The long hard winter soon came on, and we retired to Valley Forge to suffer and to bear what was far more deadly than the English bullets—the terrible cold and desolation of that dreary place. Cold, bitterly cold it was, as the wind came down from the mountains, swept over the broad fields, pierced through our torn and tattered garments, and racked our frames with pain. And yet, terrible as the exposure was, there stands out one bright day in all that dreary winter, one day, one hour in which I forgot all the cold and the hardships and would not have been elsewhere for anything in the wide world. It was near the setting of the sun on one of the bleakest and coldest days of the year. The sun itself was sinking behind the distant hills, and the sky was brilliant with its fiery javelins, which threw a lurid light across the cold gray heavens, the last protest of departing day against the approach of the chill dismal night. The snow lay heavy upon the ground, and spread like a great white pall over the sins and sorrows of the world. Before us stretched the road, unbroken and trackless; not a man had passed that way, for we stood guard at the outpost, and the flicker of the foeman's fire could be seen six hundred yards away, through the gloom. "Lucifer, but it is cold!" said one of the guard, as he threw another rail on the fire and held his hands out over the flames to warm them. "Aye; Old Nick himself would not be a bad acquaintance now—his smell We were making the best we could of it, under the lee of a high bank by the side of the road, where we had cleared a space and stacked a good supply of dry fence-rails to feed the fire during the night. The wind from the northwest swept over our heads, sheltered as we were by the bank, and we would have defied the cold that crept ever upward but for the rags and tatters that covered our frames. The men themselves were cheerful, as they sat hugging the fire, and laughed and joked at their hardships. "I wonder if those Highland devils will bother us to-night?" asked one, for the Black Watch held the outpost down the road. "They will be too busy warming their knees," came the reply from across the fire, and a laugh followed. "Hello, what is that?" for the thud of hoofs was heard on the road coming from the camp. "A flag of truce, by George!" said the sergeant. "Who on earth wants to go through the lines on a night like this?" The party, consisting of several troopers, an officer, and what appeared to be a woman on horseback, was soon within hailing distance, and I heard Ringgold's voice call out: "I say, Frisby, are you in charge here?" "Yes," I replied. "What's up?" "We have a prisoner here who wishes to go through the lines, but I don't know whether you will permit her or not." "Is she fair?" I asked. "For in that case she shall not pass unless she gives us a smile by way of tribute as she rides by." "Not even if George Washington so orders, sir," said a voice that I knew. "By the saints, my lady!" I cried, and I was by her side in an instant. "What brings you here, and why are you going within the English lines?" "Should not a daughter be with her father?" she asked. "But those bloody English, with all their fine trappings and their feathers! Nay, my lady, you have been disrespectful to the Continental Congress, as I can vouch for. You are our prisoner, and I will not let you escape thus, to smile on the wearers of his Majesty's uniform." But she laughed quite merrily, and answered my threat with "Lieutenant Ringgold, pray ride on with the flag of truce." "Dick Ringgold," I cried in my turn, "All right, old fellow." Dick rode on toward the enemy's campfire with the bugler until he had gone about half the way, and then we heard the parley sounded and saw a stir in the opposite camp. "Mistress Jean," said I, returning to the charge, "you are perfectly heartless, and though I know the redcoats cannot help but fall in love with you, I warn you that if you smile on any one of them I shall go through the lines and seek him out, even into the heart of the city itself, though I have to swing for it." "You will never try anything so rash;" and now the laughter had gone from her voice. "That I will, my lady," I replied, "for I would rather dance on nothing than know that you belonged to another." "But you must not," said she. "You must not think of such a thing. You must promise me never to attempt it." "Nay, Mistress Jean, that I cannot promise. It would drive me mad to stand here on guard all the winter night and see the lights of Philadelphia off there in the east; to know amid all the gayety and the balls you reign supreme; to know I could not see you because of the miserable redcoats that guard the city. If they were ten times their number I would find my way through them to be once more at your side, Mistress Jean." Before she could reply the Highland officer broke in, for he had ridden up with Ringgold. "Mistress Jean, it gives me pleasure to be the first to welcome you to our lines. Your father told us of your coming, and there has been a rivalry between "That was kind of all of you; but how did you leave my father?" "Well, and eager for your coming." He was a splendid-looking young fellow, tall, broad-shouldered, and somewhat bony, with a voice that rang frank and true. He was a Highlander, every inch of him, and carried himself with a free and graceful carriage, and when I heard him tell Mistress Jean that he was a Farquharson and an old ally of her house, I knew I had at last met a dangerous rival. For, out of romances, it is not the villain, but the brave and frank gentleman who is most dangerous to the peace of mind of lovers, for they see in him what they themselves most admire, and by which they hope to win their ladies' love. "Lieutenant Ringgold, now," said Farquharson, "I am ready to receive "Far more ready than we are to let her go," answered Dick gallantly; "but it is the fortune of war." And then the two officers saluted and the exchange was made. So Mistress Jean bade us all good-bye right prettily, and I, being on the off side of her horse from the others, seized her hand as it hung by her side and kissed it several times. She at first did not withdraw it, and then, bending over, whispered, "Do not try to enter the city, for they will hang thee, and I would not lose so true a friend." Here her voice was very soft and low. I kissed her hand once again and she was gone. We watched their dark shadows down the road to the Highland outpost, as they moved like great blots across the snow. I stood, I do not know how "Never mind, Frisby," said he, "we shall win the city in the spring, and then you may win her also." |