The little house was dark and silent. The sky above, though shadowed by night, was blue and clear, showing everything that rose against it; but there was no smoke from the cottage to leave a trail there.
"That"s wisdom," thought Prescott. "Coal"s too precious a thing now in Richmond to be wasted. It would be cheaper to burn Confederate money."
He stood for a moment, shivering by the gate, having little thought of detection, as use had now bred confidence in him, and then went inside.
It was the work of but half a minute to slip a double eagle in its paper wrapping in the crack under the door, and then he walked away feeling again that pleasing glow which always came over him after a good deed.
He was two squares away when he encountered a figure walking softly, and the moonlight revealed the features of Mr. Sefton, the last man in the world whom he wished to see just then. He was startled, even more startled than he would admit to himself, at encountering this man who hung upon him and in a measure seemed to cut off his breath.
But he was convinced once more that it was only chance, as the Secretary"s face bore no look of malice, no thought of suspicion, being, on the contrary, mild and smiling. As before, he took Prescott"s unresisting arm and pointed up at the bright stars in their sea of blue.
"They are laughing at our pa.s.sions, Mr. Prescott, perhaps smiling is the word," he said. "Such a peace as that appeals to me. I am not fond of war and I know that you are not. I feel it particularly to-night. There is poetry in the heavens so calm and so cold."
Prescott said nothing; the old sense of oppression, of one caught in a trap, was in full force, and he merely waited.
"I wish to speak frankly to-night," continued the Secretary. "There was at first a feeling of coldness, even hostility, between us, but in my case, and I think in yours too, it has pa.s.sed. It is because we now recognize facts and understand that we are in a sense rivals--friendly rivals in a matter of which we know well."
The hand upon Prescott"s arm did not tremble a particle as the Secretary thus spoke so clearly. But Prescott did not answer, and they went on in silence to the end of the square, where a man, a stranger to Prescott, was waiting.
Mr. Sefton beckoned to the stranger and, politely asking Prescott to excuse him a moment, talked with him a little while in low tones. Then he dismissed him and rejoined Prescott.
"A secret service agent," he said. "Unfortunately, I have to do with these people, though I am sure it could not be more repugnant to any one than it is to me; but we are forced to it. We must keep a watch even here in Richmond among our own people."
Prescott felt cold to the spine when the Secretary, with a courteous good-night, released him a few moments later. Then he hurried home and slept uneasily.
He was in dread at the breakfast table the next morning lest his mother should hand him a tiny package, left at the door, as she had done once before, but it did not happen, nor did it come the next day or the next.
The gold double eagle had been kept.
CHAPTER IX
ROBERT AND LUCIA
Two days pa.s.sed, and neither any word nor his gold having come from the Grayson cottage, Prescott began to feel bold again and decided that he would call there openly and talk once more with Miss Grayson. He waited until the night was dusky, skies and stars alike obscured by clouds, and then knocked boldly at the door, which was opened by Miss Grayson herself. "Captain Prescott!" she exclaimed, and he heard a slight rustling in the room. When he entered Miss Catherwood was there.
Certainly they had a strange confidence in him.
She did not speak, nor did he, and there was an awkward silence while Miss Grayson stood looking on. Prescott waited for the thanks, the hint of grat.i.tude that he wished to hear, but it was not given; and while he waited he looked at Miss Catherwood with increasing interest, beholding her now in a new phase.
Hitherto she had always seemed to him bold and strong, a woman of more than feminine courage, one with whom it would require all the strength and resource of a man to deal even on the man"s own ground. Now she was of the essence feminine. She sat in a low chair, her figure yielding a little and her face paler than he had ever seen it before. The lines were softened and her whole effect was that of an appeal. She made him think for a moment of Helen Harley.
"I am glad that our soldiers did not find you here when they searched this house," he said awkwardly.
"You were here with them, Captain Prescott--I have heard," she replied.
The colour rose to his face.
"It was pure chance," he said. "I did not come here to help them."
"I do not think that Captain Prescott was a.s.sisting in the search,"
interposed Miss Grayson. Prescott again looked for some word or sign of grat.i.tude, but did not find it.
"I have wondered, Miss Catherwood, how you hid yourself," he said.
The shadow of a smile flickered over her pale face.
"Your wonder will have to continue, if it is interesting enough, Captain Prescott," she replied.
He was silent, and then a sudden flame appeared in her cheeks.
"Why do you come here?" she exclaimed. "Why do you interest yourself in two poor lone women? Why do you try to help them?"
To see her show emotion made him grow cooler.
"I do not know why I come," he replied candidly.
"Then do not do so any more," she said. "You are risking too much, and you, a Southern soldier, have no right to do it."
She spoke coldly now and her face resumed its pallor.
"I am with the North," she continued, "but I do not wish any one of the South to imperil himself through me."
Prescott felt hotly indignant that she should talk thus to him after all that he had done.
"My course is my own to choose," he replied proudly, "and as I told you once before, I do not make war on women."
Then he asked them what they proposed to do--what they expected Miss Catherwood"s future to be.
"If she can"t escape from Richmond, she"ll stay here until General Grant comes to rescue her," exclaimed the fierce little old maid.
"The Northern army is not far from Richmond, but I fancy that it has a long journey before it, nevertheless," said Prescott darkly.
Then he was provoked with himself because he had made such a retort to a woman.
"It is not well to grow angry about the war now," said Miss Catherwood.
"Many of us realize this; I do, I know."
He waited eagerly, hoping that she would tell of herself, who she was and why she was there, but she went no further.
He looked about the room and saw that it was changed; its furniture, always scanty, was now scantier than ever; it occurred to him with a sudden thrill that these missing pieces had gone to a p.a.w.nshop in Richmond; then his double eagle had not come too soon, and that was why it never returned to him. All his pity for these two women rose again.
He hesitated, not yet willing to go and not knowing what to say; but while he doubted there came a heavy knock at the door. Miss Grayson, who was still standing, started up and uttered a smothered cry, but Miss Catherwood said nothing, only her pallor deepened.
"What can it mean?" exclaimed Miss Grayson.
No one answered and she added hastily: