DICK’S MISSION
The night came down warm and heavy.
Spring was far advanced in that Southern region,
and foliage and grass were already rich and heavy.
Dick, from his dozing position beside a camp fire,
saw a great mass of tall grass and green bushes beyond
which lay the deep waters of a still creek or bayou.
The air, although thick and close, conduced to rest
and the peace that reigned after the battle was soothing
to his soul.
His friends, the two lads, who were
knitted to him by so many hardships and dangers shared,
were sound asleep, and he could see their tanned faces
when the light of the flickering fires fell upon them.
Good old Warner! Good old Pennington!
The comradeship of war knitted youth together with
ties that never could be broken.
He moved into an easier position.
He lay upon the soft turf and he had doubled his
blanket under his head as a pillow. At first
the droning noises of camp or preparation had come
from afar, but soon they ceased and now the frogs
down by the sluggish waters began to croak.
It was a musical sound, one that he
had heard often in his native state, and, singularly
enough, the lad drew encouragement from it. “Be
of good cheer! Be of good cheer! Trust
in the future! Trust in the future!” said
all those voices down among the swamps and reeds.
And then Dick said to himself: “I will
trust and I will have hope!” He remembered his
last glimpse of Grant’s short, strong figure
and the confidence that this man inspired in him.
He, with tens of thousands of others, Abraham Lincoln
at their head, had been looking for a man, they had
looked long and in vain for such a man, but Dick was
beginning to believe that they had found him at last.
It would take much of a man to stand
before the genius of Lee, but it might be Grant.
Dick’s faith in the star of his country, shattered
so often for the moment, began to rise that night
and never sank again.
He fell asleep to the homely music
of the frogs among the reeds, and slept without stir
until nearly dawn.
Just as the first strip of gray showed
in the east Colonel Winchester walked toward the spot
where Dick and his comrades lay. The colonel
had not slept that night. His fine face was
worn and thin, but the blue eyes were alight with
strength and energy. He had just left a conference
of high officers, and he came upon a mission.
He reached the three lads, and looked down at them
with a sort of pity. He knew that it was his
duty to awake them at once and send them upon a perilous
errand, but they were so young, and they had already
been through so much that he hesitated.
He put his hand upon Dick’s
shoulder and shook him. But it took more than
one shake to awaken the lad, and it was fully a minute
before he opened his eyes and sat up. Dick conscious
but partly and rubbing his sleepy eyes, asked:
“What is it? Are we to
go into battle again? Yes, sir! Yes, sir!
I’m ready!”
“Not that, Dick, but I’ve orders for you.”
Dick now awoke completely and saw
that it was Colonel Winchester. He sprang to
his feet and saluted.
“We’ll wake up Warner
and Pennington next,” said the colonel, “because
they go also on the kind of duty to which you’re
assigned.”
“I’m glad of that,” said Dick warmly.
Warner and Pennington were aroused
with difficulty, but, as soon as they realized that
Colonel Winchester was before them and that they were
selected for a grave duty, they became at once keen
and alert.
“Lads,” said the colonel
briefly, “you’ve all felt that we’re
now led by a great commander. But energy and
daring on the part of a leader demand energy and daring
on the part of his men. General Grant is about
to undertake a great enterprise, one that demands
the concentration of his troops. I want you,
Warner, to go to General Sherman with this dispatch,
and here is one for you, Pennington, to take to General
Banks.”
He paused a moment and Dick asked:
“Am I to be left out?”
Colonel Winchester smiled.
He liked this eagerness on the part
of his boys, and yet there was sadness in his smile,
too. Young lieutenants who rode forth on errands
often failed to come back.
“You’re included, Dick,”
he said, “and I think that yours is the most
perilous mission of them all. Pennington, you
and Warner can be making ready and I’ll tell
Dick what he’s to do.”
The Vermonter and the Nebraskan hurried
away and Colonel Winchester, taking Dick by the arm,
walked with him beyond the circle of firelight.
“Dick,” he said gently,
“they asked me to choose the one in my command
whom I thought most fit for this duty to be done, and
I’ve selected you, although I’m sending
you into a great peril.”
Dick flushed with pride at the trust.
Youth blinded him at present to its perils.
“Thank you, sir,” he said simply.
“You will recall Major Hertford,
who was with us in Kentucky before the Shiloh days?”
“I could not forget him, sir.
One of our most gallant officers.”
“You speak truly. He is
one of our bravest, and also one of our ablest.
I speak of him as Major Hertford, but he has lately
been promoted to the rank of colonel, and he is operating
toward the East with a large body of cavalry, partly
in conjunction with Grierson, who saved us at the ford.”
“And you want me to reach him, sir!”
“You’ve divined it.
He is near Jackson, the capital of this state, and,
incidentally, you’re to discover as much as you
can about Jackson and the Confederate dispositions
in that direction. We wish Hertford to join
General Grant’s advance, which will presently
move toward Jackson, and we rely upon you to find
him.”
“I’ll do it, if he’s
to be found at all,” said Dick fervently.
“I knew it, but, Dick, you’re
to go in your uniform. I’ll not have you
executed as a spy in case you’re taken.
Nor are you to carry any written message to Colonel
Hertford. He knows you well, and he’ll
accept your word at once as truth. Now, this
is a ride that will call for woodcraft as well as
soldiership.”
“I start at once, do I not, sir?”
“You do. Warner and Pennington
are ready now, and your own horse is waiting for you.
Here is a small map which I have reason to believe
is accurate, at least fairly so, although few of our
men know much of this country. But use it, lad,
as best you can.”
It was a sheet of thick fibrous paper
about six inches square and, after a hasty glance
at it, Dick folded it up carefully and put it in his
pocket. Warner and Pennington appeared then,
mounted and armed and ready to tell him good-bye.
He and Colonel Winchester watched them a moment or
two as they rode away, and then an orderly appeared
with Dick’s own horse, a fine bay, saddled,
bridled, saddlebags filled with food, pistols in holsters,
and a breech-loading rifle strapped to the saddle.
“I’ve made your equipment
the best I could,” said Colonel Winchester,
“and after you start, lad, you must use your
own judgment.”
He wrung the hand of the boy, for
whom his affection was genuine and deep, and Dick
sprang into the saddle.
“Good-bye, colonel,” he
said, “I thank you for this trust, and I won’t
fail.”
It was not a boast. It was courage
speaking from the heart of youth and, as Dick rode
out of the camp on his good horse, he considered himself
equal to any task. He felt an enormous pride
because he was chosen for such an important and perilous
mission, and he summoned every faculty to meet its
hardships and dangers.
He had the password, and the sentinels
wished him good luck. So did the men who were
gathering firewood. One, a small, weazened fellow,
gave him an envious look.
“Wish I was going riding with
you,” he said. “It’s fine in
the woods now.”
Dick laughed through sheer exuberance of spirits.
“Maybe it is and maybe it isn’t,”
he said. “Perhaps the forest is filled
with rebel sharpshooters.”
“If you ride toward Jackson
you’re likely to strike Confederate bands.”
“I didn’t say where I’m
going, but you may be certain I’ll keep a watch
for those bands wherever I may be.”
The little man was uncommonly strong
nevertheless, as he carried on his shoulder a heavy
log which he threw down by one of the fires, but Dick,
absorbed in his journey, forgot the desire of the soldier
to be riding through the forest too.
He soon left the camp behind.
He looked back at it only once, and beheld the luminous
glow of the campfires. Then the forest shut it
out and he rode on through a region almost abandoned
by its people owing to the converging armies.
He did not yet look at his map, because he knew that
he would soon come into the main road to Jackson.
It would be sufficient to determine his course then.
Dick was not familiar with the farther
South, which was a very different region from his
own Kentucky. His home was a region of firm land,
hills and clear streams, but here the ground lay low,
the soil was soft and the waters dark and sluggish.
But his instincts as a woodsman were fortified by
much youthful training, and he felt that he could find
the way.
It gave him now great joy to leave
the army and ride away through the deep woods.
He was tired of battle and the sight of wounds and
death. The noises of the camp were painful to
his ear, and in the forest he found peace.
He was absolutely alone in his world,
and glad of it. The woods were in all the depth
and richness of a Southern spring. Vast masses
of green foliage billowed away to right and left.
Great festoons of moss hung from the oaks, and trailing
vines wrapped many of the trees almost to their tops.
Wild flowers, pink, yellow and blue, unknown by name
to Dick, bloomed in the open spaces.
The air of early morning was crisp
with the breath of life. He had come upon a
low ridge of hard ground, away from the vast current
and low, sodden shores of the Mississippi. Here
was a clean atmosphere, and the forest, the forest
everywhere. A mockingbird, perched on a bough
almost over his head, began to pour forth his liquid
song, and from another far away came the same song
like an echo. Dick looked up but he could not
see the bird among the branches. Nevertheless
he waved his hand toward the place from which the
melody came and gave a little trill in reply.
Then he said aloud:
“It’s a happy omen that
you give me. I march away to the sound of innocent
music.”
Then he increased his speed a little
and rode without stopping until he came to the main
road to Jackson. There he examined his map upon
which were marked many rivers, creeks, lagoons and
bayous, with extensive shaded areas meaning forests.
In the southeastern corner of the map was Jackson,
close to which he meant to go.
He rode on at a fair pace, keeping
an extremely careful watch ahead and on either side
of the road. He meant to turn aside soon into
the woods, but for the present he thought himself
safe in the road—it was not likely that
Southern raiders would come so near to the Union camp.
His feeling of peace deepened.
He was so far away now that no warlike sound could
reach him. Instead the song of the mockingbird
pursued him. Dick, full of youth and life, began
to whistle the tune with the songster, and his horse
perhaps soothed too by the rhythm broke into the gentle
pace which is so easy for the rider.
It was early dawn, and the west was
not yet wholly light. The east was full of gold,
but the silver lingered on the opposite horizon, and
the hot sun of Mississippi did not yet shed its rays
over the earth. Instead, a cool breeze blew
on Dick’s face, and the quick blood was still
leaping in his veins. The road dipped down and
he came to a brook, which was clear despite its proximity
to the mighty yellow trench of the Mississippi.
He let his horse drink freely, and,
while he drank, he surveyed the country as well as
he could. On his left he saw through a fringe
of woods a field of young corn and showing dimly beyond
it a small house. Unbroken forest stretched away
on his right, but in field as well as forest there
was no sign of a human being.
He studied his map again, noting the
great number of water courses, which in the spring
season were likely to be at the flood, and, for the
first time, he realized the extreme difficulty of his
mission. Mississippi was in the very heart of
the Confederacy. He could not expect any sympathetic
farmers to help him or show him the way. More
likely as he advanced toward Jackson he would find
the country swarming with the friends of the Confederacy,
and to pass through them would demand the last resource
of skill and courage. Perhaps it would have
been wiser had he put on citizens clothes and taken
his chances as a spy! He did not know that Colonel
Winchester would have ordered the disguise had the
one who rode on this most perilous mission been any
other than he.
The realization brought with it extreme
caution. Growing up in a country which was still
mainly in forest, not differing much from its primitive
condition, save for the absence of Indians and big
game, he had learned to be at home in the woods, and
now he turned from the path, riding among the trees.
He kept a course some distance from
the road, where he was sheltered by the deep foliage
and could yet see what was passing along the main artery
of travel. The ground at times was spongy, making
traveling hard, and twice his horse swam deep creeks.
He would have turned into the road at these points
but the bridges were broken down and he had no other
choice.
The morning waned, and the coolness
departed. The sun hung overhead, blazing hot,
and the air in the forest grew dense and heavy.
He would have been glad to turn back into the road,
in the hope of finding a breeze in the open space,
but caution still kept him in the forest. He
soon saw two men in brown jeans riding mules, farmers
perhaps, but carrying rifles on their shoulders, and,
drawing his horse behind a big tree, he waited until
they passed.
They rode on unseeing and he resumed
his journey, to stop an hour later and eat cold food,
while he permitted his horse to graze in an opening.
He had seen only three houses, one a large colonial
mansion, with the smoke rising from several chimneys,
and the others small log structures inhabited by poor
farmers, but nobody was at work in the fields.
When he resumed the journey he was
thankful that he had kept to the woods as a body of
Confederate cavalry, coming out of a path from the
north, turned into the main road and advanced at a
good pace toward Jackson. They seemed to be in
good spirits, as he could hear them talking and laughing,
but he was glad when they were out of sight as these
Southerners had keen eyes and a pair of them might
have discerned him in the brush.
He went deeper into the woods and
made another long study of his map. It seemed
to him now that he knew every hill and lagoon and road
and path, and he resolved to ride a straight course
through the forest. There was a point, distinctly
marked north of Jackson, where he was to find Hertford
if he arrived in time, or to wait for him if he got
there ahead of time, and he believed that with the
aid of the map he could reach it through the woods.
He rode now by the sun and he saw
neither path nor fields. He was in the deep
wilderness once more. The mockingbirds sang around
him again and through the rifts in the leaves he saw
the sailing hawks seeking their prey. Three
huge owls sitting in a row on a bough slept undisturbed
while he passed. He took it as an omen that the
wilderness was deserted, and his confidence was strong.
But the firm ground ceased and he
rode through a region of swamps. The hoofs of
his horse splashed through mud and water. Now
and then a snake drew away its slimy length and Dick
shuddered. He could not help it. Snakes,
even the harmless, always gave him shivers.
The wilderness now had an evil beauty.
The vegetation was almost tropical in its luxuriance,
but Dick liked better the tender green of his more
northern state. Great beds of sunflowers nodded
in the light breeze. Vast masses of vines and
creepers pulled down the trees, and on many of the
vines deep red roses were blooming. Then came
areas of solemn live oaks and gloomy cypresses, where
no mockingbirds were singing.
He rode for half a mile along a deep
lagoon or bayou, he did not know which, and saw hawks
swoop down and draw fish from its dark surface.
The whole scene was ugly and cruel, and he was glad
when he left it and entered the woods again.
Once he thought he heard the mellow voice of a negro
singing, but that was the only sound, save the flitting
of small wild animals through the undergrowth.
He came, mid-afternoon, to a river,
which he made his horse swim boldly and then entered
forest that seemed more dense than ever. But
the ground here was firmer and he was glad of a chance
to rest both himself and his mount. He dismounted,
tethered the horse and stretched his own limbs, weary
from riding.
It was a pretty little glade, surrounded
by high forest, fitted for rest and peace, but his
horse reared suddenly and tried to break loose.
There was a heavy crashing in the undergrowth and a
deer, wild with alarm, darting within a dozen feet
of Dick, disappeared in the forest, running madly.
He knew there were many deer in the
Mississippi woods, but he was observant and the flight
aroused his attention. His first thought that
he and his horse had scared the deer could not be true,
because it had come from a point directly behind and
had rushed past them. Then its alarm must have
been caused by some other human being near by in the
forest or by a panther. His theory inclined to
the human being.
Dick was troubled. The more
he thought of the incident the less he liked it.
He made no effort to hide from himself the dangers
that surrounded him in the land of the enemy, and
remounting he rode briskly forward. As the ground
was firm and the forest was free enough from undergrowth
to permit of speed he finally broke into a gallop
which he maintained for a half-hour.
He struck marsh again and was a long
time in passing through it. But when he was
a half-mile on the other side he drew into a dense
cluster of bushes and waited. He could not get
the flight of the deer out of his mind, and knowing
that it was well in the wilderness to obey premonitions
he watched more closely.
Dick sat on his horse behind the bush
a full five minutes, and presently he became conscious
that his heart was pounding heavily. He exerted
his will and called himself foolish, but in vain.
The flight of the deer persisted in his mind.
It was a warning that somebody else was in the woods
not far behind him, and, while he waited, he saw a
shadow among the trees.
It was only a shadow, but it was like
the figure of a man. A single glimpse and he
was gone. The stranger, whoever he was, had darted
back in the undergrowth. Dick waited another
five minutes, but the shadow did not reappear.
He felt a measure of relief because all doubts were
gone now. He was sure that he was followed,
but by whom?
He knew that his danger had increased
manifold. Some Southern scout or skirmisher
had discovered his presence and, in such a quest, the
trailer had the advantage of the trailed. Yet
he did not hesitate. He knew his general direction
and, shifting the pistols from the saddle-holsters
to his belt he again urged his horse forward.
When they came to good ground he walked,
leading his mount, as the animal was much exhausted
by the effort the marshes needed. But whenever
the undergrowth grew dense he stopped to look and
listen. He did not see the shadow and he heard
nothing save the ordinary sounds of the woods, but
either instinct or imagination told him that the stranger
still followed.
The sun was far down the westward
slope, but it was still very hot in the woods.
There was no breeze. Not a leaf, nor a blade
of grass stirred. Dick heard his heart still
pounding. The unseen pursuit—he had
no doubt it was there—was becoming a terrible
strain upon his nerves. The perspiration ran
down his face, and he sought with angry eyes for a
sight of the fellow who presumed to hang upon his
tracks.
He began to wonder what he would do
when the night came. There would be no rest,
no sleep for him, even in the darkness. Twice
he curved from his course and hid in the undergrowth
to see his pursuer come up, but there was nothing.
Then he reasoned with himself. He had not really
seen the flitting figure of a man. It was merely
the effect of an alarmed imagination, and he told
himself to ride straight on, looking ahead, not back.
But reason again yielded to instinct and he curved
once more into the deep forest, where the tangle of
vines and undergrowth also was so thick that it would
take a keen eye to find him.
Dick looked back along the path which
he had come and he was confident that he saw some
of the tall bushes shake a little. It could not
be wind, because the air was absolutely still, and
soon he was convinced that his instinct had been right
all the time. Fancy had played him no trick and
the shadow that he had seen was a human figure.
He felt with all the force of conviction
that he was in great danger, but he did not know what
to do. So he did nothing, but sat quietly on
his horse among the bushes. The heat was intense
there and innumerable flies, gnats, and mosquitoes
assailed him. The mosquitoes were so fierce
that they drew blood from his face a half-dozen times.
Alone in the heat of the deep marshy
wilderness he felt fear more than in battle.
Danger threatened here in a mysterious, invisible
fashion and he could only wait.
He saw a bush move again, but much
nearer, and then came the crack of a rifle.
If his horse, alarmed perhaps, had not thrown up his
head suddenly, and received the bullet himself the
lad’s career would have ended there.
The horse made a convulsive leap,
then staggered for a few seconds, giving his rider
time to spring clear, and fell among the bushes.
Dick dropped down behind him and quickly unstrapped
the rifle from the saddle, meaning to use the animal’s
body as a breastwork against renewed attack.
His fear, the kind of fear that the
bravest feel, had been driven away by rage.
The killing of his innocent horse, although the bullet
was intended for him, angered him as much as if he
had received a wound himself. The spirit of
his ancestor, the shrewd and wary Indian fighter,
descended upon him again, and, lying upon his stomach
behind the horse, with the rifle ready he was anxious
for the attack to come.
Dick was firmly convinced that he
had but a single enemy. Otherwise he would have
been attacked in force earlier, and more than one shot
would have been fired. But the report of the
rifle was succeeded by deep silence. The forest
was absolutely still, not a breath of wind stirring.
His enemy remained invisible, but the besieged youth
was confident that he was lying quiet, awaiting another
chance. Dick, still hot with anger, would wait
too.
But other enemies were far more reckless
than the hidden marksman. The swarm of gnats,
flies, and mosquitoes assailed him again and he could
have cried out in pain. His only consolation
lay in the fact that the other man might be suffering
just as much.
He was aware that his enemy might
try a circling movement in order to reach him on the
flank or from behind, but he believed that his ear
would be keen enough to detect him if he came near.
Moreover he lay in a slight dip with the body of
the horse in front of him, and it would require an
uncommon sharpshooter to reach him with a bullet.
If he could only stand those terrible mosquitoes
an hour he felt that he might get away, because then
the night would be at hand.
He saw with immense relief that the
sun was already very low. The heat, gathered
in the woods, was at its worst, and over his head the
mosquitoes buzzed and buzzed incessantly. It
seemed to him a horrible sort of irony that he might
presently be forced from his shelter by mosquitoes
and be killed in flight to another refuge.
But he was endowed with great patience
and tenacity and he clung to his shelter, relying
rather upon ear than eye to note the approach of an
enemy. Meanwhile the sun sank down to the rim
of the wood, and the twilight thickened rapidly in
the east. Then a shot was fired from the point
from which the first had come. Dick heard the
bullet singing over his head, but it gave him satisfaction
because he was able to locate his enemy.
He sought no return fire, but lay
in the dip, wary and patient. The sun sank beyond
the rim, the western sky flamed blood red for a few
moments, and then the Southern night swept down so
suddenly that it seemed to come with violence.
Dick believed that his escape was now at hand, but
he still showed an infinite patience.
He did not stir from his place until
the night was almost black, and then, carrying his
weapons and the saddlebag of provisions, he crept among
the thickets.
When he stood up he found himself
stiff from lying long in a cramped position.
His face burned from the bites of the mosquitoes,
which still hung in swarms about him, and he felt
dizzy.
But Dick remembered his mission, and
his resolve to perform it was not shaken a particle.
He had lost his horse, but he could walk. Perhaps
his chance of success would be greater on foot in such
a dangerous country.
He advanced now with extreme caution,
feeling the way carefully and testing the ground before
he put his foot down solidly. Still trusting
to his ears he stopped now and then, and listened for
some sound from his enemy in pursuit. But nothing
came, and soon he became quite sure that he had shaken
him off. He was merely a dot in the wilderness
in the dark, and, feeling secure now, he pressed forward
with more speed.
He was hoping to get to a piece of
firm, high ground, where he might secure a measure
of protection from those terrible mosquitoes which
still buzzed angrily about his head. In an hour
chance favored him, as he reached a low ridge much
rockier than usual in that region. He would
have built a little smudge fire to protect himself
from the mosquitoes, but it would be sure to draw
the lurking sharpshooter, and instead he found a nook
in the ridge, under the low boughs of a great oak.
Then he took a light blanket which he carried tied
to his saddlebags, and wrapped it around his neck
and face, covering everything but his mouth and eyes.
He sank into the nook with his back
against the turf, and the reclining position was wonderfully
easy. The mosquitoes, apparently finding the
points of exposure too small, left him alone and went
away. His face still burned from numerous stings,
but he forgot it in present comfort. There was
food in the saddlebags, and he ate enough for his needs.
Then he laid the saddlebags beside him and the rifle
across his knees and stared out into the darkness.
He felt a great relief after his extreme
danger and long exertions. It was both physical
and mental, and sitting there alone in a sunken wilderness
he was nevertheless happy. Believing that the
mosquitoes would not come back, he wrapped the blanket
about his whole body by and by, and pulled his cap
down over his eyes.
Dick had no plans for the night.
He did not know whether he intended to remain there
long or not, but nature settled doubts for him.
His head drooped, and soon he slept as easily and
peacefully as if he had been at home at Pendleton
in his own bed.
Then the wilderness blotted him out
for the time. The little wild animals scurried
through the grass or ran up trees. In the far
distance an owl hooted solemnly at nothing, and he
slept the mighty sleep of exhaustion.