AHORSE WITH SHERBURNE
Harry was glad that General Jackson
had detailed him for this task. He missed his
comrades of the staff, but Sherburne was a host in
himself, and he was greatly attached to him.
He rode a good horse and there was pleasure in galloping
with these men over the rolling country, and breathing
the crisp and vital air of autumn.
They soon left the forest, and rode
along a narrow road between fields. Their spirits
rose continually. It was a singular fact that
the Army of Northern Virginia was not depressed by
Antietam. It had been a bitter disappointment
to the Southern people, who expected to see Lee take
Baltimore and Philadelphia, but the army itself was
full of pride over its achievement in beating off
numbers so much superior.
It was for these reasons that Sherburne
and those who rode with him felt pride and elation.
They had seen the ranks of the army fill up again.
Lee had retreated across the Potomac after Antietam
with less than forty thousand men. Now he had
more than seventy thousand, and Sherburne and Harry
felt certain that instead of waiting to be attacked
by McClellan he himself would go forth to attack.
Harry had seldom seen a day more beautiful.
That long hot, dry summer had been followed by a
fine autumn, the most glorious of all seasons in North
America, when the air has snap and life enough in it
to make the old young again.
He was familiar now with the rolling
country into which they rode after leaving the forest.
Off in one direction lay the fields on which they
had fought the First and Second Manassas, and off in
another, behind the loom of the blue mountains, he
had ridden with Stonewall Jackson on that marvelous
campaign which seemed to Harry without an equal.
But the land about them was deserted
now. There were no harvests in the fields.
No smoke rose from the deserted farm houses.
This soil had been trodden over and over again by
great armies, and it would be a long time before it
called again for the plough. The stone fences
stood, as solid as ever, but those of wood had been
used for fuel by the soldiers.
They watered their horses at a clear
creek, and then Sherburne and Harry, from the summit
of a low hill, scanned the country with their glasses.
They saw no human being. There
was the rolling country, brown now with autumn, and
the clear, cool streams flowing through almost every
valley, but so far as man was concerned the scene
was one of desolation.
“I should think that McClellan
would have mounted scouts some distance this side
of the Potomac,” said Sherburne. “Certainly,
if he were making the crossing, as our reports say,
he would send them ahead.”
“We’re sure to strike
’em before we reach the river,” said Harry.
“I think with you that we’ll
see ’em, but it’s our business to avoid
’em. We’re sent forth to see and
not to fight. But if General Stuart could ride
away up into Pennsylvania, make a complete circuit
around the Union army and come back without loss,
then we ought to be successful with our own task,
which is an easier one.”
Harry smiled.
“I never knew you to fail, Captain.
I consider your task as done already.”
“Thanks, Harry. You’re
a noble optimist. If we fail, it will not be
for lack of trying. Forward, my lads, and we’ll
reach the Potomac some time to-night.”
They rode on through the same silence
and desolation. They had no doubt that eyes
watched them from groves and fence corners, keeping
cautiously out of the way, because it was sometimes
difficult now to tell Federals from Confederates.
But it did not matter to Sherburne. He kept
a straight course for the Potomac, at least half of
his men knowing thoroughly every foot of the way.
“What time can we reach the
river and the place at which they say McClellan is
going to cross?” asked Harry.
“By midnight anyway,”
replied Sherburne. “Of course, we’ll
have to slow down as we draw near, or we may run square
into an ambush. Do you see that grove about
two miles ahead? We’ll go into that first,
rest our horses, and take some food.”
It was a fine oak grove, covering
about an acre, with no undergrowth and a fair amount
of grass, still green under the shade, on which the
horses could graze. The trunks of the trees
also were close enough together to hide them from
anyone else who was not very near. Here the men
ate cold food from their haversacks and let their
horses nibble the grass for a half hour.
They emerged refreshed and resumed
their course toward the Potomac. In the very
height of the afternoon blaze they saw a horseman on
the crest of a hill, watching them intently through
glasses. Sherburne instantly raised his own
glasses to his eyes.
“A Yankee scout,” he said.
“He sees us and knows us for what we are, but
he doesn’t know what we’re about.”
“But he’s trying to guess,”
said Harry, who was also using glasses. “I
can’t see his face well enough to tell, but I
know that in his place I’d be guessing.”
“As we don’t want him
hanging on to our heels and watching us, I think we’d
better charge him.”
“Have the whole troop turn aside and chase him?”
“No; Harry, you and I and eight
men will do it. Marlowe, take the rest of the
company straight along the road at an easy gait.
But keep well behind the hedge that you see ahead.”
Marlowe was his second in command,
and taking the lead he continued with the troop.
Marlowe rode behind one of the hedges,
where they were hidden from the lone horseman on the
hill, and Sherburne and Harry and the eight men followed.
While they were yet hidden, Sherburne and his chosen
band suddenly detached themselves from the others
at a break in the hedge and galloped toward the horseman
who was still standing on the hill, gazing intently
toward the point where he had last seen the troop riding.
Sherburne, Harry and the privates
rode at a gallop across the field, straight for the
Union sentinel. He did not see them until they
had covered nearly half the distance, and then with
aggravating slowness he turned and rode over the opposite
side of the hill. Harry had been watching him
intently, and when he had come much nearer the figure
seemed familiar to him. At first he could not
recall it to mind, but a moment or two later he turned
excitedly to Sherburne.
“I know that man, although I’ve
never seen him before in a uniform,” he said.
“I met him when President Davis was inaugurated
at Montgomery and I saw him again at Washington.
His name is Shepard, the most skillful and daring
of all the Union spies.”
“I’ve heard you speak
of that fellow before,” said Sherburne, “and
since we’ve put him to flight, I think we’d
better stop. Ten to one, if we follow him over
the brow of the hill, he’ll lead us into an ambush.”
“I think you’re right,
Captain, and it’s likely, too, that he’ll
come back soon with a heavy cavalry detachment.
I’ve no doubt that thousands of Union horsemen
are this side of the river.”
Sherburne was impressed by Harry’s
words, and the little detachment, returning at a gallop,
joined the main troop, which was now close to a considerable
stretch of forest.
“Ah, there they are!”
exclaimed Harry, looking back at the hill on which
he had seen the lone horseman.
A powerful body of cavalry showed
for a moment against the sun, which was burning low
and red in the west. The background was so intense
and vivid that the horsemen did not form a mass, but
every figure stood detached, a black outline against
the sky. Harry judged that they were at least
a thousand in number.
“Too strong a force for us to
meet,” said Sherburne. “They must
outnumber us five to one, and since they’ve had
practice the Northern cavalry has improved a lot.
It must be a part of the big force that made the
scout toward our lines. Good thing the forest
is just ahead.”
“And a good thing, too, that night is not far
off.”
“Right, my boy, we need ’em
both, the forest and the dark. The Union cavalry
is going to pursue us, and I don’t mean to turn
back. General Jackson sent us to find about
McClellan’s crossing, and we’ve got to
do it.”
“I wouldn’t dare go back
to Old Jack without the information we’re sent
to get.”
“Nor I. Hurry up the men, Marlowe.
We’ve got to lose the Union cavalry in the
forest somehow.”
The men urged their horses forward
at a gallop and quickly reached the trees. But
when Harry looked back he saw the thousand in blue
about a mile away, coming at a pace equal to their
own. He felt much apprehension. The road
through the forest led straight before them, but the
trail of two hundred horses could not be hidden even
by night. They could turn into the forest and
elude their pursuers, but, as Sherburne said, that
meant abandoning their errand, and no one in all the
group thought of such a thing.
Sherburne increased the pace a little
now, while he tried to think of some way out.
Harry rode by his side in silence, and he, too, was
seeking a solution. Through the trees, now nearly
leafless, they saw the blue line still coming, and
the perplexities of the brave young captain grew fast.
But the night was coming down, and
suddenly the long, lean figure of a man on the long,
lean figure of a horse shot from the trees on their
right and drew up by the side of Sherburne and Harry.
“Lankford, sir, Jim Lankford
is my name,” he said to Sherburne, touching
one finger to his forehead in a queer kind of salute.
Harry saw that the man had a thin,
clean-shaven face with a strong nose and chin.
“I ‘low you’re runnin’
away from the Yankees,” said Lankford to Sherburne.
Sherburne flushed, but no anger showed
in his voice as he replied:
“You’re right, but we
run for two reasons. They’re five to our
one, and we have business elsewhere that mustn’t
be interrupted by fighting.”
“First reason is enough.
A man who fights five to one is five times a fool.
I’m a good Johnny Reb myself, though I keep
off the fightin’ lines. I live back there
in a house among the trees, just off the road.
You’d have seen it when you passed by, if you
hadn’t been in such a hurry. Just settin’
down to take a smoke when Mandy, my wife, tells me
she hears the feet of many horses thunderin’
on the road. In a moment I hear ’em, too.
Run to the front porch, and see Confederate cavalry
coming at a gallop, followed by a big Yankee force.
Mandy and me didn’t like the sight, and we
agree that I take a hand. Now I’m takin’
it.”
“How do you intend to help us?”
“I’m gettin’ to
that. I saddled my big horse quick as lightnin’,
and takin’ a runnin’ jump out of the woods,
landed beside you. Now, listen, Captain; I reckon
you’re on some sort of scoutin’ trip, and
want to go on toward the river.”
“You reckon right.”
“About a mile further on we
dip into a little valley. A creek, wide but
shallow and with a bed all rocks, takes up most of
the width of that valley. It goes nearly to
the north, and at last reaches the Potomac. A
half mile from the crossin’ ahead it runs through
steep, high banks that come right down to its edges,
but the creek bottom is smooth enough for the horses.
I ’low I make myself plain enough, don’t
I, Mr. Captain?”
“You do, Mr. Lankford, and you’re
an angel in homespun. Without you we could never
do what we want to do. Lead the way to that blessed
creek. We don’t want any of the Yankee
vanguard to see us when we turn and follow its stream.”
“We can make it easy.
They might guess that we’re ridin’ in the
water to hide our tracks, but the bottom is so rocky
they won’t know whether we’ve gone up
or down the stream. And if they guessed the right
way, and followed it, they’d be likely to turn
back at the cliffs, anyhow.”
They urged their horses now to the
uttermost, and Harry soon saw the waters of the creek
shining through the darkness. Everything was
falling out as Lankford had said. The pursuit
was unseen and unheard behind them, but they knew
it was there.
“Slow now, boys,” said
Sherburne, as they rode into the stream. “We
don’t want to make too much noise splashing the
water. Are there many boulders in here, Mr.
Lankford?”
“Not enough to hurt.”
“Then you lead the way. The men can come
four abreast.”
The water was about a foot deep, and
despite their care eight hundred hoofs made a considerable
splashing, but the creek soon turned around a hill
and led on through dense forest. Sherburne and
Harry were satisfied that no Union horseman had either
seen or heard them, and they followed Lankford with
absolute confidence. Now and then the hoofs of
a stumbling horse would grind on the stones, but there
was no other noise save the steady marching of two
hundred men through water.
The things that Lankford had asserted
continued to come true. The creek presently
flowed between banks fifty feet high, rocky and steep
as a wall. But the stone bed of the creek was
almost as smooth as a floor, and they stopped here
a while to rest and let their horses drink.
The enclosing walls were not more
than fifty or sixty feet across the top and it was
very dark in the gorge. Harry saw overhead a
slice of dusky sky, lit by only a few stars, but it
was pitchy black where he sat on his horse, and listened
to his contented gurglings as he drank. He could
merely make out the outlines of his comrades, but he
knew that Sherburne was on one side of him and Lankford
on the other. He could not hear the slightest
sound of pursuit, and he was convinced that the Union
cavalry had lost their trail. So was Sherburne.
“We owe you a big debt, Mr. Lankford,”
said the captain.
“I’ve tried to serve my
side,” said Lankford, “though, as I told
you, I’m not goin’ on the firin’
line. It’s not worth while for all of us
to get killed. Later on this country will need
some people who are not dead.”
“You’re right about that,
Mr. Lankford,” said Sherburne, with a little
laugh, “and you, for one, although you haven’t
gone on the firing lines, have earned the right to
live. You’ve done us a great service, sir.”
“I reckon I have,” said
Lankford with calm egotism, “but it was necessary
for me to do it. I’ve got an inquirin’
mind, I have, and also a calculatin’ one.
When I saw your little troop comin’, an’
then that big troop of the Yankees comin’ on
behind, I knowed that you needed help. I knowed
that this creek run down a gorge, and that I could
lead you into the gorge and escape pursuit.
I figgered, too, that you were on your way to see
about McClellan crossin’ the Potomac, an’
I figgered next that you meant to keep straight on,
no matter what happened. So I’m goin’
to lead you out of the gorge, and some miles further
ahead you’ll come to the Potomac, where I guess
you can use your own eyes and see all you want to
see.”
“The horses are all right now
and I think we’d better be moving, Mr. Lankford.”
They started, but did not go faster
than a walk while they were in the gorge. Harry’s
eyes had grown somewhat used to the darkness, and he
could make out the rocky walls, crested with trees,
the higher branches of which seemed almost to meet
over the chasm.
It was a weird passage, but time and
place did not oppress Harry. He felt instead
a certain surge of the spirits. They had thrown
off the pursuit—there could be no doubt
of it—and the first step in their mission
was accomplished. They were now in the midst
of action, action thrilling and of the highest importance,
and his soul rose to the issue.
He had no doubt that some great movement,
possibly like that of the Second Manassas, hung upon
their mission, and Lee and Jackson might be together
at that very moment, planning the mighty enterprise
which would be shaped according to their news.
They emerged from the gorge and rode
up a low, sloping bank which gave back but little
sound to the tread of the horses, and here Lankford
said that he would leave them. Sherburne reached
over his gauntleted hand and gave him a powerful grasp.
“We won’t forget this service, Mr. Lankford,”
he said.
“I ain’t goin’ to
let you forget it. Keep straight ahead an’
you’ll strike a cross-country road in ’bout
a quarter of a mile. It leads you to the Potomac,
an’ I reckon from now on you’ll have to
take care of yourselves.”
Lankford melted away in the darkness
as he rode back up the gorge, and the troop went on
at a good pace across a country, half field, half
forest. They came to a road which was smooth
and hard, and increased their speed. They soon
reached a region which several of their horsemen knew,
and, as the night lightened a little, they rode fast
toward the Potomac.
Harry looked at his watch and saw
that it was not much past midnight. They would
have ample opportunity for observation before morning.
A half hour later they discerned dim lights ahead and
they knew that the Potomac could not be far away.
They drew to one side in a bit of
forest, and Sherburne again detached himself, Harry
and eight others from the troop, which he left as before
under the command of Marlowe.
“Wait here in the wood for us,”
he said to his second in command. “We should
be back by dawn. Of course, if any force of the
enemy threatens you, you’ll have to do what
seems best, and we’ll ride back to General Jackson
alone.”
The ten went on a bit farther, using
extreme care lest they run into a Northern picket.
Fortunately the fringe of wood, in which they found
shelter, continued to a point near the river, and as
they went forward quietly they saw many lights.
They heard also a great tumult, a mixture of many
noises, the rumbling of cannon and wagon wheels, the
cracking of drivers’ whips by the hundreds and
hundreds, the sounds of drivers swearing many oaths,
but swearing together and in an unbroken stream.
They rode to the crest of the hill,
where they were well hidden among oaks and beeches,
and there the whole scene burst upon them. The
late moon had brightened, and many stars had come out
as if for their especial benefit. They saw the
broad stream of the Potomac shining like silver and
spanned by a bridge of boats, on which a great force,
horse, foot, artillery, and wagons, was crossing.
“That’s McClellan’s army,”
said Harry.
“And coming into Virginia,”
said Sherburne. “Well, we can’t help
their entering the state, but we can make it a very
uncomfortable resting place for them.”
“How many men do you suppose they have?”
“A hundred thousand here at
the least, and others must be crossing elsewhere.
But don’t you worry, Harry. We’ve
got seventy thousand men of our own, and Lee and Jackson,
who, as you have been told before, are equal to a
hundred thousand more. McClellan will march out
again faster than he has marched in.”
“Still, he’s shown more
capacity than the other Union generals in the East,
and his soldiers are devoted to him.”
“But he isn’t swift, Harry.
While he’s thinking, Lee and Jackson have thought
and are acting. Queer, isn’t it, that a
young general should be slow, and older ones so much
swifter. Why, General Lee must be nearly old
enough to be General McClellan’s father.”
“It’s so, Captain, but
those men are crossing fast. Listen how the
cannon wheels rumble! And I know that a thousand
whips are cracking at once. They’ll all
be on our soil to-morrow.”
“So they will, but long before
that time we’ll be back at General Jackson’s
tent with the news of their coming.”
“If nothing gets in the way.
Do you remember that man whom we saw on the hill
watching, the one who I said was Shepard, the ablest
and most daring of all their spies?”
“I haven’t forgotten him.”
“This man Shepard, Captain,
is one of the most dangerous of all our enemies.
The Union could much more easily spare one of its
generals than Shepard. He’s omniscient.
He’s a lineal descendant of Argus, and has
all the old man’s hundred eyes, with a few extra
ones added in convenient places. He’s
a witch doctor, medicine man, and other things beside.
I believe he’s followed us, that some way he’s
picked up our trail somewhere. He may have been
hanging on the rear of the troop when we came through
the gorge.”
“Nonsense, Harry, you’re
turning the man into a supernatural being.”
“That’s just the way I feel about him.”
“Then, if that’s the case,
we’d better be clearing out as fast as we can.
We’ve seen enough, anyhow. We’ll
go straight back to the company and ride hard for
the camp.”
They reached the troop, which was
waiting silently under the command of the faithful
Marlowe. But before they could gallop back toward
the south, the loud, clear call of a trumpet came
from a point near by, and it was followed quickly
by the beat of many hoofs.
“I see him! It’s Shepard,”
exclaimed Harry excitedly.
He had beheld what was almost the
ghost of a horseman galloping among the trees, followed
in an instant by the more solid rush of the cavalry.
It was evident to both Sherburne and
Harry that the Federal pickets and outriders had acquired
much skill and alertness, and they urged the troop
to its greatest speed. Even if they should be
able to defeat their immediate pursuers, it was no
place for them to engage in battle, as the enemy could
soon come up in thousands.
As they galloped down the road they
heard bullets kicking up the dust behind, and the
sound made them go faster. But they were still
out of range and the pursuit did not make any gain
in the next few minutes. But Harry, looking back,
saw that the Union cavalry was hanging on grimly,
and he surmised also that other forces might appear
soon on their flanks.
“We’ve got to use every effort,”
he said to Sherburne.
“That’s apparent.
You were right about your man Shepard, Harry.
He has certainly inherited all the eyes of his ancestor,
Argus, and about three times as many besides.
He’s omniscient, right enough.”
“Are they gaining?”
“Not yet. But they will,
as fresh pursuers come up on the flank. Some
of us must fall or be taken, but then at least one
of us must get back to Old Jack with the news.
So we’re bound to scatter. When we reach
that patch of woods on the left running down to the
road, you’re to leave us, gallop into it and
make your way back through the gorge. I’ll
throw off the other messengers as we go on.”
“Must I be the first to go?”
“Yes, you’re under my
orders now, and I think you the most trustworthy.
Now, Harry, off with you, and remember that luck is
with him who tries the hardest.”
They were within the dark shade of
the trees and Harry turned at a gallop among them,
guiding his horse between the trunks, pausing a moment
further on to hear the pursuit thunder by, and then
resuming his race for the gorge.
He continued to ride at a great pace,
meeting no enemy, and at last reached the creek.
He was a good observer and he was confident that he
could ride back up it without trouble. He feared
nothing but Shepard. A single horseman in the
darkness could throw off any pursuit by cavalry, but
the terrible spy might turn at once to the creek and
the gorge. He had the consolation, though, of
knowing that Shepard could not follow him and all
the others at the same time.
Harry paused a moment at the water’s
edge and listened for the sounds of pursuit.
None came. Then he plunged boldly in and rode
against the stream, passing into the depths of the
gorge. It was darker now, being near to that
darkest hour before the dawn, and the slit of sky
above was somber.
But he rode on at a good walk until
he was about half way through the gorge. Then
he heard sounds above, and drawing his horse in by
the cliff he stopped and waited. Voices came
down to him, and once or twice he caught the partial
silhouette of a horse against the dark sky.
He felt quite sure that it was a body
of Union cavalry riding practically at random—if
they were led by Shepard they would have come up the
gorge itself.
Presently something splashed heavily
in the water near him. A stone had been rolled
over the brink. He drew his horse and himself
more closely against the wall. Another stone
fell near and a laugh came from above. Evidently
the lads in blue had pushed the stones over merely
to hear the splash, because Harry ceased to hear the
voices and he was quite sure that they had ridden
away.
He waited a little while for precaution,
and then resumed his own careful journey through the
gorge. Just as the dawn was breaking he emerged
from the stream and entered the forest. It was
a cold dawn, that of late October, white with frost,
and Harry shivered. There was still food in
his knapsack, and he ate hungrily as he rode through
the deserted country, and wondered what had become
of Shepard and the others.
It was not yet full day. The
grass was still white with frost. The early
wind, blowing out of the north, brought an increased
chill. The food Harry had eaten defended him
somewhat against the cold, but his body had been weakened
by so much riding and loss of sleep that he found
it wise to unroll his blanket and wrap it around his
shoulders and chest.
He was, perhaps, affected by the cold
and anxiety, but the country seemed singularly lonesome
and depressing. Sweeping the whole circle of
the horizon with his glasses, he saw several farm houses,
but no smoke was rising from their chimneys.
Silent and cold, they added to his own feeling of
desolation. He wondered what had become of his
comrades. Perhaps Sherburne had been taken, or
killed. He was not one to surrender, even to
overwhelming numbers, without a fight.
But he would go on. Drawing
the blanket more tightly around his body, he turned
into the narrow road by which he had come, and urged
his horse into that easy Southern gait known as a
pace. He would have been glad to go faster,
but he was too wise to push a horse that had already
been traveling twenty hours.
Harry did not yet feel secure by any
means. The lads of the South, where the cities
were few and small, had been used from childhood to
the horse. They had become at once cavalry of
the highest order; but the lads of the North were
learning, too. He had no doubt that bands of
Northern horsemen were now ranging the country to the
very verge of the camps of Jackson and Lee.
The belief became a certainty when
a score of riders in blue appeared on a hill behind
him. One of their number blew a musical note
on a trumpet, and then all of them, with a shout,
urged their horses in pursuit of Harry, who felt as
if it were for all the world a fox chase, with himself
as the fox.
He knew that his danger was great,
but he resolved to triumph over it. He must get
through to Jackson with the news that the Army of the
Potomac was in Virginia. Others from Sherburne’s
troop might arrive with the same news, but he did
not know it. It was not his place to reckon
on the possible achievements of others. So far
as this errand was concerned, and so far as he was
now concerned, there was nobody in the world but himself.
Swiftly he reckoned the chances.
He changed the pace of his horse into
an easy gallop and sped along the road. But
the horse did not have sufficient reserve of strength
to increase his speed and maintain the increase.
He knew without looking back that the Union riders
were gaining, and he continued to mature his plan.
Harry was now cool and deliberate.
It was possible that a Confederate troop scouting
in that direction might save him, but it was far from
a certainty, and he could not take it into his calculations.
He was now riding between two cornfields in which
all the corn had been cut, but he saw forest on the
right, about a half mile ahead.
He believed that his salvation lay
in that forest. He hoped that it stretched far
toward the right. He had never seen a finer forest,
a more magnificent forest, one that looked more sheltering,
and the nearer he came to it the better it looked.
He did not glance back, but he felt
sure that the blue horsemen must still be gaining.
Then came that mellow, hunting note of the trumpet,
much nearer than before. Harry felt a thrill
of anger. He remained the fox, and they remained
the hunters. He could feel the good horse panting
beneath him, and white foam was on his mouth.
Harry began to fear now that he would
be overtaken before he could reach the trees.
He glanced at the fields. If it had been only
a few weeks earlier he might have sprung from his
horse and have escaped in the thick and standing corn,
but now he would be an easy target. He must
gain the forest somehow. He said over and over
to himself, “I must reach it! I must reach
it! I must reach it!”
Now he heard the crack of rifles.
Bullets whizzed past. They no longer kicked
up the dust behind him, but on the side, and even in
front. Men began to shout to him, and he heard
certain words that meant surrender. Chance had
kept the bullets away from him so far, but the same
chance might turn them upon him at any moment.
It was a risk that he must take.
The shouts grew louder. The
rapid thudding of hoofs behind him beat on his ears
in that minute of excitement like thunder. Nearer
and nearer came the forest. The rifles behind
him were now crashing faster. It seemed to him
that he could almost smell their smoke, and still
neither he nor his horse was hit. After making
all due allowance for badness of aim at a gallop,
it was almost a miracle, and he drew new courage from
the fact.
He passed the cornfields and with
a sharp jerk of the reins turned his weary horse into
the woods on the right. The forest was thick
with a considerable growth of underbrush, but Harry
was a skillful and daring rider, and he guided his
horse so expertly that in a few moments he was hidden
from the view of the cavalry. But he knew that
it could not continue so long. They would spread
out, driving everything in front of them as they advanced.
He was still the fox and they were still the hunters.
Yet he had gained something. For a fugitive
the forest was better than the open.
He maintained his direction toward
Jackson’s camp. His horse leaped a gully
and he barely escaped being swept off on the farther
side by the bough of a tree. Then some of his
pursuers caught sight of him again, and a half dozen
shots were fired. He was not touched, but he
felt his horse shiver and he knew at once that the
good, true animal had been hit. A few leaps
more and the living machinery beneath him began to
jar heavily.
Another thick clump of undergrowth
hid him at that moment from the cavalrymen, and he
did the only thing that was left to him. Throwing
one leg over the saddle, he leaped clear and darted
away. Before he had gone a dozen steps he heard
his horse fall heavily, and he sighed for a true and
faithful servant and comrade gone forever.
He heard the shouts of the Union horsemen
who had overtaken the fallen horse, but not the rider.
Then the shouts ceased, and for a little while there
was no thud of hoofs. Evidently they were puzzled.
They had no use for a dead horse, but they wanted
his rider, and they did not know which way he had
gone. Harry knew, however, that they would soon
spread out to a yet greater extent, and being able
to go much faster on horseback than he could on foot,
they would have a certain advantage.
He had lost his blanket from his shoulders,
but he still had his pistol, and he kept one hand
on the butt, resolved not to be taken. He heard
the horsemen crashing here and there among the bushes
and calling to one another. He knew that they
pursued him so persistently because they believed
him to be one who had spied upon their army and it
would be of great value to them that he be taken or
slain.
He might have turned and run back
toward the Potomac, doubling on his own track, as
it were, a trick which would have deluded the Union
cavalry, but his resolution held firm not only to escape,
but also to reach Jackson with his news.
He stood at least a minute behind
some thick bushes, and it was a precious minute to
his panting lungs. The fresh air flowed in again
and strength returned. His pulses leaped once
more with courage and resolve, and he plunged anew
into the deep wood. If he could only reach a
part of the forest that was much roughened by outcroppings
of rock or gulleyed by rains, he felt that his chance
of escape would almost turn into a certainty.
He presently came to one such gulley or ravine, and
as he crossed it he felt that he had made a distinct
gain. The horsemen would secure a passage lower
down or higher up, but it gave him an advantage of
two hundred yards at least.
Part of the gain he utilized for another
rest, lying down this time behind a rocky ridge until
he heard the cavalrymen calling to one another.
Then he rose and ran forward again, slipping as quietly
as he could among the trees and bushes. He still
had the feeling of being the fox, with the hounds
hot on his trail, but he was no longer making a random
rush. He had become skillful and cunning like
the real fox.
He knew that the horsemen were not
trailers. They could not follow him by his footsteps
on the hard ground, and he took full advantage of it.
Yet they utilized their numbers and pursued in a long
line. Once, two of them would have galloped
directly upon him, but just before they came in sight
he threw himself flat in a shallow gully and pulled
over his body a mass of fallen leaves.
The two men rode within ten yards
of him. Had they not been so eager they would
have seen him, as his body was but partly covered.
But they looked only in front, thinking that the
fugitive was still running ahead of them through the
forest, and galloped on.
As soon as they were out of sight
Harry rose and followed. He deemed it best to
keep directly in their track, because then no one was
likely to come up behind him, and if they turned,
he could turn, too.
He heard the two men crashing on ahead
and once or twice he caught glimpses of them.
Then he knew by the sounds of the hoofs that they
were separating, and he followed the one who was bearing
to the left, keeping a wary watch from side to side,
lest others overhaul him.
In those moments of danger and daring
enterprise the spirit of Harry’s great ancestor
descended upon him again. This flight through
the forest and hiding among bushes and gulleys was
more like the early days of the border than those
of the great civil war in which he was now a young
soldier.
Instincts and perceptions, atrophied
by civilization, suddenly sprang up. He seemed
to be able to read every sound. Not a whisper
in the forest escaped his understanding, and this
sudden flame of a great early life put into him new
thoughts and a new intelligence.
Now a plan, astonishing in its boldness,
formed itself in his mind. He saw through openings
in the trees that the forest did not extend much farther,
and he also saw not far ahead of him the single horseman
whom he was following. The man had slowed down
and was looking about as if puzzled. He rode
a powerful horse that seemed but little wearied by
the pursuit.
Harry picked up a long fragment of
a fallen bough, and he ran toward the horseman, springing
from the shelter of one tree trunk to that of another
with all the deftness of a primitive Wyandot.
He was almost upon the rider before the man turned
with a startled exclamation.
Then Harry struck, and his was no
light hand. The end of the stick met the man’s
head, and without a sound he rolled unconscious from
the saddle. It was a tribute to Harry’s
humanity that he caught him and broke his fall.
A single glance at his face as he lay upon the ground
showed that he had no serious hurt, being merely stunned.
Then Harry grasped the bridle and
sprang into the saddle that he had emptied, urging
the horse directly through the opening toward the
cleared ground. He relied with absolute faith
upon his new mount and the temporary ignorance of
the others that his horse had changed riders.
As he passed out of the forest he
leaned low in the saddle to keep the color of his
clothing from being seen too soon, and speaking encouraging
words in his horse’s ears, raced toward the south.
He heard shouts behind him, but no shots, and he
knew that the cavalrymen still believed him to be
their own man following some new sign.
He was at least a half mile away before
they discovered the difference. Perhaps some
one had found their wounded comrade in the forest,
or the man himself, reviving quickly, had told the
tale.
In any event Harry heard a distant
shout of anger and surprise. Chance had favored
him in giving him another splendid horse, and now,
as he rode like the wind, the waning pursuit sank
out of sight behind him.