of indifference, and he knows that too. He has seen and felt, like sword-thrusts, my indignation, my contempt. He has said to my face, ‘You think me a coward.’ He is no fool, and has fully comprehended the situation. If he had virtually admitted, ‘I am a coward, and therefore can have no place among the friends who are surpassing your ideal of manly heroism,’ and withdrawn to those to whom a million is more than all heroism, the affair would have ended naturally long ago. But he persists in bringing me a daily sense of failure and humiliation. He says: ‘My regard for you is so great I can’t give you up, yet not so great as to lead me to do what hundreds of thousands are doing. I can’t face danger for your sake.’ I have tried to make the utmost allowance for his constitutional weakness, yet it has humiliated me that I had not the power to enable him to overcome so strange a failing. Why, I could face death for you, and he can’t stand beside one whom he used to sneer at as ‘little Strahan.’ Yet, such is his idea of my woman’s soul that he still gives me his thoughts and therefore his hopes;” and she almost stamped her foot in her irritation.
“Would you truly give your life for me?” he asked, gently.
“Yes, I know I could, and would were there necessity; not in callous disregard of danger, but because the greater emotion swallows up the less. Faulty as I am, there would be no bargainings and prudent reservations in my love. These are not the times for half-way people. Oh think, papa, while we are here in the midst of every comfort, how many thousands of mutilated, horribly wounded men are dying in agony throughout the South! My heart goes out to them in a sympathy and homage I can’t express. Think how Lane and even Strahan may be suffering to-night, with so much done for them, and then remember the prisoners of war and the poor unknown enlisted men, often terribly neglected, I fear. Papa, won’t you let me go as a nurse? The ache would go out of my own heart if I tried to reduce this awful sum of anguish a little. He whose word and touch always banished pain and disease would surely shield me in such labors. As soon as danger no longer threatens you, won’t you let me do a little, although I am only a girl?”
“Yes, Marian,” her father replied, gravely; “far be it from me to repress such heaven-born impulses. You are now attaining the highest rank reached by humanity. All the avenues of earthly distinction cannot lead beyond the spirit of self-sacrifice for others. This places you near the Divine Man, and all grow mean and plebeian to the degree that they recede from him. You see what comes of developing your better nature. Selfishness and its twin, cowardice, are crowded out.”
“Please don’t praise me any more. I can’t stand it,” faltered the girl, tearfully. A moment later her laugh rang out. “Hurrah!” she cried, “since Mr. Merwyn won’t go to the war, I’m going myself.”
“To make more wounds than you will heal,” her father added. “Remember the circumstances under which you go will have to receive very careful consideration, and I shall have to know all about the matron and nurses with whom you act. Your mother will be horrified, and so will not a few of your acquaintances. Flirting in shadows is proper enough, but helping wounded soldiers to live–But we understand each other, and I can trust you now.”
The next morning father and daughter parted with few misgivings, and the latter promised to go to her mother in a day or two, Mr. Vosburgh adding that if the week passed quietly he could join them on Saturday evening.
So they quietly exchanged their good-by kiss on the edge of a volcano already in eruption.
An early horseback ride in Central Park had become one of Merwyn’s habits of late. At that hour he met comparatively few abroad, and the desire for solitude was growing upon him. Like Mr. Vosburgh, he had watched with solicitude the beginning of the draft, feeling that if it passed quietly his only remaining chance would be to wring from his mother some form of release from his oath. Indeed, so unhappy and desperate was he becoming that he had thought of revealing everything to Mr. Vosburgh. The government officer, however, might feel it his duty to use the knowledge, should there come a time when the authorities proceeded against the property of the disloyal. Moreover, the young man felt that it would be dishonorable to reveal the secret.
Beyond his loyal impulses he now had little motive for effort. Marian’s prejudices against him had become too deeply rooted, and her woman’s honor for the knightly men her friends had proved too controlling a principle, ever to give him a chance for anything better than polite tolerance. He had discovered what this meant so fully, and in Blauvelt’s story had been shown the inevitable contrast which she must draw so vividly, that he had decided:–
“No more of Marian Vosburgh’s society until all is changed. Therefore no more forever, probably. If my mother proves as obdurate as a Southern jailer, I suppose I’m held, although I begin to think I have as good cause to break my chains as any other Union man. She tricked me into captivity, and holds me remorselessly,–not like a mother. Miss Vosburgh did show she had a woman’s heart, and would have given me her hand in friendship had I not been compelled to make her believe that I was a coward. If in some way I can escape my oath, and my reckless courage at the front proves her mistaken, I may return to her. Otherwise it is a useless humiliation and pain to see her any more.”
Such had been the nature of his musings throughout the long Sunday whose quiet had led to the belief that the draft would scarcely create a ripple of overt hostility. During his ride on Monday morning he nearly concluded to go to his country place again. He was growing nervous and restless, and he longed for the steadying influence of his mountain rambles before meeting his mother and deciding questions which would involve all their future relations.
As with bowed head, lost in thought, he approached the city by one of the park entrances, he heard a deep, angry murmur, as if a storm-vexed tide was coming in. Spurring his horse forward, he soon discovered, with a feeling like an electric shock, that a tide was indeed rising. Was it a temporary tidal wave of human passion, mysterious in its origin, soon to subside, leaving such wreckage as its senseless fury might have caused? Or was it the beginning of the revolution so long feared, but not now guarded against?
Converging from different avenues, men, women, and children were pouring by the thousand into a vacant lot near the park. Their presence seemed like a dream. Why was this angry multitude gathering here within a few rods of rural loveliness, their hoarse cries blending with the songs of robins and thrushes? It had been expected that the red monster would raise its head, if at all, in some purlieu of the east side. On the contrary its segregate parts were coming together at a distance from regions that would naturally generate them, and were forming under his very eyes the thing of which he had read, and, of late, had dreamed night and day,–a mob.
To change the figure, the vacant space, unbuilt upon as yet, was becoming an immense human reservoir, into which turgid streams with threatening sounds were surging from the south. His eyes could separate the tumultuous atoms into ragged forms, unkempt heads, inflamed faces, animated by some powerful destructive impulse. Arms of every description proved that the purpose of the gathering was not a peaceful one. But what was the purpose?
Riding closer he sought to question some on the outskirts of the throng, and so drew attention to himself. Volleys of oaths, stones, and sticks, were the only answers he received.
“Thank you,” Merwyn muttered, as he galloped away. “I begin to comprehend your meaning, but shall study you awhile before I take part in the controversy. Then there shall be some knock-down arguments.”
As he drew rein at a short distance the cry went up that he was a “spy,” and another rush was made for him; but he speedily distanced his pursuers. To his surprise the great multitude turned southward, pouring down Fifth and Sixth avenues. After keeping ahead for a few blocks, he saw that the mob, now numbering many thousands, was coming down town with some unknown purpose and destination.
Two things were at least clear,–the outbreak was unexpected, and no preparation had been made for it. As he approached his home on a sharp trot, a vague air of apprehension and expectation was beginning to manifest itself, and but little more. Policemen were on their beats, and the city on the fashionable avenues and cross-streets wore its midsummer aspect. Before entering his own home he obeyed an impulse to gallop by the Vosburgh residence. All was still quiet, and Marian, with surprise, saw him clattering past in a way that seemed reckless and undignified.
On reaching his home he followed his groom to the stable, and said, quietly: “You are an old family servant, but you must now give me positive assurance that I can trust you. There is a riot in the city, and there is no telling what house will be safe. Will you mount guard night and day in my absence?”
“Faix, sur, I will. Oi’ll sarve ye as I did yer fayther afore ye.”
“I believe you, but would shoot you if treacherous. You know I’ve been expecting this trouble. Keep the horse saddled. Bar and bolt everything. I shall be in and out at all hours, but will enter by the little side-door in the stable. Watch for my signal, and be ready to open to me only any door, and bolt it instantly after me. Leave all the weapons about the house just where I have put them. If any one asks for me, say I’m out and you don’t know when I’ll be back. Learn to recognize my voice and signal, no matter how disguised I am.”
The faithful old servant promised everything, and was soon executing orders. Before their neighbors had taken the alarm, the heavy shutters were closed, and the unusual precautions that in the family’s absence had been adopted rendered access possible only to great violence. On reaching his room Merwyn thought for a few moments. He was intensely excited, and there was a gleam of wild hope in his eyes, but he felt with proud exultation that in his manner he was imitating his father. Not a motion was hasty or useless. Right or wrong, in the solitude of his room or in the midst of the mob, his brain should direct his hand.
“And now my hand is free!” he exclaimed, aloud; “my oath cannot shackle it now.”
His first conclusion was to mingle with the mob and learn the nature and objects of the enemy. He believed the information would be valuable to Mr. Vosburgh and the police authorities. Having accomplished this purpose he would join any organized resistance he could find, at the same time always seeking to shield Marian from the possibility of danger.
He had already been shown that in order to understand the character and aims of the mob he must appear to be one of them, and he decided that he could carry off the disguise of a young city mechanic better than any other.
This plan he carried out by donning from his own wardrobe a plain dark flannel suit, which, when it had been rolled in dust and oil, and received a judicious rip here and there, presented the appearance of a costume of a workman just from his shop. With further injunctions to Thomas and the old serving-woman, he made his way rapidly to the north-east, where the smoke of a conflagration proved that the spirit of mischief was increasing.
One would not have guessed, as he hurried up Third Avenue, that he was well armed, but there were two small, yet effective revolvers and a dirk upon his person. As has been related before, he had practised for this emergency, and could be as quick as a flash with his weapon.
He had acted with the celerity of youth, guided by definite plans, and soon began to make his way quietly through the throng that blocked the avenue, gradually approaching the fire at the corner of 45th Street. At first the crowd was a mystery to him, so orderly, quiet, and inoffensive did it appear, although composed largely of the very dregs of the slums. The crackling, roaring flames, devouring tenement-houses, were equally mysterious. No one was seeking to extinguish them, although the occupants of the houses were escaping for their lives, dragging out their humble effects. The crowd merely looked on with a pleased, satisfied expression. After a moment’s thought Merwyn remembered that the draft had been begun in one of the burning houses, and was told by a bystander, “We smashed the ranch and broke some jaws before the bonfire.”
That the crowd was only a purring tiger was soon proved, for some one near said, “There’s Kennedy, chief of the cops;” and it seemed scarcely a moment before the officer was surrounded by an infuriated throng who were raining curses and blows upon him.
Merwyn made an impulsive spring forward in his defence, but a dozen forms intervened, and his effort was supposed to be as hostile as that of the rioters. The very numbers that sought to destroy Kennedy gave him a chance, for they impeded one another, and, regaining his feet, he led a wild chase across a vacant lot, pursued by a hooting mob as if he were a mad dog. The crowd that filled the street almost as far as eye could reach now began to sway back and forth as if coming under the influence of some new impulse, and Merwyn was so wedged in that he had to move with the others. Being tall he saw that Kennedy, after the most brutal treatment, was rescued almost by a miracle, apparently more dead than alive. It also became clear to him that the least suspicion of his character and purpose would cost him his life instantly. He therefore resolved on the utmost self-control. He was ready to risk his life, but not to throw it away uselessly,–not at least till he knew that Marian was safe. It was his duty now to investigate the mob, not fight it.
The next excitement was caused by the cry, “The soldiers are coming!”
These proved to be a small detachment of the invalid corps, who showed their comprehension of affairs by firing over the rioters’ heads, thinking to disperse them by a little noise. The mob settled the question of noise by howling as if a menagerie had broken loose, and, rushing upon the handful of men, snatched their muskets, first pounding the almost paralyzed veterans, and then chasing them as a wilderness of wolves would pursue a small array of sheep.
As Merwyn stepped down from a dray, whereon he had witnessed the scene, he muttered, indiscreetly, “What does such nonsense amount to!”
A big hulking fellow, carrying a bar of iron, who had stood beside him, and who apparently had had his suspicions, asked, fiercely, “An’ what did ye expect it wud amount to? An’ what’s the nonsense ye’re growlin’ at? By the holy poker oi belave you’re a spy.”
“Yis, prove that, and I’ll cut his heart out,” cried an inebriated woman, brandishing a knife a foot long.
“Yes, prove it, you thunderin’ fool!” cried Merwyn.
“The cops are comin’ now, and you want to begin a fight among ourselves.”
True enough, the cry came ringing up the avenue, “The cops comin.'”
“Oh, an’ ye’s wan uv us, oi’ll stan’ by ye; but oi’ve got me eye on ye, and ‘ud think no more o’ brainin’ ye than a puppy.”
“Try brainin’ the cops first, if yer know when yer well off,” replied Merwyn, drawing a pistol. “I didn’t come out to fight bullies in our crowd.”
The momentary excitement caused by this altercation was swallowed up by the advent of a squad of police, which wheeled into the avenue from 43d Street, and checked the pursuit of the bleeding remnants of the invalid corps. Those immediately around the young man pressed forward to see what took place, he following, but edging towards the sidewalk, with the eager purpose to see the first fight between the mob and the police.
CHAPTER XLII.
THAT WORST OF MONSTERS, A MOB.
AFTER reaching the sidewalk Merwyn soon found a chance to mount a dry-goods box, that he might better observe the action of the police and form an idea of their numbers. The moment he saw the insignificant band he felt that they were doomed men, or else the spirit abroad was not what he thought it to be, and he had been witnessing some strong indications of its ruthless nature.
It was characteristic of the young fellow that he did not rush to the aid of the police. He was able, even in that seething flood of excitement, to reason coolly, and his thoughts were something to this effect: “I’m not going to throw away my life and all its chances and duties because the authorities are so ignorant as to sacrifice a score or two of their men. I shall not fight at all until I have seen Marian and Mr. Vosburgh. When I have done something to insure their safety, or at least to prove that I am not a coward, I shall know better what to do and how to do it. This outbreak is not an affair of a few hours. She herself may be exposed to the fury of these fiends, for I believe her father is, or will be, a marked man.”
Seeing, farther up the avenue, a small balcony as yet unoccupied, he pushed his way towards it, that he might obtain one more view of the drift of affairs before taking his course. The hall-door leading to the second story was open and filled with a crowd of frightened, unkempt women and children, who gave way before him. The door of the room opening on the balcony was locked, and, in response to his repeated knockings, a quavering voice asked what was wanted.
“You must open instantly,” was his reply.
A trembling, gray-haired woman put the door ajar, and he pushed in at once, saying: “Bolt the door again, madam. I will do you no harm, and may be able to save you from injury;” and he was out in the balcony before his assurances were concluded.
“Indeed, sir, I’ve done no one any wrong, and therefore need no protection. I only wish to be let alone with my children.”
“That you cannot expect with certainty, in view of what is going on to-day. Do you not know that they are burning houses? As long as I’m here I’ll be a protection. I merely wish the use of this little outlook for a brief time. So say nothing more, for I must give my whole attention to the fight.”
“Well then, since you are so civil, you can stay; but the street is full of devils.”
He paid no heed to her further lamentations, and looking southward saw that the police had formed a line across the avenue, and that such battered remnants of the invalid corps as had escaped were limping off behind their cover as fast as possible. The presence of the city’s guardians had caused a brief hesitation in the approaching and broken edge of the rabble. Seeing this the brave sergeant ordered a charge, which was promptly and swiftly made, the mob recoiling before it more and more slowly as under pressure it became denser. There was no more effort to carry out the insane, rather than humane, tactics of the invalid corps, who had either fired high or used blank cartridges, for now the police struck for life with their locust clubs, and the thud of the blows could often be heard even above the uproar. Every one within reach of their arms went down, and the majority lay quietly where they fell, as the devoted little band pressed slowly forward. With regret Merwyn saw Barney Ghegan among the foremost, his broad red face streaming with perspiration, and he wielding his club as if it were the deadliest of shillalahs.
They did indeed strike manfully, and proved what an adequate force could do. Rioters fell before them on every side. But hopeless reaping was theirs, with miles of solid, bloodthirsty humanity before them. Slowly and more falteringly they made their way three blocks, as far as 46th Street, sustained by the hope of finding reinforcements there. Instead of these, heavier bodies of the enemy poured in from the side-streets upon the exhausted men, and the mob closed behind them from 45th Street, like dark, surging waves. Then came a mad rush upon the hemmed-in officers, who were attacked in front and in the rear, with clubs, iron-bars, guns, and pistols. Tom, bruised, bleeding, the force that had fought so gallantly broke, each man striking out for his own life. The vast heterogeneous crowd now afforded their chief chance for escape. Dodging behind numbers, taking advantage of the wild confusion of the swaying, trampling masses, and striking down some direct opponent, a few got off with slight bruises. There were wonderful instances of escape. The brave sergeant who had led the squad had his left wrist broken by an iron bar, but, knocking down two other assailants, he sprung into a house and bolted the door after him. An heroic German girl, with none of the stolid phlegm attributed to her race, lifted the upper mattress of her bed. The sergeant sprung in and was covered up without a word. There was no time then for plans and explanations. A moment later the door was broken, and a score of fierce-visaged men streamed in. Now the girl was stolidity itself.
“Der cop run out der back door,” was all that she could be made to say in answer to fierce inquiries. Every apartment was examined in vain, and then the roughs departed in search of other prey. Brave, simple-hearted girl! She would have been torn to pieces had her humane strategy been discovered.
But a more memorable act of heroism was reserved for another woman, Mrs. Eagan, the wife of the man who had rescued Superintendent Kennedy a short time before. A policeman was knocked down with a hay-bale rung, and fell at her very feet. In a moment more he would have been killed, but this woman instantly covered his form with her own, so that no blow could reach him unless she was first struck. Then she begged for his life. Even the wild-beast spirit of the mob was touched, and the pursuers passed on. A monument should have been built to the woman who, in that pandemonium of passion, could so risk all for a stranger.
I am not defending Merwyn’s course, but sketching a character. His spirit of strategical observation would have forsaken him had he witnessed that scene, and indeed it did forsake him as he saw Barney Ghegan running and making a path for himself by the terrific blows of his club. Three times he fell but rose again, with the same indomitable pluck which had won his suit to pretty Sally Maguire. At last the brave fellow was struck down almost opposite the balcony. Merwyn knew the man was a favorite of the Vosburghs, and he could not bear that the brave fellow should be murdered before his very eyes; yet murdered he apparently was ere Merwyn could reach the street. Like baffled fiends his pursuers closed upon the unfortunate man, pounding him and jumping upon him. And almost instantly the vile hags that followed the marauders like harpies, for the sake of plunder began stripping his body.
“Stop!” thundered Merwyn, the second he reached the scene, and, standing over the prostrate form, he levelled a pistol at the throng. “Now, listen to me,” he added. “I don’t wish to hurt anybody. You’ve killed this man, so let his body alone. I know his wife, an Irishwoman, and she ought at least to have his body for decent burial.”
“Faix, an he’s roight,” cried one, who seemed a leader. “We’ve killed the man. Let his woife have what’s left uv ‘im;” and the crowd broke away, following the speaker.
This was one of the early indications of what was proved afterwards,–that the mob was hydra-headed, following either its own impulses or leaders that sprung up everywhere.
An abandoned express-wagon stood near, and into this Merwyn, with the help of a bystander, lifted the insensible man. The young fellow then drove, as rapidly as the condition of the streets permitted, to the nearest hospital. A few yards carried him beyond those who had knowledge of the affair, and after that he was unmolested. It was the policy of the rioters to have the bodies of their friends disappear as soon as possible. Poor Ghegan had been stripped to his shirt and drawers, and so was not recognized as a “cop.”
Leaving him at the hospital, with brief explanations, Merwyn was about to hasten away, when the surgeon remarked, “The man is dead, apparently.”
“I can’t help it,” cried Merwyn. “I’ll bring his wife as soon as possible. Of course you will do all in your power;” and he started away on a run.
A few moments later Barney Ghegan was taken to the dead-house.
CHAPTER XLIII.
THE “COWARD.”
MERWYN now felt that he had carried out the first part of his plan. He had looked into the murderous eyes of the mob, and learned its spirit and purpose. Already he reproached himself for leaving Marian alone so long, especially as columns of smoke were rising throughout the northern part of the city. It seemed an age since he had seen that first cloud of the storm, as he emerged from the park after his quiet ride, but it was not yet noon.
As he sped through the streets, running where he dared, and fortunately having enough of the general aspect of a rioter to be unmolested, he noticed a new feature in the outbreak, one that soon became a chief characteristic,–the hatred of negroes and the sanguinary pursuit of them everywhere.
“Another danger for the Vosburghs,” he groaned. “They have a colored servant, who must be spirited off somewhere instantly.”
Avoiding crowds, he soon reached the quiet side-street on which Marian lived, and was overjoyed to find it almost deserted. Mammy Borden herself answered his impatient ring, and was about to shut the door on so disreputable a person as he now appeared to be, when he shouldered it open, turned, locked and chained it with haste.
“What do you mean, sir? and who are you?” Marian demanded, running from the parlor on hearing the expostulations of her servant.
“Have patience, Miss Vosburgh.”
“Oh, it is you, Mr. Merwyn. Indeed I have need of patience. An hour ago papa sent a message from down town, saying: ‘Don’t leave the house to-day. Serious trouble on foot.’ Since then not a word, only wild-looking people running through the street, the ringing of fire-bells, and the sounds of some kind of disturbance. What does it all mean? and why do you bar and bolt everything so timidly?” and the excited girl poured out her words in a torrent.
Merwyn’s first words were exasperating, and the girl had already passed almost beyond self-control. “Has any one seen your colored servant to-day?”
“What if they have? What does your unseemly guise mean? Oh that my brave friends were here to go out and meet the rabble like soldiers! There’s an outbreak, of course; we’ve been expecting it; but certainly MEN should not fear the canaille of the slums. It gives me a sickening impression, Mr. Merwyn, to see you rush in, almost force your way in, and disguised too, as if you sought safety by identifying yourself with those who would quail before a brave, armed man. Pardon me if I’m severe, but I feel that my father is in danger, and if I don’t hear from him soon I shall take Mammy Borden as escort and go to his office. Whoever is abroad, they won’t molest women, and I’M NOT AFRAID.”
“By so doing you would disobey your father, who has told you not to leave the house to-day.”
“But I can’t bear inaction and suspense at such a time.”
“You must bear it, Miss Vosburgh. Seeing the mood you are in, I shall not permit that door to be opened to any one except your father or some one that you recognize.”
“You cannot help yourself,” she replied, scornfully, approaching the door.
He was there before her, and, taking out the key, put it in his pocket.
“Oh, this is shameful!” she cried, blushing scarlet “Can your fears carry you so far?”
“Yes, and much farther, if needful,” he replied, with a grim laugh. “When you are calm enough to listen to me, to be sane and just, I’ll explain. Until you are I shall remain master here and protect you and your home.” Then, in a tone of stern authority, he added: “Mrs. Borden, sit yonder in that darkened parlor, and don’t move unless I tell you to hide. Then hide in earnest, as you value your life.”
“Would you not also like a hiding-place provided, Mr. Merwyn?” Marian asked, almost beside herself with anger and anxiety.
His reply was to go to the window and look up and down the still quiet street.
“A respite,” he remarked, then turned to the colored woman, and in a tone which she instantly obeyed, said, “Go to that parlor, where you cannot be seen from the street.” Then to Marian, “I have no authority over you.”
“No, I should hope not. Is there no escape from this intrusion?”
“None for the present,” he replied, coldly. “You settled it long since that I was a coward, and now that I am not a gentleman. I shall make no self-defence except to your father, whom I expect momentarily. He cannot leave you alone to-day an instant longer than is unavoidable. I wish to remind you of one thing, however: your soldier friends have long been your pride.”
“Oh that these friends were here to day!”
“They would be surprised at your lack of quiet fortitude.”
“Must I be humiliated in my own home?”
“You are humiliating yourself. Had you treated me with even your old cool toleration and civility, I would have told you all that has happened since morning; but you have left me no chance for anything except to take the precautions heedful to save your home and yourself. You think I fled here as a disguised fugitive. When shall I forget this crowning proof of your estimate and esteem? You see I did not come unarmed,” partially drawing a revolver. “I repeat, you are proud of your soldier friends. You have not learned that the first duty of a soldier is to obey orders; and you have your father’s orders. Obey them quietly, and you are under no necessity to speak to me again. When your father comes I will relieve you of my hated presence. If he wishes it, I will still serve you both for his sake, for he always kept a little faith and fairness for me. Now, regard me as a sentinel, a common soldier, to whom you need not speak until your father comes;” and he turned to the windows and began fastening them.
He, too, was terribly incensed. He had come to interpose his life between her and danger, and her words and manner had probed a deep wound that had long been bleeding. The scenes he had witnessed had wrought him up to a mood as stern and uncompromising as the death he soon expected to meet. When utterly off her guard she had shown him, as he believed, her utter contempt and detestation, and at that moment there was not a more reckless man in the city.
But his bitter words and indomitable will had quieted her As he stood motionless upon guard by the window, his was not the attitude of a cowering fugitive. She now admitted that her wild excitement and her disposition to rush to her father, contrary to his injunction, were unworthy of her friends and of herself.
There had been panic that morning in the city, and she had caught the contagion in a characteristic way. She had had no thought of hiding and cowering, but she had been on the eve of carrying out rash impulses. She had given way to uncontrollable excitement; and if her father should learn all she feared he would send her from the city as one not to be trusted. What should she think of that silent, motionless sentinel at the window? Suppose, after all, she had misunderstood and misjudged him,–suppose he HAD come for her protection. In view of this possibility which she had now to entertain, how grossly she had insulted him! If her father came and approved of his course, how could she ever look one so wronged in the face again? She must try to soften her words a little. Woman-like, she believed that she could certainly soothe a man as far as she deemed it judicious, and then leave the future for further diplomacy. Coward, or not, he had now made her afraid of him.
“Mr. Merwyn,” she began.
He made no response whatever.
Again, in a lower and more timid voice, she repeated his name.
Without turning, he said: “Miss Vosburgh, I’m on guard. You interfere with my duty. There is no reason for further courtesies between us. If you are sufficiently calm, aid Mrs. Borden in packing such belongings as she actually needs. She must leave this house as soon as possible.”
“What!” cried the girl, hotly, “send this faithful old woman out into the streets? Never.”
“I did not say, ‘out into the streets.’ When your father comes one of his first efforts will be to send her to a place of safety. No doubt he has already warned her son to find a hiding-place.”
“Great heavens! why don’t you explain?”
“What chance have I had to explain? Ah! come here, and all will be plain enough.”
She stood at his side and saw a gang of men and boys’ chasing a colored man, with the spirit of bloodhounds in their tones and faces.
“Now I’se understan’, too, Mass’r Merwyn,” said the trembling colored woman, looking over their shoulders.
“Go back,” he said, sternly. “If you were seen, that yelling pack of fiends would break into this house as if it were paste-board. Obey orders, both of you, and keep out of sight.”
Awed, overwhelmed, they stole to the back parlor; but Marian soon faltered, “O Mr. Merwyn, won’t you forgive me?”
He made no reply, and a moment later he stepped to the door. Mr. Vosburgh hastily entered, and Marian rushed into his arms.
“What, Merwyn! you here? Thank God my darling was not alone! Well, Merwyn, you’ve got to play the soldier now, and so have we all.”
“I shall not ‘play the soldier’;” was the reply, in quick, firm utterance. “But no matter about me, except that my time is limited. I wish to report to you certain things which I have seen, and leave it to your decision whether I can serve you somewhat, and whether Miss Vosburgh should remain in the city. I would also respectfully suggest that your colored servant be sent out of town at once. I offer my services to convey her to New Jersey, if you know of a near refuge there, or else to my place in the country.”
“Good God, Merwyn! don’t you know that by such an act you take your life in your hand?”
“I have already taken it in my hand, an open hand at that. It has become of little value to me. But we have not a second to lose. I have a very sad duty to perform at once, and only stayed till you came. If you have learned the spirit abroad to-day, you know that your household was and is in danger.”
“Alas! I know it only too well. The trouble had scarcely begun before I was using agents and telegraph wires. I have also been to police headquarters. Only the sternest sense of duty to the government kept me so long from my child; but a man at Washington is depending on me for information.”
“So I supposed. I may be able to serve you, if you can bring yourself to employ a coward. I shall be at police headquarters, and can bring you intelligence. When not on duty you should be in the streets as little as possible. But, first, I would respectfully suggest that Miss Vosburgh retire, for I have things to say to you which she should not hear.”
“This to me, who listened to the story of Gettysburg?”
“All was totally different then.”
“And I, apparently, was totally different. I deserve your reproach; I should be sent to the nursery.”
“I think you should go and help Mrs. Borden,” said Merwyn, quietly.
“It’s impossible to send Mammy Borden away just yet,–not till darkness comes to aid our effort,” said Mr. Vosburgh, decisively. “You can serve me greatly, Merwyn, and your country also, if you have the nerve. It will require great risks. I tell you so frankly. This is going to prove worse than open battle. O Marian, would to God you were with your mother!”
“In that case I would come to you if I had to walk. I have wronged and insulted you, Mr. Merwyn; I beg your pardon. Now don’t waste another moment on me, for I declare before God I shall remain with my father unless taken away by force; and you would soon find that the most fatal course possible.”
“Well, these are lurid times. I dreaded the thing enough, but now that it has come so unexpectedly, it is far worse–But enough of this. Mr. Merwyn, are you willing to take the risks that I shall?”
“Yes, on condition that I save you unnecessary risks.”
“Oh what a fool I’ve been!” Marian exclaimed, with one of her expressive gestures.
“Mr. Vosburgh,” said Merwyn, “there is one duty which I feel I ought to perform first of all. Mrs. Ghegan, your old waitress, should be taken to her husband.”
“What! Barney? What has happened to him?”
“I fear he is dead. I disguised myself as you see–“
“Yes, sensibly. No well-dressed man is safe on some streets.”
“Certainly not where I’ve been. I determined to learn the character of the mob, and I have mingled among them all the morning. I saw the invalid corps put to flight instantly, and the fight with a handful of police that followed. I looked on, for to take part was to risk life and means of knowledge uselessly. The savage, murderous spirit shown on every side also proved that your household might be in danger while you were absent. The police fought bravely and vainly. They were overpowered as a matter of course, and yet the police will prove the city’s chief defence. When I saw Barney running and fighting heroically for his life, I couldn’t remain spectator any longer, but before I could reach him he was prostrate, senseless, and nearly stripped. With my revolver and a little persuasion I secured his body, and took it to a hospital. A surgeon thought he was dead. I don’t know, but that his wife should be informed and go to him seems only common humanity.”
“Well, Merwyn, I don’t know,” said Mr. Vosburgh, dubiously; “we are in the midst of a great battle, and when one is down–Well, the cause must be first, you know. Whether this is a part of the rebellion or not, it will soon be utilized by the Confederate leaders. What I say of Barney I would say of myself and mine,–all private considerations must give–“
“I understand,” interrupted Merwyn, impatiently. “But in taking Mrs. Ghegan across town I could see and learn as much as if alone, and she would even be a protection to me. In getting information one will have to use every subterfuge. I think nothing will be lost by this act. From the hospital I will go direct to police headquarters, and stipulate as to my service,–for I shall serve in my own way,–and then, if there is no pressing duty, I will report to you again.”
Mr. Vosburgh sprung up and wrung the young fellow’s hand as he said: “We have done you great wrong. I, too, beg your pardon. But more than all the city to me is my duty to the general government. To a certain extent I must keep aloof from the actual scenes of violence, or I fail my employers and risk vast interests. If consistently with your ideas of duty you can aid me now, I shall be more grateful than if you saved my life. Information now may be vital to the nation’s safety. You may find me at police headquarters an hour or two hence.”
“It is settled then, and events will shape future action;” and he was turning hastily away.
A hand fell upon his arm, and never had he looked upon a face in which shame and contrition were so blended.
“What will be your future action towards me?” Marian asked, as she detained him. “Will you have no mercy on the girl who was so weak as to be almost hysterical?”
“You have redeemed your weakness,” he replied, coldly. “You are your old high-bred, courageous self, and you will probably cease to think of me as a coward before the day is over. Good-afternoon;” and in a moment he was gone.
“I have offended him beyond hope,” she said, as she turned, drooping, to her father.
“Never imagine it, darling,” her father replied, with a smile. “His lip quivered as you spoke, and I have learned to read the faintest signs in a man. You have both been overwrought and in no condition for calm, natural action. Mervvyn will relent. You lost your poise through excitement, not cowardice, and he, young and all undisciplined, has witnessed scenes that might appall a veteran. But now all must be courage and action. Since you will remain with me you must be a soldier, and be armed like one. Come with me to my room, and I will give you a small revolver. I am glad that you have amused yourself with the dangerous toy, and know how to use it. Then you must help me plan a disguise which will almost deceive your eyes. Keeping busy, my dear, will prove the best tonic for your nerves. Mammy Borden, you must go to your room and stay there till we find a way of sending you to a place of safety. After you have disappeared for a time I’ll tell the other servant that you have gone away. I sent your son home before I left the office, and he, no doubt, is keeping out of harm’s way.”
The old woman courtesied, but there was a dogged, hunted look in her eyes as she crept away, muttering, “Dis is what Zeb call de ‘lan’ ob de free!'”
CHAPTER XLIV.
A WIFE’S EMBRACE.
“O PAPA,” cried Marian, after reaching the library, “we let Mr. Merwyn go without a lunch, and it’s nearly two o’clock. Nor do I believe you have had a mouthful since breakfast, and I’ve forgotten all about providing anything. Oh, how signally I have failed on the first day of battle!”
“You are not the first soldier, by untold millions, who has done so; but you have not shown the white feather yet.”
“When I do that I shall expire from shame. You rummage for a disguise, and I’ll be back soon.”
She hastened to the kitchen, and at a glance saw that the Irish cook had fled, taking not a little with her. The range fire was out, and the refrigerator and the store-closet had been ravaged. She first barred and bolted all the doors, and then the best she could bring her father was crackers and milk and some old Sherry wine; but she nearly dropped these when she saw a strange man, as she supposed, emerge from his bedroom.
Mr. Vosburgh’s laugh reassured her, and he said: “I fancy I shall pass among strangers, since you don’t know me. Nothing could be better than the milk and crackers. No wine. My head must be clearer to-day than it ever was before. So the Irish Biddy has gone with her plunder? Good riddance to her. She would have been a spy in the camp. I’ll bring home food that won’t require cooking, and you’ll have to learn to make coffee, for Merwyn and others will, no doubt, often come half dead from fatigue. All we can do is to forage in such shops as are open, and you’ll have to take the office of commissary at once. You must also be my private secretary. As fast as I write these despatches and letters copy them. I can eat and write at the same time. In an hour I must go out.”
“I won’t play the fool again,” said the girl, doggedly.
“Drink this glass of milk first, while I run down for more, and satisfy my mind as to the fastenings, etc.”
“But, papa–“
“Marian,” he said, gravely, “you can stay with me only on one condition: you must obey orders.”
“That is what Mr. Merwyn said. Oh what a credit I’ve been to my military friends!” and with difficulty she drank the milk.
“You are a promising young recruit,” was the smiling reply. “We’ll promote you before the week’s out.”
In five minutes he was back, cool, yet almost as quick as light in every movement.
The despatches she copied were unintelligible to Marian, but the one to whom they were addressed had the key. The copies of the letters were placed in a secret drawer.
When their tasks were finished, Mr. Vosburgh looked up and down the street and was glad to find it comparatively empty. The storm of passion was raging elsewhere.
He closed all the shutters of the house, giving it a deserted aspect, then said to his daughter. “You must admit no one in my absence, and parley with no one who does not give the password, ‘Gettysburg and Little Round Top.’ If men should come who say these words, tell them to linger near without attracting attention, and come again after I return. Admit Merwyn, of course, for you know his voice. It is a terrible trial to leave you alone, but there seems to be no prospect of trouble in this locality. At all events, I must do my duty, cost what it may. Be vigilant, and do not worry unnecessarily if I am detained.”
“I am bent on retrieving myself, papa; and I’d rather die than be so weak again.”
“That’s my brave girl. You won’t die. After this venture, which I must make at once, I shall be able to take greater precautions;” and with a fond look and kiss, he hastened away through the basement entrance, Marian fastening it securely after him.
We must now follow Merwyn’s fortunes for a time. Rapidly, yet vigilantly he made his way up town and crossed Third Avenue. He soon observed that the spirit of lawlessness was increasing. Columns of smoke were rising from various points, indicating burning buildings, and in Lexington Avenue he witnessed the unblushing sack of beautiful homes, from which the inmates had been driven in terror for their lives.
“It will be strange if Mr. Vosburgh’s home escapes,” he thought. “Some one must know enough of his calling to bring upon him and his the vengeance of the mob. I shall do the best I can for him and his daughter, but to-day has slain the last vestige of hope beyond that of compelling her respect. Wholly off her guard, she showed her deep-rooted detestation, and she can never disguise it again. Regret and mortification at her conduct, a wish to make amends and to show gratitude for such aid as I may give her father, will probably lead her to be very gracious; at the same time I shall ever know that in her heart is a repugnance which she cannot overcome. A woman can never love a man towards whom she has entertained thoughts like hers;” and with much bitter musings, added to his reckless impulses, he made his way to the region in which Mrs. Ghegan had her rooms.
Finding a livery stable near he hired a hack, securing it by threats as well as money, and was soon at the door of the tenement he sought.
Mrs. Ghegan showed her scared, yet pretty face in response to his knock.
“Ye’s brought me bad news,” she said, instantly, beginning to sob.
“Yes, Mrs. Ghegan; but if you love your husband you will show it now. I have come to take you to him. He has been wounded.”
“Is it Mr. Merwyn?”
“Yes; I’ve just come from Mr. Vosburgh, and he will do what he can for you when he has a chance. They know about your trouble. Now make haste, for we’ve not a moment to lose in reaching the hospital.”
“The Lord knows I love Barney as me loife, an’ that I’d go to him through fire and blood. Oi’ll kape ye no longer than to tie me bonnet on;” and this she was already doing with trembling fingers.
Locking the door, she took the key with her, and was soon in the hack. Merwyn mounted the box with the driver, knowing that openness was the best safeguard against suspicions that might soon prove fatal. At one point they were surrounded and stopped by the rioters, who demanded explanations.
“Clear out, ye bloody divils!” cried Sally, who did not count timidity among her foibles; “wud ye kape a woman from goin’ to her husband, a-dyin’ beloikes?”
“Oh, let us pass,” said Merwyn, in a loud tone. “A cop knocked her husband on the head, and we are taking her to him.”
“Och! ye are roight, me mon. We’ll let onybody pass who spakes in her swate brogue;” and the crowd parted.
Reaching the hospital, Sally rushed into the office with the breathless demand, “Where’s Barney?”
Merwyn recognized the surgeon he had met before, and said: “You know the man I brought a few hours since. This is his wife.”
The surgeon looked grave and hesitated.
“What have ye done wid him?” Sally almost screamed. “Are ye no better than the bloody villains in the strates?”
“My good woman,” began the surgeon, “you must be more composed and reasonable. We try to save life when there is life–“
“Where is he?” shrieked the woman.
The surgeon, accustomed to similar scenes, nodded to an attendant, and said, gravely, “Show her.”
Merwyn took the poor woman’s hand to restrain as well as to reassure her, saying, with sympathies deeply touched, “Mrs. Ghegan, remember you are not friendless, whatever happens.”
“Quick! quick!” she said to her guide. “Och! what’s a wurld uv frin’s if I lose Barney? Poor man! poor man! He once said I blew hot and could, but oi’d give him me loife’s blood now.”
To Merwyn’s sorrow they were led to the dead-house, and there lay the object of their quest, apparently lifeless, his battered face almost past recognition. But Sally knew him instantly, and stared for a moment as if turned to stone; then, with a wild cry, she threw herself upon him, moaning, sobbing, and straining his unconscious form to her breast.
Merwyn felt that it would be best to let her paroxysm of grief expend itself unrestrained; but a bitter thought crossed his mind,–“I may be in as bad a plight as poor Barney before the day closes, yet no one would grieve for me like that.”
Suddenly Mrs. Ghegan became still. In her embrace her hand had rested over her husband’s heart, and had felt a faint pulsation. A moment later she sprung up and rushed back to the office. Merwyn thought that she was partially demented, and could scarcely keep pace with her.
Bursting in at the door, she cried: “Och! ye bloody spalpanes, to put a loive man where ye did! Come wid me, an’ oi’ll tache ye that I knows more than ye all.”
“Please satisfy her,” said Merwyn to the surgeon, who was inclined to ignore what he regarded as the wild ravings of a grief-crazed woman.
“Well, well, if it will do any good; but we have too much to do to-day for those who have a chance–“
“Come on, or oi’ll drag ye there,” the wife broke in.
“When I’ve satisfied you, my good woman, you must become quiet and civil. Other wives have lost their husbands–“
But Sally was already out of hearing. Reaching the supposed corpse, the deeply excited woman said, with eyes blazing through her tears, “Put yez hand on his heart.”
The surgeon did so, and almost instantly the expression of his face changed, and he said sharply to the attendant, “Bring a stretcher with bearers at once.” Then to Sally: “You are right; he is alive, but there was no such pulsation as this when he was brought here. Now be quiet and cheer up, and we may help you save his life. You can stay and take care of him.”
Merwyn again took the wife’s trembling hand and said, earnestly: “Mrs. Ghegan, obey the surgeon’s orders exactly. Be quiet, gentle, and self-controlled, and Barney may outlive us all.”
“Faix, Mr. Merwyn, now that oi’ve hope I’ll be whist as a baby asleep. Ye knew me onst as a light, giddy gurl, but oi’ll watch over Barney wid such a slapeless eye as wud shame his own mither.”
And she kept her word. For days and nights her husband remained unconscious, wavering between life and death. The faithful woman, as indifferent to the tumult and havoc in the city as if it were in another land, sat beside him and furthered all efforts in a winning fight.
Merwyn saw him in a hospital ward, surrounded by skilful hands, before he took his leave.
“God bless ye!” Sally began. “If yez hadn’t brought me–“
But, pressing her hand warmly, he did not wait to hear her grateful words.
CHAPTER XLV.
THE DECISIVE BATTLE.
MERWYN was now very anxious to reach police headquarters in Mulberry Street, for he felt that the safety of the city, as well as all personal interests dear to him, depended upon adequate and well-organized resistance.
The driver, having been promised a handsome reward to remain, still waited. Indeed, he had gained the impression that Merwyn was in sympathy with the ruthless forces then in the ascendant, and he felt safer in his company than if returning alone.
Mounting the box again, Merwyn directed the driver to make his way through the more open streets to Broadway and 14th Street.
They had not gone far through the disturbed districts when four rough-looking men stopped them, took possession of the hack, and insolently required that they should be driven to Union Square. The last ugly-visaged personage to enter the vehicle paused a moment, drew a revolver, and said, “An’ ye don’t ‘bey orders, this little bull-dog will spake to ye next.”
The Jehu looked with a pallid face at Merwyn, who said, carelessly: “It’s all right. They are going in my direction.”
The quartet within soon began to entertain suspicions of Merwyn, and the one who had last spoken, apparently the leader, thrust his head out of the window and shouted: “Shtop! Who the divil is that chap on the box wid ye?”
“I’ll answer for myself,” said Merwyn, seeking to employ the vernacular as well as the appearance of an American mechanic. “The driver don’t know anything about me. A cop knocked a friend of mine on the head this morning, and I’ve been taking his wife to him.”
The driver now took his cue, and added, “Faix, and a nice, dacent little Irishwoman she was, bedad.”
“Then ye’re wan wid us?” cried the leader of the gang.
“It looks mighty like it,” was the laughing reply. “This would be a poor place for me to hang out, if I was afraid of you or your friends.”
“Yez may bet your loife on that. How coomes it ye’re so hand-and-glove wid an Irishman, when ye spake no brogue at all?”
“Thunder! man, do you think no one but Irishmen are going to have a fist in this scrimmage? I’m as ready to fight as you are, and am only going down town to join my own gang. Why shouldn’t I have an Irishman for a friend, if he’s a good fellow, I’d like to know?”
“Beloikes they’ll be yez best frin’s. All roight. Dhrive on and moind your eye, or the bull-dog will bark.”
They ordered a halt several times, while one and another went to a saloon for a drink. It was fast becoming evident that, should there be any want of courage or recklessness, whiskey would supply the lack.
Merwyn preserved nonchalant indifference, even when his disreputable companions were approached by those with whom they were in league, and information and orders were exchanged which he partially overheard. Although much was said in a jargon that he scarcely understood, he gathered that nothing less was on foot than an attack on police headquarters, in the hope of crushing at the start the power most feared. Therefore, while he maintained his mask, every sense was on the alert.
At length they reached Union Square, and the occupants of the hack alighted. Two went east and one west, while the leader said to Merwyn, who had also jumped down: “Take me to your gang. We’re afther needing ivery divil’s son of ‘im widin the next hour or so. It’s a big game we’re playin’ now, me lad, an’ see that ye play square and thrue, or your swateheart’ll miss ye the noight.”
“You’ll have to have a bigger crowd on Broadway before you’ll get our fellows out,” Merwyn replied. “We’re not going to face the cops until there’s enough on hand to give us a livin’ chance.”
“There’ll be plenty on hand–more’n ye ever seed in yer loife–before ye’re an hour older. So lead on, and shtop your palaver. I’m not quite sure on ye yet.”
“You soon will be,” replied Merwyn, with his reckless and misleading laugh. “My course is down Broadway to Bleecker Street and then west. I can show you as pretty a lot of fellows as you’ll want to see, and most of us are armed.”
“All roight. Broadway suits me. I want to see if the coast is clear.”
“So do I, and what the cops are about in these diggin’s. The right thing to do is for all hands to pitch right on to them in Mulberry Street, and then the game’s in our own hands.”
“If that’s the lark we have on foot, can ye promise that yer gang’ll join us?”
“Yes, sir, for we’d know that meant business.”
“How many could ye muster?”
“I hardly know. We were a-growin’ fast when I left.”
“Well, lead on loively. Ivery minute now should give me a dozen men, an’ we want to start the blaze down this way. I tell ye it’s a burning-up town.”
“So I should guess from the smoke we see,” said Merwyn, with his old laugh. “Jupiter! there comes a squad of cops.”
“Well, what do we care? We’re two paceable, dacent citizens, a-strollin’ down Broadway.”
“Oh, I’m not afraid,” was the careless reply. “I’m going to see this scrimmage out, and I like the fun. Let’s watch the cops cross the street, and see how they are armed.”
As the little squad approached Broadway from a side-street, hastening to headquarters, the Hibernian firebrand and his supposed ally stood on the curbstone, A moment later Merwyn struck his companion such a powerful blow on the temple that he fell in the street, almost in front of the officers of the law. The young fellow then sprung upon the stunned and helpless man, and took away his weapons, at the same time, crying: “Secure him. He’s a leader of the mob.”
“Yes, and you too, my hard hitter,” said the sergeant in command.
“I’ll go quietly enough, so long as you take him with me. Be quick about it, too, for I have news that should be known at headquarters as soon as possible.”
The police now supposed that they recognized one of a band of detectives, everywhere busy about the city in all kinds of disguises,–men of wonderful nerve, who rendered the authorities very important services, and often captured the most dangerous of the ruffianly leaders.
The fellow in question was hustled to his feet, having discovered Merwyn’s gang sooner than he desired. The squad pushed through the fast-gathering and bewildered crowd, and soon reached headquarters. The young fellow told his story in the presence of Mr. Vosburgh, who evidently had credentials which secured for him absolute confidence on the part of the authorities.
Merwyn soon learned to recognize in his interlocutor, the superintendent of the metropolitan police, a man to whose active brain, iron will, and indomitable courage, the city chiefly owed its deliverance,–Thomas C. Acton.
Confirmation of the sinister tidings was already coming in fast. The brutal mob that had sacked and burned the Colored Orphan Asylum was moving southward, growing with accessions from different quarters, like a turbulent torrent. Its destination was well understood, and Acton knew that the crisis had come thus early. He frequently conferred with Chief Clerk Seth C. Hawley, upon whom, next to himself, rested the heaviest burdens of those terrific days.
Merwyn offered his services on the force, stipulating, however, that he might be in a measure his own master, since he had other duties to perform, at the same time promising to do his share of the fighting.
Mr. Vosburgh drew Acton to one side, and made a few whispered explanations. Merwyn’s request was granted at once, Acton adding, “There will be a general call in the morning papers for the enrolment of citizens as policemen.”
The moments were crowded with preparations, counsels, and decisions. The telegraph wires, concentring there from all parts of the city, were constantly ticking off direful intelligence; but the most threatening fact was the movement down Broadway of unknown thousands, maddened by liquor, and confident from their unchecked excesses during the day. They knew that they had only to destroy the handful of men at police headquarters and the city was theirs to plunder and destroy with hyena-like savagery.
Acton, now cognizant of the worst, went to the police commissioners’ room and said: “Gentlemen, the crisis has come. A battle must be fought now, and won, too, or all is lost.”
None doubted the truth of his word; but who should lead the small force at hand? Inspector Carpenter’s name was suggested, for he was known to be a man of great resolution and courage, and leadership naturally fell to him as one of the oldest and most experienced members of the force. Acton instructed him not only that a battle must be fought immediately, but also that it MUST be successful.
Carpenter listened quietly, comprehending both the peril and the necessity; then after a moment’s hesitation he rose to his full height, and with an impressive gesture and a terrible oath said, “I will go, and I’ll win that fight, or Daniel Carpenter will never come back a live man.”
He instantly summoned his insignificant force, and the order, “Fall in, men,” resounded through the street.
Merwyn, with a policeman’s coat buttoned over his blouse, avowed his purpose of going with them; and his exploit of the afternoon, witnessed and bruited by members of the force, made his presence welcome.
It was now between five and six in the evening. The air was hot and sultry, and in the west lowered heavy clouds, from which the thunder muttered. Emblematic they seemed to such as heeded them in the intense excitement.
Few in the great city at that hour were so deeply stirred as Merwyn. The tremendous excitements of the day, to which his experience at Mr. Vosburgh’s residence had chiefly contributed, were cumulative in their effect. Now he had reached the goal of his hope, and had obtained an opportunity, far beyond his wildest dreams, to redeem his character from the imputation of cowardice. He was part of the little force which might justly be regarded as a “forlorn hope.” The fate of the city depended upon its desperate valor, and no one knew this better than he, who, from early morning, had witnessed the tiger-spirit of the mob. If the thousands, every minute approaching nearer, should annihilate the handful of men who alone were present to cope with them, that very night the city would be at the mercy of the infuriated rioters, and not a home would be secure from outrage.
The column of police was formed scarcely two hundred strong. Merwyn, as a new recruit, was placed in its rear, a position that he did not mean to keep when the fight should begin. Like the others, he was armed with a locust-club, but he had two revolvers on his person, and these he knew how to use with fatal precision. From an open window Superintendent Acton shouted, “Inspector Carpenter, my orders are, Make no arrests, bring no prisoners, but kill–kill every, time.”
It was to be a life-and-death struggle. The mob would have no mercy: the officers of the law were commanded to show none.
As Carpenter went forward to the head of his column, his face as dark with his sanguinary puipose as the lowering west, Merwyn saw that Mr. Vosburgh, quiet and observant, was present.
The government officer, with his trained instincts, knew just where to be, in order to obtain the most vital information. He now joined Merwyn, and was struck by his extreme pallor, a characteristic of the young fellow under extreme emotion.
“Mr. Merwyn,” he said, hastily, “you have done enough for two to-day, You need rest. This is going to be a desperate encounter.”
“Forward!” shouted Carpenter.
A proud smile lighted up Merwyn’s features, as he said: “Good-by. Thank you for such faith as you have had in me;” and he moved off with the others.
Mr. Vosburgh muttered, “I shall see this fight, and I shall solve that embodied mystery whom we have thought a coward;” and he followed so near as to keep Merwyn under his eye.
A black, sulphurous cloud was rising in the west. This little dark blue column approaching from the east, marching down Bleecker Street, was insignificant in comparison, yet it was infinitely the more dangerous, and charged with forces that would scatter death and wounds such as the city had never witnessed.
No words were spoken by the resolute men. The stony pavement echoed their measured, heavy tread. Turning into Broadway they saw the enemy but a block and a half away, a howling mob, stretching northward as far as the eye could reach. It was sweeping the thoroughfare, thousands in line. Pedestrians, stages, vehicles of all kinds, were vanishing down side-streets. Pallid shopkeepers were closing their stores as sailors take in sail before a cyclone.
Carpenter halted his command, and sent small detachments up parallel side-streets, that they might come around and fall upon the flanks of the mob.
As these men were moving off on the double-quick, Merwyn left his squad and said to Carpenter: “I am a citizen, and I stipulated that I should fight as I chose. I choose to fight with you.”
“Well, well, so long as you fight,” was the hasty answer. “You shall have plenty of it, if you keep near me.” Then he added, sternly: “Mark you, young fellow, if you show the white feather I’ll knock you over myself. Those devils yonder must be taught that the one thing this force can’t do is run.”
“Brain me if I do not do my whole duty,” was the firm reply; and he took his place at the right of the front rank.
A moment later he was startled by Mr. Vosburgh, who seized his hand and said, earnestly: “Merwyn, no man ever did a braver thing than you are doing now. I can’t forgive myself that I wronged you in my thoughts.”
“You had reason. I’m doing no better than these other men, and I have a thousand-fold their motive.” Then he added, gravely, “I do not think you ought to be here and your daughter alone.”
“I know my duty,” was the quiet reply; “and there are those who must be informed of the issue of this fight as soon as it is over. Once more, farewell, my brave friend;” and he disappeared.
Carpenter was holding his force until his flanking detachments should reach their co-operative points. When the mob saw the police, it advanced more slowly, as if it, too, instinctively recognized that the supreme crisis was near. In the van of the dense mass a large board was borne aloft, inscribed with the words, “No Draft!” and beside it, in mocking irony, floated the stars and stripes.
The hesitation of the rioters was but brief. They mistook the inaction of the few policemen opposed to them for timidity, and the immense masses behind pushed them forward. Therefore, with a new impetus, the howling, yelling throng approached, and Merwyn could distinguish the features of the liquor-inflamed, maddened faces that were already becoming familiar to him. In the sultry July evening the greater part of the rioters were in their shirt-sleeves, and they were armed with every description of weapon, iron bars, clubs, pitchforks, barrel-staves, and not a few with guns and pistols.
Carpenter stood out before his men, watching the approach of his victims with an expression which only the terrible excitement of battle can produce. His men, behind him, were like statues. Suddenly his stentorian command rang out,–
“BY THE RIGHT FLANK, COMPANY FRONT! DOUBLE-QUICK! CHARGE!”
As if the lever of a powerful engine had been pressed, all clubs were raised aloft, and with swift, even tread the trained, powerful men rushed after their leader, who kept several paces ahead.
When such a disciplined force, with such a leader, have resolved to fight till they die, their power is not to be estimated by numbers. They smote the astonished van of the mob like a thunderbolt, Carpenter leading by several steps, his face aflame with his desperate resolve. He dealt the first blow, sending down, bleeding and senseless, a huge ruffian who was rushing upon him with a club. A second later the impetuous officer was in the midst of the mob, giving deadly blows right and left.
His men closed up with him instantly, Merwyn being among the first to reach his side, and for a few moments the thud of clubs on human skulls was heard above every other sound. Mr. Vosburgh, keeping a little to the rear on the sidewalk, watched Merwyn, who held his attention almost equally with the general issues of this decisive battle. The youth was dealing blows like an athlete, and keeping pace with the boldest. The windows of the buildings on Broadway were now crowded by thousands witnessing the conflict, while Mr. Vosburgh, following closely, heard the ominous “sing” of more than one bullet. The man who had come that day to the protection of his home and child should not be left to the mercy of strangers, should he fall. To his surprise he soon saw that Merwyn had shifted his club to his left hand, and that he was fighting with a revolver. He watched the young fellow with renewed interest, and observed that his aim was as deliberate as it was quick, and that often when he fired some prominent figure in the mob dropped.
“By all the powers! if he is not coolly shooting the leaders, and picking out his man every time!” ejaculated the astonished officer.
The police made a clean sweep of the street, and only prostrate forms were left in their rear. Therefore Mr. Vosburgh could almost keep pace with Merwyn.
The rioters soon became appalled at their punishment. Like a dark blue wave, with bloody clubs forming a crimson crest, that unfaltering rank of men steadily advanced and ingulfed them. All within reach went down. Those of the police who were wounded still fought on, or, if disabled, the ranks closed up, and there was no cessation in the fatal hail of blows. The rioters in front would have given way, had not the thousands in their rear pressed them forward to their fate.
The judicious Carpenter had provided for this feature of the strife, for now his detachments were smiting both flanks of the human monster with the same terrific vengeance dealt upon its head. The undisciplined herd fought desperately for a time, then gave way to panic and the wild effort to escape. Long since a policeman had seized the national flag, and bore it triumphantly with his left hand while he fought with his right. The confusion and uproar were beyond description. The rioters were yelling their conflicting views as to what ought to be done, while others were shouting to those in their rear to cease crowding forward. The pressure down Broadway now came from a desire to escape the police. In brief, a large section of the mob was hemmed in, and it surged backwards and forwards and up against the stores, while hundreds, availing themselves of the side-streets, ran for their lives. In a very short time what had been a compact, threatening mass was flying in fragments, as if disrupted by dynamite, but the pursuing clubs of Carpenter’s men never ceased their levelling blows while a rioter’s head was in reach. Far northward the direful tidings of defeat spread through the ragged hosts as yet unharmed, and they melted away, to come together again and again during the lurid days and nights which followed.
The Gettysburg of the conflict had been fought and won. Unspeakable outrages and heavy battles were yet to come; but this decisive victory gave the authorities advantage which they never lost, and time to organize more effective resistance with the aid of the military. The police saved the city.
Broadway looked like a battle-field, prostrate forms strewing its crimsoned pavement throughout the area of the conflict. The majority were left where they fell, and were carried off by their friends.
As the melee was drawing to a close, Mr. Vosburgh saw Merwyn chasing a man who apparently had had much influence with his associates, and had been among the last to yield. After a brief pursuit the young fellow stopped and fired. The man struggled on a few steps, then fell. Merwyn, panting, sat down on the curbstone, and here Mr. Vosburgh joined him with radiant face, exclaiming, as he wrung the young man’s hand: “I’ve seen it all,–seen how you smote them hip and thigh. Never has my blood been so stirred. The city is saved. When a mob is thus dealt with it soon gives up. Come, you have done more than your part. Go with me, and as soon as I have sent a despatch about this glorious victory, we’ll have supper and a little rest.”
“Impossible, Mr. Vosburgh. The inspector has heard that the mob is sacking the mayor’s house, and we have orders to march there at once. I’ll get my wind in a moment.”
“But you are not under obligations, in view of all you have done.”
“I’m going to see this fight out. If the force were ordered back to headquarters I’d go with you.”
“But you will come soon?”
“Yes; when the fighting is over for the night I’ll bring the latest news. There, the men are falling in for their march up Broadway, and I must go.”
“Well, I congratulate you. No soldier ever won greener laurels in so short a time. What’s more, you were cool enough to be one of the most effective of the force. I saw you picking off the leaders. Good-by;” and he hastened away, while Merwyn followed Carpenter and the captured flag to a new scene of battle.
CHAPTER XLVI.
“I HAVE SEEN THAT YOU DETEST ME.”
After her father had left her on that eventful afternoon, Marian felt as if alone in a beleaguered fortress. The familiar streets in which she had trundled her hoop as a child, and until to-day walked without fear, were now filled with nameless terrors. She who had been so bent on going out in the morning would now as readily stroll in a tiger-infested jungle as to venture from her door. When men like her father used such language and took such precautions as she had anxiously noted, she knew that dangers were manifold and great, that she was in the midst of the most ruthless phase of war.
But her first excitement had passed, and it had brought her such lessons that now her chief thought was to retrieve herself. The one who had dwelt in her mind as so weak and unmanly as to be a constant cause of irritation had shown himself to be her superior, and might even equal the friends with whom she had been scornfully contrasting him. That she should have spoken to him and treated him as she had done produced boundless self-reproach, while her egregious error in estimating his character was humiliating in the last degree.
“Fool! fool!” she said, aloud, “where was your woman’s intuition?”
Marian had much warm blood in her veins and fire in her spirit, and on provocation could become deeply incensed at others, as we have seen; but so devoid of petty vanity was she that she could be almost equally angry at herself. She did not share her father’s confidence that Merwyn would relent under a few smiles, for she knew how deeply she had wounded and wronged him, and she believed that he possessed a will as steadfast as fate. The desire to test her father’s theory, the hope to atone for her wrong judgment, grew so strong and absorbing as to make the awful fact of the riot secondary in her thoughts.
To get through the hours she felt that she must keep incessantly busy. She first went to her own room, packed valuables and jewels in a convenient form to carry if there should be cause for a hasty exit, then concealed them. Going to her mother’s and father’s room, she acted in view of the same possible necessity, all the while carrying on the distinct process of thought in regard to Merwyn, dwelling on their past relations, but above all questioning his course when they should meet again.
Suddenly she reproached herself with forgetfulness of Mammy Borden. True, not much time had passed; but the poor creature, after what she had heard, should be reassured frequently. She went to the attic room, but it was empty. On inspection it became evident that the colored woman had made up her little bundle and departed. Calling as she went down through the house, Marian reached the basement and saw that its door had been unfastened.
“She has gone to join her son,” said the girl, as she hastily rebolted and barred the door. “Oh what awful imprudence! Perhaps she also wished to relieve us of the danger of her presence. Well, I am now alone in very truth. I could now give Mr. Merwyn a very different reception. He and papa will be here soon perhaps. Oh, I wish I knew how to make coffee, but I can’t even kindle a fire in the range. I have proved myself to-day a fine subject for a soldier. My role is to listen, in elegant costume, to heroic deeds, and to become almost hysterical in the first hour of battle. O ‘Missy S’wanee,’ I make a sorry figure beside you, facing actual war and cheering on your friends!”
Thus she passed the time in varied and bitter soliloquy while putting the kitchen and closets in order, and in awkward attempts to remove the debris of the last fire from the range. The gas gave light for her efforts, for the closed shutters darkened the apartment.
She was startled by a tap at the door.
“Well?” she faltered, after a moment’s hesitation.
“‘Gettysburg and Little Round Top,'” was the response.
“Mr. Vosburgh is out, and left word that you should linger near till he returned and then come again.”
“I cannot do that. It would not be safe for either him or me. He does not realize. Can you be trusted?”
“I am his daughter.”
“Say, then, terrible work up town. The orphan asylum sacked and burned. Many private residences also. The mob having its own way. A crowd is coming, and I must not be seen here. Will be back to-night if possible;” and the unseen communicator of dismal intelligence went westward with hasty steps.
Marian trembled as she heard the confused, noisy tread of many feet. Hastening to the second story, she peeped through the blinds, and shuddered as she saw a fragment of the mob which had been defeated on Broadway, returning to their haunts on the west side. Baffled and infuriated, they made the street echo with their obscene words and curses. Her heart almost stood still as they approached her door, and with white, compressed lips she grasped her revolver; but the rioters passed on like a flock of unclean birds, and the street became quiet again.
She was now so anxious about her father that she maintained her position of observation. The coming storm lowering in the west oppressed her with its terrible symbolism. Already the street was darkening, while from other parts of the city came strange sounds.
“Oh, if papa should never come back,–if the mob should have its own way everywhere! To think of staying here alone to-night! Would HE come again after my treatment this morning?”
She was aroused from her deep and painful revery by a knocking on the basement door. Hastening down she was overjoyed to hear her father’s voice, and when he entered she clung to him, and kissed him with such energy that his heavy beard came off, and his disguising wig was all awry.
“O papa!” she cried, “I’m so glad you are back safe! A body of rioters passed through the street, and the thought of your falling into such hands sickened me with fear;” and then she breathlessly told him of all that had occurred, and of Mammy Borden’s disappearance.
He reassured her gently, yet strongly, and her quick ear caught the ring of truth in his words.
“I, too, have much to tell you,” he said, “and much to do; so we must talk as we work. First help me to unpack and put away these provisions. This evening I must get a stout German woman that I know of to help you. You must not be left alone again, and I have another plan in mind for our safety. I think the worst is over, but it is best not to entertain a sense of false security for a moment in these times. The mob has been thoroughly whipped on Broadway. I’ll tell you all about it after we have had a good cup of coffee and a little supper. Now that there is a respite I find I’m almost faint myself from reaction and fatigue.”
“Have you seen–do you think Mr. Merwyn will be here again?”
“I’ve seen him, and so have others, to their sorrow. ‘Coward,’ indeed!” He threw back his head and laughed. “I only wish I had a regiment of such cowards, and I could abolish the mob in twenty-four hours. But I’ll tell you the whole story after supper is ready, and will show how quickly a soldier can get up a meal in an emergency. You must go into training as a commissary at once.”
Her father seemed so genuinely hopeful and elated that Marian caught his spirit and gave every faculty to the task of aiding him. Now that he was with her, all fears and forebodings passed; the nearer roll of the thunder was unheeded except as it called out the remark, “It will be too bad if Mr. Merwyn is out in the storm.”
Again her father laughed, as he said, “All the thunder gusts that have raged over the city are nothing to the storm which Merwyn has just faced.”
“O papa, you make me half wild with curiosity and impatience. Must I wait until the coffee boils?”
“No,” was the still laughing reply. “What is more, you shall have another surprising experience; you shall eat your supper–for the first time, I imagine–in the kitchen. It will save time and trouble, and some of my agents may appear soon. Well, well, all has turned out, so far, better than I ever hoped. I have been able to keep track of all the most important movements; I have seen a decisive battle, and have sent intelligence of everything to Washington. A certain man there cannot say that I have failed in my duty, unexpected and terrible as has been the emergency. By morning the military from the forts in the harbor will be on hand. One or two more such victories, and this dragon of a mob will expire.”
“Papa, should not something be done to find and protect Mammy Borden?”
“Yes, as soon as possible; but we must make sure that the city’s safe, and our own lives secure before looking after one poor creature. She has undoubtedly gone to her son, as you suggest. After such a scare as she has had she will keep herself and him out of sight. They are both shrewd and intelligent for their race, and will, no doubt, either hide or escape from the city together. Rest assured she went out heavily veiled and disguised. She would have said good-by had she not feared you would detain her, and, as you say, her motive was probably twofold. She saw how she endangered us, and, mother-like, she was determined to be with her son.”
“Come, papa, the coffee’s boiled, and supper, such as it is, is on the table. Hungry as I am, I cannot eat till you have told me all.”
“All about the fight?”
“Yes, and–and–Well, what part did Mr. Merwyn take in it?”
“Ah, now I am to recite MY epic. How all is changed since Blauvelt kindled your eyes and flushed your cheeks with the narration of heroic deeds! Then we heard of armies whose tread shook the continent, and whose guns have echoed around the world. Men, already historic for all time, were the leaders, and your soldier friends were clad in a uniform which distinguished them as the nation’s defenders. My humble hero had merely an ill-fitting policeman’s coat buttoned over his soiled, ragged blouse. Truly it is fit that I should recite his deeds in a kitchen and not in a library. When was the heroic policeman sung in homeric verse before? When–“
“O papa, papa! don’t tantalize me. You cannot belittle this struggle or its consequences. Our enemies are at our very doors, and they are not soldiers. I would rather face scalping Indians than the wretches that I saw an hour since. If Merwyn will do a man’s part to quell this mob I shall feel honored by his friendship. But he never will forgive me, never, never.”
“We’ll see about that,” was Mr. Vosburgh’s smiling reply. Then his face became grave, and he said: “You are right, Marian. The ruffians who filled the streets to-day, and who even now are plundering and burning in different parts of the city, are not soldiers. They are as brutal as they are unscrupulous and merciless. I can only tell you what has occurred in brief outline, for the moment I am a little rested and have satisfied hunger I must be at work.”
He then rapidly narrated how Merwyn had been brought in at police headquarters with one of the leaders of the riot whom he had beguiled and helped to capture. A graphic account of the battle followed, closing with the fact that he had left the “coward” marching up Broadway to engage in another fight.
The girl listened with pale cheeks and drooping head.
“He will never forgive me,” she murmured; “I’ve wronged him too deeply.”
“Be ready to give him a generous cup of coffee and a good supper,” her father replied. “Men are animals, even when heroes, and Merwyn will be in a condition to bless the hand that feeds him to-night. Now I must carry out my plans with despatch. Oh, there is the rain. Good. Torrents, thunder, and lightning will keep away more dangerous elements. Although I have but a slight acquaintance with the Erkmanns, whose yard abuts upon ours, I hope, before the evening is over, to have a door cut in the fence between us, and a wire stretched from our rear windows to theirs. It will be for our mutual safety. If attacked we can escape through their house or they through ours. I’ll put on my rubber suit and shall not be gone long now at any one time. You can admit Merwyn or any of my agents who give the password. Keep plenty of coffee and your own courage at boiling-point. You will next hear from me at our back door.”
In less than half an hour she again admitted her father, who said: “It’s all arranged. I have removed a couple of boards so that they can be replaced by any one who passes through the opening. I have some fine wire which I will now stretch from my library to Mr. Erkmann’s sleeping-apartment.”
When he again entered the house two of his agents whom Marian had admitted were present, dripping wet, hungry, and weary. They had come under cover of the storm and darkness. While they gave their reports Mr. Vosburgh made them take a hearty supper, and Marian waited on them with a grace that doubled their incentive to serve their chief. But more than once she sighed, “Merwyn does not come.”
Then the thought flashed upon her: “Perhaps he cannot come. He may be battered and dying in the muddy streets.”
The possibility of this made her so ill and faint that she hastily left the apartment and went up to the darkened drawing-room, where her father found her a moment later seeking to stifle her sobs.
“Why, Marian, darling, you who have kept up so bravely are not going to give way now.”
“I’m not afraid for myself,” she faltered, “but Mr. Merwyn does not come. You said he was marching to another fight. He may be wounded; he may be–” her voice fell to a whisper–“he may be dead.”
“No, Marian,” replied her father, confidently, “that young fellow has a future. He is one of those rare spirits which a period like this develops, and he’ll take no common part in it. He has probably gone to see if his own home is safe. Now trust God and be a soldier, as you promised.”
“I couldn’t bear to have anything happen to him and I have no chance to make amends, to show I am not so weak and silly as I appeared this morning.”
“Then let him find you strong and self-controlled when he appears. Come down now, for I must question my agents while they are yet at supper; then I must go out, and I’ll leave them for your protection till I return.”
He put his arm about her, and led her to the stairway, meanwhile thinking, “A spell is working now which she soon will have to recognize.”
By the time his agents had finished their meal, Mr. Vosburgh had completed his examination of them and made his notes. He then placed a box of cigars on the table, instructed them about admitting Merwyn should he come, and with his daughter went up to the library, where he wrote another long despatch.
“After sending this,” he said, “and getting the woman I spoke of, I will not leave you again to-night, unless there should be very urgent necessity. You can sit in the darkened front room, and watch till either I or Merwyn returns.”
This she did and listened breathlessly.
The rain continued to pour in torrents, and the lightning was still so vivid as to blind her eyes at times, while the crashes of thunder often drowned the roar of the unquiet city; but undaunted, tearless, motionless, she watched the deserted street and listened for the footfall of one whom she had long despised, as she had assured herself.
An hour passed. The storm was dying away, and still he did not come. “Alas!” she sighed, “he is wounded; if not by the rabble, certainly by me. I know now what it has cost him to be thought a coward for months, and must admit that I don’t understand him at all. How vividly come back the words he spoke last December, ‘What is the storm, and what the danger, to that which I am facing?’ What was he facing? What secret and terrible burden has he carried patiently through all my coldness and scorn? Oh, why was I such an idiot as to offend him mortally just as he was about to retrieve himself and render papa valuable assistance,–worse still, when he came to my protection!”
The gloomy musings were interrupted by the sound of a carriage driven rapidly up town in a neighboring street. It stopped at the corner to the east, and a man alighted and came towards the Vosburgh residence. A moment later Marian whispered, excitedly, “It’s Mr. Merwyn.”
He approached slowly and she thought warily, and began mounting the steps.
“Is it Mr. Merwyn?;” she called.
“Yes.”
“I will admit you at the basement door;” and she hastened down. She meant to give her hand, to speak in warm eulogy of his action, but his pale face and cold glance as he entered chilled her. She felt tongue-tied in the presence of the strangers who sat near the table smoking.
Merwyn started slightly on seeing them, and then she explained, hastily, “These gentlemen are assisting my father in a way you understand.”
He bowed to them, then sank into a chair, as if too weary to stand.
“Mr. Merwyn,” she began, eagerly, “let me make you some fresh coffee. That on the range is warm, but it has stood some little time.”
“Please do not take the slightest trouble,” he said, decidedly. “That now ready will answer. Indeed, I would prefer it to waiting. I regret exceedingly that Mr. Vosburgh is not at home, for I am too exhausted to wait for him. Can I not help myself?” and he rose and approached the range.
“Not with my permission,” she replied, with a smile, but he did not observe it. She stole shy glances at him as she prepared the coffee. Truly, as he sat, drooping in his chair, wet, ragged, and begrimed, he presented anything but the aspect of a hero. Yet as such he appeared in her eyes beyond all other men whom she had ever seen.
She said, gently: “Let me put the coffee on the table, and get you some supper. You must need it sorely.”
“No, I thank you. I could not eat anything to-night;” and he rose and took the coffee from her hand, and drank it eagerly. He then said, “I will thank you for a little more.”
With sorrow she noted that he did not meet her eyes or relax his distant manner.
“I wish you could wait until papa returns,” she said, almost entreatingly, as she handed him a second cup.
“I hope Mr. Vosburgh will pardon my seeming lack of courtesy, and that you will also, gentlemen. It has been a rather long, hard day, and I find that I have nearly reached the limit of my powers.” With a short, grim laugh, he added: “I certainly am not fit to remain in the presence of a lady. I suppose, Miss Vosburgh, I may report what little I have to say in the presence of these gentlemen? I would write it out if I could, but I cannot to-night.”
“I certainly think you may speak freely before these gentlemen,” was her reply.
“Mr. Vosburgh trusts us implicitly, and I think we are deserving of it,” said one of the agents.
“Why need you go out again when you are so weary?” Marian asked. “I am expecting papa every moment, and I know he would like you to stay with him.”
“That would be impossible. Besides, I have some curiosity to learn whether I have a home left. My report in brief amounts to little more than this. Soon after our return from the mayor’s residence on Broadway we were ordered down to Printing-House Square. Intelligence that an immense mob was attacking the Tribune Office had been received. Our hasty march thither, and the free use of the club on our arrival, must account for my present plight. You see, gentlemen, that I am not a veteran, only a raw recruit. In a day or two I shall be more seasoned to the work. You may say to your father, Miss Vosburgh, that the mob had been broken before we arrived. We met them on their retreat across City-Hall Park, and nothing was left for us but the heavy, stupid work of knocking a good many of the poor wretches on the head. Such fighting makes me sick; yet it is imperative, no doubt. Inspector Carpenter is at City Hall with a large force, and the rioters are thoroughly dispersed. I think the lower part of the city will be quiet for the night.”
“You were wise, Mr. Merwyn, to ride up town,” said Marian, gravely. “I know well that you have been taxed to-day beyond the strength of any veteran.”
“How did you know that I rode up town?”
“I was watching for papa, and saw you leave your carriage.”
“I could never have reached home had I not secured a cab, and that reminds me that it is waiting around the corner; at least, the driver promised to wait. I shall now say good-night. Oh, by the way, in the press of other things I forgot to say that Mrs. Ghegan reached her husband, and that her good nursing, with surgical help, will probably save his life.”
Bowing to the agents, who had been listening and watching him with great curiosity, he turned to the door.
Marian opened it for him, and, stepping out into the dusky area, said, “I see that you do not forgive me.”
“And I have seen, to-day, Miss Vosburgh, that you detest me. You showed the truth plainly when off your guard. Your own pride and sense of justice may lead you to seek to make amends for an error in your estimate of me. Having convinced you that I am not a coward, I have accomplished all that I can hope for, and I’m in no mood for hollow courtesies. I shall do everything in my power to aid your father until the trouble is over or I am disabled, and then will annoy you no more. Good-night;” and he strode away, with a firm, rapid step, proving that his pride for a moment had mastered his almost mortal weariness.
Marian returned to her post in the second story to watch for her father, her ears tingling, and every faculty confused, while excited, by the words Merwyn had spoken. He had revealed his attitude towards her clearly, and, as she grew calmer, she saw it was not a mere question of the offence she had given him that morning which she had to face, but rather a deep-rooted conviction that he was personally detested.
“If he knew how far this is from the truth NOW!” she thought, with a smile.
Then the query presented itself: “How far is it from the truth? Why am I thinking more of him than of the riot, our danger, yes, even my father?”
In the light of that lurid day much had been revealed to her, and before her revery ceased she understood her long months of irritation and anger at Merwyn’s course; she saw why she had not dismissed him from her thoughts with contemptuous indifference and why she had ingeniously wrought the MacIan theory of constitutional timidity.