HOW TO PLAY THE CANNON WITHOUT NOTES
Captain Ransome sat motionless and
silent on horseback. A few yards away his men
were standing at their guns. Somewhere—everywhere
within a few miles—were a hundred thousand
men, friends and enemies. Yet he was alone.
The mist had isolated him as completely as if he had
been in the heart of a desert. His world was
a few square yards of wet and trampled earth about
the feet of his horse. His comrades in that ghostly
domain were invisible and inaudible. These were
conditions favorable to thought, and he was thinking.
Of the nature of his thoughts his clear-cut handsome
features yielded no attesting sign. His face was
as inscrutable as that of the sphinx. Why should
it have made a record which there was none to observe?
At the sound of a footstep he merely turned his eyes
in the direction whence it came; one of his sergeants,
looking a giant in stature in the false perspective
of the fog, approached, and when clearly defined and
reduced to his true dimensions by propinquity, saluted
and stood at attention.
“Well, Morris,” said the
officer, returning his subordinate’s salute.
“Lieutenant Price directed me
to tell you, sir, that most of the infantry has been
withdrawn. We have not sufficient support.”
“Yes, I know.”
“I am to say that some of our
men have been out over the works a hundred yards and
report that our front is not picketed.”
“Yes.”
“They were so far forward that they heard the
enemy.”
“Yes.”
“They heard the rattle of the
wheels of artillery and the commands of officers.”
“Yes.”
“The enemy is moving toward our works.”
Captain Ransome, who had been facing
to the rear of his line—toward the point
where the brigade commander and his cavalcade had been
swallowed up by the fog—reined his horse
about and faced the other way. Then he sat motionless
as before.
“Who are the men who made that
statement?” he inquired, without looking at
the sergeant; his eyes were directed straight into
the fog over the head of his horse.
“Corporal Hassman and Gunner Manning.”
Captain Ransome was a moment silent.
A slight pallor came into his face, a slight compression
affected the lines of his lips, but it would have
required a closer observer than Sergeant Morris to
note the change. There was none in the voice.
“Sergeant, present my compliments
to Lieutenant Price and direct him to open fire with
all the guns. Grape.”
The sergeant saluted and vanished in the fog.