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Battle Ground, The
BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS   BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS - Chapter III - The Coming of the Boy
Ellen Glasgow
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       _ The boy trudged on bravely, his stick sounding the road. Sharp pains ran
       through his feet where his shoes had worn away, and his head was swimming
       like a top. The only pleasant fact of which he had consciousness was that
       the taste of the currants still lingered in his mouth.
       When he reached the maple spring, he swung himself over the stone wall and
       knelt down for a drink, dipping the water in his hand. The spring was low
       and damp and fragrant with the breath of mint which grew in patches in the
       little stream. Overhead a wild grapevine was festooned, and he plucked a
       leaf and bent it into a cup from which he drank. Then he climbed the wall
       again and went on his way.
       He was wondering if his mother had ever walked along this road on so
       brilliant a night. There was not a tree beside it of which she had not told
       him--not a shrub of sassafras or sumach that she had not carried in her
       thoughts. The clump of cedars, the wild cherry, flowering in the spring
       like snow, the blasted oak that stood where the branch roads met, the
       perfume of the grape blossoms on the wall--these were as familiar to him as
       the streets of the little crowded town in which he had lived. It was as if
       nature had stood still here for twelve long summers, or as if he were
       walking, ghostlike, amid the ever present memories of his mother's heart.
       His mother! He drew his sleeve across his eyes and went on more slowly. She
       was beside him on the road, and he saw her clearly, as he had seen her
       every day until last year--a bright, dark woman, with slender, blue-veined
       hands and merry eyes that all her tears had not saddened. He saw her in a
       long, black dress, with upraised arm, putting back a crepe veil from her
       merry eyes, and smiling as his father struck her. She had always smiled
       when she was hurt--even when the blow was heavier than usual, and the blood
       gushed from her temple, she had fallen with a smile. And when, at last, he
       had seen her lying in her coffin with her baby under her clasped hands,
       that same smile had been fixed upon her face, which had the brightness and
       the chill repose of marble.
       Of all that she had thrown away in her foolish marriage, she had retained
       one thing only--her pride. To the end she had faced her fate with all the
       insolence with which she faced her husband. And yet--"the Lightfoots were
       never proud, my son," she used to say; "they have no false pride, but they
       know their place, and in England, between you and me, they were more
       important than the Washingtons. Not that the General wasn't a great man,
       dear, he was a very great soldier, of course--and in his youth, you know,
       he was an admirer of your Great-great-aunt Emmeline. But she--why, she was
       the beauty and belle of two continents--there's an ottoman at home covered
       with a piece of her wedding dress."
       And the house? Was the house still as she had left it on that Christmas
       Eve? "A simple gentleman's home, my child--not so imposing as Uplands, with
       its pillars reaching to the roof, but older, oh, much older, and built of
       brick that was brought all the way from England, and over the fireplace in
       the panelled parlour you will find the Lightfoot arms.
       "It was in that parlour, dear, that grandmamma danced a minuet with General
       Lafayette; it looks out, you know, upon a white thorn planted by the
       General himself, and one of the windows has not been opened for fifty
       years, because the spray of English ivy your Great-aunt Emmeline set out
       with her own hands has grown across the sash. Now the window is quite dark
       with leaves, though you can still read the words Aunt Emmeline cut with her
       diamond ring in one of the tiny panes, when young Harry Fitzhugh came in
       upon her just as she had written a refusal to an English earl. She was
       sitting in the window seat with the letter in her hand, and, when your
       Great-uncle Harry--she afterwards married him, you know--fell on his knees
       and cried out that others might offer her fame and wealth, but that he had
       nothing except love, she turned, with a smile, and wrote upon the pane
       'Love is best.' You can still see the words, very faint against the ivy
       that she planted on her wedding day--"
       Oh, yes, he knew it all--Great-aunt Emmeline was but the abiding presence
       of the place. He knew the lawn with its grove of elms that overtopped the
       peaked roof, the hall, with its shining floor and detached staircase that
       crooked itself in the centre where the tall clock stood, and, best of all,
       the white panels of the parlour where hung the portrait of that same
       fascinating great-aunt, painted, in amber brocade, as Venus with the apple
       in her hand.
       And his grandmother, herself, in her stiff black silk, with a square of
       lace turned back from her thin throat and a fluted cap above her corkscrew
       curls--her daguerreotype, taken in all her pride and her precision, was
       tied up in the bundle swinging on his arm.
       He passed Aunt Ailsey's cabin, and turned into the road with the chestnuts.
       A mile farther he came suddenly upon the house, standing amid the grove of
       elms, dwarfed by the giant trees that arched above it. A dog's bark sounded
       snappily from a kennel, but he paid no heed. He went up the broad white
       walk, climbed the steps to the square front porch, and lifted the great
       brass knocker. When he let it fall, the sound echoed through the shuttered
       house.
       The Major, who was sitting in his library with a volume of Mr. Addison open
       before him and a decanter of Burgundy at his right hand, heard the knock,
       and started to his feet. "Something's gone wrong at Uplands," he said
       aloud; "there's an illness--or the brandy is out." He closed the book,
       pushed aside the bedroom candle which he had been about to light, and went
       out into the hall. As he unbarred the door and flung it open, he began at
       once:--
       "I hope there's no ill news," he exclaimed.
       The boy came into the hall, where he stood blinking from the glare of the
       lamplight. His head whirled, and he reached out to steady himself against
       the door. Then he carefully laid down his bundle and looked up with his
       mother's smile.
       "You're my grandfather, and I'm very hungry," he said.
       The Major caught the child's shoulders and drew him, almost roughly, under
       the light. As he towered there above him, he gulped down something in his
       throat, and his wide nostrils twitched.
       "So you're poor Jane's boy?" he said at last.
       The boy nodded. He felt suddenly afraid of the spare old man with his long
       Roman nose and his fierce black eyebrows. A mist gathered before his eyes
       and the lamp shone like a great moon in a cloudy circle.
       The Major looked at the bundle on the floor, and again he swallowed. Then
       he stooped and picked up the thing and turned away.
       "Come in, sir, come in," he said in a knotty voice. "You are at home."
       The boy followed him, and they passed the panelled parlour, from which he
       caught a glimpse of the painting of Great-aunt Emmeline, and went into the
       dining room, where his grandfather pulled out a chair and bade him to be
       seated. As the old man opened the huge mahogany sideboard and brought out a
       shoulder of cold lamb and a plate of bread and butter, he questioned him
       with a quaint courtesy about his life in town and the details of his
       journey. "Why, bless my soul, you've walked two hundred miles," he cried,
       stopping on his way from the pantry, with the ham held out. "And no money!
       Why, bless my soul!"
       "I had fifty cents," said the boy, "that was left from my steamboat fare,
       you know."
       The Major put the ham on the table and attacked it grimly with the
       carving-knife.
       "Fifty cents," he whistled, and then, "you begged, I reckon?"
       The boy flushed. "I asked for bread," he replied, stung to the defensive.
       "They always gave me bread and sometimes meat, and they let me sleep in the
       barns where the straw was, and once a woman took me into her house and
       offered me money, but I would not take it. I--I think I'd like to send her
       a present, if you please, sir."
       "She shall have a dozen bottles of my best Madeira," cried the Major. The
       word recalled him to himself, and he got up and raised the lid of the
       cellaret, lovingly running his hand over the rows of bottles.
       "A pig would be better, I think," said the boy, doubtfully, "or a cow, if
       you could afford it. She is a poor woman, you know."
       "Afford it!" chuckled the Major. "Why, I'll sell your grandmother's silver,
       but I'll afford it, sir."
       He took out a bottle, held it against the light, and filled a wine glass.
       "This is the finest port in Virginia," he declared; "there is life in every
       drop of it. Drink it down," and, when the boy had taken it, he filled his
       own glass and tossed it off, not lingering, as usual, for the priceless
       flavour. "Two hundred miles!" he gasped, as he looked at the child with
       moist eyes over which his red lids half closed. "Ah, you're a Lightfoot,"
       he said slowly. "I should know you were a Lightfoot if I passed you in the
       road." He carved a slice of ham and held it out on the end of the knife.
       "It's long since you've tasted a ham like this--browned in bread crumbs,"
       he added temptingly, but the boy gravely shook his head.
       "I've had quite enough, thank you, sir," he answered with a quaint dignity,
       not unlike his grandfather's and as the Major rose, he stood up also,
       lifting his black head to look in the old man's face with his keen gray
       eyes.
       The Major took up the bundle and moved toward the door. "You must see your
       grandmother," he said as they went out, and he led the way up the crooked
       stair past the old clock in the bend. On the first landing he opened a door
       and stopped upon the threshold. "Molly, here is poor Jane's boy," he said.
       In the centre of a big four-post bed, curtained in white dimity, a little
       old lady was lying between lavender-scented sheets. On her breast stood a
       tall silver candlestick which supported a well-worn volume of "The
       Mysteries of Udolpho," held open by a pair of silver snuffers. The old
       lady's face was sharp and wizened, and beneath her starched white nightcap
       rose the knots of her red flannel curlers. Her eyes, which were very small
       and black, held a flickering brightness like that in live embers.
       "Whose boy, Mr. Lightfoot?" she asked sharply.
       Holding the child by the hand, the Major went into the room.
       "It's poor Jane's boy, Molly," he repeated huskily.
       The old lady raised her head upon her high pillows, and looked at him by
       the light of the candle on her breast. "Are you Jane's boy?" she questioned
       in suspicion, and at the child's "Yes, ma'am," she said, "Come nearer.
       There, stand between the curtains. Yes, you are Jane's boy, I see." She
       gave the decision flatly, as if his parentage were a matter of her
       pleasure. "And what is your name?" she added, as she snuffed the candle.
       The boy looked from her stiff white nightcap to the "log-cabin" quilt on
       the bed, and then at her steel hoops which were hanging from a chair back.
       He had always thought of her as in her rich black silk, with the tight gray
       curls about her ears, and at this revelation of her inner mysteries, his
       fancy received a checkmate.
       But he met her eyes again and answered simply, "Dandridge--they call me
       Dan--Dan Montjoy."
       "And he has walked two hundred miles, Molly," gasped the Major.
       "Then he must be tired," was the old lady's rejoinder, and she added with
       spirit: "Mr. Lightfoot, will you show Dan to Jane's old room, and see that
       he has a blanket on his bed. He should have been asleep hours ago--good
       night, child, be sure and say your prayers," and as they crossed the
       threshold, she laid aside her book and blew out her light.
       The Major led the way to "Jane's old room" at the end of the hall, and
       fetched a candle from somewhere outside. "I think you'll find everything
       you need," he said, stooping to feel the covering on the bed. "Your
       grandmother always keeps the rooms ready. God bless you, my son," and he
       went out, softly closing the door after him.
       The boy sat down on the steps of the tester bed, and looked anxiously round
       the three-cornered room, with its sloping windows filled with small, square
       panes of glass. By the candlelight, flickering on the plain, white walls
       and simple furniture, he tried to conjure back the figure of his
       mother,--handsome Jane Lightfoot. Over the mantel hung two crude drawings
       from her hand, and on the table at the bedside there were several books
       with her name written in pale ink on the fly leaves. The mirror to the high
       old bureau seemed still to hold the outlines of her figure, very shadowy
       against the greenish glass. He saw her in her full white skirts--she had
       worn nine petticoats, he knew, on grand occasions--fastening her coral
       necklace about her stately throat, the bands of her black hair drawn like a
       veil above her merry eyes. Had she lingered on that last Christmas Eve, he
       wondered, when her candlestick held its sprig of mistletoe and her room was
       dressed in holly? Did she look back at the cheerful walls and the stately
       furniture before she blew out her light and went downstairs to ride madly
       off, wrapped in his father's coat? And the old people drank their eggnog
       and watched the Virginia reel, and, when they found her gone, shut her out
       forever.
       Now, as he sat on the bed-steps, it seemed to him that he had come home for
       the first time in his life. All this was his own by right,--the queer old
       house, his mother's room, and beyond the sloping windows, the meadows with
       their annual yield of grain. He felt the pride of it swelling within him;
       he waited breathlessly for the daybreak when he might go out and lord it
       over the fields and the cattle and the servants that were his also. And at
       last--his head big with his first day's vanity--he climbed between the
       dimity curtains and fell asleep.
       When he awaked next morning, the sun was shining through the small square
       panes, and outside were the waving elm boughs and a clear sky. He was
       aroused by a knock on his door, and, as he jumped out of bed, Big Abel, the
       Major's driver and confidential servant, came in with the warm water. He
       was a strong, finely-formed negro, black as the ace of spades (so the Major
       put it), and of a singularly open countenance.
       "Hi! ain't you up yit, young Marster?" he exclaimed. "Sis Rhody, she sez
       she done save you de bes' puffovers you ever tase, en ef'n you don' come
       'long down, dey'll fall right flat."
       "Who is Sis Rhody?" inquired the boy, as he splashed the water on his face.
       "Who she? Why, she de cook."
       "All right, tell her I'm coming," and he dressed hurriedly and ran down
       into the hall where he found Champe Lightfoot, the Major's great-nephew,
       who lived at Chericoke.
       "Hello!" called Champe at once, plunging his hands into his pockets and
       presenting an expression of eager interest. "When did you get here?"
       "Last night," Dan replied, and they stood staring at each other with two
       pairs of the Lightfoot gray eyes.
       "How'd you come?"
       "I walked some and I came part the way on a steamboat. Did you ever see a
       steamboat?"
       "Oh, shucks! A steamboat ain't anything. I've seen George Washington's
       sword. Do you like to fish?"
       "I never fished. I lived in a city."
       Zeke came in with a can of worms, and Champe gave them the greater share of
       his attention. "I tell you what, you'd better learn," he said at last,
       returning the can to Zeke and taking up his fishing-rod. "There're a lot of
       perch down yonder in the river," and he strode out, followed by the small
       negro.
       Dan looked after him a moment, and then went into the dining room, where
       his grandmother was sitting at the head of her table, washing her pink
       teaset in a basin of soapsuds. She wore her stiff, black silk this morning
       with its dainty undersleeves of muslin, and her gray curls fell beneath her
       cap of delicate yellowed lace. "Come and kiss me, child," she said as he
       entered. "Did you sleep well?"
       "I didn't wake once," answered the boy, kissing her wrinkled cheek.
       "Then you must eat a good breakfast and go to your grandfather in the
       library. Your grandfather is a very learned man, Dan, he reads Latin every
       morning in the library.--Cupid, has Rhody a freshly broiled chicken for
       your young master?"
       She got up and rustled about the room, arranging the pink teaset behind the
       glass doors of the corner press. Then she slipped her key basket over her
       arm and fluttered in and out of the storeroom, stopping at intervals to
       scold the stream of servants that poured in at the dining-room door. "Ef'n
       you don' min', Ole Miss, Paisley, she done got de colick f'om a hull pa'cel
       er green apples," and "Abram he's des a-shakin' wid a chill en he say he
       cyarn go ter de co'n field."
       "Wait a minute and be quiet," the old lady responded briskly, for, as the
       boy soon learned, she prided herself upon her healing powers, and suffered
       no outsider to doctor her husband or her slaves. "Hush, Silas, don't say a
       word until I tell you. Cupid--you are the only one with any sense--measure
       Paisley a dose of Jamaica ginger from the bottle on the desk in the office,
       and send Abram a drink of the bitters in the brown jug--why, Car'line, what
       do you mean by coming into the house with a slit in your apron?"
       "Fo' de Lawd, Ole Miss, hit's des done cotch on de fence. All de ducks Aun'
       Meeley been fattenin' up fur you done got loose en gone ter water."
       "Well, you go, too, every one of you!" and she dismissed them with waves of
       her withered, little hands. "Send them out, Cupid. No, Car'line, not a
       word. Don't 'Ole Miss' me, I tell you!" and the servants streamed out again
       as they had come.
       When he had finished his breakfast the boy went back into the hall where
       Big Abel was taking down the Major's guns from the rack, and, as he caught
       sight of the strapping figure and kindly black face, he smiled for the
       first time since his home-coming. With a lordly manner, he went over and
       held out his hand.
       "I like _you_, Big Abel," he said gravely, and he followed him out into the
       yard.
       For the next few weeks he did not let Big Abel out of his sight. He rode
       with him to the pasture, he sat with him on his doorstep of a fine evening,
       and he drove beside him on the box when the old coach went out. "Big Abel
       says a gentleman doesn't go barefooted," he said to Champe when he found
       him without his shoes in the meadow, "and I'm a gentleman."
       "I'd like to know what Big Abel knows about it," promptly retorted Champe,
       and Dan grew white with rage and proceeded to roll up his sleeves. "I'll
       whip any man who says Big Abel doesn't know a gentleman!" he cried, making
       a lunge at his cousin. In point of truth, it was Champe who did the
       whipping in such free fights; but bruises and a bleeding nose had never
       scared the savage out of Dan. He would spring up from his last tumble as
       from his first, and let fly at his opponent until Big Abel rushed, in
       tears, between them.
       From the garrulous negro, the boy soon learned the history of his
       family--learned, indeed, much about his grandfather of which the Major
       himself was quite unconscious. He heard of that kindly, rollicking early
       life, half wild and wholly good-humoured, in which the eldest male
       Lightfoot had squandered his time and his fortune. Why, was not the old
       coach itself but an existing proof of Big Abel's stories? "'Twan' mo'n
       twenty years back dat Ole Miss had de fines' car'ige in de county," he
       began one evening on the doorstep, and the boy drove away a brood of
       half-fledged chickens and settled himself to listen. "Hadn't you better
       light your pipe, Big Abel?" he inquired courteously.
       Big Abel shuffled into the cabin and came back with his corncob pipe and a
       lighted taper. "We all ain' rid in de ole coach den," he said with a sigh,
       as he sucked at the long stem, and threw the taper at the chickens. "De ole
       coach hit uz th'owed away in de out'ouse, en I 'uz des stiddyin' 'bout
       splittin' it up fer kindlin' wood--en de new car'ige hit cos' mos' a mint
       er money. Ole Miss she uz dat sot up dat she ain' let de hosses git no
       sleep--nor me nurr. Ef'n she spy out a speck er dus' on dem ar wheels,
       somebody gwine year f'om it, sho's you bo'n--en dat somebody wuz me. Yes,
       Lawd, Ole Miss she 'low dat dey ain' never been nuttin' like dat ar car'ige
       in Varginny sence befo' de flood."
       "But where is it, Big Abel?"
       "You des wait, young Marster, you des wait twel I git dar. I'se gwine git
       dar w'en I come ter de day me an Ole Marster rid in ter git his gol' f'om
       Mars Tom Braxton. De car'ige hit sutney did look spick en span dat day, en
       I done shine up my hosses twel you could 'mos' see yo' face in dey sides.
       Well, we rid inter town en we got de gol' f'om Marse Braxton,--all tied up
       in a bag wid a string roun' de neck er it,--en we start out agin (en Ole
       Miss she settin' up at home en plannin' w'at she gwine buy), w'en we come
       ter de tave'n whar we all use ter git our supper, en meet Marse Plaintain
       Dudley right face to face. Lawd! Lawd! I'se done knowed Marse Plaintain
       Dudley afo' den, so I des tech up my hosses en wuz a-sailin' 'long by, w'en
       he shake his han' en holler out, 'Is yer wife done tied you ter 'er ap'on,
       Maje?' (He knowed Ole Miss don' w'ar no ap'on des es well es I knowed
       hit--dat's Marse Plaintain all over agin); but w'en he holler out dat, Ole
       Marster sez, 'Stop, Abel,' en I 'bleeged ter stop, you know, I wuz w'en Ole
       Marster tell me ter.
       "'I ain' tied, Plaintain, I'm tired,' sez Ole Marster, 'I'm tired losin'
       money.' Den Marse Plaintain he laugh like a devil. 'Oh, come in, suh, come
       in en win, den,' he sez, en Ole Marster step out en walk right in wid Marse
       Plaintain behint 'im--en I set dar all night,--yes, suh, I set dar all
       night a-hol'n' de hosses' haids.
       "Den w'en de sun up out come Ole Marster, white es a sheet, with his han's
       a-trem'lin', en de bag er gol' gone. I look at 'im fur a minute, en den I
       let right out, 'Ole Marster, whar de gol'?' en he stan' still en ketch his
       breff befo' he say, 'Hit's all gone, Abel, en de car'ige en de hosses dey's
       gone, too." En w'en I bust out cryin' en ax 'im, 'My hosses gone, Ole
       Marster?' he kinder sob en beckon me fer ter git down f'om my box, en den
       we put out ter walk all de way home.
       "W'en we git yer 'bout'n dinner time, dar wuz Ole Miss at de do' wid de sun
       in her eyes, en soon es she ketch sight er Ole Marster, she put up her han'
       en holler out, 'Marse Lightfoot, whar de car'ige?' But Ole Marster, he des
       hang down his haid, same es a dawg dat's done been whupped fur rabbit
       runnin', en he sob, 'Hit's gone, Molly en de bag er gol' en de hosses,
       dey's gone, too, I done loss 'em all cep'n Abel--en I'm a bad man, Molly.'
       Dat's w'at Ole Marster say, 'I'm a bad man, Molly,' en I stiddy 'bout my
       hosses en Ole Miss' car'ige en shet my mouf right tight,"
       "And Grandma? Did she cry?" asked the boy, breathlessly.
       "Who cry? Ole Miss? Huh! She des th'ow up her haid en low, 'Well, Marse
       Lightfoot, I'm glad you kep' Abel--en we'll use de ole coach agin',' sez
       she--en den she tu'n en strut right in ter dinner."
       "Was that all she ever said about it, Big Abel?"
       "Dat's all I ever hyern, honey, en I b'lieve hit's all Ole Marster ever
       hyern eeder, case w'en I tuck his gun out er de rack de nex' day, he was
       settin' up des es prim in de parlour a-sippin' a julep wid Marse Peyton
       Ambler, en I hyern 'im kinder whisper, 'Molly, she's en angel, Peyton--' en
       he ain' never call Ole Miss en angel twel he loss 'er car'ige." _
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本书目录

BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS
   BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS - Chapter I - "De Hine Foot er a He Frawg"
   BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS - Chapter II - At the Full of the Moon
   BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS - Chapter III - The Coming of the Boy
   BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS - Chapter IV - A House with an Open Door
   BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS - Chapter V - The School for Gentlemen
   BOOK FIRST - GOLDEN YEARS - Chapter VI - College Days
BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter I - The Major's Christmas
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter II - Betty dreams by the Fire
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter III - Dan and Betty
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter IV - Love in a Maze
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter V - The Major loses his Temper
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter VI - The Meeting in the Turnpike
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter VII - If this be Love
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter VIII - Betty's Unbelief
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter IX - The Montjoy Blood
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter X - The Road at Midnight
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter XI - At Merry Oaks Tavern
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter XII - The Night of Fear
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter XIII - Crabbed Age and Callow Youth
   BOOK SECOND - YOUNG BLOOD - Chapter XIV - The Hush before the Storm
BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter I - How Merry Gentlemen went to War
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter II - The Day's March
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter III - The Reign of the Brute
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter IV - After the Battle
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter V - The Woman's Part
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter VI - On the Road to Romney
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter VII - "I wait my Time"
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter VIII - The Altar of the War God
   BOOK THIRD - THE SCHOOL OF WAR - Chapter IX - The Montjoy Blood again
BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter I - The Ragged Army
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter II - A Straggler from the Ranks
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter III - The Cabin in the Woods
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter IV - In the Silence of the Guns
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter V - "The Place Thereof"
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter VI - The Peaceful Side of War -
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter VII - The Silent Battle
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter VIII - The Last Stand
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter IX - In the Hour of Defeat
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter X - On the March again
   BOOK FOURTH - THE RETURN OF THE VANQUISHED - Chapter XI - The Return