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Peculiar

a tale of the great transition
  
  
  

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CHAPTER XLII. HOW IT WAS DONE.
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42. CHAPTER XLII.
HOW IT WAS DONE.

“From Thee is all that soothes the life of man,
His high endeavor and his glad success,
His strength to suffer and his will to serve:
But O, thou bounteous Giver of all good,
Thou art of all thy gifts thyself the crown!
Give what thou canst, without thee we are poor,
And with thee rich, take what thou wilt away!”

Cowper.


ALL the efforts of Peculiar to induce the bloodhound,
Victor, to take the scent of either of the gloves, had
proved unavailing. At every trial Victor persisted in going
straight to the jail where his master, Antoine, was confined.
Peek began to despair of discovering any trace of the abducted
maiden.

Were dumb animals ever guided by spirit influence? There
were many curious facts showing that birds were sometimes
used to convey impressions, apparently from higher intelligences.
At sea, not long ago, a bird had flown repeatedly in the
helmsman's face, till the latter was induced to change his course.
The consequence was, his encounter with a ship's crew in a
boat, who must have perished that night in the storm, had they
not been picked up. There were also instances in which dogs
would seem to have been the mere instruments of a superhuman
and supercanine sagacity. But Victor plainly was not
thus impressible. His instincts led him to his master, but beyond
that point they would not or could not be made to exert
themselves.

Had not Peek's faith in the triumph of the right been large,
he would have despaired of any help from the coming of the
United States forces. For weeks the newspapers had teemed
with paragraphs, some scientific and some rhetorical, showing
that New Orleans must not and could not be taken. They all
overflowed with bitterness toward the always “cowardly and
base-born” Yankees. The Mayor of the city wrote, in the


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true magniloquent and grandiose style affected by the Rebel
leaders: “As for hoisting any flag not of our own adoption,
the man lives not in our midst whose hand and heart would not
be paralyzed at the mere thought of such an act!

A well-known physician, who had simply expressed the opinion
that possibly the city might have to surrender, had been
waited on by a Vigilance Committee and warned. Taking the
hint, the man of rhubarb forthwith handed over a contribution
of five hundred dollars, in expiation of his offence.

All at once the confident heart of Rebeldom was stunned by
the news that two of the Yankee steamers had passed Forts
Jackson and St. Philip. The great ram had been powerless to
prevent it. Then followed the announcement that seven, —
then thirteen, — then twenty, — then the whole of Farragut's
fleet, excepting the Varuna, were coming. Yes, the Hartford
and the Brooklyn and the Mississippi and the Pensacola and
the Richmond, and the Lord knew how many more, were on
their way up the great river. They would soon be at English
Bend; nay, they would soon be at the Levee, and have the
haughty city entirely at their mercy!

No sooner was the terrible news confirmed than the Rebel
authorities ordered the destruction of all the cotton-bales stored
on the Levee. The rage, the bitterness, the anguish of the pro-slavery
chiefs was indescribable. Several attempts were made
to fire the city, and they would probably have succeeded, but
for a timely fall of rain. On the landing of the United States
forces, the frenzy of the Secessionists passed all bounds; and
one poor fellow, a physician, was hung by them for simply telling
a United States officer where to find the British Consulate.

But if some hearts were sick and crushed at the spectacle,
there were many thousands in that great metropolis to whom
the sight of the old flag carried a joy and exultation transcending
the power of words to express; and one of these hearts
beat under the black skin of Peek. Followed by Victor, he
ran to the Levee where United States troops were landing, and
there — O joy unspeakable! — standing on the upper deck of
one of the smaller steamers, and almost one of the first persons
he saw, was Mr. Vance.

Peek shouted his name, and Vance, leaping on shore, threw


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his arms impulsively round the brawny negro, and pressed him
to his breast. Brief the time for explanations. In a few
clear words, Peek made Vance comprehend the precise state of
affairs, and in five minutes the latter, at the head of a couple of
hundred soldiers, and with Peek walking at his side, was on
his way to the jail. Victor, the bloodhound, evidently understood
it all. He saw, at length, that he was going to carry his
point.

Arrived at the jail, a large, square, whitewashed building,
with barred windows, they encountered at the outer door three
men smoking cigars. The foremost of them, a stern-looking,
middle-aged man, with fierce, red whiskers, and who was in his
shirt-sleeves, came forward, evidently boiling over with a wrath
he was vainly trying to conceal, and asked what was wanted.

“There is a black man, Antoine Lafour, confined here.
Produce him at once.”

“But, sir,” said the deputy, “this is altogether against civilized
usage. This is a place for —”

“I can't stop to parley with you. Produce the man instantly.”

“I shall do no such thing.”

Vance turned to an orderly, and said, “Arrest this man.”
At once the deputy was seized on either side by two soldiers.
“Now, sir,” said Vance, cocking his pistol and taking out his
watch, “Produce Antoine Lafour in five minutes, or I will
shoot you dead.”

The bloodhound, who had been scenting with curious nose
the man's person, now seconded the menace by a savage growl,
which seemed to have more effect even than the pistol, for the
deputy, turning to one of the men in attendance, said sulkily,
“Bring out the nigger, and be quick about it.”

In three minutes Antoine appeared, and the dog leaped bodily
into his arms, the negro talking to him much as he would to
a human being. “I knowed you 'd do it, ole feller! Thar!
Down! Down, I say, ole Vic! It takes you, — don't it?
Down! Behave yourself afore folk. Why, Peek, is this
you?”

“Yes, Antoine, and this is Mr. Vance, and here 's the old
flag, and you 're no longer a slave.”


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“What? I no longer a — No! Say them words agin,
Peek! Free? Owner of my own flesh an' blood? Dis arm
mine? Dis head mine? Bress de Lord, Peek! Bress him
for all his mercies! Amen! Hallelujah!”

The released negro could not forego a few wild antics expressive
of his rapture. Peek checked him, and bade him
remember the company he was in; and Antoine bowed to
Vance and said: “'Scuze me, Kunnle. I don't perfess to be
sich a high-tone gemmleman as Peek here, but —”

“Stop!” cried Peek; “where did you get those last words?”

“What words?” asked Antoine, showing the whites of his
eyes with an expression of concern at Peek's suddenly serious
manner.

“Those words, — `high-tone gemmleman.' Whom did you
ever hear use them?”

“Yah, yah! Wall, Peek, those words I got from Kunnle
Delancy Hyde.”

“Where, — where and when did you get them?”

“Bress yer, Peek, jes now, — not two minutes ago, — dar in
the gallery whar the Kunnle's walkin' up and down.”

Peek smiled significantly at Vance, and the latter, approaching
the deputy who had not yet been released from custody,
remarked: “You have a man named Hyde confined there.”

“Yes, Delancy Hyde. The scoundrel stole the funds given
to him to pay recruiting expenses.”

“For which I desire to thank him. Bring him out.”

“But, sir, you would n't —”

“Five minutes, Mr. Deputy, I give you, a second time, in
which to obey my orders. If Mr. Delancy Hyde is n't forthcoming
before this second-hand goes round five times, one of
your friends here shall have the opportunity of succeeding you
in office, and you shall be deposited where the wicked cease
from troubling.”

The deputy was far from being agreeably struck at the prospect
of quitting the company of the wicked. But for them his
vocation would be wanting. And so he nodded to a subordinate,
and in three minutes out stalked the astonishing figure
of Colonel Delancy Hyde, wearing a dirty woollen Scotch cap,
and attired in the coarsest costume of the jail.


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Ignorant of the great event of the day, not perceiving the
old flag, and supposing that he had been called out to be shot,
Hyde walked up to Vance, and said: “Kunnle, you look like
a high-tone gemmleman, and afore I 'm shot I want ter make a
confidential request.”

“Well, sir, what is it?” said Vance, shading his face with
his cap so as not to be recognized. “Speak quick. I can't
spare you three minutes.”

“Wall, Kunnle, it 's jes this: I 've a sister, yer see, in Alabamy,
jest out of Montgomery; her name 's Dorothy Rusk.
She 's a widder with six childern; one on 'em an idiot, one a
cripple, and the eldest gal in a consumption. Dorothy has had
a cruel hard time on it, as you may reckon, an' I 've ollerz
paid her rent and a leetle over till this cussed war broke out,
since when I 've been so hard up I 've had ter scratch gravel
thunderin' lively to git my own grub. Them Confed'rate rags
that I 'propriated, I meant to send to Dorothy; but the fogies,
they war too quick for me. Wall, ter come ter the pint: I
want you ter write a letter ter Dorothy, jes tellin' her that the
reason why Delancy can't remit is that Delancy has been shot;
and tellin' her he sent his love and all that — whar you can't
come it too strong, Kunnle, for yer see Dorothy an' I, we was
'bout the same age, and used ter make mud-pies together, and
sail our boats together down thar in the old duck-pond, when
we was childern; an' so yer see —”

Vance looked into his face. Yes, the battered old reprobate
was trying to gulp down his agitation, and there were tears
rolling down his cheeks. Vance was touched.

“Hyde, don't you know me?” he said.

“What! Mr. Vance? Mr. Vance!”

“Nobody else, Hyde. He comes here a United States officer,
you see. New Orleans has surrendered to Uncle Sam.
Look at that flag. Instead of being shot, you are set at liberty.
Here 's your old friend, Peek.”

The knees of Colonel Delancy Hyde smote each other, and
his florid face grew pale. Flesh and blood he could encounter
well as any man, but a ghost was a piling on of something he
had n't bargained for. Yet there palpably before him stood
Peek, the identical Peek he believed to have been drowned in
the Mississippi some fifteen years back.


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“Wall, how in creation —”

“It 's all right, Hyde,” interrupted Vance. “And now if
you want that sister of yours provided for, you just keep as
close to my shadow as you can.”

Hyde was too confounded and stupefied to make any reply.
These revelations coming upon him like successive shocks from
a galvanic-battery, were too much for his equanimity. Awestruck
and stunned, he stared stupidly, first at Vance, then at
the flag, and finally at Peek.

The roll of the drum, accompanied by Vance's orders to the
soldiers, roused him, and then attaching himself to Peek, he
marched on with the rest, Peek beguiling the way with much
useful and enlightening information.

They had not marched farther than the next carriage-stand
when Vance, leaving Captain Onslow in command, with orders
to bivouac in Canal Street, slipped out of the ranks, and beckoning
to Peek and his companions, they all, including Antoine
and Hyde, entered a vehicle which drove off with the faithful
Victor running at its side.

Behold them now in Vance's old room at the St. Charles.
The immediate matter of concern was, how to find Clara?
How was the search to be commenced?

Antoine, a bright, well-formed negro of cheerful aspect, after
scratching his wool thoughtfully for a moment, said: “Peek,
you jes gib me them two glubs you say you 've got.”

Antoine then took the gloves, and, throwing them on the
floor, called Victor's attention to them, and said: “Now, Vic,
I want yer to show these gemmen your broughten up. Ob
dem two glubs, you jes bring me de one dat you tink you kn
fine de owner ob right off straight, widout any mistake. Now,
be car'ful.”

Victor snuffed at the large glove, and instantly kicked it
aside with contempt. Then, after a thoughtful scenting of the
small glove, he took it up in his mouth and carried it to
Antoine.

“Berry well,” said Antoine. “Dat 's your choice, is it? Now
tell me, Vic, hab yer had yer dinner?”

The dog barked affirmatively.

“Berry well. Now take a good drink.” And, filling a


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washbowl with water, Antoine gave it to the dog, who lapped
from it greedily.

“Hab yer had enough?” asked Antoine.

Victor uttered an affirmative bark.

“Wall, now,” said Antoine, “you jes take dis ere glub, an
don't yer come back till you fine out su'thin' 'bout de owner ob
it. Understan'?”

The dog again barked assent, and Antoine, escorting him
down-stairs and out-of-doors, gave him the glove. Victor at
once seized it between his teeth and trotted off at “double-quick,”
up St. Charles Street.

During the interval of waiting for Victor's return, “Tell me
now, Peek,” said Vance, “of your own affairs. Have you
been able to get any clew from Amos Slink to guide you in
your search for your wife?”

“All that he could do,” replied Peek, “was merely to confirm
what I already suspected as to Charlton's agency in
luring her back into the clutch of Slavery.”

“I must make the acquaintance of that Charlton,” said
Vance. “And by the way, Hyde, you must know something
of the man.”

“I know more nor I wish I did,” replied Hyde. “I could
scar' up some old letters of his'n, I 'm thinkin', ef I was ter
sarch in an old trunk in the house of the Widder Rusk (her
as is my sister) in Montgomery.”

“Those letters we must have, Hyde,” said Vance. “You
must lay your plans to get them. 'T would be hardly safe for
you to trust yourself among the Rebels. They 've an awkward
fashion of hanging up without ceremony all who profane the
sanctity of Confederate scrip. But you might send for the
letters.”

“That 's a fak, Kunnle Vance. I 'm gittin' over my taste
for low society. I want nothin' more ter do with the Rebels.
But I 've a nephew at Montgomery, — Delancy Hyde Rusk,
— who can smuggle them letters through the Rebel lines easy
as a snake kn cahrry a toad through a stump-fence. He 'll go
his death for his Uncle Delancy. He 's got the raal Hyde
blood in him, — he has, — an' no mistake.”

“Can he read and write?”


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“I 'm proud to say he kin, Kunnle. I towt his mother, and
she towt him and the rest of the childern.”

“Well, Hyde, go into the next room and write a letter to
your nephew, telling him to start at once for New York city,
and report himself to Mr. William C. Vance, Astor House.
I 'll give you a couple of hundred dollars to enclose for him to
pay his expenses, and a couple of hundred more for your
sister.”

Four hundred dollars! What an epoch would it be in their
domestic history, when that stupendous sum should fall into
the hands of Mrs. Rusk! Colonel Hyde moved with alacrity
to comply with Vance's bidding.

Mr. Winslow and Captain Onslow now entered, followed by
Colonel Blake, between whom and Vance a friendship had
sprung up during the voyage from New York. Suddenly
Peek, who had been looking from the window, exclaimed:
“There goes the man who could tell us, if he would, what we
want.”

“Who is it?” cried Vance.

“Ratcliff's lawyer, Semmes. See him crossing the street!”

“Captain Onslow,” said Vance, “arrest the man at once.”

Five minutes did not elapse before Semmes, bland and suave,
and accompanied by Peek and Onslow, entered the room.

“Ha! my dear friend Winslow!” cried the old lawyer, putting
out his hand, “I 'm delighted to see you. Make me acquainted
with your friends.”

Winslow introduced him to all, not omitting Peek, to whom
Semmes bowed graciously, as if they had never met before,
and as if the negro were the whitest of Anglo-Saxons.

“Sit down, Mr. Semmes,” said Vance; “I have a few questions
to put to you. Please answer them categorically. Are
you acquainted with a young lady, claimed by Mr. Carberry
Ratcliff as a slave, educated by him at Mrs. Gentry's school,
and recently abducted by parties unknown from his house near
Lafayette Square?”

“I do know such a young person,” replied Semmes; “I had
her in my charge after Mr. Ratcliff's compulsory departure
from the city.”

“Well. And do you know where she now is?”


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“I certainly do not.”

“Have you seen her since she left Ratcliff's house?”

Happily for Semmes, before he could perjure himself irretrievably,
there was a knock at the door, and Antoine entered,
followed by the bloodhound, bearing something tied in a white
handkerchief, in his mouth.

A general sensation and uprising! For all except the lawyer
had been made acquainted with the nature of the dog's
search. Semmes glanced at the bloodhound, — then at the
negroes, — and then at the other persons present, with their
looks of absorbed attention. Surely, there was a dénouement
expected; and might it not be fatal to him, if he left it to be
supposed that he was colluding with Ratcliff in what would be
stigmatized as rascality by low, cowardly, base-born Yankees,
though, after all, it was only the act of a slave-owner enforcing
his legal rights in a legitimate way?

Darting forward, just as Vance received from Antoine the
little bundle the dog had been carrying, the lawyer exclaimed:
“Colonel Vance, I do not know, but I can conjecture where
the girl is. Seek her at Number 21 Camelia Place.”

Vance paused, and looked the old lawyer straight in the eyes
till the latter withdrew his glance, and resorted to his snuff-box
to cover his discomfiture. Deep as he was, he saw that he had
been fathomed. But Vance bowed politely, and said: “We
will see, sir, if your information agrees with that of the dog.”

He untied the handkerchief, took out the paper-weight, and
underneath it found Clara's note, which he opened and read.
Then turning to the lawyer, he said: “I congratulate you, Mr.
Semmes. You were right in your conjecture.

None but Semmes and Peek noticed the slightly sarcastic
stress which Vance put on this last word from his lips.

Vance now knelt on one knee, and resting on the other the
fore-legs of the bloodhound, patted his head and praised him in
a manner which Victor, by his low, gratified whine, seemed
fully to comprehend and appreciate.

Peek, who had been restless ever since the words “21 Camelia
Place” had fallen on his ears, here said: “Lend me your
revolver, Mr. Vance, and don't leave till I come back. I promise
not to rob you of your share in this work.”


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“I will trust you with the preliminary reconnoissance, Peek,”
said Vance, giving up the weapon. “Be quick about it.”

Peek beckoned to Antoine, and the two went out, followed by
the bloodhound.

Mr. Semmes, now realizing that by some display of zeal,
even if it were superserviceable, he might get rid of the ill
odor which would follow from lending himself to Ratcliff's
schemes, approached Vance and said: “Colonel, it was only
quite recently that I heard of the suspicions that were entertained
of foul play in the case of that little girl claimed by
Ratcliff as a slave. Immediately I looked into the notary's
record, and I there found that the slave-child is set down as a
quadroon; a misstatement which clearly invalidates the title. I
have also discovered a letter, written in French, and published
in L'Abeille, in which some important facts relative to the loss
of the Pontiac are given. The writer, Monsieur Laboulie, is
now in the city. Finally, I have to inform you that Mr. Ripper,
the auctioneer who sold the child, is now in this house. I
would suggest that both he and the Mrs. Gentry, who brought
her up, should be secured this very evening, as witnesses.”

“I like your suggestion, Mr. Semmes,” said Vance, in a tone
which quite reassured the lawyer; “go on and make all the
investigations in your power bearing on this case. Get the
proper affidavit from Monsieur Laboulie. Secure the parties
you recommend as witnesses. I employ you professionally.”

In his rapid and penetrating judgments of men, Vance rarely
went astray; and when Semmes, who was thinking of a little
private business of his own with the President of the Lafayette
Bank, remarked, “If you can dismiss me now, Colonel, I will
meet you an hour hence at any place you name,” Vance knew
the old lawyer would keep his promise, and replied: “Certainly,
Mr. Semmes. You will find me at 21 Camelia Place.”

Peek and Antoine, taking a carriage, drove at full speed to
the house designated. Here they found to their surprise in
the mulatto Sam, a member of a secret society of men of African
descent, bound together by faith in the speedy advent of
the United States forces, and by the resolve to demand emancipation.
Peek at once satisfied himself that Clara was in no
immediate danger. He found that Sam had withdrawn the


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bullets from Ratcliff's revolver, and was himself well armed,
having determined to shoot down Ratcliff, if necessary, in liberating
Clara. In pursuance of his plan he had lured the
negrowoman, Agnes, up-stairs, under the pretence already
mentioned. Here he had gagged, bound, and confined her
securely. Hardly had he finished this job, when, looking out
of the window, he had seen Peek and Antoine get out of a
carriage and reconnoitre the house. Instantly he had run down-stairs,
opened the front door, and made himself known.

It was arranged that Antoine and Sam, well armed, and supported
by the bloodhound, should remain and look after Ratcliff,
not precipitating action, however, and not communicating
with Clara, whose relief Peek had generously resolved should
first come from the hands of Vance.

Then jumping into the carriage, Peek drove to Lafayette
Square, and taking in Madame Josephine and Esha, returned
to the St. Charles Hotel. Here he told Vance all he
had done, and introduced the two women, — Vance greeting
Esha with much emotion, as he recognized in her that attendant
at his wife's death-bed for whom he had often sought.

Four carriages were now drawn up on Gravier Street. Into
one stepped Winslow, Hyde, and Vance; into another Semmes,
Blake, Onslow, and Blake's trusty servant, Sergeant Decazes,
the escaped slave. Into the third carriage stepped Madame
Josephine, Esha, and Peek; and into the fourth, Mrs. Gentry
and Mr. Ripper.

This last vehicle must be regarded as the centre of interest,
for over it the Loves and Graces languishingly hovered.

In introducing Ripper to Mrs. Gentry, Semmes had remarked,
in an aside to the former: “A retired schoolma'am:
some money there!” Here was a shaft that went straight to
the auctioneer's heart. In three minutes he drew from the
lady the fact that, ten days before, she had received a visit from
a Vigilance Committee, who had warned her, if she did not
pay over to them five thousand dollars within a week, her
house would be confiscated, sold, and the proceeds paid over to
the Confederate treasury. “Five thousand dollars indeed!”
said the lady, in relating the interview; “a whole year's income!
O, have n't they been nicely come up with!”

The Confederate highwaymen had done what Satan recom


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mended the Lord to do in the case of Job: they had tried Mrs.
Gentry in her substance, and she had not stood the test. It
had wrought a very sudden and radical change in her political
notions. Even slavery was no longer the august and unapproachable
thing which she had hitherto imagined; and she
threw out a sentiment which savored so much of the abolition
heresy, that Ripper, thinking to advance himself in her good
opinion, avowed himself boldly an emancipationist, and declared
that slavery was “played out.” These words, strange to say,
did not make him less charming in Mrs. Gentry's eyes.

The drive in the carriage soon offered an opportunity for
tenderer topics, and before they reached Camelia Street, the
enterprising auctioneer had declared that he really believed he
had at last, after a life-long search, found his “affinity.” And
from that he ventured to glide an arm round the lady's waist,
— a familiarity at which her indignation was so feebly simulated,
that it only added new fuel to hope.

But Camelia Place was now reached, and the carriages stopped.
The whole party were noiselessly introduced into the
house. Vance darted up to the room where Clara's note had
instructed him he could find her. Seeing the key on the outside,
he turned it, opened the door, and presented himself to
Clara in the manner already related. The unsuspecting Ratcliff
soon followed, and then followed the scenes upon which
the curtain has already been raised.

As Vance left the house, with Clara on his arm, several of
Ratcliff's slaves gathered round them. To all these Vance
promised immediate freedom and help. An old black hostler,
named Juba, or Jube, who was also a theologian and a strenuous
preacher, was spokesman for the freedmen. He proposed
“tree chares for Massa Vance.” They were given with a will.

“An' now, Massa Vance,” said the Reverend Jube, “may
de Lord bress yer fur comin' down har from de Norf ter free
an' help we. De Lord bress yer an' de young Missis likewise.
An' when yer labors am all ended, an' yer 'v chewed all de
hard bones, an' swollerd de bitter pill, may yer go ober Jordan
wid a tight hold on de Lord, an' not leeb go till yer git clar
inter de city ob Zion.”[1]

 
[1]

Actual words of a negro preacher, taken down on the spot by a hearer.