THE DOUBLE BATTLE
The twenty-four hours were a rest,
merely by comparison. There was no pursuit,
at least, the enemy was not in sight, but the scouts
brought word that the bridge over the Shenandoah would
be completed in a day and night, and that Fremont
would follow. Jackson’s army triumphantly
passed the last defile of the Massanuttons and the
army of Shields did not appear issuing from it.
It was no longer possible for them to be struck in
front and on the flank at the same time, and the army
breathed a mighty sigh of relief. At night of
the next day Harry was sitting by the camp of the
Invincibles, having received a brief leave of absence
from the staff, and he detailed the news to his eager
friends.
“General Jackson is stripping
again for battle,” he said to Colonel Leonidas
Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire.
“He’s sent all the sick and wounded across
a ferry to Staunton, and he’s dispatched his
prisoners and captured stores by another road.
So he has nothing left but men fit for battle.”
“Which includes me,” said
St. Clair proudly, showing his left shoulder from
which the bandage had been taken, “I’m
as well as ever.”
“Men get well fast with Stonewall
Jackson,” said Colonel Talbot. “I’ll
confess to you lads that I thought it was all up with
us there in the lower valley, when we were surrounded
by the masses of the enemy, and I don’t see
yet how we got here.”
“But we are here, Leonidas,”
said Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire, “and
that’s enough for us to know.”
“Right, Hector, old friend.
It’s enough for us to know. Do you by
chance happen to have left two of those delightful
cigarettes?”
“Just two, Leonidas, one for
you and one for me, and now is a chance to smoke ’em.”
The young lieutenants drew to one
side while the two old friends smoked and compared
notes. They did not smoke, but they compared
notes also, as they rested on the turf. The
rain had ceased and the grass was dry. They saw
through the twilight the dark mass of the Massanuttons,
the extreme southern end, and Happy Tom Langdon waved
his hand toward the mountain, like one who salutes
a friend.
“Good old mountain,” he
said. “You’ve been a buffer between
us and the enemy more than once, but it took a mind
like Stonewall Jackson’s to keep moving you
around so you would stand between the armies of the
enemy and make the Yankees fight, only one army at
a time.”
“You’re right,”
said Harry, who was enjoying the deep luxury of rest.
“I didn’t know before that mountains could
be put to such good use. Look, you can see lights
on the ridge now.”
They saw lights, evidently those of
powerful lanterns swung to and fro, but they did not
understand them, nor did they care much.
“Signals are just trifles to
me now,” said Happy Tom. “What do
I care for lights moving on a mountain four or five
miles away, when for a month, day and night without
stopping, a million Yankees have been shooting rifle
bullets at me, and a thousand of the biggest cannon
ever cast have been pouring round shot, long shot,
shell, grape, canister and a hundred other kinds of
missiles that I can’t name upon this innocent
and unoffending head of mine.”
“They’ll be on us tomorrow,
Happy,” said St. Clair, more gravely. “This
picnic of ours can’t last more than a day.”
“I think so, too,” said
Harry. “So long, boys, I’ve got to
join Captain Sherburne. The general has detached
me for service with him under Ashby, and you know
that when you are with them, something is going to
happen.”
Harry slept well that night, partly
in a camp and partly in a saddle, and he found himself
the next day with Ashby and Sherburne near a little
town called Harrisonburg. They were on a long
hill in thick forest, and the scouts reported that
the enemy was coming. The Northern armies were
uniting now and they were coming up the valley, expecting
to crush all opposition.
“Take your glasses, Harry,”
said Sherburne, “and you’ll see a strong
force crossing the fields, but it’s not strong
enough. We’ve a splendid position here
in the forest and you just watch. Ah, here come
your friends, the Invincibles. See, Ashby is
forming them in the center, while we, of the horse,
take the flanks.”
The men in blue, catching sight of
the Confederate uniforms in the wood, charged with
a shout, but they did not know the strength of the
force before them. The Invincibles poured in
a deadly fire at close range, and then Ashby’s
cavalry with a yell charged on either flank.
The Northern troops, taken by surprise, gave way,
and the Southern force followed, firing continuously.
They came within a half mile of Harrisonburg,
and the main Northern army of Fremont was at hand.
The general who had pursued so long, saw his men
retreating, and, filled with chagrin and anger, he
hurried forward heavier forces of both cavalry and
infantry. Other troops came to the relief of
Ashby also, and Harry saw what he thought would be
only a heavy skirmish grow into a hot battle of size.
Fremont, resolved that the North should
win a battle in the open field, and rejoiced that
he had at last brought his enemy to bay, never ceased
to hurry his troops to the combat. Formidable
lines of the western riflemen rushed on either flank,
and before their deadly rifles Ashby’s cavalry
wavered. Harry saw with consternation that they
were about to give way, but Ashby galloped up to the
unbroken lines of infantry and ordered them to charge.
The words were scarcely out of his
mouth, when his horse, shot through, fell to the ground.
Ashby fell with him, but he sprang instantly to his
feet, and shouted in a loud voice:
“Charge men, for God’s
sake! Charge! Charge!” With a rush
and roar, the Invincibles and their comrades swept
forward, but at the same instant Harry saw Ashby fall
again. With a cry of horror he leaped from his
horse and ran to him, lifting him in his arms.
But he quickly laid him back on the grass.
Ashby had been shot through the heart and killed instantly.
Harry gazed around him, struck with
grief and dismay, but he saw only the resistless rush
of the infantry. The Invincibles and their comrades
were avenging the death of Turner Ashby. Tired
of retreating and hot for action they struck the Northern
division with a mighty impact, shattering it and driving
it back rapidly. The Southern cavalry, recovering
also, struck it on the flank, and the defeat was complete.
Fremont’s wish was denied him. After
so much hard marching and such a gallant and tenacious
pursuit, he had gone the way of the other Northern
generals who opposed Jackson, and was beaten.
Although they had driven back the
vanguard, winning a smart little victory, and telling
to Fremont and Shields that the pursuit of Jackson
had now become dangerous, there was gloom in the Southern
army. The horsemen did not know until they trotted
back and saw Harry kneeling beside his dead body,
that the great Ashby was gone. For a while they
could not believe it. Their brilliant and daring
leader, who had led Jackson’s vanguard in victory,
and who had hung like a covering curtain in retreat,
could not have fallen. It seemed impossible that
the man who had led for days and days through continuous
showers of bullets could have been slain at last by
some stray shot.
But they lifted him up finally and
carried him away to a house in the little neighboring
village of Port Republic, Sherburne and the other
captains, hot from battle, riding with uncovered heads.
He was put upon a bed there, and Harry, a staff officer,
was selected to ride to Jackson with the news.
He would gladly have evaded the errand, but it was
obvious that he was the right messenger.
He rode slowly and found Jackson coming
up with the main force, Dr. McGuire, his physician,
and Colonel Crutchfield, his chief of artillery, riding
on either side of him. The general gave one glance
at Harry’s drooping figure.
“Well,” he said, “have
we not won the victory? From a hilltop our glasses
showed the enemy in flight.”
“Yes, general,” said Harry,
taking off his hat, “we defeated the enemy,
but General Ashby is dead.”
Jackson and his staff were silent
for a moment, and Harry saw the general shrink as
if he had received a heavy blow.
“Ashby killed! Impossible!” he exclaimed.
“It’s true, sir.
I helped to carry his body to a house in Port Republic,
where it is now lying.”
“Lead us to that house, Mr. Kenton,” said
Jackson.
Harry rode forward in silence, and
the others followed in the same silence. At
the house, after they had looked upon the body, Jackson
asked to be left alone awhile with all that was left
of Turner Ashby. The others withdrew and Harry
always believed that Jackson prayed within that room
for the soul of his departed comrade.
When he came forth his face had resumed
its sternness, but was without other expression, as
usual.
“He will not show grief, now,”
said Sherburne, “but I think that his soul is
weeping.”
“And a bad time for Fremont
and Shields is coming,” said Harry.
“It’s a risk that we all
take in war,” said Dalton, who was more of a
fatalist than any of the others.
The chief wrote a glowing official
tribute to Ashby, saying that his “daring was
proverbial, his powers of endurance almost incredible,
his character heroic, and his sagacity almost intuitive
in divining the purposes and movements of the enemy.”
Yet deeply as Harry had been affected by Ashby’s
death, it could not remain in his mind long, because
they had passed the Massanuttons now, and Fremont and
Shields following up the valley must soon unite.
Harry believed that Jackson intended
to strike a blow. The situation of the Confederacy
was again critical—it seemed to Harry that
it was always critical—and somebody must
wield the sword, quick and strong. McClellan
with his great and well-trained army was before Richmond.
It was only the rapid marches and lightning strokes
of Jackson that had kept McDowell with another great
army from joining him, but to keep back this force
of McDowell until they dealt with McClellan, there
must be yet other rapid marches and lightning strokes.
Harry’s sleep that night was
the longest in two weeks, but he was up at dawn, and
he was directed by Jackson to ride forward with Sherburne
toward the southern base of the Massanuttons, observe
the approach of both Fremont and Shields and report
to him.
Harry was glad of his errand.
He always liked to ride with Sherburne, who was a
fount of cheerfulness, and he was still keyed up to
that extraordinary intensity and pitch of excitement
that made all things possible. He now understood
how the young soldiers of Napoleon in Italy had been
able to accomplish so much. It was the man, a
leader of inspiration and genius, surcharging them
all with electrical fire.
Sherburne’s troop was a portion
of a strong cavalry force, which divided as it reached
the base of the Massanuttons, a half passing on either
side. Sherburne and Harry rode to the right in
order to see the army of Shields. The day was
beautiful, with a glorious June sun and gentle winds,
but Harry, feeling something strange about it, realized
presently that it was the silence. For more
than two weeks cannon had been thundering and rifles
crashing in the valley, almost without cessation.
Neither night nor storm had caused any interruption.
It seemed strange, almost incredible
now, but they heard birds singing as they flew from
tree to tree, and peaceful rabbits popped up in the
brush. Yet before they went much further they
saw the dark masses of the Northern army under Shields
moving slowly up the valley, and anxious for the junction
with Fremont.
But the Northern generals were again
at a loss. Jackson had turned suddenly and defeated
Fremont’s vanguard with heavy loss, but what
had become of him afterward? Fremont and Shields
were uncertain of the position of each other, and
they were still more uncertain about Jackson’s.
He might fall suddenly upon either, and they grew
very cautious as they drew near to the end of the
Massanuttons.
Sherburne and Harry, after examining
the Northern army through their glasses, rode back
with a dozen men to the south base of the Massanuttons.
Most of them were signal officers, and Harry and Sherburne,
dismounting, climbed the foot of the mountain with
them. When they stood upon the crest and looked
to right and left in the clear June air, they beheld
a wonderful sight.
To the south along Mill Creek lay
Jackson’s army. To the west massed in
the wider valley was the army of Fremont, which had
followed them so tenaciously, and to the east, but
just separated from it by the base of the Massanuttons,
were the masses of Shields advancing slowly.
Harry through his powerful glasses
could see the horsemen in front scouting carefully
in advance of either army, and once more he appreciated
to the full Jackson’s skill in utilizing the
mountains and rivers to keep his enemies apart.
But what would he do now that they were passing the
Massanuttons, and there was no longer anything to
separate Shields and Fremont. He dismissed the
thought. There was an intellect under the old
slouch hat of the man who rode Little Sorrel that
could rescue them from anything.
“Quite a spectacle,” said
Sherburne. “A man can’t often sit
at ease on a mountaintop and look at three armies.
Now, Barron, you are to signal from here to General
Jackson every movement of our enemies, but just before
either Shields or Fremont reaches the base of the mountain,
you’re to slip down and join us.”
“We’ll do it, sir,”
said Barron, the chief signal officer. “We’re
not likely to go to sleep up here with armies on three
sides of us.”
Sherburne, Harry and two other men
who were not to stay slowly descended the mountain.
Harry enjoyed the breathing space. On the mountainside
he was lifted, for a while, above the fierce passions
of war. He saw things from afar and they were
softened by distance. He drew deep breaths of
the air, crisp and cool, on the heights, and Sherburne,
who saw the glow on his face, understood. The
same glow was on his own face.
“It’s a grand panorama,
Harry,” he said, “and we’ll take
our fill of it for a few moments.” They
stood on a great projection of rock and looked once
more and for a little while into the valley and its
divisions. The two Northern armies were nearer
now, and they were still moving. Harry saw the
sun flashing over thousands of bayonets. He almost
fancied he could hear the crack of the teamsters’
whips as the long lines of wagons in the rear creaked
along.
They descended rapidly, remounted
their horses and galloped back to Jackson.
They buried Ashby that day, all the
leading Southern officers following him to his grave,
and throughout the afternoon the silence was continued.
But the signals on the mountain worked and worked,
and the signalmen with Jackson replied. No movement
of the two pursuing armies was unknown to the Southern
leader.
Harry, with an hour’s leave,
visited once more his friends of the Invincibles.
He had begged a package of fine West Indian cigarettes
from Sherburne, and he literally laid them at the
feet of the two colonels—he found them
sitting together on the grass, lean gray men who seemed
to be wholly reduced to bone and muscle.
“This is a great gift, Harry,
perhaps greater than you think,” said Colonel
Leonidas Talbot gravely. “I tried to purchase
some from the commissariat, but they had none—it
seems that General Stonewall Jackson doesn’t
consider cigarettes necessary for his troops.
Anyhow, the way our Confederate money is going, I
fancy a package of cigarettes will soon cost a hundred
dollars. Here, Hector, light up. We divide
this box, half and half. That’s right,
isn’t it, Harry?”
“Certainly, sir.”
Harry passed on to the junior officers
and found St. Clair and Happy Tom lying on the grass.
Happy pretended to rouse from sleep when Harry came.
“Hello, old omen of war,”
he said. “What’s Old Jack expecting
of us now?”
“I told you never to ask me
such a question as that again. The general isn’t
what you’d call a garrulous man. How’s
your shoulder, Arthur?”
“About well. The muscles
were not torn. It was just loss of blood that
troubled me for the time.”
“I hear,” said Langdon,
“that the two Yankee armies are to join soon.
The Massanuttons won’t be between them much longer,
and then they’ll have only one of the forks
of the river to cross before they fall upon each other’s
breasts and weep with joy. Harry, it seems to
me that we’re always coming to a fork of the
Shenandoah. How many forks does it have anyhow?”
“Only two, but the two forks
have forks of their own. That’s the reason
we’re always coming to deep water and by the
same token the Yankees are always coming to it, too,
which is a good thing for us, as we get there first,
when the bridges are there, and when the Yankees come
they are gone.”
But not one of these boys understood
the feeling in the Northern armies. Late the
day before a messenger from Shields had got through
the Massanuttons to Fremont, and had informed him
that an easy triumph was at hand. Jackson and
his army, he said, fearing the onset of overwhelming
numbers, was retreating in great disorder.
The two generals were now convinced
of speedy victory. They had communicated at
last, and they could have some concert of movement.
Jackson was less than thirty miles away, and his army
was now but a confused mass of stragglers which would
dissolve under slight impact. Both had defeats
and disappointments to avenge, and they pushed forward
now with increased speed, Shields in particular showing
the greatest energy in pursuit. But the roads
were still deep in mud, and his army was forced to
toil on all that day and the next, while the signalmen
on the top of the Massanuttons told every movement
he made to Stonewall Jackson.
The signals the second evening told
Jackson that the two Northern armies were advancing
fast, and that he would soon have before him an enemy
outnumbering him anywhere from two to three to one.
He had been talking with Ewell just before the definite
news was brought, and Harry, Dalton and other officers
of the staff stood near, as their duty bade them.
Harry knew the nature of the information,
as it was not a secret from any member of the staff,
and now they all stood silently on one side and watched
Jackson. Even Ewell offered no suggestion, but
kept his eyes fixed anxiously on his chief.
Harry felt that another one of those critical moments,
perhaps the most dangerous of all, had arrived.
They had fought army after army in detail, but now
they must fight armies united, or fly. He did
not know that the silent general was preparing the
most daring and brilliant of all his movements in the
valley. In the face of both Shields and Fremont
his courage flamed to the highest, and the brain under
the old slouch hat grew more powerful and penetrating
than ever. And flight never for a moment entered
into his scheme.
Jackson at length said a few words
to Ewell, who sprang upon his horse and rode away
to his division. Then, early in the morning,
Jackson led the rest of the army into a strange district,
the Grottoes of the Shenandoah. It was a dark
region, filled beneath with great caves and covered
thickly with heavy forest, through the leaves of which
the troops caught views of the Massanuttons to the
north or of the great masses of the Blue Ridge to
the east, while far to the west lay other mountains,
range on range. But all around them the country
was wooded heavily.
The army did not make a great amount
of noise when it camped in the forest over the caves,
and the fires were few. Perhaps some of the men
were daunted by the dangers which still surrounded
them so thickly after so many days of such fierce
fighting. At any rate, they were silent.
The Acadians had played no music for a day now, and
the band lay upon the ground sunk in deep slumber.
Harry had not been sent on any errand,
and he was sitting on a stone, finishing his supper,
when Dalton, who had been away with a message, returned.
“What’s happened, George?” asked
Harry.
“Nothing yet, but a lot will happen soon.”
“Where have you been?”
“I’ve been on the other
side of the Shenandoah. You needn’t open
your eyes. It’s so. Moreover, Ewell’s
whole division is over there, and it will meet the
vanguard of Fremont as he advances. I think I
begin to see the general’s scheme.”
“I do, too. Ewell will
fight off Fremont, holding him there until Jackson
can annihilate Shields. Then he will retreat
over the river to Jackson, burning the bridge behind
him.”
Dalton nodded.
“Looks that way to a man up a tree,” he
said.
“It’s like the general,”
said Harry. “He could bring his whole army
on this side, burn the bridge, and in full force attack
Shields, but he prefers to defeat them both.”
“Yes; but I wish to Heaven we had more men.”
“Sh! Here comes the general,” said
Harry.
The two were silent as General Jackson
and an officer passed. The general spoke a word
or two to the boys and went on. They were but
ordinary words, but both felt uplifted because he had
spoken to them.
Morning found them motionless in the
forest, over the caves. They ate a hasty breakfast
and waited. But the scouts were all out, and
presently Harry and Dalton were sent toward the Shenandoah.
Finding nothing there, they crossed over the bridge
and came to Ewell’s division, where they had
plenty of acquaintances.
The sun was now high, and while they
were talking with their friends, they heard the faint
report of rifle shots far in their front. Presently
the scouts came running back, and said that the enemy
was only two miles away and was advancing to the attack.
Ewell took off his hat and his bald
head glistened in the sun’s rays. But,
like Jackson, he was always cool, and he calmly moved
his troops into position along a low ridge, with heavy
woods on either flank. Harry knew the ground,
alas, too well. It was among the trees just
behind the ridge that Turner Ashby had been slain.
Ewell had before him Fremont with two to one, and
the rest of the army under Jackson’s immediate
command was four miles away, facing Shields.
“Do you hear anything behind you, Harry?”
asked Dalton.
“No, why do you ask?”
“If we heard the booming of
guns, and we’d hear ’em at four miles,
we’d know that General Jackson himself was engaged.
But as there’s no sound, Shields hasn’t
come up, and we’ll wait here a while to see if
we can’t have something important to report.”
“I don’t think so,”
said Harry. “We know that the enemy is
about to attack here in full force, and that’s
enough to know about this side of the river.
We ought to gallop back to General Jackson and tell
him.”
“You’re right, Harry,”
said the Virginian, in whom the sense of duty was
strong. “The general may be attacked by
the time we get there, and he’ll want to know
exactly how things are.”
They galloped back as fast as they
could and found that General Jackson had moved his
headquarters to the little village of Port Republic.
They found him and told him the news as he was mounting
his horse, but at the same time an excited and breathless
messenger came galloping up from another direction.
The vanguard of Shields had already routed his pickets,
and the second Northern army was pressing forward in
full force.
As he spoke, the Northern cavalry
came in sight, and if those Northern horsemen had
known what a prize was almost within their hands, they
would have spared no exertion.
“Make for the bridge!
Make for the bridge, general!” cried Dalton.
The horsemen in blue were not coming
fast. They rode cautiously through the streets.
Southern villages were not friendly to them, and this
caution saved Stonewall Jackson. He was on his
horse in an instant, galloping for the bridge, and
Harry and Dalton were hot behind him. They thundered
over the bridge with the Northern cavalry just at their
heels, and escaped by a hair’s breadth.
But the chief of artillery and Dr. McGuire and one
of the captains, Willis, were captured, and the rest
of the staff was dispersed.
“My God!” exclaimed Harry,
when the Northern cavalry stopped at the bridge.
“What an escape!”
He was thinking of Jackson’s
escape, not his own, and while he was wondering what
the general would do, he saw him ride to the bank of
the river and watch the Northern cavalry on the other
side. Then Harry and Dalton uttered a shout
as they saw a Southern battery push forward from the
village and open on the cavalry. An infantry
regiment, which had been forming in the town, also
came up at full speed, uttering the long, high-pitched
rebel yell.
The Northern vanguard, which had come
so near to such a high achievement, was driven back
with a rush, and a Southern battery appearing on its
flank, swept it with shell as it retreated. So
heavy was the Southern attack, that the infantry also
were driven back and their guns taken. The entire
vanguard was routed, and as it received no support,
even Harry and Dalton knew that the main army under
Shields had not yet come up.
“That was the closest shave
I ever saw,” said Dalton. “So it
was,” said Harry. “But just listen
to that noise behind you!”
A tremendous roar and crash told them
that the battle between Ewell and Fremont had opened.
Jackson beckoned to Harry, Dalton and the members
of his staff who had reassembled. The three,
who were captured, subsequently escaped in the confusion
and turmoil and rejoined their general. Setting
a powerful force to guard the bridge, Jackson said
to his staff:
“While we are waiting for Shields
to come up with his army, we’ll ride over and
see how the affair between Ewell and Fremont is coming
on.”
The roar and crash told them it was
coming on with great violence, but Fremont, so strong
in pursuit was not so strong in action. Now that
he was face to face with the enemy, he did not attack
with all his might. He hesitated, not from personal
fear, but from fear on account of his army.
The whole force of Jackson might be in front of him,
and the apprehensions that he did not feel in pursuit
assailed him when he looked at the ridge covered with
the enemy.
Harry and Dalton watched with breathless
interest. A portion of Fremont’s army,
but not all of it, just when it was needed most, was
sent to the charge. Led by the pickets and skirmishers
they came forward gallantly, a long line of glittering
bayonets. In the thick woods on their flank
lay three Southern regiments, ambushed and not yet
stirring. No sunlight penetrated there to show
their danger to the soldiers who were breasting the
slope.
Harry foresaw all, and he drew a long
breath for brave men who were marching to a certain
fate.
“Why don’t they look!
Why don’t they look!” he found himself
exclaiming.
The next instant the entire wood burst
into flame. Picking their aim and firing at
short range, the Southern riflemen sent sheet after
sheet of bullets into the charging ranks. It
was more than human blood and flesh could stand, and
the Northern regiments gave way. But it was not
a rout. They retreated on their reserves, and
stood there recovering themselves, while the Southern
riflemen reloaded, but did not pursue. The regiments
which had done the deadly work sank back in the woods,
and seemingly the battle was over.
Harry had not been under fire.
He and Dalton, the rest of Jackson’s staff
and the general himself merely watched. Nor did
Jackson give any further orders to his able lieutenant,
Ewell. He allowed him to make the battle his
own, and in Harry’s opinion he was making it
right.
There came a silence that seemed interminably
long to Harry. The sunlight blazed down, and
the two armies stood looking at each other across
a field that was strewn with the fallen. It would
have been folly for the men in blue to charge again,
and it was the chief business of the Southern troops
to hold them back. Therefore they stood in their
positions and watched. Harry judged that the
bulk of Fremont’s army was not yet up.
It was this failure to bring superior numbers to bear
at the right time that was always the ruin of the
Northern generals in the valley, because the genius
on the other side invariably saw the mistake and profited
by it.
Harry and Dalton still waited, wondering.
Jackson himself sat quietly on his horse, and issued
no order. The Northern troops were motionless,
and Harry, who knew how precious time was, with the
rest of Fremont’s army coming up, wondered again.
But Trimble, the commander of the Southern riflemen
hidden in the wood, saw a chance. He would send
his men under cover of the forest and hurl them suddenly
upon the Northern flank. Ewell gave his consent,
and said that he would charge, too, if the movement
were successful.
Harry, watching, saw the Southern
regiments in the wood steal from the forest, pass
swiftly up a ravine, and then, delivering a shattering
fire at short range, charge with the bayonet upon
the Northern flank. The men in blue, surprised
by so fierce an onset, gave way. Uttering the
rebel yell, the Southerners followed and pushed them
further and further. Ewell’s quick eye,
noting the success, sent forward his own center in
a heavy charge.
Fremont, from the rear, hurried forward
new troops, but they were beaten as fast as they arrived.
The batteries were compelled to unlimber and take
to flight, the fresh brigade dispatched by Fremont
was routed, and the whole Southern line pressed forward,
driving the Northern army before it.
“General Jackson was wise in
trusting to General Ewell,” said Dalton to Harry.
“He’s won a notable victory. I wonder
how far he’ll push it.”
“Not far, I think. All
Ewell’s got to do is to hold Fremont, and he
has surely held him. There’s Shields on
the other side of the river with whom we have to deal.
Do you know, George, that all the time we’ve
been sitting here, watching that battle in front of
us, I’ve been afraid we’d hear the booming
of the guns on the other side of the river, telling
that Shields was up.”
“We scorched their faces so
badly there in Cross Keys that they must be hesitating.
Lord, Harry, how old Stonewall plays with fire.
To attack and defeat one army with the other only
a few miles away must take nerves all of steel.”
“But if Ewell keeps on following
Fremont he’ll be too far away when we turn to
deal with Shields.”
“But he won’t go too far.
There are the trumpets now recalling his army.”
The mellow notes were calling in the
eager riflemen, who wished to continue the pursuit,
but the army was not to retire. It held the
battlefield, and now that the twilight was coming the
men began to build their fires, which blazed through
the night within sight of those of the enemy.
The sentinels of the two armies were within speaking
distance of one another, and often in the dark, as
happened after many another battle in this war, Yank
and Reb passed a friendly word or two. They met,
too, on the field, where they carried away their dead
and wounded, but on such errands there was always
peace.
Those hours of the night were precious,
but Fremont did not use them. Defeated, he held
back, magnifying the numbers of his enemy, fearing
that Jackson was in front of him with his whole army,
and once more out of touch with his ally, Shields.
But Stonewall Jackson was all activity.
The great war-like intellect was working with the
utmost precision and speed. Having beaten back
Fremont, he was making ready for Shields. The
first part of the drama, as he had planned it, had
been carried through with brilliant success, and he
meant that the next should be its equal.
Harry was not off his horse that night.
He carried message after message to generals and
colonels and captains. He saw the main portion
of Ewell’s army withdrawn from Fremont’s
front, leaving only a single brigade to hold him,
in case he should advance at dawn. But he saw
the fires increased, and he carried orders that the
men should build them high, and see that they did
not go down.
When he came back from one of these
errands about midnight, just after the rise of the
moon, he found General Jackson standing upon the bank
of the river, giving minute directions to a swarm
of officers. His mind missed nothing.
He directed not only the movements of the troops,
but he saw also that the trains of ammunition and food
were sent to the proper points. About half way
between midnight and morning he lay down and slept
in a small house near the river bank. Shortly
before dawn the commander of a battery, looking for
one of his officers, entered the house and saw Jackson,
dressed for the saddle, sword, boots, spurs and all,
lying on his face upon the bed, asleep. On a
small table near him stood a short piece of tallow
candle, sputtering dimly. But the officer saw
that it was Jackson, and he turned on tiptoe to withdraw.
The general awoke instantly, sat up
and demanded who was there. When the officer
explained, he said he was glad that he had been awakened,
asked about the disposition of the troops, and gave
further commands. He did not go to sleep again.
But Harry’s orders carried him
far beyond midnight, and he had no thought of sleep.
Once more repressed but intense excitement had complete
hold of him. He could not have slept had the
chance been given to him. The bulk of the army
was now in front of Shields, and the pickets were
not only in touch, but were skirmishing actively.
All through the late hours after midnight Harry heard
the flash of their firing in front of him.
The cavalry under Sherburne and other
daring leaders were exchanging shots with the equally
daring cavalry of the enemy.
As the dawn approached the firing
was heavier. Harry knew that the day would witness
a great battle, and his heart was filled with anxiety.
The army led by Shields showed signs of greater energy
and tenacity than that led by Fremont. The Northern
troops that had fought so fiercely at Kernstown were
there, and they also had leaders who would not be daunted
by doubts and numbers. Harry wondered if they
had heard of the defeat of Fremont at Cross Keys.
He looked at the flashing of the rifles
in the dusk, and before dawn rode back to the house
where his commander slept. He was ready and waiting
when Jackson came forth, and Dalton appearing from
somewhere in the dusk, sat silently on his horse by
his side.
The general with his staff at once
rode toward the front, and the masses of the Southern
army also swung forward. Harry saw that, according
to Jackson’s custom, they would attack, not
wait for it. It was yet dusky, but the firing
in their front was increasing in intensity. There
was a steady crash and a blaze of light from the rifle
muzzles ran through the forest.
He took an order to the Acadians to
move forward behind two batteries, and as he came
back he passed the Invincibles, now a mere skeleton
regiment, but advancing in perfect order, the two colonels
on their flanks near their head. He also saw
St. Clair and Langdon, but he had time only to wave
his hand to them, and then he galloped back to Jackson.
The dusk rapidly grew thinner.
Then the burnished sun rose over the hills, and Harry
saw the Northern army before them, spread across a
level between the river and a spur of the Blue Ridge,
and also on the slopes and in the woods. A heavy
battery crowned one of the hills, another was posted
in a forest, and there were more guns between.
Harry saw that the position was strong, and he noted
with amazement that the Northern forces did not seem
to outnumber Jackson’s. It was evident
that Shields, with the majority of his force was not
yet up. He glanced at Jackson. He knew
that the fact could not have escaped the general, but
he saw no trace of exultation on his face.
There was another fact that Harry
did not then know. Nearly all the men who had
fought successfully against Jackson at Kernstown were
in that vanguard, and Tyler, who had deemed himself
a victor there, commanded them. Everybody else
had been beaten by Stonewall Jackson, but not they.
Confident of victory, they asked to be led against
the Southern army, and they felt only joy when the
rising sunlight disclosed their foe. There were
the men of Ohio and West Virginia again, staunch and
sturdy.
Harry knew instinctively that the
battle would be fierce, pushed to the utmost.
Jackson had no other choice, and as the sunlight spread
over the valley, although the mountains were yet in
mist, the cannon on the flanks opened with a tremendous
discharge, followed by crash after crash, North and
South replying to each other. A Southern column
also marched along the slope of the hills, in order
to take Tyler’s men in flank. Harry looked
eagerly to see the Northern troops give way, but they
held fast. The veterans of Ohio and West Virginia
refused to give ground, and Winder, who led the Southern
column, could make no progress.
Harry watched with bated breath and
a feeling of alarm. Were they to lose after
such splendid plans and such unparalleled exertions?
The sun, rising higher, poured down a flood of golden
beams, driving the mists from the mountains and disclosing
the plain and slopes below wrapped in fire, shot through
with the gleam of steel from the bayonets.
Tyler, who commanded the Northern
vanguard, proved himself here, as at Kernstown, a
brave and worthy foe. He, too, had eyes to see
and a brain to think. Seeing that his Ohio and
West Virginia men were standing fast against every
attack made by Winder, he hurried fresh troops to their
aid that they might attack in return.
The battle thickened fast. At
the point of contact along the slopes and in the woods,
there was a continued roar of cannon and rifles.
Enemies came face to face, and the men of Jackson,
victorious on so many fields, were slowly pressed
back. A shout of triumph rose from the Union
lines, and the eager Tyler brought yet more troops
into action. Two of Ewell’s battalions
heard the thunder of the battle and rushed of their
own accord to the relief of their commander.
But they were unable to stem the fury of Ohio and
West Virginia, and they were borne back with the others,
hearing as it roared in their ears that cry of victory
from their foe, which they had so often compelled
that foe himself to hear.
But it was more bitter to none than
to Harry. Sitting on his horse in the rear he
saw in the blazing sunlight everything that passed.
He saw for the first time in many days the men in
gray yielding. The incredible was happening.
After beating Fremont, after all their superb tactics,
they were now losing to Shields.
He looked at Jackson, hoping to receive
some order that would take him into action, but the
general said nothing. He was watching the battle
and his face was inscrutable. Harry wondered
how he could preserve his calm, while his troops were
being beaten in front, and the army of Fremont might
thunder at any moment on his flank or rear. Truly
the nerves that could remain steady in such moments
must be made of steel triply wrought.
The Northern army, stronger and more
resolute than ever, was coming on, a long blue line
crested with bayonets. The Northern cannon, posted
well, and served with coolness and precision, swept
the Southern ranks. The men in gray retreated
faster and some of their guns were taken. The
Union troops charged upon them more fiercely than ever,
and the regiments threatened to fall into a panic.
Then Jackson, shouting to his staff
to follow, spurred forward into the mob and begged
them to stand. He rode among them striking some
with the flat of his sword and encouraging others.
His officers showed the same energy and courage,
but the columns, losing cohesion seemed on the point
of dissolving, in the face of an enemy who pressed
them so hard. Harry uttered a groan which nobody
heard in all the crash and tumult. His heart
sank like lead. Hope was gone clean away.
But at the very moment that hope departed
he heard a great cheer, followed a moment later by
a terrific crash of rifles and cannon. Then he
saw those blessed Acadians charging in the smoke along
the slope. They had come through the woods, and
they rushed directly upon the great Northern battery
posted there. But so well were those guns handled
and so fierce was their fire that the Acadians were
driven back. They returned to the charge, were
driven back again, but coming on a third time took
all the battery except one gun. Then with triumphant
shouts they turned them on their late owners.
The whole Southern line seemed to
recover itself at once. The remainder of Ewell’s
troops reached the field and enabled their comrades
to turn and attack. The Stonewall Brigade in
the center, where Jackson was, returned to the charge.
In a few minutes fickle fortune had faced about completely.
The Union men saw victory once more snatched from
their hands. Their columns in the plain were
being raked by powerful batteries on the flank, many
of the guns having recently been theirs. They
must retreat or be destroyed.
The brave and skillful Tyler reluctantly
gave the order to retreat, and when Harry saw the
blue line go back he shouted with joy. Then the
rebel yell, thrilling, vast and triumphant, swelled
along the whole line, which lifted up itself and rushed
at the enemy, the cavalry charging fiercely on the
flanks.
Shields got up fresh troops, but it
was too late. The men in gray were pouring forward,
victorious at every point, and sweeping everything
before them, while the army of Fremont, arriving at
the river at noon, saw burned bridges, the terrible
battlefield on the other side strewn with the fallen,
and the Southern legions thundering northward in pursuit
of the second army, superior in numbers to their own,
that they had defeated in two days.
Every pulse in Harry beat with excitement.
His soul sprang up at once from the depths to the
stars. This, when hope seemed wholly gone, was
the crowning and culminating victory. The achievement
of Jackson equaled anything of which he had ever heard.
While the army of Fremont was held fast on the other
side of the river, the second army under Shields,
beaten in its turn, was retreating at a headlong rate
down the valley. The veterans of Kernstown had
fought magnificently, but they had been outgeneralled,
and, like all others, had gone down in defeat before
Jackson.
Jackson, merciless alike in battle
and pursuit, pushed hard after the men in blue for
nine or ten miles down the river, capturing cannon
and prisoners. The Ohio and West Virginia men
began at last to reform again, and night coming on,
Jackson stopped the pursuit. He still could not
afford to go too far down the valley, lest the remains
of Fremont’s army appear in his rear.
As they went back in the night, Harry
and Dalton talked together in low tones. Jackson
was just ahead of them, riding Little Sorrel, silent,
his shoulders stooped a little, his mind apparently
having passed on from the problems of the day, which
were solved, to those of the morrow, which were to
be solved. He replied only with a smile to the
members of his staff who congratulated him now upon
his extraordinary achievement, surpassing everything
that he had done hitherto in the valley. For
Harry and Dalton, young hero-worshippers, he had assumed
a stature yet greater. In their boyish eyes he
was the man who did the impossible over and over again.
The great martial brain was still
at work. Having won two fresh victories in two
days and having paralyzed the operations of his enemies,
Jackson was preparing for other bewildering movements.
Harry and Dalton and all the other members of the
staff were riding forth presently in the dusk with
the orders for the different brigades and regiments
to concentrate at Brown’s Gap in the mountains,
from which point Jackson could march to the attack
of McClellan before Richmond, or return to deal blows
at his opponents in the valley, as he pleased.
But whichever he chose, McDowell and sixty thousand
men would not be present at the fight for Richmond.
Jackson with his little army had hurled back the Union
right, and the two Union armies could not be united
in time.
The whole Southern army was gathered
at midnight in Brown’s Gap, and the men who
had eaten but little and slept but little in forty-eight
hours and who had fought two fierce and victorious
battles in that time, throwing themselves upon the
ground slept like dead men.
While they slept consternation was
spreading in the North. Lincoln, ever hopeful
and never yielding, had believed that Jackson was in
disorderly flight up the valley, and so had his Secretary
of War, Stanton. The fact that this fleeing
force had turned suddenly and beaten both Fremont
and Shields, each of whom had superior forces, was
unbelievable, but it was true.
But Lincoln and the North recalled
their courage and turned hopeful eyes toward McClellan.