THE CLOSING CIRCLE
“George,” said Harry,
“we must chance it now and get back to the horses.
We’ve got to reach General Jackson before the
Northern army is through the pass.”
“You lead,” said Dalton.
“I don’t think we’ll have any danger
except when we are in that strip of grass between
these bushes and the woods.”
Harry started, and when he reached
the grass threw himself almost flat on his face again,
crawling forward with extreme caution. Dalton,
close behind him, imitated his comrade. The
high grass merely rippled as they passed and the anxious
Northern officers walking back and forth were not
well enough versed in woodcraft to read from any sign
that an enemy was near.
Once Dalton struck his knee against
a small bush and caused its leaves to rustle.
A wary and experienced scout would have noticed the
slight, though new noise, and Harry and Dalton, stopping,
lay perfectly still. But the officers walked
to and fro, undisturbed, and the two boys resumed
their creeping flight.
When they reached the forest, they
rose gladly from their knees, and ran up the slope,
still bearing in mind that time was now the most pressing
of all things. They whistled softly as they neared
the little plateau, and Billy’s low answering
whistle came back. They hurried up the last
reach of the slope, and there he was, the eyes shining
in his eager face, the three bridles clutched tightly
in his small right hand.
“Did you get what you wanted?” he asked
in a whisper.
“We did, Billy,” answered Harry.
“I saw ’em sendin’
up shootin’ stars an’ other shootin’
stars way off to the east answerin’, an’
I didn’t know what it meant.”
“It was their vanguard in the
Gap, talking to their army several miles to the eastward.
But we lay in the bushes, Billy, and we heard what
their officers said. All that you heard was
true. Ten thousand Yankees will be through the
pass in the morning, and Stonewall Jackson will have
great cause to be grateful to William Pomeroy, aged
twelve.”
The boy’s eyes fairly glowed, but he was a man
of action.
“Then I guess that we’ve
got to jump on our horses and ride lickety split down
the valley to give warnin’ to General Jackson,”
he said.
Harry knew what was passing in the
boy’s mind, that he would go with them all the
way to Jackson, and he did not have the heart to say
anything to the contrary just then. But Dalton
replied:
“Right you are, Billy.
We ride now as if the woods were burning behind us.”
Billy was first in the saddle and
led the way. The horses had gained a good rest,
while Harry and Dalton were stalking the troopers in
the valley, and, after they had made the descent of
the slope, they swung into a long easy gallop across
the level.
The little lad still kept his place
in front. Neither of the others would have deprived
him of this honor which he deserved so well.
He sat erect, swinging with his horse, and he showed
no sign of weariness. They took no precautions
now to evade a possible meeting with the enemy.
What they needed was haste, haste, always haste.
They must risk everything to carry the news to Jackson.
A mere half hour might mean the difference between
salvation and destruction.
Harry felt the great tension of the
moment. The words of the Northern officers had
made him understand what he already suspected.
The whole fate of the Confederacy would waver in
the balance on the morrow. If Jackson were surrounded
and overpowered, the South would lose its right arm.
Then the armies that engulfed him would join McClellan
and pour forward in an overwhelming host on Richmond.
Their hoofbeats rang in a steady beat
on the road, as they went forward on that long easy
gallop which made the miles drop swiftly behind them.
The skies brightened, and the great stars danced in
a solid sheet of blue. They were in the gently
rolling country, and occasionally they passed a farmhouse.
Now and then, a watchful dog barked at them, but
they soon left him and his bark behind.
Harry noticed that Billy’s figure
was beginning to waver slightly, and he knew that
weariness and the lack of sleep were at last gaining
the mastery over his daring young spirit. It
gave him relief, as it solved a problem that had been
worrying him. He rode up by the side of Billy,
but he said nothing. The boy’s eyelids
were heavy and the youthful figure was wavering, but
it was in no danger of falling. Billy could
have ridden his horse sound asleep.
Harry presently saw the roof of Mrs.
Pomeroy’s house showing among the trees.
“It’s less than half a
mile to your house, Billy,” he said.
“But I’m not going to
stop there. I’m goin’ on with you
to General Jackson, an’ I’m goin’
to help him fight the Yankees.”
Harry was silent, but when they galloped
up to the Pomeroy house, Billy was nearly asleep.
The door sprang open as they approached,
and the figure of the stalwart woman appeared.
Harry knew that she had been watching there every
minute since they left. He was touched by the
dramatic spirit of the moment, and he said:
“Mrs. Pomeroy, we bring back
to you the most gallant soldier in Stonewall Jackson’s
army of the Valley of Virginia. He led us straight
to the Gap where we were able to learn the enemy’s
movements, a knowledge which may save the Confederacy
from speedy destruction. We bring him back to
you, safe and unharmed, and sleeping soundly in his
saddle.”
He lifted Billy from the saddle and
put him in his mother’s arms.
“Billy’s a hero, Cousin
Eliza,” said Dalton. “Few full-grown
men have done as important deeds in their whole lives
as he has done to-night. When he awakens he’ll
be angry because he didn’t go with us, but you
tell him we’ll see that he’s a duly enrolled
member of General Jackson’s army. Stonewall
Jackson never forgets such deeds as his.”
“It’s a proud woman I
am to-night,” said Mrs. Pomeroy. “Good-bye,
Cousin George, and you, too, Mr. Kenton. I can
see that you’re in a hurry to be off, and you
ought to be. I want to see both of you in my
house again in better days.”
She went inside, carrying the exhausted
and sleeping boy in her arms, and Harry and Dalton
galloped away side by side.
“How’s your horse, Harry?” asked
Dalton.
“Fine. Smooth as silk! How’s
yours?”
“The machinery moves without
a jar. I may be stiff and sore myself, but I’m
so anxious to get to General Jackson that I haven’t
time to think about it.”
“Same here. Suppose we speed ’em
up a little more.”
They came into the turnpike, and now
the horses lengthened out their stride as they fled
northward. It was yet some time until dawn, but
the two young riders took the cold food from their
knapsacks and ate as they galloped on. It was
well that they had good horses, staunch and true,
as they were pushing them hard now.
Harry looked toward the west, where
the dark slope of Little North Mountain closed in
the valley from that side, and he felt a shiver which
he knew did not come from the night air. He knew
that a powerful Northern force was off there somewhere,
and he wondered what it was doing. But he and
Dalton had done their duty. They had uncovered
one hostile force, and doubtless other men who rode
in the night for Jackson would attend to the rest.
Both Harry and Dalton had been continuously
in the saddle for many hours now, but they did not
notice their weariness. They were still upborne
by a great anxiety and a great exaltation, too.
Feeling to the full the imminence and immensity of
the crisis, they were bending themselves heart and
soul to prevent it, and no thought of weariness could
enter their minds. Each was another Billy, only
on a larger and older scale.
Later on, the moon and all the stars
slipped away, and it became very dark. Harry
felt that it was merely a preliminary to the dawn,
and he asked Dalton if he did not think so, too.
“It’s too dark for me
to see the face of my watch,” said Dalton, “but
I know you’re right, Harry. I can just
feel the coming of the dawn. It’s some
quality in the air. I think it grows a little
colder than it has been in the other hours of the
night.”
“I can feel the wind freshening
on my face. It nips a bit for a May morning.”
They slackened speed a little, wishing
to save their horses for a final burst, and stopped
once or twice for a second or two to listen for the
sound of other hoofbeats than their own. But
they heard none.
“If the Yankee armies are already
on the turnpike they’re not near us. That’s
sure,” said Dalton.
“Do you know how many men they have?”
“Some of the spies brought in
what the general believed to be pretty straight reports.
The rumors said that Shields was advancing to Manassas
Gap with ten thousand men, and from what we heard we
know that is true. A second detachment, also
ten thousand strong, from McDowell’s army is
coming toward Front Royal, and McDowell has twenty
thousand men east of the Blue Ridge. What the
forces to the west are I don’t know but the
enemy in face of the general himself on the Potomac
must now number at least ten thousand.”
Harry whistled.
“And at the best we can’t
muster more than fifteen thousand fit to carry arms!”
he exclaimed.
Dalton leaned over in the dark, and
touched his comrade on the shoulder.
“Harry,” he said, “don’t
forget Old Jack. Where Little Sorrel leads there
is always an army of forty thousand men. I’m
not setting myself up to be very religious, but it’s
safe to say that he was praying to-night, and when
Old Jack prays, look out.”
“Yes, if anybody can lead us
out of this trap it will be Old Jack,” said
Harry. “Look, there’s the dawn coming
over the Blue Ridge, George.”
A faint tint of gray was appearing
on the loftiest crests of the Blue Ridge. It
could scarcely be called light yet, but it was a sign
to the two that the darkness there would soon melt
away. Gradually the gray shredded off and then
the ridges were tipped with silver which soon turned
to gold. Dawn rushed down over the valley and
the pleasant forests and fields sprang into light.
Then they heard hoofbeats behind them
coming fast. The experienced ears of both told
them that it was only a single horseman who came, and,
drawing their pistols, they turned their horses across
the road. When the rider saw the two threatening
figures he stopped, but in a moment he rode on again.
They were in gray and so was he.
“Why, it’s Chris Aubrey
of the general’s own staff!” exclaimed
Dalton. “Don’t you know him, Harry?”
“Of course I do. Aubrey,
we’re friends. It’s Dalton and Kenton.”
Aubrey dashed his hands across his
eyes, as if he were clearing a mist from them.
He was worn and weary, and his look bore a singular
resemblance to that of despair.
“What is it, Chris?” asked Dalton with
sympathy.
“I was sent down the Luray Valley
to learn what I could and I discovered that Ord was
advancing with ten thousand men on Front Royal, where
General Jackson left only a small garrison. I’m
going as fast as my horse can take me to tell him.”
“We’re on the same kind
of a mission, Chris,” said Harry. “We’ve
seen the vanguard of Shields, ten thousand strong
coming through Manassas Gap, and we also are going
as fast as our horses can take us to tell General
Jackson.”
“My God! Does it mean
that we are about to be surrounded?”
“It looks like it,” said
Harry, “but sometimes you catch things that you
can’t hold. George and I never give up
faith in Old Jack.”
“Nor do I,” said Aubrey.
“Come on! We’ll ride together!
I’m glad I met you boys. You give me
courage.”
The three now rode abreast and again
they galloped. One or two early farmers going
phlegmatically to their fields saw them, but they passed
on in silence. They had grown too used to soldiers
to pay much attention to them. Moreover, these
were their own.
The whole valley was now flooded with
light. To east and to west loomed the great
walls of the mountains, heavy with foliage, cut here
and there by invisible gaps through which Harry knew
that the Union troops were pouring.
They caught sight of moving heads
on a narrow road coming from the west which would
soon merge into theirs. They slackened speed
for a moment or two, uncertain what to do, and then
Aubrey exclaimed:
“It’s a detachment of
our own cavalry. See their gray uniforms, and
that’s Sherburne leading them!”
“So it is!” exclaimed
Harry, and he rode forward joyfully. Sherburne
gave all three of them a warm welcome, but he was far
from cheerful. He led a dozen troopers and they,
like himself, were covered with dust and were drooping
with weariness. It was evident to Harry that
they had ridden far and hard, and that they did not
bring good news.
“Well, Harry,” said Sherburne,
still attempting the gay air, “chance has brought
us together again, and I should judge from your appearance
that you’ve come a long way, bringing nothing
particularly good.”
“It’s so. George
and I have been riding all night. We were in
Manassas Gap and we learned definitely that Shields
is coming through the pass with ten thousand men.”
“Fine,” said Sherburne
with a dusty smile. “Ten thousand is a
good round number.”
“And if we’ll give him
time enough,” continued Harry, “McDowell
will come with twice as many more.”
“Look’s likely,” said Sherburne.
“We’ve been riding back
toward Jackson as fast as we could,” continued
Harry, “and a little while ago Aubrey riding
the same way overtook us.”
“And what have you seen, Aubrey?” asked
Sherburne.
“I? Oh, I’ve seen
a lot. I’ve been down by Front Royal in
the night, and I’ve seen Ord with ten thousand
men coming full tilt down the Luray Valley.”
“What another ten thousand!
It’s funny how the Yankees run to even tens
of thousands, or multiples of that number.”
“I’ve heard,” said
Harry, “that the force under Banks and Saxton
in front of Jackson was ten thousand also.”
“I’m sorry, boys, to break
up this continuity,” said Sherburne with a troubled
laugh, “but it’s fifteen thousand that
I’ve got to report. Fremont is coming from
the west with that number. We’ve seen ’em.
I’ve no doubt that at this moment there are nearly
fifty thousand Yankees in the valley, with more coming,
and all but ten thousand of them are in General Jackson’s
rear.”
It seemed that Sherburne, daring cavalryman,
had lost his courage for the moment, but the faith
of the stern Presbyterian youth, Dalton, never faltered.
“As I told Harry a little while
ago, we have at least fifty thousand men,” he
said.
“What do you mean?” asked Sherburne.
“I count Stonewall Jackson as
forty thousand, and the rest will bring the number
well over fifty thousand.”
Sherburne struck his gauntleted hand smartly on his
thigh.
“You talk sense, Dalton!”
he exclaimed. “I was foolish to despair!
I forgot how much there was under Stonewall Jackson’s
hat! They haven’t caught the old fox yet!”
They galloped on anew, and now they
were riding on the road, over which they had pursued
so hotly the defeated army of Banks. They would
soon be in Jackson’s camp, and as they approached
their hearts grew lighter. They would cast off
their responsibilities and trust all to the leader
who appeared so great to them.
“I see pickets now,” said
Aubrey. “Only five more minutes, boys,
but as soon as I give my news I’ll have to drop.
The excitement has kept me up, but I can’t
last any longer.”
“Nor I,” said Harry, who
realized suddenly that he was on the verge of collapse.
“Whether our arrival is to be followed by a
battle or a retreat I’m afraid I won’t
be fit for either.”
They gave the password, and the pickets
pointed to the tent of Jackson. They rode straight
to him, and dismounted as he came forth from the tent.
They were so stiff and sore from long riding that Dalton
and Aubrey fell to their knees when they touched the
ground, but they quickly recovered, and although they
stood somewhat awkwardly they saluted with the deepest
respect. Jackson’s glance did not escape
their mishap, and he knew the cause, but he merely
said:
“Well, gentlemen.”
“I have to report, sir,”
said Sherburne, speaking first as the senior officer,
“that General Fremont is coming from the west
with fifteen thousand men, ready to fall upon your
right flank.”
“Very good, and what have you seen, Captain
Aubrey?”
“Ord with ten thousand men is in our rear and
is approaching Front Royal.”
“Very good. You have done
faithful work, Captain Aubrey. What have you
seen, Lieutenant Kenton and Lieutenant Dalton?”
“General Shields, sir, is in
Manassas Gap this morning with ten thousand men, and
he and General Ord can certainly meet to-day if they
wish. We learned also that General McDowell can
come up in a few days with twenty thousand more.”
The face of Stonewall Jackson never
flinched. It looked worn and weary but not more
so than it did before this news.
“I thank all of you, young gentlemen,”
he said in his quiet level tones. “You
have done good service. It may be that you’re
a little weary. You’d better sleep now.
I shall call you when I want you.”
The four saluted and General Jackson
went back into the tent. Aubrey made a grimace.
“We may be a little tired!”
he said. “Why, I haven’t been out
of the saddle for twenty-four hours, and I felt so
anxious that every one of those hours was a day long.”
“But it’s a lot to get
from the general an admission that you may be even
a little tired,” said Dalton. “Remember
the man for whom you ride.”
“That’s so,” said
Aubrey, “and I oughtn’t to have said what
I did. We’ve got to live up to new standards.”
Sherburne, Aubrey and Dalton picked
out soft spots on the grass and almost instantly were
sound asleep, but Harry lingered a minute or two longer.
He saw across the river the glitter of bayonets and
the dark muzzles of cannon. He also saw many
troops moving on the hills and he knew that he was
looking upon the remains of Banks’ army reinforced
by fresh men, ready to dispute the passage or fight
Jackson if he marched northward in any other way,
while the great masses of their comrades gathered
behind him.
Harry felt again for a moment that
terrible sinking of the heart which is such close
kin to despair. Enemies to the north of them,
enemies to the south of them, and to the east and
to the west, enemies everywhere. The ring was
closing in. Worse than that, it had closed in
already and Stonewall Jackson was only mortal.
Neither he nor any one else could lead them through
the overwhelming ranks of such a force.
But the feeling passed quickly.
It could not linger, because the band of the Acadians
was playing, and the dark men of the Gulf were singing.
Even with the foe in sight, and a long train of battles
and marches behind them, with others yet worse to
come, they began to dance, clasped in one another’s
arms.
Many of the Acadians had already gone
to a far land and they would never again on this earth
see Antoinette or Celeste or Marie, but the sun of
the south was in the others and they sang and danced
in the brief rest allowed to them.
Harry liked to look at them.
He sat on the grass and leaned his back against a
tree. The music raised up the heart and it was
wonderfully lulling, too. Why worry? Stonewall
Jackson would tell them what to do.
The rhythmic forms grew fainter, and
he slept. He was awakened the next instant by
Dalton. Harry opened his eyes heavily and looked
reproachfully at his friend.
“I’ve slept less than a minute,”
he said.
Dalton laughed.
“So it seemed to me, too, when
I was awakened,” he said, “but you’ve
slept a full two hours just as I did. What do
you expect when you’re working for Stonewall
Jackson. You’ll be lucky later on whenever
you get a single hour.”
Harry brushed the traces of sleep from his eyes and
stood up straight.
“What’s wanted?” he asked.
“You and I and some others are
going to take a little railroad trip, escorted by
Stonewall Jackson. That’s all I know and
that’s all anybody knows except the general.
Come along and look your little best.”
Harry brushed out his wrinkled uniform,
straightened his cap, and in a minute he and Dalton
were with the group of staff officers about Jackson.
There was still a section of railway in the valley
held by the South, and Jackson and his aides were
soon aboard a small train on their way back to Winchester.
Harry, glancing from the window, saw the troops gathering
up their ammunition and the teamsters hitching up their
horses.
“It’s going to be a retreat
up the valley,” he whispered to Dalton.
“But masses more than three to one are gathering
about us.”
“I tell you again, you just trust Old Jack.”
Harry looked toward the far end of
the coach where Jackson sat with the older members
of his staff. His figure swayed with the train,
but he showed no sign of weariness or that his dauntless
soul dwelt in a physical body. He was looking
out at the window, but it was obvious that he did
not see the green landscape flashing past. Harry
knew that he was making the most complex calculations,
but like Dalton he ceased to wonder about them.
He put his faith in Old Jack, and let it go at that.
There was very little talking in the
train. Despite every effort, Harry’s eyes
grew heavy and he began to doze a little. He
would waken entirely at times and straighten up with
a jerk. Then he would see the fields and forests
still rushing past, now and then a flash as they crossed
a stream, and always the sober figure of the general,
staring, unseeing, through the window.
He suddenly became wide-awake, when
he heard sharp comment in the coach. All the
older officers were gazing through the windows with
the greatest interest. Harry saw a man in Confederate
uniform galloping across the fields and waving his
hands repeatedly to the train which was already checking
speed.
“A staff officer with news,” said Dalton.
“Yes,” said Harry, “and I’m
thinking it will seem bad news to you and me.”
The train stopped in a field, and
the officer, panting and covered with dust and perspiration,
rode alongside. Jackson walked out on the steps,
followed by his eager officers.
“What is it?” asked Jackson.
“The Northern army has retaken
Front Royal. The Georgia regiment you left in
garrison there has been driven out and without support
is marching northward. I have here, sir, a dispatch
from Colonel Connor, the commander of the Georgians.”
He handed the folded paper to the
general, who received it but did not open it for a
moment. There was something halfway between a
sigh and a groan from the officers, but Jackson said
nothing. He smiled, but, as Harry saw it, it
was a strange and threatening smile. Then he
opened the dispatch, read it carefully, tore it into
tiny bits and threw them away. Harry saw the
fragments picked up by the wind and whirled across
the field. Jackson nearly always destroyed his
dispatches in this manner.
“Very good,” he said to
the officer, “you can rejoin Colonel Connor.”
He went back to his seat. The
train puffed, heaved and started again. Jackson
leaned against the back of the seat and closed his
eyes. He seemed to be asleep. But the
desire for sleep was driven from Harry. The news
of the retaking of Front Royal had stirred the whole
train. Officers talked of it in low tones, but
with excitement. The Northern generals were
acting with more than their customary promptness.
Already they had struck a blow and Ord with his ten
thousand men had undoubtedly passed from the Luray
Valley into the main Valley of Virginia to form a
junction with Shields and his ten thousand.
What would Jackson do? Older
men in the train than Harry and Dalton were asking
that question, but he remained silent. He kept
his eyes closed for some time, and Harry thought that
he must be fast asleep, although it seemed incredible
that a man with such responsibilities could sleep at
such a time. But he opened his eyes presently
and began to talk with a warm personal friend who
occupied the other half of the seat.
Harry did not know the tenor of this
conversation then, but he heard of it later from the
general’s friend. Jackson had remarked
to the man that he seemed to be surrounded, and the
other asked what he would do if the Northern armies
cut him off entirely. Jackson replied that he
would go back toward the north, invade Maryland and
march straight on Baltimore and Washington.
Few more daring plans have ever been conceived, but,
knowing Jackson as he learned to know him, Harry always
believed that he would have tried it.
But the Southern leaders within that
mighty and closing ring in the valley were not the
only men who had anxious minds. At the Union
capital they did not know what had become of Jackson.
They knew that he was somewhere within the ring,
but where? He might pounce upon a division,
deal another terrible blow and then away! In
a week he had drawn the eyes of the world upon him,
and his enemies no longer considered anything impossible
to him. Many a patriot who was ready to die rather
than see the union of the states destroyed murmured:
“If he were only on our side!” There was
already talk of recalling McClellan’s great army
to defend Washington.
The object of all this immense anxiety
and care was riding peacefully in a train to Winchester,
talking with a friend but conscious fully of his great
danger. It seemed that the Northern generals
with their separate armies were acting in unison at
last, and must close down on their prey.
They came again into Winchester, the
town torn so often by battle and its anxieties, and
saw the Presbyterian minister, his face gray with care,
greet Jackson. Then the two walked toward the
manse, followed at a respectful distance by the officers
of the staff.
Harry soon saw that the whole of Winchester
was in gloom. They knew there of the masses
in blue converging on Jackson, and few had hope.
While Jackson remained at the manse he sat upon the
portico within call. There was little sound in
Winchester. The town seemed to have passed into
an absolute silence. Most of the doors and shutters
were closed.
And yet the valley had never seemed
more beautiful to Harry. Far off were the dim
blue mountains that enclosed it on either side, and
the bright skies never bent in a more brilliant curve.
He felt again that overpowering desire
to sleep, and he may have dozed a little when he sat
there in the sun, but he was wide awake when Jackson
called him.
“I want you to go at once to
Harper’s Ferry with this note,” he said,
“and give it to the officer in command.
He will bring back the troops to Winchester, and
you are to come with him. You can go most of
the way on the train and then you must take to your
horse. The troops will march back by the valley
turnpike.”
Harry saluted and was off. He
soon found that other officers were going to the various
commands with orders similar to his, and he no longer
had any doubt that the whole force would be consolidated
and would withdraw up the valley. He was right.
Jackson had abandoned the plan of entering Maryland
and marching on Baltimore and Washington, and was now
about to try another, fully as daring, but calling
for the most sudden and complicated movements.
He had arranged it all, as he rode in the train,
most of it as he leaned against the back of the seat
with his eyes shut.
Harry was soon back in Harper’s
Ferry, and the troops there immediately began their
retreat. Most all of them knew of the great danger
that menaced their army, but Harry, a staff officer,
understood better than the regimental commanders what
was occurring. The Invincibles were in their
division and he rode with the two colonels, St. Clair
and Happy Tom Langdon. They went at a swift
pace and behind them came the steady beat of the marching
troops on the turnpike.
“You have been with General
Jackson in Winchester, Harry,” said Colonel
Leonidas Talbot in his precise manner, “and I
judge that you must have formed some idea of his intentions.
This indicates a general retreat southward, does
it not?”
“I think so, sir. General
Jackson has said nothing, but I know that orders have
been sent to all our detachments to draw in.
He must have some plan of cutting his way through
toward the south. What do you think, Colonel
St. Hilaire?”
“It must be so,” replied
Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire, “but
how he will do it is beyond me. When I look around
at all these blue mountains, Leonidas, it seems to
me that we’re enclosed by living battlements.”
“Or that Jackson is like the
tiger in the bush, surrounded by the beaters.”
“Yes, and sometimes it’s
woe to the beaters when they come too near.”
Harry dropped back with his younger
friends who were by no means of sad demeanor.
St. Clair had restored his uniform to its usual immaculate
neatness or in some manner he had obtained a new one.
Tom Langdon was Happy Tom again.
“We’ve eaten well, and
we’ve slept well,” said Langdon, “and
Arthur and I are restored completely. He’s
the finest dandy in the army again, and I’m
ready for another week’s run with Jackson.
I know I won’t get another chance to rest in
a long time, but Old Stonewall needn’t think
I can’t march as long as he can.”
“You’ll get your fill
of it,” said Harry, “and of fighting, too.
Take a look all around you. No, not a half
circle, but a complete circle.”
“Well, I’ve twisted my
neck until my head nearly falls off. What signifies
the performance?”
“There was no time when you
were turning around the circle that your eyes didn’t
look toward Yankees. Nearly fifty thousand of
’em are in the valley. We’re in
a ring of steel, Happy.”
“Well, Old Jack will just take
his sword and slash that steel ring apart. And
if he should fail I’m here. Lead me to
’em, Harry.”
Langdon’s spirits were infectious.
Even the marching men who heard Happy Tom laugh,
laughed with him and were more cheerful. They
marched faster, too, and from other points men were
coming quickly to Jackson at Winchester. They
were even coming into contact with the ring of steel
which was closing in on them. Fremont, advancing
with his fifteen thousand from the mountains, met
a heavy fire from a line of ambushed riflemen.
Not knowing where Jackson was or what he was doing,
and fearing that the great Confederate commander might
be before him with his whole army, he stopped at Cedar
Creek and made a camp of defense.
Shields, in the south, moving forward,
found a swarm of skirmishers in his front, and presently
the Acadians, sent in that direction by Jackson, opened
up with a heavy fire on his vanguard. Shields
drew back. He, too, feared that Jackson with
his entire army was before him and rumor magnified
the Southern force. Meanwhile the flying cavalry
of Ashby harassed the Northern advance at many points.
All the time the main army of Jackson
was retreating toward Winchester, carrying with it
the prisoners and a vast convoy of wagons filled with
captured ammunition and stores. Jackson had foreseen
everything. He had directed the men who were
leading these forces to pass around Winchester in
case he was compelled to abandon it, circle through
the mountains and join him wherever he might be.
But Harry when he returned to Winchester
breathed a little more freely. He felt in some
manner that the steel ring did not compress so tightly.
Jackson, acting on the inside of the circle, had spread
consternation. The Northern generals could not
communicate with one another because either mountains
or Southern troops came between. Prisoners whom
the Southern cavalry brought in told strange stories.
Rumor in their ranks had magnified Jackson’s
numbers double or triple. Many believed that
a great force was coming from Richmond to help him.
Jackson was surrounded, but the beaters were very
wary about pressing in on him.
Yet the Union masses in the valley
had increased. McDowell himself had now come,
and he sent forward cavalry details which, losing the
way, were compelled to return. Fremont on the
west at last finding the line of riflemen before him
withdrawn, pushed forward, and saw the long columns
of the Southern army with their wagons moving steadily
toward the south. His cavalry attacking were
driven off and the Southern division went on.
Harry with the retreating division
wondered at these movements and admired their skill.
Jackson’s army, encumbered as it was with prisoners
and stores, was passing directly between the armies
of Fremont and Shields, covering its flanks with clouds
of skirmishers and cavalry that beat off every attack
of the hostile vanguards, and that kept the two Northern
armies from getting into touch.
Jackson had not stopped at Winchester.
He had left that town once more to the enemy and
was still drawing back toward the wider division of
the valley west of the Massanuttons. The great
mind was working very fast now. The men themselves
saw that warlike genius incarnate rode on the back
of Little Sorrel. Jackson was slipping through
the ring, carrying with him every prisoner and captured
wagon.
His lightning strokes to right and
to left kept Shields and Fremont dazed and bewildered,
and McDowell neither knew what was passing nor could
he get his forces together. Harry saw once more
and with amazement the dark bulk of the Massanuttons
rising on his left and he knew that these great isolated
mountains would again divide the Union force, while
Jackson passed on in the larger valley.
He felt a thrill, powerful and indescribable.
Jackson in very truth had slashed across with his
sword that great ring of steel and was passing through
the break, leaving behind not a single prisoner, nor
a single wagon. Sixty-two thousand men had not
only failed to hold sixteen thousand, but their scattered
forces had suffered numerous severe defeats from the
far smaller army. It was not that the Northern
men were inferior to the Southern in courage and tenacity,
but the Southern army was led by a genius of the first
rank, unmatched as a military leader in modern times,
save by Napoleon and Lee.
It was the last day of May and the
twilight was at hand. The dark masses of Little
North Mountain to the west and of the Massanuttons
to the east were growing dim. Harry rode by
the side of Dalton a few paces in the rear of Jackson,
and he watched the somber, silent man, riding silently
on Little Sorrel. There was nothing bright or
spectacular about him. The battered gray uniform
was more battered than ever. In place of the
worn cap an old slouched hat now shaded his forehead
and eyes. But Harry knew that their extraordinary
achievements had not been due to luck or chance, but
were the result of the mighty calculations that had
been made in the head under the old slouched hat.
Harry heard behind him the long roll
and murmur of the marching army, the wheels of cannon
and wagons grating on the turnpike, the occasional
neigh of a horse, the rattle of arms and the voices
of men talking low. Most of these men had been
a year and a half ago citizens untrained for war.
They were not mere creatures of drill, but they were
intelligent, and they thought for themselves.
They knew as well as the officers what Jackson had
done and henceforth they looked upon him as something
almost superhuman. Confident in his genius they
were ready to follow wherever Jackson led, no matter
what the odds.
These were exactly the feelings of
both Harry and Dalton. They would never question
or doubt again. Both of them, with the hero worship
of youth felt a mighty swell of pride, that they should
ride with so great a leader, and be so near to him.
The army marched on in the darkening
hours, leaving behind it sixty thousand men who closed
up the ring only to find their game gone.
Harry heard from the older staff officers
that they would go on up the valley until they came
to the Gaps of the Blue Ridge. There in an impregnable
position they could turn and fight pursuit or take
the railway to Richmond and join in the defense against
McClellan. It all depended on what Jackson thought,
and his thoughts were uniformly disclosed by action.
Meanwhile the news was spreading through
the North that Jackson had escaped, carrying with
him his prisoners and captured stores. Odds had
counted for nothing. All the great efforts directed
from Washington had been unavailing. All the
courage and energy of brave men had been in vain.
But the North did not cease her exertions for an instant.
Lincoln, a man of much the same character as Jackson,
but continually thwarted by mediocre generals, urged
the attack anew. Dispatches were sent to all
the commanders ordering them to push the pursuit of
Jackson and to bring him to battle.
Cut to the quick by their great failure,
Fremont, Shields, Ord, Banks, McDowell and all the
rest, pushed forward on either side of the Massanuttons,
those on the west intending to cross at the gap, join
their brethren, and make another concerted attempt
at Jackson’s destruction.
But Harry ceased to think of armies
and battles as he rode on in the dark. He was
growing sleepy again and he dozed in his saddle.
Half consciously he thought of his father and wondered
where he was. He had received only one letter
from him after Shiloh, but he believed that he was
still with the Confederate army in the west, taking
an active part. Much as he loved his father it
was the first time that he had been in his thoughts
in the last two weeks. How could any one think
of anything but the affair of the moment at such a
time, when the seconds were ticked off by cannon-shots!
In this vague and pleasant dream he
also remembered Dick Mason, his cousin, who was now
somewhere there in the west fighting on the other
side. He thought of Dick with affection and he
liked him none the less because he wore the blue.
Then, curiously enough, the last thing that he remembered
was his Tacitus, lying in his locked desk in the Pendleton
Academy. He would get out that old fellow again
some day and finish him. Then he fell sound asleep
in his saddle, and the horse went steadily on, safely
carrying his sleeping master.
He did not awake until midnight, when
Dalton’s hand on his shoulder caused him to
open his eyes.
“I’ve been asleep, too,
Harry,” said Dalton, “but I woke up first.
We’re going into camp here for the rest of the
night.”
“I’m glad to stop,”
said Harry, “but I wonder what the dawn will
bring.”
“I wonder,” said Dalton.