THE GHOST OF WASHINGTON.
IT was early on Christmas morning when John
Reilly wheeled away from a picturesque little
village where he had passed the previous night,
to continue his cycling tour through eastern
Pennsylvania. To-day his intention was to stop
at Valley Forge, and then to ride on up the
Schuylkill Valley, visiting in turn the many
points of historical interest that lay along his
route. Valley Forge, his road map indicated,
was but a short distance further on. All around
him were the hills and fields and roads over
which Washington and his half-starved army had
foraged and roamed throughout the trying
winter of 1777-8 one hundred and twenty-six years
ago.
It was a beautiful Christmas day, truly, and, as
he wheeled along, young Reilly's thoughts were
almost equally divided between the surrounding
pleasant scenery and the folks at home, who, he
knew very well, were assembling at just about the
present time around a heavily laden Christmas
tree in the front parlor. The sun rose higher
and higher and Reilly pedaled on down the valley,
passing every now and then quaint, pleasant-looking
farmhouses, many of which, no doubt,
had been built anterior to the period which had
given the vicinity its history.
Arriving, finally, at a place where the road
forked off in two directions, Reilly was puzzled
which way to go on. There happened to be a
dwelling close by. Accordingly he dismounted,
left his wheel leaning against a gate-post at the
side of the road, and walked up a wretchedly
flagged walk leading to the house, with the idea
of getting instructions from its inmates.
Situated in the center of an unkempt field of
rank grass and weeds, the building lay back from
the highway probably one hundred and fifty feet.
It was long and low in shape, containing but one
story and having what is termed a gabled roof,
under which there must have been an attic of no
mean size. On coming close to the house, a fact
Reilly had not noticed from the road became
plainly evident. It was deserted. He saw that
the roof and side shingles were in wretched
condition; that the window sashes and frames as
well as the doors and door frames were missing
from the openings in the side walls where once
they had been, and that the entire side of the
house, including that part of the stone foundation
which showed above the ground, was full of
cracks and seams. At first on the point of turning
back, he concluded to see what the interior
was like anyway.
Accordingly he went inside. Glancing around
the large dust-filled room he had entered his gaze
at first failed to locate any object of the least
interest. A rickety appearing set of steps went up
into the attic from one side of the apartment and
over in one corner was a large open fireplace,
from the walls of which much of the brickwork
had become loosened and fallen out. Reilly had
started up the steps toward the attic, when
happening to look back for an instant, his attention
was attracted to a singular-looking, jug-shaped
bottle no larger than a vinegar cruet, which lay
upon its side on the hearth of the fireplace, partly
covered up by debris of loose bricks and mortar.
He hastened back down the steps and crossed the
room, taking the bottle up in his hand and
examining it with curiosity. Being partly filled
with a liquid of some kind or other the bottle was
very soon uncorked and held under the young
man's nose. The liquid gave forth a peculiar,
pungent and inviting odor. Without further
hesitation Reilly's lips sought the neck of the bottle.
It is hardly possible to describe the pleasure and
satisfaction his senses experienced as he drank.
While the fluid was still gurgling down his
throat a heavy hand was placed most suddenly
on his shoulder and his body was given a violent
shaking. The bottle fell to the floor and was
broken into a hundred pieces.
"Hello!" said a rough voice almost in Reilly's
ear. "Who are you, anyway? And what are you
doing within the lines? A spy, I'll be bound."
As most assuredly there had been no one else
in the vicinity of the building when he had
entered it and with equal certainty no one had
come down the steps from the attic, Reilly was
naturally surprised and mystified by this
unexpected assault. He struggled instinctively to
break loose from the unfriendly grasp, and when
he finally succeeded he twisted his body around
so that he faced across the room. Immediately
he made the remarkable discovery that there
were four other persons in the apartment three
uncouth-looking fellows habited in fantastic but
ragged garments, and a matronly-looking woman,
the latter standing over a washtub which had
been elevated upon two chairs in a corner near
the fireplace. To all appearance the woman had
been busy at her work and had stopped for the
moment to see what the men were going to do;
her waist sleeves were rolled up to the shoulders
and her arms dripped with water and soapsuds.
Over the tops of the tubs, partly filled with
water, there were visible the edges of several
well-soaked fabrics. Too add to his astonishment he
noticed that in the chimney-place, which a
moment before was falling apart, but now seemed
to be clean and in good condition, a cheerful fire
burned, and that above the flames was suspended
an iron pot, from which issued a jet of steam.
He noticed also that the entire appearance of the
room had undergone a great change. Every
thing seemed to be in good repair, tidy and neat;
the ceilings, the walls and the door; even the
stairway leading to the attic. The openings in
the walls were fitted with window sashes and
well-painted doors. The apartment had, in fact,
evolved under his very eyesight from a state of
absolute ruin into one of excellent preservation.
All of this seemed so weird and uncanny, that
Reilly stood for a moment or two in the
transformed apartment, utterly dumbfounded, with
his mouth wide open and his eyes all but popping
out of his head. He was brought to his senses
by the fellow who had shaken him growling out:
"Come! Explain yourself!"
"An explanation is due me," Reilly managed
to gasp.
"Don't bandy words with the rascal, Harry,"
one of the other men spoke up. "Bring him along
to headquarters."
Thereupon, without further parley, the three
men marched Reilly in military fashion into the
open air and down to the road. Here he picked
up at the gate-post his bicycle, while they
unstacked a group of three old-fashioned-looking
muskets located close by. When the young man
had entered the house a few minutes before, this
stack of arms had not been there. He could not
understand it. Neither could he understand, on
looking back at the building as he was marched
off down the road, the mysterious agency that
had transformed its dilapidated exterior, just as
had been the interior, into a practically new
condition.
While they trudged along, the strangers
exhibited a singular interest in the wheel Reilly
pushed at his side, running their coarse hands
over the frame and handle-bar, and acting on
the whole as though they never before had seen a
bicycle. This in itself was another surprise.
He had hardly supposed there were three men in
the country so totally unacquainted with what is
a most familiar piece of mechanism everywhere.
At the same time that they were paying so
much attention to the wheel, Reilly in turn was
studying with great curiosity his singular-looking
captors. Rough, unprepossessing appearing
fellows they were, large of frame and unshaven,
and, it must be added, dirty of face. What
remained of their very ragged clothing, he had
already noticed, was of a most remarkable cut and
design, resembling closely the garments worn by
the Continental militiamen in the War of
Independence. The hats were broad, low of crown,
and three-cornered in shape; the trousers were
buff-colored and ended at the knees, and the long,
blue spike-tailed coats were flapped over at the
extremities of the tails, the flaps being fastened
down with good-sized brass buttons. Leather
leggings were strapped around cowhide boots,
through the badly worn feet of which, in places
where the leather had cracked open, the flesh,
unprotected by stockings, could be seen. Dressed
as he was, in a cleanly, gray cycling costume,
Reilly's appearance, most assuredly, was strongly
in contrast to that of his companions.
After a brisk walk of twenty minutes, during
which they occasionally met and passed by one
or two or perhaps a group of men clothed and
outfitted like Reilly's escorts, the little party
followed the road up a slight incline and around a
well-wooded bend to the left, coming quite
suddenly, and to the captive, very unexpectedly, to
what was without doubt a military encampment;
a village, in fact, composed of many rows of small
log huts. Along the streets, between the buildings,
muskets were stacked in hundreds of places.
Over in one corner, on a slight eminence
commanding the road up which they had come, and
cleverly hidden from it behind trees and shrubbery,
the young man noticed a battery of field
pieces. Wherever the eye was turned on this
singular scene were countless numbers of soldiers
all garmented in three-cornered hats, spike-tailed
coats and knee breeches, walking lazily hither
and thither, grouped around crackling fires, or
parading up and down the streets in platoons
under the guidance of ragged but stern-looking
officers.
Harry stopped the little procession of four in
front of one of the larger of the log houses. Then,
while they stood there, the long blast from a
bugle was heard, followed by the roll of drums.
A minute or two afterward, several companies of
militia marched up and grounded their arms,
forming three sides of a hollow square around
them, the fourth and open side being toward the
log house. Directly succeeding this maneuver
there came through the doorway of the house and
stepped up the center of the square, stopping
directly in front of Reilly, a dignified-looking
person, tall and straight and splendidly
proportioned of figure, and having a face of great
nobility and character.
The cold chills chased one another down
Reilly's back. His limbs swayed and tottered
beneath his weight. He had never experienced
another such sensation of mingled astonishment
and fright.
He was in the presence of General Washington.
Not a phantom Washington, either, but
Washington in the flesh and blood; as material and
earthly a being as ever crossed a person's line
of vision. Reilly, in his time, had seen so many
portraits, marble busts and statues of the great
commander that he could not be mistaken.
Recovering the use of his faculties, which for the
moment he seemed to have lost, Reilly did the
very commonplace thing that others before him
have done when placed unexpectedly in remarkable
situations. He pinched himself to make
sure that he was in reality wide awake and in
the natural possession of his senses. He felt like
pinching the figure in front of him also, but he
could not muster up the courage to do that. He
stood there trying to think it all out, and as his
thoughts became less stagnant, his fright
dissolved under the process of reasoning his mind
pursued. To reason a thing out, even though an
explanation can only be obtained by leaving
much of the subject unaccounted for, tends to
make one bolder and less shaky in the knees.
The series of strange incidents which he was
experiencing had been inaugurated in the
old-fashioned dwelling he had visited after information
concerning the roads. And everything had
been going along in a perfectly normal way up to
the very moment when he had taken a drink from
the bottle found in the fireplace. But from that
precise time everything had gone wrongly. Hence
the inference that the drinking of the peculiar
liquid was accountable in some way or other for
his troubles. There was a supernatural agency.
in the whole thing. That much must be admitted.
And whatever that agency was, and however it
might be accounted for, it had taken Reilly back
into a period of time more than a hundred years
ago, and landed him, body and soul, within the
lines of the patriot forces wintering at Valley
Forge. He might have stood there, turning over
and over in his mind, pinching himself and
muttering, all the morning, had not the newcomer
ceased a silent but curious inspection of his
person, and asked: "Who are you, sir?"
"John Reilly, at your pleasure," the young
man replied, adding a question on his own
account: "And who are you, sir?"
Immediately he received a heavy thump on his
back from Harry's hard fist.
"It is not for you to question the general," the
ragged administrator of the blow exclaimed.
"And it is not for you to be so gay," Reilly
returned, angrily, giving the blow back with added
force.
"Here, here!" broke in the first questioner.
"Fisticuffs under my very nose! No more of
this, I command you both." To Harry he added
an extra caution: "Your zeal in my behalf will
be better appreciated by being less demonstrative.
Blows should be struck only on the battlefield."
To Reilly he said, with a slight smile
hovering over his face, "My name is Washington.
Perhaps you may have heard of me?"
To this Reilly replied: "I have, indeed, and
heard you very well spoken of, too." Emboldened
by the other's smile, he ventured another
question: "I think my reckoning of the day and
year is badly at fault. An hour ago I thought
the day was Christmas day. How far out of the
way did my calculation take me, sir?"
"The day is indeed Christmas day, and the
year is, as you must know, the year of our Lord
one thousand seven hundred and seventy-seven."
Reilly again pinched himself.
"Why do you bring this man to me?" Washington
now inquired, turning to Harry and his
companions.
"He is a spy, sir," said Harry.
"That is a lie!" Reilly indignantly interpolated.
"I have done nothing to warrant any such
charge."
"We found him in the Widow Robin's house,
pouring strong liquor down his throat."
"I had gone inside after information concerning
the roads "
"Which he was getting from a bottle, sir."
"If drinking from a bottle of necessity constitutes
being a spy, I fear our camp is already a
hotbed," Washington somewhat sagely remarked,
casting his eye around slyly at his officers and
men. "Tell me," he went on, with sudden sternness,
looking Reilly through and through, as
though to read his very thoughts, "is the charge
true? Do you come from Howe?"
"The charge is not true, sir. I come from no
one. I simply am making a tour of pleasure
through this part of the country on my bicycle."
"With the country swarming with the men
from two hostile armies, any kind of a tour, save
one of absolute necessity, seems ill-timed."
"When I set out I knew nothing about any
armies. The fact is, sir " Reilly started to
make an explanation, but he checked himself on
realizing that the telling of any such improbable
yarn would only increase the hazardousness of
his position.
"Well?" Washington questioned, in a tone of
growing suspicion.
"I certainly did not know that your army or
any other army was quartered in this vicinity."
Reilly hesitated for lack of something further to
say. "You see," he finally added, prompted by
a happy idea, "I rode my wheel from New York."
"You may have come from New York, though
it is hard to believe you came on that singular-looking
machine so great a distance. Where is
the horse which drew the vehicle?"
Reilly touched his bicycle. "This is the horse,
sir, just as it is; the vehicle," he said.
"The man is crazy!" Harry exclaimed.
Washington only looked the incredulity he felt, and
this time asked a double question.
"How can the thing be balanced without it be
held upright by a pair of shafts from a horse's
back, and how is the motive power acquired?"
For an answer Reilly jumped upon the wheel,
and at a considerable speed and in a haphazard
way pedaled around the space within the hollow
square of soldiers. Hither and thither he went,
at one second nearly wheeling over the toes of the
line of astonished, if not frightened, militiamen;
at the next, bearing suddenly down on Harry
and his companions and making them dance and
jump about most alertly to avoid a collision.
Even the dignified Washington was once or twice
put to the necessity of dodging hurriedly aside
when his equilibrium was threatened. Reilly
eventually dismounted, doing so with assumed
clumsiness by stopping the wheel at Harry's back
and falling over heavily against the soldier.
Harry tumbled to the ground, but Reilly dexterously
landed on his feet. At once he began
offering a profusion of apologies.
"You did that by design!" Harry shouted,
jumping to his feet. His face was red with
anger and he shook his fist threateningly at the
bicyclist.
Washington commanded the man to hold his
peace. Then to Reilly he expressed a great
surprise at his performance and a desire to know
more about the bicycle. The young man thereupon
described the machine minutely, lifting it
into the air and spinning the wheels to illustrate
how smoothly they rotated.
"I can see it is possible to ride the contrivance
with rapidity. It has been put together with
wonderful ingenuity," Washington said, when
Reilly had replaced the wheel on the ground.
"And you, sir, it is but a toy," an officer spoke
up. "Put our friend on his bundle of tin and
race him against one of our horsemen and he
would make a sorry showing."
Reilly smiled. "I bear the gentleman no ill-will
for his opinion," he said. "Still, I should
like to show him by a practical test of the subject
that his ignorance of it is most profound."
"You would test the speed of the machine
against that of a horse?" Washington said, in
amazement.
"I would, sir. You have a good road yonder.
With your permission and a worthy opponent I
would make the test at once."
"But, sir, the man is a spy," Harry broke in.
"Would it not be better to throw a rope around
his neck and give him his deserts?"
"The charge is by no means proven," Washington
replied. "Nor can it be until a court
martial convenes this afternoon. And I see no
reason why we may not in the meantime enjoy the
unique contest which has been suggested. It will
make a pleasant break in the routine of camp
life."
A murmur of approval went up from the
masses of men by whom they were surrounded.
While they had been talking it seemed as though
everybody in the camp not already on the scene
had gathered together behind the square of
infantry.
"Then, sir," Harry said, with some eagerness,
"I would like to be the man to ride the horse.
There is no better animal than mine anywhere.
And I understand his tricks and humors quite
well enough to put him to his best pace."
"I confess I have heard you well spoken of as
a horseman," Washington said. "Be away with
you! Saddle and bridle your horse at once."
It was the chain of singular circumstances
narrated above which brought John Reilly into
the most remarkable contest of his life. He had
entered many bicycle races at one time or other,
always with credit to himself and to the club
whose colors he wore. And he had every expectation
of making a good showing to-day. Yet a
reflection of the weird conditions which had
brought about the present contest took away
some of his self-possession when a few minutes
later he was marched over to the turnpike and
left to his own thoughts, while the officers were
pacing out a one mile straightaway course down
the road.
After the measurements had been taken, two
unbroken lines of soldiers were formed along the
entire mile; a most evident precaution against
Reilly leaving the race course at any point to
escape across the fields. Washington came up
to him again, when the preparations were
completed, to shake his hand and whisper a word or
two of encouragement in his ear. Having
performed these kindly acts he left to take up a
position near the point of finish.
The beginning of the course was located close
to the battery of half concealed field pieces.
Reilly was now conducted to this place. Shortly
afterward Harry appeared on his horse. He
leered at the bicyclist contemptuously and said
something of a sarcastic nature partly under his
breath when the two lined up, side by side, for
the start. To these slights Reilly paid no heed;
he had a strong belief that when the race was
over there would be left in the mutton-like head
of his opponent very little of his present inclination
toward the humorous. The soldier's mount
was a handsome black mare, fourteen and a half
hands high; strong of limbs and at the flanks, and
animated by a spirit that kept her prancing
around with continuous action. It must be
admitted that the man rode very well. He guided
the animal with ease and nonchalance when she
reared and plunged, and kept her movements
confined to an incredibly small piece of ground,
considering her abundance of action.
"Keep to your own side of the road throughout
the race. I don't want to be collided with by
your big beast," Reilly cautioned, while they
were awaiting two signals from the starter.
To this Harry replied in some derision, "I'll
give you a good share of the road at the start,
and all of it and my dust, too, afterward." And
then the officer who held the pistol fired the first
shot.
Reilly was well satisfied with the conditions
under which the race was to be made. The road
was wide and level, smooth, hard and straight,
and a strong breeze which had sprung up, blew
squarely against his back. His wheel was geared
up to eighty-four inches; the breeze promised to
be a valuable adjunct in pushing it along. Awaiting
the second and last signal, Reilly glanced
down the two blue ranks of soldiers, which
stretched away into hazy lines in the distance
and converged at the termination of the course
where a flag had been stuck into the ground. The
soldiers were at parade rest. Their unceasing
movements as they chatted to one another, turning
their bodies this way and that and craning
their heads forward to look toward the starting
point, and then jerking them back, made the lines
seem like long, squirming snakes. At the end of
the course a thick bunch of militiamen clogged
the road and overspread into the fields.
Crack! The signal to be off. Reilly shoved
aside the fellow who had been holding his wheel
upright while astride of it, and pushed down on
the pedals. The mare's hoofs dug the earth; her
great muscular legs straightened out; she sprang
forward with a snort of apparent pleasure, taking
the lead at the very start. Reilly heard the shout
of excitement run along the two ranks of
soldiers. He saw them waving their arms and hats
as he went by. And on ahead through the cloud
of dust there was visible the shadow-like outlines
of the snorting, galloping horse, whose hoof beats
sounded clear and sharp above the din which
came from the sides of the highway. The mare
crept farther and farther ahead. Very soon a
hundred feet or more of the road lay between her
and the bicyclist. Harry turned in his saddle
and called out another sarcasm.
"I shall pass you very soon. Keep to your own
side of the road!" Reilly shouted, not a bit daunted
by the way the race had commenced. His head
was well down over the handle-bars, his back
had the shape of the upper portion of an immense
egg. Up and down his legs moved; faster and
faster and faster yet. He went by the soldiers
so rapidly that they only appeared to be two
streaks of blurry color. Their sharp rasping
shouts sounded like the cracking of musketry.
The cloud of dust blew against the bicyclist's
head and into his mouth and throat. When he
glanced ahead again he saw with satisfaction
that the mare was no longer increasing her lead.
It soon became evident even that he was slowly
cutting down the advantages she had secured.
Harry again turned his head shortly afterward,
doubtless expecting to find his opponent
hopelessly distanced by this time. Instead of
this Reilly was alarmingly close upon him. The
man ejaculated a sudden oath and lashed his
animal furiously. Straining every nerve and sinew
the mare for the moment pushed further ahead.
Then her pace slackened a bit and Reilly again
crept up to her. Closer and closer to her than
before, until his head was abreast of her
outstretched tail. Harry was lashing the mare and
swearing at her unceasingly now. But she had
spurted once and appeared to be incapable of
again increasing her speed. In this way they
went on for some little distance, Harry using his
whip brutally, the mare desperately struggling to
attain a greater pace, Reilly hanging on with
tenacity to her hind flanks and giving up not an
inch of ground.
A mile is indeed a very short distance when
traversed at such a pace. The finishing flag was
already but a few hundred feet further on.
Reilly realized that it was time now to go to the
front. He gritted his teeth together with
determination and bent his head down even further
toward his front wheel. Then his feet began to
move so quickly that there was only visible an
indistinct blur at the sides of his crank shaft.
At this very second, with a face marked with rage
and hatred, Harry brought his horse suddenly
across the road to that part of it which he had
been warned to avoid.
It is hard to tell what kept Reilly from being
run into and trampled under foot. An attempt
at back pedaling, a sudden twist of the handlebar,
a lurch to one side that almost threw him
from his seat. Then, in the fraction of a second
he was over on the other side of the road, pushing
ahead of the mare almost as though she were
standing still. The outburst of alarm from the
throats of the soldiers changed when they saw
that Reilly had not been injured; first into a
shout of indignation at the dastardly attempt
which had been made to run him down, and then
into a roar of delight when the bicyclist breasted
the flag a winner of the race by twenty feet.
As he crossed the line Reilly caught a glimpse
of Washington. He stood close to the flag and
was waving his hat in the air with the enthusiasm
of a schoolboy. Reilly went on down the road
slackening his speed as effectively as he could.
But before it was possible to entirely stop his
wheel's momentum the noisy acclamations in his
rear ceased with startling suddenness. He
turned in his saddle and looked back. As sure
as St. Peter he had the road entirely to himself.
There wasn't a soldier or the ghost of a soldier
in sight.
As soon as he could he turned his bicycle about
and rode slowly back along the highway, now so
singularly deserted, looking hither and thither in
vain for some trace of the vanished army. Even
the flag which had been stuck into the ground at
the end of the one-mile race course was gone.
The breeze had died out again and the air was
tranquil and warm. In the branches of a nearby
tree two sparrows chirped and twittered peacefully.
Reilly went back to the place where the
camp had been. He found there only open fields
on one side of the road and a clump of woodland
on the other. He continued on down the little
hill up which Harry and his companions had
brought him a few hours previously and followed
the road on further, coming finally to the fork in
it near which was located the old farmhouse
wherein he had been taken captive. The house
was, as it had been when he had previously
entered it, falling apart from age and neglect.
When he went inside he found lying on the
brick hearth in front of the fireplace a number of
pieces of broken glass.
THE END.