"Indeed, indeed, he really doesn't want us, Mrs. Matilda. Let's leave him

to his Immortals. I will be ready in a half-hour if I can write fast

here. Tell Caroline Darrah to hunt me up a fresh veil and phone Mammy

Kitty not to expect me home until--until midnight. Now while you dress I

will write."

"Very well," answered Mrs. Buchanan, "if you are sure you don't need us,

Major," and with a caress on his rampant lock she hurried away.

"You took an awful risk then, Major," said Phoebe with a twinkle in her

eyes.

"I know it," answered the major. "I've been taking them for nearly forty

years. It's added much to this affair between Mrs. Buchanan and me. Small

excitements are all that are necessary to fan the true connubial flame. I

didn't tell her about all this because I really hadn't the time. Tell her

on the way out, for I expect there will be a rattle of musketry as soon

as the dimity brigade hears the circumstances."

Then for a half-hour Phoebe and the major wrote rapidly until she

gathered her sheets together and left them under his paper-weight to be

delivered to the devil from the office.

She departed quietly, taking Mrs. Matilda and Caroline with her.

And for still another hour the major continued to push his pen rapidly

across the paper, then he settled down to the business of reading and

annotating his work.

For years Major Buchanan had been the editor of the _Gray Picket_, which

went its way weekly into almost every home in the South. It was a quaint,

bright little folio full of articles of interest to the old Johnnie Rebs

scattered south of Mason and Dixon. As a general thing it radiated good

cheer and a most patriotic spirit, but at times something would occur to

stir the gray ashes from which would fly a crash of sparks. Then again

the spirit of peace unutterable would reign in its columns. It was

published for the most part to keep up the desire for the yearly

Confederate reunions--those bivouacs of chosen spirits, the like of which

could never have been before and can never be after. The major's pen was

a trenchant one but reconstructed--in the main.

But the scene at the Country Club in the early afternoon was, according

to the major's prediction, far from peaceful in tone; it was confusion

confounded. Mrs. Peyton Kendrick was there and the card-tables were

deserted as the players, matrons and maids, gathered around her and

discussed excitedly the result of her "ways and means for the reunion"

mission to the city council, the judge's insult and David Kildare's

reply. They were every mother's daughter of them Dames of the Confederacy

and their very lovely gowns were none the less their fighting clothes.




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