COMRADES IN ARMS )}}))] ' . GENERAL- CHARLES KING THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES 'FOR A LITTLE MINUTE THERE WAS SILENCED CHAPTER V. PART 2. A Tale of Two Hemispheres BY GENERAL CHARLES KING AUTHOR OF "A KNIGHT OF COLUMBIA," "AN APACHE PRIN CESS," "A DAUGHTER OF THE SIOUX," "THE COLONEL'S DAUGHTER," ETC. ILLUSTRATIONS BY GEORGE GIBBS AND E. W. DEMING NEW YORK THE HOBART COMPANY 1904 COPYRIGHT, 1904, BY THE HOBART COMPANY CONTENTS. PART ONE. WHAT HAPPENED IN THE WEST. CHAPTER I. PAGE. " Number Thirteen " and the Mess 3 CHAPTER II. The Shots at Midnight 23 CHAPTER III. The Accusing Insignia 42 CHAPTER IV. A Champion Missing 56 CHAPTER V. The Lady in the Case 72 CHAPTER VI. The Knight and the Lady 85 CHAPTER VII. The Red Man on his Way 97 CHAPTER VIII. The Tale of the Telegrams 112 CHAPTER IX. The Tale of the Knight 128 CHAPTER X. A Settled Score 141 CHAPTER XI. Last Seen At Sunset . . 155 CHAPTER XII. PAGE. Abduction 165 CHAPTER XIII. Number Thirteen Gone 176 CHAPTER XIV. A New Arrest 193 CHAPTER XV. Who Was the Woman?.. . 211 PART Two. WHAT HAPPENED IN THE EAST. Letters Preliminary 231 CHAPTER I. Manila and the General's Ball 266 CHAPTER II. Through the Enemy's Lines 275 CHAPTER III. Bad News from Samar 286 CHAPTER IV. Devil's Work and Its Cure 300 CHAPTER V. Brevet Lost a Bride Won. . .312 PART THREE. WHAT HAPPENED IN GOTHAM. CHAPTER I. Another Soldier Rewarded . 333 ILLUSTRATIONS PAGE FRONTISPIECE "THERE Is JUST ONE WOMAN IN CREATION WHO CAN SET ME RIGHT " 95 "THEN CAME A FLASH FROM THAT CLUMP OF WILLOWS" . 117 "THE LID FLEW OPEN AT HER TOUCH " . 191 PART ONE What Happened in the West COMRADES IN ARMS CHAPTER I "NUMBER THIRTEEN" AND THE MESS. THE first thing Pat Langham does when he gets a new uniform," said Captain Sparker reflec tively, as he studied the approaching officer, " is to pay the photographer a visit." " And the last thing Pat Langham does," drawled Lieu tenant Crabbe significantly, "is to pay the tailor any thing." The first speaker was a man of forty stout, ruddy- faced, and sturdy ; a man of substance, thanks to a well- to-do wife. The second was a man of thirty, spare, somewhat angular, and possibly dyspeptic; a man of many moods, few of them gracious. Both speakers were component parts of a little group smoking and chatting lazily on the veranda of the officers' mess. It was just after luncheon on a June day, and the inspector general was officially visiting the post. The sun was hot, the shade was alluring. Every man was hoping the inspector would not turn out the garrison in full uniform. Every 4 COMRADES IN ARMS man was ruefully certain that that was just what the inspector would do. At that moment, however, the inspector was clos.eted somewhere with the commanding officer. Luncheon had been over and done with at the colonel's half an hour at least, for the ladies had been out on the piazza, scanning the neighbors and fanning themselves just that length of time. There were at the moment three of them in the household of Colonel Mack his wife, his wife's married sister, Mrs. Cullin, and his niece, Miss Flora Cullin. All three were in evidence, as were the senior major, the adjutant, and one or two "youngsters" lieutenants being much favored in the observant eyes of the niece. But the post commander and his official guest were not of the party, and the regimental quartermaster, who had lunched with his colonel, declared as he came hurrying along by the messroom that he hadn't even an inkling of what the inspector's plans might be. " He's busy with the Old Man behind closed doors," said the quartermaster irrev erently. " Something deep and mysterious, I dare say, for " Old Hardtack " took the colonel aside before we were fairly through lunch. Briggs and I had to choke off," he continued regretfully, for Mr. Potts was fond of the good things of life, and had not too many of his own at home. " Mr. Fleshpots," Crabbe had delicately referred to him COMRADES IN ARMS 5 on one occasion, still memorable at the mess. These were the ante-reorganization days, when adjutant and quartermaster were still, as they had been for nearly a century, doing five officers' duty on one officer's pay when the regimental staff was chosen from the lieu tenants, not the captains. Potts, a poor man at best, was wedded to a woman poorer than himself, a woman who bore him many children and complaints, both of which he accepted with Christian fortitude and resignation. A meek man was Potts in the family circle but, like many a wedded warrior, what he would submit to at home was no safe criterion of what he might submit to abroad. Crabbe discovered this the oft-remembered night of his unwarrantable witticism. Potts turned on him it was a mess dinner in honor of a former colonel become a brigadier with a rejoinder that left its sting to this day. Crabbe was not one of those that hailed him as he came scurrying down the sidewalk. They had exchanged no word since the episode referred to. But Potts was bombarded with questions, for with every other man of the party he was a pet. They had a way of say ing that Potts was " square from the ground up," and " without a mean streak in his build," and when men speak thus of their quartermaster he is an official of exalted virtue. 6 COMRADES IN ARMS But Potts couldn't stop. He was in a hurry. " Ask Briggs," was his hasty answer, " I'm blessed if I know. Got to send ambulance over to meet the Flyer." Then, carrying the tail of his remarks clear across the road way, with his mustache bristling over the right shoulder, he wound up with, " Or ask Langham he was galled into the confab." It was this parting shot that drew all eyes on the designated officer. It was his spick and span, immacu late garb, coupled with the fact that there were four different photographs of the one subject, that called forth the comment of Captain Sparker. It was Madame Rumor that reinforced the ill-natured fling of his brother officer, Mr. Crabbe. In some way or other, every man present had recently heard something to the same effect. At all events no one verbally rebuked the epigram. Some few rewarded it with a chuckle. One officer, however, turned ; looked squarely at the speaker a second or two ; thought better of an impulse to speak; arose; stepped back into the darkened hallway ; took his forage-cap from a peg; went through the reading room to the side ver anda, and from the Venetian window on that front, gazed thoughtfully at the approaching comrade. He merited a second glance, this new-comer, and gen erally got it, from men, and more than a second from COMRADES IN ARMS 7 many women. He was tall, straight, and slender, sinewy, finely built, and favored, moreover, with a well-shaped head and singularly handsome, soldierly face. He was fair of skin and hair, yet dark-eyed. His nose and chin were of the Grecian type, his mouth finely chiseled, and shaded by a sweeping, blonde mustache. He was dressed with exceeding care in the nattiest of fatigue uniforms. His cap, sack-coat, and trousers were new and of most approved cut and finish. The glistening eagle, cord, shoulder-straps, and regimental badge were of fine gold wire, deftly embroidered. The block letters, U. S., on the black mohair braiding of the collar were, as someone had ascertained, and advertised, of solid gold, yet in shape and size closely followed the regula tions. This could not be said that year of the coat collar itself, which was very high and stiff and straight very Prussian and military in effect ; very becoming, too, with the narrow bordering line of gleaming white. The cap visor, also, dodged the unbecoming slope of the regula tion of the day and curved closely down over the hand some dark eyes. The snowy stripe of the trousers was fully half an inch wider than authorized. The coat was cut with very square-shouldered effect; very snug, too, at the waist and back and hips, yet the flat braided edges lay trimly together from the throat to the squared cor- 8 COMRADES IN ARMS ners at the bottom, innocent of the unsightly, gaping effect so noticeable in so many specimens of that most indefensible garment. Just as much of white cuff as of white collar was visible. Just as snug-fitting and spot less were the white, wash-leather gloves. Just as im maculate and shapely were the natty boots. Take him all in all, Mr. Langham was as presentable a soldier as the regiment had ever seen. Yet there was many a man in the regiment who did not seem to like him. There were one or two whose dislike bordered close on hate. Perhaps it was his serene indifference to either dislike or hate, to comment or criticism, that made Mr. Langham so distinctly a mark for the slings and arrows of his detractors. They could have found it possible, perhaps, to forgive his superiority in dress, bearing, and gen eral appearance. What they could not forgive was that he should rise superior to every effort thus far made to " take him down." He was twenty-seven, well-born, well- bred, well-educated, well-favored. He rode, danced, and " tennised " finely. He drilled, shot, and studied fairly. He never meddled with other men's business, and he re sented their meddling with his. He never was uncivil, even to those who would be, and had been, uncivil to him, but his civility was of a sort that rasped them more than overt affront it savored so much of utter indifference. He COMRADES IN ARMS 9 never spoke a woman's name except in respect, and never at all when only men were present. He was genial and courteous to men whom he liked, but such men seemed few. He had hardly a flaw in his physical make-up, and as to moral obliquities, no man in the regiment could hazard a sustainable criticism. He had entered service from civil life five years earlier. He had been known to this regiment only five months promoted from one where most men were friends, to one where all men were strangers. Not one of the twenty who called to bid him welcome within the week of his arrival had he ever seen before. A limited few he had heard of cared little to see again. He came from a command long stationed in the East, to one that had never seen anything but the West much of the time a wild West, indeed. He played a fair hand at whist, and no hand at poker. He seemed to like Bor deaux, but couldn't bear Bourbon. It was never on tap at his quarters. He cared little for billiards, and less for pool. He joined the officers' mess the day after his com ing, and was absent from dinner almost every evening of the fortnight that followed. It added not to his popu larity among the bachelors that he was so welcomed of the Benedicks. These latter were not to blame: their wives enjoyed the talk of a man well versed in society's 10 COMRADES IN ARMS ways, who was fresh from the far East, and could be drawn out as to metropolitan doings, dances, dinners, and. the like. He looked well in the conventional black and white of evening garb, and was doubtless surprised to find that so few of his new brethren ever wore it. They dined and danced in uniform, as we had for years on the frontier, even after a merciful war secretary ordained that for purely social affairs civilian evening dress might be forgiven. He was properly attentive to all the married women, from the colonel's wife to the bride of Second Lieutenant Callow, only just joined. He was not too attentive to any one of the few maidens, and thereby piqued the curiosity and interest of nearly all. He spent some time in fitting up his quarters, he or his servant doing all the curtain draping, picture hanging, carpet laying, rug beating, etc., etc., despite a hint or two from a woman or two that in that sort of thing the touch of a feminine hand, the taste of a feminine eye, was ever essential to happy results. The men were speedily telling tales about Langham's luxurious ways. " Silk bed spreads, begad ! " said Cross disdainfully, " and tissue paper petticoats on the lamps, camel's hair shawls on the floor well, if it wasn't camel's hair what was it ? " This to his wife. " Embroidered sofa-pillows, embroidered pillow-shams; yes, more jimcracks and tomfoolery than COMRADES IN ARMS 11 most any women I ever knew. Why, when I was a youngster the best we had was a hospital cot and horse blankets." Langham raised a storm, however, when to his other iniquities he added four o'clock tea, and smilingly invited his various hostesses of that initial fortnight to drop in and partake. They had all heard by that time of his expensively furnished quarters, and many women were eager to see and judge for themselves. Then it transpired that Fox, the English servant he had brought with him, was an adept in the gentle art of brewing tea, that Mr. Langham's tea service was both pretty and costly, that he had photograph albums filled with pictures of very modish-looking people, one of them being given up to professionals of the stage, many of whom had scrawled their autographs across the polished surfaces. These were mines of interest for maids and matrons both, these exiles of the far frontier, and for these four months after his coming no garrison function called forth so many of the one sex and so few of the other as Langham's Sun day afternoons. It was an innovation his brother officers, bar half a dozen, declared they " couldn't stand for." But that wasn't all. There were six .companies of in fantry and four of cavalry that spring at the post. The officers often rode out with the hounds, the girls with the 12 COMRADES IN ARMS officers. With the exception of the few that owned their own mounts, they all used troop horses. The men, to a man, and to the best of their powers, rode the army seat in the army saddle, either McClellan, Whitman, or Wint. Langham came early in February, his household belongings early in March, his horses, two, early in April, and with them sensation, indeed. They were beautiful bays, with black points and banged tails blooded, mettle some creatures, as every trooper could see before ever they were stripped. They were stalled in the little shed stable in rear of his quarters. He never so much as hinted that he would be glad to obtain government forage that might have opened a chance for a snub; it was hauled out from town, a big load oats, bran, and hay, that must have cost him a month's stipend. But the climax came when, after the two had been limbered and exercised, groomed till they glistened another func tion in which Fox excelled the dancing, delighted pair were brought round to the front of the quarters one bright Saturday morning, equipped with Melton bridles and English hunting saddles, with every bit, buckle, and chain gleaming with polish, and Mr. Langham stepped forth in a civilian riding suit, whipcord breeches and pig skin leggins and riding crop of the most approved pattern, but something utterly strange to nine out ten denizens of COMRADES IN ARMS 13 Fort Minneconjou. " Good Lord, look at them pants ! " exclaimed one old-timer, disdain and amaze commingling in his tone. Even the conservatives could see nothing to approve of in those bulging, baggy, shapeless togs, tight cut at the knee, for this was '97. Foreign fashions had not then reached the far frontier. The old-school trooper gazed in disgust at the haute ecole outfit and swore that if only a white man by which he meant a cavalryman were in command of the post no such absurd exhibit of monkeyshines would be permitted. The fact that Colonel Mack should nod approval as the lieutenant trotted away, " actually jiggering up and down," rising in his stirrups, was past comprehension and much past patience. That was bad enough as a starter; but, when challenged and even dared to come out and ride " cross country " all cut up with irrigating ditches and prairie dog holes, Lang- ham calmly accepted, his fine bay guiding by a mere touch of the rein, taking the leaps in his stride, trailing close after the hounds every rod of a six-mile chase, and trail ing after him nine-tenths of the field. That night there was well-nigh a mob at the mess, and Major Baker, of the cavalry, presiding officer thereof, left his chair and the premises. The youngsters were planning some devil ment, some scheme to " take Langham down," and Baker would neither countenance nor condemn it. Langham, 14 COMRADES IN ARMS dining at the doctor's, heard naught of the plan until nearly eleven. He had been playing whist. He was in evening dress, civilian throughout, and under the lamp post nearest his quarters he met one of the few men to whom as yet he had taken a fancy Jim Gridley, a subal tern of cavalry, some years his senior, and Gridley pro posed their having a pipe in his rooms. There he quietly suggested that Langham change to uniform if he intended going to the mess before turning in. Langham asked why. Gridley answered that, while the colonel had ruled in Langham's favor that civilian evening dress could be worn at social functions such as a dance or a dinner, it would be unwise to take undue advantage and go else where, even to the mess, except in uniform. " You take too many chances, as it is," said he as quietly. " You mean I would be taking other chances if I went there, now" said Langham, with a downward glance at his broad shirtfront and dainty pearl studs. Gridley gave no answer. " Let's go, then," said Langham. " Not as you are," said Gridley, and the elder man and stronger will prevailed. But it chafed and nettled Langham. He knew there was a feeling against him among the dozen that made up the mess. " Baker's dozen " they named it after Lang- ham's joining had made it thirteen. In part, he was told, COMRADES IN ARMS 15 it was due to the old superstition against the number and the possibility of having to sit thirteen at table. In the main, he was sure, it was caused by a certain narrowness and provincialism in the mess, due to its long existence beyond the pale of civilization and the light of social amenities as practiced in the far East. That it would have been wiser on his part to adapt himself, rather, to their ways, and only gradually to introduce those that obtained in his former regiment, had occurred to him only to be rejected. Langham had the courage of his convictions. What he was doing was right; therefore would it be wrong not to do it. Might it not be more politic ? was asked. Doubtless ; but Langham could never have succeeded as a politician. These were matters he had talked over with Gridley before that they talked of earnestly that April night, and had never since dis cussed at all. Gridley found it useless, and so refrained. It was about this time the mess began to refer to Number Thirteen as " Pat " as incongruous a forename as could well have been combined with his strictly Saxon patronymic. Only son of an English mother who had early met, loved, and married a gifted secretary of the American legation, he had been named for the father, and that father for England's famous young statesman of an earlier day and generation. As " William Pitt 16 COMRADES IN ARMS Berkely Langham " the youngster was registered in school days at Eton. " Mr. William Pitt Langham " he later appeared on the rolls of Yale the Berkely would not have been elided had he gone to Harvard and then the sire was taken from earth, and the youth reverted to the dominion of a fond, doting, and unwise mother, who, when he chose the army for his career and old and influ ential friends of his father obtained his commission, had his first cards duly engraved at Tiffany's : Mr. Wm. Pitt Berkely Langham th Regiment of Infantry U. S. Army This card went with him to Sackett's Harbor, where it was speedily laughed out of barracks. He ordered his own before he was shifted to Buffalo, finding his father's wisdom unimpeachable, and did modestly well in society as Mr. William P. Langham. But a winter in Washing ton, close to the throne and the embassies, plunged him again into polynomials, and, at his mother's instance, a new plate was prepared : " Mr. Wm. Pitt Berkely-Lang- ham," this one read, and was her entire joy. She sounded the most courteous of adjutants-general upon the pro priety of having her boy so gazetted in the annual official register, and was surprised to hear that it could be done COMRADES IN ARMS 17 only through Act of Congress. " Pitt," as he had been dubbed at school, came out to the frontier with cards on the Buffalo plan, which passed current everywhere, and all might have gone well but for the mother's fatal pro pensity for enlightening the community as to her boy's aristocratic lineage. She would address her letters in her own way. He heard, of course, as people in garri son are apt to hear of fun at their expense, that men and women both were saying satirical things, but he gave no sign. One day, however, a telegram in its brown envel ope came to the mess, the Hibernian messenger, Bugler Brannigan, inquiring inocently for " Lootn't Pat Lang- ham," and the mess went wild. Major Baker, as in duty bound, would have rebuked the youngster, but Crabbe had seized the envelope and, with a shriek of delight, pro claimed Brannigan guiltless. The fault lay with the tele graph people. The stigma went from the bugler to the operator, but the name stuck to the victim. Sparker's aspersion, recorded in the first paragraph hereof, had some foundation in fact. Four photographs of Mr. Langham had been taken in as many years, the last one at the flourishing frontier city of Silver Hill, close at hand. That three of the four, including the last, were taken at the mother's behest, no one at Fort Minne- conjou had been told. They drew their own conclusions, 18 which, as a rule, were not weighty, and Langham let them. From the time of his coming until on or about the 1 5th of May that gentleman had seemed impervious to either satire or criticism. Then on a sudden there had come a change from the attitude of calm superiority. " Pat " Langham, from being the most imperturbable swell at the post, became, within a few days and two let ters, a sad, harassed, and obviously anxious man. Then many letters began to come, letters that bore no seal, no crest, no scrawling superscription business letters, law yers' letters, tradesmen's letters, alas, in strange prepon derance. Then the adjutant's office developed a leak. It wasn't Briggs, the close-mouthed, loyal adjutant. He was furious when he heard of it. But it was some one of Briggs's clerks. A well-known firm of tailors had sent to the adjutant-general a bill of some $500 against Mr. Langham. Another firm had contributed a second, less in size but equal in age. Both declared that Mr. Lang- ham declined to notice their appeals, and, therefore, they demanded action. The matter had been referred through intermediate headquarters to Colonel Mack, who in turn referred it t Lieutenant Langham, temporarily his own company commander, and the reply of that officer was something beyond the powers of Crabbe and his cro nies to ascertain. Two things, however, became appar- COMRADES IN ARMS 19 ent at once one was that Langham, who had been look ing careworn and anxious, " braced up " unaccountably. " Treats me with hauteur and acts more like a lord than ever," snarled Crabbe. " Why, if I'd had such a complaint to answer I'd want to hide my head some where." " Try your stein, Crabbe," smoothly suggested Gridley, "it's big enough." It 'had become unsafe to sneer at Langham when Gridley was by, and the mess got to know it ; but what puzzled the mess more than a little was the second thing that had become so suddenly apparent. Lieutenant and Adjutant Briggs, one of the elders of the subaltern element, a poor man financially, but a treasure to his post commander, began to " cultivate " Langham, and Crabbe watched the symptoms with astonishment that was mingled with alarm. Briggs must soon reach his captaincy and, whether he did or no, must surely lose the adjutancy, for the law of the day limited him to four years. Crabbe knew the colonel was already casting about for his successor, loath as he was to part with him. Crabbe long had had his eye on the adjutancy, and up to the time of Langham's coming his hopes had been high. It was incredible, he now said, that the Old Man would pick out for the place a junior first lieutenant, when he could have the choice of several seniors of experience ; 20 COMRADES IN ARMS but his heart failed him, even as he spoke Mack had shown such partiality for Langham. There was another who looked on Langham with similar jealousy, but not such virulent hate. One was enough for the purpose, however. Crabbe heard of Langham's misfortune with joy like that of Shylock over Tubal's tidings and the wreck of Antonio's galleons, but joy turned to doubt, and triumph to hate, when he saw that, so far from breaking, Langham stood warmer with the colonel and the colonel's staff, and this was the situation on this bright June day when Sparker and Crabbe were launching their shafts at the unconscious head of the coming man. Reaching the broad plank-way in front of the mess, > Mr. Langham turned to his right and came straight up the steps. That awkward silence had fallen on the group that tells the observant latest arrival that he or she has been the subject of unfriendly remark. Women dis semble better under such circumstances, if not under all. Some of the youngsters made way for him. None of the elders stirred. " Any news, Langham ? " queried Palmer, seeking relief and information in one breath. " Lots," was the laconic reply, and Langham was look ing straight at Crabbe as he ascended the steps. " What for a starter ? " asked Palmer, because he saw COMRADES IN ARMS 21 he was expected to ask, even though good judgment counseled silence. " For a starter ? " repeated Langham deliberately. " Why, for a starter, it seems we've started the Minnecon- jou School for Scandal, with Crabbe as Grand Gabbler." Crabbe turned white as he squirmed out of his chair and faced his accuser, whose fingers were twitching eagerly. " I'll trouble you to explain that, Mr. Lang- ham," he began. But by this time other men were on their feet. Gridley was coming swiftly round the corner. Sparker, senior officer present, was heaving slowly up from the settee. It was high time for him to interpose. Langham and Crabbe, each white with wrath, the one cool, resolute, and ready; the other quivering, raging, yet not unprepared, were confronting each other not four paces apart. " Gentlemen, this must stop ! Not another word ! " said Sparker, striding between them. " If you say that of me," burst in Crabbe, over Sparker's shoulder, " you're a liar ! " " He does say it of you, and he doesn't lie," responded another voice Gridley's, in cool, measured tone. " Come with me, Langham ; you know it means arrest if you stay here." Then he whirled about and confronted the astounded group. " My friend spoke the truth, Captain 22 COMRADES IN ARMS Sparker, and you know it, and I'm with him if Mr. Crabbe has anything further to say." Down the line came the peal of the bugle, the summons to duty whatever it might be. " I'll see you to-night when this this business is over," screamed Crabbe, after the departing pair. But Langham, very straight, never turned to look back or answer. Grid- ley was swiftly marching him away. " By gad, it's inspection in full uniform ! See, there goes the orderly ! " cried Palmer. " No time for other foolishness." " But I'll make him eat his words to-night," raved Crabbe, his voice now hot with passion. " Both of them for that matter." Most men, however, were silent as they hurried to their quarters. They knew Langham's justification. They doubted his being made to " eat " a word. They vaguely dreaded the outcome, and they had reason. But no man dreamed of such tragic sequel as was to startle all Fort Minneconjou within the compass of the coming night. CHAPTER II THE SHOTS AT MIDNIGHT. THERB was a dance that evening at the post. They always had one when an inspector came. They liked to show him they could drill, parade, march, maneuver all the livelong day, if need be, then waltz or polka, or even poker, all night. The elite of Silver Hill drove out to take part, some of the best-known com ing earlier to dine. The big assembly room was always in readiness for garrison society, and society in readiness for such gayeties, the band and certain elders among the family men being the only growlers. This time the colonel intimated toward evening to Mr. Briggs that, it being in honor of the inspector general, the dance should be re garded strictly as a military function, and it might be well to suggest that full uniform should be worn. The only man in the least likely to think of wearing anything else being Mr. Langham, Briggs dropped in at Langham's on his way home to dinner, and found Fox brushing and stowing away his master's parade uniform. The lieu tenant himself was not in sight. " Gone out to see the 'osses, sir," said Fox, his smug, clean-shaven face inscrut- 24 COMRADES IN ARMS able as ever. That man of Langham's was a living menace to the peace of mind of many people at the post. A soldier " striker " in bygone days had been the nearest approach to a body servant ever seen in the regiment. An English combination of valet and groom was something almost unheard of on the frontier. Fox slept under his master's roof, ate with the steward at the officers' mess, and lived under his officer's protection, else might living have at first been impossible in the land where every man, not soldier-bred, was fiercely insistent on the theory that he was as good as any other if not vastly better. A posi tion of voluntary servitude no westerner could condone. Even the rank and file revolted at sight of Fox. Hibern ian men-at-arms had a drubbing in mind for him before he had been a day at the fort, but dropped all thought of it within the month. Fox volunteered his services at the garrison " show," and proved to be a low comedian and ventriloquist of amazing powers. He leaped in a single hour to the height of popularity. Who could ever think of slugging a man who made mirth for everybody. Off the stage, however, Fox maintained an air of pro fessional gravity and decorum absolutely unimpeachable. His 'osses and his 'ouse, it would seem, demanded all his care and attention. His eyes were blind, his ears deaf to the allurements of kitchen doors along " the row " and COMRADES IN ARMS 25 the married quarters under the bluff. More than one maid had ogled and simpered in vain. It was whispered that Fox was already blessed, or burdened, with a wife and children in the East, or somewhere, but no one knew. He was a mite of a man, barely five feet two, and spare in proportion. He had been a jockey perhaps, a stable boy surely. What people could not understand was how it happened that one so gifted as Fox should serve in so humble a station. " That feller could get his hundred a month easy, and I offered him that," said the manager of the Alhambra Music Hall and Theater in town. But when Fox was told of this munificent bid, he so far relaxed from his habitual attitude of professional stolidity as to uplift both brows, wink with one eye, and pronounce it all gammon. The wiles and blandishments lavished on Fox at the few enter tainments he had been persuaded to attend might have turned many a head, but thus far had been powerless to draw from him aught of his past. Master and man, each in his sphere, Langham and Fox were objects of more interest, curiosity, and speculation than all the official inquisitors that ever disturbed the garrison. Now, Briggs did not wish to convey an official hint through a domestic channel. It would have been easy to say to the man, as he saw Langham's evening dress laid 26 out in the back room, that full uniform was the rule for the night, but he preferred to say it to the master. " I wish to speak to the lieutenant," said he, and started to go through to the kitchen, such being the free and easy way of the frontier, but Fox was first. " I'll call Mr. Lang- ham, sir," said he, as he dropped his brushes and darted ahead. So the adjutant waited. Thinking of it later on, it occurred to him that he waited a good while for a man who had less than a dozen rods to cover. Langham was a long time coming ; apologized for the delay, but did not explain it. He was sorry that Briggs had burdened him self with so unnecessary a hint. " I should have worn my war paint," said he, " but didn't think to tell my man. Er er, won't you sit a while ? " But Briggs said no, he must hurry on, and so left him, and then, half way to his own quarters, bethought him of another matter, turned suddenly back, and bolted in, for the door still stood invitingly open. " Langham," he cheerily called, " you may have to take Gridley's guard tour to-morrow. Grid's going . But Langham wasn't there. Neither was Fox. This time the adjutant pushed on through the bedroom to the dens in rear. He thought to find his comrade at the stable. He stumbled on him on the back porch. Master COMRADES IN ARMS 27 and man both were there, so busily occupied that neither had heard his call nor heeded his coming. Both were bending over a chest in the endeavor to lift out a tray that had warped or jammed. Some of the contents had been removed, as two cases of japanned tin, called by our English cousins " dispatch boxes," stood on the boarding close by Langham's foot. Two revolvers of handsome finish lay upon a chair. Some items of hunting garb were tossed upon a bench. Between the busy workers and pos sible observers along the back porches hung a canvas screen at the west end, and some India matting at the other. Fox, tugging and breathing hard, was flushed with his exertions. Langham, flushed possibly with im patience, was saying something that savored of rebuke and displeasure. Briggs caught, as he issued from the door, just these words : " Knowing what you do, then, you should have got everything ready at once. I may start any moment." Start at this very moment at the sound of the adjutant's soldierly voice, he certainly did. Briggs was quite dis concerted at the effect of his sudden coming. All he said was, " Aw, Langham, be ready for guard in case Grid why, what's the matter ? " and, this being said in the ver nacular of the service and most matter-of-fact tone, there was nothing to cause or warrant agitation, yet the tray 28 COMRADES IN ARMS slipped from Fox's hand ; Fox slapped down the lid, and then, recognizing the speaker and recovering his wits, quickly raised it, mumbling, " Beg pardon, sir. Did I 'urt you, sir? " for Langham, with a half-startled exclamation and a stern " Look out, man ! " straightened to his full height and stood almost glaring at Briggs. For a second or two it seemed as though suddenly petrified. Fox was the first to regain composure. He turned on his master, all solicitude. " I am 'fraid I 'urt your 'and, sir. May I look, sir ? " And that brought Langham to himself. " You really startled me, Briggs," he said, with sur prising candor. " We've had an eruption to-day you'll hear of it to-morrow and I'm all nerves just now. Guard, did you say? All right." Then, having neither bid nor excuse to tarry, Briggs turned and left. There was something about the whole affair that gave him concern. In common with the rest of the regiment, he had found it hard at first to get ac quainted with Langham. In common with none in the regiment, that he knew of, save the colonel, he had been taken to a certain extent into his confidence, and had begun to respect his character quite as much as he had admired his style. Briggs was a safe-deposit box of regi mental secrets and skeletons, a deposit box to which even Mrs. Briggs held no duplicate key, and thereby hung a COMRADES IN ARMS 29 terrible tale. Briggs never told it. " He never tells me anything," was the lady's plaint to her every intimate, and by turns, or by twos or fours, that is what they all were these other women. To keep one's place as regi mental adjutant one must keep his counsel. Possibly it was because Briggs had early found that Mrs. Briggs told everything, that now he told her nothing. Certain it was that to no one but his colonel would he talk unre servedly of office matters. Many and devious were the good lady's devices to extract information ; sometimes merely suggestive, such as, " I hear Captain Forbes got another wigging this morning ; " sometimes flatly asser tive, such as, "So ' K ' Company has to go to Custer. Then the Blunts will get Carter's quarters ; " sometimes reproachfully pleading, " Everyone knows Mr. Gridley didn't get back until reveille, and that you covered it somehow, yet you hide it from me." They were all mat ters, he would say, the adjutant's wife should know noth ing about, but her creed was the contrary. There were no matters she should not know about. Briggs's domestic lot was not a happy one, nor was hers. Briggs took to stopping at the mess on stormy nights, and having a social game and a glass, for Mrs. Briggs was rarely alone, and less rarely lonely. Yet she hated to have him away, be cause it looked as though he " had no use for home " or 30 COMRADES IN ARMS for her. Finding that he suspected her motives in cate chising him as to his movements, she resorted to the indi rect a pet device with many a spouse and this, too, he speedily sounded and set at naught. It was " more than many a saint would stand," was her declaration, both to him and to her successive confidants, for Mrs. Briggs in matters of feminine intimacy blew hot and cold, being one day all impulsive gush, the next day barely on speak ing terms. But while she learned nothing from him as to what might be going on within the charmed circle of regimental life, there is no question that he learned not a little from her. Mrs. Briggs was all over the fort nearly every day of her life, and whatsoever was astir in the air she was almost sure to absorb, and equally sure to disseminate. As a circulating medium Mrs. Briggs outclassed the national currency. Briggs had not been home five minutes when she came flying in from the next door neighbor's and began on the threshold with : " Well, I suppose you'll tell me there hasn't been a fear ful scrap between Crabbe and Langham, and they are going to meet to-night ? " Briggs only tolerated slang in men; he loathed it in women, and his hand went up at once in protest, even as he turned his head away. Yet what she told him tallied COMRADES IN ARMS 31 with what he had heard, and it explained in part the obvious excitement and discomposure shown by Langham at his sudden coming. He wouldn't discuss the matter with his wife. He couldn't dismiss it from his thoughts. He had to hasten back to his desk, he said, the moment dinner was over, and did so. " Old Hardtack " wished certain papers and returns to be in readiness for him first thing in the morning, and the clerks were at work on them now. Briggs promised to be home to dress for the dance by 9.30, but he meant to know the truth about the Crabbe-Langham imbroglio before that. The colonel and his guests were still at table. Briggs could tell that from the brilliant light in the dining room and the sounds of chat and laughter floating out through the wide open windows. The colonel was seizing the opportunity of paying some social debts in town and pleas ing " Hardtack " at the same time. There were old friends of the latter among the families of Silver Hill, and to these a dinner at the colonel's was a rare treat. The band, despite the fact that it had to play for review, inspection, and parade during a long afternoon, and that half its membership would have to play for the hop to-night, was at the colonel's doorway discoursing sweeter harmonies than dwelt at the moment in the individual breasts. ("The colonel loves music with his meals," said the colonel's 32 COMRADES IN ARMS buxom helpmate, to the mine-owning magnate seated on her left.) Briggs felt morally certain some of those bandsmen would be in a state of revolt, or inebriety, by tbr time they were wanted for the dance, and thanked his stars it was a matter the colonel and the hop committee would have to settle, not he. The local laws prohibited the sale of intoxicants even in diluted form, but such things as " Kansas canes," " Nebraska hand brooms," etc., were to be had in many a shop in Silver Hill items that were hollow shams when emptied, as it was found that each cane, when first tapped, contained perhaps a pint of burning fluid, and each whisk was but a receptacle for whisky. Then, what couldn't be bought in one way could be " found " in another. Drug stores, appropriately so-called, were dispensers of spirits " for medicinal pur poses " to such citizens as would certify that their physi cian prescribed and their malady demanded stimulant. The system resulted in prohibition to the reliable citizen and plenary indulgence to the worthless. The neighbor hood of the fort had been cleared of the old-time " hog- ranches " by the introduction of the " canteen," where soldiers could be served with sound beer, and so saved from evil. The " toughs " from town, toughs of both sexes that used to haunt those fort-fringing hells, had disappeared with the ranches. An era of " temperance, COMRADES IN ARMS 33 soberness, and chastity " had dawned upon the garrison with the advent of the post exchange, and even the moral nature of Silver Hill had soared to unaccustomed heights with the hegira of the harpies. The interminable shooting and stabbing affrays that diversified the rolling years had become almost obsolete. Desertions, once so frequent, were now uncommon. The guard-house prison, once so thronged at pay-day, knew hardly an occupant as a result of a spree. The coroner who used to count on Minne- conjou as a fruitful source of revenue, had lost faith in it as a business proposition ; and the newspaper men of the bustling mining metropolis, six miles away, had learned to look not upon the fort as longer " red." There hadn't been a ghost of a sensation there for six months, and Silver Hill, unlike Chicago, had tired of paying cash to read what wasn't true. Briggs was thinking of all this and thanking Heaven he was not a bandsman this close June evening, and wonder ing what he could do to stifle anticipated complaint as he tripped on briskly past the colonel's and took his way to the office. The day had been long, hot, and trying. The sun had hardly yet said good-night to the valley, though the fort lay deep-nestled in the shadows of the Sagamore Range, and only the crests of the far-away heights to the east still blushed at his parting caress. Briggs thought 34 COMRADES IN ARMS whimsically, as the gleam caught his eye, of another com plaint against Langham his imported fashion of bestow ing gratuity on servants and " strikers." The colonel had told Briggs he would better give Langham a hint, the colonel being one of those easy-going mortals who pre ferred to bestow reproof vicariously. Briggs, just about sunset, only six weeks earlier, had conveyed his colonel's views to Langham, and Langham smiled and said it was the example of the sun, a remark which called for further explanation. " Look at those heights," said he, " every one of them tipped with gold." Briggs told Mrs. Mack of this jeu d' esprit on the part of their recent acquisition. She was of that honest and kindly and numerous class so puzzling to our transatlantic visitors people who describe each other as most hospitable, as though the charming qual ity were something by way of an expectorant and good Mrs. Mack, not quite seeing the point, yet striving to be appreciative, passed it on delightedly next day, as nearly as she could recall it, to her crony, the chaplain's wife, who naturally saw nothing either witty or apposite in Langham's having said the eastern horizon was trimmed with gilt. Nor could Mrs. Mack explain it. She only knew, she said, that as Mr. Briggs told it there seemed something real funny about the thing. Perhaps, after all, COMRADES IN ARMS 35 she concluded, it was something " dooble ontong," and that she despised. So the mot got no more notice than it deserved. " But, talking of tips," mused Briggs, meeting Lang- ham's own man at the minute, just at the office door, " that man is tipsy." Never before had Fox shown sign of inebriety, at least at Minneconjou. Langham usually left his sideboard keys with his groom, coupled with instruction to see that comrade officers visiting in the lieu tenant's absence were invited to enter, rest, and have a peg, a beer, or a weed, as the mood possessed the caller. Fox had been discretion itself and all fidelity as to his employer's instructions, to the end that certain officers were more frequent callers when Langham was out than when he was in, for Langham discriminated, which Fox did not. Fox had appeared all straight at 6.30 P. M., but now it was going on eight. He had had ample time to get his master into evening dress for the doctor's din ner ; then, if so minded, to help himself to surplus Scotch and soda. He had been over-tasked during the afternoon. The resort to stimulant was not unnatural. Briggs noted the glassy eye, the droop about the corners of the shaven lips, and the hurried fumble at the hat brim as he touched it in darting by, and Briggs had by no means forgotten it when the summons came some hours later. It seems that 36 COMRADES IN ARMS what took Fox to the adjutant's office at this late hour was a note. DEAR BRIGGS [it said] : I find I have to meet the westbound express in town to-night. She was reported two hours late at the Niobrara. I have to hurry to dinner at Dr. Warren's and dis like to call at the colonel's with my request, knowing how many guests he has. May I ask you to arrange it for me. I regret that it will probably prevent my attending the hop. Yours, LANGHAM. It must indeed be an important matter that could take Langham away from a dance, mused Briggs. Especially, and now he was saying to himself what he wouldn't breathe to any other soul especially one that brought the townspeople and pretty Mrs. Bullard with them. Mrs. Bullard was a most winsome and attractive woman, a beauty in the eyes of Minneconjous-male ; one who loved to ride, dance, tennis, walk, talk, and none of these could her husband essay. He owned the Baltimore and the Crescent Queen, two of the richest mines on the range. He thought he owned Mrs. Bullard, nearly twenty years his junior, a New- York-made matron, who sang rejoice- fully and spoke three languages, only one of which Bullard could understand. The gossips, town and gar rison, had begun at her in March, and were buzzing hard in May, for no sooner were the snows swept from the valley than she appeared in saddle and a habit never COMRADES IN ARMS 37 made west of the Hudson. She had not ridden to hounds, at least, the previous year. She did not fancy, it now trans pired, the local " mounts " ; but late in April it began to be told that a valuable horse had been bought for the wife of Silver Hill's most opulent resident. Along in May, horse, horse furniture, and hostler all arrived in a horse- car, chartered for the trip. She could have had a groom from Gotham as well as the expensive saddle and bridle, had she expressed but a wish. She wanted no groom, said she. Of course not, said gossip ; a groom would be much in the way. It was Langham who told Mr. Bullard where to order the fine, London-made outfit. It was Langham who wrote for him as to the horse. It was Langham who rode away to town and saw to it that Roscoe was properly bitted and girthed, and saw her safely in saddle for the initial ride. After that it was unnecessary, as she rode, and Roscoe guided, so well. It saved time to meet half way. Then, when it pleased them to join the joyous party from the fort, they were by long odds the most stylish pair in the field. Now, it must not be inferred that Langham was neg lectful of garrison equestriennes. There were only five at the fort who really rode, two young matrons and three maids, one of the latter a girl of only sixteen, another of 38 COMRADES IN ARMS the latter well-nigh thirty. Langham invited each in turn to go with him, and rode with Flora Cullin more than once. He even took her out on one occasion on his second horse ; but it may have been the fault of her hand at all events the brute began boring in a way that nearly pulled her over the pommel, and, much as she longed to ride him regularly, in the hopes of reforming him perhaps, Lang- ham shook his head. The one girl who could ride Cham pion, bore or no bore the girl who didn't care what he did or how he ran was blithe, merry Kitty Belden, the sixteen-year-old referred to, and she was the one creature, Fox excepted, to whom Langham was willing to trust him. Kitty could not understand it that her mother, an energetic woman of much domestic piety, and little pa tience, soon discouraged her riding with Mr. Langham or using Mr. Langham's horse, but this was not until after Mrs. Bullard from town began to join the hunt and be escorted more than half way home by their garrison beau. On such occasions as Langham rode with some one of the army women, Mrs. Bullard would be sure to lack no atten tion at other hands, for Crabbe, Palmer, Shannon, and several more were eager to be at her side, and smilingly she made her cavalier welcome. But, three riding days out of five Langham met and joined her and saw her safely almost, if not all the way, home sometimes stayed COMRADES IN ARMS 39 and dined with them in town, always danced three or four times with her when she came to the hops, and never, until to-night, was known to miss a hop when she was said to be coming. This night, as Briggs well knew, she was already here, one of the party at the colonel's. Yet Langham had written that he must be in town to meet the night express. Now, if by any chance Crabbe should ask to leave the post, or he, too, should fail to ap pear at the dance, Briggs could know just what to expect. He was fairly startled, therefore, when Captain Sparker, seeing the adjutant at his desk, came slowly in and said : " Briggs, if Mr. Crabbe seeks permission to be away over night. I suggest that you suggest to the colonel that he would be wise to say no." Briggs nodded. Sparker sidled away " to avoid question," he explained later, and when the dance fairly and finally began, lo, there was Crabbe, dancing and " gallivanting " as though nothing had happened. It was not until midnight that he was suddenly missed. Somewhere after midnight some minutes before the sentries should begin calling the half hour Kitty Belden, like a plaintive, pretty Cinderella forbidden to see her prince at the ball, was sitting at the open window of her room, moping a bit and wishing she was two years older, and listening to the soft strains of cornet and viol, mel- 40 COMRADES IN ARMS lowed by distance, floating from the brilliantly lighted hoproom across the dim, starlit parade. Captain Belden and his wife had come home half an hour earlier, and, after brief admonition to Kitty, were now retiring for the night. The waltz music ceased, the silence of the mountains, the far-spreading prairie, the over-arching firmament, settled upon the fort and the broad surround ing valley. Somewhere out toward the southwest a faint dull roar and rumble, now rising, now dying, told that the night express, though belated, was boring on into the heart of the Sagamore Range. Then even this sound died away, and save a low murmur as of voices of the night, the post seemed wrapped in slumber. Away to the east the electric lights of Silver Hill were blinking in the dim distance, and suddenly, between the window where she sat and a low gap in the southeastward hills, a ruddy little flash twinkled through the dusk, then another two others quickly followed. Then, low, yet distinct, the sound of three shots came pulsating through the night, and almost instantly the sentry on Number Three, out on that front, woke the echoes with a shout for the corporal of the guard. Then came the sound of echoing cries, then swift run ning footfalls, then the dull, distant, rhythmical thud of galloping hoofs coming nearer and nearer, straight for COMRADES IN ARMS 41 the gun-flanked entrance beyond the post of the guard. There they swerved and quickened as though someone had striven to head off and halt the runner. Then on they came, bounding; then suddenly died away behind some intervening buildings ; then windows began to fly up and heads to appear and excited voices to ask what was the matter ; and then the hoofs were heard on the soft ground at the rear of the quarters, where stood the little shed stables, and then Champion's eager neigh welcoming his stable mate, now drooping and panting at the door. Kitty Belden, hurrying through the hallway to the rear window, got there just in time to hear the sentry's answer to some hail from up the row. " It's Lieutenant Langham's horse, ma-am, an' he's all bloody." CHAPTER III THE ACCUSING INSIGNIA. THE dance went on. Someone had inspired the string orchestra, for, to the adjutant's surprise, there came no " kick " at midnight. They had been " refreshed " in the anteroom, and were playing with unaccustomed vim when the cap of the officer of the guard appeared for a moment at a side window of the cardroom. Potts, the post quartermaster, was summoned from a game of dummy, and Briggs from the buffet. They vanished through a side door with no woman the wiser. Neither was valuable as a partner on the floor; each had his good points at the game. But, when it was noted that young Dr. Griscom was gone, and the senior surgeon, Warren, was summoned, then people began to whisper and ask questions, and some women to pale, for Mr. Langham had not been at the hop. Mr. Crabbe, who had been, was gone upwards of half an hour, and many tongues had been telling with more or less elaboration of the clash between the two young officers in front of the mess, and of Crabbe's vehement threat that followed. Such a thing, on general principles, is seldom told at the 42 COMRADES IN ARMS 43 time to the commanding and responsible officer. He is apt to hear of it, to his detriment, only later. At 12.50 the colonel, looking at his watch and yawning behind a broad, kid-gloved hand, was wondering how soon Mrs. Mack would be ready to quit dancing (" bouncing with the boys," Mack called it), and go home, when he noted that the music had ceased again, that sounds of chat and laughter were stilled, that people were huddling in groups and murmuring in low tones, ominously, and with fear some glances, and then came the only woman in the gar rison that wasn't afraid of him his wife and her florid face was filled with portent. " Have you heard, Mack? " she hoarsely whispered. " They're bringing in Lang- ham, shot. Now hware's Crabbe ? " In moments of ex citement Mrs. Mack paid unwilling tribute to her almost forgotten nationality, and Mack, sturdy soldier that he was, if easy-going, never failed to realize in this symptom the signal to be up and doing. It roused him as the trum pet rouses the war-horse. He was on his feet on the instant, and out of the door forthwith, and with him van ished the last lingering doubt as to the truth of the flitting rumor. At this moment the sentries were calling the hour of one. The carriages of the Bullards and Stringhams, rival social forces in town, and the two livery carry-alls that 44 COMRADES IN ARMS had come laden with Silver Hill society not yet burdened with the care of their own equipage, were waiting on the road in front of the assembly room. Prominent among those who came hastening forth in quest of accurate news was Bullard himself, a burly man, and forceful. With him were three or four officers and as many civilians. The women, as a rule, remained within the room, mur muring together in knots of three or four. Some few were tremulous. All were glancing furtively, eagerly about in search of still another, and at the moment, at the flag-draped archway to the ladies' dressing room, she suddenly, smilingly appeared, looked quickly back at the deft-handed maid who had been repairing a rent in her flimsy skirt, then her bright eyes sought the ballroom in search of her escort, who had unaccountably disappeared. Then the bright color, the winsome smile, began to fade as she noted that no women were seated, but all were clus tering in groups, white-faced, whispering ; that most men had gone. Then she came swiftly forward, the eyes of all the room upon her, and hailed the nearest circle with : " Something has certainly happened. Tell me what it is." As luck would have it, Mrs. Mack, the ever resolute, was of this group and first to answer. " It's bad news, Mrs. Bullard. I may as well tell you Mr. Langham's shot and they're bringing him home." COMRADES IN ARMS 45 Whosoever expected to see Mrs. Bullard faint or col lapse was destined to grieve. Mrs. Bullard actually blazed with sudden energy. "Shot! When? Where?" she demanded; and then, as they seemed dazed and bewildered, away she sped to the open doorway, passing unnoticed other groups that scanned her narrowly, and then she fairly flung herself upon her husband's arm. " You're here ! " they heard her say. " Where is where did it happen ? " " Out on the flats, they say, near the ford," was the reluctant answer. " They've gone for a stretcher." " Gone for a stretcher! And you here with a car riage ! " Then down the steps she flew, and over the walk. " Mr. Shannon ! " she called, to the young cavalryman just hurrying by, " if you know where to find him, tell my coachman and come." " My coachman ! " " My ladyship's orders ! " " My lord passed by as of no account ! " " Lieutenant Shan non, th Cavalry, U. S. A., imperiously bidden to 4rop what he was about and go with my lady ! " Fancy the verbal comments of the women that watched and waited as the carriage went spinning away to the prairie gate, my lady and Shannon silent within, the stretchermen speedily left behind. As for Bullard, the burly and force- 46 COMRADES IN ARMS ful, he stood a moment with gloom stamped upon his face and a curse stifled on his lips, then made his way to the cardroom, now deserted of all save attendants, and stopped at the sideboard. A mile away a shadowy little group had gathered about a prostrate man. A bleeding and senseless head was sup ported on the young surgeon's knee. Briggs and the quartermaster were bending anxiously over them. Some men of the guard, with lanterns, were searching the neigh borhood where the bridle-path made a short cut over the shallows of the creek. Other shadowy forms, singly or by twos or threes, were hastening over from the fort. Some one of these had shouted, " Hold up," as the Bullard carriage whirled swiftly by, but the driver never held until it reached the bank above the ford. Then Mrs. Bul lard sprang out, unassisted, never waiting for slow-witted Shannon, and in a second she, too, was bending over them, when young Dr. Griscom looked up in her white but beau tiful face. She needed to ask no question. " Serious," he said, " and how serious we cannot tell here." "Then take my carriage and get him home. The stretcher is nowhere yet in sight." They lifted the senseless form, and it was a difficult thing. The doctor clambered in, and the men hoisted. COMRADES IN ARMS 47 Langham was placed with his head on the doctor's shoulder and his legs doubled up on the opposite seat. " Jump in," said she to Briggs, quick, commanding, and he, long schooled to silent tolerance of woman's ways, obeyed without question. " Help the doctor hold him," she added. " Now, drive carefully, James. Dr. Griscom will direct you." " But you, Mrs. Bullard ? We can make room for you," began Briggs. " Make room for nobody ! " said this Zenobia of the frontier. " I'm coming afoot. Drive on, James ! " And the carriage turned and rolled away. The colonel and chaplain, more men of the guard, more officers on the run, the stretchermen on the jog-trot, all these it passed in its swift whirl to the post, leaving nearly a dozen men hunting for sign, searching the banks of the stream and the length of the road. " Let the doctors look after Langham," said Mack. " What I want is the man who did this." And that Langham was " done " was the first story sent in circulation that woeful night. It was much after one when they got him to bed and could examine his injuries. By that time he had for a moment regained consciousness, perhaps through pain, but, no more than the dead could he tell who or what had felled him. Again he had lapsed 48 COMRADES IN ARMS into almost deathlike swoon, and both doctors were plainly anxious. By half an hour later while these skilled prac titioners and their two attendants worked over the bruised and senseless form, the colonel with some of his older offi cers had been taking counsel and evidence in the front room, the " parlor," sacred to the four o'clock teas in the early spring, now invaded by solemn-faced men of various grades. Corporal Stone of the second relief, summoned before them, had stated that the first he knew of trouble was the cry of Number Three. There was talking at the guard house, and he had heard no shot. He ran because he knew it was trouble. Number Three said there was shooting out at the fords, and they could hear the galloping hoofs of a horse coming home. Stone took two men who had run after him, and double-timed out over the prairie, and there at the first ford they found Lieutenant Langham lying on his face, stunned and bleeding. Stone sent a man back on the run for the doctor and to notify the offi cers. More men came, and they dashed water in the Lieutenant's face and tried to stanch the bleeding, and others hunted for tracks when the lanterns came, but Stone knew nothing more. Ramsdell, sergeant of the guard, stated that the horse left blood tracks as he ran through the gateway. Num- COMRADES IN ARMS 49 her Seven and other men who examined him back of Lieutenant Langham's quarters, said a bullet had gone across the breast; that he was foaming, panting, and bleeding. The sentry on Number Three told of hearing the first shot, turning instantly and looking southeast ward; then seeing two flashes and hearing two other shots before calling the corporal. Fox was summoned and couldn't be found. Fox had been conspicuous early in the evening. Fox had saddled and bridled Mr. Lang- ham's pet horse, and brought him round somewhere about 9.45. It was after ten when the lieutenant rode away. Fox and the lieutenant had some words, said Captain Curran, who lived next door. The lieutenant had rebuked Fox sharply and sternly, and Fox had replied in a tone Captain Curran had never before heard him use. He couldn't help thinking Fox might have been drinking. On this point Mr. Briggs was positive: Fox had been drinking. It was noticeable to him at the adju tant's office at eight o'clock was probably more so to Langham at ten. Colonel Mack gave orders that sys tematic search be made for Fox all over the post, and every " shack " was ordered open to expedite the matter. Most of the officers, whether bidden or not, had come to Langham's to see what they could do, or to answer questions if need be, but Mr. Crabbe was not one of these. 50 COMRADES IN ARMS Nor did Mack send for him. By this time, of course, the story of the afternoon's ugly clash at the mess had been told to the post commander, and the situation, bad enough at the start, became suddenly worse. Mrs. Bullard, walk ing back to the post with young Shannon, had gone to the colonel's for certain of her wraps, she said, and Shannon was sent to find her husband with the message that she was now ready to go home. Bullard was a long time coming. He explained that it was necessary to dry and cleanse the deep blood stains on the back and seat of the carriage. He, too, it seems, had driven out to the scene of the affray, supposing, he said, his wife to be still there. He went by the road and she came by the stream bank, a favorite walk. They did not see the colonel to say good night. They left about two o'clock, without that cere mony, but not without reining up in front of Langham's to inquire for the latest tidings of the wounded man. Briggs, just back from the quarters of Lieutenant Crabbe, came to the carriage door and answered Mrs. Bullard, for, as usual, that spirited woman did the talking for both. Mr. Langham was in very serious shape, was all he could say, and both doctors agreed that the worst might follow if he did not pull up by morning. Mrs. Bullard was full of deep sympathy, interest, anxiety, and then she asked a curious question : COMRADES IN ARMS 51 " How and where is Mr. Crabbe ? " " At his quarters," said Briggs stoutly, " and he is very much shocked and distressed." Briggs did not especially like Crabbe, but he wouldn't have any woman supposing that even a man he didn't like could so far forget his station as an officer and gentleman as to be concerned in so brutal, so mad, an assault as this. Briggs said good night, and slammed the carriage door resentfully. He went in and told his colonel Mr. Crabbe was at his quar ters awaiting his, Colonel Mack's, wishes, and would not stir from them until sent for, a species of self-imposed arrest entirely unnecessary, and this, too, at a time when Mr. Crabbe would gladly have felt himself at liberty to go and make search on his own account. He had lost the beautiful insignia worn by him as a Companion by Inheritance in the Military Order of the Loyal Legion. It was on the left breast of his full dress uniform, to gether with his sharp-shooter's badge and the cross of the Sons of the American Revolution, when he was dancing with Mrs. Stringham, for Mrs. Stringham had remarked them and asked what they all meant and why he didn't wear them every day. They were all in place when he stopped at the side board in the cardroom a little later. Mr. Bullard and others from town spoke of them while having a glass of 52 COMRADES IN ARMS punch together. About twelve he had gone over to his own quarters, he said, to change a pair of patent leather dancing boots for something older and more comfortable, as the new ones had drawn his feet and been extremely tight and painful. While there he saw that his collar was wilted, as well as his shirt, and he concluded to make a complete change. It took some time. He even put his feet in a tub of cold water. It must have been 12.50, or later, he said, when, on donning again his uniform, he missed his Loyal Legion insignia. He was searching for that about his own quarters when Captain Sparker came hurrying in and told him the shocking news. This was toward one. All this detail had Crabbc hurriedly confided to Briggs during the latter's brief visit in search of him, and Briggs concluded it was of such importance that he took a sheet of paper and jotted it down, reading it over to Crabbe before returning to the impromptu council. Briggs gave no more thought to the Loyal Legion insignia. What was the loss of a bauble in face of a murder mystery ? He read off his notes to the colonel and the assembled officers, and Major Baker, of the cavalry, the second in command, sat and looked straight at him every moment as he read. COMRADES IN ARMS 53 " You've got it exact, have you ? " he asked of Briggs, as the adjutant finished. " Exact as I could, from a hurried narrative," answered Briggs. " And Crabbe acquiesced in every word when I read it aloud to him." The major sat one moment in silence, then turned on Captain Sparker : " How was Crabbe dressed and what was he doing when you entered ? " said he, and the effect was marked and instant. " Why in his shirt sleeves, and he seemed to be hunting round. He had his uniform coat on his arm." " Room looked as though he'd been washing and changing his shirt and other things ? " queried Baker. " Why, yes ; he said so. There was some disorder. Things flung about. Tub and basin by the washstand, but nothing in the least unusual." And Sparker's face was clouding, his eyes were filling with a new light and anxiety. " That's all, then," replied the major, a grim look on his weather-beaten face. " I'd like, Colonel Mack, to have Mr. Crabbe come here and tell us a little more, if you'll kindly send for him." With that he arose and sauntered into the hall and thence tip-toed to the room where Langham lay feebly moaning at intervals. Warren's hand was at the patient's 54 COMRADES IN ARMS wrist, his sensitive fingers on the pulse, and his anxious eyes sought those of Major Baker with a shade of dis pleasure. He disliked the intrusion. " Any change ? " whispered Baker. Warren slowly shook his head. " Can you say that he will live till morning ? " War ren pondered a bit, then, still more slowly, shook his head again. The major returned, angering. The veter inarian was giving his theory as to the injuries inflicted on the beautiful bay, whose bleeding was finally stanched, but who lay in his box stall back of Langham's, suffering from shock and weakness, with Champion wonderingly nosing the intercepting grating. They had had to break in the stable to reach the stall. Fox was gone with the keys. And then came Briggs again, and Crabbe, the latter very pale and very nervous, as all could see. No time was lost in preliminaries. " Have I your permission, colonel?" asked the major, and wonderingly the colonel said aye. '' The adjutant has read your statement, Mr. Crabbe. You wish us to believe that you have not been outside the post ? " " Certainly, sir," was the prompt reply, yet the lips and fingers both were twitching. COMRADES IN ARMS 55 " And that you had nothing whatsoever to do with this attack on Lieutenant Langham? " And the major's eye lids were screwing down to a narrow slit. His tone was menacing. " Not a thing, sir," and still, though Crabbe spoke promptly, confidently, he winced before the stern, level gaze. "You lost your Loyal Legion badge after 11.30, I think you said." " I did," answered Crabbe. Now all men's eyes were fixed upon him, and there seemed to be a catching, a holding of breath throughout the room. Deliberately the major drew forth a glistening cross of gold and enamel with a tri-colored bit of ribbon, from beneath the breast of his coat. " This is numbered seven thousand and blank your number, I think," said he, in a voice that shook in spite of himself, " and I found it in the sand at the ford, not ten feet from where Mr. Langham lay." CHAPTER IV A CHAMPION MISSING. IN close arrest Lieutenant Crabbe had gone to his quarters. Nay, more. So serious were Langham's injuries so doubtful the result that, for the first time in the history of Fort Minneconjou, armed sentries stood at the door of an officer's room. The colonel's im promptu council had dissolved. Belden and Sparker, brother captains of the 2 th, trudged home together in awed silence until they reached the latter's gate. Belden was a man much esteemed for his modesty and worth. Sparker was known rather for his money or that of his indulgent mate. Beyond comradeship in the service there was little in common between the two men. Belden, a strict disciplinarian in his own household, had no words to waste on the management of others' the most per sistent critics in such affairs being the men or women negligent or ignorant as to their own. Sparker was a sower of dragon's teeth, a man to whom was ever traced much of the little meannesses afloat, like malignant microbes, in the social atmosphere at the fort. With no children of his own, Sparker was full of comment on 56 COMRADES IN ARMS 57 parental weaknesses as exhibited about him. With no erudition beyond that picked up in a yawning contem plation of newspaper headlines, he was prone to sneer at those who studied deeper. With no temporal anxieties to teach him sympathy and charity, he overflowed with captious criticism of those who fell behind. And, having, started nine-tenths of such garrison gossip as was of masculine origin, he was now virtuously indignant at the cavalry major who had " brought such disgrace upon the name of the army." " Don't you think," he began at Belden, as they reached the gallery, " he ought to have gone privately to Crabbe and told him what he'd found, and let let him " " Resign? " said Belden quietly, " with a possible mur der to be accounted for ? " " Well, perhaps not that," stammered the captain. " But don't you think he took the worst way of adver tising the whole business ? " Sparker was an adept in that sort of dragging forth of personal opinion by the roots, as it were, that enables a man to triumphantly quote So-and-So and So-and-So as backing his views, when, in point of fact, the men re ferred to seldom, if ever, were of his way of thinking. Belden knew his neighbor of old, and could not be trapped. 58 " The business is bound to be advertised far and wide," said he. " The major couldn't prevent it." "Awe well, but now, Belden, don't you think " " I think," said Belden very calmly, " that it is high time we got to bed, and tried not to think, if we're to sleep at all before to-morrow's inspection." " You don't suppose ' Old Hardtack ' will have us out after after what happened to-night ? " blustered Sparker impulsively. " Our orders are to be in readiness for anything," was the answer. " Good-night, Sparker," and Belden broke away, glanced up at a pallid little face that peeped be tween the white dimity curtains of a dormer window above his soldier parlor, and, heavy-hearted, stole back to bed. Matters at Minneconjou, though he would not prate of them, were giving him sad cause for worry, and that dearly loved face of his little girl was what troubled him most. With all his heart he was beginning to wish that Kitty had not won such fame as a rider, and that " Pat " Langham, with his handsome face and handsome horses, had never come to the regiment. He knew she would be waiting for him at the head of the stairs, and that she was waiting to ask for news of him, and there she was at the landing, her glossy, rippling hair " falling down to her waist," her big, beautiful eyes pathetic with COMRADES IN ARMS 59 inquiry and supplication, her slender form shivering a bit in its dainty night robe, but shivering not from cold. Belden's big heart was moved at the sight, though his head would have counseled reproof. His arm stole about her, as he gently drew her to her own door. " No worse, at least, little woman," he said, " and sleeping quietly when I came away. So be good, and go and do like wise." But she clung to his arm. She would know. " Is it serious dangerous ? " she pleaded. " Serious, yes. Dangerous, I hardly know. I think the doctors hardly know. But they are hopeful." Again she shivered. " But, Daddy dear, do they say do they know who did it ? " " Well, no. Why, where's mother ? " he asked, noting that the marital chamber was deserted. " She went in to Mrs. Sparker's for news. She said she was too excited to sleep. She's coming now." Coming the good lady certainly was, coming with por tentous face, having learned that her liege had returned, having waited only long enough to hear the startling tidings of Crabbe's arrest and how it was brought about. She was into the open hallway and up the stairs before the captain could persuade Kitty to step within her own threshold. She was upon him with the natural and im- 60 COMRADES IN ARMS pulsive exclamation : " Well, isn't that just too horrible for anything ? an officer becoming a vile assassin ! " " Hush, Kate," said Belden, striving to lure her away from the subject and into her room. " It is purely cir cumstantial as yet." " Purely circumstantial, when his Loyal Legion badge is found right there on the spot! Kitty, I told you to go to bed two hours ago." " Whose Loyal Legion Badge ? Where was it ? " de manded the girl, springing back, barefooted, into the hallway. Mrs. Belden would have denied her further information and had her lying awake in suspense and terror until dawn, and then, when too late to mend mat ters, telling her as a last resort. It was Belden who spoke, his theory being that it was always best to tell the truth and end all mystery. " Mr. Crabbe's Loyal Legion badge, my girlie," said he, gently drawing her back to the little room. " It was picked up at the ford, close to the spot. There had been angry words between them, and listen ! " Somebody was knocking at the door, knocking vehe mently. Had there not been enough excitement for one night? Belden hurried down, and there stood the adju tant. " You're dressed already. Come right over as you are. The colonel wants to see you at once," were COMRADES IN ARMS 61 his words, as he led on toward the little gate. " You'll find the major there and ' Old Hardtack's ' taking a hand now." It was then after two long after. The barracks of the men, the assembly hall, the storehouse, and offices were all wrapped in darkness. Lights burned dimly at the guard-room and at many of the officers' quarters, while at the colonel's the ground floor was still brightly illuminated. Two cavalry horses with heaving flanks stood in front of the gate, held by a single trooper. His comrade was at the hall doorway, chatting in low tone with the orderly of the commanding officer. " We made it in fifty minutes there'n back," Belden heard him say, as he passed quickly in. There in the flag-draped army parlor stood the gray-haired inspector general, his lined face full of concern. There under the chandelier, tramp ing nervously up and down, fretful and ill at ease, was the colonel. There on the sofa, his hands thrust deep in his trouser's pockets, his legs outsprawled, was Major Baker, dubious, perhaps, and perturbed in spirit, as shown by his most unsoldierly pose, yet truculent and holding to his point. There was a fourth figure in the room, that of a man in cool garments, and heated argu ment, with a fifth the sheriff of Sagamore County. In the first civilian Belden recognized Mr. Murray, 62 COMRADES IN ARMS landlord of the Argenta, one of the local hostelries of the better class, the one most affected by post people when they lunched or shopped in town. The moment Belden entered the room Colonel Mack abruptly stopped his nervous walk and strove to stop the debate, which, having become pointed and acrimonious, bade fair to reach listen ing ears on the landing above. Both Boniface and sheriff had long been at odds, rival candidates for office and claimants for a hand, the sheriff winning both events to the profuse and profane disgust of the rival. The land lord had come as a volunteer to launch valuable informa tion. The sheriff had come as a drafted man, straight from his slumbers to controversy, for what Boniface had said the sheriff scouted, and no one present could say which man was right. " I tell you," clamored the former, " I saw him talking excitedly, you could almost say imploringly, with this stranger at the train. I always meet the express, even when it is late as it was to-night. They walked up and down together as much as five minutes. Then this third man joined them, and I knew him the moment I set eyes on him. It's my business to know every face I've ever seen before. It was Pyne, the young Britisher that killed the soldier at Cheyenne the winter of '89." " That man hasn't been seen or heard of in these COMRADES IN ARMS 63 parts for six years," burst in the sheriff. " He went back to England after his pardon ; that was one of the con ditions " " Hush, gentlemen ! " pleaded the colonel. " Not so loud. Let me ask a question, as I wish Captain Belden to hear. Captain, you were at Cheyenne at that time, as I remember, and you saw this young man Pyne ? " " I was in command of a detachment of recruits going through," answered Belden gravely. " I saw him after his arrest after the affray, and again during the trial, but that was all." " I was running the Eureka restaurant at Cheyenne at that time," again broke in the landlord. " He stopped at my place. I saw him a dozen times, and I can't be mis taken. He was the man that rode away with Lieutenant Langham to-night." " Did you see him ride away ? " demanded the sheriff. " I didn't see him ride away. I saw him walk away with Langham toward the stable, and the stable hands will tell you they rode away together, heading for the fort, and it wasn't an hour after that the cry went up at the bar that Lieutenant Langham had been shot out there at the fords, and that's what brought me here. Find that jnan Pyne." " And I'll bet that man Pyne isn't anywhere in these 64 COMRADES IN ARMS parts, and can't be," declared the sheriff. " So there you are." The colonel turned impatiently away. " You see how it is, Belden," he began. " Our friend of the Argenta de clares somebody rode away from town with Langham He says two or three men can swear to that. He says the man was Pyne, who shot a soldier in your detach ment at Cheyenne in '89. There are so many hoofprints all along the banks about the fords that I have had tc send men further in toward town, searching the trail with lanterns. Somewhere it may be found that two horses came loping out to-night together. There's someone coming now ! " It was Potts, regimental quartermaster, and Potts came swiftly, silently in and stopped straight in front of his colonel. " It's so, sir. Half a mile east of the fords we found two places on the trail where the ground was soft and muddy. Two horses came this way, probably together." The announcement was heard in almost oppressive silence. It meant far more than was apparent at first to all those present. Only the officers knew that, charged with the crime, Lieutenant Crabbe was now in close arrest. Only they could realize what intensity of relief it would bring to Minneconjou could that crime be COMRADES IN ARMS 65 fastened on a rank outsider and the stain be swept from the uniform. Murray's story, as hastily told long after one, was in deed of almost startling interest. Two of the colonel'? guests, he said, Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey, driving home in their buggy at half past twelve, had stopped in front of the Argenta and declared that they were overtaken half way to Silver Hill by a horseman who galloped wildly on toward town, and cried to them that Lieutenant Langham had been shot by road agents. Nobody else as yet, however, seemed to have seen this fleeing horse man ; but Murray, the moment he heard the news, " piled into the bus," as he expressed it, and told his man to drive like sin to the fords. He felt so sure he knew the shooter, and that the shooter could be caught if promptly traced and followed, that, when four miles out, he came suddenly on two troopers scouting the prairie, he did not hesitate to bid them gallop over to Sheriff Blos som's ranch on the North Fork, and west of Silver Hill. They were to " rout out " that official and get him to the colonel's at once. He was well on his way thither before the conference at Langham's broke up for the night. It was Murray's profound conviction that the wild horseman who had startled the Chaunceys was Pyne him- 66 COMRADES IN ARMS self, a man he had known when, young, friendless, and without means, he had drifted into the Eureka at Chey enne, and there dwelt some days, as it turned out, at Mur ray's expense. The lad " hocussed " him, he said, with stories of wealthy kindred in England, and by the casual display of a beautiful watch. He was waiting for his luggage and remittances, but before these could come a recruit train pulled into the station late one night, a squad of devil-may-care blue-coats got away somewhere ; speedily found whisky, and then, when ripe for mischief, ran foul of this lone young Englishman, whom they forthwith proceeded to " guy." He knocked two of his tormentors into the gutter, and was then set upon by the entire party. Within two minutes thereafter he would probably have been kicked into pulp had he not, within ten seconds, whipped out his pistol and opened fire. The police swooped upon the party, capturing one dead and one wounded soldier, and one battered, bleeding young Briton with a smoking revolver tight-grasped in his fist. The other recruits had scattered. When the case came to trial, however, it was six against one. The soldiers stoutly swore they were only " having a little fun with him " when he whirled on them and shot two. Not until after Pyne had been convicted and sentenced did his friends begin to be heard from. Not until the state de- COMRADES IN ARMS 67 partment, through the diplomatic and consular service, had had voluminous correspondence and the lad long months of languishing in jail, did his side of the story begin to tell on the public mind. At last came a pardon, coupled with advice to quit the state and the practice of carrying concealed weapons, both of which were readily promised, and young Pyne was called for by English kin- folk and whisked away eastward and then beyond. Two men who knew him well in his few Cheyenne days were Murray, then mine host of the Eureka, and Blossom, then deputy sheriff; the former inimical because defrauded, the latter friendly because he had profited by the bounty of Pyne's kindred when they finally came. Possibly in the face of graver things the lad had never thought to tell his people of his little debt. All this was set before the colonel and his chosen few in the murmured conference that followed Murray's truculent announcement. He was for having Blossom take instant measures to run down the possible mur derer, who could be none other than Pyne, while Blos som sturdily scoffed at the whole theory, declared his belief that Pyne was not in America, and his conviction that he was in no wise concerned in the case. Blossom said his suspicions pointed to Fox. "Why?" snapped the colonel and Major Baker, in a 68 breath. They had kept him still in ignorance of Crabbe's arrest, and Mack, at least, was overjoyed at the possi bility of clearing the cloth. Hardly another sound was heard as the civil official began his reply. In strained attention, every man now on his feet, they listened, breathless. " Because Fox has had some trouble with the lieuten ant. Because he was in town drinking two evenings ago, and let fall some things about Mr. Langham he never would have said if he hadn't been in ugly mood, and when some barroom loafer laughed at him, probably to pro voke him into saying more, he declared that he could tell things that would ' drive the damned snob out of the army.' Those were his own words. He said he would have quit the lieutenant's service six weeks ago if he could have got his wages " And here the eyes of the adjutant and quartermaster met across the parlor table. " He said the lieutenant himself might have to skip the country any minute, and then he'd get his pay out of things the lieutenant couldn't take with him. Now, you tell me Fox is missing. There's the man I mean to look for." For a moment no man spoke. Then the colonel turned on Briggs. " You heard some strange words between them this afternoon. What were they ? " COMRADES IN ARMS 69 Briggs flushed and balked, painfully. It was one thing to have to tell his commander, in confidence, of words he had accidentally overheard that pointed to Fox as having a grievance. It was another to tell it to a room half full. Briggs looked appealingly at his colonel, but Mack was obdurate. He resented Major Baker's melo dramatic method of bringing Crabbe to grief. He felt that a stigma had been planted upon the fair name of the regiment, and all through Baker's meddlesome action. He held, and held with reason, that Baker's proper course was to acquaint him, the commanding officer, with what he had found, and then let the commanding officer in his own way confront the suspected man with this unsus pected evidence. It would be a lesson to Baker if now, after all, they could muster evidence so strong against the servingman as to relax the pressure on the subaltern. " These gentlemen have all heard so much they may just as well hear what you heard, especially Major Baker," said the colonel sententiously, and with significant look at the junior field officer. Thus adjured Briggs bluntly said his say. " They were packing or unpacking some things, revol vers, among others. Fox seemed surly or sullen, and I heard Mr. Langham speaking somewhat angrily. What he said practically was this : ' Knowing what you do, 70 COMRADES IN ARMS then you should have got everything ready at once. I may start any moment.' " Again there was silence. No one seemed to know just what to say. Murray sank into a chair and sat glaring at Blossom. The latter was the first to speak : " That tallies with what I heard with what I know Fox let slip in town. Again I say Fox is the man we should be chasing, and you tell me he has not been seen since ten o'clock, and had been drinking again ? " This to Briggs. The adjutant bowed. It was as Blossom had said. " And you had to break in the stable door, I under stand, to get the wounded horse to his stall. If I were in your place, colonel, I'd have that door replaced and locked this very night. There's neither stage nor train until afternoon, and if Fox skips, or has skipped, it's in saddle probably. There isn't a horse hereabouts can catch either of those runners of Mr. Langham's with Fox up." " He'd have to get him out right under the sentry's nose," said the colonel. " But the suggestion is good. See to it first thing in the morning, Potts. And here's the oflfker-of-the-day now. I want you to give your sen try orders to watch that stable of Mr. Langham's espe cially." The colonel had turned, as he spoke, to a COMRADES IN ARMS 71 solemn-faced, soldierly looking officer who come clank ing swiftly in. But they read tidings in his somber eyes before ever he opened his lips. "Mr. Langham's stable, sir?" was the embarrassed answer. " I fear it's too late. The sergeant has just come running to tell me that Champion is gone." CHAPTER V THE LADY IN THE CASE. A OTHER night had come to Minneconjou and still other theories as to the assault. Langham's few conscious moments had been spent in such severe pain that the surgeons found themselves forced to administer opiates. In answer to questions the injured man gasped that he saw no assailant. The shots came from the darkness. Now Fox and Champion both had vanished from the scene. The gallant horse had been led from the little stable while the sentry, either through col lusion or stupidity, was sauntering up his post full fifty yards away. This according to his own wretched story. He claimed that, until the sergeant's visit, he never saw anything of horse or human after the veterinarian and his assistants left at half past one. It was on the stroke of three when the sergeant of the guard came running up the road to tell his tale. Number Six had then been taken off post, stripped forthwith of arms and equipment, and confined in the guard-house. Number Six swore stoutly that Fox hadn't been anywhere about the stable, that if the horse was gone he had just broken his halter 72 COMRADES IN ARMS 73 shank and started. But Champion could never have saddled and bridled himself, and saddle and bridle, Lang- ham's handsome English set, were gone with the horse. They trailed him with lanterns across the springy bunch grass of the mesa, down into the bed of the North Fork, then away eastward toward the sheriff's ranch, and the sheriff went lumbering to town to wire far and wide, and warn all fellow officers to look out for the fugitive. But no pursuit was ordered from the post. Fox and Cham pion could ride nearly two miles to a trooper's one. Fox's self obliteration had, of course, concentrated sus picion on himself. But Briggs and Gridley had been looking over Langham's quarters, and the amount of loose change and trinkets in the upper drawers of his bureau items to which Fox had easy and frequent ac cess caught their attention at once. If Fox had fled it was strange he left so much cash and convertible assets behind. True, after the assault there might have been no opportunity to help himself, but there had been abundant time before. And that the assault was planned and premeditated was a thing no man could actually assert, yet that all men felt. Langham, in the moment that he could speak of it at all, had declared the shots came without word of warning. He had swooned again before they could question him as to his companion. 74 COMRADES IN ARMS And so at noonday, the second of " Old Hardtack'^ "' official visit, there were no less than three different men suspected of being Langham's assailant. Major Baker and a few of his backers and believers held to the theory that Crabbe was the criminal. There was the damning and damaging evidence of his precious Loyal Legion insignia. Sheriff Blossom, with Lieutenant Briggs and almost all the junior officers, clung to the convictic:. tha: Fox was the traitor who h?.d done his master GO near to death. Murray, of the Argenta, with rather a large fol lowing of friends in town, believed that Pyne, the once conspicuous, was the would-be assassin, and these civilians were searching high and low for motive. Several citizens had seen Mr. Langham in converse with the ivc) strangers at the station. Some had seen him walk z.T:"j in ccmpany with one of the arrivals on the belated express. The train had changed engines and stopped t-,7c:--'.y minutes. The passengers, as a rule, had taken supper at Murray's, or browsed at the lunch counter. The train was far across the great divide and spinning through the gorges of the Sagamore by the time Silver Hill began investigating on its own account, and meanwhile, firz- thing r.i the morning, Potts had taken to saddle and the prairio; had gc-:e again to the ford and begun hi.} researches afresh. At breakfast ume COMRADES IN ARMS 75 he was back at the post and the colonel's. He believed he had found that which should relieve Crabbe at once, and so expressed himself. Moreover, it disposed of Murray's theory as to Pyne, and, more compactly than before, laid the load of suspicion on the shoulders of Fox. Potts had ridden half way back to town, and studied the trail in a dozen spots and confidently de clared that, whether Fox was or was not the assailant, it was Fox, not Pyne, that accompanied him on the home ward ride. " How do you know ? " asked the post commander. " Because, had it been Pyne, they would have ridden side by side, but this man rode behind. In many a place the hoofprints of the second horse almost obliterate those of the first," was the answer, and the answer was true. Blossom saw it for himself when he came out again at midday, and Blossom had been asking questions at the stable where Langham left his beautiful horse on reaching town. The manager said that in half an hour the lieutenant was back, that he ordered an extra saddle horse ; gave no word of explanation ; said he would send the horse home the following morning, and then rode away, leading him. That horse wandered in at dawn, very much wearied and looking as though he had been ridden hard. Only one other thing attracted attention. 76 COMRADES IN ARMS The leathers had been shortened, three holes on each side. It was remembered that Fox used a very short stirrup. Then the railway officials, thanks to Sheriff Blossom, had been wiring after that night express. They wished the conductor to ascertain the names of two passengers in the Pullman who had had an animated talk with an officer at the station platform. They wished to know whither they were bound and whence they came, etc. The conductor replied that the names given were Brown and Jones ; that the parties evidently resented such inquiries ; that they came from Chicago and were going "through"; that several Pullman pasengers got out at Silver Hill, but none remained there, in fact, they had two more passen gers than on arriving at that point. Then while Murray's friend Pyne might have walked away with Mr. Langham before the train started, he must have returned in time and could not, therefore, have ridden forth with that offi cer. No, all things now pointed to the luckless Fox, and by 10 A. M. a liveryman was found who declared that he brought Fox to town at 10.30 the previous night, and had not seen him since. Then the bartender at a sec ond-rate saloon announced that Fox was there at eleven, " pretty full " and wanted to borrow ten dollars, which was refused him. Finally Bullard's gardener, out late to COMRADES IN ARMS 77 see a sweetheart, declared he saw Fox reeling toward the railway station just before the train pulled out to the west, and a minute later passed Lieutenant Langham and a stranger walking in the same direction. The chances were that the lieutenant had overtaken his groom, noticed his condition and had ordered him to be ready to ride back to the post. No one ever saw Fox so full that he couldn't ride. At noon, therefore, the possible Pyne had been elim inated from the case, much to the sheriff's triumphant sat isfaction, and suspicion was now divided between Crabbe, the subaltern, and Fox, the scamp. Then came still another searcher for information, and Mrs. Bullard, who had sent a mounted messenger to the post at eight, now followed in person at 4 P. M., and dismounted at the gate of her hostess of the night before, the wife of the commanding officer. There were dark circles about the lady's beautiful eyes, and her face had lost much of its bright color. " I have not slept an hour," said she, with frankness unlocked for. "And Mr. Bul lard is quite as much distressed as I am, but he had to be at his office. I told him I would come out to see what we could do for Mr. Langham. It was a great relief to hear that he was at least no worse." Mrs. Mack stood stately and unresponsive " just drawed myself up," as said the good lady. But Mrs. 78 COMRADES IN ARMS Mack's unbending attitude, physical and mental, received distinct sense of shock with the stylish visitor's very next suggestion : " I wonder if I could see Kitty Belden." Now, why on earth should the mature and prominent leader of Silver Hill society desire to see the sixteen-year- old child of the garrison. Mrs. Mack could imagine all manner of reasons, but assert none. In spite of herself and her resolution, she fairly bristled with curiosity and interest. Still she was, to use her own expression, some what " dubersome," and her answer was hesitating. " Why, I suppose so," was the reply, " though you know the captain and his wife have notions." " As to me, you mean ? Yes, I have observed ; but we all have our likes and dislikes. Now, I greatly like their child and fancy that I should like them were we at all acquainted, but, since returning my call last winter, Mrs. Belden hasn't been near me. And now, with this dread ful thing " Then suddenly : " You know Kitty used to ride a good deal with Mr. Langham. Then " " Then her pa and ma thought it time to call a halt," said Mrs. Mack, " and it's good for her they did." " Why ? " asked Mrs. Bullard, drawing her whiplash through the slender fingers of her left hand, and looking unflinchingly in the other's flitting eyes. " Well, it ain't for me to say. Ask them," said Mrs. COMRADES IN ARMS 79 Mack. " She might have got interested in Langham Some women do." "I am one," said Mrs. Bullard, with calm and instant assurance. " He interests me more than any of your offi cers. As a class I find them rather dull. Mr. Lang- ham has lived, read, seen, traveled." Mrs. Mack could only gasp. This was brazen effront ery, thought she, yet never looked the woman brazen, never was there in her placid, polished manner a symptom of bravado. She spoke of her interest as something quite beyond criticism or suspicion, something to be considered a perfectly proper and legitimate regard, something as un objectionable in the eyes of her lord and master as it should be, consequently, in those of her associates. Versed in the ways of society East and abroad, Mrs. Bullard had tolerance, but no sympathy, for the limitations of the West. Society in the arm of the frontier could not under stand her, nor could she quite explain. Despite the dark circles, she was very handsome in her stylish riding habit, for her features were fine, her figure was still slender and beautiful, and honest, buxom Mrs. Mack, her senior by twenty unshadowed years, looked upon her enviously. There were times when Mrs. Mack could even have ac cepted Mrs. Bullard's questionable morals could she only have been gifted with her unquestionable graces. But 80 COMRADES IN ARMS this declaration of social independence shocked the stout heart of the elder into silence. She really knew not what to say, though vaguely she felt that it should be rebuked. " Why don't you go and ask for Kitty if you want to see her ? " " Because, frankly, Mrs. Mack, I have questions to ask her that are for herself alone. Now, even in telling you this I have come to ask you to help me." " Well, of all the extryoniary women I ever heard of ! " Mrs. Mack was saying to herself, when the trumpets began sounding stable call at the cavalry barracks. Then the bugler at the foot of the flag-staff pealed forth the summons for afternoon police. The few prisoners at the guard-house came filing forth under charge of the sentries, and Mack, himself, coming from the adjutant's office, orderly followed, stopped one minute at his gate to study the thoroughbred and his handsome equipment, then straightway entered the house and asked : " Where is Mrs. Bullard?" The voice that answered from a shaded nook in the parlor was sweet and silvery. " Here, colonel, and wait ing for you with a score of questions," and not at all did Mrs. Mack approve it that instantly the lady left her side and went with outstretched hand to meet the husband and putative commander. " That woman has too many fasci- COMRADES IN ARMS 81 nations and followers," said Mrs. Mack, " and Mack himself is such a fool about them." But Mack came not in mood to woo or captivate. The worries of the day and night gone by had left their im press on both his senses and his spirit. " Hardtack," too, had had little of the laudatory to say as to the condition of the command. He had, indeed, been somewhat captious in his criticisms, and had not yet half finished his investi gations. " Hardtack " had gone so far as to intimate that he, Mack, a colonel of Foot and commander of the fort, had been derelict in his dealings with these subalterns, lax in supervision, and the like. " Hardtack " thought it the duty of commanding officers to curb young gentlemen who essayed extravagance of any kind. This business of lieutenants owning fine horses and swagger outfits, Corot pictures and Persian rugs, for instance, was never heard of when he was in the line. " Hardtack " didn't know a Corot from a chromo, possibly, but vaguely he felt that Langham's plight was due to Langham's patrician tastes and habits, and yet that all disaster might have been averted had Mack but curbed him that was the word curbed him at the outset. Now, Mack had been a fine rider in his day, and loved good horseflesh and good horsemanship to this. Therefore, if he knew anything at all, he knew that curbing was a thing to exasperate a 82 COMRADES IN ARMS thoroughbred, and if it rasped and worried a horse sc must curbing rasp a rider of spirit. So far as he was concerned, he said, he wished all officers owned their horses and could ride like Langham. " The regulations," said " Hardtack," " do not contemplate such er possi bilities." And in the eyes of that accomplished officer the revised regulations of the United States army and the Holy Scriptures took rank in the order named. " As matters have turned out," said he, " it seems that Lang- ham was living much beyond his means, and couldn't afford such luxuries." " As matters have turned out," said Mack in reply, " Langham has been temporarily deprived of means he had every reason to count on when he came here, and I know it. The luxuries had been bought and paid for long ago or else given to him." Nettled at this defense, the inquisitor inspector had then said something as to Lang- ham and Langham's conduct and Mack's apparent blind ness thereto that sent the colonel homeward with crack ling nerves and angering eyes. There at his own gate stood, side-saddled, the evidence that the disturber of the inquisitorial peace and the post commander's serenity was probably within. Mack came to question and remained to plead, for Mrs. Bullard's first interrogation put him on the defensive. COMRADES IN ARMS 83 " Colonel Mack, have you wired Mr. Langham's rela tives?" Mack had not. He had devoutly hoped no one had thought of such a thing. It would only terrify a mother already, so he had been told, much broken in health. It would only get into the Chicago papers, said he, and that to Mack, once stationed at Fort Sheridan, meant noth ing short of sheol. That it was already in the Chicago evening papers, and that managing editors of the morn ing sheets were wiring for full particulars, had not yet occurred to him. He felt himself chafing at this woman's presuming to question him as to what, in the line of his duty, he had or had not done. He stood at the curtained entrance from his hall to the spacious parlor, halted prac tically by her challenge. He felt a sneaking sense of relief when the orderly's rap was heard at the open door, and the orderly's voice in the announcement : " Telegram, sir." He turned, tore off the envelope, unfolded the yellow- brown half sheet, and read from the office of the adju tant general at Washington the following message : Sec. War directs seven days' leave granted Lieutenant Lang- ham at once, to be extended from this office. Mother seriously ill. Slowly Mack refolded the message. His eyes wan- 84 COMRADES IN ARMS dered a moment, then returned to the contemplation of the graceful figure before him. " Mrs. Bullard," said he, " they are wiring for him His mother, I fear, is desperately ill. Now, I'll have to tell them." " Tell them anything you wish, colonel," then with almost commanding emphasis, " but unless you wish to kill, tell her or him nothing." CHAPTER VI THE KNIGHT AND THE LADY. THE wire that went to Washington in response to the mandate of the war secretary merely stated that Lieutenant Langham had met with an accident, was unconscious, and unable to travel. Par ticulars by mail. But both Mack and his loyal adjutant well knew by this time, and as a result of the confidences growing out of the creditors' complaints heretofore men tioned, that between Langham and his devoted mother there lived a degree of affection bordering on the intense, a tie stronger, yet tenderer, far than usually unites mother and son. Knowing this, and having heard from Langham's lips his version of the causes of the complaints and the delays in certain payments, these two officers had not hesitated to stand between the regimental dandy and criticism from any source. " Everything has been ex plained to my satisfaction," said the colonel, a trifle pom pously, perhaps, " and in a short time these people will be kicking themselves for ever having started proceedings against him." And with this declaration Langham's de tractors found themselves confronted, and with the same 85 86 COMRADES IN ARMS were his defenders comforted. Now, through her own impetuosity, Mrs. Bullard had revealed to Colonel Mack that she, too, had been taken into the confidence of his in dependent subaltern, and to an extent that enabled her, probably, to know much more of Langham's affairs and relatives than did the post commander. Whatsoever this fact may have missed in significance, so far as the colonel was concerned, it lost nothing in the eyes of his wife. Mrs. Mack had listened with all her ears, which were large, and pondered with all her soul, which was small. It was not good that a woman in no wise allied to the regiment should be the confidant of its most interesting and eligible officer, when there were so many to choose from at the fort. Mrs. Bullard was no favorite of Mrs. Mack's when police call and stables were being sounded at four o'clock. Mrs. Bullard was distinctly in madame's bad books by the time the bugles were calling the men into ranks for sunset dress parade. It was the hour at which the valley of the Minneconjou was at its best. The low, slanting sunshine threw long shadows eastward toward the glinting spires and domes of the busy little frontier city. Pine-clad heights to the west and north fringed and framed the far-spreading picture, even as they screened the garrison and its nestling settlement from the rude blasts that came whirling and COMRADES IN ARMS 87 whistling down the broad waste of the " bad lands " away toward the Yellowstone. Southward the prairie rolled, ridge after ridge, wave after wave, until it sent its gray-green surges tumbling skyward far beyond the tawny river and spanned the horizon from east to west in the long barrier of Calumet Range. So too, lay even, gentle slope, bold, rounded bluff, and gracefully winding stream all spread before the eye, unscreened by other foliage than that of the scattered cottonwoods along the shallow, sandy reaches of the river. Far beyond the limits of the thriving county seat one could almost see where the Minneconjou poured its swift-flowing, swirl ing tribute into the spreading flood of the broad and turbid Cheyenne. Rollicking down from the beetling heights behind the post, the North Fork came leaping, sparkling, tossing its snowy spray, an almost ice-cold tor rent at any season of the year, the joy of the angler until civilization scared away the trout ; the hope of miner and prospector until science settled the silver question; and now the boast of Silver Hill as laundry, lavatory, and latent power all in one. Rushing into the valley nearly three miles north of the fort, it left that martial bailiwick far to its right and tore impetuously townwards, there to lose its crystalline and incomparable sheen, and to emerge at the eastward edge, soiled, bedraggled, and ashamed, a 88 COMRADES IN ARMS city sewer and nothing more; yet, even after its base use and degradation, preserving much of the wild grace that won it the Indian name of Leaping Water. On the bank of the Fork, northwest of town, were the corrals and buildings of Sheriff Blossom's ranch. On its left bank, in the heart of Silver Hill, lay the costly and pre tentious home of Amos Bullard, banker and capitalist. On both banks of the Fork, toward the eastward end of town, were smelters, foundries, and machine shops. It served them all, and served them well. It was but rudely served in turn. The railway, leaving the levels of the Cheyenne and the meanderings of the Minneconjou, wound along the fork, leaping it here and there until it reached the eastward edge of town, then curved abruptly to the southwest and crawled snake-like away over the open uplands, seeking the easiest grade to the Sagamore Pass. One of Fort Minneconjou's diversions was to stroll or ride out southwestward, fording the lazier stream from which it was named, and to line up along the wind ing right-of-way and surprise the passengers of the west bound flyer with hearty and stentorian cheer as it went puffing, panting, straining up the divide, a marked con trast to the mate it met in the heart of the pass, that came easily gliding or coasting, with smoke-spitting tires, with COMRADES IN ARMS 89 wheezing complaint of the gripping brakes, and looking in the black nights of winter like fettered meteor or fiery dragon of old. Government had built a little station two miles southwest of the post, and paid for a siding, with the idea of a much shorter haul for its stores and sup plies; but passengers, it was observed, still preferred to go and come via Silver Hill. Time was when a small guard had been maintained at this lonely depot out on the southwestward prairie, but Mack had long since with drawn it as unnecessary, yet this lonely June evening, as" he watched the prompt, soldierly formation of his regi mental line, and wondered if " Old Hardtack " would not be in mollified mood as a result of so fine an exhbition of precision, Mack was wishing he had never recalled the outpost. Only half an hour before first call for parade, and while Mrs. Bullard was still at the post striving to extract hopeful words from Dr. Warren, a strange tale was told him by Lieutenant Gridley, Langham's one real friend among the subalterns, and Gridley had been out scouting on his own account and because of certain theo ries of his own. The brief conference between the colonel and this officer was ended by these words : " Then with your permission, sir, I will not attend parade, but will escort Mrs. Bullard home." 90 COMRADES IN ARMS " So be it, Gridley. She may tell you, as his friend what she would never tell me." Turning away with parting salute, Gridley stopped one moment to look at his faithful comrade, the troop horse he had been bestriding many hours of the afternoon. " Take him to the stables, orderly," he said, after an ap preciative pat or two. " He has done his share to-day," then went briskly down the line, raising his cap to the groups of garrison ladies seated on the verandas in readi ness to watch parade. At Dr. Warren's there was quite a little gathering, Mrs. Bullard, in her stunning riding habit, central figure of the party. They all looked up as he entered the gate. They all knew that in Jim Gridley they saw the closest friend of the sorely injured officer. They knew he had been out during much of the day, investigating on his own account, and, believing that he acted on knowledge or information shared by nobody else, were eager to hear the result. Gridley bowed gravely and comprehensively ; said, " Good-evening, ladies," to all, and then, giving no time for question, ad dressed himself at once to the one woman of the half dozen present to whom he had hardly spoken twice in the scope of a year: " Mrs. Bullard, may I have the pleasure of escorting you when you are ready to return ? '"' COMRADES IN ARMS 91 Mrs. Bullard flushed with surprise and a certain embar rassment. Gridley's simple directness was a thing as new to her as the invitation was unexpected. For certain reasons, she had believed he disliked or distrusted her. She had told Langham as much, and told herself that Langham had told him. A moderate degree of courtesy and attention Jim Gridley had ever shown to the women of the officers' households at the post, but attention of any kind to any woman not of the garrison circle was some thing never looked for in him. Nothing, therefore, could have been much more pointed or significant than his thus approaching the acknowledged leader of Silver Hill society. Motive of some kind there must be and she knew it, and naturally colored high under the instant scrutiny of her associates and the calm gaze of his deep eyes. "You are very kind, Mr. Gridley," she replied, how ever. " Shall we say right after parade ? " " I shall be ready at gun fire," he answered, with a glance at the flag-staff where stood the adjutant and sergeant major awaiting the band. Another touch of his cap and he was gone, leaving them to marvel. Entering Langham's quarters he paused long enough to inquire 0f a nurse how the patient was doing; took one peep at the drowsing, unconscious form in the bedroom; bor- 92 COMRADES IN ARMS rowed Langham's crop and steel spurs ; then hastened to his own quarters. Adjutant's call had sounded and the band was banging away at " King Cotton " as he passed within the dark hallway of his little army home, shared in common with a brother bachelor whose habitat was the second floor. The band had changed its tune and was making its triumphal progress down the long, immov able line of blue and white flanked, as Mack would have it, by yellow-plumed troopers parading afoot when, in civilian garb, Mr. Gridley stepped forth into the rear yard of his quarters and there, awaiting him, pawing impatiently, and held by a remonstrating soldier- groom, was Major Baker's own pet mount, Ivanhoe. There, too, was Baker. Mack could not find it possible to order his cavalry major to attend parade so long as he split up the major's command, and Baker was glad enough to be excused on such terms. This evening he was more than glad. Holding still to the belief that Crabbe had gone forth in the dead of night ; had waylaid Langham on the prairie and lost his Loyal Legion insignia, possibly in some scuffle, of which Langham had as yet been able to give no account, Baker knew that he had incurred the hostility of all of Crabbe's friends and most of his fellow officers. Crabbe or Fox it must have been, said pretty much every- body at the post, with the chances leaning, said four out of five, to Fox. Baker was distressed and unhappy over the demonstration with which many of his fellow officers had favoured him. Esprit de corps was still alive in the army and had a flourishing growth in the 2 th. There fore, when at noon that day, Jim Gridley, looking worn and harassed, came in to ask permission to be absent until parade and to ride afar, Baker opened his sore heart and told his trusted subaltern his trouble. " Even Mack," said he, " treats me Ike a Pariah for what I have said and done, and some of the women, by gad, have cut me dead. If it should turn out after all that Crabbe was utterly innocent and Fox the guilty man, I'd wear sackcloth all summer." " You'll not have to wear sackcloth then," said Gridley quietly. " Do you mean you can prove I'm right ? " asked Baker eagerly. " I mean," said Gridley, " that I expect to prove they're all wrong. I want the afternoon to myself. I may want to ride to town this evening, and I need a good horse for that ride." " Take Ivanhoe," said the major promptly, an offer he had never been known to make before, and Gridley ac cepted. No wonder the women looked surprised when, 94 COMRADES INi 'ARMS just as they resumed their seats after loyally standing through the " Star Spangled Banner " Mr. Gridley came riding into view at the east end of the row and riding the major's precious and incomparable charger. Mrs. Bul- iard's saddler was already at the gate, pawing as impa tiently as was Ivanhoe but the moment before, and casting reproachful glances at his mistress; much disturbed, too, by the recent bang of the evening gun, and giving the soldier in charge about all he could do to hold him. Gridley noted the symptoms as he and Ivanhoe drew near, and, glancing about him as he dismounted, signaled Mas ter Jerry Warren, the doctor's eldest, and bade him hold Ivanhoe one moment while he looked to the girth and curb of the lady's thoroughbred. She was by his side and ready to mount even before he hoped, having said adieu to all at his approach, and Gridley bowed to her with appreciation in his eyes. Feminine farewells had always seemed to him interminable. " Hold with your right just below the bit, Doyle," said he, to the orderly, " and stand close in to prevent his swinging out his haunches." But Mrs. Bullard had no fear of her favorite's jumping from under. Already her gauntleted right hand was on the pommel and the daintily booted left foot uplifted for his aid. Gridley stooped ; took it, and the lady bounded "THEHK is .TUST ONE WOMAN IN CREATION WHO CAN SET ME RIGHT" COMRADES IN ARMS 95 to her seat, light as a feather and quick as a kitten. It needed only ten seconds to adjust skirt and stirrup. She nodded a cordial good-night to the group at the piazza.', smiled graciously upon the admiring Irish trooper, adding a silvery " Thank you ever so much," and with practiced hand controlled the nervous curveting of her steed and moved slowly gateward. Gridley swung into saddle and trotted alongside. Together and in silence and both gazing into the open doorway, they moved slowly beyond Langham's quarters, then more swiftly past the statuesque sentry at the gate, and were well out upon the open prairie before the lady turned in saddle, looked squarely into her escort's eyes and demanded, " Now, Mr. Gridley, kindly explain what this means." For answer the soldier at her side pointed southeast ward over the level of the " bench " along the left bank of the Minneconjou to a point where the bridle-path dipped down to the glistening shallows of the ford. " Mrs. Bullard," said he, " the man I most like in this garrison the man who leans most on me was all but murdered from ambush right there at the fords last night. Some men accuse Mr. Crabbe. Some men say Fox. I have still another theory and there is just one woman in creation who can set me right." He bent forward over the pommel that he might look up and see her eyes, for 96 COMRADES IN ARMS now her head was drooping. Still she never shunned the issue. There was no tremor in the tone with which she queried, as she lifted her head. " And who may she be, Mr. Gridley ? " The answer was the single word: " You." CHAPTER VII THE RED MAN ON HIS WAY. ONCE upon a time in the long-ago days of the army it happened that a man listened in unmurmuring, unprotesting silence to griev ous accusations laid at his door ; bowed his humbled head ; tendered his resignation and departed forever from the associations of the profession he loved. Within the month that saw his name, by his own act, stricken from the rolls, the men who had been his accusers woudl have given almost their hopes of promotion could that sacri fice have atoned for and annulled his. For there were women who had their wits about them, who had ideas of their own as to the victim and the vic tim's helpmate, and these women never rested until they were in position to prove that the man was innocent. They had labored not because they loved him more, but because they loved her less ; he had accepted and shoul dered the sin of his wife. Mack, colonel commanding Fort Minneconjou in the year '97, had known them both. Gridley, subaltern of cavalry, who had known neither, was none the less known to have expressed strenuous 97 98 COMRADES IN ARMS opinions on the subject. Gridley had some history of his own. He was regarded at the post as anything but a " lady's man." Without being a woman-hater, as some women held, he was not a woman-worshiper. He went but seldom in society. He was a man they declared to be dangerous because of his detrimental views, but all the more was he worth conquering for purposes of con version. The sight of him riding away with the Queen of Silver Hill, as a local enthusiast had once described her, so soon after the most mysterious tragedy Fort Min- neconjou had ever known, was a thing to keep every one of their number speculating for hours. Already they had heard that she had expressed an earnest wish to see and speak with Kitty Belden, and that she had gone ungratified because it was learned that Kitty was ill and confined to her room. " Over excited," said the doctor. " Overcome," said some of her associates, by the distressing event that had so shocked the entire garrison. Already they had heard, for such news travels swiftly, that telegraphic summons to his stricken mother's side had come to their Adonis, himself stricken and incapable of thought or action. Already they had learned that, while Crabbe lay housed in close arrest and Fox was gone with the wide frontier to [choose from, a third person originally connected with the crime COMRADES IN ARMS 99 had been replaced in the eye of certain suspicion by still another third as yet unnamed, and Colonel Mack was even then sending forth a little party of mounted men to follow a clue furnished by Lieutenant Gridley. No sooner was parade over, and the officers scattering to their quarters, than Mack was seen to turn away to the administration building and there, accompanied by the ever faithful Briggs, stood giving some instructions to a sergeant of cavalry who had dismounted to receive them, while his detachment of four remained seated in saddle a dozen yards away. Hundreds of keen eyes all over the post watched that little party as it left the quad rangle and took the back road through the valley of the Minneconjou and over the rolling prairie beyond, bound obviously for that lonely station. " This mystery is just making me down sick," said Mrs. Sparker, a lady lavish in the use of the italic in conversation, " and if it isn't settled by to-morrow night, I'll take to my bed, too. Has anybody seen Kitty Belden?" Nobody in the party at Warren's, at least, had as yet succeeded, though several had called, perhaps in hopes of seeing, but Dr. Warren had been implacable, Mrs. Belden vigilant, and the gentle little patient had escaped the infliction. One girl, two girls, perhaps, she really 100 COMRADES IN ARMS wished to see and had so stated to her mother, but the mother counsel had in this case prevailed. " If you see this one or that, how can you refuse to see Flo Cullin or any of these younger married ladies who are so atten tively inquisitive ? " And Kitty had the sense to see the point and to refrain. Minneconjou had quite made up its mind by sunset of that second day that the child had lost her girlish heart to Mr. Langham, and was pros trated because of his serious condition. It was natural enough. She was at a most impressionable age, and he had been very cordial, very kind and to a certain extent attentive to her attentive, at least, in the way of letting her ride his horses and even occasionally riding with her himself. Whether the girl was in love with him or not, she had been so shocked and distressed by the details of the murderous assault that it was a mercy to put her to bed and out of the way of prying eyes. Naturally, too, if Mrs. Belden denied her daughter to her one or two intimates, she would deny her to a [comparative stranger whom she neither liked nor trusted, and rest you sure that some of the women, dropping in to inquire how Kitty was, let drop the bit of information that Mrs. Bui- lard was at the post and that " Mrs. Bullard was hoping to see Kitty and have a talk with her." Mrs. Belden shut her lips when the project was mentioned, and would not COMRADES IN ARMS 101 gratify her caller to the extent of giving voice to her views as to Mrs. Bullard and Mrs. Bulla-rd's expressed wish. " She hung about here as much as three hours," said Mrs. Sparker, " just waiting, I suppose, in hopes that something might occur to bring you out, so then she could ask you to let her see Kitty." And Mrs. Sparker, the one moneyed woman of Fort Minneconjou, was noto riously jealous of Mrs. Bullard, who, 'with much less cash at her command for Bullard's allowance was not princely as once had been his gifts contrived to utterly outshine Mrs. Sparker in the elegance of her toilets. But even Mrs. Sparker's pointed references evoked no quotable comment. Mrs. Belden had possibly been warned by her husband to let no word escape her as to Mrs. Bullard, for in this crisis of affairs the least harmful in intent might well became a prodigy of accusation. To the chagrin of Mrs. Sparker, the only words vouchsafed by Mrs. Belden were : " Then Mrs. Bullard must have been very late for dinner." " Oh, she said Mr. Bullard had to go out to a mine this afternoon and wouldn't be back until late at night, and she was too sick at heart to eat. Did you ever hear of so so brazen a woman ? " And even that tentative failed. Mrs. Belden merely 102 COMRADES IN ARMS smiled and hoped somebody had given Mrs. Bullard a cup of tea, whereat Mrs. Sparker withdrew, discomfited, and, could she have done so, would have dodged the dames she had so recently left at the Warrens' piazza. ; but there they were anxiously awaiting her return and eager to hear what Mrs. Belden had to say, and Mrs. Sparker had to face them empty-mouthed and defeated or else to invent, and inventions at Minneconjou paid no better than many at the patent office it was too easy to trace a statement to its source. " She just won't say a thing," said Mrs. Sparker. " Her husband's doing, I suppose. I'd like to see w^self made a slave of, forbidden to speak or even think." But there were those among her hearers who sometimes wished there were some power to put a stopper on Mrs. Sparker's tongue. Night came down on Minneconjou with no woman the wiser as to Mrs. Bullard's motive in wishing to see Kitty Belden no woman the wiser as to Gridley's object in securing that ride with Mrs. Bullard alone. In the gloaming now gathering over the still and far- spreading valley, the forms of the two riders had been gradually lost to view. It was not usual for eques triennes to take the ford road. The longer way round was the shorter way home with dry skirts, for e-ven so COMRADES IN ARMS 103 abbreviated and stylish a habit as Mrs. Bullard's would be splashed where the horses plunged through breast deep. Yet the watchers saw that Gridley and his fair and grace ful companion had turned from the main road and taken the bridle-path to the southeast. When last visible they were just descending the incline to the bed of the stream, and once there, and beyond the vision of prying eyes at the post, it would seem that they spent some little time, ten minutes, perhaps, for the fresh hoofprints were very numerous when studied in the morning. The horses had evidently stood side by side much of the time, then gone scouting about the edge of the waters and all around a little clump of willows on the farther shore, the clump from which the first shot seemed to have been fired. Then, at long lope or hand gallop, the pair had speeded away to town. At nine o'clock, as was later learned, Mr. Gridley put up the major's favorite steed at the customary stable and disappeared for nearly two hours, then re turned, remounted, and galloped back to Minneconjou, meeting Bullard's substantial spring wagon, homeward bound from the Baltimore mine, just at the westward edge of town. Bullard's driver mentioned this the following day. It is doubtful if Bullard knew it, for the night was dark and no greetings had been ex changed. 104 COMRADES IN ARMS The Baltrmore lay in the heart of the eastward spur of the Sagamore Range, some eighteen miles northwest of town. There were other, many other, mines and some few mining camps and settlements along that pine- .crested backbone. There were cattle ranches and a stage station or two in the beautiful valley of the Belle Fourche, thirty miles beyond the range. It was somewhere over in that direction that Fox with Champion was supposed to have gone, and it was believed that from the Belle Fourche he would probably continue his flight northward beyond the breaks of the Heecha Wakpa beyond Deer's Ears and the Bad Land, until he succeeded in reaching the Northern Pacific somewhere near Medora. Already the telegraph had flashed his description and that of Champion to the Missouri, thence northward to Bis marck, and, long days before Fox could hope to reach the railway many a deputy sheriff would be on watch for him. Even if Fox were not "wanted," the horse was. The fame of the splendid 'cross country hunter and jumper had as yet spread only through western Nebraska and South Dakota and eastern Wyoming, but nine out of ten frontiersmen would see at a glance the fine points in Fox's mount, and though the English pigskin saddle could call forth nothing but derision, the horse would fetch his price in dollars unless acquired by the less COMRADES IN ARMS 105 expensive process of disposing summarily of his rider. This could be so readily charged to the Indians. Settled on their reservations in the Standing Rock, Pine Ridge, and the Rosebud regions, hundreds of eager young braves even now sought occasional opportunity to set forth on hunting expeditions, with or without the consent of the agent, and then it took but little fire-water and less persuasion on part of cowboy or settler to start a row. The Indian on a tear was like a fire at a fort anything missing could be charged thereto, and there is no point on which the cowboy is more credulous than the culpability of the Indian. Hunting parties from Stand ing Rock went westward, as a rule, and those from near the Nebraska line northward, giving Silver Hill and Fort Minneconjou a very wide berth. But, once along the head waters of Owl Creek or Grand River the Sioux were on their old stamping grounds and perfectly at home. Ogallalla or Brule, Uncapapa or Minneconjou, they knew the neighborhood as the cat knows the cellar, and whensoever they saw fit to revisit the scene of their old-time glory, the rancher with a hankering for a neigh bor's stock or blood occasionally arose to the opportu nity. No frontiersman would suspect a fellow exile of any crime so long as there were Indians loose upon the land. 106 COMRADES IN ARMS And, just as luck would have it, not two days before the sudden disappearance of the English groom, a letter had come to Colonel Mack saying that as many as sixty young men from Pine Ridge and Rosebud had recently cut away from the reservations and gone a-hunting beyond the Cheyenne. " Keep a fatherly eye on them, and don't let them get into trouble," said the agent, and Mack promised that he would do so, and had meant to keep his promise when along came " Old Hardtack " to inspect, and then this miserable business about Langham, and between the two Mack forgot all about the Indians and the troop of cavalry he had intended sending into the Owl Creek country by way of keeping the peace. And so it happened that there was no one to oppose any white man religiously and devoutly disposed to stir up a scrim mage with the Sioux, and whisky was abundant on the ranges this bonny month of June. Fox could not have chosen a better time to bring a blooded horse into the Bad Lands a better time for the native and to the manner born. Plentiful as were the wild warriors in former days, and numerous as were their descendants now limited to the reservations, only a few of the once noble race of red men could be found about the Minneconjou valley in '97. A dozen half-breeds and half a dozen full-bloods, COMRADES IN ARMS 107 who had cast aside the blanket and taken to the cast-off clothing of the white brother, were hangers-on about the station and saloons in town, but contact with civil ization had robbed the aborigine of all that was pic turesque and much that was proper. He had little left to recommend him. He was not even a voter, wherein he lacked the value of thousands of imported fellow citi zens whose very names had been lost and who were designated and known in mining regions far to the east only by number. Lazy, shiftless, yet mildly inoffensive, as a rule, Silver Hill's contingent of semi-civilized Sioux were mainly in evidence at train time in town, and at no time at the fort. Uncle Sam suspected his wards of a propensity to steal, and warned his sentries to warn them away. Beg they could and would wheresoever they saw possibility of return. Work of any kind, save one, they would not. There wasn't one of their number who could be induced to weed garden, chop wood, curry a horse, or carry in coal. But, send him into the hills with a roving commission to hunt for game, or as a runner to look up prospectors, strayed horses, or cattle, and he would face a blizzard to earn a dime. Time was when the snows hauled down Bullard's wires to the Baltimore, the Calumet, and other mining and lumbering camps, and he took to sending John le Gros, Louis Belles Pierres, 108 COMRADES IN ARMS and others of that ilk, bearers of dispatches to his weather-bound employees, generally with good results. One thing led to another, to the end that there were three or four of these unsavory Mercuries ever within call of Bullard's office, ready to run his errands to the recesses of the Black Hills in quest either of men or game. They would work in this way because it was congenial, and Bullard would work them in this way because it was cheap. The man said to be worth a million would haggle with a bootblack over the price of a shine. Now whatever Mrs. Bullard might have thought of a Sioux chief in all the paint, pomp, and panoply of savage war, she had no use whatever for a Sioux servitor in foul-smelling garb. More than once she had been com pelled to eject the latter from her kitchen because " cook " invariably took to her heels and fled whimpering to the upper regions whenever Big Thunder or Smites- the-Bear, familiarly known respectively as John and Joe, put in an appearance. Once, it was told at the fort and among her few associates in town, she had actually used a broomstick with telling effect on the shoulders of Smites-the-Bear, who had come in drunk and refused to go forth uncomforted by more whisky. It is never good to smite the red man, even drunk and truculent, for when sobriety returns and reason resumes its sway, he remem- COMRADES IN ARMS 109 bers, and his dignity has suffered outrage. Colonel Mack had looked concerned when told of this episode, and Mr. Langham had remonstrated. She said that Mr. Bullard said more and worse things than either the colonel or his subaltern, but without shaking her resolve to renew the lesson should John, Joe, or any one of their set venture to repeat the performance. Mrs. Bullard was a woman of grace and refinement, as has been said, yet one capable of strenuous deed when occasion required. The " Indian, His Uses and Abuses," was one of several topics, it had begun to be rumored, on which she and her husband could not agree at all. And now, since it has been admitted that Mrs. Bullard could cherish antipathies, it is time to announce that these were not confined to the red men. For reasons of her own, and mainly because she believed him inimical to her, Mrs. Amos had begun to feel a fervent dislike for Lieutenant Jim Gridley. She had owned it, in part, to Langham, but excused it on the ground that she instinc tively felt that Gridley had attempted to warn his com rade against her. It was something Langham could not truthfully deny, yet he could and did and promptly, too, assure her it was not Mrs. Bullard whom Gridley dis liked, it was Langham's intimacy no, that is too strong a wor d it was Langham's attention to her and her accept- 110 COMRADES IN ARMS ance of his attentions that Gridley had so positively assailed. She was more than surprised, therefore, at Gridley's seeking her out to show her attention this long June evening. She was more than surprised, she was startled, when he named the object. What could have prompted him to turn to her as the one woman capable of throwing light on this nearly deadly assault upon his soldier friend and comrade? Mrs. Bullard's head had drooped upon her breast in the effort to hide her pallor. She was startled at his abrupt announcement. This man, who had seemed to avoid and to disapprove of her, now appeared gifted with the power of reading her very thoughts. She knew that what he said was true. She knew there was one woman who had reason to believe in the guilt of some other man than those already suspected. She was not unprepared for the words that followed : " Mrs. Bullard, I beg your pardon in advance for what I have to say, but say it I must. You believe, and your husband believes, that suspicion must speedily attach to him." She lifted her head with a shiver as of cold, yet the air was still warm, the pace was swift. She turned toward him a face from which all vestige of color had fled, even the soft lips were almost livid. There was agony horror in her dilated eyes, but there was no denial. COMRADES IN ARMS 111 " Bear with me a moment," he went on. " I know you but slightly. I know him still less, but I saw the look you gave him when the news first reached you, and you best know why you should suspect him. Then I saw his face after you had driven him away. So sure was he that suspicion would attach to him so terrified, I may say, that he was ready to do anything to avert it. Do you believe Mr. Crabbe lost his Loyal Legion badge in yonder last night ? " and he pointed down among the sands about the ford. " Do you not know someone else lost it there for him ? " Again her head was bowed upon her breast. She swayed forward over the pommel, a pic ture of grief and shame. She could not answer. They had reached the edge of the bank and were winding down the short descent to the broad stream-bed. The wil lows lay directly opposite, not fifty yards away. He waited until once again they were on level ground, then quietly reached over and took her rein. " Let us wait here a moment. There is something you should see. We know it was not his hand that fired the shot, for he was there at the dance, but you believe, Mrs. Bullard, and I expect to prove that one of his hench men did it for him." CHAPTER VIII THE TALE OF THE TELEGRAMS. ONE of the best trailers in the cavalry was the sergeant sent out by Colonel Mack in charge of the little party just after sunset parade. Long years in Arizona, Wyoming, and Dakota in the old campaigning days had made him mas ter of much that only the Indian is supposed to know. Winsor, his name was, and of him a rival sergeant once had said " he could trail the hind fut of a flea on a marble flure," and Winsor had been chosen at Gridley's suggestion to follow the clue last discovered of all. Grid- ley had found it among the sands of the Minneconjou half a mile southeast of the post, leading from the rocks near that clump 'of willows. It appeared again in places about the lonely prairie. It was lost there in the firm, elastic sod, but it was dollars to doughnuts, said Gridley, it would be found again somewhere up the valley, cross ing to the north bank and making probably for the mines. It would be dark by the time the party reached that out-of-the-way siding, but watchers at the post saw that Winsor detached two of his men and sent them straight- 112 COMRADES IN ARMS 113 way west, up stream along the sandy shores, and the colonel knew what that meant. They were looking for the foot tracks described by Lieutenant Gridley, and both they and the sergeant had with them powerful lanterns. i It was while Mack was still gazing after his scouts that a message came to him from the junior surgeon, Dr. Griscom. Langham was awake, semi-conscious, yet dazed, and it might be well for the colonel to see him at once. Never stopping to remove his full-dress uniform, Mack went forthwith, found Dr. Warren hastening on the same mission and joined forces with him. " We ought to have some one of his friends with us," said Warren, "and Gridley er has gone home with " " Yes, I authorized that," said Mack, seeing the doctor balk at what might sound like gossip, " and for good rea son, I believe. Now, Briggs is busy. How would Belden do?" " Best man I know of," was the prompt answer, so Mack shouted " Orderly " over his shoulder, while never checking his stride. The natty soldier on duty came run ning after and ranged up alongside long enough to receive the message, his white-gloved hand never quitting the salute until he turned. " My compliments to Captain Bel- den, and say I desire to see him at Langham's quar ters at once, and tell Mrs. Mack I may not be home for 114 COMRADES IN ARMS an hour. Lucky we dined this evening before parade," he added, resuming his conversational tone. "Hardt I mean our inspector, will need nothing but a hand at whist the rest of the evening." Together they turned in at Langham's gate, many an eye following, even as the orderly rang at Belden's door. As luck would have it, the captain was at that moment seated by the bedside of his beloved " little girl," his pet name always for that only daughter. He had been fondling her hand and telling her the while how many people had been asking for her during the afternoon. " Here's someone else now," he added, rising and going to the hall, a whimsical grin dawning under the big mus tache, for Belden, who said so little about the vagaries of his neighbors, saw so very much. A servant had gone to the door, and the orderly's crisp sentences came shoot ing up the stairway, distinctly audible on the second floor.