The Iron Game eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 534 pages of information about The Iron Game.

The Iron Game eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 534 pages of information about The Iron Game.

“There are but three horses.  If you are up to an adventure I think we can make this turn to our profit.”

“I’m up to anything, as the cat said when Biddy Hiks’s plug ran her up the crab-tree.”

“Very well.  Come after me.”

The sorghum, meanwhile, had been handed to the raiders in the cabin, and the men could be heard making merry.

“You, Gabe, go out and mind the horses; see that they don’t twist the bridles about their legs.”

Gabe sallied out and one of his brothers with him.  As they neared the horses Jack came upon them, and taking the elder, Gabe, in the shadow of the house, he whispered: 

“Have the soldiers’ pistols?”

“Yes, sah.”

“Where are they?”

“De put dem on de stool, neah de doah.”

“Good.  How many?”

“Free.”

“Have they swords?”

“Yes, sah.”

“Where are they?”

“On de stool, too.”

“That will do; keep with the horses, and don’t be frightened if you hear anything.  We’ll give you freedom yet, if you’ll be prudent.”

He could hear the men grumbling because the food was not enough to go around.  The liquor had begun to work in their systems, drinking so lavishly, and without nourishment to absorb its fiery quality.  Jack let enough time pass to give this ally full play in disabling the troopers, then taking Barney to the rear of the cabin, whispered: 

“I will dash in at the door, seize the weapons, and demand surrender.  You make a great ado here; give command, as if there were a squad.  The boys will make a loud clatter with the horses, and we shall bag the game without a blow.  Now, be prudent.  Barney, and we will go into the Union lines in triumph.”

Inside the men were laughing uproariously, mingling accounts of love and war in a confused medley—­how a sweetheart in Petersburg was only waiting for the stars on her lover’s collar to make him happy; how the Yankees would be wiped out of the Peninsula as soon as Jack Magruder got his nails pared for fight; how three Yankees had been gobbled that day, and how others were in the net to be taken in the morning.  The bacchanal was at its highest when Jack, dashing into the open doorway, placed himself between the drinkers and their arms, and cried, sternly, as he pointed his pistol at the group: 

“Surrender, men!  You are surrounded!”

“Close up, there!  Keep your guns on a line with the windows; don’t fire till I give the order!” Barney could be heard at the window in suppressed tones, as he, too, covered the maudlin company.  Gabe and his brother added to the effect of numbers by clattering the stirrups of the horses, so that the clearing seemed alive with armed men.

The troopers, sobered and astonished, half rose, and then as these sounds of superior force emphasized the menace of Jack’s pistol in front and Barney’s in the rear, they sank back in their seats, the spokesman saying, tipsily: 

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Project Gutenberg
The Iron Game from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.