“Appleweight!” exclaimed the group of officers in amazement.
“None other than the great Appleweight!” responded Collins. “The governor has him in his own hands at last, and is going to carry him across the border and into a South Carolina bastille, as a little pleasantry on the governor of South Carolina.”
“He’s had a sudden change of heart if he’s captured Appleweight,” remarked a major incredulously. “His policy has always been to let old Bill alone.”
“It’s only a ripple of the general reform wave that’s sweeping the country,” suggested Ardmore cheerfully. “Turn the rascals out; put the rascals in; keep the people hopeful and the jails full. That’s the Dangerfield watchword.”
“Well, I guess Dangerfield knows how to drive the hearse if there’s got to be a funeral,” observed the quartermaster. “The governor’s not a man to ride inside if he can find another corpse.”
And they all laughed and accepted the situation as promising better diversion than they had expected from the summer manœuvres.
The militia officers gave the necessary orders for breaking the half-formed camp, and then turned their attention to the entertainment of their guests. Ardmore kept track of the time, and promptly at ten o’clock Collins rose from the log by the roadside where they had been sitting.
“We must obey the governor’s orders, gentlemen,” said Collins courteously, “and march at once to Ardsley. I, you understand, am only a courier, and your guest for the present.”
“If you please,” asked Cooke, when the line had begun to move forward, “what is that wagon over there?”
He pointed to a mule team hitched to a quartermaster’s wagon that a negro was driving into position across the rough field. It was piled high with luggage, a pyramid that rose black against the heavens. One of the militia officers, evidently greatly annoyed, bawled to the driver to get back out of the way.