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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XIII. </h2>
<p>The Female Smuggler Episode Makes Me Famous—I am Sent Forth<br/>
in Women's Clothes—My Interview with the Bad Corporal—A<br/>
Fist Fight—The Rebellion is Put Down Once More—I Reveal My<br/>
Identity.<br/></p>
<p>It was not twenty-four hours before the news spread all over my regiment,
as well as several other regiments, that a certain corporal had captured a
female smuggler, while on picket, had searched her on the spot and found a
large quantity of quinine and other articles contraband of war, and there
was a general desire to look upon the features of a man, not a
commissioned officer who had gall enough to search a female rebel, from
top to toe, without orders from the commanding officer, and I was
constantly being visited by curiosity-seekers, who wanted to know all
about it. Of course it was not known that I had been ordered to do as I
did, and they all wondered why I was not made an example of; and many
privates, corporals and sergeants wondered if they would get out of it so
easily if they should do as I did. There were a great many women passing
through the lines, and I am sure many soldiers decided that the first
woman who attempted to pass through would get searched. It was talked
among the men, and for a day or two a lady would certainly have stood a
poor show to have rode up to a picket post with a pass to go outside. The
soldiers had so long been away from female society that it would have been
a picnic for them to have captured a suspicious looking woman who was
pretty. I was pointed out, down town, as the man who captured the woman
loaded with quinine, and women with rebel tendencies would look at me as
though I was a bold, bad man that ought to be killed, and they acted as
though they would like to eat me. But I tried to appear modest, and not as
though I had done anything I was particularly proud of. The next evening
the colonel sent for me and said he had got something for me to do that
required nerve. I told him that my experience in putting down the
rebellion had shown me that the whole thing required nerve. That I had
been on my nerve until my nerves were pretty near used up, and I asked him
if he couldn't let some of the other boys do a little of the nervous work.
He said he had one more woman job that he would like to have me undertake.</p>
<p>I was sick of the whole woman business, and told him I did not want to be
aggravated any more; that arresting women and searching them, was nothing
but an aggravation, and I wanted to be let out. He said in this case I
would not have to arrest anybody of the female persuasion, but that I
would have to be arrested, and that it would be the greatest joke that
ever was. I told him if there was any joke about it he could count me in.
Then he went on to say that my success with the female smuggler had
excited all the boys to emulate my deeds, and they were all laying for a
female smuggler, and that he feared it wouldn't be safe for a woman to be
caught on the picket line. There had got to be a stop put to it, and he
and the general had thought of a scheme. He said there was a corporal in
one of the companies who had made his brags that he would arrest the first
female that came to his picket post, and search her for smuggled goods,
and they wanted to make an example of him. He asked me if I wasn't
something of a boxer, and I told him for a light weight I was considered
pretty good. Then he asked me if I could ride on a side saddle. I told him
I could ride anything, from a hobby to an elephant. He said that was all
right, and I would fill the bill. Then he went into details. I was to go
to the town with him, and be fitted out with a riding habit of the female
persuasion, false hair, side saddle, and a bustle as big as a bushel
basket. That I was to ride out on a certain road, where the corporal would
be on picket with two men. He would stop me, and search me, I was to cry,
and beg, and all that, but finally submit to be searched, and after the
corporal had got started to search me, I was to haul off and give him one
“biff” in the nose, another if it was necessary to knock him down, paste
one of the men in the ear, if he showed any impudence, jump on my horse
and come back to town, and leave the corporal to find his mistake.</p>
<p>I didn't half like the idea of dressing up in such a masquering costume,
but of course if I could help put down the rebellion that way, it was my
duty to do it, and besides, I had a grudge against that corporal, anyway,
because he called me a “jay” and a “substitute,” and a “drafted man,” when
I came to the regiment. The colonel took me to the residence of a lady
friend who rode on horseback a good deal, and as he let her into the
secret, she helped fix me up. All I had to do was to remove my cavalry
jacket, and she put the dress on over my head. I always supposed they put
on these dresses the same as men put on pants, by walking into them feet
first, but she said they went over the head. I felt as though my pants
were going to show, but she gave me some instructions about keeping the
dress down, and I began to feel a good deal like a woman. The dress fit me
around the waist as though it was made for me, and when it was all
buttoned up in front I felt stunning. She and the colonel made a bustle
out of newspapers, and a small sofa cushion of eider down was placed where
it would do the most good. After the dress was all fixed, she got a wig
and put it on my head, and a hat, with a feather in it, and then pinned a
veil on the hair, so it reached down to my rose-bud mouth. Then she took a
powder arrangement and powdered my face, put on a pair of long gauntlets
which she usually wore, and told me to look in the glass. When I looked
into the glass I almost fainted. The deception was so good that it would
have fooled the oldest man in the world.</p>
<p>The colonel said he was almost inclined to fall in love with me himself,
and he did put his arm around me and squeeze me, but I didn't notice any
particular feeling, such as I did when his lady friend was fooling around
me. That was different. Well, I was an inveterate smoker at that time, so
I took my pipe and a bag of tobacco, and put it in a pocket of the dress,
and some matches, and we went out doors. The colonel took my tiny number
eight boot in his hand and tossed me lightly into the saddle, then he
mounted his own horse and we rode around the suburbs of the town, so I
could get used to the side-saddle. I got him to stop behind a fence and
let me have a smoke out of my pipe, and then I told him I was ready. He
gave me a pass, and told me to go out on the road the corporal was on, and
if he let me pass out of the lines to go on to a turn in the road, where a
squad of our men were on a scout, and to report to the officer in charge,
who would bring me in all right, by another road, but if the corporal
attempted to search me, to do as I had been told to do. After I had
knocked the corporal down, if I would give a yell, the officer who was
outside would come and arrest us all and bring us to headquarters, where
the colonel could reprimand the corporal, etc. I threw a kiss to the
colonel and started out on the road. It was about a mile to the picket
post, and I had time to reflect on my position. This was putting down the
rebellion at a great rate. I was an ostensible female, liable to be
insulted at any moment, but I would maintain the dignity of my alleged sex
if I didn't lay up a cent. I put on a proud, haughty look, full of purity
and all that, and as I neared the picket post, I saw the corporal step out
into the road, and as I came up he told me to halt. I halted, and handed
him my pass, but he said it was a forgery, and ordered me to dismount. I
turned on the water, from my eyes, and began to cry, but it run off the
bad corporal like water off a duck.</p>
<p>“None of your sniveling around me,” said the vile man. “Get down off that
horse.”</p>
<p>“Sir,” I said, with well feigned indignation, “you would not molest a poor
girl who has no one to defend her. Let me go I prithe.”</p>
<p>I had read that, “Let me go I prithe,” in a novel, and it seemed to me to
be the proper thing to say, though I couldn't hardly keep from laughing.</p>
<p>“Prithe nothing,” said the corporal. “What you got in that bustle?” said
the corporal.</p>
<p>“Bustle,” I said, blushing so you could have touched a match to my face.
“Why speak of such a thing in the presence of a lady. I want you to let me
go or I shall think you are real mean, so now. Please, Mr. Soldier, let me
go,” and I smiled at him and winked with my left eye in a manner that
ought to have paralyzed a marble statue. “O, what you giving us,” said the
vile man. “Get down off that horse and let me go through you for quinine.
Do you hear?”</p>
<p>I was afraid if he helped me down he would see my boots or pants, which
would be a give-away. So I gathered my dress in my hands and jumped down
in pretty good shape. I had sparred with the corporal several times in
camp, and I knew I could knock him out easy, and I made up my mind that
the first indignity he offered me I would just “lam him one. It was all I
could do to keep from pasting him in the nose, when I first landed on the
ground, but I had a part to play, and it would not do to go off half
cocked. So I looked sad, pouted my lips, and wondered if he would kiss me,
and feel the beard where I had been shaved.</p>
<p>“Now, shuck yourself,” said he.</p>
<p>“Do what? I asked, with apparent alarm.</p>
<p>“Peel,” said he, as he put his hand on my back,</p>
<p>“Sir,” I said with my eyes flashing fire, and my heart throbbing, and
almost bursting with suppressed laughter, “you are insolent. I am a poor
orphan, unused to contact with coarse men. I have been raised a pet, and
no vile hand has ever been laid upon me until you just touched me. If you
touch me I shall scream. I shall call for help. What would you do, you
wicked, naughty man.”</p>
<p>“Unbutton,” said he as he pointed to my dress in front. “Call for help and
be darned. You are a smuggler, and I know it.”</p>
<p>“O, my God,” said I, with a stage accent, “has it come to this? Am I to be
robbed of all I hold dear, by a common Yankee corporal. Has a woman no
rights which are to be respected? Am I to be murdered in cold bel-lud,
with all my sins upon my head. O, Mr. Man, give me a moment to utter a
silent prayer.”</p>
<p>“O, hush,” said he, “and hold up your hands. There ain't going to be any
bel-lud. All I want is to go through you for quinine.”</p>
<p>“Spare me, I beseech you,” I said, as I held up my hands, and got in
position to knock him silly the first move he made. “I am no walking drug
store, I am a good girl.” Around my awful form I draw an imaginary circle.
“Step but one foot within that sacred circle, and on thy head I launch the
cu-r-r-r-se of Rome, Georgia.”</p>
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<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/203.jpg" alt="Gave a Yell That Could Have Been Heard A Mile 203 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<p>“Let up on this Shakespeare, and get to busiess, said the corporal, as he
reached up to my neck to unbutton the top button of my dress. He was
looking at my dress, and wondering what he would find concealed within,
when I brought down both fists and took him with one in each eye, with a
force that would have knocked a mule down. He fell backwards, and gave a
yell that could have been heard a mile. Then one of his men started for me
and I knocked him in the ear, and he fell beside the corporal. The other
man was going to come for his share, when the officer who had been
stationed outside the lines rode up with his men and asked what was the
matter. The soldier-who was not hit said I had assassinated the corporal.
The officer said that was wrong, and women who would go around killing off
the Union army with their fists ought to be arrested. Just then the
corporal raised up on his elbow and tried to open two of the blackest eyes
that ever were seen. Turning to the officer, he said:</p>
<p>“That woman is a smuggler, and she struck me with a brick house!</p>
<p>“Ancient female,” said the officer, looking at me and laughing, “why do
you go around like a besum of destruction, wiping out armies, one man at a
time. You ought to be ashamed of myself, and you should be muzzled.</p>
<p>“Don't call me a female,” said I, in my natural hoarse voice. “That is
something that I will not submit to.”</p>
<p>The corporal looked up at me with one eye, the other being almost closed
from the effects of the fall of the brick house. He looked as though he
smelled woolen burning, as the old saying is. The officer said he guessed
he would take us all to headquarters, and inquire into the affair. The
corporal said that there was nothing to inquire into. That this female
came along and insisted on going outside of the lines, and when he asked
her, in a polite manner, to show her pass, she struck him down with a
billy, or some weapon she had concealed about her person.</p>
<p>“You are not much of a liar, either,” said I, jumping on to my horse
astraddle, like a man.</p>
<p>The corporal looked at me as though he would sink, but he maintained that
he had done nothing that should offend the most fastidious female. The
corporal and his men mounted, and we all started for headquarters. I rode
beside the officer, and the corporal was right behind me. After we had got
started I pulled out my pipe, filled it, lit a match as soldiers usually
do, though it was quite unhandy, and began to smoke. As the tobacco smoke
rolled out under my veil, from the alleged rosebud mouth, the scene was
one that the corporal and the most of the men had never thought of, though
the officer was “on” all right enough. The corporal could hardly believe
his eyes, or one eye, for the other one had gone closed. I was a fine
enough looking female as we rode through the regiment, except the pipe,
which I puffed along just as though I had no dress on. As we rode up to
the colonel's tent, it was noised around that a scout had captured a
daring female rebel, and she had almost killed a corporal, and the whole
regiment gathered around the colonel's tent.</p>
<p>“What is the trouble, corporal?” asked the colonel of my black-eyed
friend.</p>
<p>“Well this woman wanted to go outside, and when I objected, she knocked me
down with a rail off a fence.”</p>
<p>“And you offered her no indignity?” the colonel asked.</p>
<p>“Not in the least,” said the corporal.</p>
<p>Then the colonel asked me to tell my story, which I did. The corporal said
it was a lie, but the other man, whom I did not hit, said I was right.</p>
<p>“Can you disrobe, before these soldiers, without getting off your horse?”
asked the colonel, looking at me.</p>
<p>I told him I could and he told me to proceed. I pulled the hat and hair
off first and appeared with my red hair clipped short. I then I threw the
dress over my head, and appeared in my cavalry pants, all dressed, except
my jacket and cap, which the colonel handed me, having brought it from the
house where I put on the dress. I put on the jacket, wiped the powder off
my face, and the corporal said:</p>
<p>“It's that condemned raw recruit.”</p>
<p>All the boys took in the transformation scene, and then the colonel told
them that he wanted this to be a lesson to all of them, to let all women
who came to the picket posts, or anywhere, who had passes, alone, and not
think because one woman had been caught smuggling, that all women were
smugglers. In fact he wanted every soldier to mind his own business. Then
he dismissed us, and we went to our quarters. On the way, the one-eyed
corporal touched me on the arm, and he said:</p>
<p>“Old man, you played it fine on me, but I will get even with you yet.”</p>
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