"I have quite decided upon my course. I shall not change my plans."
The good dames were in such despair that they even welcomed Baillie"s coming.
"We have done everything, said everything," they hastily explained to him; "why, we have almost _apologised_ to the child, and all to no purpose. Perhaps you can have some influence, Captain Pegram. Will you not speak to her?"
"I shall speak to her, of course," was his reply. "I am here indeed for that express purpose. But I shall certainly not try to dissuade her from any course that she may desire to pursue. That would be an impertinence of which I am incapable."
The Oaks ladies flushed as he spoke the word "impertinence," remembering their own recent use of the term in connection with his conduct. Perhaps Agatha had told him of that in her letter, they thought. If so it would be most embarra.s.sing for them to dine in his company and hers. So, pleading their great agitation of mind as their excuse, they returned at once to The Oaks, leaving Baillie and Agatha as the only guests of the Misses Blair at dinner.
When left alone with the young woman after dinner, the master of Warlock opened the conversation as promptly as it was his custom to open fire when the proper moment had come.
"Agatha," he began, as the two stood in the piazza in the glow of the early setting sun and in the midst of the blood-red Virginia creepers that embowered the place, "Agatha, do you remember the words I spoke to you on the picket-line at Fairfax Court-house?" Then without waiting for her reply, he continued: "I have come to you now to say those words over again, at a more fitting time and in a more appropriate place. I love you. I have loved you ever since those days in Richmond, those precious days when I first began to know you for what you are. I loved you all through that cruel time when, in obedience to what you believed was your duty, you decreed that there should be "war between me and thee." And now after all that you have done and dared for me, my love for a nature so pure, so n.o.ble, so heroic, pa.s.ses understanding. I have a right to tell you this now. Tell me in return, if it displeases you?"
With that absolute truthfulness which was the basis of her nature, Agatha replied as frankly as he had spoken.
"It pleases me," she said. "I had not expected this. I thought I had repulsed you so rudely that--oh! Baillie, you will never know."
In a torrent of tears that were a more welcome answer than any words could have been, she buried her face in her hands.
Half an hour later these two sat by a crackling fire, arranging practical affairs.
"You do not wish to go back to The Oaks, then, even for a few weeks, and to save appearances?"
"No, Baillie, I cannot. I should have to act a lie every hour of my stay there. I should be obliged to pretend friendship for my aunts when I feel nothing of the kind. They have insulted the memory of my grandfather, and they have spoken of you in a way that never so long as I live will I let any human being speak of you without resenting it. I do not care to "save appearances," as you put it. Appearances may look out for themselves. "Saving appearances" is only a sneaking way of lying. No. I will go to some friends in Richmond, if they will let me--"
"Why not go to Warlock?" he asked.
"Why, that would outrage the proprieties beyond forgiveness now that we--well, under the circ.u.mstances."
So Mistress Agatha did "care for appearances" and conventions after all.
But Baillie did not think of that.
"Why not go there as the mistress of Warlock--as my wife?" he asked.
"Why should we not be married to-morrow at Christ-Church-in-the-Woods? I am a soldier. I shall be strong enough to return to duty presently. When I do so I shall want to feel that you are safe at Warlock, that you are mine, my wife to cherish while I live. Say that it shall be so, Agatha!
Let me send word to Mr. Berkeley, the rector, to-night, that we shall be at the church at noon to-morrow!"
[Ill.u.s.tration: ""_"At Christ-church-in-the-wood_""]
The girl thought for a moment, and then said:
"Yes, that will be best. For then, if you fall ill or are wounded again, I shall have a right to go to you and care for you. Let it be so. Now you must not ride to Warlock on horseback to-night. It is very cool, and you have already overtaxed your strength. I shall ask Miss Blair to send you over in her carriage."
When he had gone Agatha announced the news to her hostesses and straightway set about writing a score of little notes to be despatched by negro messengers early in the morning, to her friends in the neighbourhood. To her aunts she wrote simply, and without formal address of any kind, the bare statement:
"Captain Baillie Pegram and I are to be married to-morrow, Thursday, at noon, at Christ-Church-in-the-Woods."
This note she sent before going to bed. When it was received at The Oaks, a conversation ensued which was largely ejaculatory:
"How shocking!"
"Yes, and how scandalous!"
"What will people say!"
"The girl must be bewitched!"
"And yet it is better than nursing soldiers, and she an unmarried woman!"
"Perhaps. At any rate it is clear that we can exercise no restraint over the poor, headstrong child."
"No, Captain Pegram has completely undermined our influence. Of course we cannot lend our countenance to the affair by attending!"
"I think we must. Otherwise people will talk. They might even call it a runaway match."
"That would be too dreadful!"
"Yes. I think we must put the best face we can on the affair by attending. In these war-times everything is topsyturvy. Ah, me! What a pity we couldn"t have had the child"s bringing-up to ourselves!"
"Yes, we should have made a very different woman of her. Anyhow, with this marriage all our responsibility for her will be at an end. And after all, perhaps it is as well to have it so, for if she had remained single there is no knowing at what moment she would have done something else as scandalous as her going North to nurse Mr. Pegram was."
And so they cackled for half the night.
x.x.xIV
_THE END AND AFTER_
A few weeks later came the news that a campaign was on and battle impending. Burnside had replaced McClellan in command of the Federal armies in Virginia. He had at once begun a campaign against Richmond, moving by way of Fredericksburg. There Lee met him, posting the Southern veterans on the circling hills behind the town and awaiting his adversary"s a.s.sault.
Baillie Pegram had resumed command of his battery now, but no longer with the light guns that he had used while galloping with Stuart. A captured Federal battery of six twelve-pounder Napoleons had been a.s.signed to him, and with these he took position on the crest of Marye"s Heights, where there was presently to occur one of the most heroic battles of all the war.
It was nearly mid-December when Burnside crossed the river and moved to a.s.sault Lee. His army, though greater than Lee"s, was not quite so great in numbers as it had been when McClellan had commanded it near Richmond"s gates; but it was greatly more formidable in all other respects. The men who composed it were war-seasoned veterans now, and its officers had fully learned their trade of command. Moreover the army had successfully held its own against Lee at Sharpsburg, and the confidence inspired by that event was an important element of strength.
But in Burnside the Federal administration had again failed to find a leader capable of so employing the North"s stupendous resources of men, money, and material as to crush the splendid resistance of the Army of Northern Virginia.
So Burnside failed, as McDowell, and McClellan, and Pope had failed before, and as Hooker, who succeeded him in command, failed even more conspicuously, when, in the following spring, he made the campaign of Chancellorsville.
After Chancellorsville Lee crossed the Potomac again. Then came Gettysburg, which proved to be the turning-point in the war, so far as the armies of Virginia were concerned.
For before the next campaign opened--the campaign of the Wilderness, Spottsylvania, and Cold Harbour--the North had recognised in Grant a leader who knew what use to make of the means at his command, and, more important still, a leader who clearly saw that the strength of the Confederacy lay, not in the possession of cities or the holding of strategic positions, but in the superb fighting force of Lee"s army.
Grant, in supreme command of all the armies of the Union, directed the work of all of them to the one task of crushing Lee, and in the end he accomplished it. When that was done, this most stupendous war in modern history was over.
In all these epoch-making events the master of Warlock did his part, with a devotion that wrought a colonel"s stars upon his collar and added honour to the name he bore. During the long winter of 1863-64, while the mud-bound armies lay helplessly idle in winter quarters, Baillie had Agatha with him in his log hut near Orange Court-house, and before the campaign opened at the Wilderness in the spring, an heir to Warlock was born in camp,--a child veritably "cradled in a revolution."
Agatha was near her husband, too, during the long siege of Petersburg, though she could not be actually with him; for his place was on the lines, where the "scream of shot, and burst of sh.e.l.l, and bellowing of the mortars" were ceaseless by night and by day, for the s.p.a.ce of eight months, before the end came. But she was always near at hand, as one of that heroic band of women who stayed and starved in the beleaguered city, heedless of the storm of huge sh.e.l.ls that daily wrecked buildings there and tore cavernous trenches in the streets. She remained there to the end as the others did, in order that they might minister in loving, life-saving ways to the wounded, who were daily brought in from the lines on ever-busy litters.
When at last the attenuated lines that had so long and so heroically held their ground against an ever-increasing disparity of numbers, were broken, and Lee ordered the instant evacuation of the city, Agatha made her way on foot to Warlock, and there, with her babe, awaited the return of the man she loved, and whose voice she fancied she could hear in the receding echoes of the cannon.