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"I am not scared on my own account," replied the officer, bitterly. "A dozen bullets, whether in battle or standing blindfold against a white wall, are all the same to me. I'll take the gallows itself, if it comes, and say good quittance."
"Ay," grunted Mr. Meredith, "go on. Tip us a good touch of the heroics."
The aide smiled, but then went on anxiously: "But what I do fear, and why I tell you what I do, is for--for--for Mrs.
Meredith and--The loss of this force leaves us barely three thousand men to fight Cornwallis's and Knyphausen's fifteen thousand. We shall burn the bridge within the hour, but that will scarce check them, and so we must retreat to the Delaware."
"And how does this affect me?"
"Every hour brings us word of the horrible excesses of the British soldiery. No woman seems safe from--For G.o.d's sake, Mr. Meredith, don't remain here! But go with our army, and I'll pledge you my word you shall be safe and as comfortable as it is in my power to make you."
"Tush! British officers never--"
"'T is not the officers, but the common soldiers who straggle from the lines for plunder and--while the pigs of Hessians and Waldeckers, sold by their princes at so much per head, cannot be controlled, even by their own officers. See, here, is the broadside of which I spoke. I have seen every affidavit, and swear to you that they are genuine. Don't--you can't risk such a fate for Mrs. Meredith or--" Brereton stopped, unable to say more, and thrust the paper he held in his hand into that of the squire.
"I'll have none of your Whig lies puffed on me!" persisted the squire, obstinately.
The officer started to argue; but as he did so the gallop of a horse's feet was heard, and Colonel Laurens came dashing up.
Throwing himself from the saddle, he flung into the tavern; and that he brought important news was so evident that Brereton hurriedly left Mr. Meredith and followed. Barely a moment pa.s.sed when aide after aide issued from the inn, and, mounting, spurred away in various directions. The results were immediate. The carts were hurriedly put in train and started southward on the Princeton post-road, smoke began to rise from the bridge, the batteries limbered up, and the regiments on the green fell in and then stood at ease.
While these obvious preparations for a retreat were in progress a coloured man appeared, leading so handsome and powerful a horse that Janice, who had much of her father's taste, gave a cry of pleasure and, jumping from her perch, went forward to stroke the beast's nose.
"What a beauty!" she cried.
"Yes, miss, dat Blueskin," replied the darky, grinning proudly. "He de finest horse from de Mount Vernon stud, but he great villain, jus' de same. He so obstropolus when he hear de guns dat the gin'l kian't use him, an' has tu ride ole Nelson when dyars gwine tu be any fightin'."
Janice leaned forward and kissed the "great villain" on his soft nose, and then turned to find the general standing in the doorway watching her.
"I have not time to attend to your complaints, gentlemen,"
he announced to the two esquires and the group of farmers, all of whom started forward at his appearance. "File your statements and claims with the commissary-general, and in due time they'll receive attention." Then he came toward his horse, and as he recognised the not easily forgotten face he uncovered. "I trust Miss Janice remembers me!" he said, a smile succeeding the careworn look of the previous moment, and added: "Had ye been kind, ye'd have kept that caress for the master."
Janice coloured, but replied with a mixture of a.s.surance and shyness: "Blueskin could not ask for it, but your Excellency--"
Then she paused and coloured still more.
Washington laughed, and, stooping, kissed her hand.
"Being a married man, must limit the amount of his yielding to temptation," he said, finishing the sentence for the girl.
"I would I were to have the honour of your company at dinner once more, but your friends, the British, will not give us the time. So I must mount and say farewell."
Janice turned an eager face up to the general, as he swung himself into the saddle. "Oh, your Excellency," she exclaimed below her breath, "dadda would think it very wicked of me, but I hope you'll beat them!"
Washington's face lighted up, and, leaning over, he once more kissed her hand. "Thank you for the wish, my child,"
he said, and, giving Blueskin the spur, rode toward the river.
"If Philemon was only like his Excellency!" thought the girl.
XXVII A CHECK TO THE ENEMY
There followed a weary hour of waiting, while first the carts, then the artillery, and finally the few hundred ill-clad, weary men filed off on the post-road.
Before the rear-guard had begun its march, British regiments could be discerned across the river, and presently a battery came trotting down to the opposite sh.o.r.e, and a moment later the guns were in position to protect a crossing.
This accomplished, a squadron of light dragoons rode into the water and struck boldly across, a number of boats setting out at the same moment, each laden with redcoats. While they were yet in mid-stream the Continental bugles sounded the retreat, and the last American regiment marched across the green and disappeared from view.
Owing to the fact that the coach had not been parked with the waggons, but had been brought to the tavern door, the baggage-train had moved off without it,--a circ.u.mstance, needless to say, which did not sadden the squire. It so happened that the vehicle had stopped immediately under the composite portrait sign-board of the inn; and no sooner was the last American regiment lost to view than the publican appeared, equipped with a paint-pot and brush, and, muttering an apology to the owner of the coach, now seated beside his wife and daughter on the box, he climbed upon the roof and, by a few crude strokes, altered the lettering from "Gen. George the Good into "King George the Good." But he did not attempt to change the firm chin and the strong forehead the bondsman had added to the face.
Barely was the operation finished when the British light horse came wading out of the water and cantered up the river road to the green, the uniforms and helmets flashing brilliantly, the harness jingling, and the swords clanking merrily.
"There are troops worth talking about," cried the squire, enthusiastically.
He spoke too quickly, for the moment the "dismount"
sounded, twenty men were about the coach.
"Too good horses for a d.a.m.ned American!" shouted one, and a dozen hands were unharnessing them on the instant.
"A load of prog, boys!" gleefully shouted a second, and both doors were flung open, and the soldiers were quickly crowding each other in their endeavours to get a share.
"Egad!" announced another, "but I'll have a tousel and a buss from yon la.s.s on the box." "Well said!" cried a fourth, and both sprang on the wheel, as a first step to the attainment of their wishes.
Mr. Meredith, from the box, had been shrieking affirmations of his loyalty to King George without the slightest heed being paid to him; but there is a limit to pa.s.sivity, and as the two men on the wheel struggled which should first gain the desired prize, the squire kicked out twice with his foot in rapid succession, sending both disputants back into the crowd of troopers.
Howls of rage arose on all sides; and it would have fared badly with the master of Greenwood had not the noise brought an officer up.
"Here, here!" he cried sharply, "what 's all this pother about?"
"'T is a d.a.m.ned Whig, who is--"
"A lie!" roared the squire. "There is no better subject of King George living than Lambert Meredith."
The officer jeered. "That's what every rebel claims of late. Not one breathes in the land, if you'd but believe the words of you turncoats."
"'T is not a lie," spoke up Janice, her face blazing with temper and her fists clinched as if she intended to use them.
"Dadda always--"
"Ho!" exclaimed the officer, "what a pretty wench! Art a rebel, too? for if so, I'll see to it that guard duty falls to me. Come, black eyes, one kiss, and I'll send the men to right about."
Janice caught the whip from its socket and raised it threateningly, just as another officer from a newly arrived company came spurring up and, without warning, began to strike right and left with the flat of his sword. "Off with you, you d.a.m.ned rapscallions!" he shouted. "Leftenant Bromhead, where are your manners?"
"And where are yours, Mr. Hennion, that ye dare speak so to your superior officer?" demanded the lieutenant.
There was no mistaking Philemon, changed though he was.
He wore a fashionable wig, and his clothes fitted well a figure that, once shambling and loose-jointed, had now all the erectness of the soldier, but the face was unchanged.
"I'll not quarrel with you now," swaggered Philemon.
"If you want ter fight later I'm your man, an' if you want ter go before Colonel Harcourt with a complaint I'll face you.
But now I've other matters." He turned to the trio on the box, and exclaimed as he doffed his hat: "Well, squire, didst ever expect sight of me again? An' how do Mrs. Meredith and Janice? Strap my vitals, if I've seen such beauty since I left Brunswick," he added airily, and making Janice feel very much put out of countenance.
"Welcome, Philemon!" cried Mrs. Meredith, "and doubly welcome at such a moment."
"Ay," shouted the squire, heartily. "Ye arrived just in the nick o' time to save your bride, Phil." A remark which sent the whip rattling to the ground from the hands of Janice.
"An' ye a king's officer!" he ended. "Bubble your story to us, lad."
"There ain't much ter tell as you don't know already. Sir William put no faith in the news I carried, thinkin' it but a Whig trick, and so they held me prisoner. But later, when 't was too late ter use it, they learned the word I brought them was true; so they set me free, and as there was no gettin'
away from Boston, the general gave me a cornetcy, that I should not starve."