BESIDE THE BROOK
When the slow retreat began Dick looked
for the sergeant. But a stalwart figure, a red
bandage around the head, rose up and confronted him.
It was Sergeant Whitley himself, a little unsteady
yet on his feet, but soon to be as good as ever.
“Thank you for looking for me,
Mr. Mason,” he said, “but I came to, some
time ago. I guess the bullet found my skull too
hard, ’cause it just ran ‘roun’
it, and came out on the other side. I won’t
even be scarred, as my hair covers up the place.”
“Can you walk all right?”
asked Dick, overjoyed to find the sergeant was not
hurt badly.
“Of course I can, Mr. Mason,
an’ I’m proud to have been with General
Thomas in such a battle. I didn’t think
human bein’s could do what our men have done.”
“Nor did I. It was impossible,
but we’ve done it all the same.”
Colonel Winchester rejoiced no less
than the lads over the sergeant’s escape.
All the officers of the regiment liked him, and they
had an infinite respect for his wisdom, particularly
when danger was running high. They were glad
for his own sake that he was alive, and they were
glad to have him with them as they retreated into Chattanooga,
because the night still had its perils.
The moon, though clouded, was out
as they withdrew slowly. On their flanks there
was still firing, as strong detachments skirmished
with one another, but the Winchester men as yet paid
little attention to it. They said grimly to one
another that two days in the infernal regions were
enough for one time. They looked back at the
vast battlefield and the clumps of pines burning now
like funeral torches, and shuddered.
The retreat of Thomas was harried
incessantly. Longstreet and Forrest were eager
to push the attack that night and the next day and
make the victory complete. They and men of less
rank dreamed of a triumph which should restore the
fortunes of the Confederacy to the full, but Bragg
was cautious. He did not wish to incur the uttermost
risk, and the roll of his vast losses might well give
him pause also.
Nevertheless Southern infantry and
cavalry hung on the flanks and rear of the withdrawing
Union force. The cloudy moon gave sufficient
light for the sharpshooters, whose rifles flashed
continuously. The lighter field guns moved from
the forests and bushes, and the troops of Thomas were
compelled to turn again and again to fight them off.
The Winchester regiment was on the
extreme flank, where the men were exposed to the fiercest
attacks, but fortunately the thickets and hills gave
them much shelter. At times they lay down and
returned the fire of the enemy until they beat him
off. Then they would rise and march on again.
All the officers had lost their horses,
and Colonel Winchester strode at the head of his men.
Just behind were Dick, Pennington and some other
members of his staff. The rest had fallen.
Further back was Sergeant Whitley, his head in a
red bandage, but all his faculties returned.
In this dire emergency he was taking upon himself the
duties of a commissioned officer, and there was none
to disobey him. Once more was the wise veteran
showing himself a very bulwark of strength.
Despite the coolness of the night,
they had all suffered on the second day of the battle
from a burning thirst. And now after their immense
exertions it grew fiercer than ever. Dick’s
throat and mouth were parched, and he felt as if he
were breathing fire. He felt that he must have
water or die. All the men around him were panting,
and he knew they were suffering the same torture.
“This country ought to be full
of brooks and creeks,” he said to Pennington.
“If I see water I mean to make a dash for it,
Johnnies or no Johnnies. I’m perfectly
willing to risk my life for a drink.”
“So am I,” said Warner,
who overheard him, “and so are all who are left
in this regiment. If they see the flash of water
nothing can hold them back, not even Bragg’s
whole army. How those skirmishers hang on to
us! Whizz-z! there went their bullets right over
our head!”
The Winchesters turned, delivered
a heavy volley into a thicket, whence the bullets
had come, and marched on, looking eagerly now for water.
They began to talk about it. They spoke of the
cool brooks, “branches” they called them,
that they had known at home, and they told how, when
they found one, they would first drink of it, and then
lie down in its bed and let its water flow over them.
But Dick’s thirst could not
wholly take his mind from the tremendous scenes accompanying
that sullen and defiant retreat. Hills and mountains
were in deepest gloom, save when the signal lights
of the Southern armies flashed back and forth.
The clouded moon touched everything nearer by with
somber gray. The fire of cannon rolled through
the forest and gorges with redoubled echoes.
A shout suddenly came from the head
of the Winchester column.
“Water! Water!”
they cried. A young boy had caught a glimpse
of silver through some bushes, and he knew that it
was made by the swift current of a brook. In
an instant the regiment broke into a run for the water.
Colonel Winchester could not have stopped them if he
had tried, and he did not try. He knew how great
was their need.
“We’re off!” cried Pennington.
“I see it! The water!” shouted Dick.
“I do, too!” exclaimed
Warner, “and it’s the most beautiful water
that ever flowed!”
But they stopped in their rush and
dropped down in the thickets. Sergeant Whitley
had given the warning shout, and fortunately most of
a volley from a point about a hundred yards beyond
the stream swept over their heads. A few men
were wounded, and they not badly.
Dick crawled to the head of the column.
The sergeant was already there, whispering to Colonel
Winchester.
“They’ve taken to cover, too, sir,”
said the sergeant.
“How many do you suppose they are?” asked
the colonel.
“Not more than we are, sir.”
“They run a great risk when they attack us in
this manner.”
“Maybe, sir,” said Dick, “they,
too, were coming for the water.”
Colonel Winchester looked at Sergeant Whitley.
“I’m of the opinion, sir,” said
the sergeant, “that Mr. Mason is right.”
“I think so, too,” said
Colonel Winchester. “It’s a pity
that men should kill each other over a drink of water
when there’s enough for all. Has any man
a handkerchief?”
“Here, sir,” said Warner;
“it’s ragged and not very clean, but I
hope it will do.”
The Colonel raised the handkerchief
on the point of his sword and gave a hail. The
bulk of the two armies had passed on, and now there
was silence in the woods as the two little forces
confronted each other across the stream.
Dick saw a tall form in Confederate
gray rise up from the bushes on the other side of
the brook.
“Are you wanting to surrender?”
the man called in a long, soft drawl.
“Not by any means. We
want a drink of water, and we’re just bound to
have it.”
“You don’t want it any
more than we do, and you’re not any more bound
to have it than we are.”
The colonel hesitated a moment, and
then, influenced by a generous impulse, said:
“If you won’t fire, we won’t.”
The tall, elderly Southerner, evidently a colonel,
also said:
“It’s a fair proposition,
sir. My men have been working so hard the last
two days licking you Yanks that they’re plum’
burnt up with thirst.”
“I don’t admit the licking,
although it’s obvious that you’ve gained
the advantage so far, but is it agreed that we shall
have a truce for a quarter of an hour?”
“It is, sir; the truce of the
water, and may we drink well! Come on, boys!”
Colonel Winchester gave a similar
order to his men, and each side rose from the thickets,
and made a rush for the brook. It was a beautiful
little stream, the most beautiful in the world just
then to Dick and his friends. Clear and cold,
the color of silver in the moonlight, it rushed down
from the mountains. On one side knelt the men
in blue, and on the other the men in gray, and the
pure water was like the elixir of heaven to their
parched and burning throats.
Dick drank long, and then as he raised
his face from the stream he saw opposite him a tall,
lean youth, evidently from the far South, Louisiana
perhaps, a lad with a tanned face and a wide mouth
stretched in a friendly grin.
“Tastes good, doesn’t it, Yank?”
he said.
“Yes, it does, Reb,” replied
Dick. “I felt that I was drying up and
just crumbling away like old dead wood. As soon
as the gallon that I’ve drunk has percolated
thoroughly through my system I intend to hoist aboard
another gallon.”
“I don’t know what percolate
means, but I reckon it has something to do with travelin’
about through your system. I think I need a couple
of gallons myself. Say, will you give a fair
answer to a fair question?”
“Yes, go ahead.”
“Don’t you Yanks feel powerful bad over
the thrashing we’ve given you?”
“Not so bad. Besides I
wouldn’t call it a thrashing. It’s
just a temporary advantage. And you wait.
We’ll take it away from you.”
“I don’t know about that,
but I can’t argue with you now. I’m
due for my second gallon.”
“So am I.”
Each bent down and drank again a long,
life-giving draught from the rushing stream.
For a distance of a hundred yards or more heads black,
brown and sometimes yellow were bent over the brook.
Far off, both to east and west, the cannon thundered
in the darkness, but with the drinkers it was a peaceful
interlude of a quarter of an hour. Such moments
often occurred in this war when the men on both sides
were blood brethren.
Colonel Winchester stood up, and the
grizzled Confederate colonel stood up on the other
side of the stream, facing him. Their hands rose
in a simultaneous salute of respect.
“Sir,” said Colonel Winchester,
“I’m happy to have met you in this manner.”
“Sir,” said the Southern
colonel ornately, “we are happy to have drunk
from the same stream with such brave foes, and now,
sir, I propose as we retire that neither regiment
shall fire a shot within the next five minutes.”
“Agreed,” said Colonel
Winchester, and then as the colonels gave the signals
the two regiments withdrew beyond their respective
thickets. The truce of the water was over, but
these foes did not meet again that night.
The regiment had left a great proportion
of its numbers dead upon the field. Half the
others were wounded more or less, but the slightly
wounded marched on with the unhurt. Many of them
were now barely conscious. They were either
asleep upon their feet or in a daze. Nevertheless
they soon rejoined the main command.
Dick, having his pride as an officer,
sought to keep himself active and alert. He
passed among the lads of his own age, and encouraged
them. He told them how the older men were already
speaking of the wonders they had done, and presently
he saw Thomas himself riding along with the young
general, Garfield, who had been with him throughout
the afternoon. All the Winchester men saw their
commander, and, worn as they were, they stopped and
gave a mighty cheer. Thomas was moved.
Under the cloudy moon Dick saw him show emotion for
the first time. He took off his hat.
“Gentlemen, comrades,”
he said, “we have lost the battle of Chickamauga,
but if all our regiments fight as you fought to-day
the war is won.”
Another cheer, enthusiastic and spontaneous,
burst from the regiment, and Thomas rode on.
Dick had never heard him make another speech so long.
When they reached the little town
of Chattanooga within its mountains they began to
realize the full grandeur of their exploit. The
remainder of the army of Rosecrans was almost a mob,
and brave as he undoubtedly was he was soon removed
to another field, leaving Thomas in supreme command
until Grant should come.
Dick had no rest until the next night,
when tents were set for the battered remains of the
Winchester regiment. He, Warner, Pennington
and three others were assigned to one of the larger
tents. He had been without sleep for two days
and two nights, and the tremendous tension that had
kept him up so long was relaxing fast. He felt
that he must sleep or die. Yet they talked together
a little before they stretched themselves upon their
blankets.
“Do you think Bragg will attack
us in Chattanooga, Dick?” asked Pennington.
“I don’t. Our position
here is too strong, and, as he was the assailant,
his losses must be something awful. Moreover,
the rivers are always ours and reinforcements will
soon pour in to us. I think that General Thomas
saved the Union. What have you to say, George?”
“Just about what you are saying,
Dick. We’ve been beaten, but not enough
to suit the Johnnies. They have on their side
present victory. We have on ours present but
not total defeat. You might say they have x,
while we have x + y. Wait until I look into
my algebra, and I can find further mathematical and
beautiful propositions proving my contention beyond
the shadow of a doubt.”
He took out his algebra and opened
it. A bullet fell from the leaves into his lap.
Warner picked it up and examined it carefully.
Then he looked at the book.
“It went half way through,”
he said in tones of genuine solemnity. “If
it had gone all the way it would have pierced my heart
and I could never have known how this war is going
to end. It has saved my life, and I shall always
keep it over my heart until we go back home.”
Dick was asleep the next minute, and
they did not wake him for twelve hours. When
he came from the tent he stood blinking in the sun,
and a tall lean youth hailed him with a joyous shout:
“Why, it’s Mason—Mason
of Kentucky!” exclaimed the lad, extending a
hardened hand. “I’m glad you’re
alive. How are those friends of yours, Warner
and Pennington?”
“Well, save for scratches, Ohio.
They’re about somewhere.”
They shook hands again, hunted up
the others, and celebrated their escape from death.
Dick learned later that all the Woodvilles
were still alive and that Colonel Kenton, although
wounded, was recovering fast. Slade, with troublesome
raids, soon gave evidence of his own continued existence.
Then, as they expected, reinforcements
poured in. Grant came, and Dick and his comrades
took part in the fight at Missionary Ridge and the
battle “above the clouds” on Lookout Mountain.
He witnessed great triumphs and he had a share in
them.
He saw Bragg’s army broken up,
and he rejoiced with the others when the news came
that Grant for his brilliant successes had been made
commander of all the armies of the Union, and would
go east to match himself against the mighty Lee.
The Winchester regiment would go with him and Dick,
Warner, Pennington and Sergeant Whitley, who was entirely
recovered, talked of it gravely:
“We’ve been in the East
before,” said Pennington, “but we won’t
be under any doubting general now.”
“I fancy it will be the death grapple,”
said Warner.
“And the continent will shake with it,”
said Dick.
The three, as if by the same impulse,
turned and faced the distant East, where the shades
were already gathering over the Wilderness.