CHAPTER XXXIII.SATAN AMUSES HIMSELF

CHAPTER XXXIII.SATAN AMUSES HIMSELF

“We can die;And, dying nobly, though we leave behind usThese clods of flesh, that are too massy burdens,Our living souls fly crowned with living conquests.”Beaumont and Fletcher.

“We can die;And, dying nobly, though we leave behind usThese clods of flesh, that are too massy burdens,Our living souls fly crowned with living conquests.”Beaumont and Fletcher.

“We can die;And, dying nobly, though we leave behind usThese clods of flesh, that are too massy burdens,Our living souls fly crowned with living conquests.”Beaumont and Fletcher.

“We can die;

And, dying nobly, though we leave behind us

These clods of flesh, that are too massy burdens,

Our living souls fly crowned with living conquests.”

Beaumont and Fletcher.

Vance sat in his room at the St. Charles. He seemed plunged in meditation. His fingers were playing with a little gold cross he wore round his neck; a trinket made very precious by the dying kiss and pious faith of Estelle. It recalled to him daily those memorable moments of their last earthly parting. And she now seemed so near to him, so truly alive to him, in all his perplexities, that he would hardly have been surprised to see her suddenly standing in immortal youth by his side. How could he, while thus possessed with her enchanting image, evoke from his heart any warmer sentiment than that of friendship for any other woman?

He thought of the so-called Perdita. He feared he would have to leave the city without getting any further light than Miss Tremaine had vouchsafed on the mystery that surrounded that interesting young person. One thing, on reconsideration, puzzled him and excited his distrust in Laura’s story. Perdita had pretended that the name Brown was improvised for the occasion,—assumed while she was conversing with him. Could she have been deceiving?

There were still other reflections that brought anxiety. He had not yet heard from Peek. Could that faithful friend have failed in all his inquiries for Hyde?

The immediate matter for consideration, however, was the danger that began to darken over Vance’s own path. It had been ascertained by leading Secessionists, interested in providing for the financial wants of the Rebellion, that Vance had drawn more than a hundred thousand dollars of special depositsof gold from the banks since the fall of Sumter. The question was now put to him by the usurpers, What had been done with that money? He was summoned to appear before the authorities with an explanation. A committee would be in session that very evening to hear his statement.

There was still another subject to awaken his concern. Kenrick had been called on to set at rest certain unfavorable reports, by appearing before that same committee, and accepting a captaincy in the confederate army. Onslow was to be presented with a colonel’s commission.

Vance had made preparations for the escape of Kenrick and himself. A little steam-tug called the Artful Dodger, carrying the Confederate flag, lay in the river. Everybody supposed she was a sort of spy on United States cruisers. For two days she had lain there with steam all up, ready to start at a moment’s warning. Her crew appeared to be all ashore, except the captain, mate, engineer, cook, and two stewards. The last three were black men. The other three, if they were not Yankees, had caught some peculiarities of pronunciation which the schoolmaster is vainly striving to extirpate at the North. These men saidbeeyowndforboundsandneeyowfornow.

While Vance was meditating on his arrangements, a card was brought to him. It bore the name “Simon Winslow.”

“Show him in,” said Vance to the servant.

As Simon entered, Vance recognized him as the individual who had aided him the day of the rescue of Quattles from the mob.

“There’s a sort of freemasonry, Mr. Vance,” said Winslow, “that assures me I may trust you. Your sympathies, sir, are with the Union.”

Wary and suspicious, Vance bowed, but made no reply.

“Do not doubt me,” continued Winslow. “True, I’ve been a slaveholder. But ’t is now several years since I owned a slave. Mr. Vance, I want your counsel, and, it may be, your aid. Still distrustful? How shall I satisfy you that I’m not a traitor knave?”

“Enough, Mr. Winslow! I’ll trust your threescore years and your loyal face. Tell me what I can do for you. Be seated.”

They sat down, and the old man resumed: “I have lived in this city more than forty years, Mr. Vance, but for some time I’ve foreseen that there would be little hope for a man of Northern birth unless he would consent to howl with the pack for secession and a slave confederacy. Now I’m too old to tune my bark to any such note. The consequence is, I am a marked man, liable at any moment to be seized and imprisoned. My property here is nearly all in real estate; so if that is confiscated, as it will be, I’ve no fear but Uncle Sam will soon come to give it back to me. The rest of my assets it will be hard for the keenest-scented inquisitor to find. To-day, by the death of Mrs. Ratcliff—”

“Of what Mrs. Ratcliff?” inquired Vance.

“Mrs. Carberry Ratcliff. By her death I become the legally irresponsible, and therefore all the moremorallythe responsible, manager of an estate of more than half a million, of which a considerable portion is to be used by me for the benefit of two women at present slaves.”

“But her husband will never consent to it!” interposed Vance.

“Fortunately,” replied Winslow, “all the property was some time since sent North and converted into gold. Well: I’ve just come from an interview with Ratcliff himself. He came to tell me of his wife’s death. He brought with him aquasiwill, signed a year ago, in which his wife requests me to hand over to him such property as I may consider at her disposal. He called on me to demand that I should forthwith surrender my trust; said he was in immediate need of three hundred thousand dollars. He did not dream of a rebuff. He was in high spirits. The news from Bull Run had greatly elated him. His wife’s death he plainly regarded as a happy relief. Conceive of his wrath, when, in the midst of his lofty hopes and haughty demands, I handed him a copy of the memoranda, noted down by me this very day, in which Mrs. Ratcliff makes a very different disposition of the property.”

“I know something of the man’s temper,” said Vance.

“He laughed a scornful laugh,” resumed Winslow, “and, shaking his forefinger at me, said: ‘You shall swing for this, you damned old Yankee! Your trusteeship isn’t worth astraw. I’ll have you compelled to disgorge, this very hour.’ But when I told him that the whole half-million, left in my hands by his wife’s father, was safely deposited in gold in a Northern city, the man actually grew livid with rage. He drew his Derringer on me, and would probably have shot me but for the sober second thought that told him he could make more out of me living than dead. In a frenzy he left my office. This was about half an hour ago. After reflection on our interview I concluded it would be prudent in me to escape from the city if possible, and I have come to ask if you can aid me in doing it.”

“Nothing could be more opportune,” replied Vance, “than your coming. I have laid all my plans to leave in a small steamer this very night. A young friend goes with me. You shall accompany us. Have you any preparations to make?”

“None, except to find some trustworthy person with whom I can leave an amount of money for the two slave-women of whom I spoke. For it would be dangerous, if not impracticable, to attempt to take them with us.”

“Yes, use your golden keys to unlock their chains in this case,” said Vance. “Do not show yourself again on the street. Ratcliff will at once have detectives at your heels. Hark! There’s a knock at the door. Pass into my chamber, and lock yourself in, and open only to my rapping, thus,—one, two—one, two—one.”

Winslow obeyed, and Vance, opening his parlor door, met Kenrick.

“Well, cousin,” asked Vance, “are you all ready? You look pale, man! What’s the matter?”

“Nothing,” replied Kenrick; “that is, everything. I wish I’d never seen that Perdita Brown! Look here! They’ve got her photograph in the print-shops. Beautiful, is it not?”

“Yes; it almost does her justice. Could you draw out from the Tremaines no remark which would afford a further clew?”

“After you had failed, what could I hope to do? But I’ll tell you what I ventured upon. All stratagems in love and war are venial, I suppose. Seeing that Miss Tremaine was deeply interested in your conquering self, I tried to pique her by making her think you were secretly enamored of MissBrown. She denied it warmly. I then said: ‘Reflect! Hasn’t he been very inquisitive in trying to find out all he could about her?’ She was obliged to confess that you had; and at last, after considerable skirmishing between us, she dropped this remark: ‘Those who would fall in love with her had better first find out whether she’s a lady.’ ‘She certainly appears one,’ I replied. ‘Yes,’ said Miss Tremaine, ‘and so does many a Creole who has African blood in her veins.’”

“Ah! what could that mean?” exclaimed Vance, thoughtfully. “Can that story of a paternal Brown be all a lie?”

Here there was a low knock at the door. Vance opened it, and there stood Peek.

“Come in!” said Vance, grasping him by the hand, drawing him in, and closing the door. “What news?”

And then, seeing the negro’s hesitation, Vance turned to Kenrick, and said: “Cousin, this is the man to whom you need no introduction. He was christened Peculiar Institution; but, for brevity, we call him Peek.”

Kenrick put out his hand with a face so glowing with a cordial respect that Peek could not resist the proffer.

“Now, Peek,” said Vance, “pull off that hot wig and those green spectacles, and, unless you would keep us standing, sit down and be at ease. There! That’s right. Now, first of all, did you hit upon any trace of your wife and boy?”

“None, Mr. Vance. I think they cannot be in Texas.”

“Then what of Colonel Delancy Hyde?”

“The Colonel was said to have attached himself to the fortunes of General Van Dorn. That’s all I could find out about Hyde.”

“Pity! I must unearth the fellow somehow. The fate of that poor little girl of the Pontiac haunts me night and day. My suspicions of foul play have been fully confirmed. When you have time, read this letter which I had written to send you. It will tell you of all I learnt from Quattles and Amos Slink. But you have something to ask. What is it?”

“Where shall I find Captain Onslow of the Confederate army?”

Vance pointed to Kenrick, who replied: “I know him well. He is probably now in this house. ’T is his usual time for dressing for dinner.”

“I’ve terrible news for him,” said Peek.

“What has happened?”

“On my way from Austin to Fort Duncan on the Rio Grande I passed through San Antonio. You have heard something of the persecutions of Union men in Western Texas?”

“Yes. Good Heavens! Is old Onslow among the victims?”

“He and his whole family—wife, son, and daughter—have been slain by the Confederate agents.”

The cousins looked at each other, and each grew paler as he read the other’s thought. Vance spoke first. “Go on, Peek,” he said. “Tell us what you know.”

“The old man, you see,” said Peek, “has been trying for some time to do without slave labor. He has employed a good many Germans on his lands. The slaveholders haven’t liked this. At the beginning of the Rebellion he went with old Houston and others against secession; but when Houston caved in, Onslow remained firm and plucky. He kept quiet, however, and did nothing that the Secesh authorities could find fault with. But what they wanted was an excuse for murdering him and seizing his lands. They employed three scoundrels, a broken-down lawyer, a planter, and a horse-jockey, to visit him under the pretence that they were good Union and antislavery men, trying to escape the conscription. The old man fell into the trap. Thinking he was among friends, he freely declared, that ‘he meant to keep true to the old flag; that only one of his family had turned traitor; the rest (thank God!) including the women, were thoroughly loyal; that secession would prove a failure, and end (thank God always!) in the breaking up of slavery.’ At the same time he told them he should make no resistance, either open or clandestine, to the laws of the State. The scoundrels tried to implicate him in some secret plot, but failed. They had drawn out of him enough, however, for their purposes. They left him, and straightway denounced him as an Abolitionist. A gang of cutthroats, set on by the Rebel leaders, came to hang him. Well knowing he could expect no mercy, the old man barricaded his doors, armed his household, and prepared to resist. The women loaded the guns while the men fired. Several of the assailants were wounded. The rest grew furious, and at last made an entrance by a back door,rushed in, and overpowered William Onslow, the son, who had received a ball in his neck. They dragged him out and hung him to a tree. The daughter they tried to pinion and lash to the floor, but she fought so desperately that a ruffian, whose hair she had torn out by the roots, shot her dead. The mother, in a frantic attempt to save the daughter, received a blow on the head from which she died. The old man, exhausted and fatally wounded, was disarmed, and placed under guard in the room from which he had been firing. It was not till the women and the son were dead that I arrived on the spot. I claimed to be a Secesh nigger, and the passes Mr. Vance had given me confirmed my story. The Rebels regarded me as a friend and helper. I lurked round the room where the old man was confined, and at last, through whiskey, I persuaded his guard to lie down and go to sleep. I then made myself known to the sufferer. I helped him write a letter to his surviving son. Here it is, stained as you see by the writer’s blood. You can read it, Mr. Vance. It contains no secrets. Hardly had I concealed it in my pocket, when some of the Rebels came in, seized the old man, helpless and dying as he was, and, dragging him out, hung him on a tree by the side of his son.”

Peek ended his narrative, and Vance, taking the proffered letter, slowly drew it from the envelope and unfolded it. There dropped out four strands of hair: one white, one iron-gray, one a fine and thick flaxen, and one a rich brown-black.

“I cut off those strands of hair, thinking that Captain Onslow might prize them,” said Peek.

“You did well,” remarked Vance. “And since you have authority to permit it, I will read this letter.”

He then read aloud as follows:—

“Stricken down by a death-wound, I write this. When itreaches you, my son, you will be the last survivor of yourfamily. The faithful negro who bears this letter will tell youall. You may rely on what he says. This crafty, this SatanicSlave Power has—I can use the pen no longer. But Ican dictate. The negro must be my amanuensis.”

“Stricken down by a death-wound, I write this. When itreaches you, my son, you will be the last survivor of yourfamily. The faithful negro who bears this letter will tell youall. You may rely on what he says. This crafty, this SatanicSlave Power has—I can use the pen no longer. But Ican dictate. The negro must be my amanuensis.”

“Stricken down by a death-wound, I write this. When itreaches you, my son, you will be the last survivor of yourfamily. The faithful negro who bears this letter will tell youall. You may rely on what he says. This crafty, this SatanicSlave Power has—I can use the pen no longer. But Ican dictate. The negro must be my amanuensis.”

“Stricken down by a death-wound, I write this. When it

reaches you, my son, you will be the last survivor of your

family. The faithful negro who bears this letter will tell you

all. You may rely on what he says. This crafty, this Satanic

Slave Power has—I can use the pen no longer. But I

can dictate. The negro must be my amanuensis.”

And then, in a different handwriting, the letter proceeded:—

“This Slave Power, which, for many weeks past, has been hunting down and hanging Union men, has at last laid itsbloody hand on our innocent household. Should you meet Colonel A. J. Hamilton,[34]he will tell you something of what the pro-slavery butchers have been doing.“Yesterday three men called on me. They brought forged letters from one I knew to be my friend. The trick succeeded. I admitted them to my confidence. They left and denounced me to the Confederate leaders. My only crime was a secret sympathy with the Union cause. Not a finger had I lifted or threatened to lift against the ruling powers of the State. But I did not love slavery,—that was the crime of crimes in the eyes of Jeff Davis’s immediate partisans and friends.“To-day they came with ropes to hang us,—to hang us, remember, not for resistance to authority, however usurped, not for one imprudent act or threat against slavery, but simply because we were known at heart to disapprove of slavery, and consequently to love the old flag. And many hundreds have been hung here for no other offence. We knew we could expect no better fate than our neighbors had bravely encountered; and we resolved, men and women, to sell our lives dearly. Your brother fell wounded, and was hung; then your sister, resisting outrage, was slain; then your mother, striving to protect Emily, received a mortal blow. And I am lying here wounded, soon to be dragged forth and hung—for what?—for unbelief, not in a God, but in the Southern Confederacy and its corner-stone!“And this is slavery! All these brutalities and wrongs spring from slavery as naturally as the fruit from the blossom. That which is inherently wrong must, by eternal laws, still produce and reproduce wrong. The right to hold one innocentman a slave, implies the right to enslave or murder any other man! There is no such right. It is a lie born in the inmost brain of hell. No laws can make it a right. No clamor of majorities can give it a sanction. In slavery, Satan once more scales the heavenly heights.“Jeff Davis, I hear, has just joined the church. Would he be pardoned, andretainthe offence? If so, not prayers nor sacraments can save his trembling and perjured soul from the guilt of such wrongs as I and mine, and hundreds of other true men and women, here in Texas have fallen under because of slavery. God is not to be cheated by any such flattering unction as Davis is laying to his heart. The more he seeks to cover profane with holy things, the deeper will be his damnation in that world where all shams and self-delusions are dissolved, and the true man stands revealed, to be judged by his fidelity to Christ’s golden rule,—to the cause of justice and humanity on earth.“Our national agony is the old conflict of the Divine with the Satanic principle. Believe in God, my son, and you cannot doubt the result. Do you suppose Eternal Justice will be patient much longer? Think of the atrocities to which this American slave system has reconciled us! A free white man can, in any of the Slave States, go into a negro’s house and beat or kill any of the inmates, and not be prosecuted by law, except a free white man sees him do it; becausea negro’s testimony is not taken against a white man. As for themarriageof slaves, you well know what a mere farce—what a subject for ribaldry and laughter—it is among the masters. No tie, whether of affection, of blood, or of form, is respected.[35]“The originators of this rebellion saw thatby inevitable laws of populationslavery must go down under a republican form of government. Their fears and their jealousies of freedom grew intolerable. The very wordfreebecame hateful. They saw that their property in slaves depended for its duration on the action of political forces slumbering in the mass of their white population, which population, though now densely ignorant, would gradually learn that slavery is adverse to the interests of nine tenths of the whites. And so this war was originatedeven less to separate from the North than to crush into hopeless subjection, through that separation, the white masses atthe South. The slave barons dreaded lest this drugged and stupefied giant should rouse from his ignoble slumber, and, learning his strength, and opening his eyes to the truth, should, Samson-like, seize the pillars of their system. To prevent this, a grand oligarchy of slaveholders must be created, and the liberties of the whites destroyed!“You will see all this now, my son. Yes, I have this comfort in my extremity: my son will be converted from wrong; the stubborn head will be reached through the stricken heart; we shall not have died in vain. And his conversion will be instantaneous. But be prudent, my son. Let not passion betray you. These Rebel leaders are as remorseless as they are crafty. All the bad energies of the very prince of devils are ranged on their side, and will help them to temporary success.“Let them see that higher and more persistent energies can spring from the right. What I most fear for the North is the paralyzing effect of its prosperity. It will go on thriving on the war, while the South is learning the wholesome training of adversity. Young men at the North will be tempted by money-making to stay at home. The voice of Mammon will be louder than the voice of God in their hearts. This will be their tremendous peril. But God will not be thwarted. If prosperity will not make the North do God’s work, then adversity must be called in.“Set your heart on no private vengeance, my son. Take this as my dying entreaty. Let your revenge be the restoration of the old flag. All the rest must follow as the night the day.... And now, farewell! May God bless and guide you. I go to join your mother, brother, and sister. Their spirits are round me while I speak. Their love goes forth to you with mine, and my prayer for you is their prayer also. Adieu!”

“This Slave Power, which, for many weeks past, has been hunting down and hanging Union men, has at last laid itsbloody hand on our innocent household. Should you meet Colonel A. J. Hamilton,[34]he will tell you something of what the pro-slavery butchers have been doing.

“Yesterday three men called on me. They brought forged letters from one I knew to be my friend. The trick succeeded. I admitted them to my confidence. They left and denounced me to the Confederate leaders. My only crime was a secret sympathy with the Union cause. Not a finger had I lifted or threatened to lift against the ruling powers of the State. But I did not love slavery,—that was the crime of crimes in the eyes of Jeff Davis’s immediate partisans and friends.

“To-day they came with ropes to hang us,—to hang us, remember, not for resistance to authority, however usurped, not for one imprudent act or threat against slavery, but simply because we were known at heart to disapprove of slavery, and consequently to love the old flag. And many hundreds have been hung here for no other offence. We knew we could expect no better fate than our neighbors had bravely encountered; and we resolved, men and women, to sell our lives dearly. Your brother fell wounded, and was hung; then your sister, resisting outrage, was slain; then your mother, striving to protect Emily, received a mortal blow. And I am lying here wounded, soon to be dragged forth and hung—for what?—for unbelief, not in a God, but in the Southern Confederacy and its corner-stone!

“And this is slavery! All these brutalities and wrongs spring from slavery as naturally as the fruit from the blossom. That which is inherently wrong must, by eternal laws, still produce and reproduce wrong. The right to hold one innocentman a slave, implies the right to enslave or murder any other man! There is no such right. It is a lie born in the inmost brain of hell. No laws can make it a right. No clamor of majorities can give it a sanction. In slavery, Satan once more scales the heavenly heights.

“Jeff Davis, I hear, has just joined the church. Would he be pardoned, andretainthe offence? If so, not prayers nor sacraments can save his trembling and perjured soul from the guilt of such wrongs as I and mine, and hundreds of other true men and women, here in Texas have fallen under because of slavery. God is not to be cheated by any such flattering unction as Davis is laying to his heart. The more he seeks to cover profane with holy things, the deeper will be his damnation in that world where all shams and self-delusions are dissolved, and the true man stands revealed, to be judged by his fidelity to Christ’s golden rule,—to the cause of justice and humanity on earth.

“Our national agony is the old conflict of the Divine with the Satanic principle. Believe in God, my son, and you cannot doubt the result. Do you suppose Eternal Justice will be patient much longer? Think of the atrocities to which this American slave system has reconciled us! A free white man can, in any of the Slave States, go into a negro’s house and beat or kill any of the inmates, and not be prosecuted by law, except a free white man sees him do it; becausea negro’s testimony is not taken against a white man. As for themarriageof slaves, you well know what a mere farce—what a subject for ribaldry and laughter—it is among the masters. No tie, whether of affection, of blood, or of form, is respected.[35]

“The originators of this rebellion saw thatby inevitable laws of populationslavery must go down under a republican form of government. Their fears and their jealousies of freedom grew intolerable. The very wordfreebecame hateful. They saw that their property in slaves depended for its duration on the action of political forces slumbering in the mass of their white population, which population, though now densely ignorant, would gradually learn that slavery is adverse to the interests of nine tenths of the whites. And so this war was originatedeven less to separate from the North than to crush into hopeless subjection, through that separation, the white masses atthe South. The slave barons dreaded lest this drugged and stupefied giant should rouse from his ignoble slumber, and, learning his strength, and opening his eyes to the truth, should, Samson-like, seize the pillars of their system. To prevent this, a grand oligarchy of slaveholders must be created, and the liberties of the whites destroyed!

“You will see all this now, my son. Yes, I have this comfort in my extremity: my son will be converted from wrong; the stubborn head will be reached through the stricken heart; we shall not have died in vain. And his conversion will be instantaneous. But be prudent, my son. Let not passion betray you. These Rebel leaders are as remorseless as they are crafty. All the bad energies of the very prince of devils are ranged on their side, and will help them to temporary success.

“Let them see that higher and more persistent energies can spring from the right. What I most fear for the North is the paralyzing effect of its prosperity. It will go on thriving on the war, while the South is learning the wholesome training of adversity. Young men at the North will be tempted by money-making to stay at home. The voice of Mammon will be louder than the voice of God in their hearts. This will be their tremendous peril. But God will not be thwarted. If prosperity will not make the North do God’s work, then adversity must be called in.

“Set your heart on no private vengeance, my son. Take this as my dying entreaty. Let your revenge be the restoration of the old flag. All the rest must follow as the night the day.... And now, farewell! May God bless and guide you. I go to join your mother, brother, and sister. Their spirits are round me while I speak. Their love goes forth to you with mine, and my prayer for you is their prayer also. Adieu!”

There was silence for a full minute after the reading.

“I’ll wait,” said Kenrick, “till he gets through dinner before I tell him the news. He’ll need all his strength, poor fellow!”

“I foresee,” said Vance, “that Onslow will be of our party of escape this night.” And then, turning to Peek, he remarked: “Your coming, Peculiar, is timely. I want the help of a trustworthy driver. You are the man for us. Can you, without exciting suspicion, get the control of a carriage and two fast, fresh horses?”

Peek reflected a moment, and then said: “Yes; I know acolored man, Antoine Lafour, who has the care of two of the best horses in the city. His master really thinks Antoine would fight any Abolitionist who might come to free him; but Antoine and I laugh at the old man’s credulity.”

“There’s yet another service you can render,” said Vance; and he gave five raps on the door of his chamber.

The lock was turned from the inside, and Winslow appeared.

“You’re among friends,” said Vance. “This is my cousin, Mr. Kenrick; and this is Peculiar Institution, otherwise called Peek. Notwithstanding his inauspicious name, you may trust him as you would your own right hand.”

“But I want an agent who can write and keep accounts.”

“Then Peek is just the man for you. Of his ability you can satisfy yourself in five minutes. For hishonestyI will vouch.”

“But will he remain in New Orleans the next six months?”

“I hope so,” replied Vance. “This is my plan for you, Peek: that you should still occupy that little house of mine with the Bernards. I’ve spoken to them about it; and they will treat you well for my sake. I want some one here with whom I may freely communicate; and more, I want you to pursue your search for Colonel Delancy Hyde, and to secure him when found, which you can easily do with money. Will you remain?”

“You know how it is with me, Mr. Vance,” said Peek. “I have two objects in life: One is to find my wife and child; the other is to help on the great cause. For both these objects I can have no better head-quarters than New Orleans.”

“Good! He will remain, Mr. Winslow. Go now both of you into the next room. You’ll find writing materials on the table.”

The old man and the negro withdrew. Kenrick paced the floor, thinking one moment of Clara, and the next of the dreadful communication he must make to Onslow. Vance sat down and leaned his head on his hands to consider if there was anything he had left undone.

“I hear some one knocking at the door of my room,” said Kenrick. He went into the corridor, and a servant handed him a card. It was from Onslow, and pencilled on it was the following:—

“Come to the dinner-table, Kenrick. Where are you?Dreaming of Perdita? Or planning impracticable victoriesfor your Yankee friends? Come and join me in a bottle ofclaret. It may be our last together. Only think of it, mydear fellow, I am to be made a Colonel! But that will notplease you. Sink politics! We will ignore all that is disagreeable.There shall be no slavery,—no Rebeldom,—noYankeedom. All shall be Arcadian. We will talk over oldtimes, and compare notes in regard to Perdita. I don’t believeyou are a tenth part as much in love as I am. Where has theenchantress gone? ‘O matchless sweetness! whither art thouvanished? O thou fair soul of all thy sex! what paradise hastthou enriched and blessed?’ Come, Kenrick, come; if onlyfor auld lang syne, come and chat with me; for the day ofaction draws near, when there shall be no more chatting!”

“Come to the dinner-table, Kenrick. Where are you?Dreaming of Perdita? Or planning impracticable victoriesfor your Yankee friends? Come and join me in a bottle ofclaret. It may be our last together. Only think of it, mydear fellow, I am to be made a Colonel! But that will notplease you. Sink politics! We will ignore all that is disagreeable.There shall be no slavery,—no Rebeldom,—noYankeedom. All shall be Arcadian. We will talk over oldtimes, and compare notes in regard to Perdita. I don’t believeyou are a tenth part as much in love as I am. Where has theenchantress gone? ‘O matchless sweetness! whither art thouvanished? O thou fair soul of all thy sex! what paradise hastthou enriched and blessed?’ Come, Kenrick, come; if onlyfor auld lang syne, come and chat with me; for the day ofaction draws near, when there shall be no more chatting!”

“Come to the dinner-table, Kenrick. Where are you?Dreaming of Perdita? Or planning impracticable victoriesfor your Yankee friends? Come and join me in a bottle ofclaret. It may be our last together. Only think of it, mydear fellow, I am to be made a Colonel! But that will notplease you. Sink politics! We will ignore all that is disagreeable.There shall be no slavery,—no Rebeldom,—noYankeedom. All shall be Arcadian. We will talk over oldtimes, and compare notes in regard to Perdita. I don’t believeyou are a tenth part as much in love as I am. Where has theenchantress gone? ‘O matchless sweetness! whither art thouvanished? O thou fair soul of all thy sex! what paradise hastthou enriched and blessed?’ Come, Kenrick, come; if onlyfor auld lang syne, come and chat with me; for the day ofaction draws near, when there shall be no more chatting!”

“Come to the dinner-table, Kenrick. Where are you?

Dreaming of Perdita? Or planning impracticable victories

for your Yankee friends? Come and join me in a bottle of

claret. It may be our last together. Only think of it, my

dear fellow, I am to be made a Colonel! But that will not

please you. Sink politics! We will ignore all that is disagreeable.

There shall be no slavery,—no Rebeldom,—no

Yankeedom. All shall be Arcadian. We will talk over old

times, and compare notes in regard to Perdita. I don’t believe

you are a tenth part as much in love as I am. Where has the

enchantress gone? ‘O matchless sweetness! whither art thou

vanished? O thou fair soul of all thy sex! what paradise hast

thou enriched and blessed?’ Come, Kenrick, come; if only

for auld lang syne, come and chat with me; for the day of

action draws near, when there shall be no more chatting!”

Sick at heart, Kenrick handed the card to Vance, who read it, and said: “The sooner a disagreeable duty is discharged, the better. Go, cousin, and let him know the character of that fell Power which he would serve. Let him know what reason he, of all men, has to love it!”

“I’d rather face a battery than do it; but it must be done.”

At the same moment Winslow and the negro entered.

“I’ve arranged everything with Peek,” said the old man. “I’ve placed in his hands funds which I think will be sufficient.”

“That reminds me that I must do the same,” said Vance; and, taking a large sum in bank-bills from his pocket-book, he gave it to Peek to use as he might see fit, first for the common cause, and secondly for prosecuting inquiries in regard to the kidnapped child of the Pontiac, and his own family.

Peek carefully noted down dates and amounts in a memorandum-book, and then remarked, “Now I must see Captain Onslow.”

“Give me that letter from his father, and I will myself deliver it,” said Kenrick.

“But I promised to see him.”

“That you can do this evening.”

Peek gave up the letter, and Kenrick darted out of the room.

Turning to Vance and Winslow, Peek remarked: “I thankyou for your confidence, gentlemen. I’ll do my best to deserve it.”

“I wish our banks deserved it as well,” said Vance; then he added: “And now, Peek, make your arrangements carefully, and be with the carriage at the door just under my window at nine o’clock precisely.”

Peek compared watches with Vance, promised to be punctual, and took his leave.

Vance rang the bell, and ordered a private dinner for two. Unlocking a drawer, he took from it two revolvers and handed one to Winslow, with the remark, “You are skilled in the use of the pistol, I suppose?”

“Though I’ve been a planter and owned slaves, I must sayno.”

“Then a revolver would rather be a danger than a security.”

And Vance thrust the pistols into the side pockets of his own coat.

Dinner was brought in.

“Come,” said Vance, “we must eat. My way of life has compelled me to suffer no excitement to impair my appetite. Indeed, I have passed through the one supreme excitement, after which all others, even the prospect of immediate death, are quite tame. Happy the man, Mr. Winslow, who can say, I cling to this life no longer for myself, but for others and for humanity!”

“Such a sentiment would better become a man of my age than of yours,” replied Winslow.

“Here’s the dinner,” said Vance. “Now let us talk nothing but nonsense. Let us think of nothing that requires the effort of a serious thought.”

“Well then,” replied Winslow. “Suppose we discuss the last number of De Bow’s Review, or that charlatan Maury’s last lying letter in the London Times.”

“Excellent!” said Vance. “For reaching the very sublime of the superficial, commend me to De Bow or to the Chevalier Maury.”

Before the dinner was over, each man felt that the day had not been unprofitable, since he had earned a friend.


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