The Littlest Rebel - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Which way did he go?" the officer demanded, and she pointed with her spoon.
"Down by the spring--through the blackberry patch."
The soldier was half-convinced. He stood for a moment, looking at the floor, then asked her sharply, suddenly:
"If your father had gone, then why did you lock that door?"
She faltered, but only for an instant.
"'Cause I thought you might be--_n.i.g.g.e.rs_."
The man before her clenched his hands, as he thought of that new-born, hideous danger menacing the South.
"I see," he answered gently; "_yes_, I see." He turned away, but, even as he turned, his eye was caught by the double-doored cupboard against the wall. "What do you keep in there?" he asked; and the child smiled faintly, a trifle sadly, in reply:
"We _used_ to keep things to eat--when we had any."
He noted her mild evasion, and pushed the point.
"What is in it now?"
"Tin pans."
"Anything else?"
"Er--yes, sir."
He caught his breath and stepped a little nearer, bending till his face was close to hers.
"What?"
"Colonel Mosby," declared the mite, with a most emphatic nod; "an' you better look out, too!"
The officer laughed as he turned to his grinning squad.
"Bright little youngster! Still, I think we'll have a look." He dropped his air of amus.e.m.e.nt, growing stern again. "Now, men! Ready!"
They swung into line and faced the cupboard, the muzzles of their carbines trained upon it, while their leader advanced, swung open the doors, and quickly stepped aside.
On the bottom shelf, as Virgie had declared, were a few disconsolate tin pans; yet tacked to the door was a picture print of Mosby--that dreaded guerrilla whose very name was a bugaboo in the Union lines.
The littlest rebel flung back her head and laughed.
"My, but you looked funny!" she cried to the somewhat disconcerted officer, pointing at him with her spoon. "If a mouse had jumped out, I reckon it would have scared you mos' to death."
The officer's cheeks flushed red, in spite of his every effort at control; nor was he a.s.sisted by the knowledge that his men were t.i.ttering behind his back. He turned upon them sharply.
"That will do," he said, and gave a brusque command: "Corporal, deploy your men and make a thorough search outside. Examine the ground around the spring--and report!"
"Yes, sir," returned Corporal Dudley saluting and dropping his hand across his mouth to choke off an exclamation of anger. Then he snarled at his men, to ease the pain of thwarted vengeance: "_'Tention! Right face! Forward! March!_"
The squad trooped out across the broken door, leaving their commanding officer alone with his rebel prisoner.
"Now, Virgie," he asked, in a kindly tone, though holding her eyes with his, "do you mean to tell me--cross your heart--that you are here, just by yourself?"
"Er--no, sir." As he opened his lips to speak, she pointed to her doll.
"Me an' Susan Jemima."
"Well, that's a fact," he laughed. "Hanged if I'm not losing all my social polish." He gallantly removed his hat, bowed gravely to the cedar stick, and shook its hand. "Charmed to make your acquaintance, Miss Susan, believe me. My own name is Morrison--Lieutenant-Colonel Morrison--at your service." He turned to the little mother with a smile that showed a row of white and even teeth. "And now," he said, "since we are all informally introduced, suppose we have a quiet, comfortable chat." He paused, but she made no answer. "Well? Aren't you going to ask me to have some breakfast?"
Virgie cast a troubled gaze into the plate before her.
"Er--no, sir."
"What? Why not?"
She faltered, and answered slowly:
"'Cause--'cause you're one of the d.a.m.n Yankees."
"Oh! oh! oh!" exclaimed the soldier, shocked to hear a baby's lips profaned. "Little girls shouldn't use such words. Why, Virgie!"
She raised her eyes, clear, fearless, filled with vindicating innocence.
"Well, it's your _name_, isn't it? _Everybody_ calls you that."
"Um--yes," he admitted, striving to check the twitching of his lips; "I suppose they do--south of Was.h.i.+ngton. But don't you know we are just like other people?" She shook her head. "Oh, yes, we are. Why, _I_ have a little girl at home--not any bigger than you."
"Have you?" asked Virgie, her budding racial prejudice at war with youthful curiosity. "What's her name?"
"Gertrude," he answered softly, tenderly. "Gertrude Morrison. Would you like to see her picture?"
"Yes," said the little rebel, and stepped across the gulf which had lain between her and her enemy. "You can sit down if you want to. Jus' put Susan Jemima on the table."
"Thank you," returned her visitor, obeying instructions, seating himself and loosening the upper b.u.t.tons of his coat. On his neck, suspended by a chain, was a silver locket containing the miniature of a plump and pretty child. It had lain there since the war began, through many a bivouac, many a weary march, and even in the charge he could feel it tapping against his breast; so now, as he held it out to Virgie, the father's hand was trembling.
"There she is. My Gertrude--my little Gertrude."
Virgie leaned forward eagerly.
"Oh!" she said, in unaffected admiration, "She's _mighty_ pretty.
She's--" The child stopped suddenly, and raised her eyes. "An' she's fat, too. I reckon Gertrude gets lots to eat, doesn't she?"
"Why, yes," agreed the father, thinking of his comfortable Northern home; "of course. Don't you?"
Virgie weighed the question thoughtfully before she spoke.
"Sometimes--when Daddy gets through the lines and brings it to me."