swatter.â
âYou two ought to haul that down to Asheville,â Ansel added. âTheyâs folks will pay cash money for music handsome as that.â
âThereâs a blessingness in the having heard it,â Laurel said, touching Walterâs forearm and leaving it there for a few moments.
âMore Walter than me,â Slidell said. âI was the caboose dragged along by the engine.â
They played on, Slidell drinking alone now.
âBe careful, Slidell,â Hank warned. âThat stuffâs going to light up your head like a stick of dynamite.â
âItâs same as snake poison,â Slidell replied. âKeep getting bit and it donât hurt you near as bad.â
Darkness filled the cove now but for the lanternâs yellow smudge. Boyce looked toward the notch and laid the dulcimer back in its case.
âTime to go,â he said to his brother, who nodded and stood.
âJust a couple more songs,â Slidell said, but the brothers stepped off the porch.
Slidell put up his guitar and rose as well, wavering as he stood. He lifted the jug, tilted it but nothing sloshed.
âAh, me,â Slidell sighed. âNary a thing left but a skullbuster come morning.â
The three men mounted their horses and went up the trail, the lanternâs glow quickly vanishing.
âTime for bed,â Hank said, âat least for me.â
Walter was about to rise and go inside as well, but Laurel let her hand settle on his forearm.
âThank you for playing your flute.â
She searched for something more to say, but the words had been held inside too long. They would be heard by a man she didnât know, a man who even if he understood what she was trying to say, could not tell her so.
âI guess weâd best go on in,â Laurel said. âI know youâre tired.â
It was Walter who rose first, but not before heâd settled his hand over hers a few moments, as though he had some inkling, Laurel thought, of what had been left unspoken.
Chapter Nine
W here we going now, sir?â Wilber, the younger brother, asked.
Chauncey pointed to a building with wide steps and marble pillars.
âIs there another professor there we need to question, sir?â Jack asked.
âNo, we just need to find which German books the library has.â
âDo we have to write down all their names too?â Wilber whined.
âIf you boys want to be dismissed, just say so and Iâll take you home,â Chauncey answered. âItâs not something Paul Clayton would do but maybe you boys havenât got the soldier spirit like Paul.â
âWe got it, sir,â Jack said, glaring at Wilber.
âAll right then,â Chauncey said, âbut we need to go by the automobile first.â
âThat professor was shaking like a wet hound,â Jack said as they walked across the campus. âHe ought to be too, especially after he admitted his ownself he talked to them Germans with no one else around who understood them.â
âI bet they got him to sneak secret messages back to Kaiser Wilhelm,â Wilber said. âHe could of hid them in that metal thing on his head.â
âHeâll not do it no more though,â Jack said. âWe sure set that professor straight. He wonât be going back for no more visits. I bet he wonât stir farther than he can throw his own shadow.â
Chauncey couldnât help but let a smile lift the corners of his mouth. Professor Mayer had been scared. There was no doubt about that. Sweat had popped out on the old foolâs brow even before claiming heâd gone to Hot Springs in the first place only because heâd been asked to read some of the Germansâ letters. But Chauncey had outslicked him there, asking why heâd kept going back to socialize with a bunch of Huns. The professorâs eyes had teared up and heâd started blubbering that it was a chance
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