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Mary blushed.
"I don't think you know my husband," she said; "he lives a long way from here."
"In New Orleans?" asked the gentleman.
"Yes, sir," said Mary, boldly. She couldn't fear such good faces.
"His first name is John, isn't it?"
"Yes, sir. Do you really know John, sir?" The lines of pleasure and distress mingled strangely in Mary's face. The gentleman smiled. He tapped little Alice's head with the tips of his fingers.
"I used to hold him on my knee when he was no bigger than this little image of him here."
The tears leaped into Mary's eyes.
"Mr. Thornton," she whispered, huskily, and could say no more.
"You must come home with us," said the lady, touching her tenderly on the shoulder. "It's a wonder of good fortune that we've met. Mr.
Thornton has something to say to you,--a matter of business. He's the family's lawyer, you know."
"I must get to my husband without delay," said Mary.
"Get to your husband?" asked the lawyer, in astonishment.
"Yes, sir."
"Through the lines?"
"Yes, sir."
"I told him so," said the lady.
"I don't know how to credit it," said he. "Why, my child, I don't think you can possibly know what you are attempting. Your friends ought never to have allowed you to conceive such a thing. You must let us dissuade you. It will not be taking too much liberty, will it? Has your husband never told you what good friends we were?"
Mary nodded and tried to speak.
"Often," said Mrs. Thornton to her husband, interpreting the half-articulated reply.
They sat and talked in low tones, under the dismal lamp of the railroad coach, for two or three hours. Mr. Thornton came around and took the seat in front of Mary, and sat with one leg under him, facing back toward her. Mrs. Thornton sat beside her, and Alice slumbered on the seat behind, vacated by the lawyer and his wife.
"You needn't tell me John's story," said the gentleman; "I know it. What I didn't know before, I got from a man with whom I corresponded in New Orleans."
"Dr. Sevier?"
"No, a man who got it from the Doctor."
So they had Mary tell her own story.
"I thought I should start just as soon as my mother's health would permit. John wouldn't have me start before that, and, after all, I don't see how I could have done it--rightly. But by the time she was well--or partly well--every one was in the greatest anxiety and doubt everywhere.
You know how it was."
"Yes," said Mrs. Thornton.
"And everybody thinking everything would soon be settled," continued Mary.
"Yes," said the sympathetic lady, and her husband touched her quietly, meaning for her not to interrupt.
"We didn't think the Union _could_ be broken so easily," pursued Mary.
"And then all at once it was unsafe and improper to travel alone. Still I went to New York, to take steamer around by sea. But the last steamer had sailed, and I had to go back home; for--the fact is,"--she smiled,--"my money was all gone. It was September before I could raise enough to start again; but one morning I got a letter from New Orleans, telling me that John was very ill, and enclosing money for me to travel with."
She went on to tell the story of her efforts to get a pa.s.s on the bank of the Ohio river, and how she had gone home once more, knowing she was watched, not daring for a long time to stir abroad, and feeding on the frequent hope that New Orleans was soon to be taken by one or another of the many naval expeditions that from time to time were, or were said to be, sailing.
"And then suddenly--my mother died."
Mrs. Thornton gave a deep sigh.
"And then," said Mary, with a sudden brightening, but in a low voice, "I determined to make one last effort. I sold everything in the world I had and took Alice and started. I've come very slowly, a little way at a time, feeling along, for I was resolved not to be turned back. I've been weeks getting this far, and the lines keep moving south ahead of me. But I haven't been turned back," she went on to say, with a smile, "and everybody, white and black, everywhere, has been just as kind as kind can be." Tears stopped her again.
"Well, never mind, Mrs. Richling," said Mrs. Thornton; then turned to her husband, and asked, "May I tell her?"
"Yes."
"Well, Mrs. Richling,--but do you wish to be called Mrs. Richling?"
"Yes," said Mary, and "Certainly," said Mr. Thornton.
"Well, Mrs. Richling, Mr. Thornton has some money for your husband. Not a great deal, but still--some. The younger of the two sisters died a few weeks ago. She was married, but she was rich in her own right. She left almost everything to her sister; but Mr. Thornton persuaded her to leave some money--well, two thousand--'tisn't much, but it's something, you know--to--ah to Mr. Richling. Husband has it now at home and will give it to you,--at the breakfast-table to-morrow morning; can't you, dear?"
"Yes."
"Yes, and we'll not try to persuade you to give up your idea of going to New Orleans. I know we couldn't do it. We'll watch our chance,--eh, husband?--and put you through the lines; and not only that, but give you letters to--why, dear," said the lady, turning to her partner in good works, "you can give Mrs. Richling a letter to Governor Blank; and another to General Um-hm, can't you? and--yes, and one to Judge Youknow.
Oh, they will take you anywhere! But first you'll stop with us till you get well rested--a week or two, or as much longer as you will."
Mary pressed the speaker's hand.
"I can't stay."
"Oh, you know you needn't have the least fear of seeing any of John's relatives. They don't live in this part of the State at all; and, even if they did, husband has no business with them just now, and being a Union man, you know"--
"I want to see my husband," said Mary, not waiting to hear what Union sympathies had to do with the matter.
"Yes," said the lady, in a suddenly subdued tone. "Well, we'll get you through just as quickly as we can." And soon they all began to put on wraps and gather their luggage. Mary went with them to their home, laid her tired head beside her child's in sleep, and late next morning rose to hear that Fort Donelson was taken, and the Southern forces were falling back. A day or two later came word that Columbus, on the Mississippi, had been evacuated. It was idle for a woman to try just then to perform the task she had set for herself. The Federal lines!
"Why, my dear child, they're trying to find the Confederate lines and strike them. You can't lose anything--you may gain much--by remaining quiet here awhile. The Mississippi, I don't doubt, will soon be open from end to end."
A fortnight seemed scarcely more than a day when it was past, and presently two of them had gone. One day comes Mr. Thornton, saying:--
"My dear child, I cannot tell you how I have the news, but you may depend upon its correctness. New Orleans is to be attacked by the most powerful naval expedition that ever sailed under the United States flag.
If the place is not in our hands by the first of April I will put you through both lines, if I have to go with you myself." When Mary made no answer, he added, "Your delays have all been unavoidable, my child!"