victorious march into the North after all."
Harry said nothing. As events marched forward on swift foot, he felt
more intensely their gravity. For every month that had passed since he
put the Tacitus in his desk at Pendleton Academy, the boy had grown a
year in mind and thought. So, that rumor about the relieving fleet had
come true and they might look for it in Charleston in two or three days.
Harry had his place in one of the batteries nearest Sumter, and he often
went with Colonel Talbot on tours of inspection and once or twice he was
in General Beauregard's own party. The fact that his father had been
a graduate of West Point and for years an officer, was of the greatest
service to him. In the little army of the United States before the
Civil War, the officers constituted a family. Everybody knew who
everybody else was, and those of the same age had been at West Point
together. General Beauregard and Colonel Kenton had met often, and the
Southern commander became very partial to the Colonel's son.
Harry was present when Beauregard, some of his more important officers
and the civil authorities of Charleston, conferred after Lincoln's
warning message came.
"If Lincoln's fleet tries to force the harbor," said Rhett, "we must
fire upon it. Sumter should be ours, and if Lincoln succeeds in
revictualling the fort it will be a great blow to our prestige.
It will hurt the whole South. What do you think, General?"
"I think as you do, Mr. Rhett," replied Toutant Beauregard. "But have
no fear, gentlemen. No fleet that Lincoln may send can reach Sumter.
Our batteries are able to blow out of the water every vessel that flies
the Northern flag."
"We must reduce Sumter itself before the fleet comes," said Jamison,
of Barnwell.
Beauregard smiled slightly.
"We can do that, too," he said, "and I am glad to see that you gentlemen
are for action. The fleet, I am accurately informed, consists of the
warship Baltic, three sloops of war and two tenders. The Baltic,
with Fox, the assistant secretary of the Northern Navy, on board,
left New York two days ago. The other vessels started earlier, and we
may expect the whole fleet in a day."
"Then," said Rhett, "we must send to Sumter another and a final demand
for its surrender."
They were all agreed, and Beauregard chose his messengers, putting Harry
among the number. Hoisting a white flag, they entered a large boat and
were rowed by powerful oarsmen towar
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