Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 22, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 November 1894 — Page 7
CONTINUED FROM BtXTH I'ACIB
hrino wherein the boy sat Installed, the hero of a girl's imaginative and imrmisfrre nature. With what burning cheeks dul she own-it to herself. With what womanly shame 'Alid she realize that she had betrayed it ere she herself fairly knew of its existence! She!—an army girl, a soldier's daughter, with Lot and Billy to look after, with dear old daddy to nurse and comfort—she, Constanoe
Morgan, daring- to indulge in idle day dreaming over a boy in his first uniform! It was simply shameful. She could have scratched the eyes out of any woman who jsaw her poring over that letter, had there been any there to see. She raged within herself to think that for that moment she had been blind and deaf to her father's presence and lost in reading Thornton's laughing words. No one on earth ever knew what pangs
tof
maidenly
wrath and shame "Little Mother" endured for several days, but whenever after that initial exhibition Morgan looked for further symptom of sentimental regard for the absent lieutenant he failed entirely, and wished that he might write himself an ass for ever having believed it.
The presentation came off at the as-sembly-room one lovely evening in July, Sergt. Jeff era being spokesman for the troop and utterly routing Morgan, who knew not how to formulate reply to words so rich with soldierly trust and affection. Close behind fcfce •piMIkm Corporal Schramm, his glistening eyes fixed on Connie's beautiful, blushing face, with its swimming eyes, for Jeff era' voice was tremulous when he went on to say how for ten long years the old hands had soldiered under Morgan and never once could recall a harsh or an unjust word, never once a day when his voice or heart or hand had failed them when they looked to him for leadership or aid. The old fellow was worn and ill and heavily laden, and this unlooked-for tribute from his men completely floored him. "Why, men," he stammered, "I—always stood by you as a matter of course. I never dreamed of doing anything else. What's an officer for, if it isn't to be a friend and leader to his own troop first of all? I'm more obliged to you than you can imagine. This isn't strictly according to law and regulations, I am afraid, and if I'd got wind of it in any way before, I should have stopped it but precedents seem to be plenty of late, and I only wish I might think it would be my luck to wear them as your captain for years to «ome, but your old lieutenant makes an older captain, and I'm soon to step aside for a younger soldier and better man but so long as I live, men, this .gift of yours and these words of Jeffers' will—will— God bless you all, lads, I -can't finish it."
And then the men in their full-dress uniforms had escorted their captain and Connie and the invited guests homeward that night and the first, thing when father and daughter were left alone old Morgan turned to Connie. 'r "So that was what Thornton's letter was about, was it, Connie?" "Certainly, father," she replied, looking straight into his eyes with those clear brown orbs of hers. "What else" could it have been?" And that was the last mentioned of the subject between them.
Each and every one, the men had shaken hands with their captain and pledged his health in the foaming beer old Curran had insisted on "setting up" for the occasion. They swore, soldier-like, they'd never let the captain retire but that was a matter beyond their jurisdiction. Wind and weather and many a worry laid the veteran by the heels, and his old enemy, rheumatism, took fresh and forcible hold. When troop rode a.way to take the field, poor Morgan was groaning both in flesh and spirit, und when Irtte that autumn Schramm •came posting homeward under subpoene to testify in re The People vs. Lacy, the chevrons of a sergeant decked his sleeves in recognition of a ride of over ajhondred miles through Indianhaunted wilds to bear dispatches to «. distant command, but neither captain nor Connie was there to bid him •welcome. The lonely grave"out on the prairie lacked the bunch of wild flowers which formerly deckcd it every Sunday morning. The old quarters down the row were peopled by strangers to the German soldier now. The sweet face of the gnadige Frauleln smiled no more from the dormer window over the veranda the Morgans, one and all, were gone. A retiring board had pronounced the old dragoon unfit for further service, and with his own fuel and quarters to furnish as best he could, with no more medical attendance or supplies from Unele Sam, with all the brood to feed and clothe and educate, without a word of aid or welcome from the kinsfolk in the east, poor Morgan meekly took his discharge and his retired pay, and a tiny two-storied cottage in an out-of-the-way street in Butte, and strove to set up housekeeping with Connie at the head and a Chinese man-of-all-work at the foot of the new establishment. Rand had been to see them and urged their all coming eastward awhile as his guests at home, but tho railroad company had offered Morgan a little berth which he considered it his duty to accept at once, and Connie scouted the idea of her being in need of rest or change she oou id not think of leaving father and within the month it seemed as though her vision were preternaturally clear, for presently poor Morgan oould not leave the house at all. It was at this stage of the proceedings that as Connie, broom in hand, and an old silk handkerchief over*her head, waa sweeping out the hall one sharp Ootober morning, the Chinaman having been discharged as the result of a strike for more wages and less work, she sent a whirl of dust upon the glistening boots of a statuesque trooper with hand at salute and blue eye*
beaming in 3elig1it at sight of Tils friend the captain's daughter. "Oh, 8chr-r-ramml" she cried, throwing down her besom and joyously grasping his g^untleted hand. "Where did ybu cdbe'from? Come right in papa will be so glad!—Here's Schramm —Sergt. Schramm, daddy dear and, first closing the outer door, she opened that which led to the den, and ushered the Bergeant in and. watched with ....
Wl 'Ill
"Oil! SCHRAMM," SHE CRIED.
glistening eyes the greeting of the two soldiers. Schramm must stay and take luncheon with them. "We are no longer on duty, lad," said Morgan, with a sad smile, "and if you'll have a bite with us and te!T~T» all about the old troop it'll be a comfort." And Connie's eyes and lips: were even more insistent. Off came the blue overcoat, and there In all the glossy sheen of the new, snug-fitting blouse, with the triple bars of his sergeant's chevron's, the athletic frame of their soldier guest stood revealed, and they made him sit, and Connie poured his tea and bustled in and out of the kitchen, and Schramm sat with his old captain and talked by the hour of the troop, and how well Jefferslield his own now as first sergeant, and what a fine soldier Treacy was, and yet—he did not say how or why, but fast as their term of service expired the old hands took their discharge, and then "took on" in some other troop. And all the time he talked, whensoever she flitted in or out or by, the blue eyes would follow and were full of light and reverence and watchful care. It was as he walked slowly away, two hours later, eagerly promising to come again, that those same blue eyes were clouded with deep anxiety—Morgan was failing so fast.
The trial, he told them, was to begin forthwith but it never did. In some of Lacy's appealing letters to former employers in- official station in Washington reference was made to the malignant hatred of Col. Rand as the inspiration of all their proofless and damnable accusations, and these getting to the war department and so coming to ttaud for remark, the placid colonel finally waxed indignant. It was bad tnough, said he. that Lacy should be an expert thief and blaekleg, but that to cover his own tracks and those of his pals he should seek the ruin of innocent men was rather too much of a good thing. Then the general came back from, the field about this time Rand made his report, and on went a four-page letter to Washington reciting briefly the evidence in their possession as affecting Lacy. This was shown to the ex-clerk's friends at court, and two letters from the east, after being opened and examined by the sheriff, were handed in to- Lacy's cell the day after Schramm's arrival. That night the prisoner asked for more paper and permission to write till late, and when morning came the neatlyfolded document proved to be the final statements of the clerk who had cashed so many papers of that name within the past year—but would cash no more. What was left of Lacy fay stiffening on the narrow cot. The night-watch had not even heard him groan, if,
A fellow of much inventive genius was Lacy, and of uncommon usefulness until luck turned. Cards, mining stocks, wheat, wine and women all combined against him. He had to cover the money abstracted to pay his losses and put up more margins. He owed still more, and his creditors, gamblers like himself, said: "Pay or we peach." There was just one way to "raise the wind" without reaping the whirlwind the paymaster must be robbed on the very next trip and the plan was to have the train "held up," until the sudden move of the cavalry suggested an easier way. Out went two of his sportsmen friends with letters of introduction to the hunter hermit in the Tomahawk range. Down they wont with him as their guide and companion and scout. Cavalry overeoats and sfbuch hats and equipments, such as were worn in the field in those days, were to be had almost anywhere. Armed with their bogus dispatch they rode to Minden, dodging Sergt. Dolan's escort from Bear fork to Alkali Leaving their horses with the boy at the bridge, the three men received the paymaster and Lacy at the station to which he had been lured, and the rest. was easy until it came to getting away with the money. The hermit forbade their returning by way of his hut, as they would be trailed thither and he and his boy instantly suspected. They mqat go farther east, by way of Wagon gap, and back to the agency with their game, as though from innocent and successful hunt. But, in dodging the troops and certain couriers they saw, time was lost, in which they got to drinking and quarreling. Lacy's friends were two well-known contractors for Indian supplies, long accustomed to agency ways, well-versed in Indian affairs and often suspected of being knaves of deeper dye than mere swindlers of the aborigines, which species of crime was not bereft of virtue in frontier eyes. They were known to the trade by the names of Stein and Wirt*, sod their
V, I.
1
iMl ikiSlk
intimacy with Lacy and certain employes of the quartermaster department had attracted Rand's attention to them months before the robbery. Hearing of their absence^ from town,, he traced them to tjhe agency, thence to the range beyond, and found that the date of their return that way corresponded exactly with that of Thorn-ton-s fight. Young Stearns had at last made a coherent statement. Promising to give his luckless father his share (is soop as they got back within sight of that harbor of refuge, but plying him with liquor all the time, these men rode to Fossil creek in company, then gave their dozing guide the slip and dashed rapidly ahead. Being aware of the Indian outbreak, they probably studied the country with their glasses and saw the commotion among the distant war parties and so dodged into the range away from the road, and by a wide detour got safely in, while their hapless guide, following in drunken pursuit, ran foul of the Sioux, was chased and killed. Wisely they hid such of the money as they did not need at the moment, and kept away from headquarters and Lacy awhile until the announcement in the papers that the crime had been definitely fixed on the soldiers Schultz and Schramm gave them courage to unearth their plunder and fetch it nearer home. Not that they intended to divide with Lacy by any means—he was in their toils now, and could be further bled—but to hold him with mingled threat and promise. And all the time Rand was weaving his web about them. The more coherent statements of the ^half-witted son, now being restored to *uch intellect as he possessed, had given ample clew, and the arrest trf .Lacy at Ransom was the result of a dispatch to Rand that his confederates had been pounced upon the previous night at Yankton with over ten thousand dollars of the stolen money in their possession. So long as they did not poach, however, Lacy was still safe, and ho played the indignant and wronged and faithful servant, and played it well, for just six weeks then "Dux femina faeti"—the woman who was leader—by the nose—of the triumvirate, and the recipient of much of their stolen plunder, was also arrested when on the wing to the east, and—she couldn't keep a secret her circumstantial confession of the whole business from, beginning to ul, made whon hoping to win exemption for herself, ended the battle. Then Lacy's own hand penned his parting words and freed his shame-stricken soul. "It was a well-planned job," said Rand, "on Lacy's part at least, but it had its leak so long as there was a woman in it."
And now, as his evidence was no longer needed, Sergt. Schramm had no further business at either Butte or Ransom. "But you don't want to go back that long distance alone," said Old Tintop. "We can assign you to duty here until your troop comes home next month." And to the adjutant's infinite surprise, Schramm eagerly assented.
October went, and keener winds from the mountain-gorges and fiercer twinges in Morgan's legs reminded them that winter was at hand. Often now tho post surgeon found means to ride over to Butte and see the failing soldier, and many a day officers or their wives contrived to visit town and dropped in to see Connie and offer aid and comfort to her father, but Connie declared slhe ueeded no help. She had an excellent servant now, a German woman whom Mrs. Hinkel brought to her, who cooked and washed and did almost everything for so small a sum that when the amount was mentioned I fear me there were women who were sorely tempted to offer the paragon twice as much to quit the Morgans and come to them, but they deserved the more honor that they promptly dismissed the unwOrthy thought. Connie said Mrs. Hinkel, too, was kind and useful in making things for the children, and Miss Franzen of the public school, who lived in the next block, took such interest in Lot and Billy and taught them so ranch. Why, they would really be in clover, were poor father only better. And then one evening when Schramm had ridden into town and left his horse at the Empire and had come promptly around to see the Herr Rittmeister, he was amazed to find a trill, gray-mustached, soldierly man seated by the captain's side, while there—riglit by Connie—in civilian dress stood a tall, slender young fellow, at sight of whom the sergeant's eyes clouded, and he would have re-
t\
-v
TriKRE HAUTM tsATURDAT EVKMNG MAIL, NOVEMBER 24,1804
I
\i
PXRBT THORNTON It AD HIM BY TITB HAitD.
tired, but v?&8too late. for with one leap Perry Thornton had him by the hand. "Schramm, by all that's glorioast Father, look here!" And before the Prussian ex-hussar could realize it, a veteran colonel of dragoons was wringing one of his hands, while the lieutenant clasped the other. Nor would they or the Morgans let him go. "I have a letter from Berlin which I am charged to give yon, Herr von Rhets," said Thornton pere, and at the name Schramm's lips quivered and twitched and he turaed^ very white.
but straight in the colonel's kindly face looked the unflinching eyes of blue. Yet even then he would have asked to be permitted tq retire—the soldier in him shrinking from what he deemed intrusion/ and a strange, restless gnawing at his heart impelling him to go and leave them to the joy of a reunion in which no doubt he had really no place—but, one and all, they forbade. Constance held in her hands two cabinet photographs, and Perry Btepped forward, took one of these, and, holding it forth, said to Schramm: "If you need more reason, sergeant, here it is, for this is the picture of a young lady who says she mugt have yours, and quickly, too." "The young lady is most gracious, Herr Lieutenant, and most beautiful,1M said Schramm, studying it attentivelyi then, glancing up: "The lieutenants sister?" "Not quite," laughed Perry, blushing, "though that's what my sisters are beginning to call her—rather prematurely."
And then in his perplexity Schramm gazed past the handsome boy and sought Connie's face. It was beaming. "Pardon," he said, "I am so dull. Doeb the lieutenant mean it is his betrothed?" "Yes, and we health—we five."
For one moment Schramm's eyes Bought doubtfully the eyes of the maiden who stood there so unflinchingly and smilingly before them, and then liis hand went out in earnest. IPT 4 ^[TO BB CONTINUED.]
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