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"I am always ready to shake hands with my cousin," she returned, and blushed.
Colonel Stanton was then introduced, and a minute later Harry Powell asked about St. John Ruthven.
"Is he in the ranks, aunt?" he questioned.
"He is not," answered Mrs. Ruthven, and drew down her mouth.
"He cannot leave his mother," put in Marion contemptuously.
"Evidently you think he ought to go?"
"He is a strong, able-bodied man. I would go, were I in his place."
"So would I," put in Jack.
"Then he isn't very patriotic."
"Oh, yes he is--in words," returned Marion. "But in deeds----" She shrugged her pretty shoulders, and that meant a good deal.
Colonel Stanton and Mrs. Ruthven entered the house, followed by Jack, and presently Marion and the young surgeon found themselves alone in the garden.
CHAPTER XVII.
A SCENE IN THE SUMMERHOUSE.
In years gone by Marion and Harry Powell, as little girl and boy, had thought a good deal of each other.
Now, as the pair faced once more, much of the old feelings came back, and pretty Marion found herself blus.h.i.+ng deeply, she could not tell exactly why.
She despised Harry's uniform, yet she felt that he looked remarkably handsome in it, and not such an awful bear of a Yankee, after all. The manliness of the young surgeon's superior had likewise made a deep impression upon her.
Before going into the house Mrs. Ruthven had invited the young man to remain to dinner, and he had readily accepted the invitation. But he was by no means anxious to go into the house with the others.
"It is so nice and cool in the garden, Marion," he said. "Let us remain out here for a while, if you have no objections."
"As you will, Harry. But we need not stand. Let us go down to the old summerhouse. Of course you remember that place."
"To be sure, Marion--I remember it only too well. How you used to bring in the flowers and make bouquets and wreaths, and open a flower store and bid me buy----"
"And you wouldn't buy, more than half the time," she laughed. "You always were somewhat contrary, Harry. Is that what made you turn Yankee?"
"I hardly think so. I want to see all the slaves set free."
"Is that all?"
"Isn't that enough?"
"Most Yankees want to see the South broken up and ruined."
"No! no! That is a mistake."
The summerhouse was soon gained, and she sat down, and without ceremony he took a seat on the bench at her side.
"This takes me back ten or fifteen years," he declared, as he looked around at the familiar surroundings. "There are the same old magnolias, with the swing, and the same old rose bush, or new ones just like the old. Marion, you ought to be happy here."
"I was--until the war broke out, and poor papa was killed."
"Yes, that was a shock, and I felt it too, when the news reached me. He was a n.o.ble man, Marion."
"So they all say, Harry, but that does not give him back to us. And now another danger threatens us."
"Another danger? You mean the presence of our troops here? Marion, no harm shall come to you, if I can prevent it."
"But I do not mean that. It is concerning Jack."
"What of your brother?"
"Oh, Harry, he is just like a brother to me, and mamma thinks of him as her son! Now a stranger has appeared on the scene, and he wants to take Jack away from us."
"A stranger. Who?"
"A Confederate surgeon named Dr. Mackey. He claims that he is Jack's father."
"But is he?"
"We do not believe that he is. But he says he can prove it."
"This is news certainly, Marion. Will you give me the particulars?"
"I will," and she did so, to which Harry Powell listened with keen interest.
"Humph! And Jack does not like the man?"
"No, he despises him."
"That will make it awkward, if this doctor's story is true."
"He will have to bring strong proofs to make me believe the story, I can tell you that."
"I do not blame you, Marion." The young surgeon mused for a moment. "It runs in my mind that I have heard of this Dr. Mackey before."
"Where?"
"I cannot remember now. But I believe it was while I was practicing in Philadelphia."