CONTENTS

CHAPTER PAGE
[I]I WHET MY FATHER'S SWORD1
[II]KNITS UP SOME BROKEN ENDS15
[III]MY ENEMY SCORES FIRST25
[IV]MAY BE PASSED OVER LIGHTLY36
[V]I LOST WHAT I HAD NEVER GAINED47
[VI]RED WRATH MAY HEAL A WOUND60
[VII]MY LADY HATH NO PART75
[VIII]I TASTE THE QUALITY OF MERCY88
[IX]A GOLDEN KEY UNLOCKED A DOOR98
[X]A FORLORN HOPE CAME TO GRIEF107
[XI]A LIE WAS MADE THE VERY TRUTH114
[XII]THE NEWS CAME TO UNWELCOME EARS129
[XIII]A PILGRIMAGE BEGINS141
[XIV]THE BARONET PLAYED ROUGE-ET-NOIR150
[XV]A HATCHET SINGS A MAN TO SLEEP164
[XVI]JENNIFER THREW A MAIN WITH DEATH171
[XVII]LOVE TOOK TOLL OF FRIENDSHIP183
[XVIII]WE HEAR NEWS FROM THE SOUTH194
[XIX]A STUMBLING HORSE BROUGHT TIDINGS207
[XX]WE STRIVE AS MEN TO RUN A RACE217
[XXI]WE KEPT LENTEN VIGILS IN TRINITYTIDE228
[XXII]THE FATES GAVE LARGESS OF DESPAIR235
[XXIII]WE KEPT THE FEAST OF BITTER HERBS251
[XXIV]WE FOUND THE SUNKEN VALLEY259
[XXV]UNCANOOLA TRAPPED THE GREAT BEAR269
[XXVI]THE CHARRED STICK FOR A GUIDE279
[XXVII]A KING'S TROOPER BECAME A WASTREL287
[XXVIII]I SADDLE THE BLACK MARE296
[XXIX]HAVING DANCED, WE PAY THE PIPER309
[XXX]EPHRAIM YEATES PRAYED FOR HIS ENEMIES324
[XXXI]WE MAKE A FORCED MARCH336
[XXXII]I AM BEDDED IN A GARRET351
[XXXIII]I HEAR CHANCEFUL TIDINGS361
[XXXIV]I MET A GREAT LORD AS MAN TO MAN369
[XXXV]I FIGHT THE DEVIL WITH FIRE376
[XXXVI]I RODE POST ON THE KING'S BUSINESS382
[XXXVII]WHAT BEFELL AT KING'S CREEK395
[XXXVIII]WE FIND THE GUN-MAKER412
[XXXIX]THE THUNDER OF THE CAPTAINS418
[XL]VAE VICTIS432
[XLI]I PLAYED THE HOST AT MY OWN FIRESIDE446
[XLII]MY LORD HAS HIS MARCHING ORDERS454
[XLIII]I DRINK A DISH OF TEA460
[XLIV]WE COME TO THE BEGINNING OF THE END470
[XLV]WE FIND WHAT WE NEVER SOUGHT480
[XLVI]OUR PIECE MISSED FIRE AT HARNDON ACRES488
[XLVII]ARMS AND THE MAN505
[XLVIII]WE KEPT TRYST AT APPLEBY517
[XLIX]A LAWYER HATH HIS FEE531
[L]RICHARD COVERDALE'S DEBT WAS PAID549
[LI]THE GOOD CAUSE GAINS A CONVERT562
[LII]BRINGS US TO THE JOURNEY'S END573

CHAPTER I
IN WHICH I WHET MY FATHER'S SWORD

The summer day was all but spent when Richard Jennifer, riding express, brought me Captain Falconnet's challenge.

'Twas a dayfall to be marked with a white stone, even in our Carolina calendar. The sun, reaching down to the mountain-girt horizon in the west, filled all the upper air with the glory of its departing, and the higher leaf plumes of the great maples before my cabin door wrought lustrous patterns in gilded green upon a zenith background of turquoise shot with crimson, like the figurings of some rich old tapestries I had once seen in my field-marshal's castle in the Mark of Moravia.

Beyond the maples a brook tinkled and plashed over the stones on its way to the near-by Catawba; and its peaceful brawling, and the evensong of a pair of clear-throated warblers poised on the topmost twigs of one of the trees, should have been sweet music in the ears of a returned exile. But on that matchless bride's-month evening of dainty sunset arabesques and brook and bird songs, I was in little humor for rejoicing.

The road made for the river lower down and followed its windings up the valley; but Jennifer came by the Indian trace through the forest. I can see him now as he rode beneath the maples, bending to the saddle horn where the branches hung lowest; a pretty figure of a handsome young provincial, clad in fashions three years behind those I had seen in London the winter last past. He rode gentleman-wise, in small-clothes of rough gray woolen and with stout leggings over his hose; but he wore his cocked hat atilt like a trooper's, and the sword on his thigh was a good service blade, and no mere hilt and scabbard for show such as our courtier macaronis were just then beginning to affect.

Now I had known this handsome youngster when he was but a little lad; had taught him how to bend the Indian bow and loose the reed-shaft arrow in those happier days before the tyrant Governor Tryon turned hangman, and the battle of the Great Alamance had left me fatherless. Moreover, I had drunk a cup of wine with him at the Mecklenburg Arms no longer ago than yesterweek—this to a renewal of our early friendship. Hence, I must needs be somewhat taken aback when he drew rein at my door-stone, doffed his hat with a sweeping bow worthy a courtier of the great Louis, and said, after the best manner of Sir Charles Grandison: