登陆注册
20046600000007

第7章 CHAPTER II A COURIER TO THE SOUTH(1)

Harry was awakened by his father shaking his shoulder. It was yet dark outside, but a small lamp burned on his table.

"It is time for you to go, Harry," said Colonel Kenton, somewhat unsteadily. "Your horse, bridle and saddle on, is waiting. Your breakfast has been cooked for you, and everything else is ready."Harry dressed rapidly in his heaviest and warmest clothing. He and his father ate breakfast by lamplight, and when he finished it was not yet dawn. Then the Colonel himself brought him his overcoat, comforter, overshoes, and fur cap.

"The saddlebags are already on your horse," he said, "and they are filled with the things you will need. In this pocket-book you will find five hundred dollars, and here is, also, an order on a bank in Charleston for more. See that you keep both money and order safely.

I trust to you to spend the money in the proper manner."Harry put both in an inside pocket of his waistcoat, and then his father handed him a heavy sealed letter.

"This you must guard with your life," he said. "It is not addressed to anybody, but you can give it to Senator Yancey, who is probably in Charleston, or Governor Pickens, of South Carolina, or General Beauregard, who, I understand, is coming to command the troops there, and whom I knew in former days, or to General Ripley. It contains Kentucky's promise to South Carolina, and it is signed by many of us.

And now, Harry, let prudence watch over action. It is no common errand upon which you ride."The colonel walked with him to the gate where the horse stood. Harry did not know who had brought the animal there, but he believed that his father had done so with his own hand. The boy sprang into the saddle, Colonel Kenton gave him a strong grasp of the hand, undertook to say something but, as he did so, the words choked in his throat, and he walked hastily toward the house.

Harry spoke to his horse, but a hundred yards away, before he came to the first curve in the road, he stopped and looked back. Colonel Kenton was standing in the doorway, his figure made bright in the moonlight.

Harry waved his hand and a hand was waved in return. Tears arose to his own eyes, but he was youth in the saddle, with the world before him, and the mist was gone quickly.

The snow was six or eight inches deep, and lay unbroken in the road.

But the horse was powerful, shod carefully for snow and ice, and Harry had been almost from infancy an expert rider. His spirits rose.

He had no fear of the stillness and the dark. But one could scarcely call it the dark, since brilliant stars rode high in a bright blue heaven, and the forest on either side of him was a vast and intricate tracery of white touched with silver.

He examined his saddle bags, and found in them a silver-mounted pistol and cartridges which he transferred to his belt. The line of the mountains lay near the road, and he remembered Bill Skelly and those like him. The weapon gave him new strength. Skelly and his comrades might come on any pretext they chose.

The road lay straight toward the south, edged on either side by forest.

Now and then he passed a silent farm house, set back among the trees, and once a dog barked, but there was no sound, save the tread of the horse's feet in the snow, and his occasional puff when he blew the steam from his nostrils. Harry did not feel the cold. The heavy overcoat protected his body, and the strong action of the heart, pouring the blood in a full tide through his veins, kept him warm.

The east whitened. Dawn came. Thin spires of smoke began to rise from distant houses in the woods or fields. Harry was already many miles from Pendleton, and then something rose in his throat again. He remembered his father standing in the portico, and, strangely enough, the Tacitus lying in his locked desk at the academy. But he crushed it down. His abounding youth made him consider as weak and unworthy, an emotion which a man would merely have reckoned as natural.

The station at Winton was a full twenty miles from Pendleton and, with such heavy snow, Harry did not expect to arrive until late in the afternoon. Nor would there be any need for him to get there earlier, as no train for Nashville reached that place until half past six in the evening. His horse showed no signs of weariness, but he checked his speed, and went on at an easy walk.

The road curved nearer to a line of blue hills, which sloped gradually upward for scores of miles, until they became mountains. All were clothed with forest, and every tree was heavy with snow. A line between the trees showed where a path turned off from the main road and entered the hills. As Harry approached it, he heard the crunching of horses' hoofs in the snow. A warning instinct caused him to urge his own horse forward, just as four riders came into view.

He saw that the men in the saddles, who were forty or fifty yards away, were mountaineers, like Skelly. They wore fur caps; heavy blanket shawls were drooped about their shoulders and every one carried a rifle.

As soon as they saw the boy they shouted to him to halt.

Harry's alert senses took alarm. They must have gained some knowledge of his errand and its nature. Perhaps word had been sent from Pendleton by those who were arraying themselves on the other side that he be intercepted. When they cried to him to stop, he struck his horse sharply, shouted to him, and bent far over against his neck. Colonel Kenton had chosen well. The horse responded instantly. He seemed to gather his whole powerful frame compactly together, and shot forward.

The nearest mountaineer fired, but the bullet merely whistled where the horse and rider had been, and sent snow flying from the bushes on the other side of the road. A second rifle cracked but it, too, missed the flying target, and the mountaineers, turning into the main road, gave pursuit.

同类推荐
  • A Gentleman of France

    A Gentleman of France

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 郑成功传

    郑成功传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 孙真人摄养论

    孙真人摄养论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 鬼门十三针

    鬼门十三针

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 通典

    通典

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 总裁,请别放肆

    总裁,请别放肆

    初次相遇便被霸道的帅哥囚禁在家中?为了解救自己,砸碎了豪宅的玻璃并且失误的毒死了帅哥的一条爱犬。婚礼上,她一身耀目的黑色婚纱成为全场的焦点,众人还未消化,却又拿着一把黑色的手枪指向自己的未婚夫,威胁其取消这场婚礼。还有一个同自己完全没有任何血缘关系的变态哥哥。为了将她同金钱和权势捆绑在一起,日日折磨着她的那一颗心。本是复仇,却又在复仇的过程中遗失了自己的心。那个纯真的少女,是够真的能勾引住自己心爱的男人?
  • 逆乱虚元

    逆乱虚元

    天地动荡,乾坤虚妄;时空错乱,混天为元;究其根本——时空之门!
  • 孙悟空职场打拼记

    孙悟空职场打拼记

    一个人在职场打拼,应从确定职业生涯规划开始,即首先要对自己的前途与未来进行认真而理性的设计,清楚:自己喜欢干什么?能干什么?怎样去干?社会可以提供给自己多少机会?你的理想与期望,都应在设计中考虑到。掌握了这些,定位就会减少偏差;但社会又是发展变化的,当设计出现与现实不符时,就要进行修正,重新定位,争取得到属于自己的理想位置。如果能够了解自己的优势,知道自己的力能,并勇于磨练自己,不断思考自己,提升自己,那么你必定会完成最合理的与最幸福的人生定位,从而达到你追求的目标,成为一名好员工、好主管、好经理、好总裁。
  • 舞魂

    舞魂

    如果能在另一个世界找到幸福,那么穿越又有何妨?如果只有为你亲手带上耳环的人才有可能成为终身的依靠,你又会选择谁呢?一个是拥有绝世武功冰冷孤傲的前朝皇子,隐姓埋名只为报国仇家恨;一个是温柔执着的突厥王子,只愿为一人倾心;一个是手握重兵的护国将军;一个是指腹为婚的内定夫君。谁才是为她戴上耳环的人呢?又有谁能陪她舞尽此生?
  • 跟着公子混仙路

    跟着公子混仙路

    被收养长大的孤儿,因一场意外不得不离开梦寐以求的地方...奇怪的玉佩,神秘的公子,还有隐秘的身世...在一切都真相大白之后,却又来到一个奇妙的世界!(PS:不喜欢第一卷内容的书友,可以直接跳到第二卷第二章开始看。)
  • 重山烟雨诺

    重山烟雨诺

    苏伊诺一个什么都懂的逗B女,季曜沂一个一根筋的大好青年。携手经历了一些不敢想象的人生,出现了各种不忍直视的狗血桥段。从一个武功高强的高手,变成一个打架除了看就只能跑的逗B女,从一个天赋异禀的大好青年,变成快当配角的小男子。请看小女子和大,大,大豆腐的爱情和不同常人的人生。
  • 邪少医王

    邪少医王

    美女我所欲,名利我所求。若想美女名利两全,只需银针一根,便可手到擒来……
  • 重生之完美神皇

    重生之完美神皇

    重新归来,战神无敌!神王强者林萧,巅峰之上被人暗算,重生在一灵海破碎少年身上。前世一个天才少女赠送的灵魂紫玉,忽然发出了炫目光彩,由此一段强者崛起之路……开设了书友群333847579,欢迎交流。
  • 玉女倾城

    玉女倾城

    一朝穿越,不想惊天动地,只想安稳度日!可天不遂人愿,她只是偷溜出去玩了一圈,不想回来她面对的竟然是自家的灭门惨案!看着父母兄长被杀的惨状,她眼神冰冷,选择寄人篱下,想尽一切办法只想报那灭门之仇!太子?三皇子?五皇子?亦或是其他人?管他是谁,只要是灭门仇人,必定诛之而后快!若有人阻碍报仇,那么也只能遇神杀神遇佛杀佛了!以为遇到了命中注定的人,能帮自己报家仇,到头来却只是镜花水月一场空!原来对的人一直在身边,只要你一回头就可以看到,只是你从来都没有发现!
  • 漂浮的穿越城

    漂浮的穿越城

    自从与外星人扯上了关系,他的命运就发生了翻天覆地的变化。他用强大的金手指让一座城市在时空中飞行……他改写了三个时期的历史……