PERRYVILLE
Dick slept very well that night.
The water from the little spring, gushing out from
under the rock, had refreshed him greatly. He
would have rejoiced in another bath, such as one as
they had luxuriated in that night before Frankfort,
but it was a thing not be dreamed of now, and making
the best of things as they were, he had gone to sleep
among his comrades.
The dryness of the ground had at least
one advantage. They had not colds and rheumatism
to fear, and, with warm earth beneath them and fresh
air above, they slept more soundly than if they had
been in their own beds. But while they were sleeping
the wary Sergeant Whitley was slipping forward among
the woods and ravines. He had received permission
from Colonel Winchester, confirmed by a higher officer,
to go on a scout, and he meant to use his opportunity.
He had made many a scouting trip on the plains, where
there was less cover than here, and there torture and
death were certain if captured, but here it would only
be imprisonment among men who were in no sense his
personal enemies, and who would not ill-treat him.
So the sergeant took plenty of chances.
He passed the Union pickets, entered
a ravine which led up between two hills and followed
it for some distance. In a cross ravine he found
a little stream of water, flowing down from some high,
rocky ground above, and, at one point, he came to
a pool several yards across and three or four feet
deep. It was cool and fresh, and the sergeant
could not resist the temptation to slip off his clothes
and dive into it once or twice. He slipped his
clothes on again, the whole not consuming more than
five minutes, and then went on much better equipped
for war than he had been five minutes before.
Then he descended the hills and came
down into a valley crossed by a creek, which in ordinary
times had plenty of water, but which was now reduced
to a few muddy pools. The Southern pickets did
not reach so far, and save for the two tiny streams
in the hills this was all the water that the Northern
army could reach. Farther down, its muddy and
detached stream lay within the Confederate lines.
Crossing the creek’s bed the
sergeant ascended a wooded ridge, and now he proceeded
with extreme caution. He had learned that beyond
this ridge was another creek containing much more
water than the first. Upon its banks at the
crossing of the road stood the village of Perryville,
and there, according to his best information and belief,
lay the Southern army. But he meant to see with
his own eyes and hear with his own ears, and thus
return to McCook’s force with absolute certainty.
The sergeant, as he had expected,
found cover more plentiful than it was on the plains,
but he never stalked an Indian camp with more caution.
He knew that the most of the Southern scouts and skirmishers
were as wary as the Indians that once hunted in these
woods, and that, unless he used extreme care, he was
not likely to get past them.
He came at last to a point where he
lay down flat on his stomach and wormed himself along,
keeping in the thickest shadow of woods and bushes.
The night was bright, and although his own body was
blended with the ground, he could see well about him.
The sergeant was a very patient man. Life as
a lumberman and then as a soldier on the plains had
taught him to look where he was crawling. He
spent a full hour worming himself up to the crest
of that ridge and a little way down on the other side.
In the course of the last fifteen minutes he passed
directly between two alert and vigilant Southern pickets.
They looked his way several times, but the sergeant
was so much in harmony with the color scheme of the
earth on which he crept, that no blame lay upon them
for not seeing him.
The sergeant was already hearing with
his own ears. He heard these pickets and others
talking in low voices of the Northern army and of
their own. They knew that Buell’s great
force was approaching from different points and that
a battle was expected on the morrow. He knew
this already, but he wanted to know how much of the
Confederate army lay in Perryville, and he intended
to see with his own eyes.
Having passed the first line of pickets
the sergeant advanced more rapidly, although he still
kept well under cover. Advancing thus he reached
the bed of the creek and hid himself against the bank,
allowing his body to drop down in the water, in order
that he might feel the glorious cool thrill again,
and also that he might be hidden to the neck.
His rifle and ammunition he laid at the edge of the
bank within reach. Situated thus comfortably,
he used his excellent eyes with excellent results.
He could see Perryville on his left, and also a great
camp on some heights that ran along the creek.
There were plenty of lights in this camp, and, despite
the lateness of the hour, officers were passing about.
It was obvious to the sergeant that
many thousands of soldiers were on those heights,
and now he wanted to hear again with his own ears.
He did not dare go any nearer, and the water in the
creek was growing cold to his body. But his
patience was great, and still he waited, only his
head showing above the water, and it hidden in the
black gloom of the bank’s shadows.
His reward came by-and-by. A
number of cavalrymen led their horses down to the
creek to drink, and while the horses drank and then
blew the water away from their noses, the men talked
at some length, enabling the sergeant to pick up important
scraps of information.
He learned that the heights were occupied
by Hardee with two divisions. It was the same
Hardee, the famous tactician who had been one of the
Southern generals at Shiloh. Polk was expected,
but he had not yet come up. Bragg, too, would
be there.
The brave sergeant’s heart thumped
as he listened. He gathered that Polk, perhaps,
could not arrive before noon, and here was a brilliant
chance to destroy a large part of the Southern army
early in the morning.
He waited until all the cavalrymen
had gone away with their horses, and then he crawled
cautiously out of the stream. His limbs were
cold and stiff, but his enforced exercise in crawling
soon brought back their flexibility. He passed
between the pickets again, and, when he was safely
beyond their hearing, he rose and stretched himself
again and again.
The sergeant greatly preferred walking
to crawling. Primitive men might have crawled,
but to do so made the modern man’s knees uncommonly
sore. So he continued to stretch, to inhale great
draughts of air, and to feel proudly that he was a
man who walked upright and not a bear or a pig creeping
on four legs through the bushes.
He reached his own army not long afterward,
and, walking among the thousands of sleeping forms,
reached the tree under which Colonel Winchester slept.
“Colonel,” he said gently.
The colonel awoke instantly and sat
up. Despite the dusk he recognized Whitley at
once.
“Well, sergeant?” he said.
“I’ve been clean over
the ridge to the rebel camp. I reached the next
creek and lay on the heights just beyond it.
I’ve seen with my own eyes and I’ve heard
with my own ears. They’ve only two divisions
there, though they’re expectin’ Polk to
come up in the mornin’ an’ Bragg, too.
Colonel, I’m a good reckoner, as I’ve seen
lots of war, and they ain’t got more `n fifteen
thousand men there on the creek, while if we get all
our divisions together we can hit `em with nigh on
to sixty thousand. For God’s sake, Colonel,
can’t we do it?”
“We ought to, and if I can do
anything, we will. Sergeant, you’ve done
a great service at a great risk, and all of us owe
you thanks. I shall see General McCook at once.”
The sergeant, forgetting that he was
wet to the skin, stretched himself in the dry grass
near Dick and his comrades, and soon fell fast asleep,
while his clothes dried upon him. But Colonel
Winchester went to General McCook’s tent and
insisted upon awakening him. The general received
him eagerly and listened with close attention.
“This man Whitley is trustworthy?” he
said.
“Absolutely. He has had
years of experience on the plains, fighting Sioux,
Cheyennes and other Indians, and he has been with me
through most of the war so far. There is probably
no more skillful scout, and none with a clearer head
and better judgment in either army.”
“Then, Colonel, we owe him thanks,
and you thanks for letting him go. We’ll
certainly bring on a battle to-morrow, and we ought
to have all our army present. I shall send a
messenger at once to General Buell with your news.
Messengers shall also go to Crittenden, Rousseau,
and the other generals. But you recognize, of
course, that General Buell is the commander-in-chief,
and that it is for him to make the final arrangements.”
“I do, sir,” said the
colonel, as he saluted and retired. He went back
to the point where his own little regiment lay.
He knew every man and boy in it, and he had known
them all in the beginning, when they were many times
more. But few of the splendid regiment with which
he had started south a year and a half before remained.
He looked at Dick and Warner and Pennington and the
sergeant and wondered if they would be present to
answer to the roll the next night, or if he himself
would be there?
The colonel cherished no illusions.
He was not sanguine that the whole Union army would
come up, and even if it came, and if victory should
be won it would be dark and bloody. He knew
how the Southerners fought, and here more so than
anywhere else, it would be brother against brother.
This state was divided more than any other, and, however
the battle went, kindred would meet kindred.
Colonel Kenton, Dick’s uncle, a man whom he
liked and admired, was undoubtedly across those ridges,
and they might meet face to face in the coming battle.
It was far into the morning now and
the colonel did not sleep again. He saw the messengers
leaving the tent of General McCook, and he knew that
the commander of the division was active. Just
what success he would have would remain for the morrow
to say. The colonel saw the dawn come.
The dry fields and forests reddened with the rising
sun, and then the army rose up from its sleep.
The cooks had already prepared coffee and food.
“Show me the enemy,” said
Pennington fiercely, “and as soon as I finish
this cup of coffee, I’ll go over and give him
the thrashing he needs.”
“He’s just across those
ridges, sir, and on the banks of the far creek,”
said Sergeant Whitley.
“How do you know?”
“I made a call on him last night.”
“You did? And what did he say?”
“I didn’t send in my card.
I just took a look at his front door and came away.
He’s at home, waiting and willing to give us
a fight.”
“Well, it’s a fine day
for a battle anyway. Look what a splendid sun
is rising! And you can see the soft haze of
fall over the hills and woods.”
“It’s not as fine a fall
as usual in Kentucky,” said Dick, in an apologetic
tone to Warner and Pennington. “It’s
been so dry that the leaves are falling too early,
and the reds, the yellows and the browns are not so
bright.”
“Never mind, Dickie, boy,”
said Warner consolingly. “We’ll see
it in a better year, because Pennington and I are
both coming back to spend six months with you when
this war is over. I’ve already accepted
the invitation. So get ready for us, Dick.”
“It’s an understood thing
now,” said Dick sincerely. “There
go the trumpets, and they mean for us to get in line.”
A large portion of the division was
already on the way, having started at five o’clock,
and the little Winchester regiment was soon marching,
too. The day was again hot. October, even,
did not seem able to break that singular heat, and
the dust was soon billowing about them in columns,
stinging and burning them. The sergeant the night
before had taken a short cut through the hills, but
the brigades, needing wide spaces, marched along the
roads and through the fields. A portion of their
own army was hidden from them by ridges and forest,
and Dick did not know whether Buell with the other
half of the army had come up.
After a long and exhausting march
they stopped, and the Winchester regiment and the
Ohio lads concluded that they had been wrong after
all. No battle would be fought that day.
They were willing now, too, to postpone it, as they
were almost exhausted by heat and thirst, and that
stinging, burning dust was maddening. A portion
of their line rested on the first creek, and they
drank eagerly of the muddy water. Dick saw before
him fields in which the corn stood thick and heavy.
The fields were divided by hedges which cut off the
view somewhat and which the sergeant said would furnish
great ambush for sharpshooters.
The men were now allowed to lie down,
but most of them were still panting with the heat.
The three boys on horseback rode with Colonel Winchester
to the crest of a low hill, just beyond the first creek.
From that point they clearly saw the enemy gathered
in battle array along the second stream. Dick,
with his glasses, saw the batteries, and could even
mark the sun-browned faces of the men.
“Has General Buell come?” he asked Colonel
Winchester.
“He has not. Not half of our army is here.”
The answer was made with emphasis
and chagrin. There was a report that Buell did
not intend to attack until the following day, when
he would have his numbers well in hand.
“Under the circumstances,”
said the colonel, “we have to wait. Better
get off your horses, boys, and hunt the shade.”
They rode back and obeyed. It
was now getting well along into the afternoon.
Thousands of soldiers lay on the grass in the shadiest
places they could find. Many were asleep.
Overhead the sun burned and burned in a sky of absolute
blazing white.
A cannon boomed suddenly and then
another. The artillery of the two armies watching
one another had opened at long range, but the fire
was so distant that it did no harm. Dick and
his comrades watched the shells in their flight, noting
the trails of white smoke they left behind, and then
the showers of earth that flew up when they burst.
It was rather a pleasant occupation to watch them.
In a way it broke the monotony of a long summer day.
They did not know that Polk, the bishop-general,
was arriving at that moment in the Southern camp with
five thousand men. Bragg had come, too, but
he left the command to Polk, who outranked Hardee,
and the three together listened to the long-range
cannonade, while they also examined with powerful
glasses the Union army which was now mostly lying on
the ground.
Dick himself felt a strong temptation
to sleep. The march through the heat that morning
had been dusty and tiresome, and the warm wind that
blew over him made his eyelids very heavy. The
cannonade itself was conducive to slumber. The
guns were fired at regular intervals, which created
a sort of rhythm. The shells with their trailing
white smoke ceased to interest him, and his eyelids
grew heavier. It was now about 2:30 o’clock
and as his eyes were about to close a sudden shout
made him open them wide and then spring to his feet.
“Look out! Look out!”
cried Sergeant Whitley, “The Johnnies are coming!”
The Union forces in an instant were
in line, rifles ready and eager. The gray masses
were already charging across the fields and hills,
while their cannon made a sudden and rapid increase
in the volume of fire. Their batteries were
coming nearer, too, and the shells hitherto harmless
were now shrieking and hissing among their ranks, killing
and wounding.
Dick looked around him. The
members of the slim Winchester regiment were all veterans;
but thousands of the Ohio lads were recruits who had
never seen battle before. Now shell and shot
were teaching them the terrible realities. He
saw many a face grow pale, as his own had often grown
pale, in the first minutes of battle, but he did not
see any one flinch.
The Northern cannon posted in the
intervals and along the edges of the woods opened
with a mighty crash, and as the enemy came nearer the
riflemen began to send a hail of bullets. But
the charge did not break. It was led by Buckner,
taken at Donelson, but now exchanged, and some of
the best troops of the South followed him.
“Steady! Steady!”
shouted Colonel Winchester. The ranks were so
close that he and all of his staff, having no room
for their horses, had dismounted, and they stood now
in the front rank, encouraging the men to meet the
charge. But the rush of the Southern veterans
was so sudden and fierce that despite every effort
of valor the division gave way, suffering frightful
losses.
Two of the Union generals seeking
to hold their men were killed. Each side rushed
forward reinforcements. A stream of Confederates
issued from a wood and flung themselves upon the Union
flank. Dick was dazed with the suddenness and
ferocity with which the two armies had closed in mortal
combat. He could see but little. He was
half blinded by the smoke, the flash of rifles and
cannon and the dust. Officers and men were falling
all around him. The numbers were not so great
as at Antietam, but it seemed to him that within the
contracted area of Perryville the fight was even more
fierce and deadly than it had been on that famous
Maryland field.
But he was conscious of one thing.
They were being borne back. Tears of rage ran
down his face. Was it always to be this way?
Were their numbers never to be of any avail?
He heard some one shout for Buell, and he heard some
one else shout in reply that he was far away, as he
had been at Shiloh.
It was true. The wind blowing
away from him, Buell had not yet heard a sound from
the raging battle, which for its numbers and the time
it lasted, was probably the fiercest ever fought on
the American continent. The larger Union force,
divided by ridges and thick woods from the field,
had not heard the fire of a single cannon, and did
not know that two armies were engaged in deadly combat
so near.
Dick kept close to Colonel Winchester
and Warner and Pennington were by his side.
The sergeant was also near. There was no chance
to give or send orders, and the officers, snatching
up the rifles of the fallen soldiers, fought almost
as privates. The Winchester regiment performed
prodigies of valor on that day, and the Ohio lads strove
desperately for every inch of ground.
It seemed to Dick once that they would
hold fast, when he heard in front a tremendous cry
of: “On, my boys!” As the smoke lifted
a little he saw that it was Colonel Kenton leading
his own trained and veteran regiment. Colonel
Winchester and Colonel Kenton, in fact, had met face
to face, but the Southern regiment was the more numerous
and the stronger. Winchester’s men were
gradually borne back and the colonel gasped to Dick:
“Didn’t I see your uncle leading on his
regiment?”
“Yes, it was he. It was
his regiment that struck us, but he’s hidden
now by the smoke.”
The Southern rush did not cease.
McCook’s whole division, between the shallow
creeks was driven back, sustaining frightful losses,
and it would have been destroyed, but the artillery
of Sheridan on the flank suddenly opened upon the
Southern victors. The Southerners whirled and
charged Sheridan, but his defense was so strong, and
so powerful was his artillery that they were compelled
to recoil every time with shattered ranks.
The decimated Ohio regiments beyond
the creek were gathering themselves anew for the battle,
and so were the men of Colonel Winchester, now reduced
to half their numbers again. Then a great shout
arose. A fresh brigade had come up to their
relief, and aided by these new men they made good
the ground upon which they stood.
Another shout arose, telling that
Buell was coming, and, two hours after the combat
had opened, he arrived with more troops. But
night was now at hand, and the sun set over a draw
like that at Antietam. Forty thousand men had
fought a battle only about three hours long, and eight
thousand of them lay dead or wounded upon the sanguinary
field. One half the Union army never reached
the field in time to fight.
As both sides drew off in the darkness,
Dick shouted in triumph, thinking they had won a victory.
A bullet fired by some retiring Southern skirmisher
glanced along his head. There was a sudden flash
of fire before him and then darkness. His body
fell on a little slope and rolled among some bushes.
The close hot night came down upon
the field, and the battle, the most sanguinary ever
fought on Kentucky soil, had closed. Like so
many other terrible struggles of the Civil War, it
had been doubtful, or almost, so far as the fighting
was concerned. The Northern left wing had been
driven back, but the Northern right wing had held firm
against every attack of the enemy.
Pennington, when he lay panting on
the ground with the remnant of the Winchesters, knew
little about the result of the combat. He knew
that their own division had suffered terribly.
The Ohio recruits had been cut almost to pieces,
and the Winchester regiment had been reduced by half
again. He was so tired that he did not believe
he could stir for a long time. He felt no wound,
but every bone ached from weariness, and his throat
and mouth seemed to burn with smoke and dust.
Pennington did not see either Dick
or Warner, but as soon as he got a little strength
into his limbs he would look for them. No doubt
they were safe. A special providence always
watched over those fellows. It was true that
Warner had been wounded at the Second Manassas, but
a hidden power had guided Dick to him, and he got
well so fast that he was able to fight soon afterward
at Antietam.
Pennington lay still, and he heard
all around him the deep breathing of men who, like
himself, were so worn that they could scarcely move.
The field in front of him darkened greatly, but he
saw lights moving there, and he knew that they belonged
to little parties from either army looking for the
wounded. He began to wonder which side had won
the battle.
“Ohio,” he said to one
of the Ohio lads who lay near, “did we lick the
Johnnies, or did the Johnnies lick us?”
“Blessed if I know, and I don’t
care much, either. Four fellows that I used
to play with at school were killed right beside me.
It was my first battle, and, Oh, I tell you, it was
awful!”
He gulped suddenly and began to cry.
Pennington, who was no older than he, patted him
soothingly on the shoulder.
“I know that you were the bravest
of the brave, because I saw you,” he said.
“I don’t know about that,
but I do know that I can never get used to killing
men and seeing them killed.”
Pennington was surprised that Dick
and Warner had not appeared. They would certainly
rejoin their own regiment, and he began to feel uneasy.
The last shot had been fired, the night was darkening
fast and a mournful wind blew over the battlefield.
But up and down the lines they were lighting the
cooking fires.
Pennington rose to his feet.
He saw Colonel Winchester, standing a little distance
away, and he was about to ask him for leave to look
for his comrades, when he was startled by the appearance
of a woman, a woman of thirty-eight or nine, tall,
slender, dressed well, and as Pennington plainly saw,
very beautiful. But now she was dusty, her face
was pale, and her eyes shone with a terrible anxiety.
Women were often seen in the camps at the very verge
or close of battle, saying good-bye or looking for
the lost, but she was unusual.
The soldiers stood aside for her respectfully,
and she looked about, until her gaze fell upon the
colonel. Then she ran to him, seized him by
the arm, and exclaimed:
“Colonel Winchester! Colonel Winchester!”
“Good heavens, Mrs. Mason! You!
How did you come?”
“I was at Danville, not so far
from here. Of course I knew that the armies
were about to meet for battle! And it was only
two days ago that I heard the Winchester regiment
had come west to join General Buell’s army.”
A stalwart and powerful colored woman
emerged from the darkness and put her arm around Mrs.
Mason’s waist.
“Don’t you get too much
excited, chile,” she said soothingly.
Juliana stood beside her mistress,
a very tower of defense, glaring at the soldiers about
them as if she would resent their curiosity.
“I thought I would come and
try to see Dick,” continued Mrs. Mason.
“My relatives sought to persuade me not to do
it. They were right, I know, but I wanted to
come so badly that I had to do it. We slipped
away yesterday, Juliana and I. We stayed at a farmhouse
last night, and this morning we rode through the woods.
We expected to be in the camp this afternoon, but
as we were coming to the edge of the forest we heard
the cannon and then the rifles. Through three
or four dreadful hours, while we shook there in the
woods, we listened to a roar and thunder that I would
have thought impossible.”
“The battle was very fierce
and terrible,” said Colonel Winchester.
“I don’t think it could
have been more so. We saw a part of it, but
only a confused and awful sweep of smoke and flame.
And now, Colonel Winchester, where is my boy, Dick?”
Colonel Winchester’s face turned
deadly pale, and she noticed it at once. Her
own turned to the same pallor, but she did not shriek
or faint.
“You do not know that he is
killed?” she said in a low, distinct tone that
was appalling to the other.
“I missed him only a little
while ago,” said Colonel Winchester, “and
I’ve been looking for him. But I’m
sure he is not dead. He can’t be!”
“No, he can’t be!
I can’t think it!” she said, and she looked
at the colonel appealingly.
“If you please, sir,”
said Pennington, “Lieutenant Warner is missing
also. I think we’ll find them together.
You remember what happened at the Second Manassas.”
“Yes, Frank, I do remember it,
and your supposition may be right.”
He asked a lantern from one of the
men, and whispered to Pennington to come. But
Mrs. Mason and Juliana had been standing at strained
attention, and Mrs. Mason inferred at once what was
about to be done.
“You mean to look for him on
the field,” she said. “We will go
with you.”
Colonel Winchester opened his lips
to protest, but shut them again in silence.
“It is right that you should
come,” he said a moment later, “but you
will see terrible things.”
“I am ready.”
She seemed all the more admirable
and wonderful to Colonel Winchester, because she did
not weep or faint. The deathly pallor on her
face remained, but she held herself firmly erect beside
the gigantic colored woman.
“Come with me, Pennington,”
said Colonel Winchester, “and you, too, Sergeant
Whitley.”
The two men and the boy led the way
upon the field, and the two women came close behind.
They soon entered upon the area of conflict.
The colonel had said that it would be terrible, but
Mrs. Mason scarcely dreamed of the reality.
It was one vast scene of frightful destruction, of
torn and trampled earth and of dead men lying in all
directions. The black of her faithful servant’s
face turned to an ashen gray, and she trembled more
than her mistress.
Colonel Winchester had a very clear
idea of the line along which his regiment had advanced
and retreated, and he followed it. But the lantern
did not enable them to see far. As happened so
often after the great battles of the Civil War, the
signs began to portend rain. The long drouth
would be broken, but whether by natural change or so
much firing Colonel Winchester did not know.
Despite the lateness of the season dim lightning
was seen on the horizon. The great heat was broken
by a cool wind that began to blow from the northwest.
The five advanced in silence, the
two men and the boy still leading and the two women
following close behind. Colonel Winchester’s
heart began to sink yet farther. He had not
felt much hope at first, and now he felt scarcely
any at all. A few moments later, however, the
sergeant suddenly held up his hand.
“What is it?” asked the colonel.
“I think I hear somebody calling.”
“Like as not. Plenty of wounded men may
be calling in delirium.”
“But, colonel, I’ve been
on battlefields before, and this sounds like the voice
of some one calling for help.”
“Which way do you think it is?”
“To the left and not far off. It’s
a weak voice.”
“We’ll turn and follow it. Don’t
say anything to the others yet.”
They curved and walked on, the colonel
swinging his lantern from side to side, and now all
of them heard the voice distinctly.
“What is that?” exclaimed
Mrs. Mason, speaking for the first time since they
had come upon the field of conflict.
“Some one shouting for help,”
replied Colonel Winchester. “One could
not neglect him at such a time.”
“No, that is so.”
“It’s the voice of Lieutenant Warner,
colonel,” whispered the sergeant.
Colonel Winchester nodded. “Say nothing
as yet,” he whispered.
They walked a dozen steps farther
and the colonel, swinging high the lantern, disclosed
Warner sitting on the trunk of a tree that had been
cut through by cannon balls. Warner, as well
as they could see, was not wounded, but he seemed
to be suffering from an overpowering weakness.
The colonel, the sergeant and the boy alike dreaded
to see what lay beyond the log, but the two women
did not know Warner or that his presence portended
anything.
The Vermonter saw them coming, and
raised his hand in a proper salute to his superior
officer. Then as they came nearer, and he saw
the white woman who came with them, he lifted his
head, tried to straighten his uniform a little with
his left hand, and said as he bowed:
“I think this must be Mrs. Mason, Dick’s
mother.”
“It is,” said Colonel
Winchester, and then they waited a moment or two in
an awful silence.
“I don’t rise because
there is something heavy lying in my lap which keeps
me from it,” said Warner very quietly, but with
deep feeling. “After the Second Manassas,
where I was badly wounded and left on the ground for
dead, a boy named Dick Mason hunted over the field,
found me and brought me in. I felt grateful
about it and told him that if he happened to get hit
in the same way I’d find him and bring him in
as he had brought me.
“I didn’t think the chance
would come so soon. Curious how things happen
as you don’t think they’re going to happen,
and don’t happen as you think they’re
going to happen, and here the whole thing comes out
in only a few weeks. We were driven back and
I missed Dick as the battle closed. Of course
I came to hunt for him, and I found him. Easy,
Mrs. Mason, don’t get excited now. Yes,
you can have his head in your own lap, but it must
be moved gently. That’s where he’s
hurt. Don’t tremble, ma’am.
He isn’t going to die, not by a long shot.
The bullet meant to kill him, but finding his head
too hard, it turned away, and went out through his
hair. He won’t have any scar, either, because
it’s all under the thickest part of his hair.
“Of course his eyes are closed,
ma’am. He hasn’t come around yet,
but he’s coming fast. Don’t cry on
his face, ma’am. Boys never like to have
their faces cried on. I’d have brought
him in myself, but I found I was too weak to carry
him. It’s been too short a time since the
Second Manassas for me to have got back all my strength.
So I just bound up his head, held it in my lap, and
yelled for help. Along came a rebel party, bearing
two wounded, and they looked at me. ‘You’re
about pumped out,’ said one of them, ‘but
we’ll take your friend in for you.’
’No, you won’t,’ I said.
‘Why not?’ said they. ’Because
you’re no account Johnnies,’ I said, ‘while
my wounded friend and I are high-toned Yanks.’
‘I beg your pardon,’ said the Johnny, who
was one of the most polite fellows I ever saw, ’I
didn’t see your uniform clearly by this dim light,
but the parties looking for the wounded are mostly
going in, and you’re likely to be left here
with your friend, who needs attention. Better
come along with us and be prisoners and give him a
chance to get well.’
“Now, that was white, real white,
but I thanked him and said that as soon as General
Buell heard that the best two soldiers in his whole
army were here resting, he’d come with his finest
ambulance for us, driving his horses himself.
They said then they didn’t suppose they were
needed and went on. But do you know, ma’am,
every one of those Johnnies, as he passed poor old
unconscious Dick with his head in my lap, took off
his hat.”
“It was a fine thing for them
to do,” said Colonel Winchester, and then he
whispered: “I’m glad you talked that
way, Warner. It helps. You see, she’s
feeling more cheerful already.”
“Yes, and you see old Dick’s
opening his eyes. Isn’t it strange that
the first thing he should see when he opens them here
on the battlefield should be his mother?”
“A strange and happy circumstance,”
said Colonel Winchester.
Dick opened his eyes.
“Mother!” he exclaimed.
Her arms were already around him.