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Chapter 2 WHICH KNITS UP SOME BROKEN ENDS

Word Count: 2355    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

le from Episcopal Virginia, and a descendant of those Nottingham Iretons whose best-known son fought stoutly against Church and King un

after a stormy passage and overmuch waiting as my cousins' guest in Lincolnshire, ha

er. But of this you may like to know that, what with a good father's example, and some small heritage of Puritan decency come down to me from the sound-hea

et. Coverdale was an ensign in my own regiment, and we were sworn friends from the first. His was a clean soul

cy; but with a mother's bequeathings to purchase idleness and to gild his iniquities, he was a fair example of the jeunesse dorée of that England; a libertine, a gamester, a ra

gic comedy of a false friend's treachery and a woman's weakness; a duel, and the wrong man slain. And you may know this; that Falconnet's

for the upsetting news of the Tryon tyranny in Carolina,-news which reached me on the

he feudal lord of his own domain, more absolute than many of the petty kinglings I came afterward to know in the German marches. But this, too, I remember; that while his rule at Appleby Hundred was stern and despotic enough,

rth receiving, my father had little justice and less mercy accorded him. With many others he was outlawed; his estates were declared for

lainies as these of the butcher William Tryon. So I threw up my lieutenant's commission in the Blues, took ship for the Continent, and, after wearing s

that elder time must needs seem past belief. It was early in the year '79 before I began to hear more than vague camp-fire tales of the struggle goin

an warfare. Though I came not once upon the partizans themselves in all that long faring, there were trampled fields and pillaged h

when I rode into Queensborough was the familiar trappings of my old service, and I was made to know that in spite of Mr. Jefferson's boldly written Declaration of Independence, and t

was chiefly concerned with my own affair and anxious to learn at fir

the outlawed Roger Ireton save that of this poor hunting lodge in the mighty forest of the Catawba, overlooked, with the few runaw

Nor shall I forget his truculent leer when he hinted that I had best be gone out of these parts,

ve throttled him where he sat at his writing table, matching his long fingers and smirking at me with his evil

e day I would be minded to go back to my old field-marshal and the keeping of the Turkish border; the next I would ride over some part of my stolen heritage and swear a great oath to bide ti

bin, so lightly touched by time that the mere sight of it carried me swiftly back to those happy days when my father and I had stalked the white-tailed deer in the hill glades beyond, wi

red, and a very grandsire of ancients now-was one of the runaways who made the forest lodge a refuge. He

n there was instant vassalage and loyal service. But best of all, on my first evening before the handful of fire in the great fire-place, Darius brought me a package swathed in many wrappings of Indian-tanned de

S

cast for liberty and it has failed, and to-morrow I and five others are to die at the rope's end. I bequeath you my sword-'tis all the tyrant hath

fa

r Ir

r, when my voice was surer and my eyes less dim, I summoned Darius and bade him tell m

, how best to throw the weight of the good old Andrea into the patriot scale, meaning

that this light-horse outpost in our hamlet was far in advance of the army of invasion-so far that it was dangersomely isolated, an

l down upon the Wateree, I could not guess. But for the secrecy and vigilance there were good reasons and sufficient. Th

ees. She was riding, unmasked, down the high road, not on a pillion as most women rode in that day, but upon her own mount with a black groom two lengths in the rear. I can picture her for you no better th

lf laughing, half defiant. I turned quickly to look at the favored one. He stood with his back to me; a man of about my own bigness, heavy-built and well-muscled. He wore a

he turned, and then I saw his face-saw and recognized it though nine years l

bait him, the lady passed out of earshot, and I heard him say to the two, his comrades, that foul thi

cried the younger of the twain; and the

" I said; and, lest that should not be enough, I smote hi

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Contents

Chapter 1 IN WHICH I WHET MY FATHER'S SWORD Chapter 2 WHICH KNITS UP SOME BROKEN ENDS Chapter 3 IN WHICH MY ENEMY SCORES FIRST Chapter 4 WHICH MAY BE PASSED OVER LIGHTLY Chapter 5 HOW I LOST WHAT I HAD NEVER GAINED Chapter 6 SHOWING HOW RED WRATH MAY HEAL A WOUND Chapter 7 IN WHICH MY LADY HATH NO PART Chapter 8 IN WHICH I TASTE THE QUALITY OF MERCY Chapter 9 HOW A GOLDEN KEY UNLOCKED A DOOR Chapter 10 HOW A FORLORN HOPE CAME TO GRIEF Chapter 11 HOW A LIE WAS MADE THE VERY TRUTH
Chapter 12 HOW THE NEWS CAME TO UNWELCOME EARS
Chapter 13 IN WHICH A PILGRIMAGE BEGINS
Chapter 14 HOW THE BARONET PLAYED ROUGE-ET-NOIR
Chapter 15 IN WHICH A HATCHET SINGS A MAN TO SLEEP
Chapter 16 HOW JENNIFER THREW A MAIN WITH DEATH
Chapter 17 SHOWING HOW LOVE TOOK TOLL OF FRIENDSHIP
Chapter 18 IN WHICH WE HEAR NEWS FROM THE SOUTH
Chapter 19 HOW A STUMBLING HORSE BROUGHT TIDINGS
Chapter 20 IN WHICH WE STRIVE AS MEN TO RUN A RACE
Chapter 21 HOW WE KEPT LENTEN VIGILS IN TRINITYTIDE
Chapter 22 HOW THE FATES GAVE LARGESS OF DESPAIR
Chapter 23 HOW WE KEPT THE FEAST OF BITTER HERBS
Chapter 24 HOW WE FOUND THE SUNKEN VALLEY
Chapter 25 HOW UNCANOOLA TRAPPED THE GREAT BEAR
Chapter 26 WE TAKE THE CHARRED STICK FOR A GUIDE
Chapter 27 HOW A KING'S TROOPER BECAME A WASTREL
Chapter 28 IN WHICH I SADDLE THE BLACK MARE
Chapter 29 IN WHICH, HAVING DANCED, WE PAY THE PIPER
Chapter 30 HOW EPHRAIM YEATES PRAYED FOR HIS ENEMIES
Chapter 31 IN WHICH WE MAKE A FORCED MARCH
Chapter 32 IN WHICH I AM BEDDED IN A GARRET
Chapter 33 IN WHICH I HEAR CHANCEFUL TIDINGS
Chapter 34 HOW I MET A GREAT LORD AS MAN TO MAN
Chapter 35 IN WHICH I FIGHT THE DEVIL WITH FIRE
Chapter 36 HOW I RODE POST ON THE KING'S BUSINESS
Chapter 37 OF WHAT BEFELL AT KING'S CREEK
Chapter 38 IN WHICH WE FIND THE GUN-MAKER
Chapter 39 THE THUNDER OF THE CAPTAINS AND THE SHOUTING
Chapter 40 VAE VICTIS
Chapter 41 HOW I PLAYED THE HOST AT MY OWN FIRESIDE
Chapter 42 IN WHICH MY LORD HAS HIS MARCHING ORDERS
Chapter 43 IN WHICH I DRINK A DISH OF TEA
Chapter 44 HOW WE CAME TO THE BEGINNING OF THE END
Chapter 45 IN WHICH WE FIND WHAT WE NEVER SOUGHT
Chapter 46 HOW OUR PIECE MISSED FIRE AT HARNDON ACRES
Chapter 47 ARMS AND THE MAN
Chapter 48 HOW WE KEPT TRYST AT APPLEBY HUNDRED
Chapter 49 IN WHICH A LAWYER HATH HIS FEE
Chapter 50 HOW RICHARD COVERDALE'S DEBT WAS PAID
Chapter 51 IN WHICH THE GOOD CAUSE GAINS A CONVERT
Chapter 52 WHICH BRINGS US TO THE JOURNEY'S END
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