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(RETIRING A STEP UPSTAGE)

Shall I dig a man up for you, then?

THOMAS

Dig up nobody. It's all nonsense.

BAGBY

Nonsense? And when you're court-martialed and shot for a deserter, will that be nonsense?

THOMAS

(ABRUPTLY, LOSING PATIENCE)

I've seen that, do you hear? That's… enough!

BAGBY

Seen… what, sir?

THOMAS

(GLANCING up TOWARD UPSTAGE RIGHT)

Just tend your business, Bagby. A particularly unattractive bundle of it just arrived at your desk.

As THOMAS speaks, KANE has appeared at desk upstage right carrying a small case, and is heedlessly entering door as BAGBY hastens to intercept him.

BAGBY

(TO KANE)

Here, where are you going? You don't just march in and see him like he was a public monument. I'm the man you see here.

KANE

(STOPPING, AS THOMAS TURNS SLOWLY TO LOOK, CONFUSED)

You might be… Mister Bagby?

BAGBY

You got my name at the barber shop in Coal Street, did you? Let's see your teeth.

(KANE OBLIGES)

Not that you'll need them for eating. And you've got all your fingers and toes, have you? You'll do, if your breath don't knock them flat first. Go back to that barber shop, do you hear? Tell them I sent you. Mister Bagby, do you hear? They'll know what to do with you. Trim you up and get this thing off your face, why, they may find a boy of twenty hiding behind it! And then you come back here to me, do you hear? And I'll take you down and enroll you. Now get on!

THOMAS

(STANDING, SLOWLY)

Wait a minute!

BAGBY

(TURNING TO HIM, HOLDING KANE'S ARM)

You want him, sir?

(STANDING OFF, LOOKING KANE OVER AGAIN)

I'll be frank now, on second look, he don't look like he'll get far. They can't shave that belly off him in a hurry, and his breath would stop a train. I'll dig up better by sundown.

KANE

(ALMOST APOLOGETIC)

I'm sorry if I've misled you, sir. All I have to volunteer is my wares here. I'm a commercial traveler in tobaccos,

(COMING DOWNSTAGE TO DESK)

and I've a fine bright leaf that may interest you…

THOMAS

(COMING ROUND, PROFFERING A CHAIR BESIDE THE DESK)

Yes, sit down. You'll forgive Mister Bagby here. His enthusiasm to recruit, feed, worm, and outfit the entire Union army from head to toe sometimes gets the better of him.

(TO BAGBY, DRILY)

Though I hadn't realized you were recruiting.

BAGBY

I, sir? Yes, volunteering my services, you might say. Why, since Lee crossed the Potomac there hasn't been a moment's peace, and a man must come forward and lend a hand…

THOMAS

And you've been lending hands from the mines? Is that why the payroll is smaller every time I look at it?

BAGBY

And why not, with the mines closed down? If we've been ordered to suspend operations until the draft is ended, should we let the poor men go unemployed?

KANE

Yes, I understand Harpers Ferry has fallen, and General McClellan is marching out of Washington with every division he can pull together to meet them before they reach the Pennsylvania line here. I passed a fine set of lads drilling down near the river…

BAGBY

Them? Buckeyes, you mean? And do you think they're getting ready to fight Lee and Jackson? They're getting themselves ready to fight off the draft officers, that's what they're doing.

KANE

(HIS FACETIOUSNESS LOST UPON BAGBY)

Such an attitude must make your noble efforts quite difficult.

BAGBY

Ah, but it's not that I don't see their point, you know, now the word is out that it's no more than a war to free the naygers. Why, they've had high wages here in the mines. Do they want to go off and get killed fighting to free a lot of naygers that will come in and work for a penny a day? Why, the President himself said when it started that he had no power or intention of freeing the naygers, and now? Well, I've learned from a friend, he's a highly placed man down in Washington, that he's already written a proclamation freeing the naygers! Yes, he wrote it this summer, the President did, and he's read it off to his Cabinet there. Yes, preserve the Union! with four million naygers running around free? Why, the woods is full of them right now, and do you expect a nayger to go back into slavery once he's been as free to come and go as yourself?

KANE

(WITH SUDDEN ILL–CONCEALED INTEREST)

Reading such a thing to his Cabinet hasn't freed anyone.

BAGBY

And who should he read it to, you? He'd be a laughing stock if he read it out in public now, the way things are going. No, he must wait for a victory. Then people will listen and it will make sense. With a real victory behind it, he can give the slave states a choice of coming back into the Union or having their slaves freed right under their noses.

THOMAS

A victory? Winning a battle, what difference will that make. No, you'd better say winning the war!

KANE

(THOUGHTFULLY)

But even a battle… and a battleline advancing as a crusade… While the South is waiting for France and England to intervene, if only to free the cotton. And they might still in a rebellion, yes, in a civil war, but… a crusade against slavery?

BAGBY

Yes, and the victory is all the President lacks to make it so! There's nobody seen what war can be, that hasn't seen the next battle!

BAGBY exits importantly upstage right.

THOMAS

(LEVELLY)

You dislike me, don't you Kane. You showed it at Quantness when we met. What is it you want, then.

KANE

(TURNING, AGREEABLY)

Or perhaps it's just my unfortunate manner? Yes, my manner may be like your scar there, the expression it gives you? When I walked in, you looked outraged to see me, but… surely you were not?

THOMAS

And that cotton, what's happened to it? Was it ever shipped from Wilmington?

KANE

It was shipped. That's what I've come to tell you about…

THOMAS

And what's happened to it? There are obligations attached to it, and I've heard nothing. I had a special interest in that cotton, you know, an arrangement I made with the Major, and I've heard nothing. No remittance, nothing…

KANE

The shipment was impounded by the French government.

THOMAS

Im-pounded? but… I owe nothing, I left no debts…

KANE

A firm of French shipbuilders got out a lien against it. The OflCS WÍIO are building the battle ram Stonewall. The cotton was shipped from a Southern port, and they hadn't been paid…

THOMAS

A ram! But… by heaven! I'm being pressed for those profits now, the shareowners here… a ram! What the devil are they building a ram for!

KANE

To break the blockade…

THOMAS

The blockade! Why, damn the blockade, what does it matter now? With the army that's sweeping up here? Lee has probably invaded Pennsylvania itself while we sit here, he's right on our doorstep, and they're worried about a blockade? The whole thing will be over in a matter of days.

KANE

I seem to recall your saying that the last time we met.

THOMAS

(WITH DEFIANT ANNOYANCE)

Well, and… isn't it?

KANE

But not as it would have ended then, with a hundred thousand Union troops massed on Richmond.

THOMAS

Yes but… damn it, that's not the point now! Don't you see the shape things are in here? These militia drafts and the rest of this nonsense? They're terrified. The Southern armies will sweep through like hail in a cornfield.

KANE

(QUIETLY, EYEING THOMAS' BOOTS)

In boots like that, they might.

(AS THOMAS CLAPS ms BOOT AND STANDS IN EXASPERATION)