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MR. VOSBURGH and his daughter had pa.s.sed a very anxious day, the former going out but seldom. The information obtained from the city had not been rea.s.suring, for while the authorities had under their direction larger bodies of men, and lawlessness was not so general, the mob was still unquelled and fought with greater desperation in the disaffected centres. In the after-part of the day Mr. Vosburgh received the cheering intelligence that the Seventh Regiment would arrive that night, and that other militia organizations were on their way home. Therefore he believed that if they escaped injury until the following morning all cause for deep anxiety would pa.s.s away. As the hours elapsed and no further demonstration was made against his home, his hopes grew apace, and now, as he and his daughter waited for Merwyn before dining, he said, "I fancy that the reception given to the mob last night has curbed their disposition to molest us."
"O papa, what keeps Mr. Merwyn?"
"Well, my dear, I know he was safe at noon."
"Oh, oh, I do hope that this will be the last day of this fearful suspense! Isn't it wonderful what Mr. Merwyn has done in the past few days?"
"Not so wonderful as it seems. Periods like these always develop master-spirits, or rather they give such spirits scope. How little we knew of Acton before this week! yet at the beginning he seized the mob by the throat and has not once relaxed his grasp. He has been the one sleepless man in the city, and how he endures the strain is almost beyond mortal comprehension. The man and the hour came together. The same is true of Merwyn in his sphere. He had been preparing for this, hoping that it would give him an opportunity to right himself. Fearless as the best of your friends, he combines with courage the singularly cool, resolute nature inherited from his father. He is not in the least ambitious for distinction, but is only bent on carrying out his own aims and purposes."
"And what are they, papa?"
"Sly fox! as if you did not know. Who first came to your protection?"
"And to think how I treated him!"
"Quite naturally, under the circ.u.mstances. The mystery of his former restraint is still unexplained, but I now think it due to family reasons. Yet why he should be so reluctant to speak of them is still another mystery. He has no sympathy with the South or his mother's views, yet why should he not say, frankly, 'I cannot fight against my mother's people'? When we think, however, that the sons of the same mother are often arrayed against each other in this war, such a reason as I have suggested appears entirely inadequate. All his interests are at the North, and he is thoroughly loyal; but when I intimated, last evening, that he might wish to spend the night in his own home to insure its protection, it seemed less than nothing to him compared with your safety. He has long had this powerful motive to win your regard, and yet there has been some restraint more potent."
"But you trust him now, papa?"
"Yes."
Thus they talked until the clock struck eight, and Marian, growing pallid with anxiety and fear, went to the darkened parlor window to watch for Merwyn, then returned and looked at her father with something like dismay on her face.
Before he could speak, she exclaimed, "Ah! there is his ring;" and she rushed toward the door, paused, came back, and said, blushingly, "Papa, you had better admit him."
Mr. Vosburgh smilingly complied.
The young fellow appeared in almost as bad a plight as when he had come in on Monday night and gone away with bitter words on his lips. He was gaunt from fatigue and long mental strain. His first words were: "Thank G.o.d you we still all safe! I had hoped to be here long before this, but so much has happened!"
"What!" exclained Marian, "anything worse than took place yesterday?"
"No, and yes." Then, with an appealing look; "Miss Marian, a cup of your good coffee. I feel as if a rioter could knock me down with a feather."
She ran to the kitchen herself to see that it was of the best possible quality, and Merwyn, sinking into a chair, looked gloomily at his host and said: "We have made little if any progress. The mob grows more reckless and devilish."
"My dear fellow," cried Mr. Vosburgh, "the Seventh Regiment will be here to-night, and others are on the way;" and he told of the rea.s.suring tidings he had received.
"Thank Heaven for your news! I have been growing despondent during the last few hours."
"Take this and cheer up," cried Marian. "The idea of your being despondent! You are only tired to death, and will have a larger appet.i.te for fighting to-morrow, I fear, than ever."
"No; I witnessed a scene this evening that made me sick of it all.
Of course I shall do my duty to the end, but I wish that others could finish it up. More than ever I envy your friends who can fight soldiers;" and then he told them briefly of the scene witnessed in the rescue of Mammy Borden and her son.
"Oh, horrible! horrible!" exclaimed the girl. "Where are they now?"
"I took them from headquarters to a hospital. They both need the best surgical attention, though poor Zeb, I fear, is past help."
"Merwyn," said Mr. Vosburgh, gravely, "you incurred a fearful risk in taking those people through the streets."
"I suppose so," replied the young fellow, quietly; "but in a sense they were a part of your household, and the poor creatures were in such a desperate plight that--"
"Mr. Merwyn," cried Marian, a warm flush mantling her face, "you are a true knight. You have perilled your life for the poor and humble."
He looked at her intently a moment, and then said, quietly, "I would peril it again a thousand times for such words from YOU."
To hide a sudden confusion she exclaimed: "Great Heavens! what differences there are in men! Those who would torture and kill these inoffensive people have human forms."
"Men are much what women make them; and it would almost seem that women are the chief inspiration of this mob. The draft may have been its inciting cause, but it has degenerated into an insatiable thirst for violence, blood, and plunder. I saw an Irishwoman to-day who fought like a wild-cat before she would give up her stolen goods."
The German servant Riten now began to place dinner on the table, Mr. Vosburgh remarking, "We had determined to wait for you on this occasion."
"What am I thinking of?" cried Merwyn. "If this thing goes on I shall become uncivilized. Mr. Vosburgh, do take me somewhere that I may bathe my hands and face, and please let me exchange this horrid blouse, redolent of the riot, for almost any kind of garment. I could not sit at the table with Miss Vosburgh in my present guise."
"Yes, papa, give him your white silk waistcoat and dress-coat,"
added Marian, laughing.
"Come with me," said Mr. Vosburgh, "and I'll find you an outfit for the sake of your own comfort."
"I meant to trespa.s.s on your kindness when I first came in, but mind and body seemed almost paralyzed. I feel better already, however.
While we are absent may I ask if you have your weapons ready?"
"Yes, I have a revolver on my person, and my rifle is in the dining-room."
A few moments later the gentlemen descended, Merwyn in a sack-coat that hung rather loosely on his person. Before sitting down he scanned the street, which was quiet.
"My former advice, Merwyn," said his host; "you must make a light meal and wait until you are more rested."
"O papa, what counsel to give a guest!"
"Counsel easily followed," said Merwyn. "I crave little else than coffee. Indeed, your kindness, Miss Vosburgh, has so heartened me, that I am rallying fast."
"Since everything is to be in such great moderation, perhaps I have been too prodigal of that," was the arch reply.
"I shall be grateful for much or little."
"Oh, no, don't put anything on the basis of grat.i.tude. I have too much of that to be chary of it."
"A happy state of affairs," said Merwyn, "since what you regard as services on my part are priceless favors to me. I can scarcely realize it, and have thought of it all day, that I only, of all your friends, can be with you now. Strahan will be green with envy, and so I suppose will the others."
"I do not think any the less of them because it is impossible for them to be here," said the young girl, blushing.
"Of course not. It's only my immense good fortune. They would give their right eyes to stand in my shoes."
"I hope I may soon hear that they are all recovering. I fear that Mr. Lane's and Mr. Strahan's wounds are serious; and, although Mr.
Blauvelt made light of his hurt, he may find that it is no trifle."