AT THE CAPITAL
The Southern cavalry was seen almost
at the same time by many men in the regiments, and
nervous and hasty, as was natural at such a time, they
opened a scattering fire. The horsemen did not
return the fire, but seemed to melt away in the darkness.
But the shrewdest of the officers,
among whom was Colonel Winchester, took alarm at this
sudden appearance and disappearance. Dick would
have divined from their manner, even without their
talk, that they believed Jackson was at hand.
Action followed quickly. The army stopped and
began to seek a strong position in the wood.
Cannon were drawn up, their mouths turned to the side
on which the horsemen had appeared, and the worn regiments
assumed the attitude of defense. Dick’s
heart throbbed with pride when he saw that they were
as ready as ever to fight, although they had suffered
great losses and the bitterest of disappointments.
“What I said I’ve got
to say over again,” said Pennington ruefully:
“the night’s no time for fighting.
It’s heathenish in Stonewall Jackson to follow
us, and annoy us in such a way.”
“Such a way! Such a way!”
said Dick impatiently. “We’ve got
to learn to fight as he does. Good God, Frank,
think of all the sacrifices we are making to save
our Union, the great republic! Think how the
hateful old monarchies will sneer and rejoice if we
fall, and here in the East our generals just throw
our men away! They divide and scatter our armies
in such a manner that we simply ask to be beaten.”
“Sh! sh!” said Warner,
as he listened to the violent outbreak, so unusual
on the part of the reserved and self-contained lad.
“Here come two generals.”
“Two too many,” muttered
Dick. A moment or two later he was ashamed of
himself, not because of what he had said, but because
he had said it. Then Warner seized him by the
arm and pointed.
“A new general, bigger than
all the rest, has come,” he said, “and
although I’ve never seen him before I know with
mathematical certainty that it’s General John
Pope, commander-in-chief of the Army of Virginia.”
Both Dick and Pennington knew instinctively
that Warner was right. General Pope, a strongly
built man in early middle years, surrounded by a brilliant
staff, rode into a little glade in the midst of the
troops, and summoned to him the leading officers who
had taken part in the battle.
Dick and his two comrades stood on
one side, but they could not keep from hearing what
was said and done. In truth they did not seek
to avoid hearing, nor did many of the young privates
who stood near and who considered themselves quite
as good as their officers.
Pope, florid and full-faced, was in
a fine humor. He complimented the officers on
their valor, spoke as if they had won a victory—which
would have been a fact had others done their duty—and
talked slightingly of Jackson. The men of the
west would show this man his match in the art of war.
Dick listened to it all with bitterness
in his heart. He had no doubt that Pope was
brave, and he could see that he was confident.
Yet it took something more than confidence to defeat
an able enemy. What had become of those gray
horsemen in the bush? They had appeared once
and they could appear again. He had believed
that Jackson himself was at hand, and he still believed
it. His eyes shifted from Pope to the dark woods,
which, with their thick foliage, turned back the moonlight.
“George,” he whispered
to Warner, “do you think you can see anything
among those trees?”
“I can make out dimly one or
two figures, which no doubt are our scouts. Ah-h!”
The long “Ah-h!” was drawn
by a flash and the report of a rifle. A second
and a third report came, and then the crash of a heavy
fire. The scouts and sentinels came running in,
reporting that a great force with batteries, presumably
the whole army of Jackson, was at hand.
A deep murmur ran through the Union
army, but there was no confusion. The long hours
of fighting had habituated them to danger. They
were also too tired to become excited, and in addition,
they were of as stern stuff at night as they had been
in the morning. They were ready to fight again.
Formidable columns of troops appeared
through the woods, their bayonets glistening in the
moonlight. The heavy rifle fire began once more,
although it was nearly midnight, and then came the
deep thunder of cannon, sending round shot and shells
among the Union troops. But the men in blue,
harried beyond endurance, fought back fiercely.
They shared the feelings of Pennington. They
felt that they had been persecuted, that this thing
had grown inhuman, and they used rifles and cannon
with astonishing vigor and energy.
Two heavy Union batteries replied
to the Southern cannon, raking the woods with shell,
round shot and grape, and Dick concluded that in the
face of so much resolution Jackson would not press
an attack at night, when every kind of disaster might
happen in the darkness. His own regiment had
lain down among the leaves, and the men were firing
at the flashes on their right. Dick looked for
General Pope and his brilliant staff, but he did not
see them.
“Gone to bring up the reserves,”
whispered Warner, who saw Dick’s inquiring look.
But the Vermonter’s slur was
not wholly true. Pope was on his way to his
main force, doubtless not really believing that Jackson
himself was at hand. But the little army that
he left behind fighting with renewed energy and valor
broke away from the Southern grasp and continued its
march toward that court house, in which the boys could
see no merit. Jackson himself, knowing what great
numbers were ahead, was content to swing away and
seek for prey elsewhere.
They emerged from the wood toward
morning and saw ahead of them great masses of troops
in blue. They would have shouted with joy, but
they were too tired. Besides, nearly two thousand
of their men were killed or wounded, and they had
no victory to celebrate.
Dick ate breakfast with his comrades.
The Northern armies nearly always had an abundance
of provisions, and now they were served in plenty.
For the moment, the physical overcame the mental in
Dick. It was enough to eat and to rest and to
feel secure. Thousands of friendly faces were
around them, and they would not have to fight in either
day or dark for their lives. Their bones ceased
to ache, and the good food and the good coffee began
to rebuild the worn tissues. What did the rest
matter?
After breakfast these men who had
marched and fought for nearly twenty hours were told
to sleep. Only one command was needed.
It was August, and the dry grass and the soft earth
were good enough for anybody. The three lads,
each with an arm under his head, slept side by side.
At noon they were still sleeping, and Colonel Winchester,
as he was passing, looked at the three, but longest
at Dick. His gaze was half affection, half protection,
but it was not the boy alone whom he saw. He
saw also his fair-haired young mother in that little
town on the other side of the mountains.
While Dick still slept, the minds
of men were at work. Pope’s army, hitherto
separated, was now called together by a battle.
Troops from every direction were pouring upon the
common center. The little army which had fought
so gallantly the day before now amounted to only one-fourth
of the whole. McDowell, Sigel and many other
generals joined Pope, who, with the strange faculty
of always seeing his enemy too small, while McClellan
always saw him too large, began to feed upon his own
sanguine anticipations, and to regard as won the great
victory that he intended to win. He sent telegrams
to Washington announcing that his triumph at Cedar
Run was only the first of a series that his army would
soon achieve.
It was late in the afternoon when
Dick awoke, and he was amazed to see that the sun
was far down the western sky. But he rubbed his
eyes and, remembering, knew that he had slept at least
ten hours. He looked down at the relaxed figures
of Warner and Pennington on either side of him.
They still slumbered soundly, but he decided that they
had slept long enough.
“Here, you,” he exclaimed,
seizing Warner by the collar and dragging him to a
sitting position, “look at the sun! Do
you realize that you’ve lost a day out of your
bright young life?”
Then he seized Pennington by the collar
also and dragged him up. Both Warner and Pennington
yawned prodigiously.
“If I’ve lost a day, and
it would seem that I have, then I’m glad of it,”
replied Warner. “I could afford to lose
several in such a pleasant manner. I suppose
a lot of Stonewall Jackson’s men were shooting
at me while I slept, but I was lucky and didn’t
know about it.”
“You talk too long,” said
Pennington. “That comes of your having
taught school. You could talk all day to boys
younger than yourself, and they were afraid to answer
back.”
“Shut up, both of you,”
said Dick. “Here comes the sergeant, and
I think from his look he has something to say worth
hearing.”
Sergeant Whitley had cleansed the
blood and dust from his face, and a handkerchief tied
neatly around his head covered up the small wound
there. He looked trim and entirely restored,
both mentally and physically.
“Well, sergeant,” said
Dick ingratiatingly, “if any thing has happened
in this army you’re sure to know of it.
We’d have known it ourselves, but we had an
important engagement with Morpheus, a world away, and
we had to keep it. Now what is the news?”
“I don’t know who Morpheus
is,” replied the sergeant, laughing, “but
I’d guess from your looks that he is another
name for sleep. There is no news of anything
big happenin’. We’ve got a great
army here, and Jackson remains near our battlefield
of yesterday. I should say that we number at
least fifty thousand men, or about twice the rebels.”
“Then why don’t we march against ’em
at once?”
The sergeant shrugged his shoulders.
It was not for him to tell why generals did not do
things.
“I think,” he said, “that
we’re likely to stay here a day or two.”
“Which means,” said Dick,
his alert mind interpreting at once, “that our
generals don’t know what to do. Why is
it that they always seem paralyzed when they get in
front of Stonewall Jackson? He’s only a
man like the rest of them!”
He spoke with perfect freedom in the
presence of Sergeant Whitley, knowing that he would
repeat nothing.
“A man, yes,” said Warner,
in his precise manner, “but not exactly like
the others. He seems to have more of the lightning
flash about him. What a pity such a leader should
be on the wrong side! Perhaps we’ll have
his equal in time.”
“Is Jackson’s army just sitting still?”
asked Dick.
“So far as scouts can gather,
an’ I’ve been one of them,” replied
Sergeant Whitley, “it seems to be just campin’.
But I wish I knew which way it was goin’ to
jump. I don’t trust Jackson when he seems
to be nappin’.”
But the good sergeant’s doubts
were to remain for two days at least. The two
armies sat still, only two miles apart, and sentinels,
as was common throughout the great war, became friendly
with one another. Often they met in the woods
and exchanged news and abundant criticism of generals.
At last there was a truce to bury the dead who still
lay upon the sanguinary field of Cedar Run.
Dick was in charge of one of these
burial parties, and toward the close of the day he
saw a familiar figure, also in command of a burial
party, although it was in a gray uniform. His
heart began to thump, and he uttered a cry of joy.
The unexpected, but not the unnatural, had happened.
“Oh, Harry! Harry!” he shouted.
The strong young figure in the uniform
of a lieutenant in the Southern army turned in surprise
at the sound of a familiar voice, and stood, staring.
“Dick! Dick Mason!”
he cried. Then the two sprang forward and grasped
the hands of each other. There was no display
of emotion—they were of the stern American
stock, taught not to show its feelings—but
their eyes showed their gladness.
“Harry,” said Dick, “I
knew that you had been with Jackson, but I had no
way of knowing until a moment ago that you were yet
alive.”
“Nor I you, Dick. I thought you were in
the west.”
“I was, but after Shiloh, some
of us came east to help. It seemed after the
Seven Days that we were needed more here than in the
west.”
“You never said truer words,
Dick. They’ll need you and many more thousands
like you. Why, Dick, we’re not led here
by a man, we’re led by a thunderbolt.
I’m on his staff, I see him every day.
He talks to me, and I talk to him. I tell you,
Dick, it’s a wonderful thing to serve such a
genius. You can’t beat him! His kind
appears only a few times in the ages. He always
knows what’s to be done and he does it.
Even if your generals knew what ought to be done,
most likely they’d do something else.”
Harry’s face glowed with enthusiasm
as he spoke of his hero, and Dick, looking at him,
shook his head sadly.
“I’m afraid that what
you say is true for the present at least, Harry,”
he said. “You beat us now here in the east,
but don’t forget that we’re winning in
the west. And don’t forget that here in
the east even, you can never wear us out. We’ll
be coming, always coming.”
“All right, old Sober Sides,
we won’t quarrel about it. We’ll
let time settle it. Here come some friends of
mine whom I want you to know. Curious that you
should meet them at such a time.”
Two other young lieutenants in gray
uniforms at the head of burial parties came near in
the course of their work, and Harry called to them.
“Tom! Arthur! A
moment, please! This is my cousin, Dick Mason,
a Yankee, though I think he’s honest in his
folly. Dick, this is Arthur St. Clair, and this
is Tom Langdon, both friends of mine from South Carolina.”
They shook hands warmly. There
was no animosity between them. Dick liked the
looks and manners of Harry’s friends. He
could have been their friend, too.
“Harry has talked about you
often,” said Happy Tom Langdon. “Says
you’re a great scholar, and a good fellow, all
right every way, except the crack in your head that
makes you a Yankee. I hope you won’t get
hurt in this unpleasantness, and when our victorious
army comes into Washington we’ll take good care
of you and release you soon.”
Dick smiled. He liked this youth
who could keep up the spirit of fun among such scenes.
“Don’t you pay any attention
to Langdon, Mr. Mason,” said St. Clair.
“If he’d only fight as well and fast as
he talks there’d be no need for the rest of
us.”
“You know you couldn’t
win the war without me,” said Langdon.
They talked a little more together,
then trumpets blew, the work was done and they must
withdraw to their own armies. They had been engaged
in a grewsome task, but Dick was glad to the bottom
of his heart to have been sent upon it. He had
learned that Harry still lived, and he had met him.
He did not understand until then how dear his cousin
was to him. They were more like brothers than
cousins. It was like the affection their great-grandfathers,
Henry Ware and Paul Cotter, had felt for each other,
although those famous heroes of the border had always
fought side by side, while their descendants were
compelled to face each other across a gulf.
They shook hands and withdrew slowly.
At the edge of the field, Dick turned to wave another
farewell, and he found that Harry, actuated by the
same motive at the same time, had also turned to make
a like gesture. Each waved twice, instead of
once, and then they disappeared among the woods.
Dick returned to Colonel Winchester.
“While we were under the flag
of truce I met my cousin, Harry Kenton,” he
said.
“One of the lucky fortunes of war.”
“Yes, sir, I was very glad to
see him. I did not know how glad I was until
I came away. He says that we can never beat Jackson,
that nothing but death can ever stop him.”
“Youth often deceives itself,
nor is age any exception. Never lose hope, Dick.”
“I don’t mean to do so, sir.”
The next morning, when Dick was with
one of the outposts, a man of powerful build, wonderfully
quick and alert in his movements, appeared. His
coming was so quick and silent that he seemed to rise
from the earth, and Dick was startled. The man’s
face was uncommon. His features were of great
strength, the eyes being singularly vivid and penetrating.
He was in civilian’s dress, but he promptly showed
a pass from General Pope, and Dick volunteered to
take him to headquarters, where he said he wished
to go.
Dick became conscious as they walked
along that the man was examining him minutely with
those searching eyes of his which seemed to look one
through and through.
“You are Lieutenant Richard
Mason,” said the stranger presently, “and
you have a cousin, Harry Kenton, also a lieutenant,
but in the army of Stonewall Jackson.”
Dick stared at him in amazement.
“Everything you say is true,” he said,
“but how did you know it?”
“It’s my business to know.
Knowledge is my sole pursuit in this great war, and
a most engrossing and dangerous task I find it.
Yet, I would not leave it. My name is Shepard,
and I am a spy. You needn’t shrink.
I’m not ashamed of my occupation. Why should
I be? I don’t kill. I don’t
commit any violence. I’m a guide and educator.
I and my kind are the eyes of an army. We show
the generals where the enemy is, and we tell them
his plans. An able and daring spy is worth more
than many a general. Besides, he takes the risk
of execution, and he can win no glory, for he must
always remain obscure, if not wholly unknown.
Which, then, makes the greater sacrifice for his country,
the spy or the general?”
“You give me a new point of
view. I had not thought before how spies risked
so much for so little reward.”
Shepard smiled. He saw that
in spite of his logic Dick yet retained that slight
feeling of aversion. The boy left him, when they
arrived at headquarters, but the news that Shepard
brought was soon known to the whole army.
Jackson had left his camp. He
was gone again, disappeared into the ether.
“Retreated” was the word that Pope at once
seized upon, and he sent forth happy bulletins.
Shepard and other scouts and spies reported a day
or two later that Jackson’s army was on the Rapidan,
one of the numerous Virginia rivers. Then Dick
accompanied Colonel Winchester, who was sent by rail
to Washington with dispatches.
He did not find in the capital the
optimism that reigned in the mind of Pope. McClellan
was withdrawing his army from Virginia, but the eyes
of the nation were turned toward Pope. Many
who had taken deep thought of the times and of men,
were more alarmed about Pope than he was about himself.
They did not like those jubilant dispatches from “Headquarters
in the Saddle.” There was ominous news
that Lee himself was marching north, and that he and
Jackson would soon be together. Anxious eyes
scanned the hills about Washington. The enemy
had been very near once before, and he might soon
be near again.
Dick had an hour of leisure, and he
wandered into an old hotel, at which many great men
had lived. They would point to Henry Clay’s
famous chair in the lobby, and the whole place was
thick with memories of Webster, Calhoun and others
who had seemed almost demigods to their own generation.
But a different crowd was there now.
They were mostly paunchy men who talked of contracts
and profits. One, to whom the others paid deference,
was fat, heavy and of middle age, with a fat, heavy
face and pouches under his eyes. His small eyes
were set close together, but they sparkled with shrewdness
and cunning.
The big man presently noticed the
lad who was sitting quietly in one of the chairs against
the wall. Dick’s was an alien presence
there, and doubtless this fact had attracted his attention.
“Good day to you,” said
the stranger in a bluff, deep voice. “I
take it from your uniform, your tan and your thinness
that you’ve come from active service.”
“In both the west and the east,”
replied Dick politely. “I was at Shiloh,
but soon afterward I was transferred with my regiment
to the east.”
“Ah, then, of course, you know
what is going on in Virginia?”
“No more than the general public
does. I was at Cedar Run, which both we and
the rebels claim as a victory.”
The man instantly showed a great increase of interest.
“Were you?” he said.
“My own information says that Banks and Pope
were surprised by Jackson and that the rebel general
has merely drawn off to make a bigger jump.
Did you get that impression?”
“Will you tell me why you ask
me these questions?” said Dick in the same polite
tone.
“Because I’ve a big stake
in the results out there. My name is John Watson,
and I’m supplying vast quantities of shoes and
clothing to our troops.”
Dick turned up the sole of one of
his shoes and picked thoughtfully at a hole half way
through the sole. Little pieces of paper came
out.
“I bought these, Mr. Watson,
from a sutler in General Pope’s army,”
he said. “I wonder if they came from you?”
A deeper tint flushed the contractor’s
cheeks, but in a moment he threw off anger.
“A good joke,” he said
jovially. “I see that you’re ready
of wit, despite your youth. No, those are not
my shoes. I know dishonest men are making great
sums out of supplies that are defective or short.
A great war gives such people many opportunities, but
I scorn them. I’ll not deny that I seek
a fair profit, but my chief object is to serve my
country. Do you ever reflect, my young friend,
that the men who clothe and feed an army have almost
as much to do with winning the victory as the men
who fight?”
“I’ve thought of it,”
said Dick, wondering what the contractor had in mind.
“What regiment do you belong
to, if I may ask? My motive in asking these
questions is wholly good.”
“One commanded by Colonel Winchester,
recently sent from the west. We’ve been
in only one battle in the east, that fought at Cedar
Run against Jackson.”
Watson again looked at Dick intently.
The boy felt that he was being measured and weighed
by a man of uncommon perceptions. Whatever might
be his moral quality there could be no question of
his ability.
“I am, as I told you before,”
said Watson, “a servant of my country.
A man who feeds and clothes the soldiers well is a
patriot, while he who feeds and clothes them badly
is a mere money grubber.”
He paused, as if he expected Dick
to say something, but the boy was silent and he went
on:
“It is to the interest of the
country that it be served well in all departments,
particularly in the tremendous crisis that we now face.
Yet the best patriot cannot always get a chance to
serve. He needs friends at court, as they say.
Now this colonel of yours, Colonel Winchester—I’ve
observed both him and you, although I approached you
as if I’d never heard of either of you before—is
a man of character and influence. Certain words
from him at the right time would be of great value,
nor would his favorite aide suffer through bringing
the matter to his attention.”
Dick saw clearly now, but he was not
impulsive. Experience was teaching him, while
yet a boy, to speak softly.
“The young aide of whom you
speak,” he said, “would never think of
mentioning such a matter to the colonel, of whom you
also speak, and even if he should, the colonel wouldn’t
listen to him for a moment.”
Watson shrugged his shoulders slightly,
but made no other gesture of displeasure.
“Doubtless you are well informed
about this aide and this colonel,” he said,
“but it’s a pity. If more food is
thrown to the sparrows than they can eat, is it any
harm for other birds to eat the remainder?”
“I scarcely regard it as a study in ornithology.”
“Ornithology? That’s
a big word, but I suppose it will serve. We’ll
drop the matter, and if at any time my words here should
be quoted I’ll promptly deny them. It’s
a bad thing for a boy to have his statements disputed
by a man of years who can command wealth and other
powerful influences. Unless he had witnesses
nobody would believe the boy. I tell you this,
my lad, partly for your own good, because I’m
inclined to like you.”
Dick stared. There was nothing
insulting in the man’s tone. He seemed
to be thoroughly in earnest. Perhaps he regarded
his point of view as right, and Dick, a boy of thought
and resource, saw that it was not worth while to make
a quarrel. But he resolved to remember Watson,
feeling that the course of events might bring them
together again.
“I suppose it’s as you
say,” he said. “You’re a man
of affairs and you ought to know.”
Watson smiled at him. Dick felt
that the contractor had been telling the truth when
he said that he was inclined to like him. Perhaps
he was honest and supplied good materials, when others
supplied bad.
“You will shake hands with me,
Mr. Mason,” he said. “You think that
I will be hostile to you, but maybe some day I can
prove myself your friend. Young soldiers often
need friends.”
His eyes twinkled and his smile widened.
In spite of his appearance and his proposition, something
winning had suddenly appeared in the manner of this
man. Dick found himself shaking hands with him.
“Good-bye, Mr. Mason,”
said Watson. “It may be that we shall meet
on the field, although I shall not be within range
of the guns.”
He left the lobby of the hotel, and
Dick was rather puzzled. It was his first thought
to tell Colonel Winchester about him, but he finally
decided that Watson’s own advice to him to keep
silent was best. He and Colonel Winchester took
the train from Washington the next day, and on the
day after were with Pope’s army on the Rapidan.
Dick detected at once a feeling of
excitement or tension in this army, at least among
the young officers with whom he associated most.
They felt that a storm of some kind was gathering,
either in front or on their flank. McClellan’s
army was now on the transports, leaving behind the
Virginia that he had failed to conquer, and Pope’s,
with a new commander, was not yet in shape.
The moment was propitious for Lee and Jackson to strike,
and the elusive Jackson was lost again.
“Our scouts discover nothing,”
said Warner to Dick. “The country is chockfull
of hostility to us. Not a soul will tell us a
word. We have to see a thing with our own eyes
before we know it’s there, but the people, the
little children even, take news to the rebels.
A veil is hung before us, but there is none before
them.”
“There is one man who is sure to find out about
Jackson.”
“Who?”
Dick’s only answer was a shake
of the head. But he was thinking of Shepard.
He did not see him about the camp, and he had no doubt
that he was gone on another of his dangerous missions.
Meanwhile newspapers from New York and other great
cities reflected the doubts of the North. They
spoke of Pope’s grandiloquent dispatches, and
they wondered what had become of Lee and Jackson.
Dick, an intense patriot, passed many
bitter moments. He, like others, felt that the
hand upon the reins was not sure. Instead of
finding the enemy and assailing him with all their
strength, they were waiting in doubt and alarm to
fend off a stroke that would come from some unknown
point out of the dark.
The army now lay in one of the finest
parts of Virginia, a region of picturesque mountains,
wide and fertile valleys, and of many clear creeks
and rivers coming down from the peaks and ridges.
To one side lay a great forest, known as the Wilderness,
destined, with the country near it, to become the
greatest battlefield of the world. Here, the
terrible battles of the Second Manassas, Fredericksburg,
Chancellorsville, the Wilderness, Spottsylvania, and
others less sanguinary, but great struggles, nevertheless,
were to be fought.
But these were yet in the future,
and Dick, much as his eyes had been opened, did not
yet dream how tremendous the epic combat was to be.
He only knew that to-day it was the middle of August,
the valleys were very hot, but it was shady and cool
on the hills and mountains. He knew, too, that
he was young, and that pessimism and gloom could not
abide long with him.
He and Warner and Pennington had good
horses, in place of those that they had lost at Cedar
Run, and often they rode to the front to see what might
be seen of the enemy, which at present was nothing.
Their battlefield at Cedar Run had been reoccupied
by Northern troops and Pope was now confirmed in his
belief that his men had won a victory there.
And this victory was to be merely a prelude to another
and far greater one.
As they rode here and there in search
of the enemy, Dick came upon familiar ground.
Once more he saw the field of Manassas which had been
lost so hardly the year before. He remembered
every hill and brook and curve of the little river,
because they had been etched into his brain with steel
and fire. How could anyone forget that day?
“Looks as if we might fight
our battle of last year over again, but on a much
bigger scale,” he said to Warner.
“Here or hereabouts,”
said the Vermonter, “and I think we ought to
win. They’ve got the better generals, but
we’ve got more men. Besides, our troops
are becoming experienced and they’ve shown their
mettle. Dick, here’s a farmer gathering
corn. Let’s ask him some questions, but
I’ll wager you a hundred to one before we begin
that he knows absolutely nothing about the rebel army.
In fact, I doubt that he will know of its existence.”
“I won’t take your bet,” said Dick.
They called to the man, a typical
Virginia farmer in his shirt sleeves, tall and spare,
short whiskers growing under his chin. There
was not much difference between him and his brother
farmer in New England.
“Good-day,” said Warner.
“Good-day.”
“You seem to be working hard.”
“I’ve need to do it. Farm hands
are scarce these days.”
“Farming is hard work.”
“Yes; but it’s a lot safer than some other
kinds men are doin’ nowadays.”
“True, no doubt, but have you seen anything
of the army?”
“What army?”
“The one under Lee and Jackson, the rebel army.”
“I ain’t heard of no rebel
army, mister. I don’t know of any such
people as rebels.”
“You call it the Confederate
army. Can you tell us anything about the Confederate
army?”
“What Confederate army, mister?
I heard last month when I went in to the court house
that there was more than one of them.”
“I mean the one under Lee and Jackson.”
“That’s cur’us.
A man come ridin’ ’long here three or
four weeks ago. Mebbe he was a lightnin’
rod agent an’ mebbe he had patent medicines to
sell, he didn’t say, but he did tell me that
General Jackson was in one place an General Lee was
in another. Now which army do you mean?”
“That was nearly a month ago. They are
together now.”
“Then, mister, if you know so
much more about it than I do, what are you askin’
me questions for?”
“But I want to know about Lee and Jackson.
Have you seen them?”
“Lord bless you, mister, them
big generals don’t come visitin’ the likes
o’ me. You kin see my house over thar among
the trees. You kin search it if you want to,
but you won’t find nothin’.”
“I don’t want to search
your house. You can’t hide a great army
in a house. I want to know if you’ve seen
the Southern Army. I want to know if you’ve
heard anything about it.”
“I ain’t seed it.
My sight’s none too good, mister. Sometimes
the blazin’ sun gits in my eyes and kinder blinds
me for a long time. Then, too, I’m bad
of hearin’; but I’m a powerful good sleeper.
When I sleep I don’t hear nothin’, of
course, an’ nothin’ wakes me up.
I just sleep on, sometimes dreamin’ beautiful
dreams. A million men wouldn’t wake me,
an’ mebbe a dozen armies or so have passed in
the night while I was sleepin’ so good.
I’d tell you anything I know, but them that
knows nothin’ has nothin’ to tell.”
Warner’s temper, although he
had always practiced self-control, had begun to rise,
but he checked it, seeing that it would be a mere foolish
display of weakness in the face of the blank wall that
confronted him.
“My friend,” he said with
gravity, “I judge from the extreme ignorance
you display concerning great affairs that you sleep
a large part of the time.”
“Mebbe so, an’ mebbe not.
I most gen’ally sleep when I’m sleepy.
I’ve heard tell there was a big war goin’
on in these parts, but this is my land, an’
I’m goin’ to stay on it.”
“A good farmer, if not a good patriot.
Good day.”
“Good day.”
They rode on and, in spite of themselves, laughed.
“I’m willing to wager
that he knows a lot about Lee and Jackson,” said
Warner, “but the days of the rack and the thumbscrew
passed long ago, and there is no way to make him tell.”
“No,” said Dick, “but we ought to
find out for ourselves.”
Nevertheless, they discovered nothing.
They saw no trace of a Southern soldier, nor did
they hear news of any, and toward nightfall they rode
back toward the army, much disappointed. The
sunset was of uncommon beauty. The hot day was
growing cool. Pleasant shadows were creeping
up in the east. In the west a round mountain
shouldered its black bulk against the sky. Dick
looked at it vaguely. He had heard it called
Clark’s Mountain, and it was about seven miles
away from the Union army which lay behind the Rapidan
River.
Dick liked mountains, and the peak
looked beautiful against the red and yellow bars of
the western horizon.
“Have you ever been over there?”
he said to Pennington and Warner.
“No; but a lot of our scouts
have,” replied Pennington. “It’s
just a mountain and nothing more. Funny how
all those peaks and ridges crop up suddenly around
here out of what seems meant to have been a level
country.”
“I like it better because it
isn’t level,” said Dick. “I’m
afraid George and I wouldn’t care much for your
prairie country which just rolls on forever, almost
without trees and clear running streams.”
“You would care for it,”
said Pennington stoutly. “You’d miss
at first the clear rivers and creeks, but then the
spell of it would take hold of you. The air
you breathe isn’t like the air you breathe anywhere
else.”
“We’ve got some air of
our own in Vermont that we could brag about, if we
wanted to,” said Warner, defiantly.
“It’s good, but not as
good as ours. And then the vast distances, the
great spaces take hold of you. And there’s
the sky so high and so clear. When you come
away from the great plains you feel cooped up anywhere
else.”
Pennington spoke with enthusiasm,
his nostrils dilating and his eyes flashing.
Dick was impressed.
“When the war’s over I’m
going out there to see your plains,” he said.
“Then you’re coming to
see me!” exclaimed Pennington, with all the
impulsive warmth of youth. “And George
here is coming with you. I won’t show
you any mountains like the one over there, but boys,
west of the Platte River, when I was with my father
and some other men I watched for three days a buffalo
herd passing. The herd was going north and all
the time it stretched so far from east to west that
it sank under each horizon. There must have
been millions of them. Don’t you think
that was something worth seeing?”
“We’re surely coming,”
said Dick, “and you be equally sure to have your
buffalo herd ready for us when we come.”
“It’ll be there.”
“Meanwhile, here we are at the
Rapidan,” said the practical Warner, “and
beyond it is our army. Look at that long line
of fires, boys. Aren’t they cheering?
A fine big army like ours ought to beat off anything.
We almost held our own with Jackson himself at Cedar
Run, and he had two to one.”
“We will win! We’re
bound to win!” said Dick, with sudden access
of hope. “We’ll crush Lee and Jackson,
and next summer you and I, George, will be out on
the western plains with Frank, watching the buffalo
millions go thundering by!”
They forded the Rapidan and rejoined
their regiment with nothing to tell. But it was
cheerful about the fires. Optimism reigned once
more in the Army of Virginia. McClellan had
sent word to Pope that he would have plenty of soldiers
to face the attack that now seemed to be threatened
by the South. Brigades from the Army of the
Potomac would make the Army of Virginia invincible.
Dick having nothing particular to
do, sat late with his comrades before one of the finest
of the fires, and he read only cheerful omens in the
flames. It was a beautiful night. The moon
seemed large and near, and the sky was full of dancing
stars. In the clear night Dick saw the black
bulk of Clark’s Mountain off there against the
horizon, but he could not see what was behind it.