my consuming envy. If a girl should flatter me with a
-wink, I should follow her thrice round the world. She should not elude
-me anywhere in the Copernican system. If it were not the nobler part
-for you to pursue alone, I should forsake my professorship and buckle
-on my armour and follow your standard--
-
- With the winking eye
- For my battle-cry.”
-
-And Griswold hummed the words, beating time with his stick, much to
-Ardmore’s annoyance.
-
-“In my ignorance,” Griswold continued, “I recall but one allusion to
-the wink in immortal song. If my memory serves me, it is no less a soul
-than Browning who sings:
-
- ‘All heaven, meanwhile, condensed into one eye
- Which fears to lose the wonder, should it wink.’
-
-You seem worried, Ardy. Does the wink press so heavily, or what’s the
-matter?”
-
-“The fact is, I’m in trouble. My sister says I’ve got to marry.”
-
-“Which sister?”
-
-“Mrs. Atchison. You know Nellie? She’s a nice girl and she’s a good
-sister to me, but she’s running me too hard on this marrying business.
-She’s going to bring a bunch of girls down to Ardsley in a few days,
-and she says she’ll stay until I make a choice.”
-
-Griswold whistled.
-
-“Then, as we say in literary circles, you’re up against it. No wonder
-you’re beginning to take notice of the frolicsome boarding-school girl
-who winks at the world. I believe I’d rather take chances myself with
-that amiable sort than marry into your Newport transatlantic set.”
-
-“Well, one thing’s certain, Grissy. You’ve got to come to Ardsley and
-help me out while those people are there. Nellie likes you; she thinks
-you’re terribly intellectual and all that, and if you’ll throw in a
-word now and then, why----”
-
-“Why, I may be able to protect you from the crafts and assaults of your
-sister. You seem to forget, Ardy, that I’m not one of your American
-leisure class. I’m always delighted to meet Mrs. Atchison, but I’m a
-person of occupations. I have a consultation in Richmond to-morrow,
-then me for Charlottesville. We have examinations coming on, and while
-I like to play with you, I’ve positively got to work.”
-
-“Not if I endow all the chairs in the university! You’ve not only got
-to come, but you’re going to be there the day they arrive.”
-
-Thomas Ardmore, of New York and Ardsley, struck his heavy stick--he
-always carried a heavy stick--smartly on the cement platform in the
-stress of his feeling. He was much shorter than Griswold, to whom he
-was deeply attached--for whom he had, indeed, the frank admiration
-of a small boy for a big brother. He sometimes wondered how fully
-Griswold entered into the projects of adventure which he, in his
-supreme idleness, planned and proposed; but he himself had never been
-quite ready to mount horse or shake out soil, and what Griswold had
-said about indecision rankled in his heart. He was sorry now that he
-had told of this new enterprise to which he had pledged himself, but
-he grew lenient towards Griswold’s lack of sympathy as he reflected
-that the quest of a winking girl was rather beneath the dignity of a
-gentleman wedded not merely to the law, but to the austere teaching
-profession as well. In his heart he forgave Griswold, but he was all
-the more resolved to address himself stubbornly to his pursuit of
-the deity of the car _Alexandra_, for only by finding her could he
-establish himself in Griswold’s eyes as a man of action, capable of
-carrying through a scheme requiring cleverness and tact.
-
-Ardmore was almost painfully rich, but the usual diversions of the
-wealthy did not appeal to him; and having exhausted foreign travel, he
-spent much time on his estate in the North Carolina hills, where he
-could ride all day on his own land, and where he read prodigiously in a
-huge library that he had assembled with special reference to works on
-piracy, a subject that had attracted him from early youth.
-
-It was this hobby that had sealed his friendship with Griswold, who
-had relinquished the practice of law, after a brilliant start in his
-native city of Richmond, to accept the associate professorship of
-admiralty in the law department of the University of Virginia. Marine
-law had a particular fascination for Griswold, from its essentially
-romantic character. As a law student he had read all the decisions in
-admiralty that the libraries afforded, and though faithfully serving
-the university, he still occasionally accepted retainers in admiralty
-cases of unusual importance. His lectures were constantly attended by
-students in other departments of the university for sheer pleasure in
-Griswold’s racy and entertaining exposition of the laws touching the
-libelling of schooners and the recovery of jettisoned cargoes. Henry
-Maine Griswold was tall, slender, and dark, and he hovered recklessly,
-as he might have put it, on the brink of thirty. He stroked his thin
-brown moustache habitually, as though to hide the smile that played
-about his humorous mouth--a smile that lay even more obscurely in his
-fine brown eyes. He did violence to the academic traditions by dressing
-with metropolitan care, gray being his prevailing note, though his
-scarfs ventured upon bold colour schemes that interested his students
-almost as much as his lectures. The darkest fact of his life--and one
-shared with none--was his experiments in verse. From his undergraduate
-days he had written occasionally a little song, quite for his own
-pleasure in versifying, and to a little sheaf of these things in
-manuscript he still added a few verses now and then.
-
-“Don’t worry, Ardy,” he was saying to his friend as “all aboard” was
-called, “and don’t be reckless. When you get through looking for the
-winking eye, come up to Charlottesville, and we’ll plan _The True Life
-of Captain Kidd_ that is some day going to make us famous.”
-
-“I’ll wire you later,” replied Ardmore, clinging to his friend’s hand
-a moment after the train began to move. Griswold leaned out of the
-vestibule to wave a last farewell to Ardmore, and something very kind
-and gentle and good to see shone in the lawyer’s eyes. He went into the
-car smiling, for he called Ardmore his best friend, and he was amused
-by his last words, which were always Ardmore’s last in their partings,
-and were followed usually by telegrams about the most preposterous
-things, or suggestions for romantic adventures, or some new hypothesis
-touching Captain Kidd and his buried treasure. Ardmore never wrote
-letters; he always telegraphed, and he enjoyed filing long, mysterious,
-and expensive messages with telegraph operators in obscure places where
-a scrupulous ten words was the frugal limit.
-
-Griswold lighted a cigar and opened the afternoon Atlanta papers in
-the smoking compartment. His eye was caught at once by imperative
-headlines. It is not too much to say that the eye of the continent was
-arrested that evening by the amazing disclosure, now tardily reaching
-the public, that something unusual had occurred at the annual meeting
-of the Cotton Planters’ Association at New Orleans on the previous day.
-Every copy-reader and editor, every paragrapher on every newspaper in
-the land, had smiled and reached for a fresh pencil as a preliminary
-bulletin announced the passing of harsh words between the Governor
-of North Carolina and the Governor of South Carolina. It may as well
-be acknowledged here that just what really happened at the Cotton
-Planters’ Convention will never be known, for this particular meeting
-was held behind closed doors; and as the two governors were honoured
-guests of the association, no member has ever breathed a word touching
-an incident that all most sincerely deplored. Indeed, no hint of it
-would ever have reached the public had it not been that both gentlemen
-hurriedly left the convention hall, refused to keep their appointments
-to speak at the banquet that followed the business meetings, and
-were reported to have taken the first trains for their respective
-capitals. It was whispered by a few persons that the Governor of South
-Carolina had taken a fling at the authenticity of the Mecklenburg
-Declaration of Independence; it was rumoured in other quarters that
-the Governor of North Carolina was the aggressor, he having--it was
-said--declared that a people (meaning the freemen of the commonwealth
-of South Carolina) who were not intelligent enough to raise their own
-hay, and who, moreover, bought that article in Ohio, were not worth
-the ground necessary for their decent interment. It is not the purpose
-of this chronicle either to seek the truth of what passed between the
-two governors at New Orleans, or to discuss the points of history and
-agriculture raised in the statements just indicated. As every one
-knows, the twentieth of May (or was it the thirty-first?), 1775, is
-solemnly observed in North Carolina as the day on which the patriots of
-Mecklenburg County severed the relations theretofore existing between
-them and his Majesty King George the Third. Equally well known is the
-fact that in South Carolina it is an article of religious faith that on
-that twentieth day of May, 1775, the citizens of Mecklenburg County,
-North Carolina, cheered the English flag and adopted resolutions
-reaffirming their ancient allegiance to the British crown. This
-controversy and the inadequacy of the South Carolina hay crop must
-be passed on to the pamphleteers, with such other vexed questions as
-Andrew Jackson’s birthplace--more debated than Homer’s, and not to be
-carelessly conceded to the strutting sons of Waxhaw.
-
-Griswold read of the New Orleans incident with a smile, while several
-fellow-passengers discussed it in a tone of banter. One of them, a
-gentleman from Mississippi, presently produced a flask, which he
-offered to the others, remarking, “As the Governor of North Carolina
-said to the Governor of South Carolina,” which was, to be sure,
-pertinent to the hour and the discussion, and bristling with fresh
-significance.
-
-“They were both in Atlanta this morning,” said the man with the flask,
-“and they would have been travelling together on this train if they
-hadn’t met in the ticket office and nearly exploded with rage.”
-
-The speaker was suddenly overcome with his own humour, and slapped his
-knee and laughed; then they all laughed, including Griswold.
-
-“One ought to have taken the lower berth and one the upper to make it
-perfect,” observed an Alabama man. “I wonder when they’ll get home.”
-
-“They’ll probably both walk to be sure they don’t take the same train,”
-suggested a commercial traveller from Cincinnati, who had just come
-from New Orleans. “Their friends are doing their best to keep them
-apart. They both have a reputation for being quick on the trigger.”
-
-“Bosh!” exclaimed Griswold. “I dare say it’s all a newspaper story.
-There’s no knife-and-pistol nonsense in the South any more. They’ll
-both go home and attend to their business, and that will be the last of
-it. The people of North Carolina ought to be proud of Dangerfield; he’s
-one of the best governors they ever had. And Osborne is a first-class
-man, too, one of the old Palmetto families.”
-
-“I guess they’re both all right,” drawled the Mississippian, settling
-his big black hat more firmly on his head. “Dangerfield spoke in our
-town at the state fair last year, and he’s one of the best talkers I
-ever heard.”
-
-Therefore, as no one appeared to speak for the governor of South
-Carolina, the drummer volunteered to vouch for his oratorical gifts,
-on the strength of an address lately delivered by Governor Osborne in
-a lecture course at Cincinnati. Being pressed by the Mississippian, he
-admitted that he had not himself attended the lecture, but he had heard
-it warmly praised by competent critics.
-
-The Mississippian had resented Griswold’s rejection of the possibility
-of personal violence between the governors, and wished to return to the
-subject.
-
-“It’s not only themselves,” he declared, “but each man has got the
-honour of his state to defend. Suppose, when they met in the railway
-office at Atlanta this morning, Dangerfield had drawed his gun. Do you
-suppose, gentlemen, that if North Carolina had drawed South Carolina
-wouldn’t have followed suit? I declare, young man, you don’t know what
-you’re talking about. If Bill Dangerfield won’t fight, I don’t know
-fightin’ blood when I see it.”
-
-“Well, sir,” began the Alabama man, “my brother-in-law in Charleston
-went to college with Osborne, and many’s the time I’ve heard him say
-that he was sorry for the man who woke up Charlie Osborne. Charlie--I
-mean the governor, you understand--is one of these fellows who never
-says much, but when you get him going he’s terrible to witness. Bill
-Dangerfield may be Governor of North Car’line, and I reckon he is, but
-he ain’t Governor of South Car’line, not by a damned good deal.”
-
-The discussion had begun to bore Griswold, and he went back to his
-own section, having it in mind to revise a lecture he was preparing
-on “The Right of Search on the High Seas.” It had grown dark, and the
-car was brilliantly lighted. There were not more than half a dozen
-other persons in his sleeper, and these were widely scattered. Having
-taken an inventory of his belongings to be sure they were all at hand,
-he became conscious of the presence of a young lady in the opposite
-section. In the seat behind her sat an old coloured woman in snowy cap
-and apron, who was evidently the young lady’s servant. Griswold was
-aware that this dusky duenna bristled and frowned and pursed her lips
-in the way of her picturesque kind as he glanced at her, as though
-his presence were an intrusion upon her mistress, who sat withdrawn
-to the extreme corner of her section, seeking its fullest seclusion,
-with her head against a pillow, and the tips of her suède shoes showing
-under her gray travelling skirt on the farther half of the section.
-She twirled idly in her fingers a half-opened white rosebud--a fact
-unimportant in itself, but destined to linger long in Griswold’s
-memory. The pillow afforded the happiest possible background for her
-brown head, her cheek bright with colour, and a profile clear-cut,
-and just now--an impression due, perhaps, to the slight quiver of her
-nostrils and the compression of her lips--seemingly disdainful of the
-world. Griswold hung up his hat and opened his portfolio; but the
-presence of the girl suggested Ardmore and his ridiculous quest of the
-alluring blue eye, and it was refreshing to recall Ardmore and his
-ways. Here was one man, at least, in this twentieth century, at whose
-door the Time Spirit might thump and thunder in vain.
-
-The black woman rose and ministered to her mistress, muttering in
-kind monotone consolatory phrases from which “chile” and “honey”
-occasionally reached Griswold’s ears. The old mammy produced from a
-bag several toilet bottles, a fresh handkerchief, a hand mirror, and a
-brush, which she arranged in the empty seat. The silver trinkets glowed
-brightly against the blue upholstery.
-
-“Thank you, Aunt Phœbe, I’m feeling much better. Just let me alone now,
-please.”
-
-The girl put aside the white rose for a moment and breathed deeply
-of the vinaigrette, whose keen, pungent odour stole across the aisle
-to Griswold. She bent forward, took up the hand mirror, and brushed
-the hair away from her forehead with half a dozen light strokes. She
-touched her handkerchief to the cologne flask, passed it across her
-eyes, and then took up the rose again and settled back with a little
-sigh of relief. In her new upright position her gaze rested upon
-Griswold’s newspapers, which he had flung down on the empty half of
-his section. One of them had fallen open, and lay with its outer page
-staring with the bold grin of display type.
-
- TWO GOVERNORS AT WAR.
-
- WHAT DID THE GOVERNOR OF NORTH CAROLINA SAY TO THE GOVERNOR OF SOUTH
- CAROLINA?
-
-The colour deepened in the girl’s face; a slight frown gathered in
-her smooth forehead; then she called the coloured woman, and a brief
-colloquy followed between them. In a moment Griswold was addressed in a
-tone and manner at once condescending and deferential.
-
-“If yo’ please, suh, would yo’ all ’low my mistus t’ look at yo’
-newspapahs?”
-
-“Certainly. Take them along.”
-
-And Griswold, recalled from a passage in his lecture that dealt
-with contraband munitions of war, handed over the newspapers, and
-saw them pass into the hands of his fellow-passenger. He had read
-the newspapers pretty thoroughly, and knew the distribution of
-their contents, so that he noted with surprise the girl’s immediate
-absorption in the telegrams from New Orleans relating to the difficulty
-between the two governors.
-
-As she read she lost, he thought, something of her splendid colour,
-and at one point in her reading her face went white for a moment, and
-Griswold saw the paper wrinkle under the tightening grasp of her hands.
-The tidings from New Orleans had undoubtedly aroused her indignation,
-which expressed itself further in the rigid lines of her figure as
-she read, and in the gradual lifting of her head, as though with some
-new resolution. She seemed to lose account of her surroundings, and
-several times Griswold was quite sure that he heard her half exclaim,
-“Preposterous! Infamous!”
-
-When she had finished the New Orleans telegrams she cast the offending
-newspapers from her; then, recalling herself, summoned the black woman,
-and returned them to Griswold, the dusky agent expressing the elaborate
-thanks of her race for his courtesy. The girl had utterly ignored
-Griswold, and she now pulled down the curtain at her elbow with a snap
-and turned her face away from him.
-
-Professor Griswold’s eyes wandered repeatedly from his manuscript
-to the car ceiling, then furtively to the uncompromisingly averted
-shoulder and head of the young lady, then back to his lecture notes,
-until he was weary of the process. He wished Ardmore were at hand, for
-his friend would find here a case that promised much better than the
-pursuit to which he had addressed himself. The girl in this instance
-was at least a self-respecting lady, not given to flirtations with
-chance travellers, and the brown eyes, of which Griswold had caught one
-or two fleeting glimpses, were clearly not of the winking sort. The
-attendance of the black mammy distinguished the girl as a person of
-quality, whose travels were stamped with an austere propriety.
-
-Her silver toilet articles testified to an acquaintance with the
-comforts if not the luxuries of life. The alligator-hide suit-case
-thrust under the seat bore the familiar label of a Swiss hotel where
-Griswold had once spent a week, and spoke of the girl’s acquaintance
-with an ampler world. When Phœbe had brought it forth, the initials “B.
-O.” in small black letters suggested Baltimore and Ohio to Griswold’s
-lazy speculations, whereupon he reflected that while Baltimore was
-plausible, the black servant eliminated Ohio; and as every Virginian
-knows every other Virginian, he tried to identify her with Old Dominion
-family names beginning with O, but without result. He finally concluded
-that, while her name might be Beatrice or Barbara, it could not be
-Bessie, and he decided that very likely the suit-case belonged to her
-brother Benjamin, in whom he felt no interest whatever.
-
-He went out to supper, secured the only remaining table for two, and
-was giving his order when the young lady appeared. She had donned her
-hat, and as she stood a moment in the entrance, surveying the line
-of tables, her distinction was undeniable. There were but two vacant
-places in the car, one facing Griswold, the other across the aisle at a
-larger table where three men were engaged in animated discussion. The
-girl viewed the prospect with evident disappointment as the waiter drew
-out the vacant chair at Griswold’s table. She carried herself bravely,
-but wore still a triste air that touched Griswold’s sympathy. He rose,
-told the waiter that he would sit at the other table, and the girl
-murmured her thanks with a forlorn little smile as she took his seat.
-
-The appearance of Griswold aroused the Mississippian to a renewal of
-the discussion of the New Orleans incident. He was in excellent humour,
-and had carried to the car a quart bottle, which he pushed toward
-Griswold.
-
-“As the Governor of North Carolina said to the Governor of South
-Carolina----”
-
-“No, thank you,” and as he spoke Griswold’s eyes fell upon the girl,
-and he saw annoyance written fleetingly on her face.
-
-“You needn’t be afraid of that whisky. It’s all right,” the
-Mississippian protested.
-
-“I’m confident of that; but some other time, thank you.”
-
-“Well, sir,” the Mississippian declared, “after you left us a while
-ago we got to talking about Dangerfield and his trouble with Osborne.
-There’s something back of this rumpus. You see, if they lived in the
-same state you might account for a fierce rivalry between them. Both of
-’em, for example, might have the senatorial bee in their bonnets; but
-either one of ’em could make the senate any time he pleased. I guess
-they’re the two biggest men in the South right now. They’re too big to
-be touchy about any small matter; that’s why I reckon there’s something
-behind this little racket over there at New Orleans. No passing remark
-would send men off that way, so wild that they wouldn’t travel on the
-same train together. Why, gentlemen----”
-
-“Please pass the salt,” interposed Griswold.
-
-The Mississippian enjoyed the sound of his own voice, which boomed out
-above the noise of the train with broad effects of dialect that these
-types will not be asked to reproduce. Griswold’s eyes had again met
-those of the girl opposite, and there was, he felt, a look of appeal
-in them. The discussion distressed her, just as the telegrams from New
-Orleans in the afternoon papers had distressed her, and Griswold began
-at once to entertain his table companions with his views on a number of
-national political issues, that were as vital to Arizona or Wyoming as
-to the Carolinas. He told stories to illustrate his points, and told
-them so well that his three companions forgot the estrangement of the
-belligerent governors.
-
-Griswold ran on in the low, musical voice that distinguishes the
-cultivated Virginian in any company anywhere in the world, and the
-noisy loquacity of the Mississippian went down before him. He was so
-intent on holding their attention that his dishes were taken from him
-almost untouched. The others lingered until his coffee was brought.
-He was so absorbed that he failed to see the smile that occasionally
-passed over the girl’s face as some fragment of one of his stories
-found its way to her. He had undertaken to deflect the talk from a
-channel which had, it seemed, some painful association for her, but he
-had done more in unwittingly diverting her own thoughts by his droll
-humour. He did not cease until she had left the car, whereupon he
-followed his trio of auditors to the smoking compartment, and there
-suffered the Mississippian to hold uninterrupted sway.
-
-When he went back into the car at eleven o’clock he found the girl and
-her maid still sitting in their sections, though most of the other
-berths, including his own, had been made up. The train was slowing
-down, and wishing a breath of air before retiring, he went to the
-rear platform of the sleeper, which was the last car of the train.
-The porter had opened the door in the vestibule to allow the brakeman
-to run back with his torpedoes. The baggage car had developed a hot
-box, and jumping out, Griswold saw lanterns flashing ahead where the
-trainmen laboured with the sick wheel. The porter vanished, leaving
-Griswold alone. The train had stopped at the edge of a small town,
-whose scattered houses lay darkly against the hills beyond. The
-platform lamps of a station shone a quarter of a mile ahead. The
-feverish steel yielded reluctantly to treatment, and Griswold went
-forward and watched the men at work for a few minutes, then returned
-to the end of the train. He swung himself into the vestibule and
-leaned upon the guard rail, gazing down the track toward the brakeman’s
-lantern. Then he grew impatient at the continued delay and dropped
-down again, pacing back and forth in the road-bed behind the becalmed
-train. The night was overcast, with hints of rain in the air, and a
-little way from the rear lights it was pitch dark. Griswold felt sure
-that the train would not leave without the brakeman, and he was further
-reassured by the lanterns of the trainmen beside the baggage car.
-Suddenly, as he reached the car and turned to retrace his steps, a man
-sprang up, seemingly from nowhere, and accosted him.
-
-“I reckon y’u’re the gov’nor, ain’t y’u?”
-
-“Yes, certainly, my man. What can I do for you?” replied Griswold
-instantly.
-
-“I reckoned it was y’u when y’u fust come out on the platform. I’m
-app’inted to tell y’u, Gov’nor, that if y’u have Bill Appleweight
-arrested in South Car’lina, y’u’ll get something one of these days
-y’u won’t like. And if y’u try to find me y’u’ll get it quicker.
-Good-night, Gov’nor.”
-
-“Good-night!” stammered Griswold.
-
-The least irony had crept into the word governor as the man uttered
-it and slipped away into the darkness. The shadows swallowed him up;
-the frogs in the ditch beside the track chanted dolorously; then the
-locomotive whistled for the brakeman, whose lantern was already bobbing
-toward the train.
-
-As Griswold swung himself into the vestibule the girl who had borrowed
-his newspapers turned away hurriedly and walked swiftly before him to
-her section. The porter, who was gathering her things together, said,
-as she paused in the aisle by her seat,--
-
-“Beginnin’ to get ready, Miss Osbo’n. We’re gwine intu Columbia thirty
-minutes late all account dat hot box.”
-
-Griswold passed on to the smoking compartment and lighted a cigar.
-His acquaintances of the supper table had retired, and he was glad
-to be alone with his thoughts before the train reached Columbia. He
-dealt harshly with himself for his stupidity in not having associated
-the girl’s perturbation over the breach between the governor of North
-Carolina and the governor of South Carolina with the initials on her
-travelling bag; he had been very dull, but it was clear to him now that
-she was either the daughter or some other near relative of Governor
-Osborne. In a few minutes she would leave the train at Columbia, where
-the governor lived, and, being a gentleman, he would continue on his
-way to Richmond, and thence to the university, and the incident would
-be closed. But Griswold was a lawyer, and he had an old-fashioned
-Southern lawyer’s respect for the majesty of law. On the spur of
-curiosity or impulse he had received a threatening message intended for
-the governor of South Carolina, who, from the manner of the delivery
-of the message, had been expected on this train. Griswold argued that
-the man who had spoken to him had been waiting at the little station
-near which they had stopped, in the hope of seeing the governor; that
-the waiting messenger had taken advantage of the unexpected halt of the
-train; and, further, that some suggestion of the governor in his own
-appearance had deceived the stranger. He felt the least bit guilty at
-having deceived the man, but it was now clearly his duty to see that
-the governor was advised of the threat that had been communicated in so
-unusual a manner.
-
-He was pondering whether he should do this in person or by letter or
-telegram, when the rattle of the train over the switch frogs in the
-Columbia yards brought him to the point of decision.
-
-The porter thrust his head into the compartment.
-
-“Columbia, sah. Yo’ berth’s all ready, sah. Yo’ gwine t’ Richmond--yes,
-sah.”
-
-His hands were filled with the young lady’s luggage. The lettering on
-the suit-case seemed, in a way, to appeal to Griswold and to fix his
-determination.
-
-“Porter! Put my things off. I’ll wait here for the morning train.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE ABSENCE OF GOVERNOR OSBORNE.
-
-
-Griswold spent the night at the Saluda House, Columbia, and rose in
-the morning with every intention of seeing Governor Osborne, or some
-one in authority at his office, as soon as possible, and proceeding to
-Richmond without further delay. As he scanned the morning newspaper at
-breakfast he read with chagrin this item, prominently headlined:
-
- Governor Osborne, who was expected home from the Cotton Planters’
- Convention yesterday morning, has been unavoidably detained in
- Atlanta by important personal business. Miss Barbara Osborne arrived
- last night and proceeded at once to the governor’s mansion.
-
- Several matters of considerable importance await the governor’s
- return. Among these is the matter of dealing with the notorious Bill
- Appleweight. It is understood that the North Carolina officials are
- unwilling to arrest Appleweight, though his hiding-place in the hills
- on the border near Kildare is well known. Although he runs back and
- forth across the state line at pleasure, he is a North Carolinian
- beyond question, and it’s about time Governor Dangerfield took note
- of the fact. However, the governor of South Carolina may be relied on
- to act with his usual high sense of public duty in this matter.
-
-Professor Griswold was not pleased to learn that the governor was still
-absent from the capital. He felt that he deserved better luck after the
-trouble he had taken to warn the governor. His conscience had got the
-better of his comfort--he knew that, and he wrote a telegram to the law
-firm at Richmond with which he was consultant, asking that a meeting
-with certain clients arranged for to-day be deferred twenty-four
-hours. It was now Tuesday; he had no further lectures at the university
-until the following Monday, and after he had taken his bearings of
-Columbia, where it occurred to him he had not an acquaintance, he
-walked toward the capitol with a well-formed idea of seeing the
-governor’s private secretary--and, if that person appeared to be worthy
-of confidence, apprising him of the governor’s danger.
-
-Standing in the many-pillared portico of the capitol, Griswold turned
-to look down upon Columbia, a city distinguished to the most casual eye
-by streets an acre wide! And having an historical imagination and a
-reverence for the past, Griswold gave himself for a moment to Memory,
-hearing the tramp of armed hosts, and the thunder of cannon, and seeing
-flames leap again in the wake of battle. It was a glorious day, and the
-green of late May lay like a soft scarf upon the city. The sky held the
-wistful blue of spring. Griswold bared his head to the faint breeze,
-or perhaps unconsciously he saluted the bronze figure of Hampton, who
-rides for ever there at the head of his stubborn legion. He turned into
-the capitol with a little sigh, for he was a son of Virginia, and here,
-in this unfamiliar scene, the Past was revivified, and he felt the
-spell of things that were already old when he was born.
-
-It was not yet nine o’clock when he entered the governor’s office. He
-waited in the reception-room, adjoining the official chamber, but the
-several desks of the clerical staff remained unoccupied. He chafed a
-bit as time passed and no one appeared, for his north-bound train left
-at eleven, and he could not fairly be asked to waste the entire day
-here. He was pacing the floor, expecting one of the clerks to appear at
-any moment, when a man entered hurriedly, walked to the closed inner
-door, shook it impatiently, and kicked it angrily as he turned away. He
-was a short, thick-set man of thirty-five, dressed in blue serge, and
-his movements were quick and nervous. He growled under his breath and
-swung round upon Griswold as though to tax him with responsibility for
-the closed door.
-
-“Has no one been here this morning?” he demanded, glaring at the closed
-desks.
-
-“If you don’t count me I should answer no,” replied Griswold quietly.
-
-“Oh!”
-
-The two gentlemen regarded each other for a moment, contemptuous
-dislike clearly written on the smaller man’s face, Griswold
-half-smiling and indifferent.
-
-“I am waiting for the governor,” remarked Griswold, thinking to gain
-information.
-
-“Then you’re likely to wait some time,” jerked the other. “The whole
-place seems to be abandoned. I never saw such a lot of people.”
-
-“Not having seen them myself, I must reserve judgment,” Griswold
-remarked, and the blue serge suit flung out of the room.
-
-Presently another figure darkened the entrance, and the coloured
-servant whom Griswold had seen attending Miss Osborne on the train
-from Atlanta swept into the reception-room, and grandly ignoring his
-presence, sat down in a chair nearest the closed door of the inner
-chamber. Griswold felt that this was encouraging, as implying some link
-between the governor and his domestic household, and he was about to
-ask the coloured woman if she knew the business hours of the office
-when the closed door opened and Miss Osborne appeared on the threshold.
-The coloured woman rose, and Griswold, who happened to be facing the
-door when it swung open with such startling suddenness, stared an
-instant and bowed profoundly.
-
-“I beg your pardon, but I wish very much to see Governor Osborne or his
-secretary.”
-
-Miss Osborne, in white, trailing a white parasol in her hand, and with
-white roses in her belt, still stood half withdrawn inside the private
-office.
-
-“I am very sorry that Governor Osborne and his secretary are both
-absent,” she answered, and the two eyed each other gravely. Griswold
-felt that the brown eyes into which he looked had lately known tears;
-but she held her head high, with a certain defiance, even.
-
-“That is unfortunate. I stopped here last night on purpose to see him,
-and now I fear that I must leave”--and he smiled the Griswold smile,
-which was one of the secrets of his popularity at the university--“I
-must leave Columbia in a very few minutes.”
-
-“The office does not keep very early hours,” remarked the girl, “but
-some one will certainly be here in a moment. I am sorry you have had to
-wait.”
-
-She had not changed her position, and Griswold rather hoped she would
-not, for the door framed her perfectly, and the sunlight from the inner
-windows emphasized the whiteness of the snowy gown she wore. Her straw
-hat was shaped like a soldier’s campaign hat, with sides pinned up, the
-top dented, and a single feather thrust into the side.
-
-“It was not I,” said Griswold, “who so rudely shook the door. I beg
-that you will acquit me of that violence.”
-
-The girl did not, however, respond to his smile. She poked the floor
-with her parasol a moment, then raised her head and asked,--
-
-“Who was it, if you please?”
-
-“A gentleman with a brown beard, a red necktie, and a bad disposition.”
-
-“I thought as much,” she said, half to herself, and her eyes were
-bent again upon the point of her parasol, with which she was tracing
-a design in the rug. She lifted her head with the abruptness of quick
-decision, and looked straight at Griswold. The negress had withdrawn
-to the outer door, by which she sat with sphinx-like immovability.
-
-“I am Miss Osborne. Governor Osborne is my father. Would you mind
-telling me whether your business with my father is----”
-
-She hesitated, and her eyes met Griswold’s.
-
-“Miss Osborne, as I have no acquaintances here, let me introduce
-myself. My name is Griswold. My home is Charlottesville. Pardon me,
-but you and I were fellow-passengers from Atlanta yesterday evening.
-I am unacquainted with your father, and I have no business with him
-except----”
-
-He was not yet clear in his mind whether to tell her that her father’s
-life was threatened; it did not seem fair to alarm her when he was
-powerless to help; but as he weighed the question the girl came out
-into the reception-room and sat down near the window.
-
-“Won’t you have a seat, Mr. Griswold? May I ask you again whether you
-know the gentleman who came in here and beat the door a while ago?”
-
-“I never saw him before in my life.”
-
-“That is very well. And now, Mr. Griswold, I am going to ask you to
-tell me, if you will, just what it is you wish to say to my father.”
-
-She was very earnest, and the request she made rang the least bit
-imperiously. She now held the white parasol across her lap in the tight
-clasp of her white-gloved hands.
-
-“I should not hesitate----” began Griswold, still uncertain what to do.
-
-“You need not hesitate in the fear that you may alarm me. I think I
-know”--and she half-smiled now--“I think perhaps I know what it is.”
-
-“My reason for wishing to see your father is, then, to warn him that
-if a criminal named Appleweight is brought back from his hiding-place
-on the North Carolina frontier, and tried for his crimes in South
-Carolina, the governor of that state, your father, will be made to
-suffer by Appleweight’s friends.”
-
-“That is what I thought,” said the girl, slowly nodding her head.
-
-“And now, to be quite honest about it, Miss Osborne, I must confess
-that I received this warning last night from a man who believed me to
-be the governor. To tell the truth, I told him I was the governor!”
-
-The girl’s eyes made a fresh inventory of Griswold, then she laughed
-for the first time--a light laugh of honest mirth that would not be
-gainsaid. The beautiful colour deepened in her cheeks; her eyes lighted
-merrily, as though at the drollery of Griswold standing, so to speak,
-_in loco parentis_.
-
-“I have my own confession to make. I heard what you said to that man.
-I had gone to the rear platform to see what was the matter. The stop
-there in that preposterous place seemed interminable. You must have
-known that I listened.”
-
-“I didn’t suppose you heard what that man said to me or what I said to
-him. I don’t know how I came to palm myself off as the governor--I am
-not in the habit of doing such things, but it was due, I think, to the
-fact that I had just been saying to a friend of mine at Atlanta----”
-
-He ceased speaking, realizing that what he might have said to Ardmore
-was not germane to the point at issue. His responsibility for the
-life and security of Governor Osborne of the sovereign state of South
-Carolina was at an end, and he was entering upon a social chat with
-Governor Osborne’s daughter. Some such thought must have passed through
-her mind, too, for she straightened herself in her chair and dropped
-the point of her parasol to the floor. But she was the least bit
-curious, in spite of herself. The young man before her, who held his
-hat and gloves so quietly and who spoke with so nice a deference in a
-voice so musical, was beyond question a gentleman, and he had stopped
-at Columbia to render her father a service. There was no reason why she
-should not hear what he had said to his friend at Atlanta.
-
-“What had you been saying, Mr. Griswold?”
-
-“Oh, really nothing, after all! I’m ashamed of it now! But he’s the
-most amusing person, with nothing to do but to keep himself amused. We
-discuss many daring projects, but we are never equal to them. I had
-just been telling him that we were incapable of action; that while we
-plan our battles the foe is already breaking down the outer defences
-and beating in the gates. You see, we are both very ridiculous at
-times, and we talk that sort of idiocy to keep up our spirits. And
-having berated my friend for his irresolution, I seized the first
-opportunity to prove my own capacity for meeting emergencies. The man
-flattered me with the assumption that I was the governor of South
-Carolina, and I weakly fell.”
-
-Distress was again written in Miss Osborne’s face. She had paid little
-heed to the latter half of Griswold’s recital, though she kept her eyes
-fixed gravely upon him. In a moment the gentleman in blue serge who had
-manifested so much feeling over the governor’s absence strode again
-into the room.
-
-“Ah, Miss Osborne, so you are back!”
-
-He bowed over the girl’s hand with a great deal of manner, then glanced
-at once toward the door of the private office.
-
-“Hasn’t your father come in yet? I have been looking for him since
-eight o’clock.”
-
-“My father is not home yet, Mr. Bosworth.”
-
-“Not home! Do you mean to say that he won’t be here to-day?”
-
-“I hardly expect him,” replied the girl calmly. “Very likely he will be
-at home to-night or in the morning.”
-
-Griswold had walked away out of hearing; but he felt that the girl
-purposely raised her voice so that he might hear what she said.
-
-“I must know where he is; there’s an important matter waiting--a very
-serious matter it may prove for him if he isn’t here to-day to pass on
-it. I must wire him at once.”
-
-“Very good. You had better do so, Mr. Bosworth. He’s at the Peach Tree
-Club, Atlanta.”
-
-“Atlanta! Do you mean to say that he isn’t even in this state to-day?”
-
-“No, Mr. Bosworth, and I advise you to telegraph him immediately if
-your business is so urgent.”
-
-“It isn’t my business, Barbara; it’s the state’s business; it’s your
-father’s business, and if he isn’t here to attend to it by to-morrow at
-the latest, it will go hard with him. He has enemies who will construe
-his absence as meaning----”
-
-He spoke rapidly, with rising anger, but some gesture from the girl
-arrested him, and he turned frowningly to see Griswold calmly intent
-upon an engraving at the farther end of the room. The coloured woman
-was dozing in her chair. Before Bosworth could resume, the girl spoke,
-her voice again raised so that every word reached Griswold.
-
-“If you refer to the Appleweight case, I must tell you, Mr. Bosworth,
-that I have all confidence that my father will act whenever he sees
-fit.”
-
-“But the people----”
-
-“My father is not afraid of the people,” said the girl quietly.
-
-“But you don’t understand, Barbara, how much is at stake here. If some
-action isn’t taken in that matter within twenty-four hours your father
-will be branded as a coward by every newspaper in the state. You seem
-to take it pretty coolly, but it won’t be a trifling matter for him.”
-
-“I believe,” replied the girl, rising, “that you have said all that I
-care to hear from you now or at any further time, Mr. Bosworth, about
-this or any other matter.”
-
-“But, Barbara----”
-
-Miss Osborne turned her back and walked to the window. Bosworth stared
-a moment, then rushed angrily from the room. Griswold abandoned his
-study of the picture, and gravely inclined his head as Bosworth passed.
-Then he waited a minute. The girl still stood at the window, and there
-was, Griswold felt, something a little forlorn in her figure. It was
-quite time that he was off if he caught his train for Richmond. He
-crossed the room, and as he approached the window Miss Osborne turned
-quickly.
-
-“It was kind of you to wait. That man is the state’s attorney-general.
-You doubtless heard what he said to me.”
-
-“Yes, Miss Osborne, I could not help hearing. I did not leave, because
-I wished to say----”
-
-The associate professor of admiralty in the department of law of the
-University of Virginia hesitated and was lost. Miss Osborne’s eyes
-were brown, with that hint of bronze, in certain lights, that is the
-distinctive possession of the blessed. Health and spirit spoke in her
-bright colour. She was tall and straight, and there was something
-militant in her figure as she faced Griswold.
-
-“I beg to say, Miss Osborne, that if there is any way in which I can
-serve you, my time is wholly at your disposal.”
-
-“I thank you. I fear that you have already given yourself too much
-trouble in stopping here. My father will wish to thank you on his
-return.”
-
-Her lips trembled, and tears were bright in her eyes. Then she regained
-control of herself.
-
-“Mr. Griswold, I have no claim whatever on your kindness, but I am in
-very great distress. I don’t see just where I can turn for aid to any
-one I know. But you as a stranger may be able to help me--if it isn’t
-asking too much--but then I know it is asking too much!”
-
-“Anything, anything whatever,” urged Griswold kindly.
-
-“Mr. Bosworth, the attorney-general, warns me that if my father does
-not use the power of the state to capture this outlaw Appleweight, the
-results will be disastrous. He says my father must act immediately. He
-demanded his address, and, and--I gave it to him.”
-
-“But you must remember, Miss Osborne, that the attorney-general
-probably knows the intricacies of this case. He must have every reason
-for upholding your father; in fact, it’s his sworn duty to advise him
-in such matters as this.”
-
-“There’s another side to that, Mr. Griswold,” and the girl’s colour
-deepened; but she smiled and went on. It was quite evident that she
-was animated now by some purpose, and that she was resolved to avail
-herself of Griswold’s proffered aid. “I have my own reasons for
-doubting Mr. Bosworth’s motives; and I resent his assumption that my
-father is not doing his full duty. No one can speak to me of my father
-in that way--no one!”
-
-“Certainly not, Miss Osborne!”
-
-“This whole matter must be kept as quiet as possible. I can appeal
-to no one here without the risk of newspaper publicity which would
-do my father very great injury. But if it is not altogether too
-great a favour, Mr. Griswold, may I ask that you remain here until
-to-night--until my father returns? His secretary has been ill and is
-away from town. The other clerks I sent away on purpose this morning.
-Father had left his office keys at home, and I came in to see if I
-could find the papers in the Appleweight case. They are there, and
-on the top of the packet is a requisition on the governor of North
-Carolina for Appleweight’s return.”
-
-“Signed?”
-
-“Signed. I’m sure he had only deferred acting in the case until his
-return, and he should have been back to-day.”
-
-“But of course he will be back; it is inconceivable that he should
-ignore, much less evade, a duty as plain as this--the governor of a
-state--it is preposterous! His business in Atlanta accounts for his
-absence. Governor Osborne undoubtedly knows what he is about.”
-
-“My father is not in Atlanta, Mr. Griswold. He is not at the Peach Tree
-Club, and has not been. I have not the slightest idea where my father
-is!”
-
-The echoing whistle of the departing Virginia express reached them
-faintly as they stood facing each other before the open window in the
-governor’s reception-room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE JUG AND MR. ARDMORE.
-
-
-Mr. Thomas Ardmore, of New York and Ardsley, having seen his friend
-Griswold depart, sought a book-shop where, as in many other book-shops
-throughout the United States, he kept a standing order for any works
-touching piracy, a subject which, as already hinted, had long afforded
-him infinite diversion. He had several hours to wait for his train
-to New Orleans, and he was delighted to find that the bookseller,
-whom he had known only by correspondence, had just procured for him,
-through the dispersion of a Georgia planter’s valuable library, that
-exceedingly rare narrative, _The Golden Galleons of the Caribbean_, by
-Dominguez y Pascual--a beautifully bound copy of the original Madrid
-edition.
-
-With this volume under his arm, Ardmore returned to the hotel where he
-was lodged and completed his arrangements for leaving. It should be
-known that Mr. Thomas Ardmore was a person of democratic tastes and
-habits. In his New York house were two servants whose sole business
-it was to keep himself and his wardrobe presentable; yet he preferred
-to travel unattended. He was by nature somewhat secretive, and his
-adventurous spirit rebelled at the thought of being followed about by a
-hired retainer. His very wealth was, in a way, a nuisance, for wherever
-he went the newspapers chronicled his movements, with speculations as
-to the object of his visit, and dark hints at large public gifts which
-the city honoured by his presence at once imagined would be bestowed
-upon it forthwith. The American press constantly execrated his family,
-and as he was sensitive to criticism he kept very much to himself.
-
-It was a matter of deep regret to Ardmore that his great-grandfather,
-whose name he bore, should have trifled with the morals of the red
-men, but he philosophized that it was not his fault, and if he had
-known how to squeeze the whisky from the Ardmore millions he would have
-been glad to do so. His own affairs were managed by the Bronx Loan and
-Trust Company, and Ardmore took little personal interest in any of his
-belongings except his estate in North Carolina, where he dreamed his
-dreams, and had, on the whole, a pretty good time.
-
-When he had finished packing his trunk he went down to the dinner he
-had ordered to be in readiness at a certain hour, at a certain table,
-carefully chosen beforehand; for Ardmore was very exacting in such
-matters, and had an eye to the comforts of life, as he understood them.
-
-As he crossed the hotel lobby on his way to the restaurant he was
-accosted by a reporter for the Atlanta _Palladium_, who began to
-question him touching various Ardmores who were just then filling
-rather more than their usual amount of space in the newspapers.
-Ardmore’s family, with the single exception of his sister, Mrs.
-Atchison, bored him immensely. His two brothers and another sister, the
-Duchess of Ballywinkle, kept the family name in display type a great
-deal of the time, and their performances had practically driven Thomas
-Ardmore from New York. He felt keenly his shame in being brother-in-law
-to a dissolute duke, and the threatened marriage of one of his brothers
-to a chorus girl had added, he felt, all too great a burden to a family
-tree whose roots, he could not forget it, were soaked in contraband
-rum. The reporter was a well-mannered youth, and Ardmore shook his
-hand encouragingly. He was rather curious to see what new incident
-in the family history was to be the subject of inquisition, and the
-reporter immediately set his mind at rest.
-
-“Pardon me, Mr. Ardmore, but is it true that your sister, the Duchess
-of Ballywinkle, has separated from the duke?”
-
-“You may quote me as saying that while I am not quite sure, yet I
-sincerely hope the reports are true. To be frank with you, I do not
-like the duke; in fact, strictly between ourselves, I disliked him
-from the first,” and Ardmore shook his head gravely, and meditatively
-jingled the little gold pieces that he always carried in his trousers
-pockets.
-
-“Well, of course, I had heard that there was some trouble between you
-and your brother-in-law, but can’t the _Palladium_ have your own exact
-statement, Mr. Ardmore, of what caused the breach between you?”
-
-Ardmore hesitated and turned his head cautiously.
-
-“You understand, of course, that this discussion is painful to me,
-extremely painful. And yet, so much has been published about my
-sister’s domestic affairs----”
-
-“Exactly, Mr. Ardmore. What we want is to print _your_ side of the
-story.”
-
-“Very decent of you, I’m sure. But the fact is”--and Ardmore glanced
-over his shoulder again to be sure he was not overheard--“the fact
-is----” and he paused, batting his eyes as though hesitating at the
-point of an important disclosure.
-
-“Yes, Mr. Ardmore,” encouraged the reporter.
-
-“Well, I don’t mind telling _you_, but don’t print this. Let it be just
-between ourselves.”
-
-“Oh, of course, if you say not----”
-
-“That’s all right; I have every confidence in your discretion; but if
-this will go no further, I don’t mind telling you----”
-
-“You may rely on me absolutely, Mr. Ardmore.”
-
-“Then, with the distinct understanding that this is _sub rosa_--now we
-_do_ understand each other, don’t we?” pleaded Ardmore.
-
-“Perfectly, Mr. Ardmore,” and the perspiration began to bead the
-reporter’s forehead in his excitement over the impending revelation.
-
-“Then you shall know why I feel so bitter about the duke. I assure
-you that nothing but the deepest chagrin over the matter causes me to
-tell you what I have never revealed before--not even to members of my
-family--not to my most intimate friend.”
-
-“I appreciate all that----”
-
-“Well, the fact is--but please never mention it--the fact is that his
-Grace owes me four dollars. I gave it to him in two bills--I remember
-the incident perfectly--two crisp new bills I had just got at the bank.
-His Grace borrowed the money to pay a cabman--it was the very day
-before he married my sister. Now let me ask you this: Can an American
-citizen allow a duke to owe him four dollars? The villain never
-referred to the matter again, and from that day to this I have made it
-a rule never to lend money to a duke.”
-
-The reporter stared a moment, then laughed. He abandoned the idea
-of getting material for a sensational article and scented the
-possibilities of a character sketch of the whimsical young millionaire.
-
-“How about that story that your brother, Samuel Ardmore, is going to
-marry the chorus girl he ran over in his automobile?”
-
-“I hope it’s true; I devoutly do. I’m very fond of music myself, and,
-strange to say, nobody in our family is musical. I think a chorus girl
-would be a real addition to our family. It would bring up the family
-dignity--you can see that.”
-
-“The wires brought a story this afternoon that your cousin, Wingate
-Siddall--he is your cousin, isn’t he?”
-
-“I’m afraid so. What’s Siddy’s latest?”
-
-“Why, it’s reported that he’s going to cross the Atlantic in a balloon.
-Can you tell us anything about that from the inside?”
-
-“Well, the ocean is only four miles deep; I’d take more interest in
-Cousin Siddy’s ballooning if you could make it a couple of miles more
-to the dead men’s chests. And now, much as I’d like to prolong this
-conversation, I’ve got to eat or I’ll miss my train.”
-
-“If you don’t mind saying where you are going, Mr. Ardmore?”
-
-“I’d tell you in a minute, only I haven’t fully decided yet; but I
-shall probably take the Sambo Flyer at 9.13, if you don’t make me lose
-it.”
-
-“You have large interests in Arkansas, I believe, Mr. Ardmore?”
-
-“Yes; important interests. I’m searching for the original fiddle of the
-Arkansaw Traveller. When I find it I’m going to give it to the British
-Museum. And now you really must excuse me.”
-
-Ardmore looked the reporter over carefully as they shook hands. He was
-an attractive young fellow, alert and good-humoured, and Ardmore liked
-him, as, in his shy way, he really liked almost every one who seemed to
-be a human being.
-
-“I’ll tell you what I’ll do with you. If you’ll forget this rot we’ve
-been talking and come up to Ardsley as soon as I get home, I’ll see
-if I can’t keep you amused for a couple of weeks. I don’t offer that
-as a bribe; my family affairs are of interest to nobody but hostlers
-and kitchen-maids. Wire me at Ardsley when you’re ready, throw away
-your lead-pencil, then come on and I’ll show you the finest collection
-of books on Captain Kidd in the known world. What did you say your
-name is? Collins--Frank Collins? I never forget anything, so don’t
-disappoint me.”
-
-“That’s mighty nice of you, but I don’t have much time for vacations,”
-replied the reporter, who was, however, clearly pleased.
-
-“If the office won’t give you a couple of weeks, wire me, and I’ll buy
-the paper.”
-
-The young man laughed outright. “I’ll remember; I really believe you
-mean for me to come.”
-
-“Of course I do. It’s all settled; make it next week. Good-bye!”
-
-Ardmore ate his dinner oblivious of the fact that people at the
-neighbouring tables turned to look at him. He overheard his name
-mentioned, and a woman just behind him let it be known to her
-companions and any one else who cared to hear that he was the
-brother-in-law of the Duke of Ballywinkle. Another voice in the
-neighbourhood kindly remarked that Ardmore was the only decent member
-of the family, and that he was not the one whose wife had just left
-him, nor yet the one who was going to marry the chorus girl whose
-father kept a delicatessen shop in Hoboken. It is very sad to be
-unable to dine without having family skeletons joggle one’s elbow, and
-Ardmore was annoyed. The head waiter hung officiously near; the man who
-served him was distressingly eager; and then the voice behind him rose
-insistently:
-
-“--worth millions and yet he can’t find anybody to eat with him.”
-
-This was almost true, and a shadow passed across Ardmore’s face and his
-eyes grew grave as he humbly reflected that he was indeed a pitiable
-object. He waved away his plate and called for coffee, and at that
-moment a middle-aged man appeared at the door, scanned the room for a
-moment, and then threaded his way among the tables to Ardmore.
-
-“I heard you were here and thought I’d look you up. How are you, Ardy?”
-
-“Very well, thank you, Mr. Billings. Have you dined? Sorry; which way
-are you heading?”
-
-The newcomer had the bearing of a gentleman used to consideration. He
-was, indeed, the secretary of the Bronx Loan and Trust Company, whose
-business was chiefly the administration of the Ardmore estate, and
-Ardmore knew him very well. He was afraid that Billings had traced him
-to Atlanta for one of those business discussions which always vexed and
-perplexed him so grievously, and the thought of this further depressed
-his spirits. But the secretary at once eased his mind.
-
-“I’m looking for a man, and I’m not good at the business. I’ve lost him
-and I don’t understand it, I don’t understand it,” and the secretary
-seemed to be half-musing to himself as he sat down and rested his arms
-on the table.
-
-“You might give me the job. I’m following a slight clue myself just at
-present.”
-
-The secretary, who had no great opinion of Ardmore’s mental capacity,
-stared at the young man vacantly. Then it occurred to him that possibly
-Ardmore might be of service.
-
-“Have you been at Ardsley recently?” he asked.
-
-“Left there only a few days ago.”
-
-“You haven’t seen your governor lately, have you?”
-
-“My governor?” Ardmore stared blankly. “Why, Mr. Billings, don’t you
-remember that father’s dead?”
-
-“I don’t mean your father, Ardy,” replied Billings, with the
-exaggerated care of one who deals with extreme stupidity. “I mean the
-Governor of North Carolina--one of the American states. Ardsley is
-still in North Carolina, isn’t it?”
-
-“Oh yes, of course. But bless your soul, I don’t know the governor. Why
-should one?”
-
-“I don’t know why, Ardy; but people sometimes do know governors and
-find it useful.”
-
-“I’m not in politics any more, Mr. Billings. What’s this person’s
-name?”
-
-“Dangerfield. Don’t you ever read the newspapers?” demanded the
-secretary, striving to control his inner rage. He was in trouble, and
-Ardmore’s opaqueness taxed his patience. And yet Tommy Ardmore had
-given him less trouble than any other member of the Ardmore family.
-The others galloped gaily through their incomes; Tommy was rapidly
-augmenting his inheritance from sheer neglect or inability to scatter
-his dividends.
-
-“No; I quit reading newspapers after the noble Duke of Ballywinkle
-didn’t break the bank at Monte Carlo that last time. I often wish, Mr.
-Billings, that the Mohawks had scalped my great-grandfather before they
-bought his whisky. That would have saved me the personal humiliation of
-being brother-in-law to a duke.”
-
-“You mustn’t be so thin-skinned. You pay the penalty of belonging to
-one of the wealthiest families in America,” and Billings’s tone was
-paternal.
-
-“So I’ve heard, but I’m not so terribly proud of it. What about this
-governor?”
-
-“That’s what troubles me--what of the governor?” Billings
-dropped his voice so that no one but Ardmore could hear. “He’s
-missing--disappeared.”
-
-“That’s the first interesting thing I ever heard of a governor doing,”
-said Ardmore. “Tell me more.”
-
-“He’s had a row with the Governor of South Carolina, at New Orleans.
-I was to have met him here on an important matter of business this
-afternoon, but he’s cleared out and nobody knows what’s become of him.
-His daughter even, who was in New Orleans with him, doesn’t know where
-he is.”
-
-“When was she in New Orleans with him?” asked Ardmore, looking at his
-watch.
-
-“She--who?” asked Billings, annoyed.
-
-“Why, the daughter!”
-
-“I don’t know anything about the daughter, but if I could find her
-father I’d give him a piece of my mind,” and the secretary’s face
-flushed angrily.
-
-“Well, I suppose she isn’t the one I’m looking for, anyhow,” said
-Ardmore resignedly.
-
-“I should hope not,” blurted Billings, who had not really taken in what
-Ardmore said, but who assumed that it must necessarily be something
-idiotic.
-
-“She had fluffy hair,” persisted Ardmore to this serious-minded
-gentleman whose life was devoted to the multiplication of the Ardmore
-millions. Ardmore’s tone was that of a child who persists in babbling
-inanities to a distracted parent.
-
-“Better let girls alone, Tommy. Mrs. Atchison told me you were going to
-marry Daisy Waters, and I should heartily approve the match.”
-
-“Did Nellie tell you that? I wonder if she’s told Daisy yet? You’ll
-have to excuse me now, for I’m taking the Sambo Flyer. I’d like to find
-your governor for you; and if you’ll tell me when he was seen last----”
-
-“Right here, just before noon to-day, and a couple of hours before I
-reached town. His daughter either doesn’t know where he went or she
-won’t tell.”
-
-“Ah! the daughter! She remains behind to guard his retreat.”
-
-“The daughter is still here. She’s a peppery little piece,” and
-Billings looked guardedly around the room. “That’s she, alone over
-there in the corner--the girl with the white feather in her hat who’s
-just signing her check. There--she’s getting up!”
-
-Ardmore gazed across the room intently, then suddenly a slight smile
-played about his lips. To gain the door the girl must pass by his
-table, and he scrutinized her closely as she drew near and passed.
-She was a little girl, and her light fluffy hair swept out from under
-a small blue hat in a shell-like curve, and the short skirt of her
-tailor-made gown robbed her, it seemed, of years to which the calendar
-might entitle her.
-
-“She gave me the steadiest eye I ever looked into when I asked her
-where her father had gone,” remarked Billings grimly as the girl
-passed. “She said she thought he’d gone fishing for whales.”
-
-“So she’s Miss Dangerfield, is she?” asked Ardmore indifferently; and
-he rose, leaving on the plate, by a sudden impulse of good feeling
-towards the world, exactly double the generous tip he had intended
-giving. Billings was glad to be rid of Ardmore, and they parted in the
-hotel lobby without waste of words. The secretary of the Bronx Loan
-and Trust Company announced his intention of remaining another day in
-Atlanta in the hope of finding Governor Dangerfield, and he was so
-absorbed in his own affairs that he did not heed, if indeed he heard,
-Ardmore’s promise to keep an eye out for the lost governor. Like most
-other people, the secretary of the Bronx Loan and Trust Company did not
-understand Ardmore, but Thomas Ardmore, having long ago found himself
-ill-judged by the careless world, lived by standards of his own, and
-these would have meant nothing whatever to Billings.
-
-Ardmore’s effects had been brought down, and were already piled on a
-carriage at the door. In his pocket were his passage to New Orleans and
-a stateroom ticket. At the cashier’s desk Miss Dangerfield paid her
-bill, just ahead of him.
-
-“If any telegrams come for my father, please forward them to Raleigh,”
-said the girl. The manager came out personally to show her to her
-carriage, and having shut the door upon her, he wished Ardmore, who
-stood discreetly by, a safe journey.
-
-“Off for New Orleans, are you, Mr. Ardmore?” asked the manager
-courteously.
-
-“No,” said Ardmore, “I’m going to Raleigh to look at the tall
-buildings,” whereat the manager returned to his duties, gravely shaking
-his head.
-
-At the station Ardmore caught sight of Miss Dangerfield, attended by
-two porters, hurrying toward the Tar Heel Express. He bought a ticket
-to Raleigh, and secured the last available berth from the conductor on
-the platform at the moment of departure.
-
-Ardmore did not like to be hurried, and this sudden change of plans had
-been almost too much for him, but he was consoled by the reflection
-that after all these years of waiting for just such an adventure he
-had proved himself equal to an emergency that required quick thought
-and swift action. He had not only found the girl with the playful eye,
-but he had learned her identity without, as it were, turning over his
-hand. Not even Griswold, who was the greatest man he knew--Griswold
-with his acute legal mind and ability to carry through contests of wit
-with lawyers of highest repute--not even Griswold, Ardmore flattered
-himself, could have managed better.
-
-The stateroom door stood open, and from his seat at the farther end of
-the car Ardmore caught a fleeting glimpse of Miss Dangerfield as she
-threw off her jacket and hat; then she summoned the porter, gave him
-her tickets, bade him a smiling good-night, and the door closed upon
-her. The broad grin on the porter’s face--a grin of delight, as though
-he had spoken with some exalted deity--filled Ardmore with bitterest
-envy.
-
-He went back to smoke and plan his future movements. For the first
-time in his life he faced to-morrow with eager anticipations, resolved
-that nothing should thwart his high resolves, though these, to be
-sure, were somewhat hazy. Then, from a feeling of great satisfaction,
-his spirit reacted, and he regretted that he had been deprived of the
-joy of prolonged search. If he could only have followed her until, at
-the last moment, when about to give up for ever and accept the frugal
-consolations of memory, he met her somewhere face to face! These
-reflections led him to wonder whether he might not have been mistaken
-about the wink after all. Griswold, with his wider knowledge of the
-world, had scouted the idea. Very likely if one of those blue eyes
-had actually winked at him it had been out of mere playfulness, and
-he would never in the world refer to it when they met. Billings had
-applied the term peppery to her, and he felt that he should always hate
-Billings for this; Billings was only a financial automaton anyhow,
-who bought at the lowest and sold at the highest, and bored one very
-often with strangely-worded papers which one was never expected to
-understand. He did not know why Billings was so anxious to find Miss
-Dangerfield’s father, but as between a man of Billings’s purely
-commercial instincts and the governor of a great state like North
-Carolina, Ardmore resolved to stand by the Dangerfields to the end of
-the chapter. He was proud to remember his estate at Ardsley, which
-was in Governor Dangerfield’s jurisdiction, and had been visited by
-the game warden, the state forester, and various other members of the
-governor’s official household, though Ardmore could not remember their
-names. He had never in his life visited Raleigh, but far down some dim
-vista of memory he saw Sir Walter covering a mud-puddle with his cloak
-for Queen Elizabeth. It was a picture of this moving incident in an
-old history that rose before him, as he tried vainly to recall just
-how it was that Sir Walter had lost his head. He wondered whether Miss
-Dangerfield’s name was Elizabeth, though he hoped not, as the name
-suggested a town in New Jersey where his motor had once broken down on
-a rainy evening when he was carrying Griswold to Princeton to deliver a
-lecture.
-
-Ardmore smoked many pipes, and did not turn in until after midnight.
-The car was hot and stuffy, and he slept badly. At some hour of the
-morning, being again awake and restless, he fished his dressing-gown
-and slippers out of his bag and went out on the rear platform. His was
-the last car, and he found a camp-stool and crouched down upon it in a
-corner of the vestibule and stared out into the dark. The hum and click
-of the rails soothed him, and he yielded himself to pleasant reveries.
-Griswold was well on his way back to Virginia, he remembered--“Dear
-old Grissy!” he murmured; but he resolved to tell Griswold nothing of
-the prosperous course of his quest. Griswold would never, he knew,
-countenance so grave a performance as the following of a strange girl
-to her home; but this would be something for later justification.
-
-Ardmore was half-dozing when the train stopped so abruptly that he was
-pitched from the camp-stool into a corner of the entry. He got himself
-together and leaned out into the cool moist air.
-
-The porter came out and stared, for a gentleman in a blue silk wrapper
-who sat up all night in a vestibule was new to his experience.
-
-“What place is this, porter?”
-
-“Kildare, sah. This place is wha’ we go from South C’lina into No’th
-C’lina. Ain’t yo’ be’th comfor’ble, sah?”
-
-“Perfectly, thank you.”
-
-Kildare was a familiar name, and the station, that lay at the outskirts
-of the town, and a long grim barracks-like building that he identified
-as a cotton mill, recalled the fact that he was not far from his own
-ample acres which lay off somewhere to westward. He had occasionally
-taken this route from the north in going to Ardsley, riding or driving
-from Kildare about ten miles to his house. In this way he was enabled
-to go or come without appearing at all in the little village of Ardsley.
-
-The porter left him. He felt ready for sleep now, and resolved to go
-back to bed as soon as the train started. Just then a dark shadow
-appeared in the track, and a man’s voice asked cautiously,--
-
-“Air y’u the conductor?”
-
-The questioner saw that he was not, before Ardmore could reply, and
-hesitated a moment.
-
-“The porter’s in the car; you can get aboard up forward,” Ardmore
-suggested.
-
-“Be Gov’nor Dangerfield on this train?” asked the man, whom Ardmore now
-saw dimly outlined in the track below.
-
-“Certainly, my friend. The governor’s asleep, but I’m his private
-secretary. What can I do for you?”
-
-“Well, hyeh’s somethin’ fer ’im--it’s confidential. Sure, air ye, th’
-gov’nor’s in they?”
-
-The man--a tall, bearded countryman in a slouch hat, handed up to
-Ardmore a jug--a plain, brown, old-fashioned American gallon jug.
-
-“It’s a present fer Gov’nor Dangerfield. He’ll understand,” and the man
-vanished as mysteriously as he had appeared, leaving Ardmore holding
-the jug by its handle, and feeling a little dazed by the transaction.
-
-The train lingered, and Ardmore was speculating as to which one of the
-Carolina commonwealths was beneath him, when another figure appeared
-below in the track--that of a bareheaded, tousled boy this time. He
-stared up at Ardmore sleepily, having apparently been roused on the
-arrival of the train.
-
-“Air y’u the gov’nor?” he piped.
-
-“Yes, my lad; in what way can I serve you?” and Ardmore put down his
-jug and leaned over the guard rail. It was just as easy to be the
-governor as the governor’s private secretary, and his vanity was
-touched by the readiness with which the boy accepted him in his new
-_rôle_. His costume, vaguely discernible in the vestibule light,
-evidently struck the lad as being some amazing robe of state affected
-by governors. The youngster was lifting something, and he now held up
-to Ardmore a jug, as like the other as one pea resembles another.
-
-“Pa ain’t home, and ma says hyeh’s yer jug o’ buttermilk.”
-
-“Thank you, my lad. While I regret missing your worthy father, yet I
-beg to present my compliments to your kind and thoughtful mother.”
-
-He had transferred his money to his dressing-gown pocket on leaving his
-berth, and he now tossed a silver dollar to the boy, who caught it with
-a yell of delight and scampered off into the night.
-
-Ardmore had dropped the jugs carelessly into the vestibule, and he
-was surveying them critically when the train started. The wheels were
-beginning to grind reluctantly when a cry down the track arrested his
-attention. A man was flying after the train, shouting at the top of his
-lungs. He ran, caught hold of the rail, and howled,--
-
-“The gov’nor ain’t on they! Gimme back my jug.”
-
-“Indian-giver!” yelled Ardmore. He stooped down, picked up the first
-jug that came to hand, and dropped it into the man’s outstretched arms.
-
-The porter, having heard voices, rushed out upon Ardmore, who held the
-remaining jug to the light, scrutinizing it carefully.
-
-“Please put this away for me, porter. It’s a little gift from an old
-army friend.”
-
-Then Mr. Ardmore returned to his berth, fully pleased with his
-adventures, and slept until the porter gave warning of Raleigh.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-DUTY AND THE JUG.
-
-
-Mr. Thomas Ardmore, one trunk, two bags, and a little brown jug reached
-the Guilford House, Raleigh, at eight o’clock in the morning. Ardmore
-had never felt better in his life, he assured himself, as he chose
-a room with care, and intimated to the landlord his intention of
-remaining a week. But for the ill luck of having his baggage marked he
-should have registered himself falsely on the books of the inn; but
-feeling that this was not quite respectable, he assured the landlord,
-in response to the usual question, that he was not Ardmore of New York
-and Ardsley, but an entirely different person.
-
-“Well, I don’t blame you for not wanting to be taken for any of that
-set,” remarked the landlord sympathetically.
-
-“I should think not!” returned Ardmore, in a tone of deep disgust.
-
-The Guilford House coffee was not just what he was used to, but he
-was in an amiable humour, and enjoyed hugely the conversation of the
-commercial travellers with whom he took his breakfast. He did not
-often escape from himself or the burden of his family reputation, and
-these strangers were profoundly entertaining. It had never occurred
-to Ardmore that man could be so amiable so early in the day, and his
-own spirits rallied as he passed the sugar, abused the hot bread, and
-nodded his approval of bitter flings at the inns of other southern
-towns of whose existence he only vaguely knew. They spoke of the
-president of the United States and of various old world monarchs in
-a familiar tone that was decidedly novel and refreshing; and he felt
-that it was a great privilege to sit at meat with these blithe spirits.
-Commercial travellers, he now realized, were more like the strolling
-players, the wandering knights, the cloaked riders approaching lonely
-inns at night, than any other beings he had met out of books. It was
-with the severest self-denial that he resisted an impulse to invite
-them all to visit him at Ardsley or to use his house in Fifth Avenue
-whenever they pleased. When the man nearest him, who was having a
-second plate of corn-cakes and syrup, casually inquired his “line,”
-Ardmore experienced a moment of real shame, but remembering the jug he
-had acquired in the night, he replied,--
-
-“Crockery.”
-
-“Mine’s drugs. Do you know Billy Gallop?--he’s in your line.”
-
-“Should say I did,” replied Ardmore unhesitatingly. “I took supper with
-him in Philadelphia Sunday night.”
-
-“How’s trade?”
-
-“Bully,” replied Ardmore, reaching for the syrup. “I broke my record
-yesterday.”
-
-The drug man turned to listen to a discussion of the row between
-Governors Osborne and Dangerfield precipitated by one of the company
-who had fortified himself with a newspaper, and Ardmore also gave ear.
-
-“Whatever did happen at New Orleans,” declared a Maiden Lane jewellery
-representative, “you can be quite sure that Dangerfield won’t get the
-hot end of the poker. I’ve seen him, right here at Raleigh, and he has
-all the marks of a fighting man. He’d strip at two hundred, and he’s
-six in his socks.”
-
-“Pshaw! Those big fellows are all meat and no muscle,” retorted the
-drug man. “I doubt if there’s any fight in him. Now Osborne’s a
-different product--a tall, lean cuss, but active as a cat. A man to be
-governor of South Carolina has got to have the real stuff in him. If it
-comes to a show-down you’ll see Dangerfield duck and run.”
-
-This discussion was continued at length, greatly to Ardmore’s delight,
-for he felt that in this way he was being brought at once into touch
-with Miss Dangerfield, now domiciled somewhere in this town, and to
-whom he expected to be properly introduced just as soon as he could
-devise some means to that end. As he had not read the newspapers, he
-did not know what the row was all about, but he instinctively aligned
-himself on the Dangerfield side. The Osbornes were, he felt, an
-inferior race, and he inwardly resented the imputations upon Governor
-Dangerfield’s courage.
-
-“I wonder if the governor’s back yet?” asked one man.
-
-“The morning paper says not, but he’s expected to-day,” replied the man
-with the newspaper.
-
-“About the first thing he’ll have to do will be to face the question of
-arresting Appleweight. I was in Columbia the other day, and everybody
-was talking of the case. They say”--and the speaker waited for the
-fullest attention of his hearers--“they say Osborne ain’t none too
-anxious to have Appleweight arrested on his side of the line.”
-
-“Why not?” demanded Ardmore.
-
-“Well, you hear all kinds of things. It was only whispered down there,
-but they say Osborne was a little too thick with the Appleweight crowd
-before he was elected governor. He was their attorney, and they were
-a bad lot for any man to be attorney for. But they haven’t caught
-Appleweight yet.”
-
-“Where’s he hiding? don’t the authorities know?”
-
-“Oh, he’s up there in the hills on the state line. His home is as much
-on one side as the other. He spends a good deal of time in Kildare.”
-
-“Kildare?” asked Ardmore, startled at the word.
-
-“Yes, it’s the county seat, what there is of it. I hope you never make
-that town?” and the inquirer bent a commiserating glance upon Ardmore.
-
-“Well, they use jugs there, I know that!” declared Ardmore; whereat the
-table roared. The unanimity of their applause warmed his heart, though
-he did not know why they laughed.
-
-“You handle crockery?” asked a man from the end of the table. “Well, I
-guess Dilwell County consumes a few gross of jugs all right. But you’d
-better be careful not to whisper jugs too loud here. There’s usually a
-couple of revenue men around town.”
-
-They all went together to the office, where they picked up their sample
-cases and sallied forth for a descent upon the Raleigh merchants; and
-Ardmore, thus reminded that he was in the crockery business, and that
-he had a sample in his room, sat down under a tree on the sidewalk
-at the inn door to consider what he should do with his little brown
-jug. It had undoubtedly been intended for Governor Dangerfield, who
-was supposed to be on the train he had himself taken from Atlanta to
-Raleigh. There had been, in fact, two jugs, but one of them he had
-tossed back into the hands of the man who had pursued the train at
-Kildare. Ardmore smoked his pipe and meditated, trying to determine
-which jug he had tossed back; and after long deliberation, he slapped
-his knee, and said aloud,--
-
-“I gave him the wrong one, by jing!”
-
-The boy had said that his offering contained buttermilk, a beverage
-which Ardmore knew was affected by eccentric people for their stomach’s
-sake. He had sniffed the other jug, and it contained, undeniably, an
-alcoholic liquid of some sort.
-
-Jugs had not figured prominently in Ardmore’s domestic experiences;
-but as he sat under the tree on the curb before the Guilford House he
-wondered, as many other philosophers have wondered, why a jug is so
-incapable of innocency! A bottle, while suggestive, is not inherently
-wicked; but a jug is the symbol of joyous sin. Even the soberest souls,
-who frown at the mention of a bottle, smile tolerantly when a jug is
-suggested. Jugs of many centuries are assembled in museums, and round
-them the ethnologist reconstructs extinct races of men; and yet even
-science and history, strive they never so sadly, cannot wholly relieve
-the jug of its cheery _insouciance_. A bottle of inferior liquor
-may be dressed forth enticingly, and alluringly named; but there’s
-no disguising the jug; its genial shame cannot be hidden. There are
-pleasant places in America where, if one deposit a half-dollar and a
-little brown jug behind a certain stone, or on the shady side of a
-blackberry bush, jug and coin will together disappear between sunset
-and sunrise; but lo! the jug, filled and plugged with a corn-cob,
-will return alone mysteriously, in contravention of the statutes in
-such cases made and provided. Too rare for glass this fluid, which
-bubbles out of the southern hills with as little guilt in its soul as
-the brooks beside which it comes into being! But, lest he be accused
-of aiding and abetting crime against the majesty of the law, this
-chronicler hastens to say that on a hot day in the harvest field,
-honest water, hidden away in a little brown jug in the fence corner,
-acquires a quality and imparts a delight that no mug of crystal or of
-gold can yield.
-
-As Mr. Ardmore pondered duty and the jug a tall man in shabby corduroy
-halted near by and inspected him carefully. Mr. Ardmore, hard upon
-his pipe, had not noticed him, somewhat, it seemed, to the stranger’s
-vexation. He patrolled the sidewalk before the inn, hoping to attract
-Ardmore’s attention, but finding that the young man’s absorption
-continued, he presently dropped into a neighbouring chair under the
-maple tree.
-
-“Good-morning,” said Ardmore pleasantly.
-
-The man nodded but did not speak. He was examining Ardmore with a pair
-of small, shrewd gray eyes. In his hands he held a crumpled bit of
-brown paper that looked like a telegram.
-
-“Well, I reckon you jest got to town this mornin’, young fella.”
-
-“Yes, certainly,” Ardmore replied promptly. He had never been addressed
-in quite this fashion before, but it was all in keeping with his new
-destiny, and he was immediately interested in the stranger, who was
-well on in middle age, with a rough grizzled beard, and a soft hat,
-once black, that now struggled for a compromise tint between yellow and
-green.
-
-“Ever been hyeh befo’?”
-
-“Never; but I’m crazy about the place, and I’ll be seen here a good
-deal hereafter.”
-
-Ardmore produced his cigar-case and extended it to the stranger. The
-man, awed by the splendour of the case, accepted a cigar a little
-gingerly.
-
-“Drummer, I reckon?”
-
-“Commercial traveller, we prefer to be designated,” replied Ardmore,
-with dignity.
-
-“I guess drummer’s good enough down hyeh. What y’u carry?”
-
-“Jugs. I’m in the jug business. Never had any business but jugs.”
-
-The man paused in lighting his cigar, stared at Ardmore over the
-flaming match, drew the fire into the cigar several times, then settled
-back with his hands in his pockets.
-
-“Full ’r empty?”
-
-“The jugs? Oh, empty jugs; but it’s no affair of mine what becomes of
-the jugs afterwards.”
-
-“Y’u likely got samples with y’u?”
-
-“Well, not many. You see my line is so well known I don’t have to carry
-samples any more. The trade knows our goods.”
-
-“Stop at Kildare on the way up?” and the stranger looked about
-guardedly.
-
-“Certainly, my friend, I always ‘make’ Kildare,” replied Ardmore, using
-a phrase he had acquired at breakfast.
-
-“Train runs through the’ pretty late at night?”
-
-“Beastly. But I hardly ever sleep, anyhow. A man in my splendid health
-doesn’t need sleep. It’s a rotten waste of time.”
-
-Silence for several minutes; then the stranger leaned forward in his
-chair, resting his elbows on his knees, and said in a low tone,--
-
-“I got a telegram hyeh says y’u got a jug thet y’u ain’t no right t’
-last night at Kildare. I want thet jug, young fella.”
-
-“Now that’s very unfortunate. Ordinarily I should be delighted, but I
-really couldn’t give away my Kildare jug. Now if it was one of my other
-jugs--even my Omaha jug or my dear old Louisville jug--I shouldn’t
-hesitate a minute, but that old Kildare jug! My dear man, you don’t
-know what you ask!”
-
-“Y’ll give me thet jug, or it’ll be the worse for y’u. Y’u ain’t in
-thet game, young fella.”
-
-“Not in it! You don’t know whom you are addressing. I’m not only in the
-game, but I’m in to the finish,” declared Ardmore, sitting upright in
-his chair. “You’ve got the wrong idea, my friend, if you think you can
-intimidate me. That jug was given me by a friend, a very old and dear
-friend----”
-
-“A friend of yourn!”
-
-The keen little gray eyes were blinking rapidly.
-
-“One of the best friends I ever had in this world,” and Ardmore’s face
-showed feeling. “He and I charged side by side through the bloodiest
-battles of our Civil War. I will cheerfully give you my watch, or
-money in any sum, but the jug--I will part with my life first! And
-now,” concluded Ardmore, “while I should be glad to continue this
-conversation, my duties call me elsewhere.”
-
-As he rose, the man stood quickly at his side, menacingly.
-
-“Give me thet jug, or I’ll shoot y’u right hyeh in the street.”
-
-“No, you wouldn’t do that, Old Corduroy. I can see that you are kind
-and good, and you wouldn’t shoot down an unarmed man. Besides, it would
-muss up the street.”
-
-“Y’u took thet jug from my brother by lyin’ to ’im. He’s telegraphed me
-to git it, and I’m a-goin’ to do it.”
-
-“Your brother sent you? It was nice of him to ask you to call on me.
-Why, I’ve known your brother intimately for years.”
-
-“Knowed my brother?” and for the first time the man really seemed to
-doubt himself. “Wheh did y’u know Bill?”
-
-“We roomed together at Harvard, that’s how I know him, if you force
-me to it! We’re both Hasty Pudding men. Now if you try to bulldoze me
-further, I’ll slap your wrists. So there!”
-
-Ardmore entered the hotel deliberately, climbed to his room, and locked
-the door. Then he seized the little brown jug, drew the stopper, and
-poured out a tumblerful of clear white fluid. He took a swallow, and
-shuddered as the fiery liquid seemed instantly to cause every part of
-his being to tingle. He wiped the tears from his eyes and sat down.
-The corn-cob stopper had fallen to the floor, and he picked it up and
-examined it carefully. It had been fitted tightly into the mouth of
-the jug by the addition of a bit of calico, and he fingered it for a
-moment with a grin on his face. He was, considering his tranquil past,
-making history rapidly, and he wished that Griswold, whom he imagined
-safely away on his law business at Richmond, could see him now embarked
-upon a serious adventure, that had already brought him into collision
-with a seemingly sane man who had threatened him with death. Griswold
-had been quite right about their woeful incapacity for rising to
-emergencies, but the episode of the jugs at Kildare was exactly the
-sort of thing they had discussed time and time again, and it promised
-well. His throat was raw, as though burned with acid, and it occurred
-to him for an anxious moment that perhaps he had imbibed a poison
-intended for the governor.
-
-He was about to replace the cob stopper when, to his astonishment, it
-broke in his fingers, and out fell a carefully folded slip of paper. He
-carried it to the window and opened it, finding that it was an ordinary
-telegraph blank on which were written in clear round characters these
-words:
-
- The Appleweight crowd never done you harm. If you have any of them
- arrested you will be shot down on your own doorstep.
-
-When Mr. Thomas Ardmore had read this message half a dozen times with
-increasing satisfaction he folded it carefully and put it away in his
-pocket-book.
-
-Taking half a sheet of notepaper he wrote as follows:
-
- Appleweight and his gang are cowards. Within ten days those that have
- not been hanged will be in jail at Kildare.
-
-He studied the phraseology critically, and then placed the paper in the
-cob stopper, whose halves he tied together with a bit of twine. As the
-jug stood on the table it was, to all appearances, exactly as it had
-been when delivered to Ardmore on the rear of the train at Kildare, and
-he was thoroughly well pleased with himself. He changed the blue scarf
-with which he had begun the day for one of purple with gold bars, and
-walked up the street toward the state house.
-
-This venerable edifice, meekly reposing amid noble trees, struck
-agreeably upon Ardmore’s fancy. Here was government enthroned in quiet
-dignity, as becomes a venerable commonwealth, wearing its years like a
-veteran who has known war and tumult, but finds at last tranquillity
-and peace. He experienced a feeling of awe, without quite knowing it,
-as he strolled up the walk, climbed the steps to the portico and turned
-to look back from the shadow of the pillars. He had never but once
-before visited an American public building--the New York city hall--and
-he felt that now, indeed, he had turned a corner and entered upon a
-new and strange world. He had watched army manœuvres abroad with about
-the same attention that he gave to a ballet, and with a like feeling
-of beholding a show contrived for the amusement of spectators; but
-there was not even a policeman here to represent arsenals and bayonets.
-The only minion of government in sight was the languid operator of a
-lawn-mower, which rattled and hummed cheerily in the shadow of the
-soldiers’ monument. There was something fine about a people who, as he
-learned from the custodian, would not shake down these historic walls
-obedient to the demands of prosperity and growth, but sent increased
-business to find lodgment elsewhere. He ascended to the toy-like
-legislative chambers, where flags of nation and state hung side by
-side, and where the very seats and desks of the law-makers spoke of
-other times and manners.
-
-Mr. Ardmore, feeling that he should now be about his business, sought
-the governor’s office, where a secretary, who seemed harassed by the
-cares of his position, confirmed Ardmore’s knowledge of the governor’s
-absence.
-
-“I didn’t wish to see the governor on business,” explained Ardmore
-pleasantly, leaning upon his stick with an air of leisure. “He and my
-father were old friends, and I always promised my father that I would
-never pass through Raleigh without calling on Governor Dangerfield.”
-
-“That is too bad,” remarked the young man sympathetically, though with
-a preoccupation that was eloquent of larger affairs.
-
-“Could you tell me whether any members of the governor’s family are at
-home?”
-
-“Oh yes; Mrs. Dangerfield and Miss Jerry are at the mansion.”
-
-“Miss Jerry?”
-
-“Miss Geraldine. We all call her Miss Jerry in North Carolina.”
-
-“Oh yes; to be sure. Let me see; it’s over this way to the mansion,
-isn’t it?” inquired Ardmore.
-
-“No; out the other end of the building--and turn to your right. You
-can’t miss it.”
-
-The room was quiet, the secretary a young man of address and
-intelligence. Here, without question, was the place for Ardmore to
-discharge his business and be quit of it; but having at last snatched a
-commission from fleeting opportunity, it was not for him to throw it to
-another man. As he opened the door to leave, the secretary arrested him.
-
-“Oh, Mr.--pardon me, but did you come in from the south this morning?”
-
-“Yes; I came up on the Tar Heel Express from Atlanta.”
-
-“To be sure. Of course you didn’t sit up all night? There’s some
-trouble brewing around Kildare. I thought you might have heard
-something, but, of course, you couldn’t have been awake at two o’clock
-in the morning?”
-
-The secretary was so anxious to acquit him of any knowledge of the
-situation at Kildare that it seemed kindest to tell him nothing. The
-secretary’s face lost its anxiety for a moment, and he smiled.
-
-“The governor has an old friend and admirer up there who always puts a
-jug of fresh buttermilk on board when he passes through. The governor
-was expected home this morning, and I thought maybe----”
-
-“You’re positive it’s always buttermilk, are you?” asked Ardmore, with
-a grin.
-
-“Certainly,” replied the secretary, with dignity. “Governor
-Dangerfield’s sentiments as to the liquor traffic are well known.”
-
-“Of course, all the world knows that. But I’m afraid all jugs look
-alike to me; but then, the fact is I’m in the jug business myself.
-Good-morning.”
-
-The governor’s mansion was easily found, and having walked about the
-neighbourhood until his watch marked eleven, Ardmore entered the
-grounds and rang the bell at the front door.
-
-Once within, the air of domestic peace, the pictures on the walls, a
-whip and a felt hat with a blue band on the hall table, and a book on
-a chair in the drawing-room, turned down to mark the absent reader’s
-place, rebuked him for his impudence. If he had known just how to
-escape he would have done so; but the maid who admitted him had said
-that Miss Dangerfield was at home, and had gone in search of her
-with Ardmore’s card. He deserved to be sent to jail for entering a
-gentleman’s house in this way. He realized now, when it was too late,
-that he ought to have brought letters to one of the banks and been
-introduced to the Dangerfields by some gentleman of standing, if he
-wished to know them. The very portraits on the walls, the photographs
-on the mantel and table, frowned coldly upon him. The foundations of
-his character were set in sand; he knew that, because he had found it
-so easy to lie, and he had been told in his youth that one sin paved
-the way for another. He would take the earliest train for Ardsley
-and bury himself there for the remainder of his days. He had hardly
-formed this resolution when a light step sounded in the hall, and Miss
-Geraldine Dangerfield stood at the threshold. His good resolutions went
-down like a house of cards.
-
-“Miss Dangerfield,” he began, “I had the pleasure of meeting your
-father in New Orleans the other day, and as I was passing through town
-unexpectedly, I thought I should give myself the pleasure of calling
-on him. He said that in case I found him absent I might call upon you.
-In fact, he wrote a line on a card for me to present, but I stupidly
-left it at my hotel.”
-
-They faced each other in the dim, cool room for what seemed to him
-endless centuries. She was much younger than he had imagined; but her
-eyes were blue, just as he remembered them, and her abundant light
-hair curled away from her forehead in pretty waves, and was tied
-to-day with a large bow of blue ribbon. For an instant she seemed
-puzzled or mystified, but her blue eyes regarded him steadily. The very
-helplessness of her youth, the simplicity of her blue linen gown, the
-girlish ribbon in her hair, proclaimed him blackguard.
-
-“Won’t you please sit down, Mr. Ardmore?”
-
-And when they were seated there was another pause, during which the
-blue eyes continued to take account of him, and he fingered his tie,
-feeling sure that there was something wrong with it.
-
-“It’s warm, isn’t it?”
-
-“I suppose it is. It’s a way summer has, of being mostly warm.”
-
-He was quite sure that she was laughing at him; there was a tinge of
-irony in the very way in which she pronounced “wa’m,” lingeringly,
-as though to prolong her contempt for his stupidity in not finding
-anything better to say.
-
-She had taken the largest chair in the room, and it seemed to hide her
-away in its shadows, so that she could examine him at her leisure as he
-sat under a window in the full glare of its light.
-
-“I enjoyed meeting your father so much, Miss Dangerfield. I think we
-are always likely to be afraid of great men, but your father made me
-feel at home at once. And he tells such capital stories--I’ve been
-laughing over them ever since I left New Orleans.”
-
-“Father has quite a reputation for his stories. When did you leave New
-Orleans, Mr. Ardmore?”
-
-“Sunday night. I stopped in Atlanta a few hours and came on through.
-What a fine old town Atlanta is! don’t you think so?”
-
-“I certainly do not, Mr. Ardmore. It’s so dreadfully northernized.”
-
-When she said “no’thenized” her intonation gave the word a fine,
-cutting edge.
-
-“I suppose, Mr. Ardmore, that you saw papa at the luncheon at the
-Pharos Club in New Orleans?”
-
-“Why, yes, Miss Dangerfield. It was there I met the governor!”
-
-“Are you sure it was there, Mr. Ardmore?”
-
-“Why, I think that was the place. I don’t know my New Orleans as I
-should, but----”
-
-Ardmore was suddenly conscious that Miss Dangerfield had risen, and
-that she stood before him, with her fair face the least bit flushed,
-her blue eyes alight with anger, and that the hands at her sides were
-clenched nervously.
-
-“My father was not at luncheon at the Pharos Club, Mr. Ardmore. You
-never saw my father in your life. I know why it is you came here, and
-if you are not out of that door in one second I shall call the servants
-and have them throw you out.”
-
-She ceased abruptly and turned to look into the hall where steps
-sounded.
-
-“Is that you, Jerry?”
-
-“Yes, mamma; I’ll be up in just a minute. Please don’t wait for me.
-It’s only the man to see about the plumbing.”
-
-The lady who had appeared for an instant at the door went on slowly up
-the stairs, and the girl held Ardmore silent with her steady eyes until
-the step died away above.
-
-“I know what you want my father for. Mr. Billings and you are both
-pursuing him--it’s infamous, outrageous! And it isn’t his fault. I
-would have you know that my father is an honourable man!”
-
-The bayonets were at his breast: he would ask for mercy.
-
-“Miss Dangerfield, you are quite mistaken about me. I shall leave
-Raleigh at once, but I don’t want you to think I came here on any
-errand to injure or annoy your father.”
-
-“You are one of _those_ Ardmores, and Mr. Billings represents you. You
-thought you could come here and trick me into telling where my father
-is. But I’m not so easily caught. My mother is ill because of all this
-trouble, and I must go to her. But first I want to see that you leave
-this house!”
-
-“Oh, I’m sorry you are in trouble. On my honour, Miss Dangerfield, I
-know nothing of Billings and his business with your father.”
-
-“I suppose you will deny that you saw Mr. Billings in Atlanta
-yesterday?”
-
-“Why, no. I can’t exactly----”
-
-“You’d better not! I saw you there talking to him; and I suppose he
-sent you here to see what you could find out.”
-
-The room whirled a moment as she dealt this staggering blow. Billings,
-of the Bronx Loan and Trust Company, had said that Miss Dangerfield
-was peppery, but his employment of this trifling term only illustrated
-his weak command of the English language. It is not pleasant to be
-pilloried for undreamed-of crimes, and Ardmore’s ears tingled. He must
-plunge deeper and trust to the gods of chance to save him. He brought
-himself together with an effort, and spoke so earnestly that the words
-rang oddly in his own ears.
-
-“Miss Dangerfield, you may call me anything you please, but I am not
-quite the scoundrel you think me. It’s true that I was not in New
-Orleans, and I never saw your father in my life. I came to Raleigh
-on a mission that has absolutely nothing to do with Mr. Billings; he
-did not know I was coming. On the way here a message intended for your
-father came into my hands. It was thrown on the train at Kildare last
-night. I had gone out on the platform because the sleeper was hot,
-and a warning to your father to keep his hands off of Appleweight was
-given to me. Here it is. It seems to me that there is immediate danger
-in this, and I want to help you. I want to do anything I can for you.
-I didn’t come here to pry into your family secrets, Miss Dangerfield,
-honestly I didn’t!”
-
-She took the piece of paper into her slim little hands and read it,
-slowly nodding her head, as if the words only confirmed some earlier
-knowledge of the threat they contained. Then she lifted her head, and
-her eyes were bright with mirth as Ardmore’s wondering gaze met them.
-
-“Did _you_ get the jug?”
-
-“I got two jugs, to tell the truth; but when they seemed dissatisfied
-and howled for me to give one back, I threw off the buttermilk.”
-
-“You threw back father’s buttermilk to the man who gave you the
-applejack? Oh! oh!”
-
-Miss Jerry Dangerfield sat down and laughed; and Ardmore, glad of an
-opportunity to escape, found his hat and rushed from the house.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-MR. ARDMORE OFFICIALLY RECOGNIZED.
-
-
-“She never did it; she never, never did!”
-
-Mr. Ardmore, from a bench in the State House Park, thus concluded a
-long reverie. It was late afternoon, and he had forgotten luncheon in
-his absorption. There was no manner of use in recurring again to that
-episode of the lonely siding. He had found the girl--indubitably the
-girl--but not the wink! Miss Jerry Dangerfield was not the winking
-sort; he was well satisfied on that point, and so thoroughly ashamed
-into the bargain that he resolved to lead a different life and be very
-heedful of the cry of the poor in the future. His emotions had never
-been taxed as to-day, and he hoped that he might never again suffer the
-torture he had experienced as he waited in the governor’s drawing-room
-for Miss Dangerfield to appear. After that agony it had been a positive
-relief to be ordered out of the house. Her anger when she caught him
-lying about having met her father in New Orleans was superior to any
-simulated rage he had ever seen on the stage, and no girl with a
-winking eye would be capable of it. He was not clever; he knew that;
-but if he had had the brains of a monkey he would not have risked his
-foolish wits against those of a girl like Geraldine Dangerfield, who
-had led him into an ambush and then shot him to pieces.
-
-“She threatened to have the servants throw me out!” he groaned. And
-her slight, tense figure rose before him, and her voice, still the
-voice of young girlhood, rang in his ears. As she read the threatening
-message from Kildare he had noted the fineness of her hands, the curve
-of her fair cheek, the wayward curls on her forehead, and he remembered
-all these things now, but more than anything else her wrath, the tiny
-fists, the flashing eyes as she confronted him. As he sat dejectedly on
-his park bench he was unaware that Miss Geraldine Dangerfield, walking
-hurriedly through the park on her way from the governor’s mansion
-to the state house, passed directly behind him. His attitude was so
-eloquent of despair that it could not have failed to move a much harder
-heart than that of Miss Dangerfield, yet she made no sign; but a few
-minutes later the private secretary came out on the steps of the state
-house, and after a brief survey of the landscape crossed the lawn and
-called Ardmore by name.
-
-“I beg your pardon, but Miss Dangerfield wished me to say that she’d
-like to see you for a minute. She’s at the governor’s office.”
-
-A prisoner, sentenced to death, and unexpectedly reprieved with the
-rope already on his neck, could not experience greater relief than that
-which brought Mr. Thomas Ardmore to his feet.
-
-“You are sure of it--that there’s no mistake?”
-
-“Certainly not. Miss Dangerfield told me I was to bring you back.”
-
-Enthroned at the secretary’s desk, a mass of papers before her, Miss
-Geraldine Dangerfield awaited him. He was ready to place his head on
-the block in sheer contrition for his conduct, but she herself took the
-initiative, and her tone was wholly amiable.
-
-“This morning, Mr. Ardmore----”
-
-“Oh, please forget this morning!” he pleaded.
-
-“But I was rude to you; I threatened to have you thrown out of the
-house; and you had come to do us a favour.”
-
-“Miss Dangerfield, I cannot lie to you. You are one of the most
-difficult persons to lie to that I have ever met. I didn’t come to
-Raleigh just to warn your father that his life was threatened. I can’t
-lie to you about that----”
-
-“Then you _are_ a spy?” and Miss Dangerfield started forward in her
-chair so suddenly that Ardmore dropped his hat.
-
-“No! I am not a spy! I don’t care anything about your father. I never
-heard of him until yesterday.”
-
-“Well, I like that!” ejaculated Miss Dangerfield.
-
-“Oh, I mean that I wasn’t interested in him--why should I be? I don’t
-know anything about politics.”
-
-“Neither does father. That’s why he’s governor. If he were a politician
-he’d be a senator. But”--and she folded her hands and eyed him
-searchingly--“here’s a lot of telegrams from the sheriff of Dilwell
-County about that jug. How on earth did you come to get it?”
-
-“Lied, of course. I allowed them to think I was intimately associated
-in business with the governor, and they began passing me jugs. Then the
-man who gave the jug with that message in the cork got suspicious, and
-I dropped the buttermilk jug back to him.”
-
-“You traded buttermilk for moonshine?”
-
-“I shouldn’t exactly call it moonshine. It’s more like dynamite than
-anything else. I’ve written a reply to the note and put it back in the
-cork, and I’m going to return it to Kildare.”
-
-“What answer did you make to that infamous effort to intimidate my
-father?” demanded Miss Dangerfield.
-
-“I told the Appleweight gang that they are a lot of cowards, and that
-the governor will have them all in jail or hanged within ten days.”
-
-“Splendid! Perfectly _splendid_! Did you really say that?”
-
-“What else could I do? I knew that that’s what the governor would
-say--he’d have to say it--so I thought I’d save him the trouble.”
-
-“Where’s the jug now, Mr. Ardmore?”
-
-“In my room at the hotel. The gang must have somebody on guard here.
-A gentleman who seemed to be one of them called on me this morning,
-demanding the jug; and if he’s the man I think he is, he’s stolen the
-little brown jug from my room in the hotel by this time.”
-
-Miss Dangerfield had picked up a spool of red tape, and was unwinding
-it slowly in her fingers and rewinding it. They were such nice little
-hands, and so peaceful in their aimless trifling with the tape that
-he was sure his eyes had betrayed him into imagining she had clenched
-them in the quiet drawing-room at the mansion. This office, now that
-its atmosphere enveloped him, was almost as domestic as the house in
-which she lived. The secretary had vanished, and a Sabbath quiet was on
-the place. The white inner shutters swung open, affording a charming
-prospect of the trees, the lawn, and the monument in the park outside.
-And pleasantest of all, and most soothing to his weary senses, she was
-tolerating him now; she had even expressed approval of something he had
-done, and he had never hoped for this. She had not even pressed him to
-disclose his real purpose in visiting Raleigh, and he prayed that she
-would not return to this subject, for he had utterly lost the conceit
-of his own lying gift. Miss Dangerfield threw down the spool of tape
-and bent toward him gravely.
-
-“Mr. Ardmore, can you keep a secret?”
-
-“Nobody ever tried me with one, but I think I can, Miss Dangerfield,”
-he murmured humbly.
-
-“Then please stand up.”
-
-And Ardmore rose, a little sheepishly, like a school-boy who fears
-blame and praise alike. Miss Dangerfield lifted one of the adorable
-hands solemnly.
-
-“I, acting governor of North Carolina, hereby appoint you my private
-secretary, and may God have mercy on your soul. You may now sit down,
-Mr. Secretary.”
-
-“But I thought there was a secretary already. And besides, I don’t
-write a very good hand,” Ardmore stammered.
-
-“I am just sending Mr. Bassford to Atlanta to find papa. He’s already
-gone, or will be pretty soon.”
-
-“But I thought your father would be home to-night.”
-
-Miss Dangerfield looked out of the open window upon the park, then into
-the silent outer hall, to be sure she was not overheard.
-
-“Papa will not be at home to-night, or probably to-morrow night, or
-the night afterward. I’m not sure we’ll wait next Christmas dinner for
-papa.”
-
-“But, of course, you know where he is! It isn’t possible----” and
-Ardmore stared in astonishment into Miss Dangerfield’s tranquil blue
-eyes.
-
-“It _is_ possible. Papa is ducking his official responsibilities.
-That’s what’s the matter with papa! And I guess they’re enough to drive
-any man into the woods. Just look at all this!”
-
-Miss Dangerfield rested one of those diminutive hands of hers on the
-pile of documents, letters, and telegrams the secretary had left behind
-him; with a nod of the head she indicated the governor’s desk in the
-inner room, and it too was piled high with documents.
-
-“I supposed,” faltered Ardmore, “that in the absence of the governor
-the lieutenant-governor would act. I think I read that once.”
-
-“You must have read it wrong, Mr. Ardmore. In North Carolina, in the
-absence of the governor, I am governor! Don’t look so shocked; when I
-say I, I mean I--_me!_ Do you understand what I said?”
-
-“I heard what you said, Miss Dangerfield.”
-
-“I mean what I said, Mr. Ardmore. I have taken you into my confidence
-because I don’t know you. I don’t know anything about you. I don’t
-want to know anything about you. I’d be ashamed to ask anybody I know
-to help me. The people of North Carolina must never know that the
-governor is absent during times of great public peril. And if _you_ are
-afraid, Mr. Ardmore, you had better not accept the position.”
-
-“There’s nothing I wouldn’t do for you,” blurted Ardmore.
-
-“I’m not asking you--I _would_ not ask you--to do anything for me. I
-am asking you to do it for the Old North State. Our relations, Mr.
-Ardmore, will not be social, but purely official. Do you accept the
-terms?”
-
-“I do; and I warn you now that I shall never resign.”
-
-“I have heard papa say that life is short and the tenure of office
-uncertain. I can remove you at any time I please. Now do you understand
-that this is a serious business? There’s likely to be a lot of trouble,
-and no time for asking questions, so when I say it’s so it’s so.”
-
-“It’s so,” repeated Ardmore docilely.
-
-“Now, here’s the sheriff at Kildare, on our side of the line, who
-writes to say that he is powerless to catch Appleweight. He’s afraid of
-the dark, that man! You see, the grand jury in Dilwell County--that’s
-Kildare, you know--has indicted Appleweight as a common outlaw, but
-the grand jurors were all friends of Appleweight, and the indictment
-was only to satisfy law-and-order sentiment and appease the Woman’s
-Civic League of Raleigh. Now, papa doesn’t--I mean _I_ don’t want to
-offend those Appleweight people by meddling in this business. Papa
-wants Governor Osborne to arrest Appleweight in South Carolina; but I
-don’t believe Governor Osborne will dare do anything about it. Now,
-Mr. Ardmore, I am not going to have papa called a coward by anybody,
-particularly by South Carolina people, after what Governor Osborne said
-of our state.”
-
-“Why, what did he say?”
-
-“He said in a speech at Charleston last winter that no people who
-fry their meat can ever amount to anything, and he meant us! I can
-never forgive him for that; besides, his daughter is the stuck-upest
-thing! And I’d like Barbara Osborne to tell me how _she_ got into the
-Colonial Dames, and what call _she_ has to be inspector-general of
-the Granddaughters of the Mexican War; for I’ve heard my grandfather
-Dangerfield say many a time that old Colonel Osborne and his South
-Carolina regiment never did go outside of Charleston until the war was
-over and the American army had come back home.”
-
-One tiny fist this time! Ardmore was sure of it. Her indignation
-against the Osbornes was so sincere, the pouting petulance to which it
-diminished so like a child’s, and the gravity of the offence so novel
-in his simple experiences, that Ardmore was bound in chains before her
-speech was finished. The little drawl with which she concluded gave
-heightened significance to her last three words, so that it seemed that
-all the veterans of the war with Mexico trudged by, bearing the flag of
-North Carolina and no other banner.
-
-“Governor Osborne is a contemptible ruffian,” declared Ardmore, with
-deep feeling.
-
-Miss Dangerfield nodded judicial approval, and settled back in her
-chair the better to contemplate her new secretary, and said,--
-
-“I’m a Daughter of the Confederacy and a Colonial Dame. What are you?”
-
-“I suppose you’ll never speak to me again; papa sent three expensive
-substitutes to the Civil War.”
-
-“Three! Horrible!”
-
-“Two of them deserted, and one fell into the Potomac on his way south
-and was drowned. I guess they didn’t do you folks much harm.”
-
-“We’ll forgive you that; but what did your ancestors do in the
-Revolution?”
-
-“I’m ashamed to say that my great-grandfather was a poor guesser. He
-died during Washington’s second administration still believing the
-Revolution a failure.”
-
-“Do you speak of the war of 1861 as the Rebellion or as the war between
-the states? I advise you to be careful what you say,” and Miss Jerry
-Dangerfield was severe.
-
-“I don’t believe I ever mentioned it either way, so I’m willing to take
-your word for it.”
-
-“The second form is correct, Mr. Ardmore. When well-bred Southern
-people say Rebellion they refer to the uprising of 1776 against the
-British oppressor.”
-
-“Good. I’m sure I shall never get them mixed. Now that you are the
-governor, what are you going to do first about Appleweight?”
-
-“I’ve written--that is to say, papa wrote before he went away--a strong
-letter to Governor Osborne, complaining that Appleweight was hiding
-in South Carolina and running across the state line to rob and murder
-people in North Carolina. Papa told Governor Osborne that he must break
-up the Appleweight crowd, or he would do something about it himself.
-It’s a splendid letter; you would think that even a coward like
-Governor Osborne would do something after getting such a letter.”
-
-“Didn’t he answer the letter?”
-
-“Answer it? He never got it! Papa didn’t send it; that’s the reason!
-Papa’s the kindest man in the world, and he must have been afraid of
-hurting Governor Osborne’s feelings. He wrote the letter, expecting to
-send it, but when he went off to New Orleans he told Mr. Bassford to
-hold it till he got back. He had even signed it--you can read it if you
-like.”
-
-It was undoubtedly a vigorous epistle, and Ardmore felt the thrill
-of its rhetorical sentences as he read. The official letter paper on
-which it was typewritten, and the signature of William Dangerfield,
-governor of North Carolina, affixed in a bold hand, were sobering in
-themselves. The dignity and authority of one of the sovereign American
-states was represented here, and he handed the paper back to Miss
-Dangerfield as tenderly as though it had been the original draft of
-Magna Charta.
-
-“It’s a corker, all right.”
-
-“I don’t much like the way it ends. It says, right here”--and she bent
-forward and pointed to the place under criticism--“it says, ‘Trusting
-to your sense of equity, and relying upon a continuance of the
-traditional friendship between your state and mine, I am, sir, awaiting
-your reply, very respectfully, your obedient servant.’ Now, I wouldn’t
-trust to his sense of anything, and that traditional friendship
-business is just fluffy nonsense, and I wouldn’t be anybody’s obedient
-servant. I decided when I wasn’t more than fifteen years old, with a
-lot of other girls in our school, that when we got married we’d never
-say obey, and we never have, though only three of our class are married
-yet, but we’re all engaged.”
-
-“Engaged?”
-
-“Of course; we’re engaged. I’m engaged to Rutherford Gillingwater, the
-adjutant-general of this state. You couldn’t be my private secretary if
-I wasn’t engaged; it wouldn’t be proper.”
-
-The earth was only a flying cinder on which he strove for a foothold.
-She had announced her engagement to be married with a cool finality
-that took his breath away; and not realizing the chaos into which she
-had flung him, she returned demurely to the matter of the letter.
-
-“We can’t change that letter, because it’s signed close to the
-‘obedient servant,’ and there’s no room. But I’m going to put it into
-the typewriter and add a postscript.”
-
-She sat down before the machine and inexpertly rolled the sheet into
-place; then, with Ardmore helping her to find the keys, she wrote:
-
- I demand an imediate reply.
-
-“_Demand_ and _immediate_ are both business words. Are you sure
-there’s only one _m_ in immediate? All right, if you know. I reckon a
-postscript like that doesn’t need to be signed. I’ll just put ‘W. D.’
-there with papa’s stub pen, so it will look really fierce. Now, you’re
-the secretary; you copy it in the copying press and I’ll address the
-envelope.”
-
-“Don’t you have to put the state seal on it?” asked Ardmore.
-
-“Of course not. You have to get that from the secretary of state, and I
-don’t like him; he has such funny whiskers, and calls me little girl.
-Besides, you never put the seal on a letter; it’s only necessary for
-official documents.”
-
-She bade him give the letter plenty of time to copy, and talked
-cheerfully while he waited. She spoke of her friends, as Southern
-people have a way of doing, as though every one must of course know
-them--a habit that is illuminative of that delightful Southern
-neighbourliness that knits the elect of a commonwealth into a single
-family, that neither time and tide nor sword and brand can destroy.
-Ardmore’s humility increased as the names of the great and good of
-North Carolina fell from her lips; for they were as strange to him as
-an Abyssinian dynasty. It was perfectly clear that he was not of her
-world, and that his own was insignificant and undistinguished compared
-with hers. His spirit was stayed somewhat by the knowledge that he, and
-not the execrable Gillingwater, had been chosen as her coadjutor in
-the present crisis. His very ignorance of the royal families of North
-Carolina, which she recited so glibly, and the fact that he was unknown
-at the capital, had won him official recognition, and it was for him
-now to prove his worth. The political plot into which he had been most
-willingly drawn pleased him greatly; it was superior to his fondest
-dream of adventure, and now, moreover, he had what he never had before,
-a definite purpose in life, which was to be equal to the task to which
-this intrepid girl assigned him.
-
-“Well, that’s done,” said Miss Jerry, when the letter, still damp
-from the copy-press, had been carefully sealed and stamped. “Governor
-Osborne will get it in the morning. I think maybe we’d better telegraph
-him that it’s coming.”
-
-“I don’t see much use in that, when he’ll get the letter first thing
-to-morrow,” Ardmore suggested. “It costs money to telegraph, and you
-must have an economical administration.”
-
-“The good of it would be to keep him worried and make him very angry.
-And if he told Barbara Osborne about it, it would make her angry, too,
-and maybe she wouldn’t sleep any all night, the haughty thing! Hand me
-one of those telegraph blanks.”
-
-The message, slowly thumped out on the typewriter, and several times
-altered and copied, finally read:
-
- RALEIGH, N. C.
-
- The Honourable Charles Osborne,
- Governor of South Carolina,
- Columbia, S. C.:
-
- Have written by to-night’s mail in Appleweight matter. Your
- vacillating course not understood.
-
- WILLIAM DANGERFIELD,
- Governor of North Carolina.
-
-“I reckon that will make him take notice,” and Miss Jerry viewed her
-work with approval. “And now, Mr. Ardmore, here’s a telegram from Mr.
-Billings which I don’t understand. See if you know what it means.”
-
-Ardmore chuckled delightedly as he read:
-
- Cannot understand your outrageous conduct in bond matter. If payment
- is not made June first your state’s credit is ruined. Where is
- Foster? Answer to Atlanta.
-
- GEORGE P. BILLINGS.
-
-
-“I don’t see what’s so funny about that! Mr. Bassford was walking the
-floor with that message when I came to the office. He said papa and
-the state were both going to be ruined. There’s a quarter of a million
-dollars to be paid on bonds that are coming due June first, and there
-isn’t any money to pay them with. That’s what he said. And Mr. Foster
-is the state treasurer, and he’s gone fishing.”
-
-“Fishing?”
-
-“He left word he had gone fishing. Mr. Foster and papa don’t get along
-together, and Mr. Bassford says he’s run off just to let those bonds
-default and bring disgrace on papa and the state.”
-
-Ardmore’s grin broadened. The Appleweight case was insignificant
-compared with this new business with which he was confronted. He was
-vaguely conscious that bonds have a way of coming due, and that there
-is such a thing as credit in the world, and that it is something that
-must not be trifled with; but these considerations did not weigh
-heavily with him. For the first time in his uneventful life vengeance
-unsheathed her sword in his tranquil soul. Billings had always treated
-him with contempt, as a negligible factor in the Ardmore millions, and
-here at last was an opportunity to balance accounts.
-
-“I will show you how to fix Billings. Just let me have one of those
-blanks.”
-
-And after much labour, and with occasional suggestions from Miss Jerry,
-the following message was presently ready for the wires:
-
- Your famous imputation upon my honour and that of the state shall
- meet with the treatment it deserves. I defy you to do your worst.
- If you come into North Carolina or bring legal proceedings for the
- collection of your bonds I will fill you so full of buckshot that
- forty men will not be strong enough to carry you to your grave.
-
-“Isn’t that perfectly grand!” murmured Jerry admiringly. “But I thought
-your family and the Bronx Loan and Trust Company were the same thing.
-That’s what Rutherford Gillingwater told me once.”
-
-“You are quite right. Billings works for us. Before I came of age he
-used to make me ask his permission when I wanted to buy a new necktie,
-and when I was in college he was always fussing over my bills, and
-humiliating me when he could.”
-
-“But you mustn’t make him so mad that he will cause papa trouble and
-bring disgrace on our administration.”
-
-“Don’t you worry about Billings. He is used to having people get down
-on their knees to him, and the change will do him good. When he gets
-over his first stroke of apoplexy he will lock himself in a dark room
-and begin to think hard about what to do. He usually does all the
-bluffing, and I don’t suppose anybody ever talked to him like this
-telegram in all his life. Where is this man Foster?”
-
-“Just fishing; that’s what Mr. Bassford said, but he didn’t know where.
-Father was going to call a special session of the legislature to
-investigate him, and he was so angry that he ran off so that papa would
-have to look after those bonds himself. Then this Appleweight case came
-up, and that worried papa a great deal. Here’s his call for the special
-session. He told Mr. Bassford to hold that, too, until he came back
-from New Orleans.”
-
-Ardmore read Governor Dangerfield’s summons to the legislature with
-profound interest. It was signed, but the space for the date on which
-the law-makers were to assemble had been left blank.
-
-“It looks to me as though you had the whole state in your hands, Miss
-Dangerfield. But I don’t believe we ought to call the special session
-just yet. It would be sure to injure the state’s credit, and it will be
-a lot more fun to catch Foster. I wonder if he took all the state money
-with him.”
-
-“Mr. Bassford said he didn’t know and couldn’t find out, for the
-clerks in the treasurer’s office wouldn’t tell him a single thing.”
-
-“One should never deal with subordinates,” remarked Ardmore sagely.
-“Deal with the principals--I heard a banker say that once, and he was a
-man who knew everything. Besides, it will be more fun to attend to the
-bonds ourselves.”
-
-He seemed lost in reverie for several minutes, and she asked with some
-impatience what he was studying about.
-
-“I was trying to think of a word they use when the government has war
-or any kind of trouble. It’s something about a corpse, but I can’t
-remember it.”
-
-“A corpse? How perfectly horrid! Can it be possible, Mr. Ardmore, that
-you mean the writ of habeas corpus?” The twinkle in his eye left her
-unable to determine whether his ignorance was real, or assumed for his
-own amusement.
-
-“That’s it,” beamed Ardmore. “We’ve got to suspend it if worst comes to
-worst. Then you can put anybody you like into a dungeon, and nobody can
-get him out--not for a million years.”
-
-“I wonder where they keep it?” asked Jerry. “It must be here somewhere.
-Perhaps it’s in the safe.”
-
-“I don’t think it’s a thing, like a lemon, or a photograph, or a bottle
-of ink; it’s a document, like a Thanksgiving proclamation, and you
-order out the militia, and the soldiers have to leave their work and
-assemble at their armouries, and it’s all very serious, and somebody is
-likely to get shot.”
-
-“I don’t think it would be nice to shoot people,” said Jerry. “That
-would do the administration a terrible lot of harm.”
-
-“Of course we won’t resort to extreme measures unless we are forced to
-it. And then, after we have exhausted all the means at our command, we
-can call on the president to send United States troops.”
-
-He was proud of his knowledge, which had lingered in his
-subconsciousness from a review of the military power of the states
-which he had heard once from Griswold, who knew about such matters; but
-he was brought to earth promptly enough.
-
-“Mr. Ardmore, how dare you suggest that we call United States troops
-into North Carolina! Don’t you know that would be an insult to every
-loyal son of this state? I should have you know that the state of North
-Carolina is big enough to take care of herself, and if any president
-of the United States sends any troops down here while I’m running this
-office, he’ll find that, while our people will gladly die, they never
-surrender.”
-
-“Oh, I didn’t mean anything like that by what I said,” pleaded Ardmore,
-frightened almost to tears. “Of course, we’ve got our own troops,
-and we’ll get through all our business without calling for help. I
-shouldn’t any more call on the president than I’d call on the Czar of
-Russia.”
-
-She seemed satisfied with this disclaimer, and produced a diary in
-which Governor Dangerfield had noted his appointments far into the
-future.
-
-“We’ll have to break a lot of engagements for papa. Here’s a speech he
-promised to make at Wilmington at the laying of the corner-stone of the
-new orphan asylum. That’s to-morrow, and papa can’t be there, so we’ll
-send a telegram of congratulation to be read instead. Then he was to
-preside at a convention of the Old Fiddlers’ Association at Goldsboro
-the next day, and he can’t do that. I guess we’d better telegraph and
-say how sorry he is to be delayed by important official business. And
-here’s--why, I had forgotten about the National Guard encampment,
-that’s beginning now.”
-
-“Do you mean the state militia?” Ardmore inquired.
-
-“Why, of course. They’re having their annual encampment over in
-Azbell County at Camp Dangerfield--they always name the camp for the
-governor--and father was to visit the camp next Saturday for his
-annual inspection. That’s near your county, where your farm is; didn’t
-you know that?”
-
-Ardmore was humble, as he always was when his ignorance was exposed,
-but his face brightened joyfully.
-
-“You mustn’t break that engagement. Those troops ought to be inspected.
-Inspecting his troops is one of the most important things a governor
-has to do. It’s just like a king or an emperor. I’ve seen Emperor
-William and King Humbert inspect their soldiers, and they go galloping
-by like mad, with all the soldiers saluting, and it’s perfectly bully.
-And then there have to be manœuvres, to see whether the troops know how
-to fight or not, and forced marches and sham battles.”
-
-“Papa always speaks to the men,” suggested Jerry, a little abashed by
-the breadth and splendour of Ardmore’s knowledge. His comparison of the
-North Carolina militia with the armies of Europe pleased her.
-
-“I think the ladies of the royal family inspect the troops too,
-sometimes,” he continued. “The queens are always honorary colonels of
-regiments, and present them with flags, which is a graceful thing to
-do.”
-
-“Colonel Gillingwater never told me that, and he’s the adjutant-general
-of the state and ought to know.”
-
-“What’s he colonel of?” asked Ardmore gloomily.
-
-“He was colonel in the Spanish war, or was going to be, but he got
-typhoid fever, and so he couldn’t go to Cuba, and papa appointed him
-adjutant-general as a reward for his services; but everybody calls him
-Colonel just the same.”
-
-“It looks like a pretty easy way of getting a title,” murmured Ardmore.
-“I had typhoid fever once, and nearly died, and all my hair came out.”
-
-“You oughtn’t to speak that way of my fiancé. It’s quite impertinent in
-a mere private secretary to talk so.”
-
-“I beg your pardon. I forgot that you were engaged. You’ll have to go
-to Camp Dangerfield and inspect the troops yourself, and they would a
-lot rather have you inspect them than have your father do it.”
-
-“You mustn’t say things like that! I thought I told you your
-appointment carried no social recognition. You mustn’t talk to me as
-though I was a girl you really know----”
-
-“But there’s no use of making-believe such things when I do know you!”
-
-“Not the least little tiny bit, you don’t! Do you suppose, if you were
-a gentleman I knew and had been introduced to, I would be talking to
-you here in papa’s office?”
-
-“But I pretend to be a gentleman; you certainly wouldn’t be talking to
-me if you thought me anything else.”
-
-“I can’t even discuss the matter, Mr. Ardmore. A gentleman wouldn’t lie
-to a lady.”
-
-“But if you know I’m a liar, why are you telling me these secrets and
-asking me to help you play being governor?” and Ardmore, floundering
-hopelessly, marvelled at her more and more.
-
-“That’s exactly the reason--because you came poking up to my house and
-told me that scandalous fib about meeting papa in New Orleans. Mr.
-Bassford is a beautiful liar; that’s why he’s papa’s secretary; but you
-are a much more imaginative sort of liar than Mr. Bassford. He can only
-lie to callers about papa being engaged, or write encouraging letters
-to people who want appointments which papa never expects to make; but
-you lie because you can’t help it. Now, if you’re satisfied, you can
-take those telegrams down to the telegraph office; and you’d better
-mail that letter to Governor Osborne yourself, for fear the man who’s
-running the lawn-mower will forget to come for it.”
-
-The roll of drums and the cry of a bugle broke in upon the peace
-of the late afternoon. Miss Jerry rose with an exclamation and ran
-out into the broad portico of the state house. Several battalions
-of a tide-water regiment, passing through town on their way to Camp
-Dangerfield, had taken advantage of a wait in Raleigh to disembark
-and show themselves at the capital. They were already halted and at
-parade rest at the side of the street, and a mounted officer in khaki,
-galloping madly into view, seemed to focus the eyes of the gathering
-crowd. He was a gallant figure of a man; his mount was an animal that
-realized Job’s ideal of a battle-horse; the soldiers presented arms as
-the horseman rode the line. Miss Dangerfield waved her handkerchief,
-standing eagerly on tiptoe to make her salutation carry as far as
-possible.
-
-“Who is that?” asked Ardmore, with sinking spirit.
-
-“Why, Rutherford Gillingwater, of course.”
-
-“Fours right!” rang the command a moment later, and the militiamen
-tramped off to the station.
-
-It was then that Ardmore, watching the crowd disperse at the edge of
-the park, saw his caller of the morning striding rapidly across the
-street. Ardmore started forward, then checked himself so suddenly that
-Miss Jerry Dangerfield turned to him inquiringly.
-
-“What’s the matter?” she demanded.
-
-“Nothing. I have been robbed, as I hoped to be. Over there, on the
-sidewalk, beyond the girl in the pink sunbonnet, goes my little brown
-jug. That lank individual with the shabby hat has lifted it out of my
-room at the hotel, just as I thought he would.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-MR. GRISWOLD FORSAKES THE ACADEMIC LIFE.
-
-
-Miss Osborne had asked Griswold to await the outcome of the day,
-and, finding himself thus possessed of a vacation, he indulged his
-antiquarian instincts by exploring Columbia. The late afternoon found
-him in the lovely cathedral churchyard, where an aged negro, tending
-the graves of an illustrious family, leaned upon his spade and recited
-the achievements and virtues of the dead. Men who had been law-makers,
-others who had led valiantly to battle, and ministers of the Prince of
-Peace, mingled their dust together; and across the crisp hedges a robin
-sang above Timrod’s grave.
-
-As the shadows lengthened, Griswold walked back to the hotel, where he
-ate supper, then, calling for a horse, he rode through the streets in
-a mood of more complete alienation than he had ever experienced in a
-foreign country; yet the very scents of the summer night, stealing out
-from old gardens, the voices that reached him from open doorways, spoke
-of home.
-
-As he reached the outskirts of town and rode on toward the governor’s
-mansion, his mood changed, and he laughed softly, for he remembered
-Ardmore, and Ardmore was beyond question the most amusing person he
-knew. It was unfortunate, he generously reflected, that Ardmore, rather
-than himself, had not been plunged into this present undertaking, which
-was much more in Ardmore’s line than his own. There would, however,
-be a great satisfaction in telling Ardmore of his unexpected visit to
-Columbia, in exchange for his friend’s report of his pursuit of the
-winking eye. He only regretted that in the nature of things Columbia
-is a modern city, a seat of commerce as well as of government, a place
-where bank clearings are seriously computed, and where the jaunty
-adventurer with sword and ruffles is quite likely to run afoul of the
-police. Yet his own imagination was far more fertile than Ardmore’s,
-and he would have hailed a troop of mail-clad men as joyfully as his
-friend had he met them clanking in the highway. Thus modern as we
-think ourselves, the least venturesome among us dreams that some day
-some turn of a street corner will bring him face to face with what we
-please to call our fate; and this is the manifestation of our last
-drop of mediæval blood. The grimmest seeker after reality looks out
-of the corner of his eye for the flutter of a white handkerchief from
-the ivied tower he affects to ignore; and, in spite of himself, he is
-buoyed by the hope that some day a horn will sound for him over the
-nearest hill.
-
-Miss Osborne met him at the veranda steps. Indoors a mandolin and piano
-struck up the merry chords of _The Eutaw Girl_.
-
-“My young sisters have company. We’ll sit here, if you don’t mind.”
-
-She led the way to a quiet corner, and after they were seated she was
-silent a moment, while the light from the windows showed clearly that
-her perplexity of the morning was not yet at an end. The music tinkled
-softly, and a breeze swept in upon them with faint odours of the garden.
-
-“I hope you won’t mind, Mr. Griswold, if I appear to be ashamed of you.
-It’s not a bit hospitable to keep you outside our threshold; but--you
-understand--I don’t have to tell you!”
-
-“I understand perfectly, Miss Osborne!”
-
-“It seems best not to let the others know just why you are here. I told
-my sisters that you were an old friend--of father’s--who wished to
-leave a message for him.”
-
-“That will do first-rate!” he laughed. “My status is fixed. I know your
-father, but as for ourselves, we are not acquainted.”
-
-He felt that she was seriously anxious and troubled, and he wished to
-hearten her if he could. The soft dusk of the faintly-lighted corner
-folded her in. Behind her the vines of the verandah moved slightly in
-the breeze. A thin, wayward shaft of light touched her hair, as though
-searching out the gold. When we say that people have atmosphere, we
-really mean that they possess indefinite qualities that awaken new
-moods in us, as by that magic through which an ignorant hand thrumming
-a harp’s strings may evoke some harmony denied to conscious skill. He
-heard whispered in his heart a man’s first word of the woman he is
-destined to love, in which he sets her apart--above and beyond all
-other womenkind; she is different; she is not like other women!
-
-“It is nearly nine,” she said, her voice thrilling through him. “My
-father should have been here an hour ago. We have heard nothing from
-him. The newspapers have telephoned repeatedly to know his whereabouts.
-I have put them off by intimating that he is away on important
-public business, and that his purpose might be defeated if his exact
-whereabouts were known. I tried to intimate, without saying as much,
-that he was busy with the Appleweight case. One of the papers that has
-very bitterly antagonized father ever since his election has threatened
-to expose what the editor calls father’s relations with Appleweight. I
-cannot believe that there is anything wrong about that; of course there
-is not!”
-
-She was controlling herself with an effort, and she broke off her
-declaration of confidence in her absent father sharply but with a sob
-in her voice.
-
-“I have no doubt in the world that the explanation you gave the
-newspapers is the truth of the matter. Your father must be absent a
-great deal--it is part of a governor’s business to keep in motion.
-But we may as well face the fact that his absence just now is most
-embarrassing. This Appleweight matter has reached a crisis, and a
-failure to handle it properly may injure your father’s future as a
-public man. If you will pardon me, I would suggest that there must be
-some one whom you can take into your confidence--some friend, some one
-in your father’s administration that you can rely on?”
-
-“Yes; father has many friends; but I cannot consider acknowledging
-to any one that father has disappeared when such a matter as this
-Appleweight case is an issue through the state. No; I have thought of
-every one this afternoon. It would be a painful thing for his best
-friends to know what is--what seems to be the truth.” Her voice wavered
-a little, but she was brave, and he was aware that she straightened
-herself in her chair, and, when wayward gleams of light fell upon her
-face, that her lips were set resolutely.
-
-“You saw the attorney-general this morning,” she went on. “As you
-suggested, he would naturally be the one to whom I should turn, but I
-cannot do it. I--there is a reason”--and she faltered a moment--“there
-are reasons why I cannot appeal to Mr. Bosworth at this time.”
-
-She shrugged her shoulders as though throwing off a disagreeable topic,
-and he saw that there was nothing more to be said on this point. His
-heart-beats quickened as he realized that she was appealing to him;
-that, though he was only the most casual acquaintance, she trusted him.
-It was a dictum of his, learned in his study and practice of the law,
-that issues must be met as they offer--not as the practitioner would
-prefer to have them, but as they occur; and here was a condition of
-affairs that must be met promptly if the unaccountable absence of the
-governor was to be robbed of its embarrassing significance.
-
-As he pondered for a moment, a messenger rode into the grounds, and
-Miss Osborne slipped away and met the boy at the steps. She came back
-and opened a telegram, reading the message at one of the windows. An
-indignant exclamation escaped her, and she crumpled the paper in her
-hand.
-
-“The impudence of it!” she exclaimed. He had risen, and she now turned
-to him with anger and scorn deepening her beautiful colour. Her breath
-came quickly; her head was lifted imperiously; her lips quivered
-slightly as she spoke.
-
-“This is from Governor Dangerfield. Can you imagine a man of any
-character or decency sending such a message to the governor of another
-state?”
-
-She watched him as he read:
-
- RALEIGH, N. C.
-
- The Honourable Charles Osborne,
- Governor of South Carolina,
- Columbia, S. C.:
-
- Have written by to-night’s mail in Appleweight matter. Your
- vacillating course not understood.
-
- WILLIAM DANGERFIELD,
- Governor of North Carolina.
-
-“What do you think of that?” she demanded.
-
-“I think it’s impertinent, to say the least,” he replied guardedly.
-
-“Impertinent! It’s the most contemptible, outrageous thing I ever heard
-of in my life! Governor Dangerfield has dilly-dallied with that case
-for two years. His administration has been marked from the beginning
-by the worst kind of incompetence. Why, this man Appleweight and his
-gang of outlaws only come into South Carolina now and then to hide and
-steal, but they commit most of their crimes in North Carolina, and
-they always have. Talk about a vacillating course! Father has never
-taken steps to arrest those men, out of sheer regard for Governor
-Dangerfield; he thought North Carolina had some pride, and that her
-governor would prefer to take care of his own criminals. What do you
-suppose Appleweight is indicted for in this state? For stealing one
-ham--one single ham from a farmer in Mingo County, and he’s killed half
-a dozen men in North Carolina.”
-
-She paced the corner of the veranda angrily, while Griswold groped for
-a solution of the problem. The telegram from Raleigh was certainly
-lacking in diplomatic suavity. It was patent that if the governor of
-North Carolina was not tremendously aroused, he was playing a great
-game of bluff; and on either hypothesis a prompt response must be made
-to his telegram.
-
-“I must answer this at once. He must not think we are so stupid in
-Columbia that we don’t know when we’re insulted. We can go through the
-side door to father’s study and write the message there,” and she led
-the way.
-
-“It might be best to wait and see what his letter is like,” suggested
-Griswold, with a vague wish to prolong this discussion, that he might
-enjoy the soft glow of the student lamp on her cheek.
-
-“I don’t care what his letter says; it can’t be worse than his
-telegram. We’ll answer them both at once.”
-
-She found a blank and wrote rapidly, without asking suggestions, with
-this result:
-
- The Honourable William Dangerfield,
- Raleigh, N. C.:
-
- Your extremely diverting telegram in Appleweight case received and
- filed.
-
- CHARLES OSBORNE,
- Governor of South Carolina.
-
-She met Griswold’s obvious disappointment with prompt explanation.
-
-“You see, the governor of South Carolina cannot stoop to an exchange
-of billingsgate with an underbred person like that--a big, solemn,
-conceited creature in a long frock-coat and a shoestring necktie, who
-boasts of belonging to the common ‘peo-pull.’ He doesn’t have to tell
-anybody that, when it’s plain as daylight. The way to answer him is not
-to answer at all.”
-
-“The way to answer him is to make North Carolina put Appleweight in
-jail, for crimes committed in that state, and then, if need be, we
-can satisfy the cry for vengeance in South Carolina by flashing our
-requisition. There is a rule in such cases that the state having the
-heaviest indictments shall have precedence; and you say that in this
-state it’s only a matter of a ham. I am not acquainted with the South
-Carolina ham,” he went on, smiling, “but in Virginia the right kind of
-a ham is sacred property, and to steal one is a capital offence.”
-
-“I should like to steal one such as I had last winter in Richmond,”
-and Miss Osborne forgot her anger; her eyes narrowed dreamily at an
-agreeable memory.
-
-“Was it at Judge Randolph Wilson’s?” asked Griswold instantly.
-
-“Why, yes, it was at Judge Wilson’s, Mr. Griswold. How did you know?”
-
-“I didn’t know--I guessed; for I have sat at that table myself. The
-judge says grace twice when there’s to be ham--once before soup, then
-again before ham.”
-
-“Then thanksgiving after the ham would be perfectly proper!”
-
-Miss Osborne was studying Griswold carefully, then she laughed, and
-her attitude toward him, that had been tempered by a certain official
-reserve, became at once cordial.
-
-“Are you the Professor Griswold who is so crazy about pirates? I’ve
-heard the Wilsons speak of you, but you don’t look like that.”
-
-“Don’t I look like a pirate? Thank you! I had an appointment at
-Judge Wilson’s office this morning to talk over a case in which I’m
-interested.”
-
-“I remember now what he said about you. He said you really were a fine
-lawyer, but that you liked to read about pirates.”
-
-“That may have been what he said to you; but he has told me that the
-association of piracy and law was most unfortunate, as it would suggest
-unpleasant comments to those who don’t admire the legal profession.”
-
-“And you are one of those tide-water Griswolds, then, if you know the
-Randolph Wilsons. They are very strong for the tide-water families;
-to hear them talk you’d think the people back in the Virginia hills
-weren’t really respectable.”
-
-“It’s undeniably the right view of the matter,” laughed Griswold, “but
-now that I live in Charlottesville I don’t insist on it. It wouldn’t be
-decent in me. And I have lots of cousins in Lexington and through the
-Valley. The broad view is that every inch of the Old Dominion is holy
-ground.”
-
-“It is an interesting commonwealth, Mr. Griswold; but I do not consider
-it holy ground. South Carolina has a monopoly of that;” and then the
-smile left her face and she returned to the telegram. “Our immediate
-business, however, is not with Virginia, or with South Carolina, but
-with the miserable commonwealth that lies between.”
-
-“And that commonwealth,” said Griswold, wishing to prolong the respite
-from official cares, “that state known in law and history as North
-Carolina, I have heard called, by a delightful North Carolina lady I
-met once at Charlottesville, a valley of humility between two mountains
-of conceit. That seems to hit both of us!”
-
-“North Carolina isn’t a state at all,” Miss Osborne declared
-spitefully; “it’s only a strip of land where uninteresting people live.
-And now, what do you say to this telegram?”
-
-“Excellent. It’s bound to irritate, and it leaves him in the dark as to
-our--I mean Governor Osborne’s--intentions. And those intentions----”
-
-During this by-play he had reached a decision as to what should be
-done, and he was prepared to answer when she asked, with an employment
-of the pronoun that pleasantly emphasized their relationship,--
-
-“What _are_ our intentions?”
-
-“We are going to catch Appleweight, that’s the first thing--and until
-we get him we’re going to keep our own counsel. Let me have a telegraph
-blank, and I will try my hand at being governor.” He sat down in the
-governor’s chair, asked the name of the county seat of Mingo, and wrote
-without erasure or hesitation this message:
-
- To the Sheriff of Mingo County,
- Turner Court House, S. C.:
-
- Make every possible effort to capture Appleweight and any of his gang
- who are abroad in your county. Swear in all the deputies you need,
- and if friendliness of citizens to outlaws makes this impossible wire
- me immediately, and I will send militia. Any delay on your part will
- be visited with severest penalties. Answer immediately by telegraph.
-
- CHARLES OSBORNE,
- Governor of South Carolina.
-
-“That’s quite within the law,” said Griswold, handing Barbara the
-message; “and we might as well put the thing through at a gallop. I’ll
-get the telegraph company to hold open the line to Turner Court House
-until the sheriff answers.”
-
-As Barbara read the message he saw her pleasure in the quick
-compression of her lips, the glow in her cheeks, and then the bright
-glint of her bronze-brown eyes as she finished.
-
-“That’s exactly right. I didn’t know just how to manage such a thing,
-but I see that that is the proper method.”
-
-“Yes; the sheriff must have his full opportunity to act.”
-
-“And what, then, if the sheriff refuses to do anything?”
-
-“Then--then”--and Griswold’s jaw set firmly, and he straightened
-himself slightly before he added in a quiet tone--“then I’m going down
-there to take charge of the thing myself.”
-
-“Oh, that is too much! I _didn’t_ ask that; and I must refuse to
-let you take any such responsibility on yourself, to say nothing of
-the personal danger. I merely wanted your advice--as a lawyer, for
-the reason that I dared not risk father’s name even among his best
-friends here. And your coming to the office this morning seemed so--so
-providential----”
-
-He sought at once to minimize the value of his services, for he was
-not a man to place a woman under obligations, and, moreover, an
-opportunity like this, to uphold the dignity, and perhaps to exercise
-the power, of a state laid strong hold upon him. He knew little enough
-about the Appleweight case, but he felt from his slight knowledge
-that he was well within his rights in putting spurs to the sheriff of
-Mingo County. If the sheriff failed to respond in proper spirit and
-it became necessary to use the militia, he was conscious that serious
-complications might arise. He had not only a respect for law, but an
-ideal of civic courage and integrity, and the governor’s inexplicable
-absence aroused his honest wrath. The idea that a mere girl should be
-forced to sustain the official honour and dignity of a cowardly father
-further angered him. And then he looked into her eyes and saw how grave
-they were, and how earnest and with what courage she met the situation;
-and the charm of her slender figure, that glint of gold in her hair,
-her slim, supple hands folded on the table--these things wrought in him
-a happiness that he had never known before, so that he laughed as he
-took the telegram from her.
-
-“There must be no mistake, no failure,” she said quietly.
-
-“We are not going to fail; we are going to carry this through! Within
-three days we’ll have Appleweight in a North Carolina jail or a flying
-fugitive in Governor Dangerfield’s territory. And now these telegrams
-must be sent. It might be better for you to go to the telegraph office
-with me. You must remember that I am a pilgrim and a stranger, and they
-might question my filing official messages.”
-
-“That is perfectly true. I will go into town with you.”
-
-“And if there’s an official coach that everybody knows as yours, it
-would allay suspicions to have it,” and while he was still speaking she
-vanished to order the carriage.
-
-In five minutes it was at the side door, and Griswold and Barbara,
-fortified by the presence of Phœbe, left the governor’s study.
-
-“If they don’t know me, everybody in South Carolina knows Phœbe,” said
-Barbara.
-
-“A capital idea. I can see by her eye that she’s built for conspiracy.”
-
-Griswold’s horse was to be returned to town by a boy; and when this had
-been arranged the three entered the carriage.
-
-“The telegraph office, Tom; and hurry.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-AN AFFAIR AT THE STATE HOUSE.
-
-
-Barbara filed the messages herself with the manager of the telegraph
-company, who lifted the green shade from his eyes and smiled upon her.
-
-“We’ll rush them, Miss Osborne. Shall I telephone the answers if
-they come to-night? No; your father likes his telegrams delivered, I
-remember.”
-
-“I will call for them,” said Griswold. “Governor Osborne was only
-at home a few hours this evening, and he left me in charge of these
-matters.”
-
-The manager’s face expressed surprise.
-
-“Oh! I didn’t know the governor was at home,” he remarked, as he
-finished counting the words and charging them against the state’s
-account. “I will send them myself, and ask the operators at the other
-end to look lively about the answers. You are Mr.----”
-
-“This is Major Griswold,” said Barbara, conferring the title with a
-vague feeling that it strengthened her cause.
-
-“Major,” repeated the manager, as he nodded to Griswold with an air
-that implied his familiarity with official secrets. “You will call? In
-a couple of hours, Major.”
-
-As Barbara and Griswold turned to leave, a young man who had been
-writing a message at the standing desk in the lobby lifted his hat and
-addressed Barbara. He was a reporter for the Columbia _Intelligencer_,
-and his manner was eager.
-
-“Oh, Miss Osborne, pardon me, but I’ve been trying to get you on the
-telephone. Can you tell me where your father is to-night?”
-
-“Father was in town only a few hours, and then left on state business.”
-
-The young man glanced from one to the other. He was a polite youngster,
-and Miss Barbara Osborne was--Miss Barbara Osborne, and this, to the
-people of South Carolina, was a fact of weight. Still the reporter
-twirled his hat uncertainly.
-
-“Well, I thought I had met all the trains, but I guess I missed the
-governor.”
-
-“No; you didn’t miss him,” smiled Barbara. “Father drove in from the
-country and went back the same way. He didn’t come into town at all.”
-
-The news instinct is the keenest with which man may be blessed, and the
-reporter scented events. Griswold, seeing the light flash in the young
-man’s eye, felt that here was an opportunity to allay public criticism.
-
-“Governor Osborne is engaged upon important public business. He will
-be absent from town for a day--perhaps a week. He will not return to
-Columbia until the business is thoroughly disposed of.”
-
-“May I ask if it’s the Appleweight case? The Raleigh papers have wired
-for information, and we’d like to know here.”
-
-“I cannot answer that question. It’s enough that the governor is absent
-on state business, and that the business is important. You may print
-that in the _Intelligencer_, and repeat it to Raleigh.--There is no
-harm in that, is there, Miss Osborne?”
-
-“No; certainly not,” Barbara replied.
-
-“But the papers all over the state are talking about the Appleweight
-gang. They intimate that those people enjoy immunity from prosecution,
-and that the governor--you will pardon me, Miss Osborne--will take no
-steps to arrest them, for personal reasons.”
-
-“Your question is quite proper,” replied Griswold. “The governor’s acts
-are subject to scrutiny at all times, and it is just as well to have
-this matter understood now. I am employed by the governor as special
-counsel in some state matters. My name is Griswold. Take out your book
-and come to the desk here, and I will give you a statement which you
-may publish as by the authority of the governor.”
-
-The three found seats at a table, and Griswold dictated while the
-reporter wrote, Barbara meanwhile sitting with her cheek resting
-against her raised hand. She was experiencing the relief we all know,
-of finding a strong arm to lean upon in an emergency, and she realized
-that Griswold was not only wise, but shrewd and resourceful.
-
-“Please print this exactly as I give it: It having been intimated in
-certain quarters that the Appleweight gang of outlaws, which has been
-terrorizing the North Carolina frontier for several years, enjoys
-immunity from prosecution in South Carolina owing to the fact that
-Governor Osborne was at some time attorney for Appleweight, Governor
-Osborne begs to say that steps have already been taken for the arrest
-of this man and his followers, dead or alive. The governor presents
-his compliments to those amiable critics who have so eagerly seized
-upon this pretext for slurring his private character and aspersing his
-official acts. The governor has no apologies to proffer the people of
-South Carolina, who have so generously reposed in him their trust and
-confidence. He is intent upon safeguarding the peace, dignity, and
-honour of the state through an honest enforcement of law, and he has no
-other aim or ambition.”
-
-Griswold took the reporter’s notebook and read over this
-_pronunciamiento_; then he handed it to Barbara, who studied it
-carefully.
-
-“I think that sounds just right, only why not substitute for ‘honest’
-the word ‘vigorous’?”
-
-“Excellent,” assented Griswold, and thus amended the statement was
-returned to the reporter.
-
-“Now,” said Griswold to the young man, “you are getting a pretty good
-item that no other paper will have. Please wire your story to Raleigh;
-Governor Osborne is very anxious that the people up there shall
-understand fully his attitude in the Appleweight matter.”
-
-“I reckon this will wake up old Dangerfield all right,” said the
-reporter, grinning. “He’ll be paralyzed. May I use your name in this
-connection, sir?”
-
-“Not at all. My engagement with Governor Osborne is of the most
-confidential character, and our purposes would be defeated by
-publicity. Remember, you get the exclusive use of this story--the
-return and immediate departure of the governor, his statement to the
-people in the Appleweight case--all with the understanding that you use
-what you have to the best advantage.”
-
-“This is all right, is it, Miss Osborne?” asked the reporter.
-
-“Major Griswold has full authority to act, and you need question
-nothing he tells you,” Barbara replied.
-
-“I suppose the governor didn’t see the attorney-general to-day?” asked
-the reporter detainingly, as Barbara rose. She exchanged a glance with
-Griswold.
-
-“Father didn’t see Mr. Bosworth at all, if that’s what you mean!”
-
-“Didn’t see him? Well, Bosworth didn’t exactly tell me he had seen him
-to-day, but I asked him about the Appleweight case an hour ago at his
-house, and he said the governor wasn’t going to do anything, and that
-was the end of it so far as the administration is concerned.”
-
-“Print his story and see what happens! We have no comment to make on
-that, have we, Miss Osborne?”
-
-“Nothing at all,” replied Barbara scornfully.
-
-“I’m at the Saluda House at present. See me to-morrow and I may have
-another story for you!” and Griswold shook the reporter warmly by the
-hand as they parted at the carriage door.
-
-“Home,” said Barbara for the reporter’s benefit, and then, to Griswold:
-“I must speak of another matter. Drive with me a little way until we
-can throw the reporter off.”
-
-She spoke quietly, but he saw that she was preoccupied with some new
-phase of the situation, and as the carriage gained headway she said
-earnestly,--
-
-“That young man told the truth--I am sure of it--about Mr. Bosworth. I
-knew he would do something to injure father if he could, but I did not
-know he had the courage to go so far.”
-
-“It’s only politics, Miss Osborne,” said Griswold lightly. “Besides,
-you may be sure the _Intelligencer_ will print the governor’s side of
-it in its largest type.”
-
-“No; it is not politics. It is more despicable, more contemptible, more
-ungenerous even than politics. But he shall be punished, humiliated,
-for his conduct.”
-
-“You shall fix his punishment yourself!” laughed Griswold; “but the
-state’s business first. We have a little more to do before I am
-satisfied with the day’s work.”
-
-“Yes, of course. We must leave nothing undone that father would do were
-he here to act for himself.”
-
-“We must be even more careful in his absence to safeguard his
-honour than the case really requires. We not only have his public
-responsibility but our own into the bargain in so far as we speak and
-act for him. And there’s always the state--the Palmetto flag must be
-kept flying at the masthead.” Their eyes met as they passed under
-an electric lamp, and he saw how completely she was relying on his
-guidance.
-
-They were now at the edge of town, and she bade him stop the carriage.
-
-“We must go to the state house,” said Griswold. “We must get that
-requisition, to guard against treason in the citadel. Assuming that
-Governor Osborne really doesn’t want to see Appleweight punished, we’d
-better hold the requisition anyhow. It’s possible that your father
-had it ready--do pardon me!--for a grand-stand play, or he may have
-wanted to bring Appleweight into the friendlier state--but that’s
-all conjectural. We’d better keep out of the principal streets. That
-reporter has a sharp eye.”
-
-She gave the necessary directions, and the driver turned back into
-Columbia. It was pleasant to find his accomplice in this conspiracy a
-girl of keen wit who did not debate matters or ask tiresome questions.
-The business ahead was serious enough, though he tried by manner,
-tone, and words to minimize its gravity. If the attorney-general was
-serving a personal spite, or whatever the cause of his attitude, he
-might go far in taking advantage of the governor’s absence. Griswold’s
-relation to the case was equivocal enough, he fully realized; but the
-very fact of its being without precedent, and so beset with pitfalls
-for all concerned, was a spur to action. In the present instance a duly
-executed requisition for the apprehension of a criminal, which could
-not be replaced if lost, must be held at all hazards, and Griswold had
-determined to make sure of the governor’s warrant before he slept.
-
-“Have you the office keys?” he asked.
-
-“Yes; I have been afraid to let go of them. There’s a watchman in the
-building, but he knows me very well. There will not be the slightest
-trouble about getting in.”
-
-The watchman--an old Confederate veteran--sat smoking in the entrance,
-and courteously bade them good-evening.
-
-“I want to get some papers from father’s office, Captain.”
-
-“Certainly, Miss Barbara.” He preceded them, throwing on the lights,
-to the governor’s door, which he opened with his own pass-key. “It’s
-pretty lonesome here at night, Miss Barbara.”
-
-“I suppose nobody comes at night,” remarked Griswold.
-
-“Not usually, sir. But one or two students are at work in the library,
-and Mr. Bosworth is in his office.”
-
-The veteran walked away jingling his keys. Barbara was already in
-the private office, bending over the governor’s desk. She found the
-right key, drew out a drawer, then cried out softly. She knelt beside
-the desk, throwing the papers about in her eagerness, then turned to
-Griswold with a white face.
-
-“The drawer has been opened since I was here this morning. The
-requisition and all the other papers in the case are gone.”
-
-Griswold examined the lock carefully and pointed to the roughened edges
-of the wood.
-
-“A blade of the shears there, or perhaps the paper-cutter--who knows?
-The matter is simple enough, so please do not trouble about it. Wait
-here a moment. I want to make some inquiries of the watchman.”
-
-He found the old fellow pacing the portico like a sentry. He pointed
-out the attorney-general’s office, threw on a few additional lights for
-Griswold’s guidance, and resumed his patrol duty outside.
-
-The attorney-general’s door was locked, but in response to Griswold’s
-knock it was opened guardedly.
-
-“I am very sorry to trouble you, Mr. Bosworth,” began Griswold, quietly
-edging his way into the room, “but one never gets wholly away from
-business these days.”
-
-He closed the door himself, and peered into the inner rooms to be sure
-the attorney-general was alone. Bosworth’s face flushed angrily when he
-found that a stranger had thus entered his office with a cool air of
-proprietorship; then he stared blankly at Griswold for a moment before
-he recalled where he had seen him before.
-
-“I don’t receive visitors at night,” he blurted, laying his hand on the
-door. “I’m engaged, and you’ll have to come in office hours.”
-
-He shook the door as though to call Griswold’s attention to it.
-
-“Do you see this thing? it’s the door!” he roared.
-
-“I have seen it from both sides, Mr. Bosworth. I intend to stay on this
-side until I get ready to go.”
-
-“Who the devil are you? What do you mean by coming here at this time of
-night?”
-
-“I’m a lawyer myself, if you will force the ignoble truth from me.
-Now, when you are perfectly quiet, and once more the sane, reasonable
-human being you must be to have been trusted with the office you hold,
-we’ll proceed to business. Meanwhile, please put on your coat. A man in
-his shirt-sleeves is always at a disadvantage; and we Virginians are
-sticklers for the proprieties.”
-
-The attorney-general’s fury abated when he saw that he had to deal with
-a low-voiced young man who seemed unlikely to yield to intimidation.
-Griswold had, in fact, seated himself on a table that was otherwise
-covered with law books, and he sniffed with pleasure the familiar
-atmosphere of dusty law calf, which no one who has had the slightest
-acquaintance with a law office ever forgets. To his infinite amusement
-Bosworth was actually putting on his coat, though it may have been a
-little absent-mindedly to give him an opportunity to decide upon a plan
-for getting rid of his visitor. However this may have been, Bosworth
-now stepped to the side of the room and snatched down the telephone
-receiver.
-
-Griswold caught him by the shoulder and flung him round.
-
-“None of that! By calling the police you will only get yourself into
-trouble. I’m bigger than you are, and I should hate to have to throw
-you out of the window. Now”--and he caught and hung up the receiver,
-which was wildly banging the wall--“now let us be sensible and get down
-to business.”
-
-“Who the devil are you?” demanded Bosworth, glaring.
-
-“I’m special counsel for Governor Osborne in the Appleweight case.
-There’s no use in wasting time in further identification, but if you
-take down that volume on Admiralty Practice just behind you, you will
-find my name on the title-page. Or, to save you the trouble, as you
-seem to be interested in my appearance, I will tell you that my name is
-Griswold, and that my address is Charlottesville, Virginia.”
-
-“You are undoubtedly lying. If you are smart enough to write a book,
-you ought to know enough about legal procedure to understand that the
-attorney-general represents the state, and special counsel would not be
-chosen without his knowledge.”
-
-“Allow me to correct you, my learned brother. You should never misquote
-the opposing counsel--it’s one of the rules of the game. What I said
-a moment ago was that I represented the governor--Governor Osborne. I
-didn’t say I represented the state, which is a different matter, and
-beset with _ultra vires_ pitfalls. There is no earthly reason why a
-governor should not detach himself, so to speak, from his office and
-act _in propria persona_, as a mere citizen. His right to private
-remedy is not abridged by the misfortune of office-holding. Whether
-he can himself be made defendant in an action at law touches that
-ancient question, whether the monarch or the state can be sued. That’s
-a question law students have debated from the beginning of time, but
-we must not confuse it with the case at issue. The governor, as a
-citizen, may certainly employ such counsel as he pleases, and just now
-I represent him. Of course, if you want me to furnish a brief----”
-
-Griswold’s manner was deliberate and ingratiating. He saw that the
-attorney-general had not the slightest sense of humour, and that his
-play upon legal phrases was wasted. Bosworth grinned, but not at the
-legal status of monarchs and states. He had thought of a clever stroke,
-and he dealt the blow with confidence.
-
-“Let us assume,” he said, “that you represent Mr. Osborne. May I ask
-the whereabouts of your client?”
-
-“Certainly. You may ask anything you please, but it will do you no
-good. It’s an old rule of the game never to divulge a client’s secret.
-Governor Osborne has his own reasons for absenting himself from his
-office. However, he was at home to-night.”
-
-“I rather guess not, as I had all the trains watched. You’ll have to do
-a lot better than that, Mr. Griswold.”
-
-“He has issued a statement to the public since you lied to the
-_Intelligencer_ reporter about him to-day. I suppose it’s part of your
-official duty to misrepresent the head of the state administration in
-the press, but the governor is in the saddle, and I advise you to be
-good.”
-
-The attorney-general felt that he was not making headway. His
-disadvantage in dealing with a stranger whose identity he still
-questioned angered him. He did not know why Griswold had sought him
-out, and he was chagrined at having allowed himself to be so easily
-cornered.
-
-“You seem to know a good deal,” he sneered. “How did you get into this
-thing anyhow?”
-
-“My dear sir, I was chosen by the governor because of my superior
-attainments, don’t you see? But I’m in a hurry now. I came here on
-a particular errand. I want that requisition in the Appleweight
-case--quick!--if you please, Mr. Bosworth.”
-
-He jumped down from the table and took up his hat and stick.
-
-“Mr. Griswold, or whoever you are, you are either a fool or a
-blackguard. There isn’t any requisition for Appleweight. The governor
-never had the sand to issue any, if you must know the truth! If you
-knew anything about the governor, you would know that that’s why
-Osborne is hiding himself. He can’t afford to offend the Appleweights,
-if you must know the disagreeable truth. Your coming here and asking me
-for that requisition is funny, if you had the brains to see it. Poor
-old Osborne is scared to death, and I doubt if he’s within a hundred
-miles of here. You don’t know the governor; I do! He’s a dodger, a
-trimmer, and a coward.”
-
-“Mr. Bosworth,” began Griswold deliberately, “that requisition, duly
-signed and bearing the seal of the secretary of state as by the
-statutes in such cases made and provided, was in Governor Osborne’s
-desk this morning at the time you were so daintily kicking the door
-in your anxiety to see the governor. It has since been taken from the
-drawer where the governor left it when he went to New Orleans. You have
-gone in there like a sneak-thief, pried open the drawer, and stolen
-that document; and now----”
-
-“It’s an ugly charge,” mocked the attorney-general.
-
-“It’s all of that,” and Griswold smiled.
-
-“But you forget that you represent Mr. Osborne. On the other hand, I
-represent Governor Osborne, and if I want the Appleweight papers I had
-every right to them.”
-
-“After office hours, feloniously and with criminal intent?” laughed
-Griswold.
-
-“We will assume that I have them,” sneered Bosworth, “and such being
-the case I will return them only to the governor.”
-
-“Then”--and Griswold’s smile broadened--“if it comes to concessions, I
-will grant that you are within your rights in wishing to place them in
-the governor’s own hands. The governor of South Carolina is now, so to
-speak, _in camera_.”
-
-“The governor is hiding. He’s afraid to come to Columbia, and the whole
-state knows it.”
-
-“The papers, my friend; and I will satisfy you that the governor of
-South Carolina is under this roof and transacting business.”
-
-“Here in the state house?” demanded Bosworth, and he blanched and
-twisted the buttons of his coat nervously.
-
-“The governor of South Carolina, the supreme power of the state,
-charged with full responsibility, enjoying all the immunities, rights,
-and privileges unto him belonging.”
-
-It was clear that Bosworth took no stock whatever in Griswold’s story;
-but Griswold’s pretended employment by the governor and his apparent
-knowledge of the governor’s affairs piqued his curiosity. If this
-was really the Griswold who had written a widely accepted work on
-admiralty and who was known to him by reputation as a brilliant lawyer
-of Virginia, the mystery was all the deeper. By taking the few steps
-necessary to reach the governor’s chambers he would prove the falsity
-of Griswold’s pretensions to special knowledge of the governor’s
-whereabouts and plans. He stepped to an inner office, came back with a
-packet of papers, and thrust a revolver into his pocket with so vain a
-show of it that Griswold laughed aloud.
-
-“What! Do you still back your arguments with firearms arms down here?
-It’s a method that has gone out of fashion in Virginia!”
-
-“If there’s a trick in this it will be the worse for you,” scowled
-Bosworth.
-
-“And pray, remember, on your side, that you are to give those documents
-into the hands of the governor. Come along.”
-
-They met the watchman in the corridor, and he saluted them and passed
-on. Bosworth strode eagerly forward in his anxiety to prick the bubble
-of Griswold’s pretensions.
-
-Griswold threw open the door of the governor’s reception-room, and they
-blinked in the stronger light that poured in from the private office.
-There, in the governor’s chair by the broad official desk, sat Barbara
-Osborne reading a newspaper.
-
-“Your Excellency,” said Griswold, bowing gravely and advancing, “I beg
-to present the attorney-general.”
-
-“Barbara!”
-
-The papers fell from the attorney-general’s hands. He stood staring
-until astonishment began to yield to rage as he realized that a trap
-had been sprung upon him. The girl had risen instantly, and a smile
-played about her lips for a moment. She had vaguely surmised that
-Griswold would charge Bosworth with the loss of the papers, but her
-associate in the conspiracy had now given a turn to the matter that
-amused her.
-
-“Barbara!” blurted the attorney-general, “what game is this--what
-contemptible trick is this stranger playing on you? Don’t you
-understand that your father’s absence is a most serious matter, and
-that in the present condition of this Appleweight affair it is likely
-to involve him and the state in scandal?”
-
-Barbara regarded him steadily for a moment with a negative sort of
-gaze. She took a step forward before she spoke, and then she asked
-quickly and sharply,--
-
-“What have you done, Mr. Bosworth, to avert these calamities, and what
-was in your mind when you pried open the drawer and took out those
-papers?”
-
-“I was going to use the requisition----”
-
-“How?”
-
-“Why, I expected----”
-
-“Mr. Bosworth expected to effect a _coup_ for his own glory during the
-governor’s absence,” suggested Griswold.
-
-“How?” and Barbara’s voice rang imperiously and her eyes flashed.
-
-“Send this unknown person, this impostor and meddler away, and I will
-talk to you as old friends may talk together,” and he glared fiercely
-at Griswold, who stood fanning himself with his hat.
-
-“I asked you how you intended to serve my father, Mr. Bosworth, because
-you sent me this afternoon a letter in which you threatened me--you
-threatened me with my father’s ruin if I did not marry you. You would
-take advantage of my trouble and anxiety to force that question on me
-when I had answered it once and for all long ago. Before this stranger
-I want to tell you that you are a despicable coward, and that if you
-think you can humiliate me or my father or the state by such practices
-as you have resorted to you are very greatly mistaken. And further, Mr.
-Bosworth, if I find you interfering again in this matter, I shall print
-that letter you wrote me to-day in every newspaper in the state! Now,
-that is all I have to say to you, and I hope never to see you again.”
-
-“Before you go, Mr. Bosworth,” said Griswold, “I wish to say that Miss
-Osborne has spoken of your conduct with altogether too much restraint.
-I shall add, on my own account, that if I find you meddling again in
-this Appleweight case, I shall first procure your removal from office,
-and after that I shall take the greatest pleasure in flogging you
-within an inch of your life. Now go!”
-
-The two had dismissed him, and before Bosworth’s step died away in the
-hall, Griswold was running his eye over the papers.
-
-“That man will do something nasty if he is clever enough to think of
-anything.”
-
-“He’s a disgusting person,” said Barbara, touching her forehead with
-her handkerchief.
-
-“He’s all of that,” remarked Griswold, as he retied the red tape round
-the packet of papers. “And now, before we leave we may as well face
-a serious proposition. Your father’s absence and this fiction we are
-maintaining that he is really here cannot be maintained for ever. I
-don’t want to trouble you, for you, of course, realize all this as
-keenly as I. But what do you suppose actually happened at New Orleans
-between your father and the governor of North Carolina?”
-
-She leaned against her father’s desk, her hands lightly resting on
-its flat surface. She was wholly serene now, and she smiled and then
-laughed.
-
-“It couldn’t have been what the governor of North Carolina said to the
-governor of South Carolina in the old story, for father is strongly
-opposed to drink of all kinds. And in the story----”
-
-“I’ve forgotten where that story originated.”
-
-“Well, it happened a long time ago, and nobody really knows the origin.
-But according to tradition, at the crisis of a great row between two
-governors, the ice was broken by the governor of North Carolina saying
-to the governor of South Carolina those shocking words about its
-being a long time between drinks. What makes the New Orleans incident
-so remarkable is that father and Governor Dangerfield have always
-been friends, though I never cared very much for the Dangerfields
-myself. The only tiffs they have had have been purely for effect. When
-father said that the people of North Carolina would never amount to
-anything so long as they fry their meat, it was only his joke with
-Governor Dangerfield--but it did make North Carolina awfully mad. And
-Jerry--she’s the governor’s daughter--refused to visit me last winter
-just on that account. Jerry Dangerfield’s a nice little girl, but she
-has no sense of humour.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE LABOURS OF MR. ARDMORE.
-
-
-While he waited for Miss Jerry Dangerfield to appear Mr. Thomas Ardmore
-read for the first time the constitution of the United States. He had
-reached the governor’s office early, and seeking diversion, he had
-picked up a small volume that bore some outward resemblance to a novel.
-This proved, however, to be Johnston’s _American Politics_, and he was
-amazed to find that this diminutive work contained the answers to a
-great many questions which had often perplexed him, but which he had
-imagined could not be answered except by statesmen or by men like his
-friend Griswold, who spent their lives in study.
-
-He had supposed that the constitution of a great nation like the United
-States would fill many volumes, and be couched in terms bewildering
-and baffling; and it was perhaps the proudest moment in Mr. Ardmore’s
-life when, in the cool and quiet of the May morning, in the historic
-chambers of the governor of North Carolina, it dawned upon him that
-the charter of American liberty filled hardly more space than the
-stipulations for a yacht race, or a set of football rules; and that,
-moreover, he understood the greater part of it, or thought he did.
-Such strange words as “attainder” and “capitation” he sought out in
-the dictionary, and this also gave him a new sensation and thrill of
-pleasure at finding the machinery of knowledge so simple. He made note
-of several matters he wished to ask Griswold about when they met
-again; then turned back into the body of the text, and had read as far
-as Burr’s conspiracy when Jerry came breezily in. He experienced for
-the first time in his life that obsession of guilt which sinks in shame
-the office-boy who is caught reading a dime novel. Jerry seemed to
-tower above him like an avenging angel, and though her sword was only a
-parasol, her words cut deep enough.
-
-“Well, you are taking it pretty cool!”
-
-“Taking what?” faltered Ardmore, standing up, and seeking to hide the
-book behind his back.
-
-“Why, this outrageous article!” and she thrust a newspaper under his
-eyes. “Do you mean to say you haven’t seen the morning paper?”
-
-“To tell you the truth, Miss Dangerfield, I hardly ever read the
-papers.”
-
-“What’s that you were reading when I came in?” she demanded severely,
-withholding the paper until she should be answered.
-
-“It’s a book about the government, and the powers reserved to the
-states and that sort of thing. I was just reading the constitution; I
-thought it might help us--I mean _you_--in your work.”
-
-“The constitution help me? Hasn’t it occurred to you before this that
-what I’m doing is all against the constitution and the revised statutes
-and all those books you see on the shelf there?”
-
-“But the constitution sounds all right. It seems remarkably reasonable.
-You couldn’t ask anything fairer than that!”
-
-“So are the ten commandments fair enough; but you’re on the wrong
-track, Mr. Ardmore, if you’re trying to support the present
-administration with stupid things in books. I don’t follow precedents,
-Mr. Ardmore; I create them.”
-
-“But I should think you would have to be awfully careful not to mix up
-the business of the executive and judicial branches of the government.
-I think I heard Grissy speak of that once, though I’m not certain.
-Grissy knows more than almost any other living man.”
-
-“I don’t doubt that your friend is a well-educated person, but in times
-like these you’ve got to rise above the constitution; and just now it’s
-more convenient to forget it. There’s a constitution of North Carolina,
-too, if you’re looking for constitutions, but in good society such
-things are not mentioned. Papa always refers to the constitution with
-tears in his eyes when he’s making speeches, but papa’s very emotional.
-If I could make a speech I should tell the people what I think of
-them--that they’re too silly and stupid for words.”
-
-“You are right, Miss Dangerfield. I have felt exactly that way about
-the people ever since I was defeated for alderman in New York. But let
-me have the paper.”
-
-She turned to the morning mail while he read and opened the envelopes
-rapidly. Such of the letters as she thought interesting or important
-she put aside, and when Ardmore finished reading a double-leaded
-telegram from Columbia, in which the governor of South Carolina was
-quoted as declaring his intention of taking immediate steps for the
-apprehension of Appleweight, she was still reading and sorting letters,
-tapping her cheek lightly meanwhile with the official paper-knife.
-
-“Here, Mr. Ardmore,” she said, drawing a paper from her pocket, “is the
-answer to that telegram we sent yesterday evening. Suppose you read
-that next, and we can then decide what to do.”
-
-She was making the letters into little piles, humming softly meanwhile;
-but he felt that there was a storm brewing. He read the message from
-Columbia a number of times, and if the acting governor had not been so
-ominously quiet he would have laughed at the terse sentences.
-
-“There must be a mistake about this. He wouldn’t have used ‘diverting’
-that way; that’s insulting!”
-
-“So you appreciate its significance, do you, Mr. Ardmore? The iron
-enters your soul, does it? You realize that I have been insulted, do
-you?”
-
-“I shouldn’t put it that way, Miss Dangerfield. Governor Osborne would
-never have sent a message like that to you--he thought he was sending
-it to your father.”
-
-“He’s insulted me and every other citizen in the Old North State;
-that’s who he’s insulted, Mr. Ardmore. Let me read it again;” and she
-repeated the telegram aloud:
-
-“‘Your extremely diverting telegram in Appleweight case received and
-filed.’ I think it’s the _extremely_ that’s so perfectly mean. The
-_diverting_ by itself would not hurt my feelings half so much. He’s a
-good deal smarter man than I thought he was to think up a telegram like
-that. But what do you think of that piece in the newspaper?”
-
-“He says he’s going to catch Appleweight dead or alive. That sounds
-pretty serious.”
-
-“I think it’s a bluff myself. That telegram we sent him yesterday must
-have scared him to death. He was driven into a corner and had to do
-something to avoid being disgraced, and it’s easy enough to talk big
-in the newspapers when you haven’t the slightest intention of doing
-anything at all. I’ve noticed that father talks the longest and loudest
-about things he doesn’t believe at all.”
-
-“Is it possible?” whispered Ardmore incredulously.
-
-“Of course it’s possible! Father would never have been elected if he’d
-expressed his real sentiments; neither would anybody else ever be
-elected if he said beforehand what he really believed.”
-
-“That must have been the reason I got defeated for alderman on the
-reform ticket. I told ’em I was for turning the rascals out.”
-
-“That was very stupid of you. You’ve got to get the rascals to elect
-you first; then if you’re tired of office and don’t need them any more
-you bounce them. But that’s political practice; it’s a theory we’ve got
-to work out now. Governor Osborne’s telegram is much more important
-than his interview in the newspapers, which is just for effect and of
-no importance at all. He doesn’t say the same things in the telegram
-to father that he said to the reporter. A governor who really meant
-to do anything wouldn’t be so ready to insult another governor. The
-newspapers are a lot of bother. I spent all yesterday evening talking
-to reporters. They came to the house to ask where papa was and when he
-would be home!”
-
-“What did you tell them?”
-
-“I didn’t tell them anything. I sent out for two other girls, and we
-all just talked to them and kept talking, and gave them lemon sherbet
-and ginger cookies; and Eva Hungerford played the banjo--you don’t know
-Eva? Of course you don’t know anybody, and I don’t want you to, for it
-would spoil you for private secretary. But Eva is simply killing when
-she gets to cutting up, and we made those reporters sing to us, and
-all they say in the papers, even the opposition papers, this morning
-is that Governor Dangerfield is in Savannah visiting an old friend.
-They all tell the same story, so they must have fixed it up after
-they left the house. But what were you doing, Mr. Ardmore, that you
-didn’t come around to help? It seems to me you don’t appreciate the
-responsibilities of being secretary to a governor.”
-
-“I was afraid you might scold me if I did. And besides I was glued
-to the long distance telephone all evening, talking to my manager at
-Ardsley. He read me my letters and a lot of telegrams that annoyed me
-very much. I wish you wouldn’t be so hard on me, for I have trifling
-troubles of my own.”
-
-“I didn’t suppose you ever had troubles; you certainly don’t act as
-though you ever had.”
-
-“No one who has never been brother-in-law to a duke has the slightest
-idea of what trouble is.”
-
-“I’ve seen the Duke of Ballywinkle’s picture in the papers, and he
-looks very attractive.”
-
-“Well, if you’d ever seen him eat celery you’d change your mind. He’s
-going down to Ardsley to visit me; for sheer nerve I must say my
-relations beat the world. I got my place over here in North Carolina
-just to get away from them, and now my sister--not the duchess,
-but Mrs. Atchison--is coming down there with a lot of girls, and
-Ballywinkle has attached himself to the party. They’ll pass through
-here to-day, and they’ll expect to find me at Ardsley.”
-
-“If the duke’s really coming to our state I suppose we ought to
-recognize him officially,” and Jerry’s eyes were large with reverie as
-she pondered her possible duty.
-
-“Do something for him!” blazed Ardmore. “I hope _you_ don’t labour
-under the delusion that a duke’s any better than anybody else? If you’d
-suffered what I have from being related to a duke you’d be sorry to
-hear he was even passing through your state, much less stopping off for
-a couple of weeks.”
-
-“Because you don’t like him is no reason why every one else should
-feel the same way, is it? I’ve read about the Duke of Ballywinkle, and
-he belongs to one of the oldest families in England, and I’ve seen
-pictures of Ballywinkle Castle----”
-
-“Worse than that,” grinned Ardmore, with rising humour, “I had to chip
-in to pay for it! And the plumbing isn’t yet what it ought to be. The
-last time I was over there I caught cold and nearly died of pneumonia.
-I make it a rule now never to visit dukes. You never know what you’ll
-strike when you stay in those ancestral castles, even when they’ve been
-restored with some silly American girl’s grandfather’s money. Those
-places are all full of draughts and malaria and ghosts, and they make
-you drink tea in the afternoon, which is worse than being haunted.”
-
-“I suppose we might invite his Grace to inspect our militia,” persisted
-Jerry. “It would sound well in the papers to have a real duke inspect
-the North Carolina troops.”
-
-“It would sound better than he would look doing it, I can tell you
-that. Old Wellington may have been all right, but these new dukes were
-never made for horseback.”
-
-“He might appear in a carriage, wearing his orders and ride the lines
-that way, with all the troops presenting arms.”
-
-“Or you might pin his debts on him and mount him on a goat on the
-rifle-range and let the sharpshooters pepper away at him! Please let us
-not talk about Ballywinkle any more; the thought of him gives me that
-sinking feeling.”
-
-He had opened an atlas and was poring over it with a magnifying glass.
-
-“It’s positively funny,” he murmured, laughing a little to himself,
-“but I know something about this country over here. Here’s Ardsley, in
-the far corner of Dilwell County, and here’s Kildare.”
-
-“Yes; I understand maps. Dilwell is green, and there’s the state line,
-and that ugly watery sort of yellow is Mingo County, South Carolina,
-and Turner Court House is the county seat of it. Those little black
-marks are hills on the border, and it’s right there that these
-Appleweight people live, and dance on the state line as though it were
-a skipping-rope.”
-
-“That’s exactly it. Now what we want to do is to arrest Appleweight
-and put him in jail in South Carolina, which relieves the governor of
-North Carolina, your honoured father, of all embarrassment.”
-
-She snatched the paper-cutter and took possession of the map for a
-moment, then pointed, with a happy little laugh.
-
-“Why, that will be only too easy. You see there’s Azbell County, where
-the militia is encamped, just three counties away from Dilwell, and if
-we needed the soldiers it wouldn’t hurt the troops to march that far,
-would it?”
-
-“Hurt them, nothing!” exclaimed Ardmore. “It will be good for them. You
-have to give orders to the adjutant-general, and, being engaged to him,
-he would be afraid not to obey your orders, even if you told him to go
-in balloons.”
-
-“Well, of course, I’d send him an official order; and if he was
-disobedient I could break our engagement. When I broke my engagement
-with Arthur Treadmeasure, it was only because he was five minutes late
-coming to take me to a dance.”
-
-“You were perfectly right, Miss Dangerfield. No gentleman would keep
-you waiting.”
-
-“But he didn’t keep me waiting! I was sick in bed with a sore throat,
-and mamma wouldn’t let me go; but I thought it was very careless and
-taking too much for granted for him to think he could come poking along
-any time he pleased, so I ended everything.”
-
-It would have interested Ardmore to know the total of Miss
-Dangerfield’s engagements, but the time did not seem propitious for
-such inquiries; and, moreover, his awe of her as a young person of
-great determination and force of character increased. She spoke of
-employing the armed forces of the state as though playing with the
-militia were a cheerful pastime, like horseback riding or tennis. His
-heart sank as he foresaw the possibility of the gallant Gillingwater
-coming out of the Appleweight affair with flying colours, a hero
-knighted on the field for valour. The remembrance of Gillingwater
-receiving the salutes of the militia and riding off to the wars to the
-beat of drums had deprived Ardmore of sleep all night.
-
-“Well, there’s the map, and there’s that insulting telegram; what are
-you going to do about it?” asked Jerry.
-
-She seemed to be honestly inviting suggestions, and the very thought
-of this affected him like wine. He deliberated for several minutes,
-while she watched him. A delicious country quiet lay upon the old state
-house; in the tranquil park outside the birds whistled their high
-disdain of law and precedent. It was no small thing to be identified
-with a great undertaking like this, with the finest girl in the world;
-and he could not help thinking of the joy of telling Griswold, the
-sober professor and sedate lawyer, of this adventure when it should
-be happily concluded. Never again should Grissy taunt him with his
-supineness before the open door of opportunity!
-
-“A governor,” he began, “is always a dignified person who doesn’t
-bother his head about little things like this unless everybody else
-has gone to sleep. Now, who’s the chief of police in a county like
-Dilwell--what do you call him?”
-
-“Do you mean the sheriff, Mr. Ardmore?”
-
-“Certainly. Now, give me those telegraph blanks, and I’ll drop him a
-few lines to let him know that the government at Raleigh still lives.”
-
-It is in the telegram alone that we Americans approach style. Our great
-commanders did much to form it; our business strategists took the key
-from them. “I propose to fight it out on this line, if it takes all
-summer” is not more admirable than “Cancel order our number six hundred
-and eighteen,” or “Have drawn at sight.” Through the most familiar
-and commonplace apparatus clicks and ticks the great American epic in
-phrases concise, unequivocal, and apt. Von Moltke, roused at night with
-news of war, merely waved his hand to the long-prepared orders in his
-chiffonier and went to sleep again; but the great Prussian has his
-counterpart in the American magnate who ties up a railroad by telegraph
-over his after-dinner coffee. Telegrams were, however, with Mr. Thomas
-Ardmore, something more than a form of communication or a mere literary
-exercise. Letter-writing seemed to him the most formidable of human
-undertakings, but with a pad of telegraph blanks under his hand his
-spirit soared free. All untrammelled by the horror of the day tariff,
-whose steep slopes have wrought so much confusion and error among
-the economical, he gave to the wires and the wireless what he never
-would have confided to a stamp. He wrote and submitted to Miss Jerry
-Dangerfield the following:
-
- To the Sheriff of Dilwell County,
- Kildare, N. C.:
-
- What is this I hear about your inability to catch Appleweight and
- the rest of his bunch? Your inattention to your duties is a matter
- of common scandal, and if you don’t get anxious pretty soon I shall
- remove you from your job and then come. I shall be down soon to see
- whether you are pitching quoits at the blacksmith shop or fishing for
- lobsters in Raccoon Creek, instead of attending to your knitting.
- Your conduct has annoyed me until I am something more than vexed by
- your behaviour. The eyes of the great North State are upon you. Wire
- me at length just what you propose doing or not doing in this matter.
-
- WILLIAM DANGERFIELD,
- Governor of North Carolina.
-
-“What do you think of that?” he asked, his pride falling as she scanned
-the paper carefully.
-
-“Isn’t it pretty expensive?” Jerry inquired, counting the words to ten
-and then roughly computing the rest.
-
-“I’ll take care of that, Miss Dangerfield. What I want to know is
-whether you think that will make the sheriff sit up.”
-
-“Well, here’s what father sent him only about a week ago. I found it in
-his private letter book, and it’s marked confidential in red ink.”
-
-She read:
-
- “‘Act cautiously in Appleweight case. Indictment by grand Jury is
- undoubtedly faulty, and Foster threatens trouble in case parties are
- arrested.’
-
-“And there’s more like that! Papa never intended to do anything, that’s
-as plain as daylight. Mr. Foster, the treasurer, comes from that
-county. He thought papa was going to have to do something, so he’s
-holding back the payment of the state bonds just to frighten papa. You
-see, the state owes the Bronx Loan and Trust Company that two hundred
-and fifty thousand dollars, and if it isn’t paid June first the state
-will be everlastingly disgraced.”
-
-“Oh yes; I’d forgotten about that.”
-
-“I don’t see how you could forget about it. That must be almost as much
-money as there is in the world, Mr. Ardmore.”
-
-“We’ve got to raise it, anyhow, even if we go to the pawn-shop. I
-pawned my watch once when I was in college and Billings--he was
-my guardian--had shut me off. Grissy--he’s my friend--Grissy says
-pawn-broking is only a more vulgar form of banking. There was a fellow
-in my class at college who pawned his pawn-ticket to get money to pay
-his laundress, and then gave the new ticket to a poor blind man. He’s
-a big man in Wall Street--has a real genius for finance, they say. But
-please don’t worry about this rascal Foster. We’ll put some digitalis
-into the state’s credit when the time comes.”
-
-“I think your telegram to the sheriff is all right,” said Jerry,
-reading it again. “If you’ll go to the door and whistle for the
-messenger we’ll get it off. I’ll sign it with the rubber stamp. Papa
-hardly ever signs anything himself; he says if you don’t sign documents
-yourself you can always repudiate them afterward, and papa’s given
-prayerful thought to all such things.”
-
-Ardmore addressed himself once more to the map. It was clear that the
-Appleweight gang was powerful enough to topple great states upon their
-foundations. It had, to Ardmore’s own knowledge, driven a governor
-into exile, and through the wretched Foster, who was their friend,
-the credit of the state was gravely menaced. The possibilities of the
-game fascinated Ardmore. He was eager for action on the scene of this
-usurpation and defiance. Responsibility, for the first time, had placed
-a warrant of trust in his hands, and, thus commissioned, the spurs of
-duty pricked his sides.
-
-“I’ll wait for the sheriff’s answer, and if he shows no signs of life
-I’ll go down there this afternoon.”
-
-“Then you will undoubtedly be shot!” Jerry declared, as though
-announcing a prospect not wholly deplorable.
-
-“That has its disagreeable side, but a great many people have to be
-shot every year to keep up the average, and if the statistics need me I
-won’t duck. I’ll call up my man on the telephone this forenoon and tell
-him to put my forester at Ardsley to work. He’s a big fellow who served
-in the German army, and if he’s afraid of anything I haven’t heard of
-it. If we can drive the gang into South Carolina, right along here,
-you see”--and Miss Dangerfield bent her pretty head over the map and
-saw--“if we can pass the chief outlaw on to Governor Osborne, then so
-much the better, and that’s what we will try to do.”
-
-“But you’re only the private secretary, and you can’t assume too
-much authority. I shall have to go to Kildare to visit my aunt, who
-is a nice old lady that lives there. The fried corn mush and syrup
-at her house is the best I ever tasted, and if papa should come when
-he sees that something is being done quite different from what he
-intended, then I should be there to explain. If you should be killed,
-Mr. Ardmore, no one would be there to identify you, and I have always
-thought it the saddest thing in the world for any one to die away from
-home----”
-
-“It would be sad; but I hope you would be sorry.”
-
-“I should regret your death, and I’d make them give you a perfectly
-beautiful military funeral, with Chopin’s funeral march, and your boots
-tied to the saddle of your horse.”
-
-“But don’t let them fuss about pulling off the boots, Miss Dangerfield,
-if I die with them on. It would be all right for you to visit your
-aunt, but I shouldn’t do it if I were you. I once visited my aunt, Mrs.
-Covington-Burns, at Newport for a week. It was a deep game to get me to
-marry my aunt’s husband’s niece, whose father had lost his money, and
-the girl was beginning to bore my aunt.”
-
-“Was she a pretty girl?” asked Jerry.
-
-“She was a whole basket of peaches, and I might have married her to get
-away from my aunt if it were not that I have made it a life-long rule
-never to marry the orphaned nieces of the husbands of my aunts. It’s
-been a good rule to me, and has saved me no end of trouble. But if my
-sister doesn’t change her mind, and if she really comes through Raleigh
-to-day in her car with those friends of hers, she will be delighted to
-have you join her for a visit at Ardsley. And then you would be near at
-hand in case some special edict from the governor seemed necessary.”
-
-“But wouldn’t your sister think it strange----”
-
-“Not in the least, Miss Dangerfield. Nothing is strange to my sister.
-Nobody ever sprang a surprise on Nellie yet. And besides, you are
-the daughter of the governor of a great state. She refuses to meet
-senators, because you can never be sure they are respectable, but
-she rather prides herself on knowing governors. Governors are very
-different. Since I read the constitution I can see very plainly that
-governors are much nearer the people, but I guess the senators are
-nearer the banks.”
-
-“Well, I have some shopping to do, and it’s ten o’clock. It would be
-hospitable to ask you to luncheon, but mamma cries so much because
-she doesn’t know where papa is that our meals at the executive mansion
-are not exactly cheerful functions. And besides”--and she eyed Ardmore
-severely as she rose and accepted her parasol from him--“and besides,
-you know our relations are purely official. You have never been
-introduced to me, and socially you are not known to us.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE LAND OF THE LITTLE BROWN JUG.
-
-
-Caboose 0186, with three box-cars and a locomotive attached, lay in the
-south-eastern yards at Raleigh late in the evening of the same day. In
-the observatory sat Mr. Thomas Ardmore, chatting with the conductor,
-while they waited for the right of way. Mr. Ardmore’s pockets were
-filled with papers, and he held half a dozen telegrams in his hand. The
-freight cars behind him were locked and sealed, and a number of men
-lounging near appeared to be watching them.
-
-The reply of the sheriff of Dilwell County had precipitated the crisis.
-That official succinctly replied to Ardmore’s message:
-
- Be good and acquire grace.
-
-While this dictum had aroused Miss Dangerfield’s wrath and indignation,
-it calmed her fellow-conspirator, and for hours Ardmore had poured
-forth orders by telegraph and telephone. No such messages as his had
-ever before radiated from Raleigh. The tolls would have bankrupted
-the commonwealth if Ardmore had not cared for them out of his private
-purse. His forester, with an armed posse from Ardsley, was already
-following the streams and beating the brush in search of Appleweight.
-One car of Ardmore’s special train contained a machine gun and a supply
-of rifles; another abundant ammunition and commissary supplies, and
-the third cots and bags. The men who loafed about the train were a
-detail of strike-breakers from a detective agency, borrowed for the
-occasion. Cooke, the conductor of the train, had formerly been in
-the government secret service, and knew the Carolina hill country
-as he knew the palm of his hand. Ardmore had warned his manager and
-the housekeeper on his estate to prepare for the arrival of Mrs.
-Atchison, whose private car had come and gone, carrying Miss Geraldine
-Dangerfield on to Ardsley. Ardmore had just received a message from his
-sister at some way station, reporting all well and containing these
-sentences: “She is rather different, and I do not quite make her out.
-She has our noble brother-in-law a good deal bewildered.”
-
-Cooke ran forward for a colloquy with the engineer over their orders;
-the guards climbed into one of the box-cars, and the train moved slowly
-out of the Raleigh yards to the main line and rattled away toward
-Kildare, with Mr. Ardmore, pipe in mouth, perched in the caboose cupola.
-
-A caboose, you may not know, is the pleasantest place in the world to
-ride. Essentially a thing of utility, it is not less the vehicle of
-joy. Neither the captain of a trading schooner nor the admiral of a
-canal fleet is more sublimely autocratic than the freight conductor
-in his watch-tower. The landscape is disclosed to him in leisurely
-panoramas; the springs beneath are not so lulling as to dull his
-senses. If he isn’t whipped into the ditch by the humour of the
-engineer, or run down and telescoped by an enemy from behind, he may
-ultimately deliver his sombre fleet to its several destinations; but
-he is the slave of no inexorable time-table, and his excuses are as
-various as his cargoes.
-
-Not Captain Kidd nor another of the dark brotherhood sailed forth with
-keener zest for battle than Mr. Ardmore. Indeed, the trailing smoke of
-the locomotive suggested a black flag, and the thought of it tickled
-his fancy. Above bent the bluest sky in the world; fields of corn and
-cotton, the brilliant crimson of German clover, and long stretches of
-mixed forest held him with enchantment. In a cornfield a girl ploughing
-with a single steer--a little girl in a sunbonnet, who reached wearily
-up to the plough handles--paused and waved to him, and he knew the
-delight of the lonely mariner when a passing ship speaks to him with
-flags. And when night came, after the long mystical twilight, the train
-passed now and then great cotton factories that blazed out from their
-thousand windows like huge steamships.
-
-When they sought a lonely siding to allow a belated passenger train to
-pass, the conductor brewed coffee and cooked supper, and Ardmore called
-in the detectives and trainmen. The sense of knowing real people,
-whose daily occupations were so novel and interesting, touched him
-afresh with delight. These men said much in few words. The taciturnity
-of Cooke, the conductor, in particular, struck Ardmore as very fine,
-and it occurred to him that very likely men who have had the fun of
-doing things never talk of their performances afterward. One of the
-detectives chaffed Cooke covertly about some adventure in which they
-had been jointly associated.
-
-“I never thought they’d get the lead out of you after that business in
-Missouri. You were a regular mine,” said the detective to Cooke, and
-Cooke glanced deprecatingly at Ardmore.
-
-“He’s the little joker, all right.”
-
-“You can’t kill him,” remarked the detective. “I’ve seen it tried.”
-
-Before the train started the detectives crawled back into their car,
-and Cooke drew out some blankets, tossed them on a bench for Ardmore,
-and threw himself down without ado. Ardmore held to his post in the
-tower, as lone as the lookout in a crow’s-nest. The night air swept
-more coolly in as they neared the hills, and the train’s single
-brakeman came down as though descending from the sky, rubbed the
-cinders from his eyes, and returned to his vigil armed with a handful
-of Ardmore’s cigars.
-
-For the greater part of the night they enjoyed a free track, and
-thumped the rails at a lively clip. Shortly after midnight Ardmore
-crawled below and went to sleep. At five o’clock Cooke called him.
-
-“We’re on the switch at Kildare. One of your men is here waiting for
-you.”
-
-Big Paul, the German forester, was called in, and Ardmore made his
-toilet in a pail of water while listening to the big fellow’s report.
-Cooke joined in the conversation, and Ardmore was gratified to see that
-the two men met on common ground in discussing the local geography. The
-forester described in clear, straightforward English just what he had
-done. He had distributed his men well through the hills, and they were
-now posted as pickets on points favourable for observation. They had
-found along the streams four widely scattered stills, and these were
-being watched. Paul drew a small map, showing the homes of the most
-active members of the Appleweight gang, and Ardmore indicated all these
-points as nearly as possible on the county map he had brought with him.
-
-“Here’s Raccoon Creek, and my own land runs right through there--just
-about here, isn’t it, Paul? I always remember the creek, because I like
-the name so much.”
-
-“You are right, Mr. Ardmore. The best timber you have lies along there,
-and your land crosses the North Carolina boundary into South Carolina
-about here. There’s Mingo County, South Carolina, you see.”
-
-“Well, that dashes me!” exclaimed Ardmore, striking the table with his
-fist. “I never knew one state from another, but you must be right.”
-
-“I’m positive of it, Mr. Ardmore. One of my men has been living there
-on the creek to protect your timber. Some of these outlaws have been
-cutting off our wood.”
-
-“It seems to me I remember the place. There’s a log house hanging on
-the creek. You took me by it once, but it never entered my head that
-the state line was so close.”
-
-“It runs right through the house! And some one, years ago, blazed the
-trees along there, so it is very easy to tell when you step from one
-state to another. My man left there recently, refusing to stay any
-longer. These Appleweight people thought he was a spy, and posted a
-notice on his door warning him to leave, so I shifted him to the other
-end of the estate.”
-
-“Did you see the sheriff at Kildare?”
-
-“I haven’t seen him. When I asked for him yesterday I found he had left
-town and gone to Greensboro to see his sick uncle.”
-
-Ardmore laughed and slapped his knee.
-
-“Who takes care of the dungeon while he’s away?”
-
-“There are no prisoners in the Kildare jail. The sheriff’s afraid to
-keep any; and he’s like the rest of the people around here. They all
-live in terror of Appleweight.”
-
-“Appleweight is a powerful character in these parts,” said Cooke,
-pouring the coffee he had been making, and handing a tin cupful to
-Ardmore. “He’s tolerable well off, and could make money honestly if
-he didn’t operate stills, rob country stores, mix up in politics, and
-steal horses when he and his friends need them.”
-
-“I guess he has never molested us any, has he, Paul?” asked Ardmore,
-not a little ashamed of his ignorance of his own business.
-
-“A few of our cows stray away sometimes and never come back. And for
-two years we have lost the corn out of the crib away over here near the
-deer park.”
-
-“They’ve got the juice out of it before this,” remarked Cooke.
-
-“That would be nice for me, wouldn’t it?” said Ardmore, grinning--“to
-be arrested for running a still on my place.”
-
-“We don’t want to lose our right to the track, and we must get out
-of this before the whole community comes to take a look at us,” said
-Cooke, swinging out of the caboose.
-
-Ardmore talked frankly to the forester, having constant recourse to
-the map; and Paul sketched roughly a new chart, marking roads and
-paths so far as he knew them, and indicating clearly where the Ardsley
-boundaries extended. Then Ardmore took a blue pencil and drew a
-straight line.
-
-“When we get Appleweight, we want to hurry him from Dilwell County,
-North Carolina, into Mingo County, South Carolina. We will go to the
-county town there, and put him in jail. If the sheriff of Mingo is
-weak-kneed, we will lock Appleweight up anyhow, and telegraph the
-governor of South Carolina that the joke is on him.”
-
-“We will catch the man,” said Paul gravely, “but we may have to kill
-him.”
-
-“Dead or alive, he’s got to be caught,” said Ardmore, and the big
-forester stared at his employer a little oddly; for this lord
-proprietor had not been known to his employees and tenants as a serious
-character, but rather as an indolent person who, when he visited his
-estate in the hills, locked himself up unaccountably in his library,
-and rarely had the energy to stir up the game in his broad preserves.
-
-“Certainly, sir; dead or alive,” Paul repeated.
-
-Cooke came out of the station and signalled the engineer to go ahead.
-
-“We’ll pull down here about five miles to an old spur where the company
-used to load wood. There’s a little valley there where we can be hidden
-all we please, so far as the main line is concerned, and it might not
-be a bad idea to establish headquarters there. We have the tools for
-cutting in on the telegraph, and we can be as independent as we please.
-I told the agent we were carrying company powder for a blasting job
-down the line, and he suspects nothing.”
-
-Paul left the caboose as the train started, and rode away on horseback
-to visit his pickets. The train crept warily over the spur into the old
-woodcutters’ camp, where, as Cooke had forecast, they were quite shut
-in from the main line by hills and woodland.
-
-“And now, Mr. Ardmore, if you would like to see fire-water spring out
-of the earth as freely as spring water, come with me for a little
-stroll. The thirsty of Dilwell County know the way to these places as
-city topers know the way to a bar. We are now in the land of the little
-brown jug, and while these boys get breakfast I’ll see if the people in
-this region have changed their habits.”
-
-It was not yet seven as they struck off into the forest beside the
-cheerful little brook that came down singing from the hills. Ardmore
-had rarely before in his life been abroad so early, and he kicked the
-dew from the grass in the cheerfullest spirit imaginable. Within a
-few days he had reared a pyramid of noble resolutions. Life at last
-entertained him. The way of men of action had been as fabulous to him
-as the dew that now twinkled before him. Griswold knew books, but
-here at his side strode a man who knew far more amazing things than
-were written in any book. Cooke had not been in this region for seven
-years, and yet he never hesitated, but walked steadily on, following
-the little brook. Presently he bent over the bank and gathered up a
-brownish substance that floated on the water, lifted a little of it in
-his palm, and sniffed it.
-
-“That,” said Cooke, holding it to Ardmore’s nose, “is corn mash.
-That’s what they make their liquor out of. The still is probably away
-up yonder on that hillside. It seems to me that we smashed one there
-once when I was in the service; and over there, about a mile beyond
-that pine tree, where you see the hawk circling, three of us got into a
-mix-up, and one of our boys was killed.”
-
-He crossed the stream on a log, climbed the bank on the opposite shore,
-and scanned the near landscape for a few minutes. Then he pointed to an
-old stump over which vines had grown in wild profusion.
-
-“If you will, walk to that stump, Mr. Ardmore, and feel under the vines
-on the right-hand side, your fingers will very likely touch something
-smooth and cool.”
-
-Ardmore obeyed instructions. He thrust his hand into the stump as Cooke
-directed, thrust again a little deeper, and laughed aloud as he drew
-out a little brown jug.
-
-Cooke nodded approvingly.
-
-“We’re all right. The revenue men come in here occasionally and smash
-the stills and arrest a few men, but the little brown jug continues
-to do business at the same old stand. They don’t even change the
-hiding-places. And while we stand here, you may be pretty sure that a
-freckled-faced, tow-headed boy or girl is watching us off yonder, and
-that the word will pass all through the hills before noon that there
-are strangers abroad in old Dilwell. If you have a dollar handy, slip
-it under the stump, so they’ll know we’re not stingy.”
-
-Ardmore was scrutinizing the jug critically.
-
-“They’re all alike,” said Cooke, “but that piece of calico is a new
-one--just a fancy touch for an extra fine article of liquor.”
-
-“I’ll be shot if I haven’t seen that calico before,” said Ardmore; and
-he sat down on a boulder and drew out the stopper, while Cooke watched
-him with interest.
-
-The bit of twine was indubitably the same that he had unwound before
-in his room at the Guilford House, and the cob parted in his fingers
-exactly as before. On a piece of brown paper that had been part of a
-tobacco wrapper was scrawled:
-
- This ain’t yore fight, Mr. Ardmore. Wher’s the guvner of North
- Carolina?
-
-“That’s a new one on me,” laughed Cooke. “You see, they know
-everything. Mind-reading isn’t in it with them. They know who we are
-and what we have come for. What’s the point about the governor?”
-
-“Oh, the governor’s all right,” replied Ardmore carelessly. “He
-wouldn’t bother his head about a little matter like this. The powers
-reserved to the states by the constitution give a governor plenty of
-work without acting as policeman of the jungle. That’s the reason I
-said to Governor Dangerfield, ‘Governor,’ I said, ‘don’t worry about
-this Appleweight business. Time is heavy on my hands,’ I said. ‘You
-stay in Raleigh and uphold the dignity of your office, and I will take
-care of the trouble in Dilwell.’ And you can’t understand, Cooke,
-how his face brightened at my words. Being the brave man he is, you
-would naturally expect him to come down here in person and seize these
-scoundrels with his own hands. I had the hardest time of my life to get
-him to stay at home. It almost broke his heart not to come.”
-
-And as they retraced their steps to the caboose, it was Ardmore who
-led, stepping briskly along, and blithely swinging the jug.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-PROFESSOR GRISWOLD TAKES THE FIELD.
-
-
-Barbara and Griswold stopped at the telegraph office on their way back
-to the executive mansion, and were met with news that the sheriff of
-Mingo had refused to receive Griswold’s message.
-
-“His private lines of communication with the capital are doubtless well
-established,” said Griswold, “and Bosworth probably warned him, but it
-isn’t of great importance. It’s just as well for Appleweight and his
-friends, high and low, to show their hands.”
-
-When they were again on the veranda, Griswold lingered for a moment
-with no valid excuse for delay beyond the loveliness of the night and
-his keen delight in Barbara’s voice and her occasional low laughter,
-which was so pleasant to hear that he held their talk to a light key,
-that he might evoke it the more. Professor Griswold’s last flirtation
-was now so remote that he would have been hard put to say whether
-the long-departed goddess’s name had been Evelyn or Laura. He had so
-thoroughly surrendered himself to the exactions of the law that love
-and marriage held small place in his speculations of the future. He had
-heard himself called a bachelor professor with the humorous tolerance
-of one who is pretty sure of himself, and who is not yet reduced to
-the cynical experiment of peering beneath the top layer of his box
-of strawberries to find the false bottom. He recalled the slender
-manuscript volume of verses in his desk at home, and he felt that
-it would be the easiest thing in the world to write a thousand songs
-to-night, beside which the soundest brief ever filed in any court would
-be the silliest of literary twaddle.
-
-“You have done all that could be asked of you, Mr. Griswold, and I
-cannot permit you to remain longer. Father will certainly be here
-to-morrow. I assure you that it is not like him to avoid his public
-obligations. His absence is the most unaccountable thing that ever
-happened. I have my difficulties here at home, for since my mother’s
-death I have had the care of my young sisters, and it is not pleasant
-to have to deceive them.”
-
-“Oh, but your father isn’t absent! He is officially present and in the
-saddle,” laughed Griswold. “You must not admit, even to me, that he is
-not here in full charge of his office. And as for my leaving the field,
-I have not the slightest intention of going back to Virginia until
-the Appleweight ghost is laid, the governor of North Carolina brought
-to confusion, and the governor of South Carolina visibly present and
-thundering his edicts again, so to speak, _ex cathedra_. My own affairs
-can wait, Miss Osborne. My university may go hang, my clients may be
-mulcted in direst damages, but just now I am your humble servant,
-and I shall not leave your service until my tasks are finished. I am
-consulting not my duty, but my pleasure. The joy of having a hand in
-a little affair like this, and of being able to tell my friend Tommy
-Ardmore about it afterward, would be sufficient. Ardmore will never
-speak to me again for not inviting him to a share in the game.”
-
-He was more buoyant than she had seen him, and she liked the note of
-affection that crept into his tone as he spoke of his friend.
-
-“Ardmore is the most remarkable person alive,” Griswold continued. “You
-remember--I spoke of him this morning. He likes to play the inscrutable
-idiot, and he carries it off pretty well; but underneath he’s really
-clever. The most amazing ideas take hold of him. You never could
-imagine what he’s doing now! I met him accidentally in Atlanta the
-other day, and he was in pursuit of a face--a girl’s face that he had
-seen from a car window for only an instant on a siding somewhere.”
-
-“He must have a romantic temperament,” suggested Barbara.
-
-“Quite that. His family have been trying to marry him off to some
-one in their own set ever since I have known him, but he’s extremely
-difficult. One of the most remarkable things about him is his amazing
-democracy. He owns a palace on Fifth Avenue, but rarely occupies it,
-for he says it bores him. He has a camp in the Adirondacks, but I have
-never known him to visit it. His place in North Carolina pleases him
-because there he commands space, and no one can crowd him or introduce
-him to people he doesn’t want to meet. He declares that the most
-interesting people don’t have more than a dollar a day to spend; that
-the most intelligent and the best-looking girls in America clerk in
-shops and work in factories. A philanthropic lady in New York supplies
-him every Christmas with a list of names of laundry girls, who seem
-to appeal particularly to Ardy’s compassion, though he never knew one
-in his life, but he admires them for the zeal with which they destroy
-buttonholes and develop the deckle-edge cuff; and he has twenty-dollar
-bills mailed to them quite mysteriously, and without any hint of who
-Santa Claus really is.”
-
-“But the girl he saw from the car window--did she also appeal to him
-altruistically?”
-
-“No; it was with her eye. He declared to me most solemnly that the girl
-winked at him!”
-
-Griswold was aware that Miss Osborne’s interest in Ardmore cooled
-perceptibly.
-
-“Oh!” she said, with that delightful intonation with which a woman
-utterly extinguishes a sister.
-
-“I shouldn’t have told you that,” said Griswold, guiltily aware of
-falling temperature. “He is capable of following a winking eye at
-a perfectly respectful distance for a hundred years, and of being
-entertained all the time by the joy of pursuit.”
-
-“It seems very unusual,” said Barbara, with cold finality.
-
-Griswold remembered this talk as, the next day aboard the train bound
-for Turner Court House, the seat of Mingo County, South Carolina, he
-pondered a telegram he had received from Ardmore. He read and re-read
-this message, chewing cigars and scowling at the landscape, and the
-cause of his perturbation of spirit may be roughly summarized in these
-words:
-
-On leaving the executive mansion the night before, he had studied maps
-in his room at the Saluda House, and carefully planned his campaign.
-He had talked by telephone with the prosecuting attorney of Mingo
-County, and found that official politely responsive. So much had gone
-well. Then the juxtaposition of Ardmore’s estate to the border, and
-the possible use of the house as headquarters, struck in upon him.
-He would, after all, generously take Ardmore into the game, and they
-would uphold the honour and dignity of the great commonwealth of South
-Carolina together. The keys of all Ardmore’s houses were, so to speak,
-in Griswold’s pocket, and invitations were unnecessary between them;
-yet at Atlanta Ardmore had made a point of asking Griswold down to help
-while away the tedium of Mrs. Atchison’s house party, and as a matter
-of form Griswold had wired from Columbia, advising Ardmore of his
-unexpected descent.
-
-Even in case Ardmore should still be abroad in pursuit of the winking
-eye, the doors of the huge house would be open to Griswold, who had
-entered there so often as the owner’s familiar friend. These things he
-pondered deeply as he read and re-read Ardmore’s reply to his message,
-a reply which was plainly enough dated at Ardsley, but which, he could
-not know, had really been written in caboose 0186 as it lay on a
-siding in the south-eastern yards at Raleigh, and thence despatched
-to the manager at Ardsley, with instructions to forward it as a new
-message to Griswold at Columbia. The chilling words thus flung at him
-were:
-
- Professor Henry Maine Griswold,
- Saluda House, Columbia, S. C.:
-
- I am very sorry, old man, but I cannot take you in just now. Scarlet
- fever is epidemic among my tenants, and I could not think of exposing
- you to danger. As soon as the accursed plague passes I want to have
- you down.
-
- ARDMORE.
-
-An epidemic that closed the gates of Ardsley would assume the
-proportions of a national disaster; for even if the great house itself
-were quarantined, there were lodges and bungalows scattered over
-the domain, where a host of guests could be entertained in comfort.
-Griswold reflected that the very fact that he had wired from Columbia
-must have intimated to Ardmore that his friend was flying toward him,
-pursuant to the Atlanta invitation. Griswold dismissed a thousand
-speculations as unworthy. Ardmore had never shown the remotest trace of
-snobbishness, and as far as the threatened house party was concerned,
-Griswold knew Mrs. Atchison very well, and had been entertained at her
-New York house.
-
-The patronizing tone of the thing caused Griswold to flush at every
-reading. If the Ardsley date-line had not been so plainly written, if
-the phraseology were not so characteristic, there might be room for
-doubt; but Ardmore--Ardmore of all men--had slapped him in the face!
-
-But scarlet fever or no scarlet fever, the pursuit of Appleweight had
-precedence of private grievances. By the time he reached Turner Court
-House Griswold had dismissed the ungraciousness of Ardmore, and his
-jaws were set with a determination to perform the mission intrusted to
-him by Barbara Osborne, and to wait until later for an accounting with
-his unaccountable friend.
-
-Arrived at Turner’s, Griswold strode at once toward the court house.
-The contemptuous rejection of his message by the sheriff of Mingo
-had angered Griswold, but he was destined to feel even more poignant
-insolence when, entering the sheriff’s office, a deputy, languidly
-posed as a letter “V” in a swivel-chair, with his feet on the mantel,
-took a cob pipe from his mouth and lazily answered Griswold’s
-importunate query with:
-
-“The sheriff ain’t hyeh, seh. He’s a-visitin’ his folks in Tennessy.”
-
-“When will he be back?” demanded Griswold, hot of heart, but
-maintaining the icy tone that had made him so formidable in
-cross-examination.
-
-“I reckon I don’t know, seh.”
-
-“Do you know your own name?” persisted Griswold sweetly.
-
-“Go to hell, seh,” replied the deputy. He reached for a match,
-relighted his pipe, and carefully crossed his feet on the mantelshelf.
-The moment Griswold’s steps died away in the outer corridor the deputy
-rose and busied himself so industriously with the telephone that within
-an hour all through the Mingo hills, and even beyond the state line,
-along lonely trails, across hills and through valleys, and beside
-cheery creeks and brooks, it was known that a strange man from Columbia
-was in Mingo County looking for the sheriff, and Appleweight, _alias_
-Poteet, and his men were everywhere on guard.
-
-Griswold liked the prosecuting attorney on sight. His name was
-Habersham, and he was a youngster with a clear and steady gray eye.
-Instead of the Southern statesman’s flowing prince albert, he wore a
-sack-coat of gray jeans, and was otherwise distinguished by a shirt of
-white-and-blue check. He grinned as Griswold bent a puzzled look upon
-him.
-
-“I took your courses at the university two years ago, Professor, and I
-remember distinctly that you always wore a red cravat to your Wednesday
-lectures.”
-
-“You have done well,” replied Griswold, “for I never expected to
-find an old student who remembered half as much of me as that. Now,
-as I understood you over the telephone, Appleweight was indicted for
-stealing a ham in this county by the last grand jury, but the sheriff
-has failed or refused to make the arrest. How did the grand jury come
-to indict if this outlaw dominates all the hill country?”
-
-“The grand jury wanted to make a showing of virtue, and it was, of
-course, understood between the foreman, the leader of the gang, and the
-sheriff that no warrant could be served on Appleweight. I did my duty;
-the grand jury’s act was exemplary; and there the wheels of justice
-are blocked. The same thing is practically true across the state line
-in Dilwell County, North Carolina. These men, led by Appleweight, use
-their intimate knowledge of the country to elude pursuers when at times
-the revenue men undertake a raid, and the county authorities have
-never seriously molested them. Now and then one of these sheriffs will
-make a feint of going out to look for Appleweight, but you may be sure
-that due notice is given before he starts. Three revenue officers have
-lately been killed while looking for these men, and the government is
-likely to take vigorous action before long.”
-
-“We may as well be frank,” said Griswold in his most professional
-voice. “I don’t want the federal authorities to take these men; it is
-important that they should not do so. This is an affair between the
-governors of the two Carolinas. It has been said that neither of them
-dares press the matter of arrest, but I am here in Governor Osborne’s
-behalf to give the lie to that imputation.”
-
-“That has undoubtedly been the fact, as you know,” and Habersham
-smiled at his old preceptor inquiringly. “Osborne once represented the
-Appleweights, and he undoubtedly saved the leader from the gallows.
-That was before Osborne ever thought of becoming governor, and he
-acted only within his proper rights as a lawyer. I don’t recall that
-anything in professional ethics requires us to abandon a client because
-we know he’s guilty. If such were the case we’d all starve to death.”
-
-“Governor Osborne has been viciously maligned,” declared Griswold.
-“While he did at one time represent these people--no doubt thoroughly
-and efficiently--he holds the loftiest ideal of public service, and
-it was only when his official integrity was brought into question by
-unscrupulous enemies that he employed me as special counsel to carry
-this affair through to a conclusion. That accounts for my presence
-here, Habersham, and, with your assistance, I propose to force Governor
-Dangerfield’s hand. Suppose all these people were arrested in Mingo
-County under these indictments, what would be the result--trial and
-acquittal?”
-
-“Just that, in spite of any effort made to convict them.”
-
-“Well, Governor Osborne is tired of this business, and wants the
-Appleweight scandal disposed of once and for all.”
-
-“That’s strange,” remarked Habersham, clearly surprised at Griswold’s
-vigorous tone. “I called on the governor in his office at Columbia only
-ten days ago, and he put me off. He said he had to prepare an address
-to deliver before the South Carolina Political Reform Association, and
-he couldn’t take up the Appleweight case; and I called on Bosworth, the
-attorney-general, and he grew furiously angry, and said I was guilty
-of the gravest malfeasance in not having brought those men to book
-long ago. When I suggested that he connive with the governor towards
-removing our sheriff, he declared that the governor was a coward. He
-seemed anxious to put the governor in a hole, though why he should take
-that attitude I can’t make out, as it has been generally understood
-that Governor Osborne’s personal friendliness for him secured his
-nomination and election to the attorney-generalship, and I have heard
-that he is engaged to the governor’s oldest daughter.”
-
-“He is a contemptible hound,” replied Griswold with feeling, “and at
-the proper time we shall deal with him; but it is of more importance
-just now to make Appleweight a prisoner in North Carolina. If he’s
-arrested over there, that lets us out; and if the North Carolina
-authorities won’t arrest their own criminals, we’ll go over into
-Dilwell County and show them how to be good. The man’s got to be locked
-up, and he’d look much better in a North Carolina jail, under all the
-circumstances.”
-
-“That’s good in theory, but how do you justify it in law?”
-
-“Oh, that’s the merest matter of formulæ! My dear Habersham, all the
-usual processes of law go down before emergencies!”
-
-The airiness of Griswold’s tone caused the prosecutor to laugh, for
-this was not the sober associate professor of admiralty whose lectures
-he had sat under at the University of Virginia, but a different person,
-whose new attitude toward the law and its enforcement shocked him
-immeasurably.
-
-“You seem to be going in for pretty loose interpretations, and if that
-plaster bust of John Marshall up there falls from the shelf, you need
-not be surprised,” and Habersham still laughed. “I might be impudent
-and cite you against yourself!”
-
-“That would constitute contempt of court, and I cannot just now spare
-your services long enough for you to serve a jail sentence. Go on now,
-and tell me what you have done and what you propose.”
-
-“Well, as I told you over the telephone, we hear a great deal about
-Appleweight and his crowd; but we never hear much of their enemies, who
-are, nevertheless, of the same general stock, and equally determined
-when aroused. Ten of these men I have quietly called to meet at my
-farm out here a few miles from town, on Thursday night. They come from
-different points over the country, and we’ll have a small but grim
-posse that will be ready for business. You may not know it, but the
-Appleweights are most religious. Appleweight himself boasts that he
-never misses church on Sunday. He goes also to the mid-week service on
-Thursday night, so I have learned, and thereby hangs our opportunity.
-Mount Nebo Church lies off here toward the north. It’s a lonely point
-in itself, though it’s the spiritual centre and rendezvous for a wide
-area. If Appleweight can be taken at all, that’s the place, and I’m
-willing to make the trial. Whether to stampede the church and make a
-fight, or seize him alone as he approaches the place, is a question for
-discussion with the boys I have engaged to go into the game. How does
-it strike you?”
-
-“First-rate. Ten good men ought to be enough; but if it comes down to
-numbers, the state militia can be brought into use. The South Carolina
-National Guard is in camp, and we can have a regiment quick enough, if
-I ask it.”
-
-Habersham whistled.
-
-“Osborne is certainly up and doing!” he exclaimed, chuckling. “I
-suppose he has tossed a quarter, and decided it’s better to be good
-than to be senator. By the way, that was a curious story in the
-newspapers about Dangerfield and Osborne having a row at New Orleans. I
-wonder just what passed between them?”
-
-Griswold was conscious that Habersham glanced at him a little
-curiously, with a look that implied something that half formed itself
-on the prosecuting attorney’s lips.
-
-“I know nothing beyond what I read in the newspapers at the time. Some
-political row, I fancy.”
-
-“I suppose Governor Osborne hasn’t discussed it with you since his
-return to Columbia?” asked Habersham carelessly. The shadow of a
-smile flitted across his face, but vanished quickly as though before
-a returning consciousness of the fact that he was facing Henry Maine
-Griswold, who was first of all a gentleman, and not less a scholar and
-a man of the world, who was not to be trifled with.
-
-“No,” replied Griswold, a little shortly. “I was appealed to in rather
-an unusual way in this matter of Appleweight. It is quite out of my
-line as a legal proposition, but there are other considerations of
-which I may not speak.”
-
-“Pardon me,” murmured Habersham; but he asked: “What was Governor
-Osborne doing when you left Columbia?”
-
-“When I left Columbia,” remarked Griswold, and it was he that smiled
-now, “to the best of my knowledge and belief the governor of South
-Carolina was deeply absorbed in knitting a necktie, the colour of which
-was, I think, the orange of a Blue Ridge autumn sunset. And now, if you
-will kindly give me pen and paper, I will communicate the Appleweight
-situation and our prospects to my honoured chief.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-TWO LADIES ON A BALCONY.
-
-
-The outer aspect of Ardsley is, frankly, feudal. The idea of a North
-Carolina estate had grown out of Ardmore’s love of privacy and his wish
-to get away from New York, where his family was all too frequently
-struck by the spot light. The great tract of land once secured he
-had not concerned himself about a house, but had thrown together a
-comfortable bungalow which satisfied him for a year. But Ardmore’s
-gentle heart, inaccessible to demands of many sorts, was a defenceless
-citadel when appeals were made to his generosity. A poor young
-architect, lately home from the Ecole des Beaux Arts, with many honours
-but few friends, fell under Ardmore’s eyes. The towers and battlements
-that soon thereafter crowned the terraced slopes at Ardsley, etching
-a noble line against the lovely panorama of North Carolina hills,
-testified at once to the architect’s talent for adaptation and
-Ardmore’s diminished balances at the Bronx Loan and Trust Company.
-
-On a balcony that commanded the sunset--a balcony bright with geraniums
-that hung daringly over a ravine on the west--Mrs. Atchison and Miss
-Jerry Dangerfield were cosily taking their tea. Their white gowns, the
-snowy awning stirring slightly in the hill air, the bright trifles of
-the tea-table mingled in a picture of charm and contentment.
-
-“I wonder,” said Mrs. Atchison abruptly, “where Tommy is.”
-
-“I have no definite idea,” said Jerry, pouring cream, “but let us hope
-that he is earning his salary.”
-
-“His salary?” and Mrs. Atchison’s brows contracted. “Do you mean that
-my brother is taking pay for this mysterious work he is doing?”
-
-“He shall be paid in money,” replied Jerry with decision. “As I have
-only the barest acquaintance with Mr. Ardmore, never, in fact, having
-seen him until a few days ago, it would be very improper for me to
-permit him to serve me except under the rules that govern the relations
-of employer and employee.”
-
-Mrs. Atchison smiled with the wise tolerance of a woman of the world;
-and she was a lady, it must be said, who had a keen perception of that
-sane and ample philosophy of life which proceeds, we may say, for the
-sake of convenience, from the sense of humour. She did not like to
-be puzzled; and she had never in her life been surprised, least of
-all by any word or deed of her singular brother Tommy. She liked and
-even cultivated with daring the inadvertent turns in a day’s affairs.
-The cool fashion in which her brother had placed the daughter of the
-governor of North Carolina in her hands on board her car at Raleigh
-had amused her. She had learned nothing from Jerry of the beginnings
-of that young woman’s acquaintance with the master of Ardsley--an
-acquaintance which seemed to be intimate in certain aspects but
-amazingly distant and opaque in others. Miss Geraldine Dangerfield,
-like Mrs. Atchison herself, was difficult to surprise, and Tommy
-Ardmore’s sister admired this in any one, and she particularly admired
-it in Jerry, who was so charming in so many other ways. Mrs. Atchison
-imagined that Jerry’s social experience had been meagre, and yet the
-girl accepted the conditions of life at Ardsley as a matter of course,
-and in the gatherings of the house party Jerry--there was no denying
-it--held the centre of the stage.
-
-The men, including the Duke of Ballywinkle, hung upon her lightest
-word, which often left them staggering; and she frequently flung the
-ball of conversation into the blue ether with a careless ease that kept
-expectancy a-tiptoe in the minds and hearts of all the company.
-
-“I hope,” said Mrs. Atchison, putting down her cup and gazing dreamily
-into the west, “that you have not given Tommy any commission in which
-he is likely to fail. If it were a matter of finding a fan you had
-left behind somewhere, or even of producing an extinct flower from
-the Andes, he would undoubtedly be faithful to the trust imposed on
-him; but in anything that is really serious, really of importance, one
-should never depend on Tommy.”
-
-This was, as the lady knew, almost vulgarly leading; but Jerry folded
-her arms, and spoke out with charming frankness.
-
-“I have heard my father say,” said Jerry, “that incapable men often
-rise to great opportunities when they are pushed. Mr. Ardmore has
-undertaken to perform for me a service of the greatest delicacy and not
-unattended with danger. You have been kind to me, Mrs. Atchison, and as
-you are my chaperon and entitled to my fullest confidence, it is right
-for you to know just how I came here, and why your brother is absent in
-my service.”
-
-For once curiosity bound Mrs. Atchison in chains of steel.
-
-“Tell me nothing, dear, unless you are quite free to do so,” she
-murmured; but her heart skipped a beat as she waited.
-
-“I should not think of doing so except of my own free will,” declared
-Jerry, carelessly following the flight of a hawk that flapped close
-by toward the neighbouring woods. “It may interest you to know that
-just now your brother, Mr. Thomas Ardmore, is the governor of North
-Carolina. He does not exactly know it, for at Raleigh I myself was
-governor of North Carolina at the time we met, and I only made Mr.
-Ardmore my private secretary; but when it became necessary to take the
-field I placed him in full charge, and he is now not only governor of
-the Old North State, but also the commander-in-chief of her troops in
-the field.”
-
-With a nice feeling for climax Jerry paused, picked a lump of sugar
-from the silver bowl on the tea-table, bit the edge of it daintily, and
-tossed it to the robins that hopped on the lawn beneath.
-
-Mrs. Atchison moved forward slightly, but evinced no other sign of
-surprise. The hour, the scene, the girl were all to her liking.
-She would even prolong the delight of hearing the further history
-of her brother’s amazing elevation to supreme power in an American
-commonwealth--it was so foreign to all experience, so heavy with
-possibilities, so delicious in that it had happened to Tommy of all men
-in the world!
-
-“I trust,” she said, smiling a little, “that Tommy will not prove
-unworthy of the confidence you have reposed in him.”
-
-“If he does,” said Jerry, slapping her hands together to free them of
-an imaginary sugar crumb, “I shall never, never marry him.”
-
-“Then may I ask, Miss Dangerfield, if you and he are engaged?”
-
-“Not at all, Mrs. Atchison! Not only are we not engaged, but he has
-never even proposed to me. Besides, I am engaged to Colonel Rutherford
-Gillingwater, our adjutant-general.”
-
-“Then if you are engaged to this military person, just wherein lies the
-significance of your threat never to marry my brother.”
-
-“That,” said Jerry, “is perfectly easy of explanation. Your brother
-and I have met only a few times, and I never become engaged to any
-man whom I have not known for a week at least. Marriage is a serious
-matter; and while the frequent breaking of engagements is painful in
-the extreme, I think one cannot be too careful in assuming the marriage
-bond.”
-
-Mrs. Atchison wondered whether the girl was amusing herself at her
-expense, but Jerry’s tone was grave and Jerry’s eyes were steady. Jerry
-was a new species, and she had appeared at a fortunate moment when Mrs.
-Atchison had almost concluded that the world is a squeezed lemon.
-
-“In view of the fact that you are engaged to Dillingwater----” began
-Mrs. Atchison, anxious for further disclosures touching Jerry’s ideas
-on matrimony.
-
-“Colonel Rutherford Gillingwater, please!” corrected Jerry.
-
-“--I don’t quite grasp this matter of your attitude toward my brother.
-Unless I misunderstood you, you remarked a moment ago that unless he
-succeeded in his present undertaking you would never marry him.”
-
-“That is exactly what I said, and I meant every word of it,” declared
-Jerry. “I will not conceal from you, Mrs. Atchison, my determination
-that your brother shall be my second husband.”
-
-There was no question of Mrs. Atchison’s complete surprise now.
-
-“Your _second_ husband, child?”
-
-“My second husband, Mrs. Atchison. Life is short at best, and I
-was told by my old mammy when I was a little child--she turned out
-afterward to be a real voodoo woman--that I should be married twice.
-I am very superstitious, and that made a great impression on my mind.
-It is not in keeping with my ideas of life, Mrs. Atchison, to be long
-a widow, so that I think it perfectly right to choose a second husband
-even before I am quite sure that I have chosen wisely for my first.”
-
-“Has the military person weak lungs?”
-
-“No; but his mind is not strong. Anything sudden, like apoplexy, would
-be sure to go hard with him.”
-
-“Then you should be careful not to shock him. It would be almost
-criminal to break your engagement with him.”
-
-“That rests entirely with him, Mrs. Atchison. The man I love must be
-brave, tender, and true. After our present difficulties are over I
-shall know whether Rutherford Gillingwater is the man I believe I am
-going to marry in October.”
-
-“But you spoke a moment ago of Tommy’s official position. Is this
-arrangement a matter of general knowledge in North Carolina?”
-
-“No, it is not. You and he and I are the only persons who know it. Papa
-does not know it yet; and when papa finds it out it may go hard with
-him. You see, Mrs. Atchison”--and Jerry leaned forward and rested an
-elbow on the tea-table and tucked her little chin into the palm of her
-hand--“you see, papa is very absent-minded, as great men often are, and
-he went away and forgot to perform some duties which the honour and
-dignity of the state require to be performed immediately. There are
-some wicked men who have caused both North Carolina and South Carolina
-a great deal of trouble, but they must not be punished in this state,
-but in South Carolina, which is just over there somewhere. There are
-many reasons for that which would be very tiresome to tell you about,
-but the principal one is that Barbara Osborne, the daughter of the
-governor of South Carolina, is the snippiest and stuck-upest person I
-have ever known, and while your brother and I are in charge of this
-state I have every intention of annoying her in every way I can. When
-Mr. Ardmore has caught those wicked men I spoke of, who really do not
-belong in this state at all, they will be marched straight into South
-Carolina, and then we shall see what Governor Osborne does about it;
-and we will show Barbara Osborne, whose father never had to paper _his_
-dining-room, after the war between the states, with bonds of the
-Confederacy--we will show her that there’s a good deal of difference
-between the Dangerfields and the Osbornes, and between the proud Old
-North State and the state of South Carolina.”
-
-“And you have placed this business, requiring courage and finesse, in
-Tommy’s hands?”
-
-“That is exactly what I have done, Mrs. Atchison. Your brother is no
-great distance from here, and we have exchanged telegrams to-day;
-but when I told you a moment ago that I did not know his whereabouts
-exactly I spoke the truth. Your brother’s appearance on the scene
-at the beginning was most providential. The stage was set, the
-curtain waited”--Jerry extended her arms to indicate a breadth of
-situation--“but there was no valiant hero. I needed a leading man, and
-Mr. Ardmore walked in like a fairy prince ready to take the part. And
-what I shall say to you further, as my chaperon, will not, I hope,
-cause you to think ill of me.”
-
-“I love you more and more! You may tell me anything you like without
-fear of being misunderstood; but tell me nothing that you prefer to
-keep to yourself.”
-
-“If you were not Mr. Ardmore’s sister I should not tell you this;
-and I shall never tell another soul. I was coming home from a visit
-in Baltimore, and the train stopped somewhere to let another train
-pass. The two trains stood side by side for a little while, and in the
-window of the sleeper opposite me I saw a young man who seemed very
-sad. I thought perhaps he had buried all his friends, for he had the
-appearance of one lately bereaved. It has always seemed to me that we
-should do what we can to cheer the afflicted, and this gentleman was
-staring out of his window very sadly, as though he needed a friend,
-and as he caught my eye it seemed to me that there was an appeal in
-it that it would have been unwomanly for me to ignore. So, just as my
-train started, at the very last moment that we looked at each other, I
-winked at that gentleman with, I think, my right eye.”
-
-Miss Geraldine Dangerfield touched the offending member delicately with
-her handkerchief.
-
-Mrs. Atchison bent forward and took both the girl’s hands.
-
-“And that was Tommy--my brother Tommy!”
-
-“That gentleman has proved to be Mr. Thomas Ardmore. I had not the
-slightest idea that I should ever in the world see him again. My only
-hope was that he would go on his way cheered and refreshed by my sign
-of good-will, though he was either so depressed or so surprised that he
-made no response. I never expected to see him again in this world; and
-when I had almost forgotten all about him he coolly sent in his card
-to me at the executive mansion in Raleigh. And I was very harsh with
-him when I learned who he was; for you know the Ardmore estate owns a
-lot of North Carolina bonds that are due on the first of June, and Mr.
-Billings had been chasing papa all over the country to know whether
-they will be paid; and I supposed that of course your brother was
-looking for papa too, to annoy him about some mere detail of that bond
-business, for the state treasurer, who does not love papa, has gone
-away fishing, and Mr. Billings is perfectly wild.”
-
-“Delicious!” exclaimed Mrs. Atchison. “Perfectly delicious! And I am
-sure that when Tommy explained his real sentiments toward Mr. Billings
-you and he became friends at once.”
-
-“Not at once, for I came very near having him thrown out of the house;
-and I laughed at him about a jug that was given to him on the train at
-Kildare with a message in it for papa. You know when you are governor
-people always give you presents--that is, your friendly constituents
-do. The others give you only unkind words. The temperance people send
-you jugs of buttermilk on board your train as you pass through the
-commonwealth, and others send you applejack. Your brother gave back
-the buttermilk and kept the jug of applejack, which had a warning to
-father in its corn-cob stopper. I thought it was very funny, and I
-laughed at your brother so that he was scared and ran out of the house.
-Then afterwards I looked out of the window of papa’s office, and saw
-Mr. Ardmore sitting on a bench in the state-house yard looking ever so
-sad and dejected, and I sent the private secretary out to get him; and
-now we are, I think, the best of friends, and Mr. Ardmore is, as I have
-already told you, the governor of North Carolina to all intents and
-purposes.”
-
-“May I call you Jerry? Thank you, dear. Let me tell you that I am
-thirty-two, and you are----?”
-
-“Seventeen,” supplied Jerry.
-
-“And this is the most amusing, interesting, and exciting thing I have
-heard in all my life. It might be difficult ordinarily for me to
-forgive the wink, but your explanation lifts it out of the realm of
-social impropriety into the sphere of generous benevolence. And if,
-after Colonel Gillingwater has gone to his reward, you should marry my
-brother, I shall do all in my power to make your life in our family
-happy in every way.”
-
-“Your brother does not seem particularly proud of his family
-connection,” said Jerry. “He spoke of you in the most beautiful way,
-but he seems distressed by the actions of some of the others.”
-
-Mrs. Atchison sighed.
-
-“Tommy is right about us. We are a sad lot.”
-
-“But he is very hard on the duke. Since I came to Ardsley his Grace has
-treated me with the greatest courtesy, and he has spoken to me in the
-most complimentary terms. He is beyond question a man of kind heart,
-for he has promised me his mother’s pearl necklace, which had been in
-her family for four hundred years.”
-
-“I should not hesitate to take the necklace, Jerry, if he really
-produces it, for my sister, his wife, has never had the slightest
-glimpse of it, and it is, I believe, in the hands of certain English
-trustees for the benefit of the duke’s creditors. I dislike to spoil
-one of his Grace’s pretty illusions, but unless Mr. Billings softens
-his heart a great deal toward the duke I fear that you will not get the
-pearls this summer.”
-
-“I must tell you as my chaperon, Mrs. Atchison, that the duke has
-already offered to elope with me. He told me last night, as we were
-having our coffee on the terrace, that he would gladly give up his
-wife, meaning, I suppose, your sister, and the Ardmore millions for me;
-but while I think him fascinating, I want you to feel quite safe, for I
-promise you I shall elope with no one while I am your guest.”
-
-Mrs. Atchison’s face had grown a little white, and she compressed her
-lips in lines that were the least bit grim.
-
-“The scoundrel!” she exclaimed half under her breath. “To think that he
-would insult a child like you! He is hanging about us here in the hope
-of getting more money, while my poor sister, his wife, is in an English
-sanatorium half crazed by his brutality. If Tommy knew this he would
-undoubtedly kill him!”
-
-“That would be very unnecessary. A duke, after all, is something, and
-I should hate to have the poor man killed on my account. And besides,
-Mrs. Atchison, I am perfectly able to take care of myself.”
-
-“I believe you are, Jerry. But it’s a terrible thing to have that beast
-about, and I shall tell him to-night that he must leave this place and
-the country.”
-
-“But first,” said Jerry, “I have an engagement to ride with him after
-dinner to see the moon, and the opportunity of seeing a moon with a
-duke of ancient family, here on the sacred soil of North Carolina, is
-something that I cannot lightly put aside.”
-
-“You cannot--you must not go!”
-
-“Leave it to me,” said Jerry, smiling slightly; “and I promise you that
-the duke will never again insult an American girl. And now I think I
-must dress for dinner.”
-
-She rose and turned her eyes dreamily to the tower above, where the
-North Carolina state flag flapped idly in the breeze. This silken
-emblem with its single star Miss Geraldine Dangerfield carried with
-her in her trunk wherever she travelled; and having noted Ardsley’s
-unadorned flagstaff, she had, with her own hands, unfurled it, highly
-resolved that it should remain until the rightful governor returned to
-his own.
-
-A few minutes later, as Mrs. Atchison was reading the late mail in her
-sitting-room, she took up a New York newspaper of the day before and
-ran over the headlines. “Lost: A Governor” was a caption that held
-her eye, and she read a special despatch dated Raleigh with deepest
-interest. Governor Dangerfield, the item hinted, had not yet returned
-from New Orleans, where he had gone to attend the Cotton Planters’
-Convention, and where, moreover, he had quarrelled with the governor of
-South Carolina. The cowardly conduct of both governors in dealing with
-the Appleweight band of outlaws was recited at length; and it was also
-intimated that Governor Dangerfield was deliberately absenting himself
-from his office to avoid meeting squarely the Appleweight issue.
-
-Mrs. Atchison smiled to herself; then she laughed merrily as she rang
-for her maid.
-
-“Little Jerry’s story seemed highly plausible as she told it; and yet
-she is perfectly capable of spinning romance with that pretty mouth of
-hers, particularly when backed by those sweet and serious blue eyes.
-Tommy and Jerry! The combination is irresistible! If she has really
-turned the state of North Carolina over to my little brother, something
-unusual will certainly happen before long.”
-
-And Mrs. Atchison was quite right in her surmise, as we shall see.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE EMBARRASSMENTS OF THE DUKE OF BALLYWINKLE.
-
-
-Mr. Frank Collins, of the Atlanta _Palladium_, trod the ties beyond
-Kildare with a light heart, gaily swinging a suit-case. He had walked
-far, but a narrow-brim straw hat, perched on the back of his head, and
-the cheery lilt of the waltz he whistled, spoke for a jaunty spirit. As
-his eye ranged the landscape he marked a faint cloud of smoke rising
-beyond a lonely strip of wood; and coming to a dilapidated piece of
-track that led vaguely away into the heart of the forest, he again
-noted the tiny smoke-cloud. On such a day the half-gods go and the
-gods arrive; and the world that afternoon knew no cheerfuller spirit
-than the _Palladium’s_ agile young commissioner. Mr. Collins was not
-only in capital health and spirits, but he rejoiced in that delicious
-titillation of expectancy which is the chief compensation of the
-journalist’s life. His mission was secret, and this in itself gave
-flavour to his errand; and, moreover, it promised adventures of a kind
-that were greatly to his liking.
-
-As the woodland closed in about him and the curving spur carried him
-farther from the main right of way, he ceased whistling, and his steps
-became more guarded. Suddenly a man rose from the bushes and levelled a
-long arm at him detainingly.
-
-“Stop, young man, stop where you are!”
-
-“Hello!” called Collins, pausing. “Well, I’m jiggered if it ain’t old
-Cookie. I say, old man, is the untaxed juice flowing in the forest
-primeval or what brings you here?”
-
-Cooke grinned as he recalled the reporter, whom he remembered as a
-particularly irrepressible specimen of his genus whom he had met while
-pursuing moonshiners in Georgia. The two shook hands amiably midway of
-the two streaks of rust.
-
-“Young man, I think I told you once before that your legs were
-altogether too active. I want you to light right out of here--skip!”
-
-“Not for a million dollars. Our meeting is highly opportune, Cookie.
-It’s not for me to fly in the face of Providence. I’m going to see
-what’s doing down here.”
-
-“All right,” replied Cooke. “Take it all in and enjoy yourself; but
-you’re my prisoner.”
-
-“Oh, that will be all right! So long as I’m with you I can’t lose out.”
-
-“March!” called Cooke, dropping behind; and thus the two came in a few
-minutes to the engine, the cars, and the caboose. From the locomotive a
-slight smoke still trailed hazily upward.
-
-Thomas Ardmore, coatless and hatless, sat on the caboose steps writing
-messages on a broad pad, while a telegraph instrument clicked busily
-within. One of his men had qualified as operator, and a pile of
-messages at his elbow testified to Ardmore’s industry. Ardmore clutched
-in his left hand a message recently caught from the wire, which he
-re-read from time to time with increasing satisfaction. It had been
-sent from Ardsley and ran:
-
- I shall ride to-night on the road that leads south beyond the red
- bungalow, and on the bridle-path that climbs the ridge on the west,
- called Sunset Trail. A certain English gentleman will accompany me.
- It will be perfectly agreeable to me to come back alone.
-
- G. D.
-
-Ardmore was still writing when Cooke stood beneath him under the
-caboose platform.
-
-“I beg your pardon, Mr. Ardmore, but this is our first prisoner.”
-
-Ardmore signed a despatch, and then looked up and took the pipe from
-his mouth. Collins lifted his hat politely.
-
-“Ah, Mr. Ardmore, you see I have taken advantage of your exceedingly
-kind invitation to look you up in North Carolina.”
-
-“He was looking for you very hard when I found him, Mr. Ardmore,”
-interposed Cooke.
-
-“Your appearance delights me,” said Ardmore, extending his hand to the
-reporter. “It was nice of you to walk out here to find me. Wouldn’t
-they put you up at the house?”
-
-“Well, the fact is I didn’t stop there. My paper sent me in this
-general direction on business, but I had every honourable intention of
-making you that visit after I finished my assignment. But Cookie here
-says I’m arrested.”
-
-“He’s a dangerous character and can’t be allowed to run loose in these
-parts. I’m going to tie him up,” said Cooke.
-
-“May I ask you, Mr. Collins, just what you are doing here?” inquired
-Ardmore.
-
-“You may, and I’ll bet a boiled goose that Cooke and I are on the same
-job.”
-
-“What are you looking for?” demanded Ardmore’s chief of staff.
-
-“It’s a big story if I get it, and I have every intention of getting
-it,” said Collins guardedly.
-
-“Out with it!” commanded Ardmore.
-
-“The fact is, then, that I’m looking for a person of importance.”
-
-“Go right on, please.”
-
-“And that person is the governor of North Carolina, who is mysteriously
-absent from Raleigh. He attended the Cotton Planters’ Convention in
-New Orleans. He got as far as Atlanta on his way home, and then
-disappeared. I need not say to gentlemen of your intelligence that
-a lost governor is ripe fruit in my business, and I have reason to
-believe that for some purpose of his own the governor of North Carolina
-is hiding in this very neighbourhood.”
-
-Cooke glanced at Ardmore for instructions, but the master of Ardsley
-preferred to keep the matter in his own hands.
-
-“So you want to find the governor of North Carolina, do you? Well, you
-shall not be disappointed. You are too able and zealous to be wasted on
-journalism. I have a feeling that you are destined to higher things.
-Something told me when we met in Atlanta that fate had set us apart for
-each other. That was why I asked you to visit me when I really didn’t
-know but that, after learning where the spoons are kept, you would skip
-without leaving your subsequent address. But now there is important
-business on hand, and the state of North Carolina will take the liberty
-of borrowing you from Georgia until the peace of the Old North State
-is restored. And now, Collins, I will make a disclosure that will
-undoubtedly startle you a good deal, but you are no longer employed
-by the Atlanta _Palladium_, and your obligations to that journal must
-be transferred to the state in which you now stand. You came here,
-Collins, to look for the governor of North Carolina, and your wits
-and your argus-nose for news have served you well. You have found the
-governor of North Carolina: _I_ am he!”
-
-Collins had stood during this recital in the middle of the track,
-with his legs wide apart, calmly fanning himself with his hat; but as
-Ardmore proceeded the reporter’s hand dropped to his side, and a grin
-that had overspread his face slowly yielded to a blank stare.
-
-“Would you mind repeating those last words?”
-
-“_I_ am the governor of North Carolina, Mr. Collins. The manner in
-which I attained that high office is not important. It must suffice
-that I am in sole charge of the affairs of this great state, without
-relief from valuation or appraisement laws and without benefit of
-clergy. And we have much to do here; mere social conversation must
-await an ampler time. I now appoint you publicity agent to the
-governor. Your business is to keep the people fooled--all the people
-all the time. In other words, you are chief liar to the administration,
-a position of vast responsibility, for which you have, if I am a judge
-of character, the greatest talents. You will begin by sending out
-word that Governor Dangerfield has given up all other work at present
-but the destruction of the Appleweight gang. These stories that the
-governor has hidden himself to dodge certain duties are all punk--do
-you understand?--he is serving the people as he has always served them,
-faithfully and with the noblest self-sacrifice. That’s the sort of
-stuff I want you to jam into the newspapers all over the world. And
-remember--my name does not appear in the business at all--neither now
-nor hereafter.”
-
-“But by the ghost of John C. Calhoun, don’t you see that I’m losing the
-chance of my life in my own profession? There’s a story in this that
-would put me to the top and carry me right into New York,” and Collins
-glanced about for his suit-case, as though meditating flight.
-
-“Your appointment has gone into effect,” said Ardmore with finality,
-“and if you bolt you will be caught and made to walk the plank. And so
-far as your future is concerned, you shall have a newspaper of your own
-anywhere you please as soon as this war is over.”
-
-The three men adjourned to the caboose where Ardmore told Collins all
-that it seemed necessary for the newspaper man to know; and within
-half an hour the new recruit had entered thoroughly into the spirit
-of the adventure, though his mirth occasionally got the better of
-him, and he bowed his head in his hands and surrendered himself to
-laughter. Thereafter, until the six o’clock supper was ready, he
-kept the operator occupied. He sent to the _Palladium_ a thoroughly
-plausible story, giving prominence to the Appleweight case and laying
-stress on Governor Dangerfield’s vigorous personality and high sense
-of official responsibility. He sent queries to leading journals
-everywhere, offering exclusive news of the rumoured disappearance of
-North Carolina’s governor. His campaign of publicity for the state
-administration was broadly planned, though he was losing a great
-opportunity to beat the world with a stunning story of the amazing
-nerve with which Ardmore, the young millionaire, had assumed the duties
-of governor of North Carolina in the unaccountable absence of Governor
-Dangerfield from his capital. The whole thing was almost too good to be
-true, and Collins put away the idea of flight only upon realizing the
-joyous possibilities of sharing, no matter how humbly, in the fate of
-an administration which was fashioning the drollest of card-houses. He
-did not know, and was not to know until long afterwards, just how the
-young master of Ardsley had leaped into the breach; but Ardmore was an
-extraordinary person, whose whims set him quite apart from other men,
-and while, even if he escaped being shot, the present enterprise would
-undoubtedly lead to a long term in jail, Collins had committed himself
-to Ardmore’s cause and would be faithful to it, no matter what happened.
-
-Ardmore took Collins more fully into his confidence during the
-lingering twilight, and the reporter made many suggestions that were of
-real value. Meanwhile Cooke’s men brought three horses from the depths
-of the forest, and saddled them. Cooke entered the caboose for a final
-conference with Ardmore and a last look at the maps.
-
-“Too bad,” remarked the acting governor, “that we must wait until
-to-morrow night to pick up the Appleweights, but our present business
-is more important. It’s time to move, Cooke.”
-
-They rode off in single file on the faintest of trails through the
-woods, Cooke leading and Ardmore and Collins following immediately
-behind him. The great host of summer stars thronged the sky, and the
-moon sent its soft effulgence across the night. They presently forded
-a noisy stream, and while they were seeking the trail again on the
-farther side an owl hooted a thousand yards up the creek, and while
-the line re-formed Cooke paused and listened. Then the owl’s call was
-repeated farther off, and so faintly that Cooke alone heard it. He laid
-his hand on Ardmore’s rein:
-
-“There’s a foot-trail that leads along that creek, and it’s very
-rough and difficult to follow. Half a mile from here there used to be
-a still, run by one of the Appleweights. We smashed it once, but no
-doubt they are operating again by this time. That hoot of the owl is
-a warning common among the pickets put out by these people. Wireless
-telegraphy isn’t in it with them. Every Appleweight within twenty
-miles will know in half an hour how many there are of us and just what
-direction we are taking. We must not come back here to-night. We must
-put up on your place somewhere and let them think, if they will, we are
-guests of yours out for an evening ride.”
-
-“That’s all right. Unless we complete this job in about two days my
-administration is a fizzle,” said Ardmore, as they resumed their march
-through the forest. There was a wilder fling to the roll of the land
-now, but the underbrush was better cleared, and the trail had become a
-bridle-path that had known man’s care.
-
-“This is some of Paul’s work,” said Ardmore; “and if I am not very
-much mistaken we are on my land now and headed straight enough for the
-wagon-road that leads south beyond the red bungalow. These roads in
-here were planned to give variety, but I never before appreciated how
-complicated they are.”
-
-The path stretched away through the heavy forest, and they climbed to a
-ridge that commanded a wide region that lay bathed in silver moonlight,
-so softly luminous that it seemed of the stuff of shadows made light.
-Westward, a mile distant, lay Ardsley, only a little below the level of
-the ridge and touched with a faint purple as of spring twilight.
-
-Ardmore sat his saddle, quietly contemplating the great house that
-struck him almost for the first time as imposing. He felt, too, a
-little heartache that he did not quite understand. He was not sure
-whether it was the effect of the moon, or whether he was tired, or what
-it was, though he thought perhaps the moon had something to do with
-it. His own house, of which he was sincerely fond, seemed mistily hung
-between heaven and earth in the moonlight, a thing not wholly of this
-world; and in his depression of spirit he reflected for a moment on his
-own aimless, friendless life; he knew then that he was lonely, and that
-there was a great void in his mind and heart and soul, and he knew also
-that Jerry Dangerfield and not the moon was the cause of his melancholy.
-
-“We’d better be moving,” suggested Cooke.
-
-“It’s too bad to leave that picture,” remarked Collins, sighing. “Had
-I the lyre of Gray I should compose an ‘Ode on a Distant Prospect of
-Ardsley Castle,’ which would ultimately reach the school readers and
-bring me fame more enduring than brass.”
-
-“Did you say brass?” ironically scoffed Cooke.
-
-Whereupon the _Palladium’s_ late representative laughed softly and
-muttered to himself,
-
- “Proud pile, by mighty Ardmore’s hand upreared!”
-
-“Cut it out,” commanded Cooke, “or I’ll drop you into the ravine. Look
-below there!”
-
-Looking off from the ridge they saw a man and a woman riding along
-a strip of road from which the timber had been cut. The night was
-so still, the gray light so subdued, that the two figures moved as
-steadily and softly as shadow pictures on a screen.
-
-The slow, even movement of the riders was interrupted suddenly. The
-man, who was nearer the remote observers, had stopped and bent towards
-the woman as though to snatch her rein, when her horse threw up its
-head and fell back on its haunches. Then the woman struck the man a
-blow with her riding-crop, and galloped swiftly away along the white,
-ribbon-like road. In the perfect night-silence it was like a scene of
-pantomime.
-
-“That’s all right!” cried Cooke. “Come along! We’ll cut into that road
-at the bungalow.”
-
-They swung their horses away from the ridge and back into the
-bridle-path, which once more dipped sharply down into heavy timber,
-Cooke leading the way, and three of the best hunters known to the
-Ardsley stables flew down the clear but winding path. The incident
-which the trio had witnessed required no interpretation: the girl’s
-blow and flight had translated it into language explicit enough.
-
-Ardmore thanked his German forester a thousand times for the admirable
-bridle-path over which they galloped, with its certain footing beneath
-and clean sweep from the boughs above. The blood surged hotly through
-his heart, and he was angry for the first time in his life; but his
-head was cool, and the damp air of the forest flowing by tranquillized
-him into a new elation of spirit. Jerry Dangerfield was the dearest and
-noblest and bravest girl in the world--he knew that: and she was clever
-and resourceful enough to devise means for preserving her father’s
-official and private honour; and not less quick to defend herself from
-insult from a titled scoundrel. She was the most inexplicable of girls;
-but at the same time she was beyond any question the wisest. The
-thought that he should now see her soon, after all the years that had
-passed since he had introduced her to his sister at Raleigh, filled him
-with wild delight, and he prayed that in her mad flight from the Duke
-of Ballywinkle no harm might come to her.
-
-The three men rode out into the broad highway at the red bungalow and
-paused to listen.
-
-“He hasn’t got here yet. Only one person has passed, and these must be
-the tracks of the girl’s horse,” said Cooke, who had dismounted and
-struck matches, the better to observe the faint hoof-prints in the hard
-shell road.
-
-“He’ll be along in a minute. Let us get into the shadow of the
-bungalow, and when he comes we’ll ride out and nail him. The bungalow’s
-a sort of way house. I often stop here when I’m out on the estate and
-want to rest. I have the key in my pocket.”
-
-As Ardmore’s keys jingled in the lock Cooke cried out softly. Their
-quarry was riding swiftly towards them, and he drew rein before the
-bungalow as Cooke and Collins rode out to meet him.
-
-“I say,” panted the duke.
-
-“You are our prisoner. Dismount and come into this house.”
-
-“Prisoner, you fool! I’m a guest at Ardsley, and I’m looking for a
-lady.”
-
-“That’s a very unlikely story.--Collins, help the gentleman down;”
-and the reporter obeyed instructions with so much zeal that the noble
-gentleman fell prone, and was assisted to his feet with a fine mockery
-of helpfulness.
-
-“I tell you I’m looking for a lady whose horse ran away with her! I’m
-the Duke of Ballywinkle, and brother-in-law to Mr. Ardmore. I’ll have
-you sent to jail if you stop me here.”
-
-“Come along, Duke, and we’ll see what you look like,” said Cooke,
-leading the way to the bungalow veranda. Within Ardmore was lighting
-lamps. There was a long room finished in black oak, with a fireplace
-at one end, and a table in the centre. The floors were covered with
-handsome rugs, and the walls were hung with photographs and etchings.
-Ardmore sat on the back of a leather settee in a pose assumed at the
-moment of the duke’s entrance. It was a pose of entire nonchalance,
-and Ardmore’s cap, perched on the back of his head, and his brown hair
-rumpled boyishly, added to the general effect of comfort and ease.
-
-The duke blinked for a moment in the lamplight, then he roared out
-joyously:
-
-“Ardy, old man!” and advanced towards his brother-in-law with
-outstretched hand.
-
-“Keep him off; he’s undoubtedly quite mad,” said Ardmore, staring
-coldly, and bending his riding-crop across his knees. “Collins, please
-ride on after the lady and bring her back this way.”
-
-Cooke had seated the prisoner rather rudely in a chair, and the noble
-duke, having lost the power of speech in amazement and fright, rubbed
-his eyes and then fastened them incredulously on Ardmore; but there
-was no question about it, he had been seized with violence; he had
-been repudiated by his own brother-in-law--the useless, stupid Tommy
-Ardmore, who at best had only a child’s mind for pirate stories, and
-who was indubitably the most negligible of negligible figures in the
-drama of life as the duke knew it.
-
-“Cooke,” began Ardmore, addressing his lieutenant gravely from his
-perch on the settee, “what is the charge against this person?”
-
-“He says he’s a duke,” grinned Cooke, taking his cue from Ardmore’s
-manner. “And he says he’s visiting at Ardsley.”
-
-“That,” said Ardmore with decision, “is creditable only to the
-gentleman’s romantic imagination. His face is anything but dukely, and
-there’s a red streak across it which points clearly to the recent
-sharp blow of a weapon; and no one would ever strike a duke. It’s
-utterly incredible,” and Ardmore lifted his brows and leaned back
-with his arms at length and his hands clasping the riding-crop, as he
-contemplated with supreme satisfaction the tell-tale red line across
-the duke’s cheek.
-
-The Duke of Ballywinkle leaped to his feet, the colour that suffused
-his pale face hiding for the moment the mark of the riding-stick.
-
-“What the devil is this joke, Ardy?” screamed the duke. “You know I’m a
-guest at your house; you know I’m your sister’s husband. I was riding
-with Miss Dangerfield, and her horse ran away with her, and she may
-come to harm unless I go after her. This cut on the face I got from a
-low limb of one of your infernal trees. You are putting me in a devil
-of an embarrassing position by holding me here.”
-
-He spoke with dignity, and Ardmore heard him through in silence; but
-when he had finished, the master of Ardsley pointed to the chair.
-
-“As I understand you, you are pleading not guilty; and you pretend to
-some acquaintance with me; but I am unable to recall you. We may have
-met somewhere, sometime, but I really don’t know you. The title to
-which you pretend is unfamiliar to me; but I will frankly disclose to
-you that I, sir, am the governor of North Carolina.”
-
-“The what?” bleated the duke, his eyes bulging.
-
-“I repeat, that I am the governor of North Carolina, and as a state
-of war now exists in my unhappy kingdom, I, sir, have assumed all the
-powers conferred upon the three co-ordinate branches of government
-under the American system--namely, or if you prefer it, I will say, to
-wit: the legislative, the executive, and the judicial. It is thus not
-only my privilege but my painful duty to pass upon your case in all its
-sad aspects. As I have already suspended the writ of habeas corpus and
-set aside the right to trial by jury, we will consider that I sit here
-as the supreme court.”
-
-“For God’s sake, Ardy----” howled the duke.
-
-“That remark I will not now construe as profanity, but don’t let it
-occur again. The first charge against you is that of insulting a woman
-on the Sunset Trail in the estate called Ardsley, owned by a person
-known in law as Thomas Ardmore. There are three witnesses to the fact
-that you tried to stop a woman in the road, and that streak on your
-face is even more conclusive. Are you guilty or not guilty?”
-
-“You are mad! You are crazy!” shouted the duke; but his face was very
-white now, and the mark of the crop flamed scarlet.
-
-“You are guilty, beyond any question. But the further charge against
-you that you pretend to be--what did he say his name was, Cooke?--that
-you pretend to be the Duke of Ballywinkle must now be considered. That
-is quite right, is it; you say you are the duke?”
-
-“Yes, you fool!” howled the duke. “I’ll have the law on you for this!
-I’ll appeal to the British ambassador.”
-
-“I advise you not to appeal to anybody,” said Ardmore, “and the British
-ambassador is without jurisdiction in North Carolina. You have yourself
-asserted that you are the Duke of Ballywinkle. Why Ballywinkle? Why not
-Argyll? why not Westminster? Why not, if duke you must be, the noble
-Duke of York?”
-
-The Duke of Ballywinkle sat staring, stupefied. The whole thing was one
-of his silly brother-in-law’s stupid jokes; there was no question of
-that; and Tommy Ardmore was always a bore; but in spite of the comfort
-he derived from these reflections the duke was not a little uneasy;
-for he had never seen his brother-in-law in just this mood, and he did
-not like it. Ardmore was carrying the joke too far; and there was an
-assurance in Ardmore’s tone, and a light in Ardmore’s eyes, that were
-ominous. Cooke had meanwhile lighted his pipe and was calmly smoking
-until his chief should have his fling.
-
-Ardmore now drew from his pocket Johnston’s _American Politics_ with an
-air of greatest seriousness.
-
-“Cooke,” he said, half to himself, as he turned the pages, “do you
-remember just what the constitution says about dukes? Oh yes, here
-we are! Now, Mr. Duke of Ballywinkle, listen to what it says here in
-Section IX. of the Constitution of the United States, which reads
-exactly as follows in this book: ‘No title of nobility shall be granted
-by the United States: And no person holding any office of profit or
-trust under them, shall, without the consent of the Congress, accept of
-any present, emolument, office, or title, of any kind whatever, from
-any king, prince, or foreign state.’ And it says in Section X. that ‘No
-state shall grant any title of nobility.’ Now, Mr. Ballywinkle, it is
-perfectly clear that this government can’t recognize anything that it
-can’t create, for that would be foolish. As I, the governor of North
-Carolina, can’t make a duke, I can’t see one. You are therefore wholly
-illegal; it’s against the most sacred law of the land for you to be
-here at all; and painful though it is to me, it is nevertheless my duty
-to order you to leave the United States at once, never to return. In
-fact, if you ever appear in the United States again, I hereby order
-that you be hanged by the neck until you be dead. One of Mr. Cooke’s
-men will accompany you to New York to-morrow and see to it that you
-take passage on a steamer bound for a British port. The crime of having
-insulted a woman will still hang over you until you are well east of
-Sandy Hook, and I advise you not to risk being tried on that charge
-in North Carolina, as my people are very impulsive and emotional, and
-lynchings are not infrequent in our midst. You shall spend to-night in
-my official caboose some distance from here, and your personal effects
-will be brought from Ardsley, where, you have said, you are a guest of
-Mr. Thomas Ardmore, who is officially unknown to me. The supreme court
-will now adjourn.”
-
-Cooke pulled the limp, bewildered duke to his feet, and dragged him
-from the bungalow.
-
-As they stepped out on the veranda Collins rode up in alarm.
-
-“I followed this road to a cross-road where it becomes a bridle-path
-and runs off into the forest. There I lost all trace of the lady, but
-here is her riding-crop.”
-
-“Cooke, take your prisoner to the caboose; and, Collins, come with me,”
-commanded Ardmore; and a moment later he and the reporter rode off
-furiously in search of Jerry Dangerfield.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-MISS DANGERFIELD TAKES A PRISONER.
-
-
-A dozen men carrying rifles across their saddle-bows rode away from
-Habersham’s farm on the outskirts of Turner Court House and struck
-a rough trail that led a devious course over the hills. At their
-head rode the guide of the expedition--a long, silent man on a mule.
-Griswold and Habersham followed immediately behind him on horseback.
-Their plans had been carefully arranged before they left their
-rendezvous, and save for an occasional brief interchange between the
-prosecuting attorney and the governor’s special representative, the
-party jogged on in silence. Habersham’s recruits were, it may be
-said, farmers of the border, who had awaited for years just such an
-opportunity as now offered to avenge themselves upon the insolent
-Appleweights. Nearly every man of the party had some private score to
-settle, but they had all been sworn as special constables, and were
-sobered by the knowledge that the power of the state of South Carolina
-was back of them.
-
-Thus, at the very hour that Mr. Ardmore and his lieutenants rode
-away from the lonely anchorage of the caboose, Professor Griswold
-and his cavalcade set out for Mount Nebo Church. While the master
-of Ardsley was revenging himself upon the Duke of Ballywinkle, his
-dearest friend, against whom he had closed the doors of his house, was
-losing no time in setting forth upon a mission which, if successful,
-would seriously interfere with all Mr. Ardmore’s hopes and plans.
-Ardmore’s scarlet fever telegram no longer rankled in the breast of the
-associate professor of admiralty of the University of Virginia, for
-Griswold knew that no matter what might be the outcome of his effort
-to uphold the dignity of the sovereign state of South Carolina, his
-participation in any such adventure would so cover his friend with envy
-that he would have him for ever at his mercy. Thomas Ardmore deserved
-punishment--there was no doubt of that, and as Professor Griswold was
-not more or less than a human being, he took comfort of the reflection.
-
-The guide of the expedition pushed his mule forward at a fast walk,
-making no excuses to Griswold and Habersham for the roughness of the
-trails he chose, nor troubling to give warning of sharp turns where a
-horse, being less wise than a mule, tobogganed madly before finding
-a foothold. Occasionally a low-hanging limb switched the associate
-professor sharply across the face, but his temper continued serene
-where the trail was darkest and steepest, and he found himself ignoring
-Habersham’s occasional polite questions about the university in his
-effort to summon up in memory certain ways of Barbara Osborne which
-baffled him. He deplored the time he had given to the study of a stupid
-profession like the law, when, if he had applied himself with equal
-diligence to poetry, he might have made for himself a place at least as
-high in belles-lettres. In his college days he had sometimes thrummed
-a guitar, and there was a little song in his heart, half formed, and
-with only a line or two as yet tangible, which he felt sure he could
-write down on paper if it were not that the bugles summoned him to war;
-it was a song of a white rose which a lover wore in his heart, through
-winter and summer, and it never changed, and the flight of the seasons
-had no manner of effect on it.
-
-“Check up, cain’t you?” snarled the man on the mule, laying hold of
-Griswold’s rein; and thus halted, Griswold found that they had been
-circling round a curiously symmetrical, thickly wooded hill, and had
-finally come to a clearing whence they were able to gaze far off toward
-the north.
-
-“We are almost out of bounds,” said Habersham, pointing. “Over there
-somewhere, across the hills, lies North Carolina. I am as thoroughly
-lost as you can possibly be; but these men know where they are.--How
-far is it, Billy”--he addressed the silent guide--“to Mount Nebo?”
-
-“About four mile, and I reckon we’d better let out a leetle now, or
-they’ll sing the doxology before we git thar.”
-
-“What’s that light away off there?” asked Habersham.
-
-The guide paused to examine it, and the faint glow far down the vale
-seemed to perplex him. He spoke to one or two other natives, and they
-viewed the light ruminatively, as is their way.
-
-“Thet must be on Ardmore’s land,” said the leader finally. “It shoots
-out all sorts o’ ways round hyeh, and I reckon thet’s about wheh
-Raccoon Creek cuts through.”
-
-“That’s very likely,” said Habersham. “I’ve seen the plat of what
-Ardmore owns on this side the border at the court house, and I remember
-that there’s a long strip in Mingo County that is Ardsley land. Ardmore
-has houses of one kind and another scattered all over the estate, and
-those lights may be from one of them. You know the place, don’t you?”
-
-“Yes; I’ve visited there,” admitted Griswold. “But we’d better give it
-a wide berth. The whole estate is simply infested with scarlet fever.
-They’re quarantined.”
-
-“I guess that’s a joke,” said Habersham. “There’s a big party on there
-now, and I have seen some of the guests in Turner’s within a day or
-two.”
-
-“Within how many days?” demanded Griswold, his heart sinking at
-the thought that Ardmore had lied to him to keep him away from
-Ardsley--from Ardmore’s house! The thought of it really hurt him now.
-Could it be possible that Ardmore had guests so distinguished that he,
-Griswold, was not worthy to make their acquaintance! He experienced a
-real pang as he thought that here he was, within a short ride of the
-home of his dearest friend, the man whom most he loved of all men, and
-that he had been denied the door of that friend’s house.
-
-“Come on!” called Habersham.
-
-Half the company rode ahead to gain the farther side of the church; the
-remainder, including Griswold and Habersham, soon dismounted and tied
-their horses out of sight of the country road which they had latterly
-been following.
-
-“We are in plenty of time,” said Habersham, looking at his watch.
-“The rest of the boys are closing in from the other side, and they
-will be ready for Appleweight when he finishes his devotions. We’ve
-been studying the old man’s habits, and he has a particular place
-where he ties his horse back of the church. It’s a little apart from
-the fence where most of the congregation hitch, and he chose it, no
-doubt, because in case of a surprise he would have plenty of room for
-manoeuvring. Two men are going to lay for him, seize and gag him, and
-carry him into the wood back of the church; and then we’re off across
-the state line to lock him up in jail at Kildare and give Governor
-Dangerfield the shock of his life.”
-
-“It sounds simple enough; but it won’t be long before Appleweight’s
-friends miss him. You must remember that they are a shrewd lot.”
-
-“We’ve got to take our chances. Let’s hope we are as shrewd as they
-are,” replied Habersham.
-
-They moved softly through the wood, and presently the faint sound of
-singing reached them.
-
-“Old Rabdick has finished his sermon, and we’ll know the worst in a few
-minutes.”
-
-One of the party had already detached himself and crept forward toward
-the church, to meet his appointed comrade in the enterprise, who was to
-come in from the other side.
-
-The clapboard church presented in the moonlight the austerest outlines,
-and as the men waited, a rude though unseen hand was slamming the
-wooden shutters that protected the windows from impious violence.
-
-“We could do with less moon,” muttered Habersham, as he and Griswold
-peered through the trees into the churchyard.
-
-“There goes Bill Appleweight now,” whispered one of the natives at his
-elbow, and Griswold felt his heart-beats quicken as he watched a tall
-figure silhouetted against the church and moving swiftly toward the
-rear of the building. At the front of the church voices sounded, as the
-departing worshippers rode or drove slowly away.
-
-Habersham laid his hand suddenly on Griswold’s arm.
-
-“They’ve got him! They’ve nailed him! See! There! They’re yanking him
-back into the timber. They’ve taken him and his horse!”
-
-Griswold saw nothing but a momentary confusion of shadows, then perfect
-silence hung over the woods behind the little church. The congregation
-was slowly dispersing, riding away in little groups. Suddenly a voice
-called out in the road a hundred yards beyond the church:
-
-“Hey there! Where’s Bill?”
-
-“Oh, he’s gone long ago!” yelled another.
-
-In a moment more the church door slammed and a last figure rode rapidly
-away.
-
-“Now we’ll see what’s happened,” said Habersham. “It looks almost too
-easy.”
-
-The members of Griswold’s party who had been thrown round to the
-farther side of the church began to appear, one at a time. There was
-no nervousness among any of the band--a fact that impressed Griswold.
-They were all risking much in this enterprise, but they were outwardly
-unperturbed, and chewing their tobacco silently while they awaited
-the return of the two active agents in the conspiracy who had dealt
-directly with Appleweight. Habersham counted heads, and announced all
-present or accounted for.
-
-The tall leader who had ridden the mule was the first to rise out of
-the underbrush, through which he had crawled circuitously from the rear
-of the church. His companion followed a few seconds later.
-
-“We’ve got Bill, all tied and gagged and a-settin’ of his hoss,”
-drawled the leader, “and the hoss is tied to the back fence. Rest o’
-his boys thought he’d gone ahead, but they may miss him and come back.
-He’s safe enough, and ef we keep away from him we’ll be ready to light
-out ef the gang scents trouble and comes back to look fer Bill.”
-
-“You’re sure he’s tied up so he can’t break away or yell?”
-
-“He’s as good as dead, a-settin’ of his hoss in the thicket back theh.”
-
-“And now,” said Habersham, “what we’ve got to do is to make a run for
-it and land him across the border, and stick him into a North Carolina
-jail, where he rightfully belongs. The question is, can we do it all in
-one night, or had we better lock him up somewhere on this side the line
-and take another night for it? The sheriff over there in Kildare is
-Appleweight’s cousin, but we’ll lock him up with Bill, to make a family
-party of it.”
-
-“We’d better not try too much to-night,” counselled Griswold. “It’s
-a big thing to have the man himself. If it were not for the matter
-of putting Governor Dangerfield in a hole, I’d favour hurrying with
-Appleweight to Columbia, just for the moral effect of it on the people
-of South Carolina. We’d make a big killing for the administration that
-way, Habersham.”
-
-“Yes, you’d make a killing all right, but you’d have Bill Appleweight
-on your hands, which Governor Osborne has not until lately been anxious
-for,” replied Habersham, in a low tone that was heard by no one but his
-old preceptor.
-
-“You’d better get over the idea that we’re afraid of this outlaw,”
-rejoined Griswold. “The governor of North Carolina dare not call his
-soul his own where these hill people are concerned; but the governor of
-South Carolina is a different sort.”
-
-“The governor of North Carolina is filling the newspapers with his own
-virtuous intentions in the matter,” remarked Habersham, “but his sudden
-zeal puts one upon inquiry.”
-
-“I hope you don’t imply that the motives of the governor of South
-Carolina are not the worthiest?” demanded Griswold hotly.
-
-“Most certainly not!” returned the prosecuting attorney; but a smile
-flitted across his face--a smile which, in the darkness, Griswold did
-not see. “The two governors are very different men--wholly antipodal
-characters, in fact,” and again Habersham smiled to himself.
-
-While they thus stood on South Carolina soil, waiting for the safe and
-complete dispersion of the Mount Nebo congregation before seizing the
-captive they had gagged and tied at the rear of the little church,
-the fates were ordering a very different termination of the night’s
-business.
-
-Miss Jerry Dangerfield, galloping away from the Duke of Ballywinkle,
-with no thought but to widen the distance between them, turned off at
-the first cross-road, which began well enough, but degenerated rapidly
-into a miserable trail, through which she was obliged to walk her
-horse. Before she was aware of it she was in the midst of a clearing
-where labourers had lately been cutting timber, and she found, on
-turning to make her way out, that she was quite lost, for three trails,
-all seemingly alike, struck off into the forest. She spoke aloud to the
-horse to reassure herself, and smiled as she viewed the grim phalanx
-of stumps. She must, however, find her way back to Ardsley, for there
-were times when Jerry Dangerfield could be very serious with herself,
-though it rarely pleased her to be serious with other people; and she
-knew that the time had long passed for her return to the house. If
-her conspiracy with Thomas Ardmore had proved successful, the duke
-would not return to the great house; but her own prolonged absence was
-something that had not been in her programme.
-
-She did not know then that three men had witnessed her flight from
-the duke, or that they had taken swift vengeance upon him for his
-unpardonable conduct in the moon-blanched road. It was not Jerry’s way
-to accept misfortune tamely, and after circling the wall of timber
-that shut her in, in the hope of determining where she had entered,
-she chose a trail at random and plunged into the woods. She assumed
-that probably all the roads and paths on the estate led more or less
-directly, to the great house or to some lodge or bungalow. She had lost
-her riding-crop in her mad flight, and she broke off a switch, tossing
-its leaves into the moonlight and laughing softly as they rained about
-her.
-
-Jerry began whistling gently to herself, for she had never been lost
-before, and it is not so bad when you have a good horse, a fair path,
-sweet, odorous woods, and the moon to keep you company. She forded a
-brook that was silver to eye and ear, and let her horse stand midway of
-it for joy in the sight and sound. She had kept no account of time, but
-rather imagined that it had not been more than half an hour since the
-Duke of Ballywinkle left her so unceremoniously.
-
-Suddenly ahead of her through the woods floated the sound of
-singing--one of those strange, wavering _pieux cantiques_ peculiar
-to the South. She rode on, thinking to find help and a guide back to
-Ardsley; then the music ceased, and lights now flashed faintly before
-her, but she went forward guardedly.
-
-“I’m much more lost than I thought I was, for I must be away off
-the estate,” she reflected. She turned and rode back a few rods and
-dismounted, and tied her horse to a sapling. She was disappointed
-at not finding a camp of Ardmore’s woodcutters, to whom she could
-unhesitatingly have confided herself; but it seemed wise now to
-exercise caution in drawing to herself the attention of strangers.
-She did not know that she had crossed the state line and was in South
-Carolina, or that the singing she had heard floated from the windows of
-Mount Nebo Church.
-
-She became now the astonished witness of a series of incidents that
-occurred so swiftly as fairly to take her breath away. A tall, loosely
-articulated man came from the direction of the church and walked
-toward her. She knelt at the tree and watched, the moonlight giving
-her a clear view of a rustic somewhat past middle age, whose chief
-characteristic seemed to be a grizzled beard and long arms that swung
-oddly at his side. The brim of his wool hat was turned up sharply
-from his forehead, and she had a glimpse of the small, keen gray eyes
-with which he swept the forest before him. He freed a horse which she
-had not before noticed, and she concluded that he would not approach
-nearer, for she expected him to mount and ride away to join others
-of the congregation whom she heard making off in a road beyond the
-church. Then, with a quickness and deftness that baffled her eyes, two
-men rose beside him just as he was about to mount; there was no outcry
-and no sound of scuffling, so quick was the descent and so perfect the
-understanding between the captors. In a moment the man was gathered
-up, bound, and flung on his saddle. She had a better view of him, now
-that he was hatless, though a gag had been forced into his mouth and
-a handkerchief tied over his eyes, so that he presented a grotesque
-appearance. Jerry was so absorbed that she forgot to be afraid; never
-in her life had she witnessed anything so amazing as this; and now, to
-her more complete bewilderment, the captors, after carefully inspecting
-their work and finding it satisfactory, seemed to disappear utterly
-from the face of the earth.
-
-In the woods to her left she thought she heard a horse neigh; then she
-saw shadows moving in that direction; and again, from the road, she
-heard the brief debate of the two men as to the whereabouts of “Bill;”
-and it struck Jerry humorously that he would not soon see his friends
-unless they came and helped him out of his predicament.
-
-It may help to an understanding of Miss Jerry Dangerfield’s character
-if it is recorded here that never in her short life had she failed to
-respond to the call of impulse. She was lost in the woods, and strange
-men lurked about; a man had been attacked, seized, and left sitting in
-a state of absurd helplessness on a horse presumably his own, and there
-was no guessing what dire penalty his captors had in store for him.
-He certainly looked deliciously funny as he sat there in the shadows,
-vigorously twisting his arms and head in an effort to free himself.
-
-Quiet reigned in the neighbourhood of the church; the lights had
-blinked out; the bang of the closing shutters reassured Jerry, and she
-crept on her knees toward the unconscious captive, loosed his horse’s
-rein, and led it rapidly toward her own horse, a little farther back in
-the woods. Her blindfolded prisoner, thinking his original captors were
-carrying him off, renewed his efforts to free himself. He tested the
-ropes and straps with which he was fastened by throwing himself first
-to one side, then to the other, as far as his gyves would permit, at
-the same time frothily chewing his gag.
-
-Jerry gained her own saddle in the least bit of a panic, and when
-she had mounted and made sure of the leading-strap with which her
-prisoner’s horse was provided, she rode on at a rapid walk until she
-reached the clearing, where the stumps again grimly mocked her. She
-stopped to listen, and heard through the still night first one cry
-and then many voices in various keys of alarm and rage. Then she bent
-toward the prisoner, tore the bandage from his eyes, and with more
-difficulty freed him of the gag. He blinked and spluttered at this
-unexpected deliverance, then blinked and spluttered afresh at seeing
-that his captor was a young woman, who was plainly not of his world.
-Jerry watched him wonderingly, then addressed him in her most agreeable
-tone.
-
-“You were caught and tied by two men over there by a church. I saw
-them, and when they went off and left you, I came along and brought you
-with me, thinking to save your life. I want to get home as quickly as
-possible, and though I do not know you, and am quite sure we never met
-before, I hope you will kindly guide me to Ardsley, and thereby render
-me a service I shall always deeply appreciate.”
-
-Mr. Bill Appleweight, _alias_ Poteet, was well hardened to the shocks
-of time, but this pleasant-voiced girl, coolly sitting her horse, and
-holding his own lank steed by a strap, was the most amazing human
-being that had yet dawned on his horizon. He was not stupid, but
-Jerry’s manner of speech had baffled more sophisticated minds than
-Appleweight’s, and the sweet sincerity of her tone, and her frank
-countenance, hallowed as it was by the moonlight, wrought in the
-outlaw’s mind a befuddlement not wholly unlike that which had possessed
-the wits of many young gallants south of the Potomac who had laid siege
-to Jerry Dangerfield’s heart. But the cries behind them were more
-pronounced, and Appleweight was nothing if not a man of action.
-
-“Take these things off’n me,” he commanded fiercely, “and I’ll see y’
-safe to Ardsley.”
-
-“Not in the least,” replied Jerry, who was herself not unmindful of the
-voices behind. “You will kindly tell me the way, and I will accommodate
-my pace to that of your own somewhat ill-nourished beast. And as
-there’s a mob looking for you back there, all ready to hang you to one
-of these noble forest trees, I advise you to use more haste and less
-caution in pointing the way.”
-
-Appleweight lifted his head and took his bearings. Then he nodded
-toward one of the three trails which had so baffled Jerry when first
-she broke into the clearing.
-
-“Thet’s the nighest,” said Appleweight, “and we’d better git.”
-
-She set the pace at a trot, and was relieved in a few minutes to pass
-one or two landmarks which she remembered from her flight through the
-woods. As they splashed through the brook she had forded, she was
-quite confident that the captive was playing her no trick, but that
-in due course she should strike the highroad to Ardsley which she had
-abandoned to throw off the Duke of Ballywinkle.
-
-It was now ten o’clock, and the moon was sinking behind the forest
-trees. Jerry took advantage of an occasional straight strip of road to
-go forward at a gallop, but these stretches did not offer frequently,
-and the two riders kept pretty steadily to a smart trot. They presented
-a droll picture as they moved through the forest--the girl, riding
-cross-saddle, with the stolen captive trailing after. Occasionally Mr.
-Appleweight seemed to be talking to himself, but whether he was praying
-or swearing Jerry did not trouble herself to decide. It was enough for
-her that she had found a guide out of the wilderness by stealing a
-prisoner from his enemies, and this was amusing, and sent bubbling in
-her heart those quiet springs of mirth that accounted for so much in
-Jerry Dangerfield.
-
-As they walked their horses through a bit of sand the prisoner spoke:
-
-“Who air y’u, little gal?”
-
-Jerry turned in the saddle, so that Appleweight enjoyed a full view of
-her face.
-
-“I am perfectly willing to tell you my name, but first it would be more
-courteous for you to tell me yours, particularly as I am delivering you
-from a band of outlaws who undoubtedly intended to do you harm.”
-
-“I reckon they air skeered to foller us, gal. They air afeard to tackle
-th’ ole man, onless they jump in two t’ one; and they cain’t tell who
-helped me git away.”
-
-He laughed--a curious, chuckling laugh. He had ceased to struggle
-at his bonds, but seemed resigned to his strange fate. He had not
-answered Jerry’s question, and had no intention of doing so. The
-sudden attack at the church had aroused all his cunning. Appleweight,
-_alias_ Poteet, was an old wolf, and knew well the ways of the trapper;
-but the bold attempt to kidnap him was a new feature of the game as
-heretofore played along the border. He did not make it out; nor was
-he wholly satisfied with the girl’s explanation of her own presence
-in that out-of-the-way place. She might be a guest at Ardsley, as she
-pretended, but women-folk were rarely seen on the estate, and never
-in such remote corners of it as Mount Nebo Church. As he pondered the
-matter, it seemed incredible that this remarkable young person, whose
-innocence was so beguiling, should be in any way leagued with his foes.
-
-He had several times called out directions as they crossed other paths
-in the forest, and they now reached the main trunk road of the estate.
-The red bungalow, Jerry knew, was not far away. Her prisoner spoke
-again.
-
-“Little gal, I’m an ole man, and I hain’t never done y’u no harm.
-Your haouse is only a leetle way up thar, and I cain’t be no more
-use to y’u. I want t’ go home, and if y’u’ll holp me ontie this yere
-harness----” and he grinned as he viewed his bonds in the fuller light
-of the open road.
-
-Then hoof-beats thumped the soft earth of another of the trails that
-converged at this point, and Ardmore and Collins flashed out upon Jerry
-and her captive, amid a wild panic of horses.
-
-Appleweight twisted and turned in his saddle, but Jerry instantly held
-up her hand and arrested the inquiries of her deliverers.
-
-“Mr. Ardmore, this gentleman was most rudely set upon by two strangers
-as he was leaving a church over there somewhere in the woods. I was
-lost, and as his appearance at the time and place seemed almost
-providential, I begged him to guide me toward home, which he has
-most courteously done;” and Jerry, to give the proper touch to her
-explanation, twitched the strap by which she held her prisoner’s horse,
-so that it danced, adding a fresh absurdity to the wobbling figure of
-its bound rider.
-
-“You are safe!” cried Ardmore in a low tone, to which Jerry nodded
-carelessly, in a way that directed attention to the more immediate
-business at hand. He was not at once sure of his cue, but there seemed
-to be something familiar in the outlines of the man on horseback, and
-full identification broke upon him now with astounding vividness.
-
-“Jugs,” he began, addressing the prisoner smilingly, “dear old Jugs,
-to think we should meet again! Since you handed me that jug on the
-rear end of the train, a few nights ago, life has had new meanings for
-me, and I’m just as sorry as can be that I gave you the buttermilk. I
-wouldn’t have done such a thing for billions in real money. And now
-that you have fallen into the excellent hands of Miss Dangerfield----”
-
-“Dangerfield!” screamed the prisoner, lifting himself as high in the
-saddle as his bonds would permit.
-
-“Certainly,” replied Ardmore. “Your rescuer is none other than Miss
-Geraldine Dangerfield.”
-
-“Why, gal,” began the outlaw, “ef your pa’s the guv’nor of No’th
-Caroline, him an’ me’s old frien’s.”
-
-“Then will you kindly tell me your name?” asked Jerry.
-
-“Allow me to complete the introductions,” interrupted Collins, who
-had hung back in silence. “Unless my eyes deceive me, which is wholly
-improbable, this is a gentleman whom I once interviewed in the county
-jail at Raleigh, and he was known at that time as William Appleweight,
-_alias_ Poteet.”
-
-“You air right,” admitted the prisoner without hesitation; and then,
-addressing Jerry: “Yer pa would be glad to know his dorter had helped
-an ole frien’ like me, gal. Ye may hev heard him speak o’ me.”
-
-“But how about that message in the cork of the jug you put on the train
-at Kildare?” demanded Ardmore. “And why did you send your brother to
-try to scare me to death at Raleigh?”
-
-“That is not the slightest importance,” interrupted Jerry, gently
-playing with the tether which held Mr. Appleweight; “nor does it matter
-that papa and this gentleman are friends. If this is, indeed, the
-famous outlaw, Mr. William Appleweight, then, papa or no papa, friend
-or no friend, he is a prisoner of the state of North Carolina.”
-
-“Pris’ner!” bawled Appleweight--“an’ you the guv’nor’s gal----”
-
-“You have hit the situation exactly, Mr. Appleweight; and as far as
-the office of governor is concerned, it is capably filled by the young
-gentleman on your left, Mr. Thomas Ardmore. Let us now adjourn to his
-house, where, if I am not mistaken, a bit of cold fowl is usually to be
-found on the sideboard at this hour. But hold”--and Jerry checked her
-horse--“where can we lodge this gentleman, Mr. Ardmore, until we decide
-upon his further fate?”
-
-“We might put him in the wine cellar,” suggested Ardmore.
-
-“No,” interposed Collins. “I fancy that much of your fluid stock
-has paid revenue tax, and most of it has passed none too lightly
-through the custom-house. It would be unwarrantably cruel to lock Mr.
-Appleweight in such quarters, with the visible marks of taxation all
-around him. Still, the sight of the stamps would probably destroy his
-thirst, though his rugged independence might so far assert itself that
-he would smash a few of your most expensive importations out of sheer
-deviltry.”
-
-“He shall be treated with the greatest consideration,” said Jerry; and
-thereafter, no further adventure befalling them, they reached Ardsley,
-where their arrival occasioned the greatest excitement.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-A MEETING OF OLD FRIENDS.
-
-
-Habersham’s men had proved exceedingly timid when it came to the
-business of threshing the woods for Appleweight, whom they regarded
-with a new awe, now that he had vanished so mysteriously. They had
-searched the woods guardedly, but the narrow paths that led away into
-the dim fastnesses of Ardsley were forbidding, and these men were not
-without their superstitions. They had awaited for years an opportunity
-to strike at the Appleweight faction; they had at last taken their
-shot, and had seemingly brought down their bird; but their lack of
-spirit in retrieving the game had been their undoing. They had only
-aroused their most formidable enemy, who would undoubtedly lose no
-time in seeking revenge. They were a dolorous band who, after warily
-beating the woods, dispersed in the small hours of the morning, having
-found nothing but Appleweight’s wool hat, which only added to their
-mystification.
-
-“We ought to have taken him away on the run,” said Habersham
-bitterly, as he and Griswold discussed the matter on the veranda of
-the prosecutor’s house and watched the coming of the dawn. “I didn’t
-realize that those fellows lived in such mortal terror of the old man;
-but they refused to make off with him until the last of his friends had
-got well out of the way. I ought to have had more sense myself than to
-have expected the old fox to sit tied up like a calf ready for market.
-We had all his friends accounted for--those that weren’t at prayer
-meeting were marked down somewhere else, and we had a line flung pretty
-well round the church. Appleweight’s deliverance must have come from
-somewhere inside the Ardmore property. Perhaps the game warden picked
-him up.”
-
-“Perhaps the Indians captured him,” suggested Griswold, yawning, “or
-maybe some Martian came down on a parachute and hauled him up. Or, as
-scarlet fever is raging at Mr. Ardmore’s castle”--and his tone was
-icy--“Appleweight was probably seized all of a sudden, and broke away
-in his delirium. Let’s go to bed.”
-
-At eight o’clock he and Habersham rode into Turner Court House, and
-Griswold went at once to the inn to change his clothes. No further
-steps could be taken until some definite report was received as to
-Appleweight’s whereabouts. The men who had attempted the outlaw’s
-capture had returned to their farms, and were most demurely cultivating
-the soil. Griswold was thoroughly disgusted at the ridiculous failure
-of Habersham’s plans, and not less severe upon himself for failing
-to push matters to a conclusion the moment the outlaw was caught,
-instead of hanging back to await the safe dispersion of the Mount Nebo
-congregation.
-
-It had been the most puerile transaction possible, and he was aware
-that a report of it, which he must wire at once to Miss Barbara
-Osborne, would not impress that young woman with his capacity or
-trustworthiness in difficult occasions. The iron that had already
-entered into his soul drove deeper. He had ordered a fresh horse, and
-was resolved to return to Mount Nebo Church for a personal study of the
-ground in broad daylight.
-
-As he crossed the musty parlour of the little hotel, to his great
-astonishment Miss Osborne’s black Phœbe, stationed where her eyes
-ranged the whole lower floor of the inn, drew attention to herself in
-an elaborate courtesy.
-
-“Miss Barb’ra wish me t’ say she done come heah on business, and she
-like fo’ to see yo’ all right away. She done bring huh seddle, and war
-a-gwine ridin’ twell you come back. She’s a-gittin’ ready, and I’ll go
-tell huh you done come. She got a heap o’ trubble, thet young missis,
-so she hev,” and the black woman’s pursed lips seemed to imply that
-Professor Griswold was in some measure responsible for Miss Osborne’s
-difficulties.
-
-As he stared out into the street a negro brought a horse bearing a
-better saddle than Mingo County had ever boasted, and hitched it near
-the horse he had secured for himself. An instant later he heard a quick
-step above, and Miss Osborne, sedately followed by the black woman,
-came downstairs. She smiled and greeted him cordially, but there was
-trouble in her brown eyes.
-
-“I didn’t warn you of my coming. I didn’t want to be a nuisance to
-you; but there’s a new--a most unaccountable perplexity. It doesn’t
-seem right to burden you with it--you have already been so kind about
-helping me; but I dare not turn to our oldest friends--I have been
-afraid to trust father’s friends at all since Mr. Bosworth acted so
-traitorously.”
-
-“My time is entirely at your service, Miss Osborne; but I have a
-shameful report to make of myself. I must tell you how miserably I
-have failed, before you trust me any further. We--that is to say, the
-prosecuting attorney of this county and a party he got together of
-Appleweight’s enemies--caught the outlaw last night--took him with the
-greatest ease--but he got away from us! It was all my fault, and I’m
-deeply disgusted with myself!”
-
-He described the capture and the subsequent mysterious disappearance of
-Appleweight, and confessed the obvious necessity for great caution in
-further attempts to take the outlaw, now that he was on guard. Barbara
-laughed reassuringly at the end of the story.
-
-“Those men must have felt funny when they went back to get the prisoner
-and found that he had gone up into the air. But there’s a new feature
-of the case that’s more serious than the loss of this man----” and the
-trouble again possessed her eyes.
-
-“Well, it’s better not to have our problems too simple. Any lawyer can
-win an easy case--though I seem to have lost my first one for you,” he
-added penitently.
-
-She made no reply, but drew from her purse a cutting from a newspaper
-and handed it to him.
-
-“That’s from last night’s Columbia _Vidette_, which is very hostile to
-my father.”
-
-He was already running over the heavily leaded column that set forth
-without equivocation the fact that Governor Osborne had not been in
-Columbia since he went to New Orleans. It scouted the story that
-he was abroad in the state on official business connected with the
-Appleweight case--the yam which Griswold had forced upon the friendly
-reporter at the telegraph office in Columbia. The governor of a state,
-the _Vidette_ went on to elaborate, could not vanish without leaving
-some trace of himself, and a _Vidette_ representative had traced the
-steps of Governor Osborne from New Orleans until--the italics are
-the _Vidette’s_--he had again entered South Carolina _under cover of
-night and for purposes which, for the honour of the state, the Vidette
-hesitated to disclose_.
-
-The writer of the article had exhausted the possibilities of gentle
-suggestion and vague innuendo in an effort to create an impression of
-mystery and to pique curiosity as to further developments, which were
-promised at any hour. Griswold’s wrath was aroused, not so much against
-the newspaper, which he assumed had some fire for its smothered trifle
-of smoke, but against the governor of South Carolina himself, who was
-causing the finest and noblest girl in the world infinite anxiety and
-pain.
-
-“The thing is preposterous,” he said lightly. “The idea that your
-father would attempt to enter his own state surreptitiously is
-inconceivable in these days when public men are denied all privacy, and
-when it’s any man’s right to deceive the press if he finds it essential
-to his own comfort and peace; but the intimation that your father is
-in South Carolina for any dishonourable purpose is preposterous. One
-thing, however, is certain, Miss Osborne, and that is that we must
-produce your father at the earliest possible moment.”
-
-“But”--and Barbara hesitated, and her eyes, near tears as they were,
-wrought great havoc in Griswold’s soul--“but father must not be found
-until this Appleweight matter is settled. You understand without making
-me speak the words--that he might not exactly view the matter as we do.”
-
-It was a painful subject; and the fact that she was driven by sheer
-force of circumstances to appeal to him, a stranger, to aid her to
-perform a public service in her father’s name rallied all his good
-impulses to her standard. It was too delicate a matter for discussion;
-it was a thing to be ignored; and he assumed at once a lighter tone.
-
-“Come! We must solve the riddle of the lost prisoner at once, and your
-father will undoubtedly give an excellent account of himself when he
-gets ready. Meanwhile the fiction that he is personally carrying the
-war into the Appleweight country must be maintained, and I shall step
-to the railway station and wire the Columbia newspaper in his name that
-he is in Mingo County on the trail of the outlaws.”
-
-The messages were composed by their joint efforts at the station,
-with not so much haste but that an associate professor of admiralty,
-twenty-nine years old, could defer in the most trifling matters to the
-superior literary taste of a girl of twenty whose brown eyes were very
-pleasant to meet in moments of uncertainty and appeal.
-
-He signed the messages Charles Osborne, Governor, with a flourish
-indicative of the increased confidence and daring which Miss Osborne’s
-arrival had brought to the situation.
-
-“And now,” said Griswold, as they rode through the meagre streets of
-Turner’s, “we will go to Mount Nebo Church and see what we can learn of
-Appleweight’s disappearance.”
-
-“The North Carolina papers are making a great deal of Governor
-Dangerfield’s activity in trying to put down outlawry on the border,”
-said Barbara. “Marked copies of the newspapers are pouring into papa’s
-office. I can but hold Mr. Bosworth responsible for that. We may count
-upon it that he will do all in his power to annoy us”--and then, as
-Griswold looked at her quickly, he was aware that she had coloured and
-averted her eyes; and while, as a lawyer, he was aware that words of
-two letters might be provocative of endless litigation of the bitterest
-sort, he had never known before that us, in itself the homeliest of
-words, could cause so sweet a distress. It seemed that an interval of
-several years passed before either spoke again.
-
-“We are quite near the estate of your friend, Mr. Ardmore, aren’t we?”
-asked Barbara presently.
-
-“I fancy we are,” replied Griswold, but with a tone so coldly at
-variance with his previous cordial references to the master of Ardsley
-that Barbara looked at him inquiringly.
-
-“I’m sorry that I should have given you the impression, Miss Osborne,
-that Mr. Ardmore and I are friends, as I undoubtedly did at Columbia.
-He has, for some unaccountable reason, cut my acquaintance in a manner
-so unlike him that I do not pretend to explain it; nor, I may add, is
-it of the least importance.”
-
-“I was a little surprised,” returned Barbara, with truly feminine
-instinct for mingling in the balm of consolation the bitterest and
-most poisonous herbs, “that you should have had for a friend a man who
-frankly follows girls whose appearance he fancies. Even Mr. Ardmore’s
-democratic enthusiasm for the downtrodden laundry girl does not wholly
-mitigate the winking episode.”
-
-“He had, only a few days ago, invited me to visit him, though I had
-been to his house so often that the obscurest servant knew that I was
-privileged even beyond the members of Mr. Ardmore’s own family in my
-freedom of the place. When I saw that his house would be a convenient
-point from which to study the Appleweight situation, I wired him that I
-was on the way, and to my utter amazement he replied that he could not
-entertain me--that scarlet fever was epidemic on the estate--on those
-almost uncounted acres!”
-
-And with a gulp and a mist in his eyes, Griswold drew rein and pointed,
-from a hill that had now borne them to a considerable height, toward
-Ardsley itself, dreamily basking in the bright morning sunlight within
-its cinture of hills, meadows, and forest.
-
-“I never saw the place before! It’s perfectly splendid!” cried Barbara,
-forgetting that Griswold must be gazing upon it with the eyes of an
-exile viewing grim, forbidding battlements that once hailed him in
-welcome.
-
-“It’s one of the most interesting houses in America,” observed
-Griswold, who strove at all times to be just.
-
-“There’s a flag flying--I can’t make out what it is,” said Barbara.
-
-“It’s probably to give warning of the scarlet fever; it would be like
-Ardy to do that. But we must hurry on to Mount Nebo.”
-
-He knew the ways of Ardsley thoroughly; better, in fact, than its owner
-ever had in old times; but in his anger at Ardmore he would not set
-foot on the estate if he could possibly avoid doing so in reaching the
-scene of the night’s contretemps. He found without difficulty the
-trail taken by Habersham’s men, and in due course of time they left
-their horses a short distance from the church and proceeded on foot.
-
-“It seems all the stupider in broad daylight,” said Griswold, after he
-had explained just what had occurred, and how the captors, in their
-superstitious awe of Appleweight, had been afraid to carry him off the
-moment they were sure of him, but had slipped back among their fellows
-to wait until the coast was perfectly clear. To ease his deep chagrin
-Barbara laughed a good deal at the occurrence as they tramped over the
-scene discussing it. They went into the woods back of the church, where
-Griswold began to exercise his reasoning powers.
-
-“Some one must have come in from this direction and freed the man and
-taken him away,” he declared.
-
-He knelt and marked the hoof-prints where Appleweight had been left
-tied; but the grass here was much trampled, and Griswold was misled by
-the fact, not knowing that news of Appleweight’s strange disappearance
-had passed among the outlaw’s friends by the swift telegraphy of the
-border, and that the whole neighbourhood had been threshed over hours
-before. It might have been some small consolation to Griswold had he
-known that Appleweight’s friends and accomplices were as much at a
-loss to know what had become of the chieftain as the men who had tried
-so ineffectually to kidnap him. From the appearance of the trampled
-grass many men had taken a hand in releasing the prisoner, and this
-impression did not clarify matters for Griswold.
-
-“Where does this path lead?” asked Barbara.
-
-“This is Ardsley land here, this side of the church, and that
-trail leads on, if I remember, to the main Ardsley highway, with
-which various other roads are connected--many miles in all. It’s
-inconceivable that the deliverers of this outlaw should have taken him
-into the estate, where a sort of police system is maintained by the
-forestry corps. I don’t at all make it out.”
-
-He went off to explore the heavy woods on each side of the trail that
-led into Ardsley, but without result. When he came gloomily back he
-found that in his absence Barbara had followed the bridle-path for a
-considerable distance, and she held out to him a diminutive pocket
-handkerchief, which had evidently been snatched away from its owner--so
-Barbara explained--by a low-hanging branch of an oak, and flung into
-a blackberry bush, where she had found it. It was a trifle, indeed,
-the slightest bit of linen, which they held between them by its four
-corners and gravely inspected.
-
-“Feminine, beyond a doubt,” pronounced Griswold sagely.
-
-“It’s a good handkerchief, and here are two initials worked in the
-corner that may tell us something--‘G. D.’ It probably belongs to some
-guest at Ardsley. And there’s a very faint suggestion of orris--it’s a
-city handkerchief,” said Barbara with finality, “but it has suffered
-a trifle in the laundry, as this edge is the least bit out of drawing
-from careless ironing.”
-
-“And I should say, from a certain crispness it still retains, that it
-hasn’t been in the forest long. It hasn’t been rained on, at any rate,”
-added Griswold.
-
-“But even the handkerchief doesn’t tell us anything,” said Barbara,
-spreading it out, “except that some woman visitor has ridden here
-within a few days and played drop the handkerchief with herself or
-somebody else to us unknown.”
-
-“She may have been a scarlet fever patient from Ardsley; you’d better
-have a care!” And Griswold’s tone was bitter.
-
-“I’m not afraid; and as I have never been so near Ardsley before, I
-should like to ride in and steal a glimpse. There’s little danger of
-meeting the lord of the manor, I suppose, or any of his guests at this
-hour, and we need not go near the house.”
-
-He saw that she was really curious, and it was not in his heart to
-refuse her, so they followed the bridle-path through the cool forest,
-and came in due course to the clearing where Jerry had first confessed
-herself lost, and thereafter had suffered the captured outlaw to point
-her the way home.
-
-“The timber has been cut here since my last visit, but I remember the
-bridle-paths very well. They all reach the highroad of the estate
-ultimately. We may safely take this one, which has been the most used,
-and which climbs a hill that gives a fine outlook.”
-
-The path he chose had really been beaten into better condition than
-either of the others, and they rode side by side now. A deer feeding on
-a grassy slope raised its head and stared at them, and a fox scampered
-wildly before them. It seemed that they were shut in from all the
-world, these two, who but a few days before had never seen each other,
-and it was a relief to him to find that she threw off her troubles
-and became more animated and cheerful than he had yet seen her. His
-comments on her mount, which was sorry enough, were amusing; and she
-paused now and then to peer into the tops of the tallest trees, under
-the pretence that Appleweight had probably reverted to the primordial
-and might be found at any minute in one of the branches above them. Her
-dark-green habit, and the soft hat to match, with its little feather
-thrust into the side, spoke for real usage; and the gauntleted hand
-that swung lightly at her side inadvertently brushed his own once--and
-he knew that this must not happen again! When their eyes met it was
-with frank confidence on her part, and it seemed to him that they were
-very old friends, and that they had been riding through this forest,
-or one identical with it, since the world began. It is thus that a man
-with any imagination feels first about a woman who begins to interest
-him--that there was never any beginning to their acquaintance that
-can be reckoned as time and experience are measured, but that he has
-known her for countless years; and if there be a poetic vein in him, he
-will indulge in such fancies as that he has seen her as a priestess of
-Aphrodite in the long ago, dreaming upon the temple steps; or that he
-has watched her skipping pebbles upon the violet storied sea against
-a hazy background of cities long crumbled into dust. Such fancies as
-these are a part of love’s gentle madness, and luckier than she knows
-is the girl who awakens in a lover this eager idealization. If he
-can turn a verse for her in which she is added to the sacred Nine,
-personifying all sweet, gentle, and gracious things, so much the better.
-
-Just what he, on the other hand, may mean to her; just what form of
-deification he evokes in her, he can never know; for the women who
-write of such matters have never been those who are sincere or worth
-heeding, and they never will be, so long as woman’s heart remains
-what it has been from the beginning--far-hidden, and filled with
-incommunicable secret beliefs and longings, and tremulous with fears
-that are beyond man’s power to understand.
-
-Griswold had missed the white rose that he had begun to associate with
-Barbara, and he grew suddenly daring and spoke of it.
-
-“You haven’t your rose to-day.”
-
-“Oh, I’m beyond the source of supply! I have a young friend, a girl,
-who makes her living as a florist--not a purely commercial enterprise,
-for she experiments and develops new varieties, and is quite wonderful;
-and that white rose is her own creation--it is becoming well known. She
-named it for me, and she sends me at least one every day--she says it’s
-my royalty--if that’s what you lawyers call that sort of thing.”
-
-“We lawyers rarely have anything so interesting as that to apply the
-word to! So that rose is the Barbara?” and it gave him a feeling of
-recklessness to find himself speaking her name aloud. “There are large
-conservatories on the estate, over there somewhere; I might risk the
-scarlet fever by attacking the gardener and demanding a Barbara for
-you.”
-
-“I’m afraid my little flower hasn’t attained to the grandeur of
-Ardsley,” she laughed. “But pray, where are we?”
-
-They had reached the highroad much sooner than Griswold had expected,
-and he checked his horse abruptly, remembering that he was _persona non
-grata_ on this soil.
-
-“We must go back; I mustn’t be seen here. The workmen are scattered all
-about the place, and they all know me.”
-
-“Oh, just a little farther! I want to see the towers of the castle!”
-
-If she had asked him to jump into the sea he would not have hesitated;
-and he was so happy at being with her that his heart sang defiance to
-Ardmore and the splendours of Ardsley.
-
-They were riding now toward the red bungalow, where he had often
-sprawled on the broad benches and chaffed with Ardmore for hours at
-a time. Tea was served here sometimes when there were guests at the
-house; and Griswold wondered just who were included in the party
-that his quondam friend was entertaining, and how Mrs. Atchison was
-progressing in her efforts to effect a match between Daisy Waters and
-her brother.
-
-The drives were nearly all open to the public, so that by the letter
-of the law he was no intruder; but beyond the bungalow he must not go.
-Sobered by the thought of his breach with Ardmore, he resolved not to
-pass the bungalow whose red roof was now in sight.
-
-“It’s like a fairy place, and I feel that there can be no end to it,”
-Barbara was saying. “But it isn’t kind to urge you in. We certainly are
-doing nothing to find Appleweight, and it must be nearly noon.”
-
-It was just then--he vividly recalls the moment--as Griswold felt in
-his waistcoat for his watch, that Miss Jerry Dangerfield, with Thomas
-Ardmore at her side, galloped into view. They were racing madly,
-like irresponsible children, and bore boisterously down upon the two
-pilgrims.
-
-Jerry and Ardmore, hatless and warm, were pardonably indignant at thus
-being arrested in their flight, and the master of Ardsley, feeling for
-once the dignity of his proprietorship, broke out stormily.
-
-“I would have you know--I would have you know----” he roared, and then
-his voice failed him. He stared; he spluttered; he busied himself
-with his horse, which was dancing in eagerness to resume the race.
-He quieted the beast, which nevertheless arched and pawed like a
-war-horse, and then the master of Ardsley bawled:
-
-“Grissy! I say, Grissy!”
-
-Miss Osborne and Professor Griswold, on their drooping Mingo County
-nondescripts, made a tame picture before Ardmore and his fair companion
-on their Ardsley hunters. The daughter of the governor of South
-Carolina looked upon the daughter of the governor of North Carolina
-with high disdain, and it need hardly be said that this feeling, as
-expressed by glacial glances, was evenly reciprocal, and that in the
-contemptuous upward tilt of two charming chins the nicest judgment
-would have been necessary to any fair opinion as to which state had the
-better argument.
-
-The associate professor of admiralty was known as a ready debater, and
-he quickly returned his former friend’s salutation, and in much the
-contumelious tone he would have used in withering an adversary before a
-jury.
-
-“Pardon me, but are you one of the employees here?”
-
-“Why, Grissy, old man, don’t look at me like that! How did you----”
-
-“I owe your master an apology for riding upon his property at a time
-when pestilence is giving you cause for so much concern. The death-rate
-from scarlet fever is deplorably high----”
-
-“Oh, Grissy!” cried Ardmore.
-
-“You have addressed me familiarly, by a nickname sometimes used by
-intimate friends, though I can’t for the life of me recall you. I want
-you to know that I am here in an official capacity, on an errand for
-the state of South Carolina.”
-
-Miss Dangerfield’s chin, which had dropped a trifle, pointed again into
-the blue ether.
-
-“You will pardon me,” she said, “but an agent of the state of South
-Carolina is far exceeding his powers when he intrudes upon North
-Carolina soil.”
-
-“The state of South Carolina does what it pleases and goes where it
-likes,” declared Miss Barbara Osborne warmly, whereupon Mr. Ardmore, at
-a glance from his coadjutor, waxed righteously indignant.
-
-“It’s one thing, sir, for you to ride in here as a sightseer, but quite
-another for you to come representing an unfriendly state. You will
-please choose which view of the matter I shall take, and I shall act
-accordingly.”
-
-Griswold’s companion spoke to him earnestly in a low tone for a moment,
-and then Griswold addressed Ardmore incisively.
-
-“I don’t know what you pretend to be, sir; but it may interest you to
-know that _I_ am the governor of South Carolina!”
-
-“And this gentleman,” cried Jerry, pointing to Ardmore with her
-riding-crop, “though his hair is mussed and his scarf visibly untied,
-is none other than the governor of North Carolina, and he is not only
-on his own property, but in the sovereign state of which he is the
-chief executive.”
-
-Professor Griswold lifted his hat with the least flourish.
-
-“I congratulate the state of North Carolina on having reposed authority
-in hands so capable. If this young lady is correct, sir, I will serve
-official notice on you that I have reason to believe that a person
-named Appleweight, a fugitive from justice, is hiding on your property
-and in your state, and I now formally demand that you surrender him
-forthwith.”
-
-“If I may introduce myself,” interposed Jerry, “I will say to you that
-my name is Geraldine Dangerfield, and that this Appleweight person is
-now at Mr. Ardmore’s house.”
-
-“I suppose,” replied Miss Osborne with gentle irony, “that he has the
-pink parlour and leads the conversation at table.”
-
-“You are quite mistaken,” replied Ardmore; “but if it would afford
-you any satisfaction to see the outlaw you may look upon him in my
-wine cellar, where, only an hour ago, I left him sitting on a case of
-Chateau Bizet ’82. My further intentions touching this scoundrelly
-South Carolinian I need not now disclose; but I give you warning that
-the Appleweight issue will soon and for ever be terminated, and in a
-manner that will greatly redound to the credit and the glory of the Old
-North State.”
-
-Professor Griswold’s hand went to his moustache with a gesture that
-smote Ardmore, for he knew that it hid that inscrutable smile that had
-always baffled him.
-
-“I trust,” said Griswold, “that the prisoner, whom we cannot for
-a moment concede to be the real Appleweight, will not be exposed
-to scarlet fever, pending a settlement of this matter. It is my
-understanding that the Bizet ’82 is a fraudulent vintage that has never
-been nearer France than Paris, Illinois, and if the prisoner in your
-cellar drinks of it I shall hold you officially responsible for the
-consequences. And now, I have the honour to bid you both good-morning.”
-
-He and Barbara swung their horses round and retraced their way, leaving
-Ardmore and Jerry gazing after them.
-
-When the shabby beasts from the stable at Turner Court House had borne
-Miss Osborne and Griswold out of sight beyond the bungalow, Ardmore
-turned blankly to Jerry.
-
-“Have I gone blind or anything? Unless I’m crazy that was dear old
-Grissy, but who is that girl?”
-
-“That is Miss Barbara Osborne, and I hope she has learned such a
-lesson that she will not be snippy to me any more, if she _is_ the
-president-general of the Daughters of the Seminole War.”
-
-“But where do you suppose she found Grissy?”
-
-“I don’t know, I’m sure; nor, Mr. Ardmore, do I care.”
-
-“He said he represented the state of South Carolina--do you suppose the
-governor has really employed him?”
-
-“I do not,” said Jerry emphatically; “for he appears intelligent, and
-intelligence is something that would never appeal to Governor Osborne.
-It is quite possible,” mused Jerry aloud, “that Miss Osborne’s father
-had disappeared like mine, and that she is running his office with Mr.
-Griswold’s aid. If so, we shall probably have some fun before we get
-through with this.”
-
-“If that’s true we shall have more than fun!” exclaimed Ardmore,
-thoroughly aroused. “You don’t know Grissy. He’s the smartest man
-alive, and if he’s running this Appleweight case for Governor Osborne,
-he’ll keep us guessing. Why did I ever send him that scarlet fever
-telegram, anyhow? He’ll fight harder than ever for that, and all I
-wanted was to keep him away until we had got all through with this
-business here, so I could show him what a great man I had been, and how
-I had been equal to an opportunity when it offered.”
-
-“I wish you to remember, Mr. Ardmore, that you still have _your_
-opportunity, and that I expect you to carry this matter through to a
-safe conclusion and to the honour of the Old North State.”
-
-“I have no intention of failing, Miss Dangerfield;” and with this they
-turned and rode slowly back toward the house.
-
-Professor Griswold and Miss Osborne were silent until the forest again
-shut them in.
-
-Then, in a sequestered spot, Griswold suddenly threw up his head and
-laughed long and loud.
-
-“It doesn’t strike me as being so amusing,” remarked Miss Osborne.
-“They have Appleweight in their wine cellar, and I don’t see for the
-life of me how we are going to get him out.”
-
-“What’s funny, Miss Osborne, is Ardy--that he and I should be pitted
-against each other in a thing of this kind is too utterly ridiculous.
-Ardy acting as governor of North Carolina beats anything that ever
-happened on this continent. But how do you suppose he ever met Miss
-Dangerfield, who certainly is a self-contained young woman?”
-
-“The answer to that riddle is so simple,” replied Miss Osborne, “that
-I am amazed that you fail to see it for yourself. Miss Dangerfield is
-undoubtedly the girl with the winking eye.”
-
-“Oh no!” protested Griswold.
-
-“I don’t hesitate to announce that as a fact. Miss Geraldine
-Dangerfield, beyond any question, is the young lady whom Mr. Ardmore,
-your knight-errant friend, went forth for to seek. Just how they met we
-shall perhaps learn later on. But just now it seems rather necessary
-for us to adopt some plan of action, unless you feel that you do not
-wish to oppose your friend.”
-
-“Oppose him! I have got to whip him to the dust if I shake down the
-very towers of his stronghold! It’s well we have the militia on the
-road. With the state army at our back we can show Tommy Ardmore a
-few things in state administration that are not dreamed of in his
-philosophy.”
-
-“Do you suppose they really have Appleweight?” asked Barbara.
-
-“Not for a minute! They told us that story merely to annoy us when they
-found what we were looking for. That touch about the wine cellar is
-characteristically Ardmoresque. If they had Appleweight you may be sure
-they wouldn’t keep him on the premises.”
-
-Whereupon they rode back to Turner Court House much faster than they
-had come.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE PRISONER IN THE CORN-CRIB.
-
-
-Jerry and Ardmore sat at a long table in the commodious Ardsley
-library, which was a modification of a Gothic chapel. It was on the
-upper floor, with broad windows that had the effect of bringing the
-landscape indoors, and the North Carolina sky is, we must concede, a
-pleasant thing to have at one’s elbow. A large accumulation of mail
-from the governor’s office at Raleigh had been forwarded, and Jerry
-insisted that it must be opened and disposed of in some way. Governor
-Dangerfield was, it appeared, a subscriber to a clipping bureau, and
-they had been examining critically a batch of cuttings relating to the
-New Orleans incident. Most of them were in a frivolous key, playfully
-reviving the ancient query as to what the governor of North Carolina
-really said to the governor of South Carolina. Others sought causes for
-the widely-reported disappearance of the two governors; and still other
-reports boldly maintained that Governors Dangerfield and Osborne were
-at their capitals engaged in the duties of their respective offices.
-
-“It’s a good thing we got hold of Collins,” observed Ardmore, putting
-down a clipping from a New York paper in which the reports of Governor
-Dangerfield’s disappearance were analyzed and tersely dismissed; “for
-he knows how to write, and he’s done a splendid picture of your father
-on his throne attending to business; and his little stingers for
-Osborne are the work of genius.”
-
-“There’s a certain finish about Mr. Collins’s lying that is
-refreshing,” replied Jerry, “and I cannot help thinking that he has a
-brilliant future before him if he enters politics. Nothing pains me
-more than a careless, ill-considered, silly lie, which is the best that
-most people can do. But it would be very interesting to know whether
-Governor Osborne has really disappeared, or just how your friend the
-Virginia professor has seized the reins of state. Do you suppose he got
-a jug from somewhere, and met Miss Osborne and----”
-
-“Do you think--do you think--she may have--er--possibly--closed one eye
-in his direction?” asked Ardmore dubiously.
-
-“Mr. Ardmore”--and Jerry pointed at him with a bronze paper-cutter to
-make sure of his attention--“Mr. Ardmore, if you ever imply again by
-act, word, or deed that I winked at you I shall never, never speak
-to you again. I should think that a man with a nice sister like Mrs.
-Atchison would have a better opinion of women than you seem to have. I
-never saw you until you came to my father’s house to tell me about the
-jug--and you know I didn’t. And as for that Barbara Osborne, while I
-don’t doubt that even in South Carolina a Daughter of the Seminole War
-might wink at a gentleman in a moment of extreme provocation, I doubt
-if she did, for she lacks animation, and has no more soul than a gum
-overshoe.”
-
-The obvious inconsistency of this pronouncement caused Ardmore to frown
-in the stress of his thought; and he stared helplessly along the line
-of the accusing paper-cutter into Jerry’s eyes.
-
-“Oh, cheer up!” she cried in her despair of him; “and forget it, forget
-it, forget it! I’ll say this to you, Mr. Ardmore, that if I ever winked
-at you--and I never, never did--I’m sorry I did it! Some time when
-you haven’t so much work on your hands as you have this morning just
-think that over and let me know where you land. And now, look at these
-things, please.”
-
-“What is all this stuff?” he demanded, as she tossed him a pile of
-papers.
-
-“They refer to the application for pardon of a poor man who’s going to
-be hanged for murder to-morrow unless we do something for him; and he
-has a wife and three little children, and he has never committed any
-other crime but to break into a smoke-house and steal a side of bacon.”
-
-“Did he shoot in self-defence, or how was it?” asked Ardmore judicially.
-
-“He killed a painless dentist who pulled the wrong tooth,” answered
-Jerry, referring to the papers.
-
-“If that’s all I don’t think we can stand for hanging him. I read a
-piece against capital punishment in a magazine once, and the arguments
-were very strong. The killing of a dentist should not be a crime
-anyhow, and if you know how to pardon a man, why let’s do it; but we’d
-better wait until the last minute, and then send a telegram to the
-sheriff to stop the proceedings just before he pulls the string, which
-makes it most impressive, and gives a better effect.”
-
-“I believe you are right about it,” said Jerry. “There’s an old pardon
-right here in this bundle which we can use. It was made out for another
-man who stole a horse that afterwards died, which papa said was a
-mitigating circumstance; but the week before his execution the man
-escaped from jail before papa could pardon him.”
-
-“Suppose we don’t let them hang anybody while we’re running the state,”
-suggested Ardmore; “it’s almost as though you murdered a man yourself,
-and I couldn’t tie my neckties afterwards without a guilty feeling. I
-can’t imagine anything more disagreeable than to be hanged. I heard all
-of _Tristan und Isolde_ once, and I have seen half an Ibsen play, and
-those were hard things to bear, but I suppose hanging would be just as
-painful, and there would be no supper afterwards to cheer you up.”
-
-“You shouldn’t speak in that tone of _Afterwards_, Mr. Ardmore,” said
-Jerry severely. “It isn’t religious. And while we’re on the subject of
-religion, may I ask the really, truly wherefore of Miss Daisy Waters’s
-sudden return to Newport?” and Jerry’s tone and manner were carelessly
-demure.
-
-“She went home,” replied Ardmore, grinning; “she left Ardsley for two
-reasons, one of which she stated at the breakfast-table and the other
-she handed me privately.”
-
-“She said at the breakfast-table that she was called home by incipient
-whooping-cough in the household of her brother-in-law’s cousin’s
-family.”
-
-“As she has no brother-in-law, that cannot be true. What she said to me
-privately was that the house party had grown very much larger than Mrs.
-Atchison had originally planned it, and that I am so busy that so many
-guests must be a burden.”
-
-Jerry stroked her cheek reflectively.
-
-“I thought Miss Waters wouldn’t last long after I asked her if
-rusty-nail water really would remove freckles. My own freckles are
-exactly seven in number, and I am not ashamed of them; but Miss Waters
-seemed very sensitive on the subject, though I thought her freckles
-useful in diverting attention from her drug-store hair.”
-
-“Did you say seven?” inquired Ardmore, gazing eagerly into Jerry’s
-face. “I make it only six, and there’s one away over there under your
-left eye that seems very lonesome, as though it suffered keenly from
-being so far away from its brothers and sisters on the other side of
-your nose.”
-
-“Mr. Ardmore”--and Jerry again indicated the person addressed by
-pointing with the paper-cutter--“Mr. Ardmore, it is downright impudent
-of you to talk to me about my appearance in any terms, but when you
-speak of my face as though it were a map in a geography and of my
-freckles as though they were county seats, or lakes, or strange places
-in China, then I must protest with all my strength. If you don’t change
-the subject immediately I shall refuse to pardon this person who killed
-the painless dentist, and he shall be hanged by the neck till he be
-dead; and you, Mr. Thomas Ardmore, will be guilty of his murder.”
-
-The discussion of Miss Jerry Dangerfield’s freckles ceased abruptly on
-the appearance of Big Paul, the forester.
-
-“A body of South Carolina militia is marching across country from the
-south. One of my men heard of it down at Turner Court House last night,
-and rode to where the troops were encamped. He learned that it was a
-practice march for the militia. There’s several companies of infantry,
-so he reports, and a piece of artillery.”
-
-“Bully for old Grissy!” exclaimed Ardmore. “They’re coming this way,
-are they, Paul?” And the three bent over the map.
-
-“That is the place, sir. They seem to be planning to get around
-Turner’s without stirring up the town. But it would take a good deal to
-wake up Turner’s,” laughed the big German.
-
-Jerry placed her finger on the state line.
-
-“If they dare cross that--if they as much as dare!”
-
-“If they dare we shall show them a few things.--Take all the men you
-need, Paul, to watch their movements. That will do.”
-
-The forester lingered.
-
-“You remember that we spoke the other day of the log house on Raccoon
-Creek, where the Appleweights had driven off our man?”
-
-“Yes, Paul. It is where the state line crosses the heavy woods and
-the farthest outpost, so to speak, on my property. When you cross
-the little creek, you’re in South Carolina. You said some of these
-Appleweight fellows had been cutting off the timber down there, if I
-remember rightly.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” replied the forester, twirling his cap awkwardly. “But some
-of the people on the estate have said----”
-
-He broke off in an embarrassment so unlike him that Jerry and Ardmore
-looked at him curiously.
-
-“Well, Paul, what’s the matter? If the cabin has been burned down it’s
-no serious matter.”
-
-“Why, sir; some of the men passing there at night say they see lights
-and hear sounds in the cabin, though no one from the estate goes there.
-A child died in the house last spring, and--well, you know how some of
-these people are!”
-
-“Ghosts!” cried Ardmore. “The property is growing more valuable all
-the time! Tell them that whoever captures the ghost and brings it here
-shall have a handsome present. So far it’s only a light in an abandoned
-house--is that it?”
-
-“Well, they say it’s very strange,” and it was clear that the German
-was not wholly satisfied to have his employer laugh off the story.
-
-“Cheer up, Paul. We have bigger business on hand than the chasing of
-ghosts just now. When we get through with these other things I’ll go
-over there myself and take a look at the spook.”
-
-As Paul hurried away, Jerry seized a pen and wrote this message:
-
- Rutherford Gillingwater,
- Adjutant-General, Camp Dangerfield,
- Azbell, N. C.:
-
- Move all available troops by shortest route to Kildare at once and
- report to me personally at Ardsley. Make no statements to newspapers.
- Answer.
-
- DANGERFIELD,
- Governor.
-
-“I guess that will bring him running,” said Ardmore, calling a servant
-and ordering the message despatched immediately. “But when he comes,
-expecting to report to the governor and finds that he isn’t here, what
-do you suppose he will do?”
-
-“Mr. Ardmore,” began Jerry, in the tone of sweet tolerance with which
-one arraigns a hopeless child--“Mr. Ardmore, there are times when you
-tax my patience severely. You don’t seem to grasp the idea that we are
-not making explanations to inferiors in our administration. Colonel
-Gillingwater will undoubtedly be a good deal surprised to get that
-message, but when the first shock is over he will obey the orders of
-his commander-in-chief. And the fact that he is ordered to report to
-Ardsley will not be lost on him, for he will see in that a possible
-social opportunity, and a chance to wear some of his uniforms that he
-has never worn before. He will think that papa is really here to test
-the efficiency of the troops, and that as papa is a guest at Ardsley,
-which we know he isn’t, there will probably be some great social
-functions in this house, with papa’s staff dressed up and all shiny in
-gold braid. Since Rutherford Gillingwater had the typhoid fever during
-the Spanish War I have not been sure that he is as much interested in
-fighting as he is in the purely circus work of being a soldier. I just
-now recall that when papa was about to order out the troops to stop a
-railroad strike last spring, Rutherford Gillingwater went to all the
-trouble of having tonsilitis, and was so ill that he could hardly leave
-his room even after the strike had been settled by arbitration. If he
-knew that there was likely to be a terrible battle over here instead of
-nice long dinners and toasts to ‘The Old North State,’ ‘Our Governor,’
-and ‘The Governor’s Daughter,’ his old wounds, that he never had, might
-trouble him so that they’d have to wrap him up in cotton and carry him
-home.”
-
-Before luncheon a message was received from Gillingwater, to this
-effect:
-
- Governor William Dangerfield.
- Ardsley, N. C.:
-
- En route with our entire available force in the field. I am riding
- ahead with all speed, and will report at Ardsley at nine o’clock. Is
- full military dress _de rigueur_?
-
- GILLINGWATER, Adjutant-General.
-
-“Isn’t that just like Rutherford! He’s afraid he won’t be dressy
-enough; but if he knew that the South Carolina troops might shoot holes
-in his uniform he wouldn’t be due here for a couple of weeks, instead
-of at nine o’clock to-night;” and Jerry laughed merrily.
-
-They debated more seriously this telegram from Collins at Raleigh sent
-the previous evening:
-
- Can’t maintain this bluff much longer. Even the friendly newspapers
- are growing suspicious. State credit jeopardized by disappearance of
- Treasurer Foster. Billings, of Bronx Loan and Trust, here in a great
- fury over bond matter. Do you know governor’s whereabouts?
-
-“Things are certainly growing more exciting,” was Ardmore’s comment.
-“I suppose even a gifted liar like Collins can’t muzzle the press for
-ever.”
-
-“You can’t go on fooling all North Carolina all the time, either,” said
-Jerry, “and I suppose when papa gets tired of being scared he will turn
-up in Raleigh and tell some plausible story about where he has been and
-what has happened. When it comes to being plausible no one can touch
-papa.”
-
-“Maybe he’s dead,” suggested Ardmore gloomily.
-
-“That’s a real inspiration on your part, Mr. Ardmore; and it’s very
-sweet of you to mention it, but I have no idea that any harm has
-come to papa. It’s too much trouble to get elected governor, without
-dying in office, and besides, papa is none too friendly with the
-lieutenant-governor, and would never think of allowing such a person to
-succeed him. But those bonds seem rather serious, and I don’t like the
-idea of your Mr. Billings making a fuss at Raleigh.”
-
-“That will be all right,” remarked Ardmore, blotting the last of a
-number of telegrams which he had been writing, and pressing a button.
-“It’s much more important for us to get Appleweight into a South
-Carolina jail; and it’s not going to be so easy to do, now that Grissy
-is working on the other side, and angry at me about that scarlet fever
-telegram.
-
-“There may be trouble,” said Ardmore to his guests as they sat at
-luncheon. “But I should hate to have it said that my guests could not
-be taken care of here perfectly. I beg that you will all remain.”
-
-“If there’s to be a row, why don’t you call the police and be done with
-it?” asked a sad young member of the company. His motor number had so
-often figured in reports of speed law violations that he was known as
-Eighteen Eighty. “I thought you came down here for quiet and not to get
-into trouble, Ardy.”
-
-“If I miss my steamer nine days from to-day, and meanwhile have to eat
-horse meat, just as they did in the siege of Paris, I shall be greatly
-provoked, to say the least,” remarked Mrs. Atchison pleasantly; for
-her brother’s amazing awakening delighted her, and it was a cheering
-experience that he promised, of civil war, battle, murder, and sudden
-death.
-
-“I think I shall spend more time in America after this,” remarked
-Eighteen Eighty. “I did not know that amusing things ever happened over
-here. What did you say the name of this state is?”
-
-“The name of this state,” replied Miss Dangerfield, “is North Carolina,
-and I have my opinion of any native American who runs around Europe
-all the time, and who can visit a place in this country without even
-knowing the name of the state he is in.”
-
-“But there’s really no difference between North and South Carolina, is
-there?” persisted Eighteen Eighty.
-
-Jerry put down her fork, and folded her hands beside her plate, while
-she addressed the offender.
-
-“Mr. Number Something, the difference between the Old North State and
-South Carolina is not merely geographical--it is also intellectual,
-ethical, and spiritual. But may I ask you whether you know of which
-state you are a citizen?”
-
-A laugh rose as the sad young man flushed and looked inquiringly about.
-
-“I voted you in my precinct that time I ran for alderman in New York,”
-said Ardmore, “but that’s no sign you had a right to vote there. I
-shot Ballywinkle through the booth at the same time. I was a reform
-candidate and needed votes, but I hoped Bally would get arrested and be
-sent to jail. My impression is that you are really a citizen of Rhode
-Island, which is where Newport is.”
-
-The debate as to Eighteen Eighty’s legal residence was interrupted by
-the arrival of a summons for Ardmore, who hurriedly left the table.
-
-Big Paul awaited him below, mounted and holding a led-horse.
-
-“There’s a line of the South Carolina militia crawling through the
-woods toward Raccoon Creek. They insist that it’s a practice skirmish,
-and that they’ve come over here because the landscape is naturally
-adapted to their purposes.”
-
-“It’s awfully nice of them to like my scenery. You’d better send
-your best man out to meet Colonel Gillingwater of the North Carolina
-militia, and tell him to march all his troops into the estate by
-the north gates, and to be in a hurry. Tell him--tell him Governor
-Dangerfield is anxious to have the staff present in full uniform at a
-grand ball at Ardsley to-night.”
-
-Ardmore rode off alone toward Raccoon Creek to catch a view of the
-enemy. How far would Griswold go? This question he kept debating with
-himself. His late friend was a lawyer and a serious one whom he had
-not believed capable of seizing the militia of one state and using
-it to make a military demonstration against another. Ardmore could
-go as far as Griswold; yet he was puzzled to know why Griswold was
-in the field at all. Miss Dangerfield’s suggestion that Griswold’s
-interest in the daughter of the governor of South Carolina accounted
-for his presence on the border seemed plausible at first; and yet
-the more he thought about it the less credible it seemed, for he was
-sure that Griswold had talked to him about women with the frankness
-that had characterized all their intercourse, and Ardmore racked his
-brains in his effort to recall the few affairs to which the associate
-professor of admiralty had pleaded guilty. Memory brought these back
-to him slowly. There was an Old Point Comfort affair, dating back to
-Griswold’s student days, and to which he had referred with no little
-feeling once or twice; and there was a York Harbour affair, that came
-a little later; and there was the girl he had met on a steamer, about
-whom Griswold had shown sensitiveness when Ardmore had made bold to
-twit him. But Ardmore could not account for Miss Osborne, unless his
-friend had been withholding his confidence while seemingly wholly
-frank; and the thought that this must be true widened the breach
-between them. And when he was saying to himself that the daughters of
-governors are not in the habit of picking up cavaliers and entrusting
-state affairs to them, and that it was almost inconceivable that the
-conscientious Griswold, at the busiest season at the university, should
-have taken employment from the governor of South Carolina, he found
-that he had struck a stone wall, and he confessed to himself that the
-situation was beyond him.
-
-These reflections carried him far toward Raccoon Creek, and when he had
-reached that tortuous stream he dismounted and tied his horse, the more
-freely to examine the frontier. The Raccoon is never more than eighty
-feet wide, but filled with boulders round which the water foams in many
-curves and splashes, running away in the merriest ripples, so that it
-is never wholly tranquil. By jumping from boulder to boulder he crossed
-the turbulent tide and gained the other side with a sense of entering
-the enemy’s country.
-
-“Now,” he muttered, “I am in South Carolina.”
-
-He drew out his map and held it against a tree the better to study it,
-reassuring himself that his own property line embraced several sections
-of the forest on the south side of the state boundary.
-
-“If Grissy shoots me, it will be on my own land,” he said aloud.
-
-He cautiously followed the stream until, several hundred yards farther
-on, and overhanging the creek, he came upon the log cabin in which
-big Paul had reported the presence of a ghost. Paul’s story had not
-interested him particularly, but now that he was in the neighbourhood
-he resolved to visit the cabin and learn if possible how ghosts amuse
-themselves by day. He had thrust a revolver into his pocket before
-leaving the house, and while he had no idea that ghosts may be shot,
-he now made sure that the weapon was in good order. As he sat on a log
-slipping the cylinder through his fingers he heard whistling farther
-along the creek, followed quickly by the snapping of twigs under a
-heavy tread, and a moment later a tall, slender man broke into view.
-
-The stranger was dressed like a countryman, but he was unmistakably
-not of the Ardsley force of workmen, for these wore a rough sort of
-uniform. His hands were thrust carelessly into the side pockets of a
-gray jeans coat. They were thrust in deep, so that the coat sagged at
-the pockets. His trousers were turned up from a pair of rough shoes,
-and he wore a gray flannel shirt, the collar of which was guiltless of
-a tie. He was smooth shaven, and carried in his mouth a short pipe,
-which he paused to relight when about a dozen yards from Ardmore. Then,
-as he held the lighted match above the pipe bowl for an instant to make
-sure his tobacco was burning, Ardmore jumped up and covered him with
-the pistol.
-
-“I beg your pardon,” said the master of Ardsley, “but you’re my
-prisoner!”
-
-The stranger shook the flame out of the match-stick carefully and threw
-it away before turning toward his captor.
-
-“Young man,” he said with perfect self-possession, “don’t fool with
-that gun; it might go off.”
-
-His drawl was characteristic of the region; his tone was one of amused
-tolerance. Ardmore was short of stature, and his knickerbockers,
-leggings, and Norfolk jacket were not wholly consonant with the
-revolver, which, however, he levelled very steadily at the stranger’s
-head.
-
-“You are an intruder on my property,” said the master of Ardsley, “and
-unless I’m much mistaken you have been playing ghost in that cabin.
-I’ve heard about you. Your gang has been cutting off my timber about
-long enough, and this game of playing ghost to scare my men won’t do.”
-
-“Stealing your timber?” And the stranger was clearly surprised. He held
-his pipe in his hand with his thumb over the bowl and seemed to take a
-more serious interest in his captor.
-
-“And now,” continued Ardmore, “I’m about tired of having this end of
-the country run by the Appleweights, and their disreputable gang, so
-I’m going to lock you up.”
-
-The stranger turned toward the cabin, one corner of which was plainly
-visible, and shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“I have nothing to do with the Appleweights, and I assure you I am not
-a timber thief.”
-
-“Then you must be the one who has lifted a few steers out of my herd.
-It makes no difference just what branch of the business you are engaged
-in, for we’re picking up all the gang and you’ve got to come along with
-me.”
-
-The captive showed signs of anger for the first time. His face flushed,
-and he took a step toward Ardmore, who immediately threw up the
-revolver so that it pointed at the man’s head.
-
-“Stop right there! We’ve got old man Appleweight, so you’ve lost your
-leader, and I tell you the jig’s up. We’ll have you all in jail before
-another twenty-four hours has passed.”
-
-“I judge from the tone of your remarks that you are Ardmore, the owner
-of Ardsley. Am I right?”
-
-“You are quite right. And you are a member of a disreputable gang of
-outlaws that has been bringing shame upon the state of North Carolina.
-Now, I want you to march straight ahead of me. Step lively now!” And
-Ardmore flourished the pistol menacingly. “March!”
-
-The man hesitated, flung up his head defiantly, then moved slowly
-forward. The flush in his face had deepened and his eyes flashed
-angrily; but Ardmore, his cap on the back of his head, himself
-presented a figure so severe, so eloquent of righteous indignation,
-that the stranger tamely obeyed him.
-
-“We will cross the creek right here,” he ordered; “it’s a pretty jump
-there from that boulder--there, that was bully! Now right along there
-over the log--see the trail! Good!”
-
-It was warm and the captive was perspiring freely. He moved along
-docilely, and finding that he manifested no inclination to bolt,
-Ardmore dropped the revolver to his side, but with his finger on
-the trigger. He was very proud of himself; for while to Miss Jerry
-Dangerfield undoubtedly belonged the honour of capturing the thief
-Appleweight, yet he had single-handed arrested a member of the famous
-gang, and he had already resolved upon a convenient method of disposing
-of his prisoner. They paused while Ardmore mounted his horse, silencing
-the captive, who took the opportunity to break out protestingly against
-what he termed an infamous outrage upon personal liberty.
-
-“You’ve taken me from one state into another without due process of
-law,” declared the stranger, thinking to impress Ardmore, as that young
-gentleman settled himself in his saddle.
-
-“Go right on now; that’s a good fellow,” replied the master of Ardsley,
-lifting the revolver warningly. “Whether it’s North Carolina or South
-Dakota--it doesn’t make a particle of difference to me. As I remarked
-before, it’s my property, I tell you, and I do what I please here.”
-
-“I’ll show you whether you do or not,” snorted the prisoner, who was
-trudging along doggedly with the nose of Ardmore’s horse occasionally
-poking his back.
-
-They soon reached a field where some labourers were at work, and
-Ardmore called them to him for instructions.
-
-“Boys, this is one of the timber thieves; put him in that corn-crib
-until I come back for him. The nights are warm; the sky is perfectly
-clear; and you will kindly see that he does not lack for food.”
-
-Two of the men jumped forward and seized Ardmore’s prisoner, who now
-broke forth in a torrent of wrath, struggling vigorously in the hands
-of the sturdy fellows who had laid violent hands on him.
-
-“That’s right, boys; that’s right; easy there! Now in he goes.”
-
-A series of corn-cribs fringed the field, and into one of these, from
-which half the corn had been removed, the prisoner was thrust sprawling
-upon the yellow ears, and when he rose and flung himself round, the
-door of the corn-crib slammed in his face. He bellowed with rage now,
-seeing that his imprisonment was a serious matter, and that it seemed
-likely to be prolonged indefinitely.
-
-“They always told me you were a fool,” he howled, “but I didn’t know
-that anything as crazy as you are was loose in the world.”
-
-“Thank you. The head of your gang is much more polite. He’s sitting on
-his case of Chateau Bizet in my wine cellar, playing solitaire.”
-
-“Appleweight in your wine cellar!” bawled the captive in astonishment.
-
-“Certainly. I was afraid to lock him in a room with bath for fear it
-might give him hydrophobia; but he’s perfectly content in the wine
-cellar.”
-
-“What are you going to do with him?”
-
-“I haven’t decided yet just what to do with him, but the scoundrel
-undoubtedly belongs in South Carolina, and I have every intention of
-making his own state punish him.”
-
-The prisoner leaned heavily against his prison door, and glared out
-upon his jailer with a new, fierce interest.
-
-“I tell you I’ve nothing to do with the Appleweights! I don’t want to
-reveal my identity to you, you young beggar; but I demand my legal
-rights.”
-
-“My dear sir,” retorted Ardmore, “you have no legal rights, for the
-writ of habeas corpus doesn’t go here. You seem rather intelligent for
-a barn burner and timber thief. Come now, what is your name?”
-
-The prisoner gazed down upon the imperturbable figure of his captor
-through the slats of the corn-crib. Ardmore returned his gaze with his
-most bland and child-like air. Many people had been driven to the point
-of madness by Ardmore’s apparent dullness. The prisoner realized that
-he must launch a thunderbolt if he would disturb a self-possession so
-complete--a tranquillity as sweet as the fading afternoon.
-
-“Mr. Ardmore, I dislike to do it, but your amazing conduct makes it
-necessary for me to disclose my identity,” and the man’s manner showed
-real embarrassment.
-
-“I knew it; I knew it,” nodded Ardmore, folding his arms across his
-chest. “You’re either the King of Siam or the Prince of Petosky. As
-either, I salute you!”
-
-“No!” roared the captive, beating impotently against the door of the
-cage with his hands. “No! I’m the governor of South Carolina!”
-
-This statement failed, however, to produce the slightest effect on
-Mr. Ardmore, who only smiled slightly, a smile less incredulous than
-disdainful.
-
-“Oh, pshaw! that’s nothing,” he replied; “_I’m_ the governor of North
-Carolina!” and mounting his horse he gravely lifted his hat to the
-prisoner and galloped away.
-
-While Mr. Ardmore was securing his prisoner in the corn-crib it may be
-interesting to return for a moment to the haunted log cabin on Raccoon
-Creek, the interior of which was roughly but comfortably furnished.
-Above were two small sleeping-rooms, and beside the bed in each stood a
-suit-case and a hand-satchel. In each room hung, on convenient hooks,
-a long, black frock-coat, a pair of trousers of light cloth, and a
-broad-brim black felt hat. Coat, trousers, and hat were exactly alike.
-
-In the room below sat a man in his shirt-sleeves, his feet on a cheap
-deal table, blowing rings from a cigar. He presented a picture of the
-greatest ease and contentment, as he occasionally stroked his short
-brown beard, or threw up his arms and clasped his hands about his head
-or caught, lazily at the smoke rings. On the table lay an array of
-playing cards and poker chips.
-
-“It’s too good to last for ever,” the lone occupant reflected aloud,
-stifling a yawn, and he reached out, with careless indifference, toward
-a bundle of newspapers tied together with a piece of twine, and drew
-one out and spread it across his knees. He yawned again as though
-the thought of a world whose affairs were stamped in printer’s ink
-bored him immensely; and then the bold headlines that shouted at him
-across half a quarter of the sheet caused him to gasp, and his feet
-struck the bare floor of the cabin resoundingly. He now bent over the
-paper with the greatest eagerness, muttering as he read, and some
-of his mutterings were, it must be confessed, not without profane
-embellishment.
-
- TWO COWARDLY GOVERNORS MISSING
-
- SCANDAL AFFECTING TWO STATE EXECUTIVES
-
- IS THE APPLEWEIGHT CASE RESPONSIBLE?
-
- RUMOURS OF FATAL DUEL ON STATE LINE
-
-He read breathlessly the startling story that followed the headlines,
-then rose and glanced anxiously at his watch.
-
-“Am I drunk or mad? I must find Osborne and get out of this.”
-
-He leaped to the open door, and gazed into the forest from a little
-platform that commanded all sides of the cabin. And there, to his utter
-amazement, he saw men in khaki emerging cautiously from the woods. They
-were unmistakably soldiers of some sort, for an officer was giving
-sharp commands, and the line opened out like a fan along the creek. The
-observer of this manœuvre mopped his head with his handkerchief as he
-watched the alert movements of the figures in khaki.
-
-He was so absorbed that he failed to hear stealthy steps at the rear of
-the platform, but he was now rudely aroused by two uniformed youngsters
-with S. C. N. G. on their caps, who sprang upon him and bore him with a
-crash to the puncheon floor.
-
-“You’re our prisoner!” shouted one of them, rising when he found that
-the prisoner yielded without resistance.
-
-“What for?” blurted the captive, sitting up and rubbing his elbow.
-
-“For being Bill Appleweight, _alias_ Poteet. Get up, now, and come with
-us to headquarters, or my instructions are to break your head.”
-
-“Who the devil are you?” panted the prisoner.
-
-“Well, if it’s anything to you, we’re the South Carolina militia, so
-you’d better get up and climb.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-THE FLIGHT OF GILLINGWATER.
-
-
-“It will be better for me to break the news to Colonel Gillingwater,”
-said Jerry, “and you must go out and meet the troops yourself, with Mr.
-Cooke and that amusing Mr. Collins. There is no telling what effect my
-tidings will have on Rutherford, or what he will decide to do. He has
-never before been so near trouble as he is now, and I may have to give
-him first aid to the injured when he finds out that the South Carolina
-troops are on Raccoon Creek, all ready to march upon our sacred soil.”
-
-“But suppose your adjutant-general shouldn’t go back to his troops
-after he sees you, then what am I to do?”
-
-“If you don’t see him by ten o’clock you will take personal command
-and exercise your own discretion as to the best method of landing
-Appleweight in a South Carolina jail. After that we must find papa, and
-it will be up to him to satisfy the newspapers and his constituents
-with some excuse for his strange disappearance.”
-
-Collins had come from Raleigh on the evening train, and he had solemnly
-assured Ardmore that the present state of affairs could not be
-maintained another twenty-four hours. He had exhausted his professional
-resources, and the North Carolina newspapers of all shades of opinion
-were clamouring for the truth, and were insisting that, for the honour
-and dignity of the state, Governor Dangerfield should show himself
-in Raleigh. Even the metropolitan press, which Collins had filled
-for several days with blithe stories of the administration’s vigorous
-policy in the Appleweight case, had refused further matter from him.
-
-“We’ve got to find Dangerfield or bust. Now, where is that eminent
-statesman, Ardmore? You can’t tell me you don’t know; but if you don’t,
-Miss Dangerfield does, and she’s got to tell.”
-
-“She hasn’t the slightest idea, but if the newspapers find out that
-he’s really and truly missing, he will have to show up; but first we’ve
-got to take Appleweight off that case of Chateau Bizet and lodge him in
-the jail at Turner Court House, and let Governor Osborne have the odium
-of incarcerating the big chief of the border, to whom he is under the
-greatest political obligations.”
-
-“But it’s all over the country now that Osborne hasn’t been seen in
-Columbia since he and Dangerfield had that row in New Orleans. Cranks
-are turning up everywhere, pretending to be governors of various
-states, and old Dangerfield is seen on all the outgoing steamers.
-There’s been nothing like it since the kidnapping of Charley Ross.”
-
-Ardmore drew on his riding-gloves reflectively, and a delighted grin
-illuminated his countenance.
-
-“I caught a lunatic down on the Raccoon this afternoon who said _he_
-was the governor of South Carolina, and I locked him up.”
-
-“Well, he may be Osborne,” remarked Collins, with journalistic
-suspicion.
-
-“And he may be a Swiss admiral or the king of Mars. I guess I’m a
-governor myself, and I know what a governor looks like and acts
-like--you can’t fool me. I put this impostor where he’ll have a chance
-to study astronomy to-night.”
-
-“Then he isn’t on that case of Chateau Bizet with Appleweight?”
-
-“No; I locked him up in a corn-crib until I get time to study his
-credentials. Come along now!”
-
-Ardmore, Collins, and Cooke rode rapidly away through the wide gates of
-the estate along the Sapphire road, over which, by his last bulletin,
-the adjutant-general of North Carolina was marching his troops. They
-had left Cooke’s men with Paul’s foresters to guard the house and to
-picket the banks of the Raccoon in the immediate neighbourhood of the
-camp of the South Carolinians.
-
-“I guess those fellows can hold ’em till morning,” said Cooke. “We’ve
-got to clean up the whole business by to-morrow night. You can’t have
-two states at war with each other this way without shaking up the
-universe, and if federal troops come down here to straighten things out
-it won’t be funny.”
-
-They had ridden about a mile, when Cooke checked his horse with an
-exclamation.
-
-“There’s somebody coming like the devil was after him. It must be
-Gillingwater.”
-
-They drew rein and waited, the quick patter of hoofs ringing out
-sharply in the still night. The moonlight gave them a fair sweep of the
-road, and they at once saw a horseman galloping rapidly toward them.
-
-“Lordy, the man’s on fire!” gasped Ardmore.
-
-“By George, you’re right!” muttered Collins, moving nervously in his
-saddle. “It’s a human sunburst.”
-
-“It’s only his gold braid,” explained the practical Cooke.
-
-“He must have on solid gold armour, then,” declared Collins.
-
-Seeing three men drawn across the road, the horseman began to check his
-flight.
-
-“Men!” he shouted, as his horse pawed the air with its forefeet, “is
-this the road to Ardsley?”
-
-“Right you are,” yelled Cooke, and they were aware of a flash, a
-glitter that startled and dazzled the eye, and Colonel Rutherford
-Gillingwater thundered on.
-
-Ardmore looked at his watch.
-
-“He’s undoubtedly a man of action, if I ever saw one; and I think
-we are to be congratulated on having so gallant a commander for our
-troops,” said the master of Ardsley; but the sight of Rutherford
-Gillingwater had filled his soul with jealous forebodings. He had heard
-that women are prone to fall in worship before warriors in their battle
-armour, and he was sure that Jerry Dangerfield was a girl of infinitely
-kind heart, who might not, when face to face with the issue, subject
-the man she had engaged to marry to any severe test.
-
-They rode on, however, and saw presently the lights of camp-fires, and
-a little later were ceremoniously halted at the roadside by an armed
-guard.
-
-It had been arranged that Collins, who had once been a second
-lieutenant in the Georgia militia, should be presented as an officer
-of the regular army, detailed as special aide to Governor Dangerfield
-during the encampment, and that in case Gillingwater failed to return
-promptly he should take command of the North Carolina forces.
-
-An open field had been seized for the night’s camp, and the tents
-already shone white in the moonlight. The three men introduced
-themselves to the militia officers, and Collins expressed their regret
-that they had missed the adjutant-general.
-
-“Governor Dangerfield wished you to move your force on to Ardsley
-should we fail to meet Colonel Gillingwater; and you had better strike
-your tents and be in readiness to advance in case he doesn’t personally
-return with orders.”
-
-Captain Collins, as he had designated himself, apologized for not being
-in uniform.
-
-“I lost my baggage train,” he laughed, “and Governor Dangerfield is so
-anxious not to miss this opportunity to settle the Appleweight case
-that I hurried out to meet you with these gentlemen.”
-
-“Appleweight!” exclaimed the group of officers in amazement.
-
-“None other than the great Appleweight!” responded Collins. “The
-governor has him in his own hands at last, and is going to carry him
-across the border and into a South Carolina bastille, as a little
-pleasantry on the governor of South Carolina.”
-
-“He’s had a sudden change of heart if he’s captured Appleweight,”
-remarked a major incredulously. “His policy has always been to let old
-Bill alone.”
-
-“It’s only a ripple of the general reform wave that’s sweeping the
-country,” suggested Ardmore cheerfully. “Turn the rascals out; put the
-rascals in; keep the people hopeful and the jails full. That’s the
-Dangerfield watchword.”
-
-“Well, I guess Dangerfield knows how to drive the hearse if there’s got
-to be a funeral,” observed the quartermaster. “The governor’s not a man
-to ride inside if he can find another corpse.”
-
-And they all laughed and accepted the situation as promising better
-diversion than they had expected from the summer manœuvres.
-
-The militia officers gave the necessary orders for breaking the
-half-formed camp, and then turned their attention to the entertainment
-of their guests. Ardmore kept track of the time, and promptly at ten
-o’clock Collins rose from the log by the roadside where they had been
-sitting.
-
-“We must obey the governor’s orders, gentlemen,” said Collins
-courteously, “and march at once to Ardsley. I, you understand, am only
-a courier, and your guest for the present.”
-
-“If you please,” asked Cooke, when the line had begun to move forward,
-“what is that wagon over there?”
-
-He pointed to a mule team hitched to a quartermaster’s wagon that a
-negro was driving into position across the rough field. It was piled
-high with luggage, a pyramid that rose black against the heavens.
-One of the militia officers, evidently greatly annoyed, bawled to the
-driver to get back out of the way.
-
-“Pardon me,” said Collins politely, “but is that your personal baggage,
-gentlemen?”
-
-“That belongs to Colonel Gillingwater,” remarked the quartermaster.
-“The rest of us have a suit-case apiece.”
-
-“Do you mean,” demanded Ardmore, “that the adjutant-general carries all
-that luggage for himself?”
-
-“That is exactly it! But,” continued the quartermaster loyally, “you
-can never tell what will happen when you take the field this way, and
-our chief is not a man to forget any of the details of military life.”
-
-“In Washington we all think very highly of Colonel Gillingwater,”
-remarked Collins, with noble condescension, “and in case we should
-become involved in war he would undoubtedly be called to high rank in
-the regular establishment.”
-
-“It’s too bad,” said Cooke, as the three drew aside and waited for a
-battery of light artillery to rumble into place behind the infantry,
-“it’s too bad, Collins, that it didn’t occur to you to impersonate the
-president of the French Republic or Emperor William. You’ll be my death
-before we finish this job.”
-
-“This won’t be so funny when Dangerfield gets hold of us,” grinned the
-reporter. “We’d better cheer up all we can now. We’re playing with the
-state of North Carolina as though it were a bean-bag. But what’s that
-over there?”
-
-The pyramidal baggage wagon had gained the road behind them, and
-lingered uncertainly, with the driver asleep and waiting for orders.
-The conspirators were about to gallop forward to the head of the moving
-column, when Collins pointed across the abandoned camp-ground to where
-a horseman, who had evidently made a wide detour of the advancing
-column, rode madly toward the baggage wagon.
-
-“The gentleman’s trying to kill his horse, I should judge,” murmured
-Ardmore. “By Jove!”
-
-“It’s Gillingwater!” chorused the trio.
-
-The rider in his haste had overlooked the men in the road. He dashed
-through the wide opening in the fence, left by the militiamen, took the
-ditch by the roadside at a leap, wakened the sleeping driver on the
-wagon with a roar, and himself leaped upon the box and began turning
-the horses.
-
-“What do you think he’s doing?” asked Cooke.
-
-“He’s in a hurry to get back to mother’s cooking,” replied Ardmore.
-“He’s seen Miss Dangerfield and learned that war is at hand, and he’s
-going to get his clothes out of danger. Lordy! listen to him slashing
-the mules!”
-
-“But you don’t think----”
-
-The wagon had swung round, and already was in rapid flight. Collins
-howled in glee.
-
-“Come on! We can’t miss a show like this!”
-
-“Leave the horses then! There’s a hill there that will break his neck.
-We’d better stop him if we can!” cried Cooke, dismounting.
-
-They threw their reins to the driver of the wagon, who had been brushed
-from his seat by the impatient adjutant-general, and was chanting
-weirdly to himself at the roadside.
-
-The wagon, piled high with trunks and boxes, was dashing forward,
-Gillingwater belabouring the mules furiously, and, hearing the shouts
-of strange pursuers, yelling at the team in a voice shrill with fear.
-
-“Come on, boys!” shouted Ardmore, thoroughly aroused, “catch the spy
-and traitor!”
-
-The road dipped down into the shadow of a deep cut, where the moon’s
-dim rays but feebly penetrated, and where the flow of springs had
-softened the surface; but the pursuers were led on by the rumble of the
-wagon, which swung from side to side perilously, the boxes swinging
-about noisily and toppling threateningly at the apex. Down the sharp
-declivity the wagon plunged like a ship bound for the bottom of the sea.
-
-The pursuers bent gamely to their task in the rough road, with Cooke
-slightly in the lead. Suddenly he shouted warningly to the others, as
-something rose darkly above them like a black cloud, and a trunk fell
-with a mighty crash only a few feet ahead of them. The top had been
-shaken off in the fall, and into it head first plunged Ardmore.
-
-“There’s another coming!” yelled Collins, and a much larger trunk
-struck and split upon a rock at the roadside. Clothing of many kinds
-strewed the highway. A pair of trousers, flung fiercely into the air,
-caught on the limb of a tree, shook free like a banner, and hung there
-sombrely etched against the stars.
-
-Ardmore crawled out of the trunk, screaming with delight. The fragrance
-of toilet water broke freshly upon the air.
-
-“It’s his ammunition!” bawled Ardmore, rubbing his head where he had
-struck the edge of a tray. “His scent-bottles are smashed, and it’s
-only by the grace of Providence that I haven’t cut myself on broken
-glass.”
-
-“Thump! bump!” sounded down the road.
-
-“Are those pants up there?” asked Cooke, pointing, “or is it a hole in
-the sky?”
-
-“This,” said Collins, picking up a garment from the bush over which it
-had spread itself, “has every appearance of being his little nightie.
-How indelicate!”
-
-“No,” said Ardmore, taking it from him, “it’s a kimona of the most
-expensive silk, which the colonel undoubtedly wears when they get him
-up at midnight to hear the reports of his scouts.”
-
-They went down the road, stumbling now and then over a bit of debris
-from the vanished wagon.
-
-“It’s like walking on carpet,” observed Cooke, picking up a feathered
-chapeau. “I didn’t know there were so many clothes in all the world.”
-
-They abandoned the idea of further pursuit on reaching a trunk standing
-on end, from which a uniform dress-coat drooped sadly.
-
-“This is not our trouble; it’s his trouble. I guess he’s struck a
-smoother road down there. We’d better go back,” said Cooke.
-
-“Whom the gods would destroy they first dress in glad rags,” piped
-Collins.
-
-They sat down and laughed until the negro approached warily with the
-horses.
-
-“He’s lost his raiment, but saved his life,” sputtered Collins,
-climbing into his saddle.
-
-“He’s lost more than that,” remarked Ardmore, and his flushed
-countenance, noted by the others as he lighted a cigarette, was
-cheerfuller than they had ever seen it before.
-
-In a moment they had climbed the hill and were in hot pursuit of the
-adjutant-general’s abandoned army.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-ON THE ROAD TO TURNER’S.
-
-
-“Who goes there?”
-
-“A jug.”
-
-“What kind of a jug?”
-
-“A little brown jug from Kildare.”
-
-Thus Mr. Thomas Ardmore tested his pickets with a shibboleth of his
-own devising. The sturdy militiamen of North Carolina patrolled the
-northern bank of Raccoon Creek at midnight, aware that that riotous
-flood alone separated them from their foes. The terraces at Ardsley
-bristled with the guns of the First Light Battery, while, upon a cot in
-the wine cellar beneath, Mr. Bill Appleweight, _alias_ Poteet, slept
-the sleep of the just.
-
-He was rudely aroused, however, at one o’clock in the morning by
-Ardmore, Cooke, and Collins, and taken out through the kitchen to
-one of the Ardsley farm wagons. Big Paul held the reins, and four of
-Cooke’s detectives were mounted as escort. Ardmore, Cooke, and Collins
-were to accompany the party as a board of strategy in the movement upon
-Turner Court House, South Carolina.
-
-Appleweight, the terror of the border, blinked at the lanterns
-that flashed about him in the courtyard. He had been numbed by
-his imprisonment, and even now he yielded himself docilely to the
-inevitable. His capture in the first instance at Mount Nebo had been
-clear enough, and he could have placed his hand on the men who did it
-if he had been free for a couple of hours. This he had pondered over
-his solacing solitaire as he sat on the case of Chateau Bizet in the
-Ardsley wine cellar; but the subsequent events had been altogether
-too much for him. He had been taken from his original captors by a
-girl, and while the ignominy of this was not lost on the outlaw, his
-wits had been unequal to the further fact, which he had no ground for
-disbelieving, that this captivity within the walls of Ardsley had been
-due to a daughter of that very governor of North Carolina whom he had
-counted his friend. Why the girl had interested herself in his seizure
-and incarceration; why he had been carried to the great house of a New
-York gentleman whom he had never harmed in the least; and why, more
-than all, he should have been locked in a room filled with bottles
-bearing absurd and unintelligible titles, and containing, he had
-learned by much despairing experiment, liquids that singularly failed
-to satisfy thirst--these were questions before which Appleweight,
-_alias_ Poteet, bowed his head helplessly.
-
-“The road between Kildare and Turner’s is fairly good,” announced
-Cooke, “though we’ve got to travel four miles to strike it. Griswold
-evidently thinks that holding the creek is all there is of this
-business, and he won’t find out till morning that we’ve crawled round
-his line and placed Appleweight in jail at Turner’s where he belongs.”
-
-“You must have a good story ready for the press, Collins,” said
-Ardmore. “The North Carolina border counties don’t want Appleweight
-injured, and Governor Dangerfield don’t want any harm to come to
-him--you may be sure of that, or Bill would have been doing time
-long ago. The moral element in the larger cities and the people in
-Boston and Springfield, Massachusetts, who only hear of Appleweight
-in the newspapers, want him punished, and we must express to them our
-righteous indignation that he has been kidnapped and dragged away
-from our vengeance by the governor of South Carolina, who wants him in
-his own state merely to protect him. We can come pretty near pleasing
-everybody if you work it right, Collins. Our manner of handling the
-matter will do much to increase Governor Dangerfield’s popularity with
-all classes.”
-
-“Gentlemen, it was very impolite of you not to tell me you were ready
-to start!” and Jerry came briskly from the side entrance, dressed for
-the saddle and nibbling a biscuit.
-
-“But you are not to go! I thought that was understood!” cried Ardmore.
-
-“It may have been understood by you, Mr. Ardmore, but not by me! I
-should never forgive myself if, after all the trouble I have taken to
-straighten out this little matter, I should not be in at the finish.
-Will you kindly get me a horse?”
-
-Miss Dangerfield’s resolution was not to be shaken, and a few minutes
-later the party moved out from the courtyard. Cooke rode several
-hundred yards ahead; then two detectives preceded the wagon, in which
-Appleweight sat on a cross-seat with two more of Cooke’s men on a seat
-just behind him. He was tied and gagged, and an old derby hat (supplied
-by Paul) had been clapped upon the side of his head at an angle that
-gave him a jaunty air belied by his bonds. Though his tongue was
-silenced, his eyes were at once eloquent of wonderment, resignation,
-and impotent rage. Beside the wagon rode Miss Jerry Dangerfield, alert
-and contented. Ardmore and Collins were immediately behind her, and
-she indulged the journalist in some mild chaff from time to time, to
-his infinite delight, though considerably to Ardmore’s distress of
-heart; for, though no words had passed between him and Jerry as to the
-disgraceful flight of the adjutant-general, yet the master of Ardsley
-was in a jealous mood. The moon had left the conspirators to the softer
-radiance of the stars, but there was sufficient light for Ardmore to
-mark the gentle lines of Jerry’s face, as she lifted it now and then to
-scan the bright globes above.
-
-Paul drove his team at a trot over the smooth road of the estate to
-a remote and little-used gate on the southern side, but still safely
-removed from the South Carolina pickets along the Raccoon.
-
-“It’s all right over there,” remarked Collins, jerking his head towards
-the creek. “The fronting armies are waiting for morning and battle. I
-suppose that when we send word to Griswold that Appleweight is in a
-South Carolina jail it will change the scene of operations. It will
-then be Governor Osborne’s painful task to dance between law-and-order
-sentiment and the loud cursing of his border constituents. The
-possibilities of this rumpus grow on me, Ardmore.”
-
-“There is no rumpus, Mr. Collins,” said Jerry over her shoulder. “The
-governor of North Carolina is merely giving expression to his civic
-pride and virtue.”
-
-Leaving Ardsley, they followed a dismal stretch of road until they
-reached the highway that connects Turner’s and Kildare.
-
-“It’s going to be morning pretty soon. We must get the prisoner into
-Turner’s by five o’clock. Trot ’em up, Paul,” ordered Cooke.
-
-They were all in capital spirits now, with a fairly good road before
-them, leading straight to Turner’s, and with no expectation of any
-trouble in landing their prisoner safely in jail. A wide publication
-of the fact that Appleweight had been dragged from North Carolina and
-locked in a South Carolina jail would have the effect of clearing
-Governor Dangerfield’s skirts of any complicity with the border
-outlaws, while at the same time making possible a plausible explanation
-by Governor Dangerfield to the men in the hills of the contemptible
-conduct of the governor of South Carolina in effecting the arrest of
-their great chief.
-
-They were well into South Carolina territory now, and were jogging on
-at a sharp trot, when suddenly Cooke turned back and halted the wagon.
-
-“There’s something coming--wait!”
-
-“Maybe Bill’s friends are out looking for him,” suggested Collins.
-
-“Or it may be Grissy,” cried Ardmore in sudden alarm.
-
-“Your professor is undoubtedly asleep in his camp on the Raccoon,”
-replied Collins contemptuously. “Do not be alarmed, Mr. Ardmore.”
-
-Cooke impatiently bade them be quiet.
-
-“If we’re accosted, what shall we say?” he asked.
-
-“We’ll say,” replied Jerry instantly, “that one of the labourers at
-Ardsley is dead, and that we are taking his remains to his wife’s
-family at Turner’s. I shall be his grief-stricken widow.”
-
-The guards already had Appleweight down on the floor of the wagon,
-where one of them sat on his feet to make sure he did not create a
-disturbance. At her own suggestion Jerry dismounted and climbed into
-the wagon, where she sat on the sideboard, with her head deeply bowed
-as though in grief.
-
-“Pretty picture of a sorrowing widow,” mumbled Collins. Ardmore punched
-him in the ribs to make him stop laughing. To the quick step of walking
-horses ahead of them was now added the whisper and creak of leather.
-
-“Hello, there!” yelled Cooke, wishing to take the initiative.
-
-“Hey-O!” answered a voice, and all was still.
-
-“Give us the road; we’re taking a body into Turner’s to catch the
-morning train,” called Cooke.
-
-“Who’s dead?”
-
-“One of Ardmore’s Dutchmen. Shipping the corpse back to Germany.”
-
-The party ahead of them paused as though debating the case.
-
-The north-bound party was a blur in the road. Their horses sniffed and
-moved restlessly about as their riders conferred.
-
-“Give us the road!” shouted Cooke. “We haven’t much time to catch our
-train.”
-
-“Who did you say was dead?”
-
-“Karl Schmidt,” returned Paul promptly.
-
-Ardmore’s heart sank, fearful lest an inspection of the corpse should
-be proposed. But at this moment a wail, eerie and heart-breaking,
-rose and fell dismally upon the night. It was Jerry mourning her dead
-husband, her slight figure swaying back and forth over his body in an
-abandon of grief.
-
-“De poor vidow--she be mit us,” called out big Paul, forsaking his
-usual excellent English for guttural dialect.
-
-“Who are _you_ fellows?” demanded Cooke, spurring his horse forward.
-The horsemen, to his surprise, seemed to draw back, and he heard a
-voice speak out sharply, followed by a regrouping of the riders at the
-side of the road.
-
-“We been to a dance at Turner’s, and air goin’ back home to Kildare,”
-came the reply.
-
-“That seems all right,” whispered Ardmore to Collins.
-
-“Thus,” muttered Collins, “in the midst of death we are in life,” and
-this, reaching Jerry, caused her to bend over the corpse at her feet
-as though in a convulsive spasm of sorrow, whereupon, to add colour to
-their story, Paul rumbled off a few consolatory sentences in German.
-
-“Give us the road!” commanded Cooke, and without further parley they
-started ahead, closing about the wagon to diminish, as far as possible,
-the size of the caravan. Paul kept the horses at a walk, as became
-their sad errand, and Jerry continued to weep dolorously.
-
-They passed the horsemen at a slight rise in the rolling road. The
-party bound for Turner’s moved steadily forward, the horsemen huddled
-about the wagon, with Jerry’s led-horse between Ardmore and Collins at
-the rear. At the top of the knoll hung the returning dancers, well to
-the left of the road, permitting with due respect the passing of the
-funeral party. One of the men, Ardmore could have sworn, lifted his
-hat until the wagon had passed. Then some one called good-night, and,
-looking back, Ardmore saw them--a dozen men, he judged--regain the road
-and quietly resume their journey toward Kildare.
-
-“Pretty peaceable for fellows who’ve been attending a dance,” suggested
-Collins, craning his neck to look after them.
-
-Cooke turned back with the same observation, and seemed troubled.
-
-“I was afraid to look too closely at those men. They seemed rather
-too sober, and I was struck with the fact that they bunched up pretty
-close, as though they were hiding something.”
-
-“They were afraid of the corpse,” remarked Collins readily. “To meet
-a dead man on a lonely road at this hour of the morning is enough to
-sober the most riotous.”
-
-“One fellow lifted his hat as we passed, and I thought----”
-
-“Well, what did you think, Mr. Ardmore?” demanded Cooke impatiently.
-
-“Well, it may seem strange, but I thought there was something about
-that chap that suggested Grissy. It would be like Grissy to lift his
-hat to a corpse under any circumstances. He has spent a whole lot of
-time in Paris, and besides, he never forgets his manners.”
-
-“But suppose it was Griswold,” said Cooke, wishing to dispose
-of the suspicion, “what could he be doing out here? _He_ hasn’t
-Appleweight--we know that; and he has just now missed his chance of
-ever getting him.”
-
-They paused to allow Jerry to resume her horse, and one of the
-detectives joined in the conference to venture his opinion that the men
-they had passed were in uniform. “They looked like militia to me,” and
-as he was a careful man, Cooke took note of his remark, though he made
-no comment.
-
-“Suppose they were in uniform,” said Jerry lightly; “they can do no
-harm, and as we are now in South Carolina, and they are not our troops,
-it would not be proper for us to molest them. Let us go on, for Mr.
-Appleweight’s widow is not anxious to miss her train back to the
-fatherland.”
-
-“If they were a detail of the enemy’s militia, they would have held us
-up,” declared Cooke with finality.
-
-But as they moved on toward Turner’s, Ardmore was still troubled
-over what had seemed to him the remarkable Parisian courtesy of the
-returning reveller who had lifted his hat as the corpse passed. Grissy,
-he kept saying over and over to himself, was no fool by any manner of
-means, and he was unable to conjecture why the associate professor of
-admiralty, known to be detached on special duty for the governor of
-South Carolina, should be riding to Kildare, unless he contemplated
-some _coup_ of importance.
-
-The stars paled under the growing light of the early summer dawn.
-Appleweight, with shoulders wearily drooping, contemplated the
-attending cortege with the gaze of one who sullenly accepts a condition
-he does not in the least understand.
-
-A few early risers saw the strange company enter and proceed to the
-jail; but before half the community had breakfasted, Bill Appleweight,
-the outlaw, was securely locked in jail in Turner Court House, the
-seat of Mingo County, in the state of South Carolina, and the jailer,
-moreover, was sharing the distinguished captive’s thraldom.
-
-Collins, at the railway station, was announcing to the world the
-fact that at the very moment when Governor Dangerfield was about to
-seize Appleweight and punish him for his crimes, the outlaw had been
-kidnapped in North Carolina and taken under cover of night to a jail in
-South Carolina where Governor Osborne might be expected to shield him
-from serious prosecution with all the power of his high office.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-THE BATTLE OF THE RACCOON.
-
-
-Mrs. Atchison met the returning adventurers at the door.
-
-“Your conduct, Jerry Dangerfield, is beyond words!” she exclaimed,
-seizing the girl’s hands. “And so you really locked that horrid person
-in a real jail! Well, we shan’t miss him! We have been kept up all
-night by the arrival here of other prisoners--brought in like parcels
-from the grocer’s.”
-
-“More prisoners!” shouted Ardmore.
-
-“Dragged here at an unearthly hour of the morning, and flung into the
-most impossible places by your soldiers! You can hear them yelling
-without much trouble from the drawing-room, and we had to give up
-breakfast because the racket they are making was so annoying.”
-
-The captain of the battery whose guns frowned upon the terraces came up
-and saluted.
-
-“Mr. Ardmore,” he said, “I have been trying for several hours to see
-Governor Dangerfield, but this lady tells me that he has left Ardsley.”
-
-“That is quite true; the governor was called away last night on
-official business, and he will not return for an hour or two. You will
-kindly state your business to me.”
-
-The captain was peevish from loss of sleep, and by no means certain
-that he cared to transact business with Mr. Ardmore. He glanced at
-Miss Dangerfield, whom he had met often at Raleigh, and the governor’s
-daughter met the situation promptly.
-
-“Captain Webb, what prisoners have you taken, and why are they not
-gagged to prevent this hideous noise?”
-
-Seemingly from beneath the ample porte-cochère, where this colloquy
-occurred, rose yells, groans and curses, and the sound of thumps, as of
-the impact of human bodies against remote subterranean doors.
-
-“They’re trying to get loose, Miss Dangerfield, and they refuse to stay
-tied. The fiercest row is from the fellows we chucked into the coal
-bins.”
-
-“It’s excellent anthracite, the best I can buy; they ought to be glad
-it isn’t soft coal,” replied Ardmore defensively. “Who are they?”
-
-“They’re newspaper men, and they’re most terribly enraged,” answered
-Captain Webb. “We picked them up one at a time in different places
-on the estate. They say they’re down here looking for Governor
-Dangerfield.”
-
-Collins grinned his delight.
-
-“Oh, perfect hour!” he sang. “We’ll keep them until they promise to be
-good and print what we tell them. The little squeaky voice you hear
-occasionally--hark!--that’s Peck, of the Consolidated Press. He scooped
-me once on a lynching, and here is where I get even with him.”
-
-“You have done well, Captain Webb,” said Jerry with dignity, “and I
-shall urge your promotion upon papa at the earliest moment possible.
-Are these newspaper gentlemen your only prisoners?”
-
-“No; we gathered up two other parties, and one of them is in the
-servants’ laundry; the other, a middle-aged person, I lodged in the
-tower, where he can enjoy the scenery.”
-
-He pointed to the tower, from which the flag of North Carolina waved
-gently in the morning breeze.
-
-“The prisoner up there made an awful rumpus. He declares he will ruin
-the whole state of North Carolina for this. Here is his card, which, in
-a comparatively lucid interval, he gave me to hand you at the earliest
-possible moment,” and Captain Webb placed a visiting card in Ardmore’s
-hands.
-
-A smile struggled for possession of Ardmore’s countenance, but he
-regained control of himself promptly, and his face grew severe.
-
-He gave the card to Jerry, who handed it to Mrs. Atchison, and that
-lady laughed merrily.
-
-“Your prisoner, Captain Webb, is George P. Billings, secretary of the
-Bronx Loan and Trust Company of New York. What was he doing when you
-seized him?” demanded Ardmore.
-
-“He was chasing the gentleman who’s resting on the anthracite. He
-chased him and chased him, around a tea-house out here somewhere on the
-place; and finally this person in the coal hole fell, and they both
-rolled over together. The gentleman in the coal hole declares that he’s
-Foster, the state treasurer of North Carolina, but his face got so
-scratched on the shrubbery that he doesn’t look in the least like Mr.
-Foster.”
-
-“I have sent him witch hazel and court plaster, and we can get a doctor
-for his wounds, if necessary,” said Mrs. Atchison.
-
-A sergeant rushed up in hot haste with a demand from Colonel
-Daubenspeck, of the North Carolina First, to know when Governor
-Dangerfield could be seen.
-
-“The South Carolina pickets have been withdrawn, and our officers want
-orders from the governor in person,” said the messenger.
-
-“Then they shall have orders!” roared Ardmore. “If our men dare abandon
-their outposts----”
-
-He turned and rode furiously toward the border, and in his rage he
-had traversed a thousand yards before he saw that Jerry was close
-behind him. As they passed the red bungalow the crack of scattering
-rifle-shots reached them.
-
-“Go back! Go back! The war’s begun!” cried Ardmore; but, though he
-quickened the pace of his horse, Jerry clung to his side.
-
-“If there’s war, and I hope there is, I shall not shrink from the
-firing line, Mr. Ardmore.”
-
-As they dashed into their own lines they came upon the regimental
-officers, seated in comfortable chairs from the red bungalow, calmly
-engaged in a game of cards.
-
-“Great God, men!” blurted Ardmore, “why do you sit here when the
-state’s honour is threatened? Where was that firing?”
-
-“You seem rather placid, gentlemen, to say the least,” added Jerry,
-coldly bowing to the officers, who had risen at her approach. “Unless I
-am greatly mistaken, that is the flag of South Carolina I see flaunted
-in yonder field.” And she pointed with a gauntleted hand to a palmetto
-flag beyond the creek.
-
-“It is, Miss Dangerfield,” replied the colonel politely, “and you can
-see their pickets occasionally, but they have been drawn back from the
-creek, and I apprehend no immediate advance.”
-
-“No advance! Who are we to wait for them to offer battle? Who are we
-to play bridge and wait upon the pleasure of a cowardly enemy?” and
-Jerry gazed upon the furious Ardmore with admiration, as he roared at
-the officers, who stood holding their caps deferentially before the
-daughter of their commander-in-chief. Ardmore, it was clear, they did
-not take very seriously, a fact which she inwardly resented.
-
-“I don’t think it would be quite fair,” said the colonel mildly, “to
-force issues to-day.”
-
-“Not force issues!” yelled Ardmore. “With your brave sons of our Old
-North State, not force battle! In the name of the constitution, I ask
-you, why not?”
-
-“For the reason,” replied the colonel, “that the South Carolina troops
-ate heavily of green apples last night in an orchard over there by
-their camp, and they have barely enough men to maintain their pickets
-this morning. These, you can see, they have withdrawn a considerable
-distance from the creek.”
-
-“Then tell me why they have been firing upon our lines? Why have they
-been permitted to shoot at our helpless and unresisting men if they are
-not ready for war?”
-
-“They were not shooting at our men, Mr. Ardmore. Their pickets are
-very tired from loss of sleep, and they were trying to keep awake by
-shooting at a buzzard that hung over a field yonder, where there is,
-our scouts inform us, a dead calf lying in one of your pastures.”
-
-“They shall have better meat! Buzzards shall eat the whole state of
-South Carolina before night! Colonel, I order you to prepare at once to
-move your troops across that creek.”
-
-The colonel hesitated.
-
-“I regret to say, sir, that we have no pontoons!”
-
-“Pontoons! Pontoons! What, by the shade of Napoleon, do you want with
-pontoons when you have legs? Again, sir, I order you to advance your
-men!”
-
-It was at this crisis that Jerry lifted her chin a trifle and calmly
-addressed the reluctant colonel.
-
-“Colonel Daubenspeck, in my father’s name, I order you to throw your
-troops across the Raccoon!”
-
-A moment later the clear notes of the bugle rose above the splash and
-bubble of the creek. There was no opportunity for a grand onward sweep;
-it must be a scramble for the southern shore over the rocks and fallen
-timber in that mad torrent.
-
-And the Raccoon is a stream from all time dedicated to noble uses and
-destined to hold mighty kingdoms in leash. One might well hesitate
-before crossing this wayward Rubicon. The Mississippi is merely
-an excuse for appropriations, the Potomac the sporting ground of
-congressmen and shad. No other known stream is so happily calculated as
-the foamy Raccoon to delight at once the gods of battle and the gentle
-sons of song. It marks one of those impatient flings of nature in
-which, bored with creating orderly, broadly-flowing streams, or varying
-the landscape with quiet woodlands or meadows, she abandons herself
-for a moment to madness and, shaking water and rock together as in a
-dice-box, splashes them out with joyous laughter.
-
-Jerry Dangerfield, seated upon her horse on a slight rise under a
-clump of trees a little way back from the stream, coolly munched a
-cracker and sipped coffee from a tin cup. Ardmore, again calm, now that
-Daubenspeck had been spurred to action, smoked his pipe and watched the
-army prepare to advance.
-
-Beyond the creek, and somewhat removed from it on the South Carolina
-side, a rifle cracked, and far against the blue arch a huge, black,
-languorous object, rising with a last supreme effort, as though to
-claim refuge of heaven, fell clawing at space with sprawling wings,
-then collapsed and pitched earthward until the trees on the farther
-shore hid it from sight. A feeble cheer rose in the distance.
-
-“They sound pretty tame over there,” remarked Ardmore critically.
-“There’s no ginger in that cheer.”
-
-“The ginger,” suggested Colonel Daubenspeck ironically, “is probably
-all in their stomachs.”
-
-One gun from the battery was brought down and placed on a slight
-eminence to support the advance, for which all was now in readiness.
-The bugle sang again, and the men of one company sprang forward and
-began leaping from rock to rock, silently, steadily moving upon the
-farther shore. Here and there some brown khaki-clad figure slipped
-and splashed into the stream with a wild confusion of brown leggings;
-but on they went intrepidly. The captain, leading his men through
-the torrent, was first to gain the southern shore. He waved his
-sword, and with a shout his men clambered up the bank and formed
-in neat alignment. This was hardly accomplished before a uniformed
-figure dashed from a neighbouring blackberry thicket and waved a
-white handkerchief. He bore something in his hand, which to Ardmore’s
-straining vision seemed to be a small wicker basket.
-
-“It’s a flag of truce!” exclaimed Colonel Daubenspeck, and a sigh that
-expressed incontestable relief broke from that officer.
-
-“The cowards!” cried Ardmore. “Does that mean they won’t fight?”
-
-“It means that hostilities must cease until we have permitted the
-bearer of the flag to carry his message into our lines.”
-
-The man with the basket was already crossing the creek in charge of a
-corporal.
-
-“I have read somewhere about being careful of the Greeks bearing
-gifts,” said Jerry. “There may be something annoying in that basket.”
-
-The bearer of the basket gained the North Carolina shore and strode
-rapidly toward Miss Dangerfield, Ardmore, and Colonel Daubenspeck.
-He handed the trifle of a basket to the colonel, who gazed upon its
-contents for a moment with unspeakable rage. The colour mounted in his
-neck almost to the point of apoplexy, and his voice bellowed forth an
-oath so bleak, so fraught with peril to the human race, that Jerry
-shuddered and turned away her head as from a blast of flame. The
-colonel cast the wicker basket from him with a force that nearly tore
-him from his saddle. It struck against a tree, spilling upon the earth
-six small, hard, bright green apples.
-
-“My letter,” said the emissary soberly, “is for Mr. Thomas Ardmore,
-and, unless I am mistaken, you are that gentleman.”
-
-Ardmore seized a long envelope which the man extended, tore it open,
-and read:--
-
- Thomas Ardmore, Esq.,
- Acting Governor of North Carolina,
- In the Field:
-
- SIR--As I understand the present unhappy differences between the
- states of North and South Carolina, they are due to a reluctance
- on the part of the governor of North Carolina to take steps toward
- bringing to proper punishment in North Carolina an outlaw named
- Appleweight. I have the honour to inform you that that person is now
- in jail at Kildare, Dilwell County, North Carolina, properly guarded
- by men who will not flinch. If necessary I will support them with
- every South Carolinian able to bear arms. This being the case, a
- _casus belli_ no longer exists, and to prevent the effusion of blood
- I beg you to cease your hostile demonstrations on our frontier.
-
- Our men seized a few prisoners during the night, and I am willing to
- meet you to arrange an exchange on the terms proper in such cases.
-
- I am, sir, your obedient servant,
-
- HENRY MAINE GRISWOLD,
- For the Governor of South Carolina.
-
-“The nerve of it! The sublime cheek of it!” exclaimed Ardmore, though
-the sight of Griswold’s well-known handwriting had shaken him for the
-moment.
-
-“As a bluffer your little friend is quite a wonder,” was Jerry’s only
-comment when she had read the letter.
-
-Ardmore promptly wrote on the back of Griswold’s letter this reply:--
-
- Henry Maine Griswold, Esq.,
- Assistant Professor of Admiralty,
- Camp Buzzard, S. C.:
-
- SIR--Appleweight is under strong guard in the jail at Turner Court
- House, Mingo County, South Carolina. I shall take pleasure in meeting
- you at Ardsley at five o’clock this afternoon for the proposed
- exchange of prisoners. To satisfy your curiosity the man Appleweight
- will be produced there for your observation and identification.
-
- I have the honour, sir, to remain, with high regard and admiration,
- your obliged and obedient servant,
-
- THOMAS ARDMORE,
- Acting Governor of North Carolina.
-
-“Putting ‘professor’ on that will make him crazy,” remarked Ardmore to
-Jerry.
-
-The messenger departed, but recrossed the Raccoon shortly with a
-formal note agreeing to an armistice until after the meeting proposed
-at Ardsley.
-
-“Colonel Daubenspeck, you may withdraw your men and go into camp until
-further orders,” said Jerry, and the notes of the bugle singing the
-recall rose sweetly upon the air.
-
-“By George,” said Ardmore, as he and Jerry rode away, “we’ll throw it
-into old Grissy in a way that will jar the professor. But when it comes
-to the exchange of prisoners, I must tell the boys to bring up that
-chap I locked in the corn-crib. I had clean forgotten him.”
-
-“I don’t think you mentioned him, Mr. Ardmore, but I suppose he’s one
-of the Appleweight ruffians.”
-
-“Undoubtedly,” replied Ardmore, whose spirits had never been higher,
-“though the fellow was not without his pleasant humour. He insisted
-with great vigour that he is the governor of South Carolina.”
-
-“I wonder”--and Jerry spoke wistfully--“I wonder where papa is!”
-
-“Well, he’s not in the corn-crib; be sure of that.”
-
-“Papa looks every inch the statesman,” replied Jerry proudly, “and in
-his frock-coat no one could ever mistake him for other than the patriot
-he is.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-IN THE RED BUNGALOW.
-
-
-“What do you think,” cried Mrs. Atchison, glowing before Jerry and
-Ardmore on their return; “we have a new guest!”
-
-“In the coal cellar?” inquired her brother.
-
-“No, in the blue room adjoining Miss Dangerfield’s! And what do you
-think! It is none other than the daughter of the governor of South
-Carolina.”
-
-“Oh, Nellie!” gasped Ardmore.
-
-“Why, what’s the matter?” demanded Mrs. Atchison. “I had gone in to
-Turner’s to look at that memorial church we’re building there, and
-I learned from the rector that Miss Osborne, with only a maid, was
-stopping at that wretched hole called the Majestic Hotel. I had met
-Miss Osborne in Washington last winter, and you may forget, Tommy, that
-on our mother’s side I am a Daughter of the Seminole War, a society of
-which Miss Osborne is the president-general.--I hope Miss Osborne’s
-presence here will not be offensive to you, Miss Dangerfield. She
-seemed reluctant to come, but I simply would not take no, and I am to
-send for her at four o’clock.”
-
-“Miss Osborne’s presence is not only agreeable to me, Mrs. Atchison,”
-responded Jerry, “but I shall join you in welcoming her. I have heard
-that the ancestor through whom Barbara Osborne derives membership in
-the Daughters of the Seminole War was afterward convicted of robbing
-an orphan of whose estate he was the trusted executor, and such being
-the case I feel that the commonest Christian charity demands that I
-should treat her with the most kindly consideration. I shall gather
-some roses, with your permission, and have them waiting in her room
-when she arrives, with my card and compliments.”
-
-Ardmore had rarely been so busy as during the afternoon. Several more
-newspaper correspondents were found prowling about the estate, and
-they were added to the howling mob in the Ardsley cellars. Collins
-searched them and read their instructions with interest. They were all
-commissioned to find the lost governors of North and South Carolina;
-and a number were instructed to investigate a rumour that North
-Carolina was about to default her bonds through malfeasance of the
-state treasurer. It was clear from the fact that practically every
-newspaper in New York had sent its best man to the field that the world
-waited anxiously for news from the border.
-
-“It has all happened very handily for us,” said Collins; “we’ve got the
-highest-priced newspaper talent in the world right under our hands,
-and before we turn them loose we’ll dictate exactly what history is to
-know of these dark proceedings. Those fellows couldn’t get anything out
-of either Kildare or Turner’s for some time, as Paul’s men have cut
-the wires and Cooke has operators at the railway stations to see that
-nothing is sent out.”
-
-“When we’ve settled with Griswold and proved to him that he’s lost out
-and that the real Mr. Appleweight is in his jail, not ours, we’ll have
-to find Governor Dangerfield and be mighty quick about it,” replied
-Ardmore. “Paul says there’s a battery of South Carolina artillery
-guarding the Dilwell County jail, and that they’ve fooled the people
-into thinking they’re North Carolina troops, and nobody can get within
-four blocks of the jail. They must have somebody in jail at Kildare.
-I don’t like the looks of it. I hope those men we left guarding old
-Appleweight in the Mingo jail know their business. It would be nasty to
-lose that old chap after all the trouble he’s given us.”
-
-“They’ll keep him or eat him, if I know old Cookie.”
-
-Jerry--a pleasing figure to contemplate in white lawn and blue
-ribbons--suggested that the meeting take place in the library, as
-more like an imperial council chamber; but Ardmore warmly dissented
-from this. A peace should never be signed, he maintained, in so large
-a house as Ardsley. At Appomattox and in many other cases that he
-recalled, the opponents met in humble farmhouses. It would be well,
-however, to have the meeting on the estate, for the property would thus
-become historic, but it would never do to have it take place in the
-Ardsley library.
-
-“There should be great difficulty in securing pens and paper,” Ardmore
-continued, “and we must decline to accept the swords of our fallen
-foes.”
-
-They finally agreed on the red bungalow as convenient and sufficiently
-modest for the purpose. And so it was arranged.
-
-A few minutes before five the flag of North Carolina was hung from the
-wide veranda of the bungalow. At the door stood an armed militiaman.
-Colonel Daubenspeck had been invited to be present, and he appeared
-accompanied by several other officers in full uniform. Word of the
-meeting-place had been sent through the lines to the enemy, and the
-messenger rode back with Griswold, who was followed quickly by the
-adjutant-general of South Carolina and half a dozen other officers. The
-guard saluted as Griswold ran up the steps of the veranda, and at the
-door Ardmore met him and greeted him formally.
-
-At the end of a long table Jerry Dangerfield sat with her arms folded.
-She wore, as befitting the occasion, a gray riding-dress and a gray
-felt hat perched a trifle to one side.
-
-She bowed coldly to Griswold, whose hand, as he surveyed the room and
-glanced out at the flag that fluttered in the doorway, went to his
-moustache with that gesture that Ardmore so greatly disliked; but
-Griswold again bowed gravely to his adversaries.
-
-“Miss Dangerfield, and gentlemen,” began Griswold, with an air of
-addressing a supreme tribunal, “I believe this whole matter depends
-upon the arrest of one Appleweight, a well-known outlaw of North
-Carolina----”
-
-“I beg your pardon----”
-
-It was Jerry who interrupted him, her little fists clenching, a glint
-of fire in her eyes.
-
-“It is for me to ask your pardon, Miss Dangerfield! Let us agree that
-this person is an unworthy citizen of any state, and proceed. It has
-been your endeavour to see this man under arrest in South Carolina,
-thus relieving North Carolina or her chief executive of responsibility
-for him. We, on our side, have used every effort to lodge Appleweight
-in jail on your side of the state line. Am I correct?”
-
-Jerry nodded affirmatively.
-
-“Then, Miss Dangerfield, and gentlemen, I must tell you that you have
-lost your contention, for Appleweight spent last night in jail at
-Kildare, and to secure his safe retention there, we generously lent
-your state a few of our militia to guard him. The proceeding was a
-trifle irregular, we admit--the least bit _ultra vires_--but the
-peculiar situation seemed to justify us.”
-
-“There are not two Bill Appleweights,” remarked Colonel Daubenspeck. “I
-assure you that the real criminal spent last night in jail at Turner
-Court House, guarded by trustworthy men, and we are able to produce
-him.”
-
-“The quickest way to settle this point, Professor Griswold, is by
-bringing in your man,” remarked Ardmore icily.
-
-“On the other hand”--and Griswold’s tone was confident--“as there is no
-reason for doubt that we have the real Appleweight, and as we are on
-your territory and in a measure your guests, it is only fair that you
-produce the man you believe to be Appleweight, that we may have a look
-at him first.”
-
-“Certainly,” said Jerry. “Our prisoner does not deny his identity. It
-gives us pleasure to produce him.”
-
-At a nod from Colonel Daubenspeck the orderly at the door ran off to
-where Cooke and the prisoner waited.
-
-In the interval there was a general exchange of introductions at the
-bungalow. The adjutant-general of South Carolina was in a merry mood,
-and began chaffing Ardmore upon the deadly character of apples found in
-his orchard beyond the Raccoon.
-
-“I deeply regret,” said Ardmore, rubbing his chin, “that the
-adjutant-general of North Carolina is suffering from a severe attack of
-_paralysis agitans_, and will be unable to meet with us.”
-
-“I deplore the fact,” replied the adjutant-general of South Carolina,
-“for one of our scouts picked up a darky in the highway a while ago
-who had on a uniform dress-coat with the initials ‘R. G.’ sewed in the
-pocket.”
-
-“If you will return that garment to me, General,” said Ardmore, “I will
-see that it reaches Colonel Gillingwater by special messenger, where,
-upon his couch of pain, he chafes over his enforced absence from the
-field of danger.”
-
-Steps sounded on the veranda, and all rose as Cooke appeared in the
-door, leading his handcuffed prisoner, who stood erect and glared at
-the company in gloomy silence.
-
-“This man,” said Ardmore, “we declare to be Bill Appleweight, _alias_
-Poteet.--I ask you, sir”--he addressed the prisoner--“to state whether
-you are not known by one or both of these names?”
-
-The man nodded his head and grumbled a reluctant affirmative.
-
-“Professor Griswold,” Ardmore went on, “the gentleman in charge of
-the prisoner is Roger Cooke, for many years in the secret service of
-the United States. He now conducts a private agency, and is in my
-employ.--Mr. Cooke, I will ask you whether you identify this man as
-Appleweight?”
-
-“There is no doubt of it whatever. I have known him for years. I once
-arrested him for moonshining, and he served a year in the penitentiary
-as the result of that arrest.--You will pardon me, sir,” Cooke
-continued, addressing Griswold directly, “but this is undoubtedly the
-man you had yourself captured at Mount Nebo Church two nights ago,
-but who was taken from you, as you may not know, by Miss Geraldine
-Dangerfield. She was lost in the woods and came upon the captive, much
-to her own surprise.”
-
-Griswold lifted his brows in amazement and turned towards Jerry.
-
-“If that is the case, Miss Dangerfield, I salute you! I am sorry to
-confess, however, that I did not myself see the man who was captured
-by my friends at the church, owing, it appears, to Miss Dangerfield’s
-prompt and daring action, and the regrettable cowardice of my men. I
-want to say to you, gentlemen, in all frankness, that I am greatly
-astonished at what you tell me. Our prisoner is about the same height
-as this man, has the same slight stoop in the shoulders, and the same
-short beard; but there the resemblance ends.”
-
-Ardmore was trying not to show too plainly his joy at Griswold’s
-discomfiture. None of the South Carolina officers had ever seen
-Appleweight, as they lived remote from the scene of his exploits.
-Habersham’s men, who had so signally failed in the descent upon Mount
-Nebo Church, had taken to the woods on the appearance of the state
-soldiery along the border, and could not be found to identify the man
-seized at the house on the creek. Habersham had discreetly declined
-to support Griswold’s venture at the last moment; to do so would, he
-pleaded, ruin his chances of political preferment in the future; or
-worse things might, indeed, happen if he countenanced and supported the
-armed invasion of North Carolina by South Carolina militia. The zealous
-young militiamen who had captured the stranger in the house on the
-creek had pronounced the man Appleweight, and their statement had been
-accepted and emphasized when the man was taken before Griswold, to whom
-he had stubbornly refused to make any statement whatever.
-
-“Now that you cannot deny that we have the real Appleweight,” began
-Jerry, “who is, you must remember, a prisoner of the state of South
-Carolina, and must be returned to the Mingo County jail at once, I
-think we may as well look at your prisoner, Professor Griswold. He
-may be one of Mr. Appleweight’s associates in business; but as we are
-interested only in the chief culprit, the identity of the man you hold
-is of very little interest to us.”
-
-“If,” said Griswold, “he is not Appleweight, the original blown in the
-bottle----”
-
-“Jug, if you please!” interposed Ardmore very seriously.
-
-“Then we don’t care about him, and I shall make you a present of him.”
-
-“Or,” remarked Ardmore, “I might exchange him for a ruffian I captured
-myself down on the Raccoon. He seemed quite insane, declaring himself
-to be the governor of South Carolina, and I locked him up in a
-corn-crib for safe keeping.”
-
-“Any man,” said Jerry, lifting her chin slightly, “who would
-impersonate the governor of South Carolina would, beyond question, be
-utterly insane and an object of compassion. Professor Griswold, will
-you please produce your imaginary Appleweight, as at this hour Mrs.
-Atchison usually serves tea. Let us therefore make haste.”
-
-One of Griswold’s retinue ran off to summon the prisoner, who was
-guarded by half a dozen soldiers near at hand.
-
-The company in the bungalow were all laughing heartily at some sally
-by the adjutant-general of South Carolina, who insisted upon giving a
-light note to the proceedings, when hurried footsteps sounded on the
-veranda, and a sergeant appeared in the doorway and saluted.
-
-The adjutant-general, annoyed at being interrupted in the telling of
-a new story, frowned and bade the sergeant produce his prisoner. At
-once a man was thrust into the room, a tall man, with a short, dark
-beard and slightly stooping shoulders. The strong light at his back
-made it difficult for the people grouped about the table to see his
-face clearly, but the air somehow seemed charged with electricity, and
-all bent forward, straining for a sight of the captive. As he stood
-framed in the doorway his face was slowly disclosed to them, and there
-appeared to be a humorous twinkle in his eyes. Before any one spoke, he
-broke out in a hearty laugh. Then a cry rose piercingly in the quiet
-room--a cry of amazement from the lips of Jerry Dangerfield, who had
-taken a step forward.
-
-“Oh, papa!” she cried.
-
-“The Governor!” roared Colonel Daubenspeck, leaping across the table.
-
-“It’s Governor Dangerfield!” shouted half a dozen men in chorus.
-
-At this moment Mrs. Atchison and Miss Barbara Osborne stole softly in
-and ranged themselves at the back of the room.
-
-The governor of North Carolina alone seemed to derive any pleasure from
-the confusion and astonishment caused by his appearance. He crossed to
-the table and took his daughter’s hand.
-
-“Jerry, what part do you play in these amateur theatricals?”
-
-Jerry rose, thrusting her handkerchief into her sleeve, and her lips
-trembled slightly, though whether with mirth or some soberer emotion it
-would be difficult to say. The room at once gave her attention, seeing
-that she was about to speak.
-
-“Papa, before these people I am not ashamed to confess that during your
-absence from the seat of government I took it upon myself to fill your
-office to the best of my ability, finding that many important matters
-were pressing and that you had gone into exile without leaving your
-address behind. I made Mr. Ardmore, the gentleman on my left in the
-pearl-gray suit and lavender tie, first private secretary, and then,
-when occasion required, acting governor, though in reality he did
-nothing without my entire approval. I am happy to say that nothing has
-been neglected, and your reputation as a great statesman and friend of
-the people has not suffered at our hands. We arrested Mr. Appleweight,
-who is standing there by the fireplace, and landed him in the Mingo
-County jail as a joke on Governor Osborne, and to appease the demands
-of the press and the Woman’s Civic League of Raleigh. The copies of our
-correspondence on this and other matters will tell you the story more
-completely. And as for Governor Osborne, I have taught him a lesson
-in the etiquette that should obtain between governors that he is not
-likely to forget. You will find that we have not hesitated to grant
-pardons, and we have filled, in one instance, the office of justice of
-the peace, made vacant by resignation. The key to your desk, papa, is
-behind the clock on the mantel in your private room.”
-
-“Ladies and gentlemen,” began the governor of North Carolina, laying a
-hand upon the table, and with the other seizing the lapel of his rough,
-brown coat--a pose made familiar by all his photographs--“the jails of
-North Carolina are more uncomfortable than I had believed them to be,
-and I have taken a slight cold which compels me to be briefer than this
-interesting occasion demands. You have witnessed here an exhibition
-of filial devotion that has, I am sure, touched us all. It is well
-worth while for me to have suffered arrest and imprisonment to realize
-the depth of my daughter’s love, and the jealousy with which she has
-safeguarded my private and public honour.”
-
-He felt for a handkerchief and touched it gently to his eyes; but
-Collins declared afterward that Governor Dangerfield was exactly like
-his daughter, and that one never could be sure that his mirth was
-genuine.
-
-“I was aware only yesterday, when I saw a newspaper for the first time
-in a week, that political capital was being made of my absence from
-Raleigh; and that my dear friend, the governor of South Carolina, also,
-was being called to account for flinching in the face of imperative
-duty.”
-
-“Your friend, Governor?” cried Ardmore, unable to restrain himself.
-
-“Certainly, Mr. Ardmore,” continued Governor Dangerfield. “That angry
-parting of ours at New Orleans was all for effect to get space in the
-newspapers. We had confided to each other that the cares of state had
-worn us to an intolerable point, and that we must have rest. Brother
-Appleweight had, I confess, given us both a great deal of annoyance,
-and to be frank, neither Osborne nor I wished to take the initiative in
-his case. So we resolved to disappear, and go to some quiet place for
-rest. We outfitted with old clothes and came to the border. Governor
-Osborne has a farm over there somewhere in Mingo County, and we made
-it our headquarters; but in roaming about we came upon that charming
-shanty of yours, Mr. Ardmore, down on the Raccoon. The house was
-deserted, and finding the marks of the official survey running clearly
-through the timber, we were amused to find that the house was partly in
-North, partly in South, Carolina. The thing touched our fancy. A negro
-cooked for us--what has become of him I do not know. We cut ourselves
-off from the mail and telegraph and received no newspapers until a
-packet came yesterday, and it was only a few minutes after I saw from
-the headlines of the _Vidette_ what a row was going on that I realized
-that strange things may happen when the king goes a-hunting.”
-
-As he paused, Miss Osborne stepped forward, the men making way for her.
-
-“If this be true, Governor Dangerfield, may I ask you, sir, what has
-become of my father?”
-
-Governor Dangerfield smiled.
-
-“I regret, Miss Barbara, that I cannot answer that question; I must
-refer it to my daughter.”
-
-“Miss Osborne,” responded Jerry, “while I should be glad to assist you
-in recovering your father as a slight return for your having placed
-mine in the Dilwell County jail and kept him there all night, I regret
-that I am unable to be of the slightest help to you.”
-
-The perspiration was beading Ardmore’s brow, but he smiled as though in
-joy at Jerry’s readiness.
-
-“We have taken a number of prisoners,” said Ardmore, meeting the
-governor’s glance, “and while I do not think Governor Osborne can
-possibly be of the number, yet I shall be glad to produce them all.
-There’s a person in the corn-crib a little way across country whom
-I captured myself. I believe he’s now tied to a mulberry tree a
-little way down the road, as he pretended to be the governor of South
-Carolina, and I feared that he might do himself some harm.”
-
-Before he ceased speaking big Paul strode in, an angry and crestfallen
-man following at his heels.
-
-“Oh, father!”
-
-It was Barbara Osborne’s voice; but whatever of anger or joy there may
-have been in her words and tone was lost in the shout of laughter that
-broke from Governor Dangerfield. The governor of South Carolina was in
-no such high humour. He sputtered, swore, stamped his foot, and struck
-the table with his clenched hand as he demanded to know the meaning of
-the outrageous indignity to which he had been subjected.
-
-The more his friend stormed the more Governor Dangerfield roared with
-laughter, but when he could control himself he laid an arresting arm on
-Governor Osborne’s shoulder, and spoke to Barbara.
-
-“Barbara, may I ask whether you, like my own Jerry, have been
-protecting your father’s fair name during his absence; and does that
-account for my night spent in the jail at Kildare? If so----”
-
-Governor Dangerfield’s laughter got the better of him, but Barbara,
-with dignity, turned to her father.
-
-“It is quite true, that finding your absence occasioning serious
-remark, while your attorney-general took advantage of your absence to
-annoy me in a most cowardly fashion, with the kind help of Professor
-Griswold, I did all in my power to thwart your enemies, and to show
-the people of South Carolina that you were not a man to evade the
-responsibilities of your office. As to the details of these matters I
-prefer, father, to speak to you in private.”
-
-“Professor Griswold?” repeated Governor Osborne haughtily. “I believe
-I have not the honour of the gentleman’s acquaintance;” whereupon, to
-ease the situation, Ardmore presented his old friend.
-
-“Governor Osborne, allow me to present Professor Henry Maine Griswold,
-associate professor of admiralty in the University of Virginia, and the
-author of----”
-
-“Griswold?” The anger slowly left Governor Osborne’s face. “Do I
-understand that you belong to the Virginia tide-water family of that
-name? Then, sir, without hesitation I offer you my hand.”
-
-“Osborne,” cried Governor Dangerfield, “we have every reason to be
-proud of our daughters. They have done their best for us; and they seem
-to have acted wisely in accepting aid from these gentlemen; and now,
-what is to be done with Bill Appleweight?”
-
-“We have with us that requisition you left on your desk,” exclaimed
-Barbara, turning to her father.
-
-“I’m afraid that won’t help,” laughed Governor Osborne, “that
-requisition, Barbara, is purely Pickwickian in character.”
-
-“The disposition of Appleweight,” said Cooke, “is a matter of delicacy
-for both of you gentlemen, and you will pardon me for thrusting myself
-forward, but that this affair may end happily for all, neither North
-nor South Carolina should bear the burden of prosecuting a man to
-whom--we may say it as between friends here--the governors of both
-states are under some trifling obligations.”
-
-The governor of North Carolina exchanged a glance and a nod with the
-governor of South Carolina.
-
-“Therefore,” resumed Cooke, “we must hit upon a plan of action that
-will eliminate both states from the controversy. I will, with your
-permission, turn Appleweight over to the United States revenue officers
-who are even now in this neighbourhood looking for him.”
-
-“No!” cried Jerry. “We shall do nothing of the kind! I met Mr.
-Appleweight under peculiar circumstances, but I must say that I formed
-a high opinion of his chivalry, and I beg that we allow him to take a
-little trip somewhere until the Woman’s Civic League of Raleigh and
-the carping Massachusetts press have found other business, and he can
-return in peace to his home.”
-
-“That,” said Governor Osborne, “meets my approval.”
-
-“And I,” Ardmore added, “will give him my private caboose in which to
-cruise the larger Canadian cities.”
-
-Two more prisoners were now brought in.
-
-“Governor Dangerfield,” continued Ardmore, “here is your state
-treasurer, who had sought to injure you by defaulting the state bonds
-due to-day, which is the first of June. And that frowsy person with Mr.
-Foster is Secretary Billings, of the Bronx Loan and Trust Company, who
-has treated me at times with the greatest injustice and condescension.
-Whether Treasurer Foster has the money with which to meet those bonds I
-do not know; but I do know that I have to-day paid them in full through
-the Buckhaw National Bank of Raleigh.”
-
-Colonel Daubenspeck leaped to his feet and swung his cap. He proposed
-three cheers for Jerry Dangerfield; and three more for Barbara Osborne;
-and then the two governors were cheered three times three; and when the
-bungalow had ceased to ring, it was seen that Ardmore and Griswold were
-in each other’s arms.
-
-“Surely, by this time,” said Mrs. Atchison, “you have adjusted enough
-of these weighty matters for one day, and I beg that you will all dine
-with us at Ardsley to-night at eight o’clock, where my brother and I
-will endeavour to mark in appropriate fashion the signing of peace
-between your neighbouring kingdoms.”
-
-“For Governor Osborne and myself I accept, madam,” replied Governor
-Dangerfield, “providing the flowing frock-coats, which are the vesture
-and symbol of our respective offices, are still in the log house on the
-Raccoon where I became a prisoner.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-ROSÆ MUNDI.
-
-
-Mrs. Atchison and Ardmore had given their last touches to the
-preparations for the dinner. Every window of the great house shone and
-a myriad of lanterns illuminated the lawns and terraces. The flags of
-North and South Carolina were everywhere entwined; nor were the stars
-and stripes neglected. They surveyed the long table in the dining-room,
-where gold and silver and crystal were bright upon the snowy napery.
-
-“The matter of precedence is serious, Tommy,” urged Mrs. Atchison. “I
-cannot for the life of me remember what two monarchs do about entering
-a room at the same time.”
-
-“Nor do I, Nellie,” said Ardmore; “unless they sprint for the door, and
-the one who gets through first takes the head of the table. Still, that
-would be undignified, particularly if the kings were old and fat, and
-if they bumped going through the door and took a header it would jar
-the divine right.”
-
-“Here in democratic America,” said Griswold, joining them, “there can
-be no such preposterous idea of precedence.”
-
-“I should think better of that notion, Professor Griswold,” laughed
-Mrs. Atchison, “if I had never seen the goats carefully shepherded to
-keep them away from the lambs at functions in Washington. Democracy
-may be a political triumph, but it is certainly deficient socially.
-Personally I have always wished to bring myself in touch with the poor.
-Ardy is quite right that our own kind are distinctly uninteresting.”
-
-“You ought to remember, Nellie, that your idea of going slumming in a
-purple coupé and dressed up in your best rags is not well calculated to
-inspire confidence and affection among the submerged. But how to handle
-two governors has me fussed. You are the hostess, and it’s for you to
-decide which excellency shall take you in. I see no way out but to
-match for it.”
-
-“That will be unnecessary,” said Mrs. Atchison, “for the doors and the
-hall are broad enough for a dozen governors to march in abreast.”
-
-“That would never do, Nellie! You don’t understand these things. You
-can’t hitch up a brace of American governors in a team and drive them
-like a pair of horses. At least, speaking for the Old North State, I
-will say that we can never consent to any such compromise.”
-
-“And I, speaking for the great Palmetto Commonwealth, not less
-emphatically reject the idea!” declared Griswold.
-
-“Then,” said Mrs. Atchison, “there is only one possible solution. When
-the rest of us have entered the dining-room and taken our places, a
-bugle will sound; the governor of North Carolina shall enter from the
-north door; the governor of South Carolina from the south door, and
-advance to seats facing each other midway of the table. Professor
-Griswold, you are an old friend of the family, and you shall yourself
-take me in to dinner.”
-
-The members of Mrs. Atchison’s house party, well distributed among
-the official guests, were still somewhat at a loss to know what had
-happened, but it seemed to be in the air that Tommy Ardmore had at
-last done something, though just what was not wholly clear. It was
-sufficiently obvious, however, that the little girl with blue eyes
-who had the drollest possible way of talking, and whom one never
-seemed able to take off guard, had seized strong hold upon the master
-of Ardsley; and she, on her part, treated him with the most provoking
-condescension. It was agreed by all that Miss Osborne was distinguished
-and lovely and that Professor Griswold did not seem out of place at her
-side.
-
-The talk grew general after the first restraint was over, and Mrs.
-Atchison dropped just the right word here and there to keep the ball
-rolling. Governor Osborne had generously forgotten and forgiven his
-painful incarceration in the corn-crib, and he and Governor Dangerfield
-vied with each other in avowing their determination to live up to the
-high standards that had been set for them by their daughters.
-
-Both governors had at almost the same moment turned down their glasses.
-It even seemed that they had been drilled in the part, so dexterous
-were they in reversing them, so nimbly did they put from them the hope
-of wine. The members of the house party noted this act of the two
-governors with well-bred surprise; and Ardmore was grieved, feeling
-that in some measure the illustrious guests were criticising his
-hospitality. The butler at this moment spoke to him, and much relieved
-he smiled and nodded. A moment later two jugs, two little brown jugs,
-were carried in, and one was placed quietly in front of each governor
-at precisely the same moment. Expectation was instantly a-tiptoe.
-
-“Gentlemen,” said Ardmore, addressing the governors, “these jugs have
-just been left at the house by our old friend, Mr. Bill Appleweight,
-_alias_ Poteet, with his compliments, for the governors of the two
-greatest states in the Union. I note that there’s a bit of pink calico
-around the stopper of Governor Dangerfield’s jug, while Governor
-Osborne’s is garnished with blue and white gingham.”
-
-Governor Osborne rose.
-
-“In politics,” he began, resting his hand gently on the jug, “it would
-be a fine thing if we could all live up to our noblest ideals, but
-unfortunately we must be all things to all men. What I have here is
-not merely the testimonial of a valued constituent, but something much
-subtler than that, ladies and gentlemen--a delicate proof that those
-of us who would command the good-will and suffrages of the people must
-keep a careful eye on the weather-vane. This jug, which you probably
-all believe contains the rude product of some hidden still, is as
-equivocal as a political platform. I will illustrate my meaning.”
-
-All eyes were bent upon the governor of South Carolina as he picked up
-the jug, twisted the cob stopper for a moment, and then poured into
-a tumbler which the butler placed for him a clear white fluid; then,
-turning the stopper slightly, he poured into another glass a thick
-milk-like liquid.
-
-“When among my constituents I almost invariably call for a gourd for
-drinking purposes in preference to a tumbler; but in this company I
-shall abandon a custom of the plain people and yield to the habits of
-the sons of Mammon. I am here, I take it, once more in my official
-capacity as governor of South Carolina, and as I am not one to offend
-the best sentiments of my people, I pledge you, my friends, not in
-the untaxed corn whisky of Appleweight’s private still, but in the
-excellent and foamy buttermilk of Mrs. Appleweight’s homely churn.”
-
-As he concluded, Governor Dangerfield rose and performed exactly
-the same solemn rite with the jug before him, pouring whisky into
-one glass, buttermilk into the other, and leaning across the table
-he touched his tumbler of buttermilk to that extended by Governor
-Osborne. When the applause that greeted this exchange of courtesies
-had subsided, Governor Dangerfield was still standing, and in a quiet
-conversational tone, and with a manner engagingly frank, he said:
-
-“Before it seemed expedient to follow the reform bandwagon, I held
-certain principles touching the drinking habit. But the American bar
-has destroyed drinking as a fine art, and it has now become a vulgar
-habit. In the good old times no gentleman ever jumped at his liquor.
-He took it with a casual air, even with a sanctifying reluctance.
-The idea of rushing into a public place and gulping your liquor is
-repugnant to the most primary of the instincts that govern gentlemen.
-To precipitate a gill of applejack into that most delicate organism,
-the human stomach, without the slightest warning, is an insult to the
-human body--ay, more, it is an outrage upon man’s very soul. The aim of
-liquor, ladies and gentlemen, is to stay and lift the spirit, not to
-degrade it. Drinking at proper intervals ceased to be respectable at a
-fixed date in human progress--to be exact, at the moment when it was no
-longer a mere incident of personal or social recreation but had become
-a sociological and political issue, staggering drunkenly under a weary
-burden of most painful statistics.”
-
-“You are eminently right, Governor Dangerfield,” said the governor of
-South Carolina, helping himself to the salted almonds; “but you have
-used a phrase which piques my curiosity. Will you kindly enlighten us
-as to how you interpret proper intervals?”
-
-“With greatest pleasure,” responded Governor Dangerfield. “I remember,
-as though it were yesterday, my venerable grandfather saying that no
-gentleman should ever approach the sideboard oftener than once before
-breakfast, and he was himself a very early riser. I discount this,
-however, because he always slept with a jug of Cuban rum--the annual
-offering of a West Indian friend--easily within his reach at the head
-of his bed. It was his practice for years to sip a little rum and water
-while he shaved. He was a gentleman if ever I knew one, and as I look
-upon him as a standard authority in all matters of deportment and
-morals, I may safely cite him further in answer to your question.
-
-“During the long open season in our country my grandfather constantly
-rode over the plantation in immaculate white duck, followed by a
-darky on a mule carrying a basket. On our ancestral estate there
-were many springs giving the purest and coldest of water, and these
-were providentially scattered at the most convenient intervals for
-my grandfather’s comfort. And as a slight return to nature for what
-she had done for him in this particular, my grandfather, in his early
-youth, had planted mint around all these springs. I need hardly point
-out the advantages of this happiest of combinations--a spring of clear,
-icy water; the pungent bouquet of lush mint; the ample basket borne
-by a faithful negro, and my grandfather, in his white duck suit and a
-Panama hat a yard wide, seated by the mossy spring, selecting with the
-most delicate care the worthiest of the fragrant leaves.
-
-“Now”--and Governor Dangerfield smiled--“I can see that you are all
-busy guessing at the number of stops made by my grandfather in the
-course of a day, and I hasten to satisfy your curiosity. My grandfather
-always started out at six o’clock in the morning, and the springs were
-so arranged that he had to make six stops before noon, and four in the
-afternoon; but at five o’clock, when he reached home all fagged out by
-a hard day’s work and sorely needing refreshment, a pitcher of cherry
-bounce was waiting for him on the west gallery of the house. After
-that he took nothing but a night-cap on retiring for the night. To my
-friend, the governor of South Carolina, I need offer no apologies for
-my grandfather, once a senator in Congress, and a man distinguished for
-his sobriety and probity. He was an upright man and a gentleman, and
-died at ninety-two, full of years and honours, and complaining, almost
-with his last breath, of a distressing dusty feeling in the throat.”
-
-When, as time passed, it seemed that every one had told a story or
-made a speech, it was Ardmore’s inspiration that Griswold should sing
-a song. The associate professor of admiralty in the University of
-Virginia had already pledged the loyalty of his state to her neighbours
-and twin sisters, the Carolinas, and Barbara, who wore a great bunch
-of her own white roses, had listened to him with a new respect and
-interest, for he spoke well, with the special grace of speech that men
-of his state have, and with little turns of humour that kept the table
-bubbling merrily.
-
-“I shall comply with your request, my friends, if you can bear with the
-poor voice of one long out of tune, and if our host still has in the
-house a certain ancient guitar I remember from old times. But I must
-impose one condition, that I shall not again in this place be called
-by my academic title. I have known wars and the shock of battle along
-the Raccoon”--here his hand went to his lips in the gesture that had
-so often distressed Ardmore--“and I have known briefly the joy of a
-military title. Miss Osborne conferred on me in an emergency the noble
-title of major, and by it I demand hereafter to be known.”
-
-The governor of South Carolina was promptly upon his feet.
-
-“Henry Maine Griswold,” he said in his most official manner, “I hereby
-appoint you a major on my staff with all the rights, privileges, and
-embarrassments thereunto belonging, and you shall to-morrow attend me
-personally in my inspection of our troops in the field.”
-
-As the guitar was placed in Griswold’s hands, Ardmore caused all
-the lights to be turned out save those on the table. In the soft
-candle-glow Ardmore bent his face upon Jerry, who had been merrily
-chaffing him at intervals, but who feigned at other times an utter
-ignorance of his presence on earth. As Griswold’s voice rose in the
-mellow dusk it seemed to Ardmore that the song spoke things he could
-not, like his friend, put into utterance, and something fine and sweet
-and hallowed--that sweet sabbath of the soul that comes with first
-love--possessed him, and he ceased looking at Jerry, but bent his head
-and was lost in dreams. For the song and the voice were both beyond
-what the company had expected. It was an old air that Griswold sang,
-and it gave charm to his words, which were those of a man who loves
-deeply and who dares speak them to the woman he loves. They rose and
-fell in happy cadences, and every word rang clear. In the longer lines
-of the song there was a quickening of time that carried the sense of
-passion, and Griswold lifted his head when he uttered them and let them
-cry out of him.
-
-One of Barbara’s white roses had fallen into her lap, and she played
-with it idly; but after the first verse it slipped from her fingers,
-and she folded her arms on the table and bent her gaze on the quiet
-flame of the candle before her. And this was the song that Griswold
-sang:
-
- Fair winds and golden suns
- Down the year’s dim aisles of gray depart;
- But you are the dear white rose of the world
- That I hide in my heart.
-
- Last leaves, and the first wild snow,
- And the earth through an iron void is whirled;
- But safe from the tempest abide in my heart,
- O dear white rose of the world!
-
- Blithe air and flashing wing.
- And awakened sap that thrills and flows;
- But hid from the riot and haste of the spring
- Sleeps one white rose.
-
- O scattered leaves of days!
- O low-voiced glories that fade and depart!
- But changeless and dear through the changing year
- Blooms one white rose in my heart.
-
-The last words hung tremulously, tenderly, on the air, and left a spell
-upon the company that no one seemed anxious to break; then there was
-long applause and cries of encore; but Ardmore, who knew that his
-friend had been greatly moved, drew attention away from him to Collins,
-who had just entered the room.
-
-The correspondent had been called away shortly before from the table,
-and he wore the serious air of one heavy with news.
-
-“I beg to report that I have just completed a treaty with the
-journalists assembled in the cellar.”
-
-“I hope, Mr. Collins, that the journalists’ convention below stairs
-realized that the lobster we sent them for supper was not canned,
-and that the mushrooms were creamed for their refreshment by Mrs.
-Atchison’s special command. It is not for us to trifle with the dignity
-of the press,” said Jerry.
-
-“The reputations of two governors and of two states are in their
-hands,” said the governor of South Carolina, with feeling. “It would
-be a distressing end of my public services if the truth of all these
-matters should be known. The fact that Governor Dangerfield and I
-had merely withdrawn from public life for a little quiet poker in
-the country would sound like the grossest immorality to my exacting
-constituency.”
-
-“Both yourself and Governor Dangerfield will be relieved to know that
-they have accepted my terms, and all is well,” responded Collins. “They
-will tell the waiting world that you have both been the guests of
-Mr. Ardmore, and that the troops assembled on the Raccoon are merely
-at their usual summer manœuvres. As for Appleweight, it has seemed
-expedient that he should be dead, and the man who has been called by
-that name of late is only an impostor seeking a little cheap notoriety.
-The boys are very sick of the cellar, and they would do even more than
-this to get away.”
-
-“Mr. Collins,” said Governor Dangerfield, rising, “your great merits
-shall not go unrewarded. I have carelessly neglected to appoint a
-delegate from North Carolina to the annual conference of the Supreme
-Lodge of the Society of American Liars shortly to meet at Lake Placid,
-New York. As a slight testimonial of my confidence and admiration, I
-hereby appoint you to represent the Old North State at that meeting,
-and your expenses shall be paid from the public purse.”
-
-“The boys wish to see your excellencies before they leave,” said
-Collins when he had acknowledged the governor’s compliment; and as he
-spoke the sound of great cheering broke through the windows, and Mrs.
-Atchison promptly rose and led the way to the broad terraces which were
-now gay with coloured lanterns.
-
-“Speech! speech!” cried the corps of correspondents. Then Ardmore
-seized Governor Osborne’s hand and led him forward to the balustrade;
-but before the governor of South Carolina could speak, the group of
-newspaper men began chanting, in the manner of a college antiphonal:
-
- What did he say to you?
- What did he say to you?
- _What did who say?_
- What did the governor of North Carolina
- SAY
- To the governor of South Carolina?
-
-“Gentlemen,” began Governor Osborne, speaking with great deliberation,
-“I am profoundly touched by the cordiality of your greeting.
-(Applause.) Amid the perplexities of my official life I am deeply
-sensible always of the consideration and generosity of our free and
-untrammelled American press. (Cheers.) Without your support and
-approval, my best aims, my sincerest endeavours in behalf of the
-people, must fall short and fail of their purpose. (A voice: You’re
-dead right about that.) I am proud of this opportunity to greet this
-most complimentary delegation of men distinguished in the noble
-profession of which Greeley, Raymond, and Dana were the high ornaments.
-(Cheers.) I look into your upturned faces as into the faces of old
-friends. But I dare not--(A voice: Oh, don’t be afraid, Governor!)--I
-dare not take too personally this expression of your good-will. It is
-not myself but the great state of South Carolina that you honour, and
-on behalf of mine own people, who have always stood sturdily for the
-great principles of the constitution (Cheers); who have failed in no
-hour of the country’s need, but have tilled their fields in peace and
-defended them in the dark days of war, I thank you, my friends, with
-all my heart, again and again.” (Applause and cheers.)
-
- What did you say to him?
- What did you say to him?
- _What did who say?_
- What did the governor of North Carolina
- SAY
- To the governor of South Carolina?
-
-“On an occasion so purely social as this,” began Governor Dangerfield,
-balancing himself lightly upon the balustrade, “it would be most
-indelicate for me to discuss any of the great issues of the day.
-(A voice: Oh, I don’t know!) I endorse, with all the strength of
-my being, and with all the sincerity of which my heart is capable,
-the stirring tribute paid to your noble profession by my friend,
-known far and near, and justly known, as the great reform governor
-of South Carolina. (Cheers.) I am proud that the American press is
-incorruptible. (Cheers.) Great commercial nation though we be, the
-American newspaper--the American newspaper, I say, is one thing that is
-never for sale. (Applause and cheers.) The temptation is strong upon
-me to take advantage of this gathering of representative journalists
-to speak--not of the fathers of the constitution, not of Jefferson or
-Jackson, but of living men and living issues (Cheers and cries of Let
-’er go!); but the hour is late (A voice: Oh, not on Broadway, William!)
-and, to repeat, it would be the height of impropriety--a betrayal of
-the bountiful hospitality we have all enjoyed (A voice: Our lobster
-was all right. Another voice, with ironical inflection: _This_ lobster
-is all right!), a betrayal, I say, of hospitality for me to do more,
-gentlemen, than to thank you, and to say that in your strong hands the
-liberties of the people are safe indeed.” (Prolonged cheering.)
-
-As the correspondents marched away to take the special train provided
-for them at Kildare by Ardmore, they continued to cheer, and they were
-still demanding, as long as their cries could be heard at Ardsley:
-
- What did he say to him?
- What did he say to him?
- _What did who say?_
- What did the governor of North Carolina
- SAY
- To the governor of South Carolina?
-
-With a sigh Ardmore left them at the great gates of Ardsley and
-returned to the house to find Jerry; but that young woman was the
-centre of a wide circle of admiring militia officers, and the master
-of Ardsley was so depressed by the spectacle that he sought a dim
-corner of the grounds where there was a stone bench by a fountain, and
-there, to his confusion, he beheld Miss Barbara Osborne and Henry Maine
-Griswold; and Miss Osborne, it seemed, was in the act of fastening a
-white rose in Professor Griswold’s coat.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-GOOD-BYE TO JERRY DANGERFIELD.
-
-
-The next morning Ardmore knocked at Griswold’s door as early as he
-dared, and went in and talked to his friend in their old intimate
-fashion. The associate professor of admiralty was shaving himself with
-care.
-
-“You won’t have any hard feelings about that scarlet fever business,
-will you, Grissy? It was downright selfish of me to want to keep the
-thing to myself, but I thought it would be fun to go ahead and carry it
-through and then show you how well I pulled it off.”
-
-“Don’t ever refer to it again, if you love me,” spluttered Griswold
-amiably, as he washed off the lather. “I, too, have ruled over a
-kingdom, and I have seen history in the making, _quorum pars magna
-fui_.”
-
-“But I say, Grissy, there is such a thing as fate and destiny and all
-that after all; don’t you believe it?”
-
-“Don’t I believe it! I know it!” thundered Griswold, reaching for a
-towel. He lifted a white rose from a glass of water where it had spent
-the night, and regarded it tenderly. “The right rose under the right
-star, and the thing’s done; the rose, the star, and the girl--the
-combination simply can’t be beat, Ardy.”
-
-Ardmore seized and wrung his friend’s hand for the twentieth time; but
-he was preoccupied, and Griswold, fastening his collar at the mirror,
-hummed softly the couplet:
-
- With the winking eye
- For my battle-cry.
-
-“Grissy!” shouted Ardmore, “she never did it!”
-
-“Oh--bless my soul, what was I saying! Why, of course she wasn’t the
-one! Not Miss Dangerfield--never!”
-
-“Well, you like her, don’t you?” demanded Ardmore petulantly.
-
-“Of course I like her, you idiot! She’s wonderful. She’s----”
-
-He frowned upon the scarf he had chosen with much care, snapped it to
-shake the wrinkles out, humming softly, while Ardmore glared at him.
-
-“She’s wise,” Griswold resumed, “with the wisdom of laughter--accept
-that, with my compliments. It’s not often I do so well before
-breakfast. And now if you’re to be congratulated before I go back to
-the groves of Academe, pray bestir yourself. At this very moment I have
-an engagement to walk with a lady before breakfast--thanks, yes, that’s
-my coat. Good-bye!”
-
-Breakfast was a lingering affair at Ardsley that morning. The two
-governors and the national guard officers who had spent the night in
-the house were not in the slightest hurry to break up the party, for
-such a company, they all knew, could hardly be assembled again. The
-governors were a trifle nervous as to the attitude of the press, in
-spite of Collins’s efforts to dictate what history should say of the
-affair on the Raccoon; but before they left the table the Raleigh
-morning papers were brought in, and it was clear that the newspaper men
-were keeping their contract.
-
-“I congratulate you, Dangerfield,” said Governor Osborne. “I only hope
-that the Columbia and Charleston papers have done half as well by me.”
-
-Both governors had decided upon an inspection of such portions of their
-militia as were assembled on the Raccoon, and a joint dress parade was
-appointed for six o’clock.
-
-Ardmore, anxious to make every one at home, saw the morning pass
-without a chance to speak to Jerry; and when he was free shortly before
-noon he was chagrined to find that she had gone for a ride over the
-estate with her father, Governor Osborne, Barbara, and Griswold. He
-went in pursuit, and to his delight found her presently sitting alone
-on a log by the Raccoon, having dismounted, it appeared, to rescue a
-fledgling robin whose cries had led her away from her companions. She
-pointed out the nest, and directed him to climb the tree and restore
-the bird. This done, he sat down beside her at a point where the
-Raccoon curved sweepingly and swung off abruptly into a new course.
-
-“I hope your father didn’t scold you for anything we did,” he began
-meekly.
-
-“No; he took it all pretty well, and promised that if I wouldn’t tell
-mamma what he had been doing--about coming down here with Governor
-Osborne just to settle an old score at poker--mamma doesn’t approve of
-cards, you know--that he would make me a present of a better riding
-horse than the one I now have, and he might even consider a trip abroad
-next summer.”
-
-“Oh, you mustn’t go abroad! It’s--it’s so lonesome abroad!”
-
-“How perfectly ridiculous! Has it never occurred to you that I am never
-lonesome, not even when I’m alone?”
-
-“Well,” said Ardmore, who saw that he was headed for a blind alley,
-“I’m glad your father was not displeased with our work.”
-
-“He’ll think we did pretty well after he’s read our correspondence in
-his letter books. I told him the stamp we stamped his name with worked
-better with the red ink pad than with the black one, which ought, at
-any rate, to be clear enough to a man of papa’s intelligence.”
-
-“Did you tell him about that railroad lawyer from New York who wanted
-to suppress the law which compels all locomotive whistles to be tuned
-to E flat?”
-
-“No; that man sent me a ten-pound box of candy, which was highly
-improper, considering papa’s position, and I should have scorned to
-accept the candy, only I had forgotten to keep his card.”
-
-“And besides,” added Ardmore gently, “you had eaten the candy. Don’t
-you remember that you left nothing but a few burnt almonds which you
-wanted to keep for eating filapenas?”
-
-“Don’t be silly!” ejaculated Jerry contemptuously.
-
-“It’s a good thing all this fuss about the Appleweight people is over,
-or I should be worse than silly. My mind was not intended for such
-heavy work.”
-
-“I think you have a good mind, Mr. Ardmore,” said Jerry, with the
-air of one who makes concessions. “You really did well in all these
-troubles, and you did much better than I thought you would the day I
-hired you for private secretary. I think I could safely recommend you
-to any governor in need of assistance.”
-
-“You talk as though you were getting ready to discharge me,” said
-Ardmore plaintively, “and I don’t want to lose my job.”
-
-“You ought to have something to do,” said Jerry thoughtfully. “As near
-as I can make out you have never done anything but study about pirates
-and collect pernicious books on the sinful life of Captain Kidd. You
-should have some larger aim in life than that, and I think I know of a
-good position that is now open, or will be as soon as papa has cleared
-out the peanut shells we left in his desk. I think you would make an
-excellent adjutant-general with full charge of the state militia.
-You have already had experience in the handling of troops, and as
-Rutherford Gillingwater never did anything but get typhoid fever to
-earn the place, I see no reason why papa should not appoint you to the
-position.”
-
-“But you have to get rid of Gillingwater first,” suggested Ardmore, his
-heart beating fast.
-
-“If you mean that he has to be removed from office, I will tell you
-now, Mr. Ardmore, that Rutherford Gillingwater will no longer sign
-himself adjutant-general of North Carolina. I removed him myself in a
-general order I wrote yesterday afternoon just before I told papa that
-you and I could not act as governor any longer, but that he must resume
-the yoke.”
-
-“But that must have been a matter of considerable delicacy, Miss
-Dangerfield, when you consider that you are engaged to marry Mr.
-Gillingwater.”
-
-“Not in the least,” said Jerry. “I broke our engagement the moment I
-saw that he came here the other night all dressed up to eat and not
-to fight, and he is now free to engage himself to that thin blonde at
-Goldsboro whom he thinks so highly intellectual.”
-
-Jerry held up her left hand and regarded its ringless fingers
-judicially, while Ardmore, his heart racing hotly against all records,
-watched her, and with a particular covetousness his eyes studied that
-trifle of a hand.
-
-Then with a quick gesture he seized her hand and raised her gently to
-her feet.
-
-“Jerry!” he cried. “From the moment you winked at me I have loved you.
-I should have followed you round the world until I found you. If you
-can marry a worthless wretch like me, if--O Jerry!”
-
-She gently freed her hand and stepped to one side, bending her head
-like a bird that pauses alarmed, or uncertain of its whereabouts,
-glancing cautiously up and down the creek.
-
-“Mr. Ardmore,” she said, “you may not be aware that when you asked me
-to be your wife--and that, I take it, was your intention--you were
-standing in South Carolina, while I stood with both feet on the sacred
-soil of the Old North State. Under the circumstances I do not think
-your proposal is legal. Moreover, unless you are quite positive which
-eye it was that so far forgot itself as to wink, I do not think the
-matter can go further.”
-
-The slightest suggestion of a smile played about her lips, but he
-was very deeply troubled, and seeing this, her eyes grew grave with
-kindness.
-
-“Mr. Ardmore, if your muscles of locomotion have not been utterly
-paralyzed, and if you will leave that particular state of the Union
-which, next to Massachusetts, I most deeply abhor, I will do what I can
-in my poor weak way--as father says in beginning his best speeches--to
-assist you to the answer.”
-
-Then for many æons, when he had his arms about her, a kiss, which he
-had intended for the lips that were so near, somehow failed of its
-destination, and fell upon what seemed to him a rose-leaf gone to
-Heaven, but which was, in fact, Jerry Dangerfield’s left eye. His being
-tingled with the most delicious of intoxications, to which the clasp
-of her arms about his neck added unnecessary though not unwelcome
-delight. Then she drew back and held him away with her finger-tips for
-an instant.
-
-“Mr. Thomas Ardmore,” she said, with maddening deliberation, “it may
-not be important, but I must tell you in all candour that it was the
-other eye.”
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
- NELSON LIBRARY
- OF COPYRIGHT FICTION.
-
-
-Popular editions of recent novels in library-style binding, uniform
-with this volume.
-
- 58. LADY ROSE’S DAUGHTER. Mrs. H. Ward.
- 57. THE PRIMROSE PATH. Mrs. Oliphant.
- 56. THOMPSON’S PROGRESS. C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne.
- 55. LONELY LADY OF GROSVENOR SQUARE. Mrs. H. de la Pasture.
- 54. LOVE AND MR. LEWISHAM. H. G. Wells.
- 53. CLARISSA FURIOSA. W. E. Norris.
- 52. CYNTHIA’S WAY. Mrs. A. Sidgwick.
- 51. RAFFLES. E. W. Hornung.
- 50. THE FOOD OF THE GODS. H. G. Wells.
- 49. FRENCH NAN. A. and E. Castle.
- 48. SPRINGTIME. H. C. Bailey.
- 47. MOONFLEET. J. Meade Falkner.
- 46. KIPPS. H. G. Wells.
- 45. THE GATELESS BARRIER. Lucas Malet.
- 44. MAJOR VIGOUREUX. “Q.”
- 43. OLD GORGON GRAHAM. G. H. Lorimer.
- 42. MRS. GALER’S BUSINESS. W. Pett Ridge.
- 41. HOUSE WITH THE GREEN SHUTTERS. George Douglas.
- 40. SELAH HARRISON. S. Macnaughtan.
- 39. MARCELLA. Mrs. Humphry Ward.
- 38. HIS HONOR AND A LADY. S. J. Duncan.
- 37. THE DUENNA OF A GENIUS. M. E. Francis.
- 36. OWD BOB. Alfred Ollivant.
- 35. EIGHT DAYS. R. E. Forrest.
- 34. LADY AUDLEY’S SECRET. Miss Braddon.
- 33. THE WAGES OF SIN. Lucas Malet.
- 32. AN ADVENTURER OF THE NORTH. Sir Gilbert Parker.
- 31. THE PIT. Frank Norris.
- 30. MONSIEUR BEAUCAIRE. Booth Tarkington.
- 29. WOODSIDE FARM. Mrs. W. K. Clifford.
- 28. RECIPE FOR DIAMONDS. C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne.
- 27. A LAME DOG’S DIARY. S. Macnaughtan.
- 26. MAN FROM AMERICA. Mrs. H. de la Pasture.
- 25. SIR JOHN CONSTANTINE. “Q.”
- 24. THE PRINCESS PASSES. C. N. and A. M. Williamson.
- 23. WHITE FANG. Jack London.
- 22. THE OCTOPUS. Frank Norris.
- 21. TRANSLATION OF A SAVAGE. Sir G. Parker.
- 20. MATTHEW AUSTIN. W. E. Norris.
- 19. THE ODD WOMEN. George Gissing.
- 18. THE LADY OF THE BARGE. W. W. Jacobs.
- 17. THE GOD IN THE CAR. Anthony Hope.
- 16. THE HOSTS OF THE LORD. Mrs. F. A. Steel.
- 15. HIS GRACE. W. E. Norris.
- 14. THE AMERICAN PRISONER. Eden Phillpotts.
- 13. IF YOUTH BUT KNEW! A. and E. Castle.
- 12. CLEMENTINA. A. E. W. Mason.
- 11. JOHN CHARITY. H. A. Vachell.
- 10. THE KING’S MIRROR. Anthony Hope.
- 9. DAVID GRIEVE. Mrs. Humphry Ward.
- 8. INCOMPARABLE BELLAIRS. A. and E. Castle.
- 7. QUISANTÉ. Anthony Hope.
- 6. NO. 5 JOHN STREET. Richard Whiteing.
- 5. ROBERT ELSMERE. Mrs. Humphry Ward.
- 4. BATTLE OF THE STRONG. Sir Gilbert Parker.
- 3. THE FORTUNE OF CHRISTINA M’NAB. S. Macnaughtan.
- 2. INTRUSIONS OF PEGGY. Anthony Hope.
- 1. THE MARRIAGE OF WILLIAM ASHE. Mrs. Humphry Ward.
-
-_Others in the Press. A new volume appears on the first and third
-Wednesdays of each month._
-
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-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-
- Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
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