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<h2> CHAPTER XIV. MY OWN SON TRIES TO MURDER ME. </h2>
<p>SETTLING DOWN IN MAINE—HENRY'S HEALTH—TOUR THROUGH THE SOUTH—SECESSION
TIMES—DECEMBER IN NEW ORLEANS—UP THE MISSISSIPPI—LEAVING
HENRY IN MASSACHUSETTS—BACK IN MAINE AGAIN—RETURN TO BOSTON—PROFITABLE
HORSE TRADING—PLENTY OF MONEY—MY FIRST WIFE'S CHILDREN—HOW
THEY HAD BEEN BROUGHT UP—A BAREFACED ROBBERY—ATTEMPT TO
BLACKMAIL ME—MY SON TRIES TO ROB AND KILL ME—MY RESCUE—LAST
OF THE YOUNG MAN.</p>
<p>Where to go, not what to do, was the next question. Wherever I might go
and establish myself, if only for a few days, or a few weeks, I was sure
to have almost immediately plenty of patients and customers enough for my
medicines—this had been my experience always—and unfortunately
for me, I was almost equally sure to get into some difficulty from which
escape was not always easy. Looking over the whole ground for a fresh
start in business, it seemed to me that Maine was the most favorable
place. Whenever I had been there I had done well; it was one of the very
few States I had lived in where I had not been in jail or in prison; nor
had I been married there, though the Biddeford widow did her best to wed
me, and it is not her fault that she did not succeed in doing it.</p>
<p>To Maine, then, I went, settling down in Augusta, and remaining there four
months, during which time I had as much as I could possibly attend to, and
laid by a very considerable sum of money. While I was there I heard the
most unfavorable reports with regard to the health of my eldest son Henry.
Prison life at Trenton had broken him down in body as well as in spirit,
and he had been ill, some of the time seriously, nearly all the time since
he went to Unadilla. The fact that he was entirely innocent of the offence
for which he was imprisoned, preyed upon his mind, and with the worst
results. As these stories reached me from week to week, I became anxious
and even alarmed about him, and at last I left my lucrative business in
Augusta and went to New York. I could not well go to Unadilla to visit
Henry without seeing his mother, whom I had no desire to see; so I sent
for him to come to me in the city if was able to do so. I knew that if
medicine or medical attendance would benefit him, I should be able to help
him.</p>
<p>In a few days he came to me in a most deplorable physical condition. He
was a mere wreck of his former self. Almost immediately he began to talk
about the attempt to abduct the boy from Oxford; how innocent he was in
the matter, and how terribly he had suffered merely because he happened to
be with me when I rashly endeavored to kidnap the lad. All this went
through me like a sharp sword. It seemed as if I was the cause, not only
of great unhappiness to myself, but of pain and misery to all who were
associated or brought in contact with me. For this poor boy, who had
endured and suffered so much on my account, I could not do enough. My
means and time must now be devoted to his recovery, if recovery, was
possible.</p>
<p>He was weak, but was still able to walk about, and he enjoyed riding very
much. I kept him with me in the city a week or two, taking daily rides to
the Park and into the country, and when he felt like going out in the
evening I made him go to some place of amusement with me. I had no other
business, and meant to have none, but to take care of Henry, and I devoted
myself wholly to his comfort and happiness. In a few days he had much
improved in health and spirits, so much so, that I meditated making a long
tour with him to the South, hoping that the journey there and back again
would fully restore him.</p>
<p>Fortunately, my recent Maine business had put me in possession of abundant
funds, and when I had matured my scheme, and saw that Henry was in
tolerable condition to travel, I proposed the trip to him, and he joyfully
assented to my plan. I wanted to get him far away, for awhile, from a part
of the country which was associated in his mind, more than in mine, with
so much misery, and he seemed quite as eager to go. Change of air and
scene I knew would do wonders for him bodily, and would build him up
again.</p>
<p>We made our preparations and started for the South, going first to
Baltimore and then on through the Southern States by railroad to New
Orleans. It was late in the fall of 1860, just before the rebellion, when
the south was seceding or talking secession, and was already preparing for
war. Henry's physical condition compelled us to rest frequently on the
way, and we stopped sometimes for two or three days at a time, at nearly
every large town or city on the entire route. Everywhere there was a great
deal of excitement; meetings were held nearly every night secession was at
fever heat, and there was an unbounded expression and manifestation of
ill-feeling against the north and against northern men. Nevertheless, I
was never in any part of the Union where I was treated with so much
courtesy, consideration and genuine kindness as I was there and then. I
was going south, simply to benefit the invalid who accompanied me;
everybody seemed to know it; and everybody expressed the tenderest
sympathy for my son. Wherever we stopped, it seemed as if the people at
the hotels, from the landlord to the lowest servant, could not do enough
for us. At Atlanta, Augusta, Mobile, and other places, where we made our
stay long enough to get a little acquainted, my son and myself were daily
taken out to ride, and were shown everything of interest that was to be
seen. Henry did not enjoy this journey more than I did—to me as well
as to him, the trip was one prolonged pleasure, and by the time we reached
New Orleans nearly a month after we left New York, my son had so
recuperated that I had every hope of his speedy and full restoration.</p>
<p>It was the beginnings of winter when we reached New Orleans; but during
the whole month of December while we remained in that city, winter, if
indeed it was winter, which we could hardly believe, was only a
prolongation of the last beautiful autumn days we had left at the north.
Now Orleans was then at the very height of prosperity; business was brisk,
money was plenty, the ships of all nations and countless steamboats from
St. Louis, Cincinnati, Louisville and all points up the Mississippi and
Ohio rivers lay at the levee. The levee itself, from end to end, for miles
along the river front, was one mass of merchandise which had come to the
city, or was awaiting shipment. I had never seen a livelier city.
Indescribably gay, too, was New Orleans that winter. The city was full of
strangers; the hotels were thronged; there were balls every night; the
theatres were crowded, and everybody seemed bent on having a good time.
With all the rest, there was an extraordinary military furor, and militia
companies and regiments paraded the streets every day, while secession
meetings were held in various halls, or in the public squares, nearly ever
night.</p>
<p>From the St. Charles hotel where we stopped, St. Charles street seemed
ablaze and alive all night, and densely thronged all day. Sunday brought
no rest, for Sunday, so far as military parades, amusement and general
gaiety were concerned, was the liveliest day in the week; and Sunday night
the theatres were sure to present their best performances and to draw
their largest audiences. And so, from morning till night, and from night
till morning again, all was whirl, stir, bustle, business, enjoyment, and
excitement. To me, unaccustomed as I was to such scenes, New York even
seemed tame and dull, and slow in comparison with New Orleans.</p>
<p>This is a picture of the Crescent City as it presented itself to me and to
my son in the early part of the winter before the war. No one knew or even
dreamed of the terrible times that were to come. No one believed that war
was probable, or even possible; it was well enough, perhaps, to prepare
for it; but secession was to be an accomplished fact, and the North and
all the world would quietly acknowledge it. This was the general sentiment
in the city; though secession, and what would, or what might come of it,
was the general topic of talk in the hotels, in the restaurants, at the
theatres, in the streets, everywhere. Now and then some southerner with
whom I had become acquainted would try to draw me out to ascertain my
sentiments on the subject, but I always laughed, and said good naturedly:</p>
<p>"My dear sir, I didn't come down here to talk about secession, but to see
if the southern climate would benefit my sick son."</p>
<p>The fact was that I minded my own business, and minded it so well that
while I was in New Orleans I managed to find a few patients and sold
recipes and medicines enough to pay the entire expenses of our journey
thus far, from the North.</p>
<p>Almost every day my son and I drove somewhere up to Carrolton, down to the
battle-ground, or on the shell road to Lake Ponchartrain. It was a month
of genuine enjoyment to us both; of profit to me pecuniarily; and of the
best possible benefit to Henry's health.</p>
<p>Early in January we took passage on one of the finest of the Mississippi
steamboats for St. Louis. The boat was crowded, and among the passengers
were a good many merchants, Northern men long resident in New Orleans, who
thought they saw trouble coming, and accordingly had closed up their
business in the Crescent City, and were now going North to stay there. We
had on board, too, the usual complement of gamblers and amateur or
professional poker-players, who kept the forward saloon near the bar, and
known in the river vernacular as the "Texas" of the boat, lively all day
long and well into the night, or rather the next morning. It was ten or
eleven days before we reached St. Louis. Nothing notable occurred on the
trip; but day after day, as we proceeded northward, and left the soft,
sunny south behind us, with the daily increasing coldness and wintry
weather, Henry seemed to decline by degrees, and gradually to lose nearly
all that he had gained since we left New York. When we reached St. Louis
he was seriously sick. I was very sorry we had come away so soon in the
season, and proposed that we should return and stay in the south till
spring; but Henry would not consent. There was nothing to be done, then,
but to hurry on to the east, and when we arrived in New York Henry would
not go home to his mother in Unadilla, but insisted upon accompanying me
to Boston. I was willing enough that he should go with me, for then I
could have him under my exclusive care; but when we arrived in Boston he
was so overcome by the excitement of travel, and was so feeble from
fatigue as well as disease, that instead of having him go with me to
Augusta, as I intended, by the advice of a friend I took him into the
country where he could be nursed, be quiet, and be well taken care of till
spring. I left him in good hands, promising to come and see him as soon as
I could, and then went back to my old business in Augusta.</p>
<p>It required a little time to knot the new end of that business to the end
where I had broken off three months before; but I was soon in full
practice again and was once more making and saving money. I had no
matrimonial affair in hand, no temptation in fact, and none but strictly
professional engagements to fulfil. In Augusta and in several other towns
which I visited, for the whole of the rest of the winter, I was as busy as
I could be. Early in the spring I made up my mind to run away for a week
or two, and arranged my business so that I could go down into
Massachusetts and visit Henry, hoping, if he was better, to bring him back
with me to Maine.</p>
<p>Two of my patients in Paris, Maine, had each given me a good horse in
payment for my attendance upon them and their families, and for what
medicines I had furnished, and I took these horses with me to sell in
Boston. I drove them down, putting a good supply of medicines in my wagon
to sell in towns on the way, and when I arrived in Boston sold out the
establishment, getting one hundred and twenty-five dollars for the wagon,
three hundred dollars for one horse, and four hundred dollars for the
other—a pretty good profit on my time and medicine for the two
patients—and I brought with me besides about eighteen hundred
dollars, the net result, above my living expenses, of about three months'
business in Maine, and what I had done on the way down through
Massachusetts. I am thus minute about this money because it now devolves
upon me to show what sort of a family of children my first and worst wife
had brought up.</p>
<p>Of these children by my first marriage, my eldest son Henry, since he had
grown up, had been with me nearly as much as he had been with his mother,
and I loved him as I did my life. Since he became of age, at such times
when I was not in prison, or otherwise unavoidably separated from him, we
had been associated in business, and had traveled and lived together. I
knew all about him; but of the rest of the children I knew next to
nothing. Shortly after I sold my horses, one day I was in my room at the
hotel, when word was brought to me that some one in the parlor wanted to
see me.</p>
<p>I went down and found a young man, about twenty-one years of age, who
immediately came to me addressing me as "father," and he then presented a
young woman, about two years older than he was, as his sister and my
daughter. I had not seen this young gentleman since the time when I had
carried him off from school and from the farmer to whom he was bound, and
had clothed him and taken him with me to Amsterdam and Troy, subsequently
sending him to my half-sister at Sidney. The ragged little lad, as I found
him, had grown up into a stout, good-looking young man; but I had no
difficulty in recognizing him, though I was much at loss to know the
precise object of this visit; so after shaking hands with them, and asking
then how they were, I next inquired what they wanted?</p>
<p>Well, they had been to see Henry, and he was a great deal better.</p>
<p>I told them I was very glad to hear it, and that I was then on my way to
visit him, and hoped to see him in a few days, as soon as I could finish
my business in Boston; if Henry was as well as they reported I should
bring him away with me.</p>
<p>"But if you are busy here," said my young man, "we can save you both time
and trouble. We will go to Henry again and settle his bills for board and
other expenses, and will bring him with us to you at this hotel."</p>
<p>This, at the time, really seemed to me a kindly offer; it would enable me
to stay in Boston and attend to business I had to do, and Henry would come
there with his brother and sister in a day or two. I at once assented to
the plan, and taking my well-filled pocket-book from the inside breast
pocket of my coat, I counted out two hundred and fifty dollars and gave
them to the young man to pay Henry's board, doctor's and other bills, and
the necessary car fares for the party. They then left me and started, as I
supposed, to go after Henry.</p>
<p>But a few days went on and I saw and heard nothing of Henry. At last word
came to me one day that some one down stairs wanted to see me and I told
the servant to send him to my room, hoping that it might be Henry. But no;
it was my young man, of whom I instantly demanded:</p>
<p>"Where is your brother, whom you were to bring to me a week ago? What have
you done with the money I gave you for his bills?"</p>
<p>"I hadn't been near Henry; sister has gone home; and I've spent the money
on a spree, every cent of it, here in Boston, and I want more."</p>
<p>"Want more!" I exclaimed in blank amazement:</p>
<p>"Yes, more; and if you don't give it to me, I'll follow you wherever you
go, and tell people all I know about you."</p>
<p>"You scoundrel," said I, "you come here and rob, not me, but your poor,
sick brother, and then return and attempt to blackmail me. Get out of my
sight this instant."</p>
<p>He sprung on me, and made a desperate effort to get my money out of my
pocket. We had a terrible struggle. He was younger and stronger than I
was, and as I felt that I was growing weaker I called out loudly for help
and shouted "Murder!"</p>
<p>The landlord himself came running into the room; I succeeded in tearing
myself away, from the grasp of my assailant, and the landlord felled him
to the floor with a chair. He then ran to the door and called to a servant
to bring a policeman.</p>
<p>"No, don't!" I exclaimed; "Don't arrest the villain, for I can make no
complaint against him—he is my son!"</p>
<p>But the landlord was bound to have some satisfaction out of the affair; so
he dragged the young man into the hall and kicked him from the top of the
stairs to the bottom, where, as soon as he had picked himself up, a
convenient servant kicked him out into the street. I have never set eyes
on my young man since his somewhat sudden departure from that hotel.</p>
<p>And when I went to visit my poor Henry a day or two afterwards, I can
hardly say that I was surprised, though I was indignant to learn that his
brother and sister had never been near him at all since he had been in
Massachusetts. They knew where and how he was from his letter's to his
mother; they knew, too, from the same letters—for I had notified
Henry—at what time I would be in Boston, and with this information
they had come on to swindle me. I have no doubt, when the young man came
the second time to rob me, he would have murdered me, if the landlord had
not come to my assistance. And this was the youngest son of my first and
worst wife!!</p>
<p>I found Henry in better condition than I expected, and I took him back
with me to Augusta. I did not tell him of his brother's attempt to rob and
kill. Me—it would have been too great a shock for him. He stayed
with me only a few days and then, complaining of being homesick, he went
to visit his mother again.</p>
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