The speaker was suddenly overcome with his own humour, and slapped his knee and laughed; then they all laughed, including Griswold.

“One ought to have taken the lower berth and one the upper to make it perfect,” observed an Alabama man. “I wonder when they’ll get home.”

“They’ll probably both walk to be sure they don’t take the same train,” suggested a commercial traveller from Cincinnati, who had just come from New Orleans. “Their friends are doing their best to keep them apart. They both have a reputation for being quick on the trigger.”

“Bosh!” exclaimed Griswold. “I dare say it’s all a newspaper story. There’s no knife-and-pistol nonsense in the South any more. They’ll both go home and attend to their business, and that will be the last of it. The people of North Carolina ought to be proud of Dangerfield; he’s one of the best governors they ever had. And Osborne is a first-class man, too, one of the old Palmetto families.”

“I guess they’re both all right,” drawled the Mississippian, settling his big black hat more firmly on his head. “Dangerfield spoke in our town at the state fair last year, and he’s one of the best talkers I ever heard.”

Therefore, as no one appeared to speak for the governor of South Carolina, the drummer volunteered to vouch for his oratorical gifts, on the strength of an address lately delivered by Governor Osborne in a lecture course at Cincinnati. Being pressed by the Mississippian, he admitted that he had not himself attended the lecture, but he had heard it warmly praised by competent critics.

The Mississippian had resented Griswold’s rejection of the possibility of personal violence between the governors, and wished to return to the subject.

“It’s not only themselves,” he declared, “but each man has got the honour of his state to defend. Suppose, when they met in the railway office at Atlanta this morning, Dangerfield had drawed his gun. Do you suppose, gentlemen, that if North Carolina had drawed South Carolina wouldn’t have followed suit? I declare, young man, you don’t know what you’re talking about. If Bill Dangerfield won’t fight, I don’t know fightin’ blood when I see it.”

“Well, sir,” began the Alabama man, “my brother-in-law in Charleston went to college with Osborne, and many’s the time I’ve heard him say that he was sorry for the man who woke up Charlie Osborne. Charlie—I mean the governor, you understand—is one of these fellows who never says much, but when you get him going he’s terrible to witness. Bill Dangerfield may be Governor of North Car’line, and I reckon he is, but he ain’t Governor of South Car’line, not by a damned good deal.”

The discussion had begun to bore Griswold, and he went back to his own section, having it in mind to revise a lecture he was preparing on “The Right of Search on the High Seas.” It had grown dark, and the car was brilliantly lighted. There were not more than half a dozen other persons in his sleeper, and these were widely scattered. Having taken an inventory of his belongings to be sure they were all at hand, he became conscious of the presence of a young lady in the opposite section. In the seat behind her sat an old coloured woman in snowy cap and apron, who was evidently the young lady’s servant. Griswold was aware that this dusky duenna bristled and frowned and pursed her lips in the way of her picturesque kind as he glanced at her, as though his presence were an intrusion upon her mistress, who sat withdrawn to the extreme corner of her section, seeking its fullest seclusion, with her head against a pillow, and the tips of her suède shoes showing under her gray travelling skirt on the farther half of the section. She twirled idly in her fingers a half-opened white rosebud—a fact unimportant in itself, but destined to linger long in Griswold’s memory. The pillow afforded the happiest possible background for her brown head, her cheek bright with colour, and a profile clear-cut, and just now—an impression due, perhaps, to the slight quiver of her nostrils and the compression of her lips—seemingly disdainful of the world. Griswold hung up his hat and opened his portfolio; but the presence of the girl suggested Ardmore and his ridiculous quest of the alluring blue eye, and it was refreshing to recall Ardmore and his ways. Here was one man, at least, in this twentieth century, at whose door the Time Spirit might thump and thunder in vain.