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The Valiants of Virginia

The Valiants of Virginia

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Chapter 1 THE CRASH

Word Count: 2270    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

e held dropped to the claret-colored rug like a huge wh

the face was glazed in a kind of horrified and assiduous surprise, as if the rosy peach of life, bitten, had suddenly revealed itself an unripe persimmon. The very words themselves came with a galvanic twitch and a stagger that conveyed a sense at once of shock and of protest. Even the white bulldog stretched on th

ands. And a single curt statement-like the ruthless blades of a pair of shears-had snipped across the one splendid scarlet thread in the woof that constituted life as he knew it. He had knotted his lavender scarf that morning a

smell of growing things-for the great building fronted the square-and the soft alluring moistness of early spring. "Failed!" he r

ed up the Panama in his mouth, and padding across the rug, poked it tentatively into his master's hand. But no, the hand made no response. Clearly t

he elder Valiant had founded and controlled until his death. With almost unprecedented earnings, it had stood as a very Gibraltar of finance, a type and sign of brilliant organization. Now, o

was one of the local managers of the Corporation whose ruin was to be that day's sensation, a colorless man who had acquired middle age with his first long trousers and had been

at the desk shrank a little, as the hair rippled up on the thick neck and the faithful red-rimmed eye

him. The fleeting sense of power, the intimate touching of wide issues in a city of Big Things had flattered him; for a while he had dreamed of playing a great part, of pushing the activities of the Corporation into new territory, invading foreign soil. He might have done much, for he had begun with good equipment. He had read law, had even be

of his own uselessness. In those profitless seasons through which he had sauntered, as he had strolled through his casual years of college, he had given least of his time and thought to the concern which had absorbed his father's young man

tamped itself on everything as though a thousand little devils had suddenly t

e, too, had come to the window and was looking dow

d gesticulations-a smudged plasterer, tools in hand,-clerks, some hatless and with thin alpaca coats-all peering at the voiceless front of the great building, a

said the manager. "I sent word to th

ready to clamor for money entrusted to it, the aggregate savings of widow and orphan, the pit

t of the bonds of the subsidiary companies recorded in your name. These are all, of course, engulfed in the larger failure. You ha

?" John Valiant f

wise,'" he quoted. "It's very good living

into the younger

for this furniture? Do you know what that rug under your feet cost? Twelve thousand-it's an old Persian. What do you suppose the papers will do to that? Do you think such things will seem amusing to that rabble

o what you seem to believe has been a deliberate wrecking?" Valiant

. How many board meetings have you attended this year? Your vote is proxied as regular as clockwork. But you're supposed to know. The people down there in the street won't ask questions about patent-leathe

a blank white f

t, if you're not too damn honest.' He owns the Stony-Rive

ons to which in all his self-indulgent life he had been a stranger were running through his mind, and outré passions had him by the throat. Fool and doubly blind! A poor pawn, a catspaw raking the chestnuts for unscrupulous men whose igno

ctric forces in the air-but the door closed sharply in his face. He smiled grimly. "Not crooked," he said to himself; "merely callow. A w

enger had his nose buried in a newspaper, and over the reader's shoulder

t-up power. There were those in the sullen anxious crowd who knew whose was that throbbing metal miracle, the chauffeur spick and span from shining cap-visor to polished brown puttees, and recogn

baton up, brought him to himself with a thud. He had small mind to be stopped at the moment. His mouth set in a sudden hard sharp line, and under it his hands gripped the slewing wheel to a tearing serpentine rush that sent the

he particular chop-house of which he was an habitué-the ivied wall of his favorite club, with the cluster of faces at the double window-the florist's where daily he stopped for his knot of Parma violets-but he saw

parted slowly; the confidential secretary of the m

o see Mr.

see him, Mr

n leaped into the young vo

won't speak to anybody any more," he said

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1 Chapter 1 THE CRASH2 Chapter 2 VANITY VALIANT3 Chapter 3 THE NEVER-NEVER LAND4 Chapter 4 THE TURN OF THE PAGE5 Chapter 5 THE LETTER6 Chapter 6 A VALIANT OF VIRGINIA7 Chapter 7 ON THE RED ROAD8 Chapter 8 MAD ANTHONY9 Chapter 9 UNCLE JEFFERSON10 Chapter 10 WHAT HAPPENED THIRTY YEARS AGO11 Chapter 11 DAMORY COURT12 Chapter 12 THE CASE OF MOROCCO LEATHER13 Chapter 13 THE HUNT14 Chapter 14 SANCTUARY15 Chapter 15 MRS. POLY GIFFORD PAYS A CALL16 Chapter 16 THE ECHO17 Chapter 17 THE TRESPASSER18 Chapter 18 JOHN VALIANT MAKES A DISCOVERY19 Chapter 19 UNDER THE HEMLOCKS20 Chapter 20 ON THE EDGE OF THE WORLD21 Chapter 21 AFTER THE STORM22 Chapter 22 THE ANNIVERSARY23 Chapter 23 UNCLE JEFFERSON’S STORY24 Chapter 24 IN DEVIL-JOHN’S DAY25 Chapter 25 JOHN VALIANT ASKS A QUESTION26 Chapter 26 THE CALL OF THE ROSES27 Chapter 27 BEYOND THE BOX-HEDGE28 Chapter 28 NIGHT29 Chapter 29 AT THE DOME30 Chapter 30 THE GARDENERS31 Chapter 31 TOURNAMENT DAY32 Chapter 32 A VIRGINIAN RUNNYMEDE33 Chapter 33 THE KNIGHT OF THE CRIMSON ROSE34 Chapter 34 KATHARINE DECIDES35 Chapter 35 “WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER”36 Chapter 36 BY THE SUN-DIAL37 Chapter 37 THE DOCTOR SPEAKS38 Chapter 38 THE AMBUSH39 Chapter 39 WHAT THE CAPE JESSAMINES KNEW40 Chapter 40 THE AWAKENING41 Chapter 41 THE COMING OF GREEF KING42 Chapter 42 IN THE RAIN43 Chapter 43 THE EVENING OF AN OLD SCORE44 Chapter 44 THE MAJOR BREAKS SILENCE45 Chapter 45 RENUNCIATION46 Chapter 46 THE VOICE FROM THE PAST47 Chapter 47 WHEN THE CLOCK STRUCK48 Chapter 48 THE SONG OF THE NIGHTINGALE