lking a little while back about what they were going
to do after the war. What's your plan, sergeant, if you have any?"
"I do have a plan, Mr. Mason. I was a lumberman, as you know, before I
entered the regular army, and when the fighting's done I think I'll go
back to it. I can swing an axe with the best of 'em, but I mean after a
while to have others swinging axes for me. If I can I'm going to become
a big lumberman. I'd rather be that than anything else."
"It's a just and fine ambition, sergeant, I feel sure that you're going
to become a man of money and power. Mr. Warner means to become president
of Harvard, twenty or twenty-five years from now, and my cousin Harry
Kenton, a reconstructed rebel, is going to deliver an address there to
the new president's young men, while Mr. Pennington and I, as the
president's guests, are going to sit on the stage and smile. Right now,
and with authority from Mr. Warner, I'm going to invite you as the lumber
king of the Northwest to sit on the stage with us on that occasion,
as the guest of President Warner, and smile with us."
"If I become what you predict I'll accept," said the sergeant.
The chances were a thousand to one against the prophecy, but it all came
true, just as they wished.
The rain increased a little, although it was not yet able to penetrate
Dick's heavy coat, but they were compelled to go more slowly on account
of the thickening darkness. They reached very soon the crest of the pass
and halted there a little while to see or hear any sign of a human being.
But no sound came to them and they resumed the scout in the darkness,
riding now down the slope which would end before long in a great valley.
The ground softened by the rain deadened the footsteps of their horses,
and they made little noise as they rode down the narrow pass, examining
as well as they could the dripping forest on either side of the road.
Shepard was a bit ahead, and Dick and the sergeant, riding side by side,
came next. Behind were the troopers, a small picked band, daring
horsemen, used to every kind of danger.
They did not really anticipate the presence of an enemy in the pass.
They knew that Colonel Talbot's command had turned toward the southwest.
All the other Confederate forces must be gathering far up the valley
to meet Sheridan, and the South was too much reduced to raise new men.
Yet after a half hour's moderate riding down the slope Dick became sure
that some one wa
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