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"Yis, sah!"
"Make a gla.s.s of rum punch and take it in to his Excellency."
"Foh de Lord, sah, I doan dar go in, an' yar know ma.r.s.e neber drink no spirits till de day's work dun."
"Make a dish of tea, then, you old coward, and I'll take it to him so soon as I get these slops off me. 'Fore George!
How small-clothes stick when they 're wet!"
"You mean when a man 's so foppish that he will have them made tight enough to display the goodness of his thighs,"
rejoined Gibbs, who, being dry, was enjoying the plight of the rest. "Make yourselves smart, gentlemen, there are ladies at quarters to-night."
"You don't puff that take-in on us, sirrah," retorted Tilghman.
"'Pon honour. They arrived a six hours ago, and have been waiting to see the general."
"You may be bound they are old and plain," prophesied Brereton, "or Gibbs would be squiring them, 'stead of wasting time on us."
"There you 're cast," rejoined the major, "I caught but a glimpse, yet 't was enough to prove to me that all astronomers lie."
"How so?"
"In saying that but twice in a century is there a transit of Venus."
"Then why bide you here, man?"
"That's the disgustful rub. They were with a man under suspicion, and orders were that none should hold converse with him before the general examined into it. A plague on't!"
Discussion of Venus was here broken by the announcement of supper, and the make-shift meal was still unfinished when the general's body-servant appeared with the tea. Taking it, Brereton marched boldly to the council door, and, giving a knock, he went in without awaiting a reply.
The group of anxious-faced men about the table looked up, and Washington, with a frown, demanded, "For what do you interrupt us, sir?"
The young officer put the tea down on the map lying in front of the general. "Billy didn't dare take this to your Excellency, so I made bold to e'en bring it myself."
"This is no time for tea, Colonel Brereton."
"'T is no time for the army to lose their general," replied the aide. "I pray you drink it, sir, for our sake if you won't for your own."
A kindly look supplanted the sternness of the previous moment on the general's face. "I thank you for your thoughtfulness, Brereton," he said, raising the cup and pouring some of the steaming drink into the saucer. Then as the officer started to go, he added, "Hold!" Picking up a small bundle of papers which lay on the table, he continued: "Harrison tells me that there is a prisoner under guard for my examination. I shall scarce be able to attend to it this evening, and to-morrow is like to be a busy day. Take charge of the matter, and report to me the moment the council breaks up. Here are the papers."
Standing in the dim light of the hallway, the aide opened the papers and read them hastily. Either the strain on the eyes, or some emotion, put a frown on his face, and it was still there as he walked to the door before which stood a sentry, and pa.s.sed into a badly lighted room.
"Powerful proud ter meet yer Excellency," was his greeting from a man in civilian shorts and a military coat, who held out his hand. "Captain Bagby desired his compliments ter yer, an' ter say that legislative dooties pervented his attindin'
ter the matter hisself."
Paying no heed to either outstretched hand or words, the officer looked first at a man standing beside the fireplace and then at the two women, who had risen as he entered. He waited a moment, glancing from one to the other, as if expecting each of them to speak; but when they did not, he asked gruffly of the guard, though still with his eyes on the prisoners: "And for what were the ladies brought?"
"Becuz they wud n't be left behind on no accaount. Yer see, yer Excellency, things hez been kinder onsettled in Middles.e.x Caounty, an' it hain't been a joyful time to them as wuz Tories; so when orders c.u.m ter bring old Meredith ter York Island, his wife an' gal wuz so scar't nothin' would do but they must come along."
"Ay," spoke up the man by the fireplace, bitterly. "A nice pa.s.s ye've brought things to, that women dare not tarry in their own homes for fear of insult."
"You may go," said the officer to the captor, pointing at the door.
"Ain't I ter hear the 'zamination, yer Excellency?" demanded the man, regretfully. "The hull caounty is sot on known' ther fac's." But as the hand still pointed to the entrance, the man pa.s.sed reluctantly through it.
Taking a seat shadowed from the dim light of the solitary candle, the officer asked: "You are aware, Mr. Meredith, on what charge you are in military custody?"
"Not I," growled the master of Greenwood. "For more than a year gone I've taken no part in affairs, but 't is all of a piece with ye Whigs that--to trump up a charge against--"
"This is no trumpery accusation," interrupted the officer.
"I hold here a letter to Sir William Howe, found after our army took possession of Boston, signed by one Clowes, and conveying vastly important information as to our lack of powder, which he states he obtained through you."
"Now a pox on the villain!" cried the squire. "Has he not tried to do me enough harm in other ways, but he must add this to it? Janice, see the evil ye've wrought."
"Oh, dadda," cried the girl, desperately, "I know I was-- was a wicked creature, but I've been sorry, and suffered for it, and I don't think 't is fair to blame me for this. 'T was not I who brought him--"
"Silence, miss!" interrupted her mother. "Wouldst sauce thy father in his trouble?"
"I presume you obtained the knowledge Clowes transmitted from your daughter?" surmised the officer.
"My daughter? Not I! How could a chit of a girl know aught of such things? Clowes got it from young Hennion, and devil a thing had I really to do with it, write what he pleases."
"Pray take chairs, ladies," suggested the aide, with more politeness. "Now, sir, unravel this matter, so far as 't is known to you."
When the squire's brief tale of how the information was obtained and forwarded to Boston was told, the officer was silent for some moments. Then he asked: "Hast had word of Clowes since then?"
"Not sight or word since the night the--"
"Oh, dadda," moaned Janice, "please don't!"
"Since he attempted to steal my girl from me. And if e'er I meet him I trust I'll have my horsewhip handy."
"Is Hennion where we can lay hold upon him?"
"Not he. 'T was impossible for him to get out of Boston, try his best, and the last word we had of him--wrote to his rascally father--was that he'd 'listed in Ruggles' loyalists."
"Then the only man we can bring to heel is this bond-servant of thine."
"Not even he. The scamp took French leave, and if ye want him ye must search your own army.
"Canst aid us to find him?"
"I know naught of him, or his doings, save that last June I received the price I paid for his bond, through Parson McClave, who perhaps can give ye word of him."
The officer rose, saying: "Mr. Meredith, I shall report on your case to the general, so soon as he is free, and have small doubt that you will be acquitted of blame and released. I fear me you will find headquarters' hospitality somewhat wanting in comfort, for we're o'ercrowded, and you arrive in times of difficulty. But I'll try to see that the ladies get a room, and, whatever comes, 't will be better than the guard-house."
He went to the hall door and called, "Grayson!"
"Well?" shouted back some one.