The Guns of Bull Run
g his shoulder. It was yet dark outside
unsteadily. "Your horse, bridle and saddle on, is waiting. Your
ate breakfast by lamplight, and when he finished it was not yet dawn. Then t
this pocket-book you will find five hundred dollars, and here is, also, an order on a bank in Charleston for
of his waistcoat, and then his fath
ens, of South Carolina, or General Beauregard, who, I understand, is coming to command the troops there, and whom I knew in former days, or to General Ripley. It cont
ieved that his father had done so with his own hand. The boy sprang into the saddle, Colonel Kenton gave him a strong grasp of
Colonel Kenton was standing in the doorway, his figure made bright in the moonlight. Harry waved his hand and a hand was waved
almost from infancy an expert rider. His spirits rose. He had no fear of the stillness and the dark. But one could scarcely call it the dark, since b
red to his belt. The line of the mountains lay near the road, and he remembered Bill Skelly and those l
barked, but there was no sound, save the tread of the horse's feet in the snow, and his occasional puff when he blew the steam from his nostrils. Harry did n
d then something rose in his throat again. He remembered his father standing in the portico, and, strangely enough, the Tacitus lying in his locked desk at
te in the afternoon. Nor would there be any need for him to get there earlier, as no train for Nashville reached that place unt
t, and every tree was heavy with snow. A line between the trees showed where a path turned off from the main road and entered the hills. As Harry approache
, like Skelly. They wore fur caps; heavy blanket shawls were drooped about their shoulder
struck his horse sharply, shouted to him, and bent far over against his neck. Colonel Kenton had chosen well. The horse responded instantly. He seemed to gather his whole powerful frame compactly together, and shot forward. The nearest mountaineer fired, bu
ey had missed, confidence came. He knew that they could not overtake him, and they would not dare to pursue him long. He glanced back. They were a full hundred yards in the rear, riding all four abreast. He r
, and he might go four or five miles without seeing a single human being, save those who pursued. But he was not afraid. His confidence lay chiefly in the powerful animal that he rode, and he saw the distance between
ce and he counted the smoke of five farm houses. He believed that the men would not pursue him into the open country, but he urged his horse to greater speed, and did not turn in his saddle for a quarter of an hour. When he
rough the adventure. It would harden him to risks and dangers to come. He made up his mind, also, to say nothing about it. He could s
bridle at a livery stable, stating that they would be called for by Colonel Kenton, who was known throughout the region, and sought food at the crude little wooden hotel.
ke himself comfortable as best he could on the red plush seat, sprinkled thickly with ashes and cind
had kept him up. Now the swaying and jarring of the train, crude like most others in that early time of railways, gave him a sense of illness. The window at his elbow rattled incessantly, and the ashes and cinders sifted in, blackening his face and hands. Three or four smoking lamps, hung from the
ry. But he could catch only glimpses of snowy woods and fields, and, once or twice, flashes of water as they crossed rivers. The effort
as black and precise. His face was shaven smoothly, save for a long gray mustache with an upward curve. While the people abou
en he drew a small silver cup from the same valise, filled it at the drinking stand, drank and returned it to t
ys he gazed straight before him, and his mind seemed to be far from the people in the car. It was obvious that he was not the o
against the corner of the seat and the wall, drew his overcoat as a blanket about his
self, put on his overcoat that he had used as a blanket, and tried to look through the window. He saw only darkness rushing past, but he knew that he had
nk from the silver cup, seemed not to have been asleep at all. He still sat rigidly erect, and his melancholy look had notger. This town of Nashville was full of promise. It had been the home of the great Andrew Jackson, and it was one of the important
ked around, his eyes met Harry's-perhaps he had been observing him in the night-and he smiled. It was a rare, illuminating smile that made him wo
ille?" said the man with t
I am then going
ossible that this man could be planning anything against him o
rd South. "Your sleep was very deep, almost like collapse. You showed that you had been through great physical and m
with a little alarm. The strange man l
the Mason and Dixon line, I make no secret of it. I am Leonidas Talbot, of South Carolina, until a week ago a colonel in the American army, but now bound for my home in Charles
blue eyes set well apart, and Harry
people generally call me Harry-and I liv
Talbot, late colonel U.
ou joined us and the strong resemblance should have mad
said
ir, let me sha
l that Harry held out his hand, and
Cerro Gordo, and we were side by side at Contreras, Molino del Rey, and the storming of Chapultepec. He left the service some time after we came back from Mexico, but I remained i
ly, and he was not sorry th
er people are now on their way to this same city of Charleston, which sinc
ou," said Harry. "I know little of Charlest
alone. I know Nashville fairly well, and while it is of the undoubted South, it will be best for us, while
d wind blowing across the hills and the Cumberland River made Harry shiver in his overcoat. Once m
of wood, and low, showed dimly through the dusk. No carriages met the
know the best hotel, and for travelers who
en door. They entered the lobby of the hotel, one carrying his saddle bags, the other his valise, and registered in the book that the sleepy cle
n the last few days, as there was a great stir in the country owing to the
but positive voice. "My young friend and I
ready become absolute. This man must be what he claimed to be. There was no tra
e colonel put his valise at the foot of one bed, and walked to the window. The night had lightened somewhat and he saw the roofs of buildings, the dim line of the yellow r
but Harry saw Colonel Talbot's melancholy
e trouble,
down on the edge of the bed and smiled. It was
one out, and, Harry, because I'm a son of South Carolina I must go with it-and I don't want to go. But I've been a soldier all my life. I know little of politics. I ha
," said Harry
he moment, he wished for the sanguine decision of youth,
ors and the raid of John Brown has appalled me. But, Harry, pay good heed to me when I say it is not a mere matte
rstand you,"
eston and along the Carolina coast came by the way of the West Indies. They have strange superstitions. They believe that some of their number have the gift of second sight. In my childhood I knew two old women who claimed the power, and they gav
forgotten his presence. A vivid and powerful imagination had carried him not only from the ro
boy," he said, briskly. "To bed, Harry! To bed! Your s
present in his mind, that of Charleston, the famous city to which they were going. The effect of Colonel Talbot's ominous words had worn off. He would soon see the city which
the hour the dining-room was still crowded, and the room buzzed with animated talk. Harry knew very well that Charleston was the absorbing topic, just as it had been the one great thought in his own
was a country merchant of middle age, and the third was a young man of twenty-five, who had very little to say. The legislator, whose name was Ra
bot," he said. "One who can give up his commission in the army a
ot gave a re
p of one who will win many honors
l a grave," said Co
his stranger. He was built well, shaven smoothly, and did not look like a Tennesseean. His thin lips, often pressed
. All southern roads seem to lead to that town, and I, too, am go
t was so intent and comprehensive that the young m
a great city, and you must know something about the feel
pard. "No man can. But
ink?" persisted
ought to join her Southern sisters. As the others go out one by one, I think she wi
arolina swept him once more with t
I told my young friend here last nigh
ad become one of overwhelming interest. "Then Charleston, as its center
ard's face and a faint pink tint appe
Carolinian, "and I heard to-day that they are building earthworks, also. All are
ngly. "I believe you said you were l
hville. They do not need us yet in Charleston, although their tempers are pretty warm. There has been so much fiery talk, cumu
hem, or rather a thread of suspicion, a fine thread in truth, but strong enough to sustain something. He could see, too, that Colonel Talbot was giving Shepard a
e was a great amount of talk. Many of the older men sprinkled their words with expressive oaths. The oaths came so naturally that it seemed to be a habit with them. They chewed tobacco f
. He was dressed in a suit of rough gray jeans, with his trousers stuffed into high boots. He carried in
place. He took him for a mountaineer, and he judged by the
f Charleston
said the man, biting his wo
ght to take Tennes
oo. I 'low the South will get whipped like all tarnation, but if she does I'm a Southerner myself, an' I'll have to git whipped along with her. But ta
Harry in an extraordinary manner. It was direct and wonderfully convincing. The boy
litely. "I'm from Kentucky, and my fa
thought I'd look in here at Nashville an' see what the smart folks was doin'. I'd tell 'em not to let Tennessee go out of
" said Harry, "but I'm afraid we're
goes out, I reckon I'll go with her. It's hard to go ag'in your own gang. Leastways, 't ain't in me to do
tel. His walk was like his talk, straight and decisive. Harry saw Shepard in the lobby making friends, but, i