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t to speak. "I hope it will burn down," he cried. Stephen picked up the object on the floor, which had dropped from his pocket, and handed it to him. It was a revolver. Volume 5. CHAPTER XVI. THE GUNS OF SUMTER Winter had vanished. Spring was come with a hush. Toward a little island set in the blue waters of Charleston harbor anxious eyes were strained. Was the flag still there? God alone may count the wives and mothers who listened in the still hours of the night for the guns of Sumter. One sultry night in April Stephen's mother awoke with fear in her heart, for she had heard them. Hark! that is the roar now, faint but sullen. That is the red flash far across the black Southern sky. For in our beds are the terrors and cruelties of life revealed to us. There is a demon to be faced, and nought alone. Mrs. Brice was a brave woman. She walked that night with God. Stephen, too, awoke. The lightning revealed her as she bent over him. On the wings of memory be flew back to his childhood in the great Boston house with the rounded front, and he saw the nursery with its high windows looking out across the Common. Often in the dark had she come to him thus, her gentle hand passing over aim to feel if he were covered. "What is it, mother?" he said. She said: "Stephen, I am afraid that the war has come." He sat up, blindly. Even he did not guess the agony in her heart. "You will have to go, Stephen." It was long before his answer came. "You know that I cannot, mother. We have nothing left but the little I earn. And if I were--" He did not finish the sentence, for he felt her trembling. But she said again, with that courage which seems woman's alone: "Remember Wilton Brice. Stephen--I can get along. I can sew." It was the hour he had dreaded, stolen suddenly upon him out of the night. How many times had he rehearsed this scene to himself! He, Stephen Brice, who had preached and slaved and drilled for the Union, a renegade to be shunned by friend and foe alike! He had talked for his country, but he would not risk his life for it. He heard them repeating the charge. He saw them passing him silently on the street. Shamefully he remembered the time, five months agone, when he had worn the very uniform of his Revolutionary ancestor. And high above the tier of his accusers he saw one face, and the look of it stung to the very quick of his soul. Before the storm he had fallen asleep i
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