warranted such impudent presumption as this; and I sharply rebuked the huge fellow for his implied disrespect toward Colonel Sheldon.
“Very well, sir. I will bite off this unmilitary tongue o’ mine and feed it to your horse. Then, sir, if you but ask him, he will tell you very plainly that none of his four-footed comrades in the barn have carried a single vidette on their backs even as far as Poundridge village, let alone Mile-Square.”
I could scarcely avoid smiling.
“Do you then, for one, believe that Colonel Tarleton will venture abroad on such a night?”
“I believe as you do,” said the rifleman coolly, “ — being some three years or more a soldier of my country.”