<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1> THE GUNS OF SHILOH </h1>
<h2> A STORY OF THE GREAT WESTERN CAMPAIGN </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h2> By Joseph A. Altsheler </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_FORE" id="link2H_FORE"></SPAN></p>
<h2> FOREWORD </h2>
<p>"The Guns of Shiloh," a complete story in itself, is the complement of
"The Guns of Bull Run." In "The Guns of Bull Run" the Civil War and its
beginnings are seen through the eyes of Harry Kenton, who is on the
Southern side. In "The Guns of Shiloh" the mighty struggle takes its color
from the view of Dick Mason, who fights for the North and who is with
Grant in his first great campaign.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE CIVIL WAR SERIES </h2>
<p>VOLUMES IN THE CIVIL WAR SERIES<br/>
<br/>
THE GUNS OF BULL RUN.<br/>
THE GUNS OF SHILOH.<br/>
THE SCOUTS OF STONEWALL.<br/>
THE SWORD OF ANTIETAM.<br/>
THE STAR OF GETTYSBURG.<br/>
THE ROCK OF CHICKAMAUGA.<br/>
THE SHADES OF THE WILDERNESS.<br/>
THE TREE OF APPOMATTOX.<br/></p>
<p>PRINCIPAL CHARACTERS IN THE CIVIL WAR SERIES<br/>
<br/>
HARRY KENTON, A Lad Who Fights on the Southern Side.<br/>
DICK MASON, Cousin of Harry Kenton, Who Fights on the Northern Side.<br/>
COLONEL GEORGE KENTON, Father of Harry Kenton.<br/>
MRS. MASON, Mother of Dick Mason.<br/>
JULIANA, Mrs. Mason's Devoted Colored Servant.<br/>
COLONEL ARTHUR WINCHESTER, Dick Mason's Regimental Commander.<br/>
COLONEL LEONIDAS TALBOT, Commander of the Invincibles,<br/>
a Southern Regiment.<br/>
LIEUTENANT COLONEL HECTOR ST. HILAIRE, Second in Command of the<br/>
Invincibles.<br/>
ALAN HERTFORD, A Northern Cavalry Leader.<br/>
PHILIP SHERBURNE, A Southern Cavalry Leader.<br/>
WILLIAM J. SHEPARD, A Northern Spy.<br/>
DANIEL WHITLEY, A Northern Sergeant and Veteran of the Plains.<br/>
GEORGE WARNER, A Vermont Youth Who Loves Mathematics.<br/>
FRANK PENNINGTON, A Nebraska Youth, Friend of Dick Mason.<br/>
ARTHUR ST. CLAIR, A Native of Charleston, Friend of Harry Kenton.<br/>
TOM LANGDON, Friend of Harry Kenton.<br/>
GEORGE DALTON, Friend of Harry Kenton.<br/>
BILL SKELLY, Mountaineer and Guerrilla.<br/>
TOM SLADE, A Guerrilla Chief.<br/>
SAM JARVIS, The Singing Mountaineer.<br/>
IKE SIMMONS, Jarvis' Nephew.<br/>
AUNT "SUSE," A Centenarian and Prophetess.<br/>
BILL PETTY, A Mountaineer and Guide.<br/>
JULIEN DE LANGEAIS, A Musician and Soldier from Louisiana.<br/>
JOHN CARRINGTON, Famous Northern Artillery Officer.<br/>
DR. RUSSELL, Principal of the Pendleton School.<br/>
ARTHUR TRAVERS, A Lawyer.<br/>
JAMES BERTRAND, A Messenger from the South.<br/>
JOHN NEWCOMB, A Pennsylvania Colonel.<br/>
JOHN MARKHAM, A Northern Officer.<br/>
JOHN WATSON, A Northern Contractor.<br/>
WILLIAM CURTIS, A Southern Merchant and Blockade Runner.<br/>
MRS. CURTIS, Wife of William Curtis.<br/>
HENRIETTA GARDEN, A Seamstress in Richmond.<br/>
DICK JONES, A North Carolina Mountaineer.<br/>
VICTOR WOODVILLE, A Young Mississippi Officer.<br/>
JOHN WOODVILLE, Father of Victor Woodville.<br/>
CHARLES WOODVILLE, Uncle of Victor Woodville.<br/>
COLONEL BEDFORD, A Northern Officer.<br/>
CHARLES GORDON, A Southern Staff Officer.<br/>
JOHN LANHAM, An Editor.<br/>
JUDGE KENDRICK, A Lawyer.<br/>
MR. CULVER, A State Senator.<br/>
MR. BRACKEN, A Tobacco Grower.<br/>
ARTHUR WHITRIDGE, A State Senator.<br/></p>
<p>HISTORICAL CHARACTERS<br/>
<br/>
ABRAHAM LINCOLN, President of the United States.<br/>
JEFFERSON DAVIS, President of the Southern Confederacy.<br/>
JUDAH P. BENJAMIN, Member of the Confederate Cabinet.<br/>
U. S. GRANT, Northern Commander.<br/>
ROBERT B. LEE, Southern Commander.<br/>
STONEWALL JACKSON, Southern General.<br/>
PHILIP H. SHERIDAN, Northern General.<br/>
GEORGE H. THOMAS, "The Rock of Chickamauga."<br/>
ALBERT SIDNEY JOHNSTON, Southern General.<br/>
A. P. HILL, Southern General.<br/>
W. S. HANCOCK, Northern General.<br/>
GEORGE B. McCLELLAN, Northern General.<br/>
AMBROSE B. BURNSIDE, Northern General.<br/>
TURNER ASHBY, Southern Cavalry Leader.<br/>
J. E. B. STUART, Southern Cavalry Leader.<br/>
JOSEPH HOOKER, Northern General.<br/>
RICHARD S. EWELL, Southern General.<br/>
JUBAL EARLY, Southern General.<br/>
WILLIAM S. ROSECRANS, Northern General.<br/>
SIMON BOLIVAR BUCKNER, Southern General.<br/>
LEONIDAS POLK, Southern General and Bishop.<br/>
BRAXTON BRAGG, Southern General.<br/>
NATHAN BEDFORD FORREST, Southern Cavalry Leader.<br/>
JOHN MORGAN, Southern Cavalry Leader.<br/>
GEORGE J. MEADE, Northern General.<br/>
DON CARLOS BUELL, Northern General.<br/>
W. T. SHERMAN, Northern General.<br/>
JAMES LONGSTREET, Southern General.<br/>
P. G. T. BEAUREGARD, Southern General.<br/>
WILLIAM L. YANCEY, Alabama Orator.<br/>
JAMES A. GARFIELD, Northern General, afterwards President of<br/>
the United States.<br/>
<br/>
And many others<br/></p>
<p>IMPORTANT BATTLES DESCRIBED IN THE CIVIL WAR SERIES<br/>
<br/>
BULL RUN<br/>
KERNSTOWN<br/>
CROSS KEYS<br/>
WINCHESTER<br/>
PORT REPUBLIC<br/>
THE SEVEN DAYS<br/>
MILL SPRING<br/>
FORT DONELSON<br/>
SHILOH<br/>
PERRYVILLE<br/>
STONE RIVER<br/>
THE SECOND MANASSAS<br/>
ANTIETAM<br/>
FREDERICKSBURG<br/>
CHANCELLORSVILLE<br/>
GETTYSBURG<br/>
CHAMPION HILL<br/>
VICKSBURG<br/>
CHICKAMAUGA<br/>
MISSIONARY RIDGE<br/>
THE WILDERNESS<br/>
SPOTTSYLVANIA<br/>
COLD HARBOR<br/>
FISHER'S HILL<br/>
CEDAR CREEK<br/>
APPOMATTOX<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<blockquote>
<p><big><b>CONTENTS</b></big></p>
<p><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_FORE"> FOREWORD </SPAN><br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> THE CIVIL WAR SERIES </SPAN><br/><br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> THE GUNS OF SHILOH </SPAN><br/><br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </SPAN> IN FLIGHT <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </SPAN> THE MOUNTAIN LIGHTS
<br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </SPAN> THE
TELEGRAPH STATION <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </SPAN> THE
FIGHT IN THE PASS <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </SPAN> THE
SINGER OF THE HILLS <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </SPAN> MILL
SPRING <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </SPAN> THE
MESSENGER <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </SPAN> A
MEETING AT NIGHT <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </SPAN> TAKING
A FORT <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </SPAN> BEFORE
DONELSON <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </SPAN> THE
SOUTHERN ATTACK <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </SPAN> GRANT'S
GREAT VICTORY <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </SPAN> IN
THE FOREST <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </SPAN> THE
DARK EVE OF SHILOH <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </SPAN> THE
RED DAWN OF SHILOH <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </SPAN> THE
FIERCE FINISH OF SHILOH <br/><br/></p>
</blockquote>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"></SPAN></p>
<h1> THE GUNS OF SHILOH </h1>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER I. IN FLIGHT </h2>
<p>Dick Mason, caught in the press of a beaten army, fell back slowly with
his comrades toward a ford of Bull Run. The first great battle of the
Civil War had been fought and lost. Lost, after it had been won! Young as
he was Dick knew that fortune had been with the North until the very
closing hour. He did not yet know how it had been done. He did not know
how the Northern charges had broken in vain on the ranks of Stonewall
Jackson's men. He did not know how the fresh Southern troops from the
Valley of Virginia had hurled themselves so fiercely on the Union flank.
But he did know that his army had been defeated and was retreating on the
capital.</p>
<p>Cannon still thundered to right and left, and now and then showers of
bursting shell sprayed over the heads of the tired and gloomy soldiers.
Dick, thoughtful and scholarly, was in the depths of a bitterness and
despair reached by few of those around him. The Union, the Republic, had
appealed to him as the most glorious of experiments. He could not bear to
see it broken up for any cause whatever. It had been founded with too much
blood and suffering and labor to be dissolved in a day on a Virginia
battlefield.</p>
<p>But the army that had almost grasped victory was retreating, and the camp
followers, the spectators who had come out to see an easy triumph, and
some of the raw recruits were running. A youth near Dick cried that the
rebels fifty thousand strong with a hundred guns were hot upon their
heels. A short, powerful man, with a voice like the roar of thunder, bade
him hush or he would feel a rifle barrel across his back. Dick had noticed
this man, a sergeant named Whitley, who had shown singular courage and
coolness throughout the battle, and he crowded closer to him for
companionship. The man observed the action and looked at him with blue
eyes that twinkled out of a face almost black with the sun.</p>
<p>"Don't take it so hard, my boy," he said. "This battle's lost, but there
are others that won't be. Most of the men were raw, but they did some
mighty good fightin', while the regulars an' the cavalry are coverin' the
retreat. Beauregard's army is not goin' to sweep us off the face of the
earth."</p>
<p>His words brought cheer to Dick, but it lasted only a moment. He was to
see many dark days, but this perhaps was the darkest of his life. His
heart beat painfully and his face was a brown mask of mingled dust, sweat,
and burned gunpowder. The thunder of the Southern cannon behind them
filled him with humiliation. Every bone in him ached after such fierce
exertion, and his eyes were dim with the flare of cannon and rifles and
the rolling clouds of dust. He was scarcely conscious that the thick and
powerful sergeant had moved up by his side and had put a helping hand
under his arm.</p>
<p>"Here we are at the ford!" cried Whitley. "Into it, my lad! Ah, how good
the water feels!"</p>
<p>Dick, despite those warning guns behind him, would have remained a while
in Bull Run, luxuriating in the stream, but the crowd of his comrades was
pressing hard upon him, and he only had time to thrust his face into the
water and to pour it over his neck, arms, and shoulders. But he was
refreshed greatly. Some of the heat went out of his body, and his eyes and
head ached less.</p>
<p>The retreat continued across the rolling hills. Dick saw everywhere arms
and supplies thrown away by the fringe of a beaten army, the men in the
rear who saw and who spread the reports of panic and terror. But the
regiments were forming again into a cohesive force, and behind them the
regulars and cavalry in firm array still challenged pursuit. Heavy firing
was heard again under the horizon and word came that the Southern cavalry
had captured guns and wagons, but the main division maintained its slow
retreat toward Washington.</p>
<p>Now the cool shadows were coming. The sun, which had shown as red as blood
over the field that day, was sinking behind the hills. Its fiery rays
ceased to burn the faces of the men. A soft healing breeze stirred the
leaves and grass. The river of Bull Run and the field of Manassas were
gone from sight, and the echo of the last cannon shot died solemnly on the
Southern horizon. An hour later the brigade stopped in the wood, and the
exhausted men threw themselves upon the ground. They were so tired that
their bodies were in pain as if pricked with needles. The chagrin and
disgrace of defeat were forgotten for the time in the overpowering desire
for rest.</p>
<p>Dick had enlisted as a common soldier. There was no burden of maintaining
order upon him, and he threw himself upon the ground by the side of his
new friend, Sergeant Whitley. His breath came at first in gasps, but
presently he felt better and sat up.</p>
<p>It was now full night, thrice blessed to them all, with the heat and dust
gone and no enemy near. The young recruits had recovered their courage.
The terrible scenes of the battle were hid from their eyes, and the cannon
no longer menaced on the horizon. The sweet, soothing wind blew gently
over the hills among which they lay, and the leaves rustled peacefully.</p>
<p>Fires were lighted, wagons with supplies arrived, and the men began to
cook food, while the surgeons moved here and there, binding up the wounds
of the hurt. The pleasant odors of coffee and frying meat arose. Sergeant
Whitley stood up and by the moonlight and the fires scanned the country
about them with discerning eye. Dick looked at him with renewed interest.
He was a man of middle years, but with all the strength and elasticity of
youth. Despite his thick coat of tan he was naturally fair, and Dick
noticed that his hands were the largest that he had ever seen on any human
being. They seemed to the boy to have in them the power to strangle a
bear. But the man was singularly mild and gentle in his manner.</p>
<p>"We're about half way to Washington, I judge," he said, "an' I expect a
lot of our camp followers and grass-green men are all the way there by
now, tellin' Abe Lincoln an' everybody else that a hundred thousand rebels
fell hard upon us on the plain of Manassas."</p>
<p>He laughed deep down in his throat and Dick again drew courage and
cheerfulness from one who had such a great store of both.</p>
<p>"How did it happen? Our defeat, I mean," asked Dick. "I thought almost to
the very last moment that we had the victory won."</p>
<p>"Their reserves came an' ours didn't. But the boys did well. Lots worse
than this will happen to us, an' we'll live to overcome it. I've been
through a heap of hardships in my life, Dick, but I always remember that
somebody else has been through worse. Let's go down the hill. The boys
have found a branch an' are washin' up."</p>
<p>By "branch" he meant a brook, and Dick went with him gladly. They found a
fine, clear stream, several feet broad and a foot deep, flowing swiftly
between the slopes, and probably emptying miles further on into Bull Run.
Already it was lined by hundreds of soldiers, mostly boys, who were
bathing freely in its cool waters. Dick and the sergeant joined them and
with the sparkle of the current fresh life and vigor flowed into their
veins.</p>
<p>An officer took command, and when they had bathed their faces, necks, and
arms abundantly they were allowed to take off their shoes and socks and
put their bruised and aching feet in the stream.</p>
<p>"It seems to me, sergeant, that this is pretty near to Heaven," said Dick
as he sat on the bank and let the water swish around his ankles.</p>
<p>"It's mighty good. There's no denyin' it, but we'll move still a step
nearer to Heaven, when we get our share of that beef an' coffee, which I
now smell most appetizin'. Hard work gives a fellow a ragin' appetite, an'
I reckon fightin' is the hardest of all work. When I was a lumberman in
Wisconsin I thought nothin' could beat that, but I admit now that a big
battle is more exhaustin'."</p>
<p>"You've worked in the timber then?"</p>
<p>"From the time I was twelve years old 'til three or four years ago. If I
do say it myself, there wasn't a man in all Wisconsin, or Michigan either,
who could swing an axe harder or longer than I could. I guess you've
noticed these hands of mine."</p>
<p>He held them up, and they impressed Dick more than ever. They were great
masses of bone and muscle fit for a giant.</p>
<p>"Paws, the boys used to call 'em," resumed Whitley with a pleased laugh.
"I inherited big hands. Father had em an' mother had 'em, too. So mine
were wonders when I was a boy, an' when you add to that years an' years
with the axe, an' with liftin' an' rollin' big logs I've got what I reckon
is the strongest pair of hands in the United States. I can pull a
horseshoe apart any time. Mighty useful they are, too, as I'm likely to
show you often."</p>
<p>The chance came very soon. A frightened horse, probably with the memory of
the battle still lodged somewhere in his animal brain, broke his tether
and came charging among the troops. Whitley made one leap, seized him by
the bit in his mighty grasp and hurled him back on his haunches, where he
held him until fear was gone from him.</p>
<p>"It was partly strength and partly sleight of hand, a trick that I learned
in the cavalry," he said to Dick as they put on their shoes. "I got tired
of lumberin' an' I wandered out west, where I served three years on
horseback in the regular army, fightin' the Indians. Good fighters they
are, too. Mighty hard to put your hand on 'em. Now they're there an' now
they ain't. Now you see 'em before you, an' then they're behind you aimin'
a tomahawk at your head. They taught us a big lot that I guess we can use
in this war. Come on, Dick, I guess them banquet halls are spread, an' I
know we're ready."</p>
<p>Not much order was preserved in the beaten brigade, which had become
separated from the rest of the retreating army, but the spirits of all
were rising and that, so Sergeant Whitley told Dick, was better just now
than technical discipline. The Northern army had gone to Bull Run with
ample supplies, and now they lacked for nothing. They ate long and well,
and drank great quantities of coffee. Then they put out the fires and
resumed the march toward Washington.</p>
<p>They stopped again an hour or two after midnight and slept until morning.
Dick lay on the bare ground under the boughs of a great oak tree. It was a
quarter of an hour before sleep came, because his nervous system had
received a tremendous wrench that day. He closed his eyes and the battle
passed again before them. He remembered, too, a lightning glimpse of a
face, that of his cousin, Harry Kenton, seen but an instant and then gone.
He tried to decide whether it was fancy or reality, and, while he was
trying, he fell asleep and slept as one dead.</p>
<p>Dick was awakened early in the morning by Sergeant Whitley, who was now
watching over him like an elder brother. The sun already rode high and
there was a great stir and movement, as the brigade was forming for its
continued retreat on the capital. The boy's body was at first stiff and
sore, but the elasticity of youth returned fast, and after a brief
breakfast he was fully restored.</p>
<p>Another hot day had dawned, but Dick reflected grimly that however hot it
might be it could not be as hot as the day before had been. Scouts in the
night had brought back reports that the Southern troops were on the
northern side of Bull Run, but not in great force, and a second battle was
no longer feared. The flight could be continued without interruption over
the hot Virginia fields.</p>
<p>Much of Dick's depression returned as they advanced under the blazing sun,
but Whitley, who seemed insensible to either fatigue or gloom, soon
cheered him up again.</p>
<p>"They talk about the Southerners comin' on an' takin' Washington," he
said, "but don't you believe it. They haven't got the forces, an' while
they won the victory I guess they're about as tired as we are. Our boys
talk about a hundred thousand rebels jumpin' on 'em, an' some felt as if
they was a million, but they weren't any more than we was, maybe not as
many, an' when they are all stove up themselves how can they attack
Washington in its fortifications! Don't be so troubled, boy. The Union
ain't smashed up yet. Just recollect whenever it's dark that light's bound
to come later on. What do you say to that, Long Legs?"</p>
<p>He spoke to a very tall and very thin youth who marched about a half dozen
feet away from them. The boy, who seemed to be about eighteen years of
age, turned to them a face which was pale despite the Virginia sun. But it
was the pallor of indoor life, not of fear, as the countenance was good
and strong, long, narrow, the chin pointed, the nose large and bridged
like that of an old Roman, the eyes full blue and slightly nearsighted.
But there was a faint twinkle in those same nearsighted eyes as he replied
in precise tones:</p>
<p>"According to all the experience of centuries and all the mathematical
formulae that can be deduced therefrom night is bound to be followed by
day. We have been whipped by the rebels, but it follows with arithmetical
certainty that if we keep on fighting long enough we will whip them in
time. Let x equal time and y equal opportunity. Then when x and y come
together we shall have x plus y which will equal success. Does my logic
seem cogent to you, Mr. Big Shoulders and Big Hands?"</p>
<p>Whitley stared at him in amazement and admiration.</p>
<p>"I haven't heard so many big words in a long time," he said, "an' then,
too, you bring 'em out so nice an' smooth, marchin' in place as regular as
a drilled troop."</p>
<p>"I've been drilled too," said the tall boy, smiling. "My name is George
Warner, and I come from Vermont. I began teaching a district school when I
was sixteen years old, and I would be teaching now, if it were not for the
war. My specialty is mathematics. X equals the war, y equals me and x plus
y equals me in the war."</p>
<p>"Your name is Warner and you are from Vermont," said Dick eagerly. "Why,
there was a Warner who struck hard for independence at Bennington in the
Revolution."</p>
<p>"That's my family," replied the youth proudly. "Seth Warner delivered a
mighty blow that helped to form this Union, and although I don't know much
except to teach school I'm going to put in a little one to help save it. X
equalled the occasion, y equalled my willingness to meet it, and x plus y
have brought me here."</p>
<p>Dick told who he and Whitley were, and he felt at once that he and this
long and mathematical Vermont lad were going to be friends. Whitley also
continued to look upon Warner with much favor.</p>
<p>"I respect anybody who can talk in mathematics as you do," he said. "Now
with me I never know what x equals an' I never know what y equals, so if I
was to get x an' y together they might land me about ten thousand miles
from where I wanted to be. But a fellow can bend too much over books.
That's what's the matter with them eyes of yours, which I notice always
have to take two looks where I take only one."</p>
<p>"You are undoubtedly right," replied Warner. "My relatives told me that I
needed some fresh air, and I am taking it, although the process is
attended with certain risks from bullets, swords, bayonets, cannon balls,
and shells. Still, I have made a very close mathematical calculation. At
home there is the chance of disease as well as here. At home you may fall
from a cliff, you may be drowned in a creek or river while bathing, a tree
may fall on you, a horse may throw you and break your neck, or you may be
caught in a winter storm and freeze to death. But even if none of these
things happens to you, you will die some day anyhow. Now, my figures show
me that the chance of death here in the war is only twenty-five per cent
greater than it was at home, but physical activity and an open air
continuously increase my life chances thirty-five per cent. So, I make a
net life gain of ten per cent."</p>
<p>Whitley put his hand upon Warner's shoulder.</p>
<p>"Boy," he said, "you're wonderful. I can cheer up the lads by talkin' of
the good things to come, but you can prove by arithmetic, algebra an'
every other kind of mathematics that they're bound to come. You're goin'
to be worth a lot wherever you are."</p>
<p>"Thanks for your encomiums. In any event we are gaining valuable
experience. Back there on the field of Bull Run I was able to demonstrate
by my own hearing and imagination that a hundred thousand rebels could
fire a million bullets a minute; that every one of those million bullets
filled with a mortal spite against me was seeking my own particular
person."</p>
<p>Whitley gazed at him again with admiration.</p>
<p>"You've certainly got a wonderful fine big bag of words," he said, "an'
whenever you need any you just reach in an' take out a few a foot long or
so. But I reckon a lot of others felt the way you did, though they won't
admit it now. Look, we're nearly to Washington now. See the dome of the
Capitol over the trees there, an' I can catch glimpses of roofs too."</p>
<p>Dick and George also saw the capital, and cheered by the sight, they
marched at a swifter gait. Soon they turned into the main road, where the
bulk of the army had already passed and saw swarms of stragglers ahead of
them. Journalists and public men met them, and Dick now learned how the
truth about Bull Run had come to the capital. The news of defeat had been
the more bitter, because already they had been rejoicing there over
success. As late as five o'clock in the afternoon the telegraph had
informed Washington of victory. Then, after a long wait, had come the
bitter despatch telling of defeat, and flying fugitives arriving in the
night had exaggerated it tenfold.</p>
<p>The division to which Dick, Warner, and Whitley belonged marched over the
Long Bridge and camped near the capital where they would remain until sent
on further service. Dick now saw that the capital was in no danger. Troops
were pouring into it by every train from the north and west. All they
needed was leadership and discipline. Bull Run had stung, but it did not
daunt them and they asked to be led again against the enemy. They heard
that Lincoln had received the news of the defeat with great calmness, and
that he had spent most of a night in his office listening to the personal
narratives of public men who had gone forth to see the battle, and who at
its conclusion had left with great speed.</p>
<p>"Lots of people have laughed at Abe Lincoln an' have called him only a
rail-splitter," said Whitley, "but I heard him two or three times, when he
was campaignin' in Illinois, an' I tell you he's a man."</p>
<p>"He was born in my state," said Dick, "and I mean to be proud of him.
He'll have support, too. Look how the country is standing by him!"</p>
<p>More than once in the succeeding days Dick Mason's heart thrilled at the
mighty response that came to the defeat of Bull Run. The stream of
recruits pouring into the capital never ceased. He now saw men, and many
boys, too, like himself, from every state north of the Ohio River and from
some south of it. Dan Whitley met old logging friends from Wisconsin whom
he had not seen in years, and George Warner saw two pupils of his as old
as himself.</p>
<p>Dick had inherited a sensitive temperament, one that responded quickly and
truthfully to the events occurring about him, and he foresaw the beginning
of a mighty struggle. Here in the capital, resolution was hardening into a
fight to the finish, and he knew from his relatives when he left Kentucky
that the South was equally determined. There was an apparent pause in
hostilities, but he felt that the two sections were merely gathering their
forces for a mightier conflict.</p>
<p>His comrades and he had little to do, and they had frequent leaves of
absence. On one of them they saw a man of imposing appearance pass down
Pennsylvania Avenue. He would have caught the attention of anybody, owing
to his great height and splendid head crowned with snow-white hair. He was
old, but he walked as if he were one who had achieved greatly, and was
conscious of it.</p>
<p>"It's Old Fuss and Feathers his very self," said Whitley.</p>
<p>"General Scott. It can be no other," said Dick, who had divined at once
the man's identity. His eyes followed the retreating figure with the
greatest interest. This was the young hero of the War of 1812 and the
great commander who had carried the brilliant campaign into the capital of
Mexico. He had been the first commander-in-chief of the Northern army,
and, foreseeing the great scale of the coming war, had prepared a wide and
cautious plan. But the public had sneered at him and had demanded instant
action, the defeat at Bull Run being the result.</p>
<p>Dick felt pity for the man who was forced to bear a blame not his own, and
who was too old for another chance. But he knew that the present cloud
would soon pass away, and that he would be remembered as the man of
Chippewa and Chapultepec.</p>
<p>"McClellan is already here to take his place," said Whitley. "He's the
young fellow who has been winning successes in the western part of
Virginia, an' they say he has genius."</p>
<p>Only a day or two later they saw McClellan walking down the same avenue
with the President. Dick had never beheld a more striking contrast. The
President was elderly, of great height, his head surmounted by a high silk
hat which made him look yet taller, while his face was long, melancholy,
and wrinkled deeply. His collar had wilted with the heat and the tails of
his long black coat flapped about his legs.</p>
<p>The general was clothed in a brilliant uniform. He was short and stocky
and his head scarcely passed the President's shoulder. He was redolent of
youth and self confidence. It showed in his quick, eager gestures and his
emphatic manner. He attracted the two boys, but the sergeant shook his
head somewhat solemnly.</p>
<p>"They say Scott was too old," he said, "and now they've gone to the other
end of it. McClellan's too young to handle the great armies that are going
into the field. I'm afraid he won't be a match for them old veterans like
Johnston and Lee."</p>
<p>"Napoleon became famous all over the world when he was only twenty-six,"
said Warner.</p>
<p>"That's so," retorted Whitley, "but I never heard of any other Napoleon.
The breed began and quit with him."</p>
<p>But the soldiers crowding the capital had full confidence in "Little Mac,"
as they had already begun to call him. Those off duty followed and cheered
him and the President, until they entered the White House and disappeared
within its doors. Dick and his friends were in the crowd that followed,
although they did not join in the cheers, not because they lacked faith,
but because all three were thoughtful. Dick had soon discovered that
Whitley, despite his lack of education, was an exceedingly observant man,
with a clear and reasoning mind.</p>
<p>"It was a pair worth seeing," said the sergeant, as they turned away, "but
I looked a lot more at Old Abe than I did at 'Little Mac.' Did you ever
think, boys, what it is to have a big war on your hands, with all sorts of
men tellin' you all sorts of things an' tryin' to pull you in all sorts of
directions?"</p>
<p>"I had not thought of it before, but I will think of it now," said Warner.
"In any event, we are quite sure that the President has a great task
before him. We hear that the South will soon have a quarter of a million
troops in the field. Her position on the defensive is perhaps worth as
many more men to her. Hence let x equal her troops, let y equal her
defensive, and we have x plus y, which is equal to half a million men, the
number we must have before we can meet the South on equal terms."</p>
<p>"An' to conquer her completely we'll need nigh on to a million." said the
sergeant.</p>
<p>Shrewd and penetrating as was Sergeant Whitley he did not dream that
before the giant struggle was over the South would have tripled her
defensive quarter of a million and the North would almost have tripled her
invading million.</p>
<p>A few days later their regiment marched out of the capital and joined the
forces on the hills around Arlington, where they lay for many days,
impatient but inactive. There was much movement in the west, and they
heard of small battles in which victory and defeat were about equal. The
boys had shown so much zeal and ability in learning soldierly duties that
they were made orderlies by their colonel, John Newcomb, a taciturn
Pennsylvanian, a rich miner who had raised a regiment partly at his own
expense, and who showed a great zeal for the Union. He, too, was learning
how to be a soldier and he was not above asking advice now and then of a
certain Sergeant Whitley who had the judgment to give it in the manner
befitting one of his lowly rank.</p>
<p>The summer days passed slowly on. The heat was intense. The Virginia hills
and plains fairly shimmered under the burning rays of the sun. But still
they delayed. Congress had shown the greatest courage, meeting on the very
day that the news of Bull Run had come, and resolving to fight the war to
a successful end, no matter what happened. But while McClellan was
drilling and preparing, the public again began to call for action. "On to
Richmond!" was the cry, but despite it the army did not yet move.</p>
<p>European newspapers came in, and almost without exception they sneered at
the Northern troops, and predicted the early dissolution of the Union.
Monarchy and privileged classes everywhere rejoiced at the disaster
threatening the great republic, and now that it was safe to do so, did not
hesitate to show their delight. Sensitive and proud of his country, Dick
was cut to the quick, but Warner was more phlegmatic.</p>
<p>"Let 'em bark," he said. "They bark because they dislike us, and they
dislike us because they fear us. We threatened Privilege when our
Revolution succeeded and the Republic was established. The fact of our
existence was the threat and the threat has increased with our years and
growth. Europe is for the South, but the reason for it is one of the
simplest problems in mathematics. Ten per cent of it is admiration for the
Southern victory at Bull Run, and ninety per cent of it is hatred—at
least by their ruling classes—of republican institutions, and a wish
to see them fall here."</p>
<p>"I suspect you're right," said Dick, "and we'll have to try all the harder
to keep them from being a failure. Look, there goes our balloon!"</p>
<p>Every day, usually late in the afternoon, a captive balloon rose from the
Northern camp, and officers with powerful glasses inspected the Southern
position, watching for an advance or a new movement of any kind.</p>
<p>"I'm going up in it some day," said Dick, confidently. "Colonel Newcomb
has promised me that he will take me with him when his turn for the
ascension comes."</p>
<p>The chance was a week in coming, a tremendously long time it seemed to
Dick, but it came at last. He climbed into the basket with Colonel
Newcomb, two generals, and the aeronauts and sat very quiet in a corner.
He felt an extraordinary thrill when the ropes were allowed to slide and
the balloon was slowly going almost straight upward. The sensation was
somewhat similar to that which shook him when he went into battle at Bull
Run, but pride came to his rescue and he soon forgot the physical tremor
to watch the world that now rolled beneath them, a world that they seemed
to have left, although the ropes always held.</p>
<p>Dick's gaze instinctively turned southward, where he knew the Confederate
army lay. A vast and beautiful panorama spread in a semi-circle before
him. The green of summer, the green that had been stained so fearfully at
Bull Run, was gone. The grass was now brown from the great heats and the
promise of autumn soon to come, but—from the height at least—it
was a soft and mellow brown, and the dust was gone.</p>
<p>The hills rolled far away southward, and under the horizon's rim. Narrow
ribbons of silver here and there were the numerous brooks and creeks that
cut the country. Groves, still heavy and dark with foliage, hung on the
hills, or filled some valley, like green in a bowl. Now and then, among
clumps of trees, colonial houses with their pillared porticoes appeared.</p>
<p>It was a rare and beautiful scene, appealing with great force to Dick.
There was nothing to tell of war save the Northern forces just beneath
them, and he would not look down. But he did look back, and saw the broad
band of the Potomac, and beyond it the white dome of the Capitol and the
roof of Washington. But his gaze turned again to the South, where his
absorbing interest lay, and once more he viewed the quiet country, rolling
away until it touched the horizon rim. The afternoon was growing late, and
great terraces of red and gold were heaping above one another in the sky
until they reached the zenith.</p>
<p>"Try the glasses for a moment, Dick," said Colonel Newcomb, as he passed
them to the boy.</p>
<p>Dick swept them across the South in a great semi-circle, and now new
objects rose upon the surface of the earth. He saw distinctly the long
chain of the Blue Ridge rising on the west, then blurring in the distance
into a solid black rampart. In the south he saw a long curving line of
rising blue plumes. It did not need Colonel Newcomb to tell him that these
were the campfires of the army that they had met on the field of Bull Run,
and that the Southern troops were now cooking their suppers.</p>
<p>No doubt his cousin Harry was there and perhaps others whom he knew. The
fires seemed to Dick a defiance to the Union. Well, in view of their
victory, the defiance was justified, and those fires might come nearer
yet. Dick, catching the tone of older men who shared his views, had not
believed at first that the rebellion would last long, but his opinion was
changing fast, and the talk of wise Sergeant Whitley was helping much in
that change.</p>
<p>While he yet looked through the glasses he saw a plume of white smoke
coming swiftly towards the Southern fires. Then he remembered the two
lines of railroad that met on the battlefield, giving it its other name,
Manassas Junction, and he knew that the smoke came from an engine pulling
cars loaded with supplies for their foes.</p>
<p>He whispered of the train as he handed the glasses back to Colonel
Newcomb, and then the colonel and the generals alike made a long
examination.</p>
<p>"Beauregard will certainly have an abundance of supplies," said one of the
generals. "I hear that arms and provisions are coming by every train from
the South, and meanwhile we are making no advance."</p>
<p>"We can't advance yet," said the other general emphatically. "McClellan is
right in making elaborate preparations and long drills before moving upon
the enemy. It was inexperience, and not want of courage, that beat us at
Bull Run."</p>
<p>"The Southerners had the same inexperience."</p>
<p>"But they had the defensive. I hear that Tom Jackson saved them, and that
they have given him the name Stonewall, because he stood so firm. I was at
West Point with him. An odd, awkward fellow, but one of the hardest
students I have ever known. The boys laughed at him when he first came,
but they soon stopped. He had a funny way of studying, standing up with
his book on a shelf, instead of sitting down at a desk. Said his brain
moved better that way. I've heard that he walked part of the way from
Virginia to reach West Point. I hear now, too, that he is very religious,
and always intends to pray before going into battle."</p>
<p>"That's a bad sign—for us," said the other general. "It's easy
enough to sneer at praying men, but just you remember Cromwell. I'm a
little shaky on my history, but I've an impression that when Cromwell, the
Ironsides, old Praise-God-Barebones, and the rest knelt, said a few words
to their God, sang a little and advanced with their pikes, they went
wherever they intended to go and that Prince Rupert and all the Cavaliers
could not stop them."</p>
<p>"It is so," said the other gravely. "A man who believes thoroughly in his
God, who is not afraid to die, who, in fact, rather favors dying on the
field, is an awful foe to meet in battle."</p>
<p>"We may have some of the same on our side," said Colonel Newcomb. "We have
at least a great Puritan population from which to draw."</p>
<p>One of the generals gave the signal and the balloon was slowly pulled
down. Dick, grateful for his experience, thanked Colonel Newcomb and
rejoined his comrades.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER II. THE MOUNTAIN LIGHTS </h2>
<p>When Dick left the balloon it was nearly night. Hundreds of campfires
lighted up the hills about him, but beyond their circle the darkness
enclosed everything. He still felt the sensations of one who had been at a
great height and who had seen afar. That rim of Southern campfires was yet
in his mind, and he wondered why the Northern commander allowed them to
remain week after week so near the capital. He was fully aware, because it
was common talk, that the army of the Union had now reached great numbers,
with a magnificent equipment, and, with four to one, should be able to
drive the Southern force away. Yet McClellan delayed.</p>
<p>Dick obtained a short leave of absence, and walked to a campfire, where he
knew he would find his friend, George Warner. Sergeant Whitley was there,
too, showing some young recruits how to cook without waste, and the two
gave the boy a welcome that was both inquisitive and hearty.</p>
<p>"You've been up in the balloon," said Warner. "It was a rare chance."</p>
<p>"Yes," replied Dick with a laugh, "I left the world, and it is the only
way in which I wish to leave it for the next sixty or seventy years. It
was a wonderful sight, George, and not the least wonderful thing in it was
the campfires of the Southern army, burning down there towards Bull Run."</p>
<p>"Burnin' where they ought not to be," said Whitley—no gulf was yet
established between commissioned and non-commissioned officers in either
army. "Little Mac may be a great organizer, as they say, but you can keep
on organizin' an' organizin', until it's too late to do what you want to
do."</p>
<p>"It's a sound principle that you lay down, Mr. Whitley," said Warner in
his precise tones. "In fact, it may be reduced to a mathematical formula.
Delay is always a minus quantity which may be represented by y.
Achievement is represented by x, and, consequently, when you have
achievement hampered by delay you have x minus y, which is an extremely
doubtful quantity, often amounting to failure."</p>
<p>"I travel another road in my reckonin's," said Whitley, "I don't know
anything about x and y, but I guess you an' me, George, come to the same
place. It's been a full six weeks since Bull Run, an' we haven't done a
thing."</p>
<p>Whitley, despite their difference in rank, could not yet keep from
addressing the boys by their first names. But they took it as a matter of
course, in view of the fact that he was so much older than they and vastly
their superior in military knowledge.</p>
<p>"Dick," continued the sergeant, "what was it you was sayin' about a cousin
of yours from the same town in Kentucky bein' out there in the Southern
army?"</p>
<p>"He's certainly there," replied Dick, "if he wasn't killed in the battle,
which I feel couldn't have happened to a fellow like Harry. We're from the
same little town in Kentucky, Pendleton. He's descended straight from one
of the greatest Indian fighters, borderers and heroes the country down
there ever knew, Henry Ware, who afterwards became one of the early
governors of the State. And I'm descended from Henry Ware's famous friend,
Paul Cotter, who, in his time, was the greatest scholar in all the West.
Henry Ware and Paul Cotter were like the old Greek friends, Damon and
Pythias. Harry and I are proud to have their blood in our veins. Besides
being cousins, there are other things to make Harry and me think a lot of
each other. Oh, he's a grand fellow, even if he is on the wrong side!"</p>
<p>Dick's eyes sparkled with enthusiasm as he spoke of the cousin and comrade
of his childhood.</p>
<p>"The chances of war bring about strange situations, or at least I have
heard so," said Warner. "Now, Dick, if you were to meet your cousin face
to face on the battlefield with a loaded gun in your hand what would you
do?"</p>
<p>"I'd raise that gun, take deliberate aim at a square foot of air about
thirty feet over his head and pull the trigger."</p>
<p>"But your duty to your country tells you to do otherwise. Before you is a
foe trying to destroy the Union. You have come out armed to save that
Union, consequently you must fire straight at him and not at the air, in
order to reduce the number of our enemies."</p>
<p>"One enemy where there are so many would not count for anything in the
total. Your arithmetic will show you that Harry's percentage in the
Southern army is so small that it reaches the vanishing point. If I can
borrow from you, George, x equals Harry's percentage, which is nothing, y
equals the value of my hypothetical opportunity, which is nothing, then x
plus y equals nothing, which represents the whole affair, which is
nothing, that is, worth nothing to the Union. Hence I have no more
obligation to shoot Harry if I meet him than he has to shoot me."</p>
<p>"Well spoken, Dick," said Sergeant Whitley. "Some people, I reckon, can
take duty too hard. If you have one duty an' another an' bigger one comes
along right to the same place you ought to 'tend to the bigger one. I'd
never shoot anybody that was a heap to me just because he was one of three
or four hundred thousand who was on the other side. I've never thought
much of that old Roman father—I forget his name—who had his
son executed just because he wasn't doin' exactly right. There was never a
rule that oughtn't to have exceptions under extraordinary circumstances."</p>
<p>"If you can establish the principle of exceptions," replied the young
Vermonter very gravely, "I will allow Dick to shoot in the air when he
meets his cousin in the height of battle, but it is a difficult task to
establish it, and if it fails Dick, according to all rules of logic and
duty, must shoot straight at his cousin's heart."</p>
<p>The other two looked at Warner and saw his left eyelid droop slightly. A
faint twinkle appeared in either eye and then they laughed.</p>
<p>"I reckon that Dick shoots high in the air," said the sergeant.</p>
<p>Dick, after a pleasant hour with his friends, went back to Colonel
Newcomb's quarters, where he spent the entire evening writing despatches
at dictation. He was hopeful that all this writing portended something,
but more days passed, and despite the impatience of both army and public,
there was no movement. Stories of confused and uncertain fighting still
came out of the west, but between Washington and Bull Run there was
perfect peace.</p>
<p>The summer passed. Autumn came and deepened. The air was crisp and
sparkling. The leaves, turned into glowing reds and yellows and browns,
began to fall from the trees. The advancing autumn contained the promise
of winter soon to come. The leaves fell faster and sharp winds blew,
bringing with them chill rains. Little Mac, or the Young Napoleon, as many
of his friends loved to call him, continued his preparations, and despite
all the urgings of President and Congress, would not move. His fatal
defect now showed in all its destructiveness. To him the enemy always
appeared threefold his natural size.</p>
<p>Reliable scouts brought back the news that the Southern troops at
Manassas, a full two months after their victory there, numbered only forty
thousand. The Northern commander issued statements that the enemy was
before him with one hundred and fifty thousand soldiers. He demanded that
his own forces should be raised to nearly a quarter of a million men and
nearly five hundred cannon before he could move.</p>
<p>The veteran, Scott, full of triumphs and honors, but feeling himself out
of place in his old age, went into retirement. McClellan, now in sole
command, still lingered and delayed, while the South, making good use of
precious months, gathered all her forces to meet him or whomsoever came
against her.</p>
<p>Youth chafed most against the long waiting. It seemed to Dick and his
mathematical Vermont friend that time was fairly wasting away under their
feet, and the wise sergeant agreed with them.</p>
<p>The weather had grown so cold now that they built fires for warmth as well
as cooking, and the two youths sat with Sergeant Whitley one cold evening
in late October before a big blaze. Both were tanned deeply by wind, sun
and rain, and they had grown uncommonly hardy, but the wind that night
came out of the northwest, and it had such a sharp edge to it that they
were glad to draw their blankets over their backs and shoulders.</p>
<p>Dick was re-reading a letter from his mother, a widow who lived on the
outskirts of Pendleton. It had come that morning, and it was the only one
that had reached him since his departure from Kentucky. But she had
received another that he had written to her directly after the Battle of
Bull Run.</p>
<p>She wrote of her gratitude because Providence had watched over him in that
dreadful conflict, all the more dreadful because it was friend against
friend, brother against brother. The state, she said, was all in
confusion. Everybody suspected everybody else. The Southerners were full
of victory, the Northerners were hopeful of victory yet to come. Colonel
Kenton was with the Southern force under General Buckner, gathered at
Bowling Green in that state, but his son, her nephew Harry, was still in
the east with Beauregard. She had heard that the troops of the west and
northwest were coming down the Ohio and Mississippi in great numbers, and
people expected hard fighting to occur very soon in western and southern
Kentucky. It was all very dreadful, and a madness seemed to have come over
the land, but she hoped that Providence would continue to watch over her
dear son.</p>
<p>Warner and the sergeant knew that the letter was from Dick's mother, but
they had too much delicacy to ask him questions. The boy folded the sheets
carefully and returned them to their place in the inside pocket of his
coat. Then he looked for a while thoughtfully into the blaze and the great
bed of coals that had formed beneath. As far as one could see to right and
left like fires burned, but the night remained dark with promise of rain,
and the chill wind out of the northwest increased in vigor. The words just
read for the fifth time had sunk deep in his mind, and he was feeling the
call of the west.</p>
<p>"My mother writes," he said to his comrades, "that the Confederate
general, Buckner, whom I know, is gathering a large force around Bowling
Green in the southern part of our state, and that fighting is sure to
occur soon between that town and the Mississippi. An officer named Grant
has come down from Illinois, and he is said to be pushing the Union troops
forward with a lot of vigor. Sergeant, you are up on army affairs. Do you
know this man Grant?"</p>
<p>Sergeant Whitley shook his head.</p>
<p>"Never heard of him," he replied. "Like as not he's one of the officers
who resigned from the army after the Mexican War. There was so little to
do then, and so little chance of promotion, that a lot of them quit to go
into business. I suppose they'll all be coming back now."</p>
<p>"I want to go out there," said Dick. "It's my country, and the westerners
at least are acting. But look at our army here! Bull Run was fought the
middle of summer. Now it's nearly winter, and nothing has been done. We
don't get out of sight of Washington. If I can get myself sent west I'm
going."</p>
<p>"And I'm going with you," said Warner.</p>
<p>"Me, too," said the sergeant.</p>
<p>"I know that Colonel Newcomb's eyes are turning in that direction,"
continued Dick. "He's a war-horse, he is, and he'd like to get into the
thick of it."</p>
<p>"You're his favorite aide," said the calculating young Vermonter. "Can't
you sow those western seeds in his mind and keep on sowing them? The fact
that you are from this western battle ground will give more weight to what
you say. You do this, and I'll wager that within a week the Colonel will
induce the President to send the whole regiment to the Mississippi."</p>
<p>"Can you reduce your prediction to a mathematical certainty?" asked Dick,
a twinkle appearing in his eye.</p>
<p>"No, I can't do that," replied Warner, with an answering twinkle, "but
you're the very fellow to influence Colonel Newcomb's mind. I'm a
mathematician and I work with facts, but you have the glowing imagination
that conduces to the creation of facts."</p>
<p>"Big words! Grand words!" said the sergeant.</p>
<p>"Never let Colonel Newcomb forget the west," continued Warner, not
noticing the interruption. "Keep it before him all the time. Hint that
there can be no success along the Mississippi without him and his
regiment."</p>
<p>"I'll do what I can," promised Dick faithfully, and he did much. Colonel
Newcomb had already formed a strong attachment for this zealous and
valuable young aide, and he did not forget the words that Dick said on
every convenient occasion about the west. He made urgent representations
that he and his regiment be sent to the relief of the struggling Northern
forces there, and he contrived also that these petitions should reach the
President. One day the order came to go, but not to St. Louis, where
Halleck, now in command, was. Instead they were to enter the mountains of
West Virginia and Kentucky, and help the mountaineers who were loyal to
the Union. If they accomplished that task with success, they were to
proceed to the greater theatre in Western Kentucky and Tennessee. It was
not all they wished, but they thought it far better than remaining at
Washington, where it seemed that the army would remain indefinitely.</p>
<p>Colonel Newcomb, who was sitting in his tent bending over maps with his
staff, summoned Dick.</p>
<p>"You are a Kentuckian, my lad," he said, "and I thought you might know
something about this region into which we are going."</p>
<p>"Not much, sir," replied Dick. "My home is much further west in a country
very different both in its own character and that of its people. But I
have been in the mountains two or three times, and I may be of some help
as a guide."</p>
<p>"I am sure you will do your best," said Colonel Newcomb. "By the way, that
young Vermont friend of yours, Warner, is to be on my staff also, and it
is very likely that you and he will go on many errands together."</p>
<p>"Can't we take Sergeant Whitley with us sometimes?" asked Dick boldly.</p>
<p>"So you can," replied the colonel, laughing a little. "I've noticed that
man, and I've a faint suspicion that he knows more about war than any of
us civilian officers."</p>
<p>"It's our task to learn as much as we can from these old regulars," said a
Major Hertford, a man of much intelligence and good humor, who, previous
to the war, had been a lawyer in a small town. Alan Hertford was about
twenty-five and of fine manner and appearance.</p>
<p>"Well spoken, Major Hertford," said the thoughtful miner, Colonel Newcomb.
"Now, Dick, you can go, and remember that we are to start for Washington
early in the morning and take a train there for the north. It will be the
duty of Lieutenant Warner and yourself, as well as others, to see that our
men are ready to the last shoe for the journey."</p>
<p>Dick and Warner were so much elated that they worked all that night, and
they did not hesitate to go to Sergeant Whitley for advice or instruction.
At the first spear of dawn the regiment marched away in splendid order
from Arlington to Washington, where the train that was to bear them to new
fields and unknown fortunes was ready.</p>
<p>It was a long train of many coaches, as the regiment numbered seven
hundred men, and it also carried with it four guns, mounted on trucks. The
coaches were all of primitive pattern. The soldiers were to sleep on the
seats, and their arms and supplies were heaped in the aisles. It was a
cold, drizzling day of closing autumn, and the capital looked sodden and
gloomy. Cameron, the Secretary of War, came to see them off and to make
the customary prediction concerning their valor and victory to come. But
he was a cold man, and he was repellent to Dick, used to more warmth of
temperament.</p>
<p>Then, with a ringing of bells, a heave of the engine, a great puffing of
smoke, and a mighty rattling of wheels, the train drew out of Washington
and made its noisy way toward Baltimore. Dick and Warner were on the same
seat. It was only forty miles to Baltimore, but their slow train would be
perhaps three hours in arriving. So they had ample opportunity to see the
country, which they examined with the curious eyes of youth. But there was
little to see. The last leaves were falling from the trees under the early
winter rain. Bare boughs and brown grass went past their windows and the
fields were deserted. The landscape looked chill and sullen.</p>
<p>Warner was less depressed than Dick. He had an even temperament based
solidly upon mathematical calculations. He knew that while it might be
raining today, the chances were several to one against its raining
tomorrow.</p>
<p>"I've good cause to remember Baltimore," he said. "I was with the New
England troops when they had the fight there on the way down to the
capital. Although we hold it, it's really a Southern city, Dick. Most all
the border cities are Southern in sympathy, and they're swarming with
people who will send to the Southern leaders news of every movement we
make. I state, and moreover I assert it in the face of all the world, that
the knowledge of our departure from Washington is already in Southern
hands. By close mathematical calculation the chances are at least
ninety-five per cent in favor of my statement."</p>
<p>"Very likely," said Dick, "and we'll have that sort of thing to face all
the time when we invade the South. We've got to win this war, George, by
hard fighting, and then more hard fighting, and then more and more of the
same."</p>
<p>"Guess you're right. Arithmetic shows at least one hundred per cent of
probability in favor of your suggestion."</p>
<p>Dick looked up and down the long coach packed with young troops. Besides
the commissioned officers and the sergeants, there was not one in the
coach who was twenty-five. Most of them were nineteen or twenty, and it
was the same in the other coaches. After the first depression their
spirits rose. The temper of youth showed strongly. They were eager to see
Baltimore, but the train stopped there only a few minutes, and they were
not allowed to leave the coaches.</p>
<p>Then the train turned towards the west. The drizzle of rain had now become
a pour, and it drove so heavily that they could see but little outside.
Food was served at noon and afterward many slept in the cramped seats.
Dick, despite his stiff position, fell asleep too. By the middle of the
afternoon everybody in their coach was slumbering soundly except Sergeant
Whitley, who sat by the door leading to the next car.</p>
<p>All that afternoon and into the night the train rattled and moved into the
west. The beautiful rolling country was left behind, and they were now
among the mountains, whirling around precipices so sharply that often the
sleeping boys were thrown from the seats of the coaches. But they were
growing used to hardships. They merely climbed back again upon the seats,
and were asleep once more in half a minute.</p>
<p>The rain still fell and the wind blew fiercely among the somber mountains.
A second engine had been added to the train, and the speed of the train
was slackened. The engineer in front stared at the slippery rails, but he
could see only a few yards. The pitchy darkness closed in ahead, hiding
everything, even the peaks and ridges. The heart of that engineer, and he
was a brave man, as brave as any soldier on the battlefield, had sunk very
low. Railroads were little past their infancy then and this was the first
to cross the mountains. He was by no means certain of his track, and,
moreover, the rocks and forest might shelter an ambush.</p>
<p>The Alleghanies and their outlying ridges and spurs are not lofty
mountains, but to this day they are wild and almost inaccessible in many
places. Nature has made them a formidable barrier, and in the great Civil
War those who trod there had to look with all their eyes and listen with
all their ears. The engineer was not alone in his anxiety this night.
Colonel Newcomb rose from an uneasy doze and he went with Major Hertford
into the engineer's cab. They were now going at the rate of not more than
five or six miles an hour, the long train winding like a snake around the
edges of precipices and feeling its way gingerly over the trestles that
spanned the deep valleys. All trains made a great roar and rattle then,
and the long ravines gave it back in a rumbling and menacing echo. Gusts
of rain were swept now and then into the faces of the engineer, the
firemen and the officers.</p>
<p>"Do you see anything ahead, Canby?" said Colonel Newcomb to the engineer.</p>
<p>"Nothing. That's the trouble, sir. If it were a clear night I shouldn't be
worried. Then we wouldn't be likely to steam into danger with our eyes
shut. This is a wild country. The mountaineers in the main are for us, but
we are not far north of the Southern line, and if they know we are
crossing they may undertake to raid in here."</p>
<p>"And they may know it," said the colonel. "Washington is full of Southern
sympathizers. Stop the train, Canby, when we come to the first open and
level space, and we'll do some scouting ahead."</p>
<p>The engineer felt great relief. He was devoutly glad that the colonel was
going to take such a precaution. At that moment he, more than Colonel
Newcomb, was responsible for the lives of the seven hundred human beings
aboard the train, and his patriotism and sense of responsibility were both
strong.</p>
<p>The train, with much jolting and clanging, stopped fifteen minutes later.
Both Dick and Warner, awakened by the shock, sat up and rubbed their eyes.
Then they left the train at once to join Colonel Newcomb, who might want
them immediately. Wary Sergeant Whitley followed them in silence.</p>
<p>The boys found Colonel Newcomb and the remaining members of his staff
standing near, and seeking anxiously to discover the nature of the country
about them. The colonel nodded when they arrived, and gave them an
approving glance. The two stood by, awaiting the colonel's orders, but
they did not neglect to use their eyes.</p>
<p>Dick saw by the engineer's lantern that they were in a valley, and he
learned from his words that this valley was about three miles long with a
width of perhaps half a mile. A little mountain river rushed down its
center, and the train would cross the stream about a mile further on. It
was still raining and the cold wind whistled down from the mountains. Dick
could see the somber ridges showing dimly through the loom of darkness and
rain. He was instantly aware, too, of a tense and uneasy feeling among the
officers. All of them carried glasses, but in the darkness they could not
use them. Lights began to appear in the train and many heads were thrust
out at the windows.</p>
<p>"Go through the coaches, Mr. Mason and Mr. Warner," said Colonel Newcomb,
"and have every light put out immediately. Tell them, too, that my orders
are for absolute silence."</p>
<p>Dick and the Vermonter did their work rapidly, receiving many curious
inquiries, as they went from coach to coach, all of which they were
honestly unable to answer. They knew no more than the other boys about the
situation. But when they left the last coach and returned to the officers
near the engine, the train was in total darkness, and no sound came from
it. Colonel Newcomb again gave them an approving nod. Dick noticed that
the fires in the engine were now well covered, and that no sparks came
from the smoke-stack. Standing by it he could see the long shape of the
train running back in the darkness, but it would have been invisible to
any one a hundred yards away.</p>
<p>"You think we're thoroughly hidden now, Canby?" said the colonel.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir. Unless they've located us precisely on advance information. I
don't see how they could find us among the mountains in all this darkness
and rain."</p>
<p>"But they've had the advance information! Look there!" exclaimed Major
Hertford, pointing toward the high ridge that lay on their right.</p>
<p>A beam of light had appeared on the loftiest spur, standing out at first
like a red star in the darkness, then growing intensely brighter, and
burning with a steady, vivid light. The effect was weird and powerful. The
mountain beneath it was invisible, and it seemed to burn there like a real
eye, wrathful and menacing. The older men, as well as the boys, were held
as if by a spell. It was something monstrous and eastern, like the
appearance of a genie out of the Arabian Nights.</p>
<p>The light, after remaining fixed for at least a minute, began to move
slowly from side to side and then faster.</p>
<p>"A signal!" exclaimed Colonel Newcomb. "Beyond a doubt it is the
Southerners. Whatever they're saying they're saying it to somebody. Look
toward the south!"</p>
<p>"Ah, there they are answering!" exclaimed Major Hertford.</p>
<p>All had wheeled simultaneously, and on another high spur a mile to the
south a second red light as vivid and intense as the first was flashing
back and forth. It, too, the mountain below invisible, seemed to swing in
the heavens. Dick, standing there in the darkness and rain, and knowing
that imminent and mortal danger was on either side, felt a frightful chill
creeping slowly down his spine. It is a terrible thing to feel through
some superior sense that an invisible foe is approaching, and not be able
to know by any kind of striving whence he came.</p>
<p>The lights flashed alternately, and presently both dropped from the sky,
seeming to Dick to leave blacker spots on the darkness in their place.
Then only the heavy night and the rain encompassed them.</p>
<p>"What do you think it is?" asked Colonel Newcomb of Major Hertford.</p>
<p>"Southern troops beyond a doubt. It is equally certain that they were
warned in some manner from Washington of our departure."</p>
<p>"I think so, too. It is probable that they saw the light and have been
signalling their knowledge to each other. It seems likely to me that they
will wait at the far end of the valley to cut us off. What force do you
think it is?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps a cavalry detachment that has ridden hurriedly to intercept us. I
would say at a guess that it is Turner Ashby and his men. A skillful and
dangerous foe, as you know."</p>
<p>Already the fame of this daring Confederate horseman was spreading over
Virginia and Maryland.</p>
<p>"If we are right in our guess," said Major Hertford, "they will dismount,
lead their horses along the mountain side, and shut down the trap upon us.
Doubtless they are in superior force, and know the country much better
than we do. If they get ahead of us and have a little time to do it in
they will certainly tear up the tracks."</p>
<p>"I think you are right in all respects," said Colonel Newcomb. "But it is
obvious that we must not give them time to destroy the road ahead of us.
As for the rest, I wonder."</p>
<p>He pulled uneasily at his short beard, and then he caught sight of
Sergeant Whitley standing silently, arms folded, by the side of the
engine. Newcomb, the miner colonel, was a man of big and open mind. A
successful business man, he had the qualities which made him a good
general by the time the war was in its third year. He knew Whitley and he
knew, too, that he was an old army regular, bristling with experience and
shrewdness.</p>
<p>"Sergeant Whitley," he said, "in this emergency what would you do, if you
were in my place?"</p>
<p>The sergeant saluted respectfully.</p>
<p>"If I were in your place, sir, which I never will be," he replied, "I
would have all the troops leave the train. Then I would have the engineers
take the train forward slowly, while the troops marched on either side of
it, but at a sufficient distance to be hidden in the darkness. Then, sir,
our men could not be caught in a wreck, but with their feet on solid earth
they would be ready, if need be, for a fight, which is our business."</p>
<p>"Well spoken, Sergeant Whitley," said Colonel Newcomb, while the other
officers also nodded approval. "Your plan is excellent and we will adopt
it. Get the troops out of the train quickly but in silence and do you,
Canby, be ready with the engine."</p>
<p>Dick and Warner with the older officers turned to the task. The young
soldiers were out of the train in two minutes and were forming in lines on
either side, arms ready. There were many whisperings among these boys, but
none loud enough to be heard twenty yards away. All felt intense relief
when they left the train and stood upon the solid, though decidedly damp
earth.</p>
<p>But the cold rain sweeping upon their faces was a tonic, both mental and
physical, after the close heat of the train. They did not know why they
had disembarked, but they surmised with good reason that an attack was
threatened and they were eager to meet it.</p>
<p>Dick and Warner were near the head of the line on the right of the tracks,
and Sergeant Whitley was with them. The train began to puff heavily, and
in spite of every precaution some sparks flew from the smoke-stack. Dick
knew that it was bound to rumble and rattle when it started, but he was
surprised at the enormous amount of noise it made, when the wheels really
began to turn. It seemed to him that in the silence of the night it could
be heard three or four miles. Then he realized that it was merely his own
excitement and extreme tension of both mind and body. Canby was taking the
train forward so gently that its sounds were drowned two hundred yards
away in the swirl of wind and rain.</p>
<p>The men marched, each line keeping abreast of the train, but fifty yards
or more to one side. The young troops were forbidden to speak and their
footsteps made no noise in the wet grass and low bushes. Dick and Warner
kept their eyes on the mountains, turning them alternately from north to
south. Nothing appeared on either ridge, and no sound came to tell of an
enemy near.</p>
<p>Dick began to believe that they would pass through the valley and out of
the trap without a combat. But while a train may go two or three miles in
a few minutes it takes troops marching in the darkness over uncertain
ground a long time to cover the same distance. They marched a full half
hour and then Dick suppressed a cry. The light, burning as intensely red
as before, appeared again on the mountain to the right, but further toward
the west, seeming to have moved parallel to the Northern troops. As Dick
looked it began to flash swiftly from side to side and that chill and
weird feeling again ran down his spine. He looked toward the south and
there was the second signal, red and intense, replying to the first.</p>
<p>Dick heard a deep "Ah!" run along the line of young troops, and he knew
now that they understood as much as he or any of the officers did. He now
knew, too, that they would not pass out of the valley without a combat.
The Southern forces, beyond a doubt, would try to shut them in at the
western mouth of the valley, and a battle in the night and rain was sure
to follow.</p>
<p>The train continued to move slowly forward. Had Colonel Newcomb dared he
would have ordered Canby to increase his speed in order that he might
reach the western mouth of the valley before the Southern force had a
chance to tear up the rails, but there was no use for the train without
the troops and they were already marching as fast as they could.</p>
<p>The gorge was now not more than a quarter of a mile away. Dick was able to
discern it, because the darkness there was not quite so dark as that which
lay against the mountains on either side. He was hopeful that they might
yet reach it before the Southern force could close down upon them, but
before they went many yards further he heard the beat of horses' feet both
to right and left and knew that the enemy was at hand.</p>
<p>"Take the train on through the pass, Canby!" shouted Colonel Newcomb.
"We'll cover its retreat, and join you later—if we can."</p>
<p>The train began to rattle and roar, and its speed increased. Showers of
sparks shot from the funnels of the two engines, and gleamed for an
instant in the darkness. The beat of horses' feet grew to thunder. Colonel
Newcomb with great presence of mind drew the two parallel lines of his men
close together, and ordered them to lie down on either side of the
railroad track and face outward with cocked rifles. Dick, the Vermonter,
and Sergeant Whitley lay close together, and the three faced the north.</p>
<p>"See the torches!" said Whitley.</p>
<p>Dick saw eight or ten torches wavering and flickering at a height of seven
or eight feet above the ground, and he knew that they were carried by
horsemen, but he could not see either men or horses beneath. Then the
rapid beat of hoofs ceased abruptly at a distance that Dick thought must
be about two hundred yards.</p>
<p>"Lie flat!" cried Whitley. "They're about to fire!"</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER III. THE TELEGRAPH STATION </h2>
<p>The darkness to the north was suddenly split apart by a solid sheet of
flame. Dick by the light saw many men on horseback and others on foot,
bridle rein over arm. It was well for the seven hundred boys that they had
pressed themselves against the solid earth. A sheet of bullets swept
toward them. Most passed over their heads, but many struck upon bones and
flesh, and cries of pain rose from the lines of men lying along the
railroad track.</p>
<p>The seven hundred pulled trigger and fired at the flash. They fired so
well that Dick could hear Southern horses neighing with pain, and
struggling in the darkness. He felt sure that many men, too, had been hit.
At least no charge came. The seven hundred shouted with exultation and,
leaping to their feet, prepared to fire a second volley. But the swift
command of their officers quickly put them down again.</p>
<p>"Don't forget the other Confederate column to the south of us," whispered
Whitley. "They did not fire at first for fear their bullets would pass
over our heads and strike their own comrades. For the same reason they
must have dropped back a little in order to avoid the fire of their
friends. Their volley will come from an angle about midway between our
left and rear."</p>
<p>Just as he spoke the last words the rifles flashed at the surmised angle
and again the bullets beat among the young troops or swept over their
heads. A soldier was killed only a few feet from Dick. The boy picked up
his rifle and ammunition and began to fire whenever he saw the flash of an
opposing weapon. But the fire of both Confederate columns ceased in a
minute or two, and not a shot nor the sound of a single order came out of
the darkness. But Dick with his ear to the soft earth, could hear the
crush of hoofs in the mud, and with a peculiar ability to discern whence
sound came he knew that the force on the left and rear was crossing the
railroad track in order to join their comrades on the north. He whispered
his knowledge to Whitley, who whispered back:</p>
<p>"It's the natural thing for them to do. They could not afford to fight on
in the darkness with two separate forces. The two columns would soon be
firing into each other."</p>
<p>Colonel Newcomb now gave an order for the men to rise and follow the
railroad track, but also to fire at the flash of the rifles whenever a
volley was poured upon them. He must not only beat off the Southern
attack, but also continue the journey to those points in the west where
they were needed so sorely. Some of his men had been killed, and he was
compelled to leave their bodies where they had fallen. Others were
wounded, but without exception they were helped along by their comrades.</p>
<p>Warner also had secured a rifle, with which he fired occasionally, but he
and Dick, despite the darkness, kept near to Colonel Newcomb in order that
they might deliver any orders that he should choose to give. Sergeant
Whitley was close to them. Dick presently heard the rush of water.</p>
<p>"What is that?" he exclaimed.</p>
<p>"It's the little river that runs down the valley," replied Warner.
"There's a slope here and it comes like a torrent. A bridge or rather
trestle is only a little further, and we've got to walk the ties, if we
reach the other side. They'll make their heaviest rush there, I suppose,
as beyond a doubt they are thoroughly acquainted with the ground."</p>
<p>The Northern troops left the track which here ran along an embankment
several feet high, and took shelter on its southern side. They now had an
advantage for a while, as they fired from a breastwork upon their foes,
who were in the open. But the darkness, lit only by the flashes of the
rifles, kept the fire of both sides from being very destructive, the
bullets being sent mainly at random.</p>
<p>Dick dimly saw the trestle work ahead of them, and the roaring of the
little river increased. He did not know how deep the water was, but he was
sure that it could not be above his waist as it was a small stream. An
idea occurred to him and he promptly communicated it to Colonel Newcomb.</p>
<p>"Suppose, sir," he said, "that we ford the river just below the trestle.
It will deceive them and we'll be half way across before they suspect the
change."</p>
<p>"A good plan, Mr. Mason," said Colonel Newcomb. "We'll try it."</p>
<p>Word was quickly passed along the line that they should turn to the left
as they approached the trestle, march swiftly down the slope, and dash
into the stream. As fast as they reached the other side of the ford the
men should form upon the bank there, and with their rifles cover the
passage of their comrades.</p>
<p>The skeleton work of the trestle now rose more clearly into view. The rain
had almost ceased and faint rays of moonlight showed through the rifts
where the clouds had broken apart. The boys distinctly heard the gurgling
rush of waters, and they also saw the clear, bluish surface of the
mountain stream. The same quickening of light disclosed the Southern force
on their right flank and rear, only four or five hundred yards away.
Dick's hasty glance backward lingered for a moment on a powerful man on a
white horse just in advance of the Southern column. He saw this man raise
his hand and then command the men to fire. He and twenty others under the
impulse of excitement shouted to the regiment to drop down, and the
Northern lads did so.</p>
<p>Most of the volley passed over their heads. Rising they sent back a return
discharge, and then the head of the columns rushed into the stream. Dick
felt swift water whirling about him and tugging at his body, but it rose
no higher than his waist, although foam and spray were dashed into his
face. He heard all around him the splashing of his comrades, and their
murmurs of satisfaction. They realized now that they were not only able to
retreat before a much superior force, but this same stream, when crossed,
would form a barrier behind which they could fight two to one.</p>
<p>The Confederate leader, whoever he might be, and Dick had no doubt that he
was the redoubtable Turner Ashby, also appreciated the full facts and he
drove his whole force straight at the regiment. It was well for the young
troops that part of them were already across, and, under the skillful
leadership of Colonel Newcomb, Major Hertford, and three or four old,
regular army sergeants, of whom the best was Whitley, were already forming
in line of battle.</p>
<p>"Kneel," shouted the colonel, "and fire over the heads of your comrades at
the enemy!"</p>
<p>The light was still growing brighter. The rain came only in slight
flurries. The clouds were trooping off toward the northeast, and the moon
was out. Dick clearly saw the black mass of the Southern horsemen wheeling
down upon them. At least three hundred of the regiment were now upon the
bank, and, with fairly steady aim, they poured a heavy volley into the
massed ranks of their foe. Dick saw horses fall while others dashed away
riderless. But the Southern line wavered only for a moment and then came
on again with many shouts. There were also dismounted men on either flank
who knelt and maintained a heavy fire upon the defenders.</p>
<p>The lads in blue were suffering many wounds, but a line of trees and
underbrush on the western shore helped them. Lying there partly protected
they loaded and pulled trigger as fast as they could, while the rest of
their comrades emerged dripping from the stream to join them. The
Confederates, brave as they were, had no choice but to give ground against
such strong defense, and the miner colonel, despite his reserve and his
middle years, gave vent to his exultation.</p>
<p>"We can hold this line forever!" he exclaimed to his aides. "It's one
thing to charge us in the open, but it's quite another to get at us across
a deep and rushing stream. Major Hertford, take part of the men to the
other side of the railroad track and drive back any attempt at a crossing
there. Lieutenant Mason, you and Lieutenant Warner go ahead and see what
has become of the train. You can get back here in plenty time for more
fighting."</p>
<p>Dick and Warner hurried forward, following the line of the railroad. Their
blood was up and they did not like to leave the defense of the river, but
orders must be obeyed. As they ran down the railroad track a man came
forward swinging a lantern, and they saw the tall gaunt figure of Canby,
the chief engineer. Behind him the train stretched away in the darkness.</p>
<p>"I guess that our men have forded the river and are holding the bank,"
said Canby. "Do they need the train crew back there to help?"</p>
<p>He spoke with husky eagerness. Dick knew that he was longing to be in the
middle of the fight, but that his duty kept him with the train.</p>
<p>"No," he replied. "The river bank, and the road along its shore give us a
great position for defense, and I know we can hold it. Colonel Newcomb did
not say so, but perhaps you'd better bring the train back nearer us. It's
not our object to stay in this valley and fight, but to go into the west.
Is all clear ahead?"</p>
<p>"No enemy is there. Some of the brakemen have gone on a mile or two and
they say the track hasn't been touched. You tell Colonel Newcomb that I'm
bringing the train right down to the battle line."</p>
<p>Dick and Warner returned quickly to Colonel Newcomb, who appreciated
Canby's courage and presence of mind. As the train approached the four
cannon were unloaded from the trucks, and swept the further shore with
shell and shrapnel. After a scattered fire the Southern force withdrew
some distance, where it halted, apparently undecided. The clouds rolled up
again, the feeble moon disappeared, and the river sank into the dark.</p>
<p>"May I make a suggestion, Colonel Newcomb?" said Major Hertford.</p>
<p>"Certainly."</p>
<p>"The enemy will probably seek an undefended ford much higher up, cross
under cover of the new darkness and attack us in heavy force on the flank.
Suppose we get aboard the train at once, cannon and all, and leave them
far behind."</p>
<p>"Excellent. If the darkness covers their movements it also covers ours.
Load the train as fast as possible and see that no wounded are left
behind."</p>
<p>He gave rapid orders to all his officers and aides, and in fifteen minutes
the troops were aboard the train again, the cannon were lifted upon the
trucks, Canby and his assistants had all steam up, and the train with its
usual rattle and roar resumed its flight into the west.</p>
<p>Dick and Warner were in the first coach near Colonel Newcomb, ready for
any commands that he might give. Both had come through the defense of the
ford without injury, although a bullet had gone through Dick's coat
without touching the skin. Sergeant Whitley, too, was unharmed, but the
regiment had suffered. More than twenty dead were left in the valley for
the enemy to bury.</p>
<p>Despite all the commands and efforts of the officers there was much
excited talk in the train. Boys were binding up wounds of other boys and
were condoling with them. But on the whole they were exultant. Youth did
not realize the loss of those who had been with them so little. Scattered
exclamations came to Dick:</p>
<p>"We beat 'em off that time, an' we can do it again."</p>
<p>"Lucky though we had that little river before us. Guess they'd have rode
us right down with their horses if it hadn't been for the stream an' its
banks."</p>
<p>"Ouch, don't draw that bandage so tight on my arm. It ain't nothin' but a
flesh wound."</p>
<p>"I hate a battle in the dark. Give me the good sunshine, where you can see
what's goin' on. My God, that you Bill! I'm tremendous glad to see you! I
thought you was lyin' still, back there in the grass!"</p>
<p>Dick said nothing. He was in a seat next to the window, and his face was
pressed against the rain-marked pane. The rifle that he had picked up and
used so well was still clutched, grimed with smoke, in his hands. The
train had not yet got up speed. He caught glimpses of the river behind
which they had fought, and which had served them so well as a barrier. In
fact, he knew that it had saved them. But they had beaten off the enemy!
The pulses in his temples still throbbed from exertion and excitement, but
his heart beat exultantly. The bitterness of Bull Run was deep and it had
lasted long, but here they were the victors.</p>
<p>The speed of the train increased and Dick knew that they were safe from
further attack. They were still running among mountains, clad heavily in
forest, but a meeting with a second Southern force was beyond probability.
The first had made a quick raid on information supplied by spies in
Washington, but it had failed and the way was now clear.</p>
<p>Ample food was served somewhat late to the whole regiment, the last wounds
were bound up, and Dick, having put aside the rifle, fell asleep at last.
His head lay against the window and he slept heavily all through the
night. Warner in the next seat slept in the same way. But the wise old
sergeant just across the aisle remained awake much longer. He was summing
up and he concluded that the seven hundred lads had done well. They were
raw, but they were being whipped into shape.</p>
<p>He smiled a little grimly as the unspoken words, "whipped into shape,"
rose to his lips. The veteran of many an Indian battle foresaw something
vastly greater than anything that had occurred on the plains. "Whipped
into shape!" Why, in the mighty war that was gathering along a front of
two thousand miles no soldier could escape being whipped into shape, or
being whipped out of it.</p>
<p>But the sergeant's own eyes closed after a while, and he, too, slept the
sleep of utter mental and physical exhaustion. The train rumbled on, the
faithful Canby in the first engine aware of his great responsibility and
equal to it. Not a wink of sleep for him that night. The darkness had
lightened somewhat more. The black of the skies had turned to a dusky
blue, and the bolder stars were out. He could always see the shining rails
three or four hundred yards ahead, and he sent his train steadily forward
at full speed, winding among the gorges and rattling over the trestles.
The silent mountains gave back every sound in dying echoes, but Canby paid
no heed to them. His eyes were always on the track ahead, and he, too, was
exultant. He had brought the regiment through, and while it was on the
train his responsibility was not inferior to that of Colonel Newcomb.</p>
<p>When Dick awoke, bright light was pouring in at the car windows, but the
car was cold and his body was stiff and sore. His military overcoat had
been thrown over him in the night and Warner had been covered in the same
way. They did not know that Sergeant Whitley had done that thoughtful act.</p>
<p>Dick stretched himself and drew deep breaths. Warm youth soon sent the
blood flowing in a full tide through his veins, and the stiffness and
soreness departed. He saw through the window that they were still running
among the mountains, but they did not seem to be so high here as they were
at the river by which they had fought in the night. He knew from his
geography and his calculation of time that they must be far into that part
of Virginia which is now West Virginia.</p>
<p>There was no rain now, at least where the train was running, but the sun
had risen on a cold world. Far up on the higher peaks he saw a fine white
mist which he believed to be falling snow. Obviously it was winter here
and putting on the big military coat he drew it tightly about him. Others
in the coach were waking up and some of them, grown feverish with their
wounds, were moving restlessly on their seats, where they lay protected by
the blankets of their fellows.</p>
<p>Dick now and then saw a cabin nestling in the lee of a hill, with the blue
smoke rising from its chimney into the clear, wintry air, and small and
poor as they were they gave him a singular sense of peace and comfort. His
mind felt for a few moments a strong reaction from war and its terrors,
but the impulse and the strong purpose that bore him on soon came back.</p>
<p>The train rushed through a pass and entered a sheltered valley a mile or
two wide and eight or ten miles long. A large creek ran through it, and
the train stopped at a village on its banks. The whole population of the
village and all the farmers of the valley were there to meet them. It was
a Union valley and by some system of mountain telegraphy, although there
were no telegraph wires, news of the battle at the ford had preceded the
train.</p>
<p>"Come, lads," said Colonel Newcomb to his staff. "Out with you! We're
among friends here!"</p>
<p>Dick and Warner were glad enough to leave the train. The air, cold as it
was, was like the breath of heaven on their faces, and the cheers of the
people were like the trump of fame in their ears. Pretty girls with their
faces in red hoods or red comforters were there with food and smoking
coffee. Medicines for the wounded, as much as the village could supply,
had been brought to the train, and places were already made for those hurt
too badly to go on with the expedition.</p>
<p>The whole cheerful scene, with its life and movement, the sight of new
faces and the sound of many voices, had a wonderful effect upon young Dick
Mason. He had a marvellously sensitive temperament, a direct inheritance
from his famous border ancestor, Paul Cotter. Things were always vivid to
him. Either they glowed with color, or they were hueless and dead. This
morning the long strain of the night and its battle was relaxed
completely. The grass in the valley was brown with frost, and the trees
were shorn of their leaves by the winter winds, but to Dick it was the
finest village that he had ever seen, and these were the friendliest
people in the world.</p>
<p>He drank a cup of hot coffee handed to him by the stalwart wife of a
farmer, and then, when she insisted, drank another.</p>
<p>"You're young to be fightin'," she said sympathetically.</p>
<p>"We all are," said Dick with a glance at the regiment, "but however we may
fight you'll never find anybody attacking a breakfast with more valor and
spirit than we do."</p>
<p>She looked at the long line of lads, drinking coffee and eating ham,
bacon, eggs, and hot biscuits, and smiled.</p>
<p>"I reckon you tell the truth, young feller," she said, "but it's good to
see 'em go at it."</p>
<p>She passed on to help others, and Dick, summoned by Colonel Newcomb, went
into a little railroad and telegraph station. The telegraph wires had been
cut behind them, but ten miles across the mountains the spur of another
railroad touched a valley. The second railroad looped toward the north,
and it was absolutely sure that it was beyond the reach of Southern
raiders. Colonel Newcomb wished to send a message to the Secretary of War
and the President, telling of the night's events and his triumphant
passage through the ordeal. These circumstances might make them wish to
change his orders, and at any rate the commander of the regiment wished to
be sure of what he was doing.</p>
<p>"You're a Kentuckian and a good horseman," said Colonel Newcomb to Dick.
"The villagers have sent me a trusty man, one Bill Petty, as a guide. Take
Sergeant Whitley and you three go to the station. I've already written my
dispatches, and I put them in your care. Have them sent at once, and if
necessary wait four hours for an answer. If it comes, ride back as fast as
you can. The horses are ready and I rely upon you."</p>
<p>"Thank you, sir, I'll do my best," said Dick, who deeply appreciated the
colonel's confidence. He wasted no time in words, but went at once to
Sergeant Whitley, who was ready in five minutes. Warner, who heard of the
mission, was disappointed because he was not going too. But he was
philosophical.</p>
<p>"I've made a close calculation," he said, "and I have demonstrated to my
own satisfaction that our opportunities are sixty per cent energy and
ability, twenty per cent manners, and twenty per cent chance. In this case
chance, which made the Colonel better acquainted with you than with me,
was in your favor. We won't discuss the other eighty per cent, because
this twenty is enough. Besides it looks pretty cold on the mountains, and
its fine here in the village. But luck with you, Dick."</p>
<p>He gave his comrade's hand a strong grasp and walked away toward the
little square of the village, where the troops were encamped for the
present. Dick sprang upon a horse which Bill Petty was holding for him.
Whitley was already up, and the three rode swiftly toward a blue line
which marked a cleft between two ridges. Dick first observed their guide.
Bill Petty was a short but very stout man, clad in a suit of home-made
blue jeans, the trousers of which were thrust into high boots with red
tops. A heavy shawl of dark red was wrapped around his shoulders, and
beneath his broad-brimmed hat a red woolen comforter covered his ears,
cheeks, and chin. His thick hair and a thick beard clothing his entire
face were a flaming red. The whole effect of the man was somewhat
startling, but when he saw Dick looking at him in curiosity his mouth
opened wide in a grin of extreme good nature.</p>
<p>"I guess you think I'm right red," he said. "Well, I am, an' as you see I
always dress to suit my complexion. Guess I'll warm up the road some on a
winter day like this."</p>
<p>"Would you mind my callin' you Red Blaze?" asked Sergeant Whitley gravely.</p>
<p>"Not-a-tall! Not-a-tall! I'd like it. I guess it's sorter pictorial an'
'maginative like them knights of old who had fancy names 'cordin' to their
qualities. People 'round here are pretty plain, an' they've never called
me nothin' but Bill. Red Blaze she is."</p>
<p>"An' Blaze for short. Well, then, Blaze, what kind of a road is that we're
goin' to ride on?"</p>
<p>"Depends on the kind of weather in which you ask the question. As it's the
fust edge of winter here in the mountains, though it ain't quite come in
the lowlands, an' as it's rained a lot in the last week, I reckon you'll
find it bad. Mebbe our hosses will go down in the road to thar knees, but
I guess they won't sink up to thar bodies. They may stumble an' throw us,
but as we'll hit in soft mud it ain't likely to hurt us. It may rain hard,
'cause I see clouds heapin' up thar in the west. An' if it rains the cold
may then freeze a skim of ice over the road, on which we could slip an'
break our necks, hosses an' all. Then thar are some cliffs close to the
road. If we was to slip on that thar skim of ice which we've reckoned
might come, then mebbe we'd go over one of them cliffs and drop down a
hundred feet or so right swift. If it was soft mud down below we might not
get hurt mortal. But it ain't soft mud. We'd hit right in the middle of
sharp, hard rocks. An' if a gang of rebel sharpshooters has wandered up
here they may see us an' chase us 'way off into the mountains, where we'd
break our necks fallin' off the ridges or freeze to death or starve to
death."</p>
<p>Whitley stared at him.</p>
<p>"Blaze," he exclaimed, "what kind of a man are you anyway?"</p>
<p>"Me? I'm the happiest man in the valley. When people are low down they
come an' talk to me to get cheered up. I always lay the worst before you
first an' then shove it out of the way. None of them things that I was
conjurin' up is goin' to happen. I was just tellin' you of the things you
was goin' to escape, and now you'll feel good, knowin' what dangers you
have passed before they happened."</p>
<p>Dick laughed. He liked this intensely red man with his round face and
twinkling eyes. He saw, too, that the mountaineer was a fine horseman, and
as he carried a long slender-barreled rifle over his shoulder, while a
double-barreled pistol was thrust in his belt, it was likely that he would
prove a formidable enemy to any who sought to stop him.</p>
<p>"Perhaps your way is wise," said the boy. "You begin with the bad and end
with the good. What is the name of this place to which we are going?"</p>
<p>"Hubbard. There was a pioneer who fit the Injuns in here in early times. I
never heard that he got much, 'cept a town named after him. But Hubbard is
a right peart little place, with a bank, two stores, three churches, an'
nigh on to two hundred people. Are you wrapped up well, Mr. Mason, 'cause
it's goin' to be cold on the mountains?"</p>
<p>Dick wore heavy boots, and a long, heavy military coat which fell below
his knees and which also had a high collar protecting his ears. He was
provided also with heavy buckskin gloves. The sergeant was clad similarly.</p>
<p>"I think I'm clothed against any amount of cold," he replied.</p>
<p>"Well, you need to be," said Petty, "'cause the pass through which we're
goin' is at least fifteen hundred feet above Townsville—that's our
village—an' I reckon it's just 'bout as high over Hubbard. Them
fifteen hundred feet make a pow'ful difference in climate, as you'll soon
find out. It's not only colder thar, but the winds are always blowin' hard
through the pass. Jest look back at Townsville. Ain't she fine an' neat
down thar in the valley, beside that clear creek which higher up in the
mountains is full of the juiciest an' sweetest trout that man ever stuck a
tooth into."</p>
<p>Dick saw that Petty was talkative, but he did not mind. In fact, both he
and Whitley liked the man's joyous and unbroken run of chatter. He turned
in his saddle and looked back, following the stout man's pointing finger.
Townsville, though but a little mountain town built mainly of logs, was
indeed a jewel, softened and with a silver sheen thrown over it by the
mountain air which was misty that morning. He dimly saw the long black
line of the train standing on the track, and here and there warm rings of
smoke rose from the chimneys and floated up into the heavens, where they
were lost.</p>
<p>He thought he could detect little figures moving beside the train and he
knew that they must be those of his comrades. He felt for a moment a sense
of loneliness. He had not known these lads long, but the battle had bound
them firmly together. They had been comrades in danger and that made them
comrades as long as they lived.</p>
<p>"Greatest town in the world," said Petty, waving toward it a huge hand,
encased in a thick yarn glove. "I've traveled from it as much as fifty
miles in every direction, north, south, east, an' west, an' I ain't never
seed its match. I reckon I'm somethin' of a traveler, but every time I
come back to Townsville, I think all the more of it, seein' how much
better it is than anything else."</p>
<p>Dick glanced at the mountaineer, and saw that there could be no doubt of
his sincerity.</p>
<p>"You're a lucky man, Mr. Petty," he said, "to live in the finest place in
the world."</p>
<p>"Yes, if I don't get drug off to the war. I'm not hankerin' for fightin'
an' I don't know much what the war's about though I'm for the Union, fust
to last, an' that's the way most of the people 'bout here feel. Turn your
heads ag'in, friends, an' take another look at Townsville."</p>
<p>Dick and Whitley glanced back and saw only the blank gray wall of the
mountain. Petty laughed. He was the finest laugher that Dick had ever
heard. The laugh did not merely come from the mouth, it was also exuded,
pouring out through every pore. It was rolling, unctuous, and so strong
that Petty not only shook with it, but his horse seemed to shake also. It
was mellow, too, with an organ note that comes of a mighty lung and
throat, and of pure air breathed all the year around.</p>
<p>"Thought I'd git the joke on you," he said, when he stopped laughing. "The
road's been slantin' into the mountains, without you knowin' it, and
Townsville is cut off by the cliffs. You'll find it gettin' wilder now
'till we start down the slope on the other side. Lucky our hosses are
strong, 'cause the mud is deeper than I thought it would be."</p>
<p>It was not really a road that they were following, merely a path, and the
going was painful. Under Petty's instructions they stopped their mounts
now and then for a rest, and a mile further on they began to feel a rising
wind.</p>
<p>"It's the wind that I told you of," said Petty. "It's sucked through six
or seven miles of pass, an' it will blow straight in our faces all the
way. As we'll be goin' up for a long distance you'll find it growin'
colder, too. But you've got to remember that after you pass them cold
winds an' go down the slope you'll strike another warm little valley, the
one in which Hubbard is layin' so neat an' so snug."</p>
<p>Dick had already noticed the increasing coldness and so had the sergeant.
Whitley, from his long experience on the plains, had the keenest kind of
an eye for climatic changes. He noticed with some apprehension that the
higher peaks were clothed in thick, cold fog, but he said nothing to the
brave boy whom he had grown to love like a son. But both he and Dick drew
their heavy coats closer and were thankful for the buckskin gloves,
without which their hands would have stiffened on the reins.</p>
<p>Now they rode in silence with their heads bent well forward, because the
wind was becoming fiercer and fiercer. Over the peaks the fogs were
growing thicker and darker and after a while the sharp edge of the wind
was wet with rain. It stung their faces, and they drew their hat brims
lower and their coat collars higher to protect themselves from such a
cutting blast.</p>
<p>"Told you we might have trouble," called Petty, cheerfully, "but if you
ride right on through trouble you'll leave trouble behind. Nor this ain't
nothin' either to what we kin expect before we git to the top of the pass.
Cur'us what a pow'ful lot human bein's kin stand when they make up their
minds to it."</p>
<p>"Are the horses well shod?" asked Whitley.</p>
<p>"Best shod in the world, 'cause I done it myself. That's my trade,
blacksmith, an' I'm a good one if I do say it. I heard before we started
that you had been a soldier in the west. I s'pose that you had to look
mighty close to your hosses then. A man couldn't afford to be ridin' a
hoss made lame by bad shoein' when ten thousand yellin' Sioux or Blackfeet
was after him."</p>
<p>"No, you couldn't," replied the sergeant. "Out there you had to watch
every detail. That's one of the things that fightin' Indians taught. You
had to be watchin' all the time an' I reckon the trainin' will be of value
in this war. Are we mighty near to the top of the pass, Mr. Petty?"</p>
<p>"Got two or three miles yet. The slope is steeper on the other side. We
rise a lot more before we hit the top."</p>
<p>The wind grew stronger with every rod they ascended, and the horses began
to pant with their severe exertions. At Petty's suggestion the three
riders dismounted and walked for a while, leading their horses. The rain
turned to a fine hail and stung their faces. Had it not been for his two
good comrades Dick would have found his situation inexpressibly lonely and
dreary. The heavy fog now enveloped all the peaks and ridges and filled
every valley and chasm. He could see only fifteen or twenty yards ahead
along the muddy path, and the fine hail which gave every promise of
becoming a storm of sleet stung continually. The wind confined in the
narrow gorge also uttered a hideous shrieking and moaning.</p>
<p>"Tests your nerve!" shouted Petty to Dick. "There are hard things besides
battles to stand, an' this is goin' to be one of the hard ones, but if you
go through it all right you kin go through any number of the same kind all
right, too. Likely the sleet will be so thick that it will make a sheet of
slippery ice for us comin' back. Now, hosses that ain't got calks on thar
shoes are pretty shore to slip an' fall, breakin' a leg or two, an' mebbe
breakin' the necks of thar riders."</p>
<p>Dick looked at him with some amazement. Despite his announcement of dire
disaster the man's eyes twinkled merrily and the round, red outline of his
bushy head in the scarlet comforter made a cheerful blaze.</p>
<p>"It's jest as I told you," said Petty, meeting the boy's look. "Without
calks on thar shoes our hosses are pretty shore to slip on the ice and
break theirselves up, or fall down a cliff an' break themselves up more."</p>
<p>"Then why in thunder, Blaze," exclaimed Whitley, "did we start without
calks on the shoes of our horses?"</p>
<p>Red Blaze broke into a deep mellow laugh, starting from the bottom of his
diaphragm, swelling as it passed through his chest, swelling again as it
passed through throat and mouth, and bursting upon the open air in a
mighty diapason that rose cheerfully above the shrieking and moaning of
the wind.</p>
<p>"We didn't start without em," he replied. "The twelve feet of these three
hosses have on 'em the finest calked shoes in all these mountains. I put
'em on myself, beginnin' the job this mornin' before you was awake, your
colonel, on the advice of the people of Townsville who know me as one of
its leadin' an' trusted citizens, havin' selected me as the guide of this
trip. I was jest tellin' you what would happen to you if I didn't justify
the confidence of the people of Townsville."</p>
<p>"I allow, Red Blaze," said the sergeant with confidence, "that you ain't
no fool, an' that you're lookin' out for our best interests. Lead on."</p>
<p>Red Blaze's mellow and pleased laugh rose once more above the whistling of
the wind.</p>
<p>"You kin ride ag'in now, boys," he said. "The hosses are pretty well
rested."</p>
<p>They resumed the saddle gladly and now mounted toward the crest of the
pass. The sleet turned to snow, which was a relief to their faces, and
Dick, with the constant beating of wind and snow, began to feel a certain
physical exhilaration. He realized the truth of Red Blaze's assertion that
if you stiffen your back and push your way through troubles you leave
troubles behind.</p>
<p>They rode now in silence for quite a while, and then Red Blaze suddenly
announced:</p>
<p>"We're at the top, boys."</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER IV. THE FIGHT IN THE PASS </h2>
<p>The three halted their horses and stood for a minute or two on the very
crest of the pass. The fierce wind out of the northwest blew directly in
their faces and both riders and horses alike were covered with snow. But
Dick felt a wonderful thrill as he gazed upon the vast white wilderness.
East and west, north and south he saw the driving snow and the lofty peaks
and ridges showing through it, white themselves. The towns below and the
cabins that snuggled in the coves were completely hidden. They could see
no sign of human life on slope or in valley.</p>
<p>"Looks as wild as the Rockies," said the sergeant tersely.</p>
<p>"But you won't find any Injuns here to ambush you," said Red Blaze,
"though I don't make any guarantee against bushwhackers and guerillas,
who'll change sides as often as two or three times a day, if it will suit
their convenience. They could hide in the woods along the road an' pick us
off as easy as I'd shoot a squirrel out of a tree. They'd like to have our
arms an' our big coats. I tell you what, friends, a mighty civil war like
ours gives a tremenjeous opportunity to bad men. They're all comin' to the
top. Every rascal in the mountains an' in the lowlands, too, I guess, is
out lookin' for plunder an' wuss."</p>
<p>"You're right, Red Blaze," said the sergeant with emphasis, "an' it won't
be stopped until the generals on both sides begin to hang an' shoot the
plunderers an' murderers."</p>
<p>"But they can't ketch 'em all," said Red Blaze. "A Yankee general with a
hundred thousand men will be out lookin' for what? Not for a gang of
robbers, not by a jugful. He'll be lookin' for a rebel general with
another hundred thousand men, an' the rebel general with a hundred
thousand men will be lookin' for that Yankee general with his hundred
thousand. So there you are, an' while they're lookin' for each other an'
then fightin' each other to a standstill, the robbers will be plunderin'
an' murderin'. But don't you worry about bein' ambushed. I was jest
tellin' you what might happen, but wouldn't happen. We kin go down hill
fast now, and we'll soon be in Hubbard, which is the other side of all
that fallin' snow."</p>
<p>The road down the mountain was also better than the one by which they had
ascended, and as the horses with their calked shoes were swift of foot
they made rapid progress. As they descended, the wind lowered fast and
there was much less snow. Red Blaze said it was probably not snowing in
the valley at all.</p>
<p>"See that shinin' in the sun," he said. "That's the tin coverin' on the
steeple of the new church in Hubbard. The sun strikes squar'ly on it, an'
now I know I'm right 'bout it not snowin' down thar. Wait 'til we turn
'roun' this big rock. Yes, thar's Hubbard, layin' out in the valley
without a drop of snow on her. It looks good, don't it, friends, with the
smoke comin' out of the chimneys. That little red house over thar is the
railroad an' telegraph station, an' we'll go straight for it, 'cause we
ain't got no time to waste."</p>
<p>They emerged into the valley and rode rapidly for the station. Farmers on
the outskirts and villagers looked wonderingly at them, but they did not
pause to answer questions. They galloped their tired mounts straight for
the little red building, which was the station. Dick sprang first from his
horse, and leaving it to stand at the door, ran inside. A telegraph
instrument was clicking mournfully in the corner. A hot stove was in
another corner, and sitting near it was a lad of about Dick's age, clad in
mountain jeans, and lounging in an old cane-bottomed chair. But Dick's
quick glance saw that the boy was bright of face and keen of eye. He
promptly drew out his papers and said:</p>
<p>"I'm an aide from the Northern regiment of Colonel Newcomb at Townsville.
Here are duplicate dispatches, one set for the President of the United
States and the other for the Secretary of War. They tell of a successful
fight that we had last night with Southern troops, presumably the
cavalrymen of Turner Ashby. I wish you to send them at once."</p>
<p>"He's speakin' the exact truth, Jim," said Red Blaze, who had come in
behind Dick, "an' I've brought him an' the sergeant here over the
mountains to tell about it."</p>
<p>The boy sprang to his instrument. But he stopped a moment to ask one
question.</p>
<p>"Did you really beat 'em off?" he asked as he looked up with shining eye.</p>
<p>"We certainly did," replied Dick.</p>
<p>"I'll send it faster than I ever sent anything before," said the boy. "To
think of me, Jim Johnson, sending a dispatch to Abraham Lincoln, telling
of a victory!"</p>
<p>"I reckon you're right, Jim, it's your chance," said Red Blaze.</p>
<p>Jim bent over the instrument which now began to click steadily and fast.</p>
<p>"You're to wait for answers," said Dick.</p>
<p>The boy nodded, but his shining eyes remained bent over the instrument.
Dick went to the door, brushed off the snow, came back and sat down by the
stove. Sergeant Whitley, who had tied the horses to hitching posts, came
in, pulled up an empty box and sat down by him. Red Blaze slipped away
unnoticed. But he came back very soon, and men and women came with him,
bringing food and smoking coffee. There was enough for twenty.</p>
<p>Red Blaze had spread among the villagers, every one of whom he knew, the
news that the Union arms had won a victory. Nor had it suffered anything
in the telling. Colonel Newcomb's regiment, by the most desperate feats of
gallantry, had beaten off at least ten thousand Southerners, and the boy
and the man in uniform, who were resting by the fire in the station, had
been the greatest two heroes of a battle waged for a whole night.</p>
<p>Curious eyes gazed at Dick and the sergeant as they sat there by the
stove. Dick himself, warm, relaxed, and the needs of his body satisfied,
felt like going to sleep. But he watched the boy operator, who presently
finished his two dispatches and then lifted his head for the first time.</p>
<p>"They've gone straight into Washington," he said. "We ought to get an
answer soon."</p>
<p>"We'll wait here for it," said Dick.</p>
<p>The three messengers were now thoroughly warmed at the stove, they had
eaten heartily of the best the village could furnish, and a great feeling
of comfort pervaded them. While they were waiting for the reply that they
hoped would come from Washington, Dick Mason and Sergeant Whitley went
outside. No snow was falling in the valley, but off on the mountain crest
they still saw the white veil, blown by the wind.</p>
<p>Red Blaze joined them and was everywhere their guide and herald. He
ascribed to them such deeds of skill and valor that they were compelled to
call him the best romancer they had met in a long time.</p>
<p>"I suppose that if Mr. Warner were here," said the sergeant, "he would
reduce these statements to mathematics, ten per cent fact an' ninety per
cent fancy."</p>
<p>"Just about that," said Dick.</p>
<p>Red Blaze came to them presently, bristling with news.</p>
<p>"A farmer from a hollow further to the west," he said, "has just come in,
an' he says that a band of guerillas is ridin' through the hills. 'Bout
twenty of them, he said, led by a big dark fellow, his face covered with
black beard. They've been liftin' hosses an' takin' other things, but
they're strangers in these parts. Tom Sykes, who was held up by them an'
robbed of his hoss, says that the rest of 'em called their leader Skelly.
Tom seemed to think that mebbe they came from somewhere in the Kentucky
mountains. They called themselves a scoutin' party of the Southern army."</p>
<p>Dick started violently.</p>
<p>"Why, I know this man Skelly," he said. "He lives in the mountains to the
eastward of my home in Kentucky. He organized a band at the beginning of
the war, but over there he said he was fightin' for the North."</p>
<p>"He'll be fightin' for his own hand," said the sergeant sternly. "But he
can't play double all the time. That sort of thing will bring a man to the
end of a rope, with clear air under his feet."</p>
<p>"I'm glad you've told me this," said Red Blaze. "Skelly might have come
ridin' in here, claimin' that he an' his men was Northern troops, an' then
when we wasn't suspectin' might have held up the whole town. I'll warn
'em. Thar ain't a house here that hasn't got two or three rifles an'
shotguns in it, an' with the farmers from the valley joinin' in Hubbard
could wipe out the whole gang."</p>
<p>"Tell them to be on guard all the time, Red Blaze," said Whitley with
strong emphasis. "In war you've got to watch, watch, watch. Always know
what the other fellow is doin', if you can."</p>
<p>"Let's go back to the station," said Dick. "Maybe we'll have an answer
soon."</p>
<p>They found the young operator hanging over his instrument, his eyes still
shining. He had been in that position ever since they left him, and Dick
knew that his eagerness to get an answer from Washington kept him there,
mind and body waiting for the tick of the key.</p>
<p>Dick, the sergeant, and Red Blaze sat down by the stove again, and rested
there quietly for a quarter of an hour. Red Blaze was thinking that it
would be another cold ride back over the pass. The sergeant, although he
was not sleepy, closed his eyes and saw again the vast rolling plains, the
herds of buffalo spreading to the horizon, and the bands of Sioux and
Cheyennes galloping down, their great war bonnets making splashes of color
against the thin blue sky. Dick was thinking of Pendleton, the peaceful
little town in Kentucky that was his home, and of his cousin, Harry
Kenton. He did not know now where Harry was, and he did not even know
whether he was dead or alive.</p>
<p>Dick sighed a little, and just at that moment the telegraph key began to
click.</p>
<p>"The answer is coming!" exclaimed the young operator excitedly and then he
bent closer over the key to take it. The three chairs straightened up, and
they, too, bent toward the key. The boy wrote rapidly, but the clicking
did not go on long. When it ceased he straightened up with his finished
message in his hand. His face was flushed and his eyes still shining. He
folded the paper and handed it to Dick.</p>
<p>"It's for you, Mr. Mason," he said.</p>
<p>Dick unfolded it and read aloud:</p>
<p>"Colonel John D. Newcomb:</p>
<p>"Congratulations on your success and fine management of your troops.
Victory worth much to us. Read dispatch to regiment and continue westward
to original destination.</p>
<p>A. LINCOLN."<br/></p>
<p>Dick's face glowed, and the sergeant's teeth came together with a little
click of satisfaction.</p>
<p>"When I saw that it was to be read to the regiment I thought it no harm to
read it to the rest of you," said Dick, as he refolded the precious
dispatch and put it in his safest pocket. "Now, sergeant, I think we ought
to be off at full speed."</p>
<p>"Not a minute to waste," said Sergeant Whitley.</p>
<p>Their horses had been fed and were rested well. The three bade farewell to
the young operator, then to almost all of Hubbard and proceeded in a trot
for the pass. They did not speak until they were on the first slope, and
then the sergeant, looking up at the heights, asked:</p>
<p>"Shall we have snow again on our return, Red Blaze? I hope not. It's
important for us to get back to Townsville without any waste of time."</p>
<p>"I hate to bring bad news," replied Red Blaze, "but we'll shore have more
snow. See them clouds, sailin' up an' always sailin' up from the
southwest, an' see that white mist 'roun' the highest peaks. That's snow,
an' it'll hit the pass just as it did when we was comin' over. But we've
got this in favor of ourselves an' our hosses now: The wind is on our
backs."</p>
<p>They rode hard now. Dick had received the precious message from the
President, and it would be a proud moment for him when he put it in the
hands of the colonel. He did not wish that moment to be delayed. Several
times he patted the pocket in which the paper lay.</p>
<p>As they ascended, the wind increased in strength, but being on their backs
now it seemed to help them along. They were soon high up on the slopes and
then they naturally turned for a parting look at Hubbard in its valley, a
twin to that of Townsville. It looked from afar neat and given up to
peace, but Dick knew that it had been stirred deeply by the visit of his
comrades and himself.</p>
<p>"It seems," he said, "that the war would pass by these little mountain
nests."</p>
<p>"But it don't," said Red Blaze. "War, I guess, is like a mad an' kickin'
mule, hoofs lashin' out everywhar, an' you can't tell what they're goin'
to hit. Boys, we're makin' good time. That wind on our backs fairly lifts
us up the mountain side."</p>
<p>Petty had all the easy familiarity of the backwoods. He treated the boy
and man who rode with him as comrades of at least a year's standing, and
they felt in return that he was one of them, a man to be trusted. They
retained all the buoyancy which the receipt of the dispatch had given
them, and Dick, his heart beating high, scarcely felt the wind and cold.</p>
<p>"In another quarter of an hour we'll be at the top," said Petty. Then he
added after a moment's pause: "If I'm not mistook, we'll have company. See
that path, leadin' out of the west, an' runnin' along the slope. It comes
into the main road, two or three hundred yards further on, an' I think I
can see the top of a horseman's head ridin' in it. What do you say,
sergeant?"</p>
<p>"I say that you are right, Red Blaze. I plainly see the head of a big man,
wearing a fur cap, an' there are others behind him, ridin' in single file.
What's your opinion, Mr. Mason?"</p>
<p>"The same as yours and Red Blaze's. I, too, can see the big man with the
fur cap on his head and at least a dozen following behind. Do you think it
likely, Red Blaze, that they'll reach the main road before we pass the
mouth of the path?"</p>
<p>A sudden thought had leaped up in Dick's mind and it set his pulses to
beating hard. He remembered some earlier words of Red Blaze's.</p>
<p>"We'll go by before they reach the main road," replied Red Blaze, "unless
they make their hosses travel a lot faster than they're travelin' now."</p>
<p>"Then suppose we whip up a little," said Dick.</p>
<p>Both Red Blaze and the sergeant gave him searching glances.</p>
<p>"Do you mean—" began Whitley.</p>
<p>"Yes, I mean it. I know it. The man in front wearing the fur cap is Bill
Skelly. He and his men made an attack upon the home of my uncle, Colonel
Kenton, who is a Southern leader in Kentucky. He and his band were
Northerners there, but they will be Southerners here, if it suits their
purpose."</p>
<p>"An' it will shorely suit their purpose to be Southerners now," said Red
Blaze. "We three are ridin' mighty good hoss flesh. Me an' the sergeant
have good rifles an' pistols, you have good pistols, an' we all have good,
big overcoats. This is a lonely mountain side with war flyin' all about
us. Easy's the place an' easy's the deed. That is if we'd let 'em, which
we ain't goin' to do."</p>
<p>"Not by a long shot," said Sergeant Whitley, resting his rifle across the
pommel of his saddle. "They've got to follow straight behind. The ground
is too rough for them to ride around an' flank us."</p>
<p>Dick said nothing, but his gauntleted hand moved down to the butt of one
of his pistols. His heart throbbed, but he preserved the appearance of
coolness. He was fast becoming inured to danger. Owing to the slope they
could not increase the speed of their horses greatly, but they were beyond
the mouth of the path before they were seen by Skelly and his band. Then
the big mountaineer uttered a great shout and began to wave his hand at
them.</p>
<p>"The road curves here a little among the rocks," said the sergeant, who
unconsciously took command. "Suppose we stop, sheltered by the curve, and
ask them what they want."</p>
<p>"The very thing to do," said Dick.</p>
<p>"Sass 'em, sergeant! Sass 'em!" said Red Blaze.</p>
<p>They drew their horses back partially in the shadow of the rocky curve,
but the sergeant was a little further forward than the others. Dick saw
Skelly and a score of men emerge into the road and come rapidly toward
them. They were a wild-looking crew, mounted on tough mountain ponies, all
of them carrying loot, and all armed heavily.</p>
<p>The sergeant threw up his rifle, and with a steady hand aimed straight at
Skelly's heart.</p>
<p>"Halt!" he cried sharply, "and tell me who you are!"</p>
<p>The whole crew seemed to reel back except Skelly, who, though stopping his
horse, remained in the center of the road.</p>
<p>"What do you mean?" he cried. "We're peaceful travelers. What business is
it of yours who we are?"</p>
<p>"Judgin' by your looks you're not peaceful travelers at all. Besides these
ain't peaceful times an' we take the right to demand who you are. If you
come on another foot, I shoot."</p>
<p>The sergeant's tones were sharp with resolve.</p>
<p>"Your name!" he continued.</p>
<p>"Ramsdell, David Ramsdell," replied the leader of the band.</p>
<p>"That's a lie," said Sergeant Whitley. "Your name is Bill Skelly, an'
you're a mountaineer from Eastern Kentucky, claimin' to belong first to
one side and then to the other as suits you."</p>
<p>"Who says so?" exclaimed Skelly defiantly.</p>
<p>The sergeant beckoned Dick, who rode forward a little.</p>
<p>"I do," said the boy in a loud, clear voice. "My name is Dick Mason, and I
live at Pendleton in Kentucky. I saw you more than once before the war,
and I know that you tried to burn down the house of Colonel Kenton there,
and kill him and his friends. I'm on the other side, but I'm not for such
things as that."</p>
<p>Skelly distinctly saw Dick sitting on his horse in the pass, and he knew
him well. Rage tore at his heart. Although on "the other side" this boy,
too, was a lowlander and in a way a member of that vile Kenton brood. He
hated him, too, because he belonged to those who had more of prosperity
and education than himself. But Skelly was a man of resource and not a
coward.</p>
<p>"You're right," he cried, "I'm Bill Skelly, an' we want your horses an'
arms. We need 'em in our business. Now, just hop down an' deliver. We're
twenty to three."</p>
<p>"You come forward at your own risk!" cried the sergeant, and Skelly,
despite the numbers at his back, wavered. He saw that the man who held the
rifle aimed at his heart had nerves of steel, and he did not dare advance
knowing that he would be shot at once from the saddle. A victory won by
Skelly's men with Skelly dead was no victory at all to Skelly.</p>
<p>The guerilla reined back his horse, and his men retreated with him. But
the three knew well that it was no withdrawal. The mountaineers rode among
some scrub that grew between the road and the cliff; and Whitley exclaimed
to his two comrades:</p>
<p>"Come boys, we must ride for it! It's our business to get back with the
dispatches to Colonel Newcomb as soon as possible, an' not let ourselves
be delayed by this gang."</p>
<p>"That is certainly true," said Dick. "Lead on, Mr. Petty, and we'll cross
the mountain as fast as we can."</p>
<p>Red Blaze started at once in a gallop, and Dick and the sergeant followed
swiftly after. But Sergeant Whitley held his cocked rifle in hand and he
cast many backward glances. A great shout came from Skelly and his band
when they saw the three take to flight, and the sergeant's face grew
grimmer as the sound reached his ears.</p>
<p>"Keep right in the middle of the road, boys," he said. "We can't afford to
have our horses slip. I'll hang back just a little and send in a bullet if
they come too near. This rifle of mine carries pretty far, farther, I
expect, than any of theirs."</p>
<p>"I'm somethin' on the shoot myself," said Red Blaze. "I love peace, but it
hurts my feelin's if anybody shoots at me. Them fellers are likely to do
it, an' me havin' a rifle in my hands I won't be able to stop the
temptation to fire back."</p>
<p>As he spoke the raiders fired. There was a crackling of rifles, little
curls of blue smoke rose in the pass, and bullets struck on the frozen
earth, while two made the snow fly from bushes by the side of the road.
The sergeant raised his own rifle, longer of barrel than the average army
weapon, and pulled the trigger. He had aimed at Skelly, but the leader
swerved, and a man behind him rolled off his horse. The others, although
slowing their speed a little, in order to be out of the range of that
deadly rifle, continued to come.</p>
<p>The pursuit at first seemed futile to Dick, because they would soon
descend into Townsville's valley, and the raiders could not follow them
into the midst of an entire regiment. But presently he saw their plan. The
pass now widened out with a few hundred yards of level space on either
side of the road thickly covered with forest. The branches of the trees
were bare, but the undergrowth was so dense that horsemen could be hidden
in it. Bands of the raiders darted into the woods both to right and left,
and he knew that advancing on a straight line one or the other of the
parties expected to catch the fugitives who must follow the curves of the
road.</p>
<p>The advantage of the pursuit was soon shown as a shot from the right
whistled by them. Red Blaze, quick as lightning, fired at the flash of the
rifle.</p>
<p>"I don't know whether I hit him or not," he said, judicially, "but the
chances are pow'ful good that I did. Still it looks as if they meant to
hang on an' likely we kin soon expect shots from the other side, too. Then
if they know the country as well as they 'pear to do they'll have us
clamped in a vise."</p>
<p>As he spoke his eyes twinkled cheerfully out of his flaming countenance.</p>
<p>"You certainly seem to take it easy," said Dick.</p>
<p>"I take it easy, 'cause the jaws of that vise ain't goin' to clamp down.
Bein' somewhat interested in a run for your life you haven't noticed how
dark it's gettin' up here on the heights an' how hard it's snowin'. It's
comin' down a lot thicker than it was when we crossed the first time."</p>
<p>It was true. Dick noticed now that the snow was pouring down, and that all
the peaks and ridges were lost in the white whirlwind.</p>
<p>"I told you that I had been a traveler," said Red Blaze. "I've been as far
as fifty miles from Townsville, and I know all the country in every
direction, twenty miles from it, inch by inch. Inside five minutes the
snowstorm will be on us full blast, an' we won't be able to see more'n
twenty yards away. An' that crowd that's follerin' won't be able to see
either. An' me knowin' the ground inch by inch I'll take you straight back
to your regiment while they'll get lost in the storm."</p>
<p>There was room now in the road for the three to ride abreast, and they
kept close together. They heard once a shout behind them and saw the flash
of a firearm in the white hurricane, but no bullet struck them, and they
kept steadily on their course, Red Blaze directing with the sure instinct
that comes of long use and habit.</p>
<p>Heavier and heavier grew the snow. There was but little wind now, and it
came straight down. It seemed to Dick that the whole earth was blotted out
by the white fall. He and the sergeant resigned themselves completely to
the guidance of Red Blaze, who never veered an inch from the right path.</p>
<p>"If I didn't know the way my hoss would," he said. "I'd just give him his
head an' he'd take us straight to his warm stable in Townsville, an' the
two bundles of oats that I mean to give him. I reckon it was pretty smart
of me, wasn't it, to order a snowstorm an' have it come just when it was
needed."</p>
<p>Again the cheerful eyes twinkled in the flaming face.</p>
<p>"You're certainly a winner," said Dick, "and you win for us all."</p>
<p>The snow was now so deep in the pass that they could not proceed at great
speed, but they did the best they could, and, as Red Blaze said, their
best, although it might be somewhat slow, was certainly better than that
of Skelly and his men. Dick believed in fact that the raiders had been
compelled to abandon the pursuit.</p>
<p>When they reached a lower level, where the snow was far less dense, they
stopped and listened. The sergeant's ears had been trained to uncommon
keenness by his life on the plains, and he could hear nothing but the sigh
of the falling snow. Nor could Petty, who had fine ears himself.</p>
<p>They descended still further, and made another stop. It was snowing here
also, but it was merely an ordinary fall, and they could get a long view
back up the pass. They saw nothing there but earth and trees covered with
snow. Looking in the other direction they saw the sunshine gleaming for a
moment on a roof in Townsville.</p>
<p>"We're all safe now," said Red Blaze, "an' we'll be with the soldiers in
another half hour. But just you two remember that mebbe the next time I
couldn't call up a snowstorm to cover us an' save our lives."</p>
<p>"Once is enough," said Dick, "and, Mr. Petty, Sergeant Whitley and I want
to thank you."</p>
<p>Mittened hands met buckskinned ones in the strong grasp of friendship, and
now, as they rode on, the whole village emerged into sight. There was the
long train standing on the track, the smoke rising in spires from the neat
houses, and then the figures of human beings.</p>
<p>The fall of snow was light in the valley and as soon as they reached the
levels the three proceeded at a gallop. Dick saw Colonel Newcomb standing
by the train, and springing from his horse he handed him the dispatch. The
colonel opened it, and as he read Dick saw the glow appear upon his face.</p>
<p>"Fire up!" he said to Canby, the engineer, who stood near. "We start at
once!"</p>
<p>The troops who were ready and waiting were hurried into the coaches, and
the engine whistled for departure.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER V. THE SINGER OF THE HILLS </h2>
<p>As the engine whistled for the last time Dick sprang upon a car-step, one
hand holding to the rail while with the other he returned the powerful
grip of Red Blaze, who with his own unconfined hand grasped the bridles of
the three horses, which had served them so well. Petty had received a
reward thrust upon him by Colonel Newcomb, but Dick knew that the
mountaineer's chief recompense was the success achieved in the perilous
task chosen for him.</p>
<p>"Good-bye, Mr. Mason," said Red Blaze, "I'm proud to have knowed you an'
the sergeant, an' to have been your comrade in a work for the Union."</p>
<p>"Without you we should have failed."</p>
<p>"It jest happened that I knowed the way. It seems to me that there's a
heap, a tremenjeous heap, in knowin' the way. It gives you an awful
advantage. Now you an' your regiment are goin' down thar in them Kentucky
mountains. They're mighty wild, winter's here an' the marchin' will be
about as bad as it could be. Them's mostly Pennsylvania men with you, an'
they don't know a thing 'bout that thar region. Like as not you'll be
walkin' right straight into an ambush, an' that'll be the end of you an'
them Pennsylvanians."</p>
<p>"You're a cheerful prophet, Red Blaze."</p>
<p>"I meant if you didn't take care of yourselves an' keep a good lookout,
which I know, of course, that you're goin' to do. I was jest statin' the
other side of the proposition, tellin' what would happen to keerless
people, but Colonel Newcomb an' Major Hertford ain't keerless people.
Good-bye, Mr. Mason. Mebbe I'll see you ag'in before this war is over."</p>
<p>"Good-bye, Red Blaze. I truly hope so."</p>
<p>The train was moving now and with a last powerful grasp of a friendly hand
Dick went into the coach. It was the first in the train. Colonel Newcomb
and Major Hertford sat near the head of it, and Warner was just sitting
down not far behind them. Dick took the other half of the seat with the
young Vermonter, who said, speaking in a whimsical tone:</p>
<p>"You fill me with envy, Dick. Why wasn't it my luck to go with you,
Sergeant Whitley, and the man they call Red Blaze on that errand and help
bring back with you the message of President Lincoln? But I heard what our
red friend said to you at the car-step. There's a powerful lot in knowing
the way, knowing where you're going, and what's along every inch of the
road. My arithmetic tells me that it is often fifty per cent of marching
and fighting."</p>
<p>"I think you are right," said Dick.</p>
<p>A little later he was sound asleep in his seat, and at the command of
Colonel Newcomb he was not disturbed. His had been a task, taxing to the
utmost both body and mind, and, despite his youth and strength, it would
take nature some time to replace what had been worn away.</p>
<p>He slept on while the boys in the train talked and laughed. Stern
discipline was not yet enforced in either army, nor did Colonel Newcomb
consider it necessary here. These lads, so lately from the schools and
farms, had won a victory and they had received the thanks of the
President. They had a right to talk about it among themselves and a little
vocal enthusiasm now might build up courage and spirit for a greater
crisis later.</p>
<p>The colonel, moreover, gave glances of approval and sympathy to his
gallant young aide, who in the seat next to the window with his head
against the wall slept so soundly. All the afternoon Dick slept on, his
breathing regular and steady. The train rattled and rumbled through the
high mountains, and on the upper levels the snow was falling fast.</p>
<p>Darkness came, and supper was served to the troops, but at the colonel's
command Dick was not awakened. Nature had not yet finished her task of
repairing. There was worn tissue still to be replaced, and the nerves had
not yet recovered their full steadiness.</p>
<p>So Dick slept on, while the night deepened and the snow continued to drive
against the window panes. Nor did he awake until morning, when the train
stopped at a tiny station in the hills. There was no snow here, but the
sun, just rising, threw no heat, and icicles were hanging from every
cliff. Dispatches were waiting for Colonel Newcomb, and after breakfast he
announced to his staff:</p>
<p>"I have orders from Washington to divide my regiment. The Southern forces
are operating at three points in Kentucky. They are gathering at Columbus
on the Mississippi, at Bowling Green in the south, and here in the
mountains there is a strong division under an officer named Zollicoffer.
Scattered forces of our men, the principal one led by a Virginian named
Thomas, are endeavoring to deal with Zollicoffer. The Secretary of War
regrets the division of the regiment, but he thinks it necessary, as all
our detached forces must be strengthened. I go on with the main body of
the regiment to join Grant, near the mouth of the Ohio. You, Major
Hertford, will take three companies and march south in search of Thomas,
but be careful that you are not snapped up by the rebels on the way. And
if you can get volunteers and join Thomas with your force increased
threefold, so much the better."</p>
<p>"I shall try my best, sir," said Major Hertford, "and thank you for this
honor."</p>
<p>Dick and Warner stood by without a word, but Dick cast an appealing look
at Colonel Newcomb.</p>
<p>"Yes, I know," said the Colonel, who caught the glance. "This is your
state, and you wish to go with Major Hertford. You are to do so. So is
your friend, Lieutenant Warner, and, Major Hertford, I also lend to you
Sergeant Whitley, who is a man of much experience and who has already
proved himself to be of great value."</p>
<p>The three saluted and were grateful. They longed for action, which they
believed would come more quickly with Major Hertford's column. A little
later, when military form permitted it, the two boys thanked Colonel
Newcomb in words.</p>
<p>"Maybe you won't thank me a few days from now," said the colonel a little
grimly, "but I am hopeful that our plans here in Eastern Kentucky will
prove successful, and that before long you will be able to join the great
forces in the western part of the state. You are both good boys and now,
good-bye."</p>
<p>The preparations for the mountain column, as Dick and Warner soon called
it, had been completed. They were on foot, but they were well armed, well
clothed, and they had supplies loaded in several wagons, purchased hastily
in the village. A dozen of the strong mountaineers volunteered to be
drivers and guides, and the major was glad to have them. Later, several
horses were secured for the officers, but, meanwhile, the train was ready
to depart.</p>
<p>Colonel Newcomb waved them farewell, the faithful and valiant Canby opened
the throttle, and the train steamed away. The men in the little column,
although eager for their new task, watched its departure with a certain
sadness at parting with their comrades. The train became smaller and
smaller, then it was only a spiral of smoke, and that, too, soon died on
the clear western horizon.</p>
<p>"And now to find Thomas!" said Major Hertford, who retained Dick and
Warner on his staff, practically its only members, in fact. "It looks odd
to hunt through the mountains for a general and his army, but we've got it
to do, and we'll do it."</p>
<p>The horses for the officers were obtained at the suggestion of Sergeant
Whitley, and the little column turned southward through the wintry forest.
Dick and Warner were riding strong mountain ponies, but at times, and in
order to show that they considered themselves no better than the others,
they dismounted and walked over the frozen ground. The greatest tasks were
with the wagons containing the ammunition and supplies. The mountain roads
were little more than trails, sometimes half blocked with ice or snow and
then again deep in mud. The winter was severe. Storms of rain, hail, sleet
and snow poured upon them, but, fortunately, they were marching through
continuous forests, and the skilled mountaineers, under any circumstances,
knew how to build fires, by the side of which they could dry themselves,
and sleep warmly at night.</p>
<p>They also heard much gossip as they advanced to meet General Thomas, who
had been sent from Louisville to command the Northern troops in the
Kentucky mountains. Thomas was a Virginian, a member of the old regular
army, a valiant, able, and cautious man, who chose to abide by the Union.
Many other Virginians, some destined to be as famous as he, and a few more
so, wondered why he had not gone with his seceding state, and criticised
him much, but Thomas, chary of speech, hung to his belief, and proved it
by action.</p>
<p>Dick learned, too, that the Southern force operating against Thomas, while
actively led by Zollicoffer, was under the nominal command of one of his
own Kentucky Crittendens. Here he saw again how terribly his beloved state
was divided, like other border states. General Crittenden's father was a
member of the Federal Congress at Washington, and one of his brothers was
a general also, but on the other side. But he was to see such cases over
and over again, and he was to see them to a still greater and a wholesale
degree, when the First Maryland regiment of the North and the First
Maryland regiment of the South, recruited from the same district, should
meet face to face upon the terrible field of Antietam.</p>
<p>But Antietam was far in the future, and Dick's mind turned from the cases
of brother against brother to the problems of the icy wilderness through
which they were moving, in a more or less uncertain manner. Sometimes they
were sent on false trails, but their loyal mountaineers brought them back
again. They also found volunteers, and Major Hertford's little force
swelled from three hundred to six hundred. In the main, the mountaineers
were sympathetic, partly through devotion to the Union, and partly through
jealousy of the more prosperous lowlanders.</p>
<p>One day Major Hertford sent Dick, Warner, and Sergeant Whitley, ahead to
scout. He had recognized the ability of the two lads, and also their great
friendship for Sergeant Whitley. It seemed fitting to him that the three
should be nearly always together, and he watched them with confidence, as
they rode ahead on the icy mountain trail and then disappeared from sight.</p>
<p>Dick and his friends had learned, at mountain cabins which they had
passed, that the country opened out further on into a fine little valley,
and when they reached the crest of a hill somewhat higher than the others,
they verified the truth of the statement. Before them lay the coziest nook
they had yet seen in the mountains, and in the center of it rose a warm
curl of smoke from the chimney of a house, much superior to that of the
average mountaineer. The meadows and corn lands on either side of a noble
creek were enclosed in good fences. Everything was trim and neat.</p>
<p>The three rode down the slope toward the house, but halfway to the bottom
they reined in their ponies and listened. Some one was singing. On the
thin wintry air a deep mellow voice rose and they distinctly heard the
words:</p>
<p>Soft o'er the fountain, ling'ring falls the southern moon,<br/>
Far o'er the mountain breaks the day too soon.<br/>
In thy dark eyes' splendor, where the warm light loves to dwell,<br/>
Weary looks yet tender, speak their fond farewell.<br/>
'Nita, Juanita! Ask thy soul if we should part,<br/>
'Nita, Juanita! Lean thou on my heart.<br/></p>
<p>It was a wonderful voice that they heard, deep, full, and mellow, all the
more wonderful because they heard it there in those lone mountains. The
ridges took up the echo, and gave it back in tones softened but
exquisitely haunting.</p>
<p>The three paused and looked at one another. They could not see the singer.
He was hidden from them by the dips and swells of the valley, but they
felt that here was no common man. No common mind, or at least no common
heart, could infuse such feeling into music. As they listened the
remainder of the pathetic old air rose and swelled through the ridges:</p>
<p>When in thy dreaming, moons like these shall shine again,<br/>
And daylight beaming prove thy dreams are vain,<br/>
Wilt thou not, relenting, for thy absent lover sigh?<br/>
In thy heart consenting to a prayer gone by!<br/>
'Nita, Juanita! Let me linger by thy side!<br/>
'Nita, Juanita! Be thou my own fair bride.<br/></p>
<p>"I'm curious to see that singer," said Warner. "I heard grand opera once
in Boston, just before I started to the war, but I never heard anything
that sounds finer than this. Maybe time and place help to the extent of
fifty per cent, but, at any rate, the effect is just the same."</p>
<p>"Come on," said Dick, "and we'll soon find our singer, whoever he is."</p>
<p>The three rode at a rapid pace until they reached the valley. There they
drew rein, as they saw near them a tall man, apparently about forty years
of age, mending a fence, helped by a boy of heavy build and powerful arms.
The man glanced up, saw the blue uniforms worn by the three horsemen, and
went peacefully on with his fence-mending. He also continued to sing,
throwing his soul into the song, and both work and song proceeded as if no
one was near.</p>
<p>He lifted the rails into place with mighty arms, but never ceased to sing.
The boy who helped him seemed almost his equal in strength, but he neither
sang nor spoke. Yet he smiled most of the time, showing rows of
exceedingly strong, white teeth.</p>
<p>"They seem to me to be of rather superior type," said Dick. "Maybe we can
get useful information from them."</p>
<p>"I judge that the singer will talk about almost everything except what we
want to know," said the shrewd and experienced sergeant, "but we can
certainly do no harm by speaking to him. Of course they have seen us. No
doubt they saw us before we saw them."</p>
<p>The three rode forward, saluted politely and the fence-menders, stopping
their work, saluted in the same polite fashion. Then they stood expectant.</p>
<p>"We belong to a detachment which is marching southward to join the Union
army under General Thomas," said Dick. "Perhaps you could tell us the best
road."</p>
<p>"I might an' ag'in I mightn't, stranger. If you don't talk much you never
have much to take back. If I knew where that army is it would be easy for
me to tell you, but if I didn't know I couldn't. Now, the question is, do
I know or don't I know? Do you think you can decide it for me stranger?"</p>
<p>It was impossible for Dick or the sergeant to take offense. The man's gaze
was perfectly frank and open and his eyes twinkled as he spoke. The boy
with him smiled widely, showing both rows of his powerful white teeth.</p>
<p>"We can't decide it until we know you better," said Dick in a light tone.</p>
<p>"I'm willin' to tell you who I am. My name is Sam Jarvis, an' this
lunkhead here is my nephew, Ike Simmons, the son of my sister, who keeps
my house. Now I want to tell you, young stranger, that since this war
began and the Yankees and the Johnnies have taken a notion to shoot up one
another, people who would never have thought of doin' it before, have come
wanderin' into these mountains. But you can get a hint about 'em
sometimes. Young man, do you want me to tell you your name?"</p>
<p>"Tell me my name!" responded Dick in astonishment. "Of course you can't do
it! You never saw or heard of me before."</p>
<p>"Mebbe no," replied Jarvis, with calm confidence, "but all the same your
name is Dick Mason, and you come from a town in Kentucky called Pendleton.
You've been serving with the Yanks in the East, an' you've a cousin, named
Harry Kenton, who's been servin' there also, but with the Johnnies. Now,
am I a good guesser or am I just a plum' ignorant fool?"</p>
<p>Dick stared at him in deepening amazement.</p>
<p>"You do more than guess," he replied. "You know. Everything that you said
is true."</p>
<p>"Tell me this," said Jarvis. "Was that cousin of yours, Harry Kenton,
killed in the big battle at Bull Run? I've been tremenjeously anxious
about him ever since I heard of that terrible fight."</p>
<p>"He was not. I have not seen him since, but I have definite news now that
he passed safely through the battle."</p>
<p>Sam Jarvis and his nephew Ike breathed deep sighs of relief.</p>
<p>"I'm mighty glad to hear it," said Jarvis, "I shorely liked that boy,
Harry, an' I think I'll like you about as well. It don't matter to me that
you're on different sides, bein' as I ain't on any side at all myself, nor
is this lunkhead, Ike, my nephew."</p>
<p>"How on earth did you know me?"</p>
<p>"'Light, an' come into the house an' I'll tell you. You an' your pardners
look cold an' hungry. There ain't danger of anybody taking your hosses,
'cause you can hitch 'em right at the front door. Besides, I've got an old
grandmother in the house, who'd like mighty well to see you, Mr. Mason."</p>
<p>Dick concluded that it was useless to ask any more questions just yet, and
he, Warner and the sergeant, dismounting and leading their horses, walked
toward the house with Jarvis and Ike. Jarvis, who seemed singularly
cheerful, lifted up his voice and sang:</p>
<p>Thou wilt come no more, gentle Annie,<br/>
Like a flower, thy spirit did depart,<br/>
Thou art gone, alas! like the many<br/>
That have bloomed in the summer of my heart.<br/>
Shall we never more behold thee?<br/>
Never hear thy winning voice again?<br/>
When the spring time comes, gentle Annie?<br/>
When the wild flowers are scattered o'er the plain?<br/></p>
<p>It seemed to Dick that the man sang spontaneously, and the deep, mellow
voice always came back in faint and dying echoes that moved him in a
singular manner. All at once the war with its passions and carnage floated
away. Here was a little valley fenced in from the battle-world in which he
had been living. He breathed deeply and as the eyes of Jarvis caught his a
sympathetic glance passed between them.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Jarvis, as if he understood completely, "the war goes around
us. There is nothing to fight about here. But come into the house. This is
my sister, the mother of that lunkhead, Ike, and here is my grandmother."</p>
<p>He paused before the bent figure of an old, old woman, sitting in a
rocking chair beside the chimney, beside which a fire glowed and blazed.
Her chin rested on one hand, and she was staring into the coals.</p>
<p>"Grandmother," said Jarvis very gently, "the great-grandson of the great
Henry Ware that you used to know was here last spring, and now the
great-grandson of his friend, Paul Cotter, has come, too."</p>
<p>The withered form straightened and she stood up. Fire came into the old,
old eyes that regarded Dick so intently.</p>
<p>"Aye," she said, "you speak the truth, grandson. It is Paul Cotter's own
face. A gentle man he was, but brave, and the greatest scholar. I should
have known that when Henry Ware's great-grandson came Paul Cotter's, too,
would come soon. I am proud for this house to have sheltered you both."</p>
<p>She put both her hands on his shoulders, and stood up very straight, her
face close to his. She was a tall woman, above the average height of man,
and her eyes were on a level with Dick's.</p>
<p>"It is true," she said, "it is he over again. The eyes are his, and the
mouth and the nose are the same. This house is yours while you choose to
remain, and my grandchildren and my great-grandson will do for you
whatever you wish."</p>
<p>Dick noticed that her grammar and intonation were perfect. Many of the
Virginians and Marylanders who emigrated to Kentucky in that far-off
border time were people of cultivation and refinement.</p>
<p>After these words of welcome she turned from him, sat down in her chair
and gazed steadily into the coals. Everything about her seemed to float
away. Doubtless her thoughts ran on those dim early days, when the Indians
lurked in the canebrake and only the great borderers stood between the
settlers and sure death.</p>
<p>Dick began to gather from the old woman's words a dim idea of what had
occurred. Harry Kenton must have passed there, and as they went into the
next room where food and coffee were placed before them, Jarvis explained.</p>
<p>"Your cousin, Harry Kenton, came through here last spring on his way to
Virginia," he said. "He came with me an' this lunkhead, Ike, all the way
from Frankfort and mostly up the Kentucky River. Grandmother was dreaming
and she took him at first for Henry Ware, his very self. She saluted him
and called him the great governor. It was a wonderful thing to see, and it
made me feel just a little bit creepy for a second or two. Mebbe you an'
your cousin, Harry Kenton, are Henry Ware an' Paul Cotter, their very
selves come back to earth. It looks curious that both of you should wander
to this little place hid deep in the mountains. But it's happened all the
same. I s'pose you've just been moved 'round that way by the Supreme Power
that's bigger than all of us, an' that shifts us about to suit plans made
long ago. But how I'm runnin' on! Fall to, friends—I can't call you
strangers, an' eat an' drink. The winter air on the mountains is powerful
nippin' an' your blood needs warmin' often."</p>
<p>The boys and the sergeant obeyed him literally and with energy. Jarvis sat
by approvingly, taking an occasional bite or drink with them. Meanwhile
they gathered valuable information from him. A Northern commander named
Garfield had defeated the Southern forces under Humphrey Marshall in a
smart little battle at a place called Middle Creek. Dick knew this
Humphrey Marshall well. He lived at Louisville and was a great friend of
his uncle, Colonel Kenton. He had been a brilliant and daring cavalry
officer in the Mexican War, doing great deeds at Buena Vista, but now he
was elderly and so enormously stout that he lacked efficiency.</p>
<p>Jarvis added that after their defeat at Middle Creek the Southerners had
gathered their forces on or near the Cumberland River about Mill Spring
and that they had ten thousand men. Thomas with a strong Northern force,
coming all the way from the central part of the state, was already deep in
the mountains, preparing to meet him.</p>
<p>"Remember," said Jarvis, "that I ain't takin' no sides in this war myself.
If people come along an' ask me to tell what I know I tell it to 'em, be
they Yank or Reb. Now, I wish good luck to you, Mr. Mason, an' I wish the
same to your cousin, Mr. Kenton."</p>
<p>Dick, Warner and the sergeant finished the refreshments and rose for the
return journey. They thanked Jarvis, and when they saw that he would take
no pay, they did not insist, knowing that it would offend him. Dick said
good-bye to the ancient woman and once again she rose, put her hands on
his shoulders and looked into his eyes.</p>
<p>"Paul Cotter was a good man," she said, "and you who have his blood in
your veins are good, too. I can see it in something that lies back in your
eyes."</p>
<p>She said not another word, but sat down in the chair and stared once more
into the coals, dreaming of the far day when the great borderers saved her
and others like her from the savages, and thinking little of the mighty
war that raged at the base of her hills.</p>
<p>The boys and the sergeant rode fast on the return trail. They knew that
Major Hertford would push forward at all speed to join Thomas, whom they
could now locate without much difficulty. Jarvis and Ike had resumed their
fence-mending, but when the trees hid the valley from them a mighty,
rolling song came to the ears of Dick, Warner and the sergeant:</p>
<p>They bore him away when the day had fled,<br/>
And the storm was rolling high,<br/>
And they laid him down in his lonely bed<br/>
By the light of an angry sky.<br/>
The lightning flashed, and the wild sea lashed<br/>
The shore with its foaming wave,<br/>
And the thunder passed on the rushing blast<br/>
As it howled o'er the rover's grave.<br/></p>
<p>"That man's no fool," said Dick.</p>
<p>"No, he ain't," said the sergeant, with decision, "nor is that nephew Ike
of his that he calls a lunkhead. Did you notice, Mr. Mason, that the boy
never spoke a word while we was there? Them that don't say anything never
have anything to take back."</p>
<p>They rode hard now, and soon reached Major Hertford with their news. On
the third day thereafter they entered a strong Union camp, commanded by a
man named Garfield, the young officer who had won the victory at Middle
Creek.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER VI. MILL SPRING </h2>
<p>Garfield's camp was on a little group of hills in a very strong position,
and his men, flushed with victory, were eager for another encounter with
the enemy. They had plenty of good tents to fend them from the winter
weather which had often been bitter. Throughout the camp burned large
fires for which they had an almost unbroken wilderness to furnish fuel.
The whole aspect of the place was pleasing to the men who had marched far
and hard.</p>
<p>Major Hertford and his aides, Richard Mason and George Warner, were
received in Colonel Garfield's tent. A slim young man, writing dispatches
at a rude little pine table, rose to receive them. He did not seem to Dick
to be more than thirty, and he had the thin, scholarly face of a student.
His manner was attractive, he shook hands warmly with all three of them
and said:</p>
<p>"Reinforcements are most welcome indeed. My own work here seems to be
largely done, but you will reach General Thomas in another day, and he
needs you. Take my chair, Major Hertford. To you two lads I can offer only
stumps."</p>
<p>The tent had been pitched over a spot where three stumps had been smoothed
off carefully until they made acceptable seats. One end of the tent was
entirely open, facing a glowing fire of oak logs. Dick and Warner sat down
on the stumps and spread out their hands to the blaze. Beyond the flames
they saw the wintry forest and mountains, seemingly as wild as they were
when the first white man came.</p>
<p>The usual coffee and food were brought, and while they ate and drank Major
Hertford answered the numerous and pertinent questions of Colonel
Garfield. He listened attentively to the account of the fight in the
mountains, and to all the news that they could tell him of Washington.</p>
<p>"We have been cut off in these mountains," he said. "I know very little of
what is going on, but what you say only confirms my own opinion. The war
is rapidly spreading over a much greater area, and I believe that its
scope will far exceed any of our earlier calculations."</p>
<p>A grave and rather sad expression occupied for a moment the mobile face.
He interested Dick greatly. He seemed to him scholar and thinker as well
as soldier. He and Warner long afterward attended the inauguration of this
man as President of the United States.</p>
<p>After a brief rest, and good wishes from Garfield, Major Hertford and his
command soon reached the main camp under Thomas. Here they were received
by a man very different in appearance and manner from Garfield.</p>
<p>General George H. Thomas, who was to receive the famous title, "The Rock
of Chickamauga," was then in middle years. Heavily built and bearded, he
was chary of words. He merely nodded approval when Major Hertford told of
their march.</p>
<p>"I will assign your troops to a brigade," he said, "and I don't think
you'll have long to wait. We're expecting a battle in a few days with
Crittenden and Zollicoffer."</p>
<p>"Not much to say," remarked Dick to Warner, as they went away.</p>
<p>"That's true," said Warner, thoughtfully, "but didn't you get an
impression of strength from his very silence? I should say that in his
make-up he is five per cent talk, twenty-five per cent patience and
seventy per cent action; total, one hundred per cent."</p>
<p>The region in which they lay was west of the higher mountains, which they
had now crossed, but it was very rough and hilly. Not far from them was a
little town called Somerset, which Dick had visited once, and near by,
too, was the deep and swift Cumberland River, with much floating ice at
its edges. When the two lads lay by a campfire that night Sergeant Whitley
came to them with the news of the situation, which he had picked up in his
usual deft and quiet way.</p>
<p>"The Southern army is on the banks of the Cumberland," he said. "It has
not been able to get its provisions by land through Cumberland Gap.
Instead they have been brought by boats on the river. As I hear it,
Crittenden and Zollicoffer are afraid that our general will advance to the
river an' cut off these supplies. So they mean to attack us as soon as
they can. If I may venture to say so, Mr. Mason, I'd advise that you and
Lieutenant Warner get as good a rest as you can, and as soon as you can."</p>
<p>They ate a hearty supper and being told by Major Hertford that they would
not be wanted until the next day, they rolled themselves in heavy
blankets, and, pointing their feet toward a good fire, slept on the
ground. The night was very cold, because it was now the middle of January,
but the blankets and fire kept them warm.</p>
<p>Dick did not fall to sleep for some time, because he knew that he was
going into battle again in a few days. He was on the soil of his native
state now. He had already seen many Kentuckians in the army of Thomas and
he knew that they would be numerous, too, in that of Crittenden and
Zollicoffer. To some extent it would be a battle of brother against
brother. He was glad that Harry Kenton was in the east. He did not wish in
the height of battle to see his own cousin again on the opposite side.</p>
<p>But when he did fall asleep his slumber was sound and restful, and he was
ready and eager the next morning, when the sergeant, Warner, and he were
detached for duty in a scouting party.</p>
<p>"The general has asked that you be sent owing to your experience in the
mountains," said Major Hertford, "and I have agreed gladly. I hope that
you're as glad as I am."</p>
<p>"We are, sir," said the two boys together. The sergeant stood quietly by
and smiled.</p>
<p>The detachment numbered a hundred men, all young, strong, and well
mounted. They were commanded by a young captain, John Markham, in whom
Dick recognized a distant relative. In those days nearly all Kentuckians
were more or less akin. The kinship was sufficient for Markham to keep the
two boys on either side of him with Sergeant Whitley just behind. Markham
lived in Frankfort and he had marched with Thomas from the cantonments at
Lebanon to their present camp.</p>
<p>"John," said Dick, addressing him familiarly and in right of kinship,
"you've been for months in our own county. You've surely heard something
from Pendleton?"</p>
<p>He could not disguise the anxiety in his voice, and the young captain
regarded him with sympathy.</p>
<p>"I had news from there about a month ago, Dick," he replied. "Your mother
was well then, as I have no doubt she is now. The place was not troubled
by guerillas who are hanging on the fringe of the armies here in Eastern,
or in Southern and Western Kentucky. The war for the present at least has
passed around Pendleton. Colonel Kenton was at Bowling Green with Albert
Sidney Johnston, and his son, Harry, your cousin, is still in the East."</p>
<p>It was a rapid and condensed statement, but it was very satisfying to Dick
who now rode on for a long time in silence. The road was as bad as a road
could be. Snow and ice were mixed with the deep mud which pulled hard at
the hoofs of their horses. The country was rough, sterile, and inhabited
but thinly. They rode many miles without meeting a single human being.
About the third hour they saw a man and a boy on a hillside several
hundred yards away, but when Captain Markham and a chosen few galloped
towards them they disappeared so deftly among the woods that not a trace
of them could be found.</p>
<p>"People in this region are certainly bashful," said Captain Markham with a
vexed laugh. "We meant them no harm, but they wouldn't stay to see us."</p>
<p>"But they don't know that," said Dick with the familiarity of kinship,
even though distant. "I fancy that the people hereabouts wish both
Northerners and Southerners would go away."</p>
<p>Two miles further on they came to a large, double cabin standing back a
little distance from the road. Smoke was rising from the chimney, and
Captain Markham felt sure that they could obtain information from its
inmates. Dick, at his direction, beat on the door with the butt of a small
riding whip. There was no response. He beat again rapidly and heavily, and
no answer coming he pushed in the door.</p>
<p>A fire was burning on the hearth, but the house was abandoned. Nor had the
owners been gone long. Besides the fire to prove it, clothing was hanging
on hooks in the wall, and there was food in the cupboard. Captain Markham
sighed.</p>
<p>"Again they're afraid of us," he said. "I've no doubt the signal has been
passed ahead of us, and that we'll not get within speaking distance of a
single native. Curious, too, because this region in the main is for the
North."</p>
<p>"Perhaps somebody has been robbing and plundering in our name," said Dick.
"Skelly and his raiders have been through these parts."</p>
<p>"That's so," said Markham, thoughtfully. "I'm afraid those guerillas who
claim to be our allies are going to do us a great deal of harm. Well,
we'll turn back into the road, if you can call this stream of icy mud a
road, and go on."</p>
<p>Another mile and they caught the gleam of water among the wintry boughs.
Dick knew that it was the Cumberland which was now a Southern artery,
bringing stores and arms for the army of Crittenden and Zollicoffer. Even
here, hundreds of miles from its mouth, it was a stream of great depth,
easily navigable, and far down its current they saw faintly the smoke of
two steamers.</p>
<p>"They bear supplies for the Southern army," said Captain Markham. "We can
cut off the passage of boats on this river and for that reason, so General
Thomas concludes, the Southern army is going to attack us. What do you
think of his reasoning, sergeant?"</p>
<p>"Beggin' your pardon, sir, for passin' an opinion upon my general,"
replied Sergeant Whitley, "but I think his reasons are good. Here it is
the dead of winter, with more mud in the roads than I ever saw before
anywhere, but there's bound to be a battle right away. Men will fight,
sir, to keep from losin' their grub."</p>
<p>A man rode forward from the ranks, saluted and asked leave to speak. He
was a native of the next county and knew that region well. Two miles east
of them and running parallel with the road over which they had come was
another and much wider road, the one that they called the big road.</p>
<p>"Which means, I suppose, that it contains more mud than this one," said
Captain Markham.</p>
<p>"True, sir," replied the man, "but if the rebel army is advancing it is
likely to be on that road."</p>
<p>"That is certainly sound logic. At least we'll go there and see. Can you
lead us through these woods to it?"</p>
<p>"I can take you straight across," replied the man whose name was
Carpenter. "But on the way we'll have to ford a creek which is likely to
be pretty deep at this time of the year."</p>
<p>"Show the way," said Captain Markham briskly.</p>
<p>They plunged into the deep woods, and Carpenter guided them well. The
creek, of which he had told, was running bankful of icy water, but their
horses swam it and they kept straight ahead until Carpenter, who was a
little in advance, held up a warning hand.</p>
<p>Captain Markham ordered his whole troop to stop and keep as quiet as
possible. Then he, Dick, Warner, Sergeant Whitley and Carpenter rode
slowly forward. Before they had gone many yards Dick heard the heavy clank
of metal, the cracking of whips, the swearing of men, and the sound of
horses' feet splashing in the mud. He knew by the amount and variety of
the noises that a great force was passing.</p>
<p>They advanced a little further and reined into a clump of bushes which
despite their lack of leaves were dense enough to shelter them from
observation. As the bushes grew on a hillock they had a downward and good
look into the road, which was fairly packed with men in the gray of the
Confederate army, some on horseback, but mostly afoot, their cannon,
ammunition and supply wagons sinking almost to the hub in the mud. As far
as Dick could see the gray columns extended.</p>
<p>"There must be six or seven thousand men here," he said to Captain
Markham.</p>
<p>"Undoubtedly," replied Markham, "this is the main Confederate army
advancing to attack ours, but the badness of the roads operates against
the offense. We shall reach General Thomas with the word that they are
coming long before they are there."</p>
<p>They watched the marching army for a half hour longer in order to be sure
of everything, and then turning they rode as fast as they could toward
Thomas, elated at their success. They swam the creek again, but at another
point. Carpenter told them that the Southern army would cross it on a
bridge, and Markham lamented that he could not turn and destroy this
bridge, but such an attempt would have been folly.</p>
<p>They finally turned into the main road along which the Southern army was
coming, although they were now miles ahead of it, and, covered from head
to foot with the red mud of the hills, they urged on their worn horses
toward the camp of Thomas.</p>
<p>"I haven't had much experience in fighting, but I should imagine that
complete preparation had a great deal to do with success," said Captain
Markham.</p>
<p>"I'd put it at sixty per cent," said Warner.</p>
<p>"I should say," added Dick, "that the road makes at least eighty per cent
of our difficulty in getting back to Thomas."</p>
<p>In fact, the road was so bad that they were compelled after a while to
ride into the woods and let their ponies rest. Here they were fired upon
by Confederate skirmishers from a hill two or three hundred yards away.
Their numbers were small, however, and Captain Markham's force charging
them drove them off without loss.</p>
<p>Then they resumed their weary journey, but the rest had not fully restored
the horses and they were compelled at times to walk by the side of the
road, leading their mounts. Sergeant Whitley, with his age and experience,
was most useful now in restraining the impatient young men. Although of
but humble rank he kept them from exhausting either themselves or their
horses.</p>
<p>"It will be long after dark before we can reach camp," said Captain
Markham, sighing deeply. "Confound such roads. Why not call them morasses
and have done with it!"</p>
<p>"No, we can't make it much before midnight," said Dick, "but, after all,
that will be early enough. If I judge him right, even midnight won't catch
General Thomas asleep."</p>
<p>"You've judged him right," said Markham. "I've been with 'Pap' Thomas some
time—we call him 'Pap' because he takes such good care of us—and
I think he is going to be one of the biggest generals in this war. Always
silent, and sometimes slow about making up his mind he strikes like a
sledge-hammer when he does strike."</p>
<p>"He'll certainly have the opportunity to give blow for blow," said Dick,
as he remembered that marching army behind them. "How far do you think it
is yet to the general's camp?"</p>
<p>"Not more than a half dozen miles, but it will be dark in a few minutes,
and at the rate we're going it will take us two full hours more to get
there."</p>
<p>The wintry days were short and the sun slid down the gray, cold sky,
leaving forest and hills in darkness. But the little band toiled patiently
on, while the night deepened and darkened, and a chill wind whistled down
from the ridges. The officers were silent now, but they looked eagerly for
the first glimpse of the campfires of Thomas. At last they saw the little
pink dots in the darkness, and then they pushed forward with new zeal,
urging their weary horses into a run.</p>
<p>When Captain Markham, Dick and Warner galloped into camp, ahead of the
others, a thickset strong figure walked forward to meet them. They leaped
from their horses and saluted.</p>
<p>"Well?" said General Thomas.</p>
<p>"The enemy is advancing upon us in full force, sir," replied Captain
Markham.</p>
<p>"You scouted thoroughly?"</p>
<p>"We saw their whole army upon the road."</p>
<p>"When do you think they could reach us?"</p>
<p>"About dawn, sir."</p>
<p>"Very good. We shall be ready. You and your men have done well. Now, find
food and rest. You will be awakened in time for the battle."</p>
<p>Dick walked away with his friends. Troopers took their horses and cared
for them. The boy glanced back at the thickset, powerful figure, standing
by one of the fires and looking gravely into the coals. More than ever the
man with the strong, patient look inspired confidence in him. He was sure
now that they would win on the morrow. Markham and Warner felt the same
confidence.</p>
<p>"There's a lot in having a good general," said Warner, who had also
glanced back at the strong figure. "Do you remember, Dick, what it was
that Napoleon said about generals?"</p>
<p>"A general is everything, an army nothing or something like that."</p>
<p>"Yes, that was it. Of course, he didn't mean it just exactly as he said
it. A general can't be one hundred per cent and an army none. It was a
figure of speech so to say, but I imagine that a general is about forty
per cent. If we had had such leadership at Bull Run we'd have won."</p>
<p>Dick and Warner, worn out by their long ride, soon slept but there was
movement all around them during the late hours of the night. Thomas with
his cautious, measuring mind was rectifying his lines in the wintry
darkness. He occupied a crossing of the roads, and he posted a strong
battery of artillery to cover the Southern approach. Around him were men
from Kentucky, the mountains of Tennessee, Ohio, Indiana, and Minnesota.
The Minnesota troops were sun-tanned men who had come more than a thousand
miles from an Indian-infested border to defend the Union.</p>
<p>All through the night Thomas worked. He directed men with spades to throw
up more intrenchments. He saw that the guns of the battery were placed
exactly right. He ordered that food should be ready for all very early in
the morning, and then, when nothing more remained to be done, save to wait
for the decree of battle, he sat before his tent wrapped in a heavy
military overcoat, silent and watchful. Scouts had brought in additional
news that the Southern army was still marching steadily along the muddy
roads, and that Captain Markham's calculation of its arrival about dawn
would undoubtedly prove correct.</p>
<p>Dick awoke while it was yet dark, and throwing off the heavy blankets
stood up.</p>
<p>Although the dawn had not come, the night was now fairly light and Dick
could see a long distance over the camp which stretched to left and right
along a great front. Near him was the battery with most of the men
sleeping beside their guns, and not far away was the tent. Although he
could not see the general, he knew instinctively that he was not asleep.</p>
<p>It was cold and singularly still, considering the presence of so many
thousands of men. He did not hear the sound of human voices and there was
no stamp of horses' feet. They, too, were weary and resting. Then Dick was
conscious of a tall, thin figure beside him. Warner had awakened, too.</p>
<p>"Dick," he said, "it can't be more than an hour till dawn."</p>
<p>"Just about that I should say."</p>
<p>"And the scene, that is as far as we can see it, is most peaceful."</p>
<p>Dick made no answer, but stood a long time listening. Then he said:</p>
<p>"My ears are pretty good, George, and sound will carry very far in this
silence just before the dawn. I thought I heard a faint sound like the
clank of a cannon."</p>
<p>"I think I hear it, too," said Warner, "and here is the dawn closer at
hand than we thought. Look at those cold rays over there, behind that hill
in the east. They are the vanguard of the sun."</p>
<p>"So they are. And this is the vanguard of the Southern army!"</p>
<p>He spoke the last words quickly and with excitement.</p>
<p>In front of them down the road they heard the crackle of a dozen rifle
shots. The Southern advance undoubtedly had come into contact with the
Union sentinels and skirmishers. After the first shots there was a
moment's breathless silence, and then came a scattered and rapid fire, as
if at least a hundred rifles were at work.</p>
<p>Dick's pulse began to beat hard, and he strained his eyes through the
darkness, but he could not yet see the enemy. He saw instead little jets
of fire like red dots appearing on the horizon, and then the sound of the
rifles came again. Warner was with him and both stood by the side of Major
Hertford, ready to receive and deliver his orders. Dick now heard besides
the firing in front the confused murmur and moving of the Union army.</p>
<p>Few of these troops had been in battle before—the same could be said
of the soldiers on the other side—and this attack in the half-light
troubled them. They wished to see the men who were going to shoot at them,
in order that they might have a fair target in return. Fighting in the
night was scarcely fair. One never knew what to do. But Thomas, the future
"Rock of Chickamauga," was already showing himself a tower of strength. He
reassured his nervous troops, he borrowed Dick and Warner and sent them
along the line with messages from himself that they had nothing to do but
stand firm and the victory was theirs.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the line of red dots in front was lengthening. It stretched
farther to left and right than Dick could see, and was rapidly coming
nearer. Already the sentinels and skirmishers were waging a sharp
conflict, and the shouts of the combatants increased in volume. Then the
cold sun swung clear of the earth, and its wintry beams lighted up both
forest and open. The whole Southern army appeared, advancing in masses,
and Dick, who was now with Major Hertford again, saw the pale rays falling
on rifles and bayonets, and the faces of his own countrymen as they
marched upon the Union camp.</p>
<p>"There's danger for our army! Lots of it!" said Warner, as he watched the
steady advance of the Southern brigades.</p>
<p>Dick remembered Bull Run, but his thoughts ran back to the iron general
who commanded now.</p>
<p>"Thomas will save us," he said.</p>
<p>The skirmishers on both sides were driven in. Their scattered fire ceased,
but a moment later the whole front of the Southern army burst into flame.
It seemed to Dick that one vast sheet of light like a sword blade suddenly
shot forward, and then a storm of lead, bearing many messengers of death,
beat upon the Northern army, shattering its front lines and carrying
confusion among its young troops. But the officers and a few old regulars
like Sergeant Whitley steadied them and they returned the fire.</p>
<p>Major Hertford, Dick and Warner were all on foot, and their own little
band, already tried in battle, yielded not an inch. They formed a core of
resistance around which others rallied and Thomas himself was passing
along the line, giving heart to the lads fresh from the farms.</p>
<p>But the Southern army fired again, and shouting the long fierce rebel
yell, charged with all its strength. Dick saw before him a vast cloud of
smoke, through which fire flashed and bullets whistled. He heard men
around him uttering short cries of pain, and he saw others fall, mostly
sinking forward on their faces. But those who stood, held fast and loaded
and fired until the barrels of their rifles burned to the touch.</p>
<p>Dick felt many tremors at first, but soon the passion of battle seized
him. He carried no rifle, but holding his officer's small sword in his
hand he ran up and down the line crying to the men to stand firm, that
they would surely beat back the enemy. That film of fire and smoke was yet
before his eyes, but he saw through it the faces of his countrymen still
coming on. He heard to his right the thudding of the great guns that
Thomas had planted on a low hill, but the rifle fire was like the beat of
hail, a crackling and hissing that never ceased.</p>
<p>The farm lads, their rifles loaded afresh, fired anew at the enemy, almost
in their faces, and the Southern line here reeled back against so firm and
deadly a front.</p>
<p>But an alarming report ran down the line that their left was driven back,
and it was true. The valiant Zollicoffer leading his brigade in person,
had rushed upon this portion of the Northern army which was standing upon
another low hill and struck it with great violence. It was wavering and
would give way soon. But Thomas, showing the singular calm that always
marked him in battle, noticed the weak spot. The general was then near
Major Hertford. He quickly wrote a dispatch and beckoned to Dick:</p>
<p>"Here," he said, "jump on the horse that the sergeant is holding for me,
and bring up our reserve, the brigade under General Carter. They are to
meet the attack there on the hill, where our troops are wavering!"</p>
<p>Dick, aflame with excitement, leaped into the saddle, and while the roar
of battle was still in his ears reached the brigade of Carter, already
marching toward the thick of the conflict. One entire regiment, composed
wholly of Kentuckians, was detached to help the Indiana troops who were
being driven fiercely by Zollicoffer.</p>
<p>Dick rode at the head of the Kentuckians, but a bullet struck his horse in
the chest. The boy felt the animal shiver beneath him, and he leaped clear
just in time, the horse falling heavily and lying quite still. But Dick
alighted on his feet, and still brandishing his sword, and shouting at the
top of his voice, ran on.</p>
<p>In an instant they reached the Indiana troops, who turned with them, and
the combined forces hurled themselves upon the enemy. The Southerners,
refusing to yield the ground they had gained, received them, and there
began a confused and terrible combat, shoulder to shoulder and hand to
hand. Elsewhere the battle continued, but here it raged the fiercest. Both
commanders knew that they were to win or lose upon this hill, and they
poured in fresh troops who swelled the area of conflict and deepened its
intensity.</p>
<p>Dick saw Warner by his side, but he did not know how he had come there,
and just beyond him the thick and powerful figure of Sergeant Whitley
showed through the hot haze of smoke. The back of Warner's hand had been
grazed by a bullet. He had not noticed it himself, but the slow drip, drip
of the blood held Dick for a moment with a sort of hideous fascination.
Then he broke his gaze violently away and turned it upon the enemy, who
were pouring upon them in all their massed strength.</p>
<p>Thomas had sent the Kentuckians to the aid of the Indiana men just in
time. The hill was a vast bank of smoke and fire, filled with whistling
bullets and shouts of men fighting face to face. Some one reeled and fell
against Dick, and for a moment, he was in horror lest it should be Warner,
but a glance showed him that it was a stranger. Then he rushed on again,
filled with a mad excitement, waving his small sword, and shouting to the
men to charge.</p>
<p>From right to left the roar of battle came to his ears, but on the hill
where he stood the struggle was at its height. The lines of Federals and
Confederates, face to face at first, now became mixed, but neither side
gained. In the fiery struggle a Union officer, Fry, saw Zollicoffer only a
few feet away. Snatching out his pistol he shot him dead. The Southerners
seeing the fall of the general who was so popular among them hesitated and
then gave back. Thomas, watching everything with keen and steady gaze,
hurled an Ohio regiment from the right flank upon the Southern center,
causing it to give way yet further under the shock.</p>
<p>"We win! We win!" shouted Dick in his ardor, as he saw the Southern line
yielding. But the victory was not yet achieved. Crittenden, who was really
Zollicoffer's superior in the command, displayed the most heroic courage
throughout the battle. He brought up fresh troops to help his weakened
center. He reformed his lines and was about to restore the battle, but
Thomas, silent and ever watchful, now rushed in a brigade of Tennessee
mountaineers, and as they struck with all their weight, the new line of
the South was compelled to give way. Success seen and felt filled the
veins of the soldiers with fresh fire. Dick and the men about him saw the
whole Southern line crumble up before them. The triumphant Union army
rushed forward shouting, and the Confederates were forced to give way at
all points.</p>
<p>Dick and Warner, with the watchful sergeant near, were in the very front
of the advance. The two young aides carried away by success and the fire
of battle, waved their swords continually and rushed at the enemy's lines.</p>
<p>Dick's face was covered with smoke, his lips were burnt, and his throat
was raw from so much shouting. But he was conscious only of great elation.
"This is not another Bull Run!" he cried to Warner, and Warner cried back:
"Not by a long shot!"</p>
<p>Thomas, still cool, watchful, and able to judge of results amid all the
thunder and confusion of battle, hurried every man into the attack. He was
showing upon this, his first independent field, all the great qualities he
was destined later to manifest so brilliantly in some of the greatest
battles of modern times.</p>
<p>The Southern lines were smashed completely by those heavy and continuous
blows. Driven hard on every side they now retreated rapidly, and their
triumphant enemies seized prisoners and cannon.</p>
<p>The whole Confederate army continued its swift retreat until it reached
its intrenchments, where the officers rallied the men and turned to face
their enemy. But the cautious Thomas stopped. He had no intention of
losing his victory by an attack upon an intrenched foe, and drew off for
the present. His army encamped out of range and began to attend to the
wounded and bury the dead.</p>
<p>Dick, feeling the reaction after so much exertion and excitement, sat down
on a fallen tree trunk and drew long, panting breaths. He saw Warner near
and remembered the blood that had been dripping from his hand.</p>
<p>"Do you know that you are wounded, George?" he said. "Look at the back of
your hand."</p>
<p>Warner glanced at it and noticed the red stripe. It had ceased to bleed.</p>
<p>"Now, that's curious," he said. "I never felt it. My blood and brain were
both so hot that the flick of a bullet created no sensation. I have
figured it out, Dick, and I have concluded that seventy per cent of our
bravery in battle is excitement, leaving twenty per cent to will and ten
per cent to chance."</p>
<p>"I suppose your calculation is close enough."</p>
<p>"It's not close merely. It's exact."</p>
<p>Both sprang to their feet and saluted as Major Hertford approached. He had
escaped without harm and he saw with pleasure that the lads were alive and
well, except for Warner's slight wound.</p>
<p>"You can rest now, boys," he said, "I won't need you for some time. But I
can tell you that I don't think General Thomas means to quit. He will
follow up his victory."</p>
<p>But Dick and Warner had been sure of that already. The army, flushed with
triumph, was eager to be led on, even to make a night attack on the
intrenchments of the enemy, but Thomas held them, knowing that another
brigade of Northern troops was marching to his aid. The brigade came, but
it was now dark and he would not risk a night attack. But some of the guns
were brought up and they sent a dozen heavy cannon shot into the
intrenchments of the enemy. There was no reply and neither of the boys,
although they strained ears, could hear anything in the defeated camp.</p>
<p>"I shouldn't be surprised if we found them gone in the morning," said
Major Hertford to Dick. "But I think our general is right in not making
any attack upon their works. What do you say to that, Sergeant Whitley?
You've had a lot of experience."</p>
<p>Sergeant Whitley was standing beside them, also trying to pierce the
darkness with trained eyes, although he could not see the Confederate
intrenchments.</p>
<p>"If a sergeant may offer an opinion I agree with you fully, sir," he said.
"A night attack is always risky, an' most of all, sir, when troops are new
like ours, although they're as brave as anybody. More'n likely if we was
to rush on 'em our troops would be shootin' into one another in the
darkness."</p>
<p>"Good logic," said Major Hertford, "and as it is quite certain that they
are not in any condition to come out and attack us we'll stand by and wait
till morning. So the general orders."</p>
<p>They walked back toward the place where the victorious troops were
lighting the fires, out of the range of the cannon in the Confederate
intrenchments. They were exultant, but they were not boasting unduly.
Night, cold and dark, had shut down upon them and was taking the heat out
of their blood. Hundreds of men were at work building fires, and Dick and
Warner, with the permission of Major Hertford, joined them.</p>
<p>Both boys felt that the work would be a relief. Wood was to be had in
abundance. The forest stretched on all sides of them in almost unbroken
miles, and the earth was littered with dead wood fallen a year or years
before. They merely kept away from the side on which the Confederate
intrenchments lay, and brought in the wood in great quantities. A row of
lights a half mile long sprang up, giving forth heat and warmth. Then
arose the cheerful sound of tin and iron dishes and cups rattling against
one another. A quarter of an hour later they were eating a victorious
supper, and a little later most of them slept.</p>
<p>But in the night the Confederate troops abandoned their camp, leaving in
it ten cannon and fifteen hundred wagons and crossed the river in boats,
which they destroyed when they reached the other side. Then, their defeat
being so severe, and they but volunteers, they scattered in the mountains
to seek food and shelter for the remainder of the winter.</p>
<p>This army of the South ceased to exist.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER VII. THE MESSENGER </h2>
<p>Victory, overwhelming and complete, had been won, but General Thomas could
not follow into the deep mountains where his army might be cut off. So he
remained where he was for a little while and on the second day he sent for
Dick.</p>
<p>The general was seated alone in a tent, an open end of which faced a fire,
as it was now extremely cold. General Thomas had shown no undue elation
over his victory. He was as silent as ever, and now, as always, he made
upon Dick the impression of strength and indomitable courage.</p>
<p>"Sit down," he said, waving his hand toward a camp stool.</p>
<p>Dick, after saluting, sat down in silence.</p>
<p>"I hear," said the general, "that you behaved very well in the battle, and
that you are a lad of courage and intelligence. Courage is common,
intelligence, real intelligence, is rare. You were at Bull Run also, so I
hear."</p>
<p>"I was, and the army fought well there too, but late in the day it was
seized with a sudden panic."</p>
<p>"Something that may happen at any time to raw troops. But we'll pass to
the question in hand. The campaign here in the mountains is ended for this
winter, but great matters are afoot further west. A courier arrived last
night stating that General Grant and Commodore Foote were preparing to
advance by water from Cairo, Illinois, and attempt the reduction of the
Confederate forts on the Cumberland and Tennessee. General Buell, one of
your own Kentuckians, is advancing southward with a strong Union force,
and in a few days his outposts will be on Green River. It will be of great
advantage to Buell to know that the Confederate army in the eastern part
of the state is destroyed. He can advance with freedom and, on the other
hand, the Southern leader, Albert Sidney Johnston, will be compelled to
throw a portion of his force to the eastward to protect his flank which
has been uncovered by our victory at Mill Spring. Do you understand?"</p>
<p>"I do, sir."</p>
<p>"Then you are to carry dispatches of the utmost importance from me to
General Buell. After you reach his camp—if you reach it—you
will, of course, be subject to his orders. I have learned that you know
the country well between here and Green River. Because of that, and
because of your intelligence, real intelligence, I mean, you are chosen
for this task. You are to change to citizen's clothes at once, and a horse
of great power and endurance has been selected for you. But you must use
all your faculties all the time. I warn you that the journey is full of
danger."</p>
<p>"I can carry it out," replied Dick with quiet confidence, "and I thank you
for choosing me."</p>
<p>"I believe you will succeed," said the general, who liked his tone.
"Return here in an hour with all your preparations made, and I will give
you the dispatches."</p>
<p>Warner was filled with envy that his comrade was to go on a secret mission
of great importance, but he generously wished him a full measure of
success.</p>
<p>"Remember," he said, "that on an errand like yours, presence of mind
counts for at least fifty per cent. Have a quick tongue. Always be ready
with a tale that looks true."</p>
<p>"An' remember, too," said Sergeant Whitley, "that however tight a place
you get into you can get into one tighter. Think of that and it will
encourage you to pull right out of the hole."</p>
<p>The two wrung his hand and Major Hertford also gave him his warmest
wishes. The horse chosen for him was a bay of tremendous power, and Dick
knew that he would serve him well. He carried double blankets strapped to
the saddle, pistols in holsters with another in his belt, an abundance of
ammunition, and food for several days in his saddle bags. Then he returned
to General Thomas, who handed him a thin strip of tissue paper.</p>
<p>"It is written in indelible ink," he said, "and it contains a statement of
our forces and their positions here in the eastern part of the state. It
also tells General Buell what reinforcements he can expect. If you are in
imminent danger of capture destroy the paper, but to provide for such a
chance, in case you escape afterward, I will read the dispatches to you."</p>
<p>He read them over several times and then questioned Dick. But the boy's
memory was good. In fact, every word of the dispatches was burnt into his
brain, and nothing could make him forget them.</p>
<p>"And now, my lad," said General Thomas, giving him his hand, "you may help
us greatly. I would not send a boy upon such an errand, but the demands of
war are terrible and must be obeyed."</p>
<p>The strong grasp of the general's hand imparted fresh enthusiasm to Dick,
and for the present he did not have the slightest doubt that he would get
safely through. He wore a strong suit of home-made brown jeans, a black
felt cap with ear-flaps, and high boots. The dispatch was pinned into a
small inside pocket of his vest.</p>
<p>He rode quickly out of camp, giving the sentinels the pass word, and the
head of the horse was pointed west slightly by north. The ground was now
frozen and he did not have the mud to hold him back.</p>
<p>The horse evidently had been longing for action. Such thews and sinews as
his needed exercise. He stretched out his long neck, neighed joyously, and
broke of his own accord into an easy canter. It was a lonely road, and
Dick was glad that it was so. The fewer people he met the better it was in
every way for him.</p>
<p>He shared the vigor and spirit of his horse. His breath turned to smoke,
but the cold whipped his blood into a quicker torrent. He hummed snatches
of the songs that he had heard Samuel Jarvis sing, and went on mile after
mile through the high hills toward the low hills of Kentucky.</p>
<p>Dick did not pass many people. The ancient name of his state—the
Dark and Bloody Ground—came back to him. He knew that war in one of
its worst forms existed in this wild sweep of hills. Here the guerillas
rode, choosing their sides as suited them best, and robbing as paid them
most. Nor did these rough men hesitate at murder. So he rode most of the
time with his hand on the butt of the pistol at his belt, and whenever he
went through woods, which was most of the time, he kept a wary watch to
right and to left.</p>
<p>The first person whom he passed was a boy riding on a sack of grain to
mill. Dick greeted him cheerfully and the boy with the fearlessness of
youth replied in the same manner.</p>
<p>"Any news your way?" asked Dick.</p>
<p>"Nothin' at all," replied the boy, his eyes enlarging with excitement,
"but from the way you are comin' we heard tell there was a great battle,
hundreds of thousands of men on each side an' that the Yankees won. Is it
so, Mister?"</p>
<p>"It is true," replied Dick. "A dozen people have told me of it, but the
armies were not quite so large as you heard. It is true also that the
Yankees won."</p>
<p>"I'll tell that at the mill. It will be big news to them. An' which way be
you goin', Mister?" said the boy with all the frankness of the hills.</p>
<p>"I'm on my way to the middle part of the state. I've been looking after
some land that my people own in the mountains. Looks like a lonesome road,
this. Will I reach any house soon?"</p>
<p>"Thar's Ben Trimble's three miles further on, but take my advice an' don't
stop thar. Ben says he ain't goin' to be troubled in these war times by
visitors, an' he's likely to meet you at the door with his double-barreled
shotgun."</p>
<p>"I won't knock on Ben's door, so he needn't take down his double-barreled
shotgun. What's next beyond Ben's house?"</p>
<p>"A half mile further on you come to Hungry Creek. It ain't much in the
middle of summer, but right now it's full of cold water, 'nough of it to
come right up to your hoss's body. You go through it keerful."</p>
<p>"Thank you for your good advice," said Dick. "I'll follow it, too.
Good-bye."</p>
<p>He waved his gauntleted hand and rode on. A hundred yards further and he
glanced back. The boy had stopped on the crest of a hill, and was looking
at him. But Dick knew that it was only the natural curiosity of the hills
and he renewed his journey without apprehension.</p>
<p>At the appointed time he saw the stout log cabin of Ben Trimble by the
roadside with the warm smoke rising from the chimney, but true to his word
he gave Ben and his shotgun no trouble, and continued straight ahead over
the frozen road until he came to the banks of Hungry Creek. Here, too, the
words of the boy came true. The water was both deep and cold, and Dick
looked at it doubtfully.</p>
<p>He urged his great horse into the stream at last, and it appeared that the
creek had risen somewhat since the boy had last seen it. In the middle the
horse was compelled to swim, but it was no task for such a powerful
animal, and Dick, holding his feet high, came dry to the shore that he
sought.</p>
<p>The road led on through high hills, covered with oak and beech and cedar
and pine, all the deciduous trees bare of leaves, their boughs rustling
dryly whenever the wind blew. He saw the smoke of three cabins nestling in
snug coves, but it was a full three hours before he met anybody else in
the road. Then he saw two men riding toward him, but he could not tell
much about them as they were wrapped in heavy gray shawls, and wore broad
brimmed felt hats, pulled well down over their foreheads.</p>
<p>Dick knew that he could not exercise too much caution in this debatable
land, and his right hand dropped cautiously to the butt of his pistol in
such a manner that it was concealed by his heavy overcoat. His left hand
rested lightly on the reins as he rode forward at an even pace. But he did
not fail to take careful note of the two men who were now examining him in
a manner that he did not like.</p>
<p>Dick saw that the strangers openly carried pistols in their belts, which
was not of overwhelming significance in such times in such a region, but
they did not have the look of mountaineers riding on peaceful business,
and he reined his horse to the very edge of the road that he might pass
them.</p>
<p>He noted with rising apprehension that they checked the pace of their
horses as they approached, and that they reined to either side of the road
to compel him to go between them. But he pulled his own horse out still
further, and as they could not pass on both sides of him without an overt
act of hostility they drew together again in the middle of the road.</p>
<p>"Mornin' stranger," they said together, when they were a few yards away.</p>
<p>"Good morning," said Dick, riding straight on, without checking his speed.
But one of the men drew his horse across the road and said:</p>
<p>"What's your hurry? It ain't friendly to ride by without passin' the time
o' day."</p>
<p>Now at close range, Dick liked their looks less than ever. They might be
members of that very band of Skelly's which had already made so much
trouble for both sides, and he summoned all his faculties in order to meet
them at any game that they might try to play.</p>
<p>"I've been on land business in the mountains," he said, "and I'm anxious
to get back to my home. Besides the day is very cold, and the two facts
deprive me of the pleasure of a long conversation with you, gentlemen.
Good-day."</p>
<p>"Wait just a little," said the spokesman, who still kept his horse reined
across the road. "These be war times an' it's important to know what a
fellow is. Be you for the Union or are you with the Secesh?"</p>
<p>Dick was quite sure that whatever he answered they would immediately claim
to be on the opposite side. Then would follow robbery and perhaps murder.</p>
<p>"Which is your side?" he asked.</p>
<p>"But we put the question first," the fellow replied.</p>
<p>Dick no longer had any doubts. The second man was drawing his horse up by
the side of him, as if to seize him, while the first continued to bar the
way. He was alarmed, deeply alarmed, but he lost neither his courage nor
his presence of mind. Luckily he had already summoned every faculty for
instant action, and now he acted. He uttered a sudden shout, and raked the
side of his horse with both spurs.</p>
<p>His horse was not only large and powerful but of a most high spirit. When
he heard that shout and felt the burning slash of the spurs he made a
blind but mighty leap forward. The horse of the first stranger, smitten by
so great a weight, fell in the road and his rider went down with him. The
enraged horse then leaped clear of both and darted forward at headlong
speed.</p>
<p>As his horse sprang Dick threw himself flat upon his neck, and the bullet
that the second man fired whistled over his head. By impulse he drew his
own pistol and fired back. He saw the man's pistol arm fall as if broken,
and he heard a loud cry. That was a lucky shot indeed, and rising a little
in his saddle he shouted again and again to the great horse that served
him so well.</p>
<p>The gallant animal responded in full. He stretched out his long neck and
the road flew fast behind him. Sparks flashed from the stones where the
shod hoofs struck, and Dick exulting felt the cold air rush past. Another
shot was fired at long range, but the bullet did not strike anywhere near.</p>
<p>Dick took only a single backward glance. He saw the two men on their
horses, but drooping as if weak from hurts, and he knew that for the
present at least he was safe from any hurt from them. But he allowed his
horse his head for a long time, and then he gradually slowed him down. No
human being was in sight now and he spoke to the noble animal soothingly.</p>
<p>"Good old boy," he said; "the strongest, the swiftest, the bravest, and
the truest. I was sorry to make those red stripes on your sides, but it
had to be done. Only quickness saved us."</p>
<p>The horse neighed. He was still quivering from excitement and exertion. So
was Dick for that matter. The men might have been robbers merely—they
were at least that bad—but they might have deprived him also of his
precious dispatch. He was proud of the confidence put in him by General
Thomas, and he meant to deserve it. It was this sense of responsibility
and pride that had attuned his faculties to so high a pitch and that had
made his action so swift, sudden and decisive.</p>
<p>But he steadied himself presently. The victory, for victory it certainly
was, increased his strength and confidence. He stopped soon at a brook—they
seemed to occur every mile—and bathed with cold water the red
streaks his spurs had made on either side of his horse. Again he spoke
soothing words and regretted the necessity that had caused him to make
such wounds, slight though they were.</p>
<p>He also bathed his own face and hands and, as it was now about noon, ate
of the cold ham and bread that he carried in his knapsack, meanwhile
keeping constant watch on the road over which he had come. But he did not
believe that the men would pursue, and he saw no sign of them. Mounting
again he rode forward.</p>
<p>The remainder of the afternoon went by without interruption. He passed
three or four people, but they were obviously natives of that region, and
they asked him only innocent questions. The wintry day was short, and the
twilight was soon at hand. He was riding over one of the bare ridges, when
first he noticed how late the day had grown. All the sky was gray and
chill and the cold sun was setting behind the western mountains. A breeze
sprang up, rustling among the leafless branches, and Dick shivered in the
saddle. A new necessity was pressed suddenly upon him. He must find
shelter for the night. Even with his warm double blankets he could not
sleep in the forest on such a night. Besides the horse would need food.</p>
<p>He rode on briskly for a full hour, anxiously watching both sides of the
road for a cabin or cabin smoke. By that time night had come fully, though
fortunately it was clear but very cold. He saw then on the right a faint
coil of smoke rising against the dusky sky and he rode straight for it.</p>
<p>The smoke came from a strong double cabin, standing about four hundred
yards from the road, and the sight of the heavy log walls made Dick all
the more anxious to get inside them. The cold had grown bitter and even
his horse shivered.</p>
<p>As he approached two yellow curs rushed forth and began to bark furiously,
snapping at the horse's heels, the usual mountain welcome. But when a kick
from the horse grazed the ear of one of them they kept at a respectful
distance.</p>
<p>"Hello! Hello!" called Dick loudly.</p>
<p>This also was the usual mountain notification that a guest had come, and
the heavy board door of the house opened inward. A man, elderly, but dark
and strong, with the high cheek bones of an Indian stood in the door, the
light of a fire blazing in the fireplace on the opposite side of the wall
throwing him in relief. His hair was coal black, long and coarse,
increasing his resemblance to an Indian.</p>
<p>Dick rode close to the door, and, without hesitation, asked for a night's
shelter and food. This was his inalienable right in the hills or mountains
of his state, and he would be a strange man indeed who would refuse it.</p>
<p>The man sharply bade the dogs be silent and they retreated behind the
house, their tails drooping. Then he said to Dick in a tone that was not
without hospitality:</p>
<p>"'Light, stranger, an' we'll put up your horse. Mandy will have supper
ready by the time we finish the job."</p>
<p>Dick sprang down gladly, but staggered a little at first from the
stiffness of his legs.</p>
<p>"You've rid far, stranger," said the man, who Dick knew at once had a keen
eye and a keen brain, "an' you're young, too."</p>
<p>"But not younger than many who have gone to the war," replied Dick. "In
fact, you see many who are not older than fifteen or sixteen."</p>
<p>He had spoken hastily and incautiously and he realized it at once. The
man's keen gaze was turned upon him again.</p>
<p>"You've seen the armies, then?" he said. "Mebbe you're a sojer yourself?"</p>
<p>"I've been in the mountains, looking after some land that belongs to my
family," said Dick. "My name is Mason, Richard Mason, and I live near
Pendleton, which is something like a hundred miles from here."</p>
<p>He deemed it best to give his right name, as it would have no significance
there.</p>
<p>"You must have seen armies," persisted the man, "or you wouldn't hev
knowed 'bout so many boys of fifteen or sixteen bein' in them."</p>
<p>"I saw both the Federal and Confederate armies in Eastern Kentucky. My
business took me near them, but I was always glad to get away from them,
too."</p>
<p>"I heard tell today that there was a big battle."</p>
<p>"You heard right. It was fought near a little place called Mill Spring,
and resulted in a complete victory for the Northern forces under General
Thomas."</p>
<p>"That was what I heard. It will be good news to some, an' bad news to
others. 'Pears to me, Mr. Mason, that you can't fight a battle that will
suit everybody."</p>
<p>"I never heard of one that did."</p>
<p>"An' never will, I reckon. Mighty good hoss that you're ridin'. I never
seed one with better shoulders. My name's Leffingwell, Seth Leffingwell,
an' I live here alone, 'ceptin' my old woman, Mandy. All we ask of people
is to let us be. Lots of us in the mountain feel that way. Let them
lowlanders shoot one another up ez long ez they please, but up here there
ain't no slaves, an' there ain't nothin' else to fight about."</p>
<p>The stable was a good one, better than usual in that country. Dick saw
stalls for four horses, but no horses. They put his own horse in one of
the stalls, and gave him corn and hay. Then they walked back to the house,
and entered a large room, where a stalwart woman of middle age had just
finished cooking supper.</p>
<p>"Whew, but the night's goin' to be cold," said Leffingwell, as he shut the
door behind them, and cut off an icy blast. "It'll make the fire an'
supper all the better. We're just plain mountain people, but you're
welcome to the best we have. Ma, this is Mr. Mason, who has been on lan'
business in the mountains, an' is back on his way to his home at
Pendleton."</p>
<p>Leffingwell's wife, a powerful woman, as large as her husband, and with a
pleasant face, gave Dick a large hand and a friendly grasp.</p>
<p>"It's a good night to be indoors," she said. "Supper's ready, Seth. Will
you an' the stranger set?"</p>
<p>She had placed the pine table in the middle of the room, and Dick noticed
that it was large enough for five or six persons. He put his saddle bags
and blankets in a corner and he and the man drew up chairs.</p>
<p>He had seldom beheld a more cheerful scene. In a great fireplace ten feet
wide big logs roared and crackled. Corn cakes, vegetables, and two kinds
of meat were cooking over the coals and a great pot of coffee boiled and
bubbled. No candles had been lighted, but they were not needed. The flames
gave sufficient illumination.</p>
<p>"Set, young man," said Leffingwell heartily, "an' see who's teeth are
sharper, yourn or mine."</p>
<p>Dick sat down gladly, and they fell to. The woman alternately waited on
them and ate with them. For a time the two masculine human beings ate and
drank with so much vigor that there was no time for talk. Leffingwell was
the first to break silence.</p>
<p>"I kin see you growin'," he said.</p>
<p>"Growing?"</p>
<p>"Yes, growin', you're eatin' so much, you're enjoyin' it so much, an'
you're digestin' it so fast. You are already taller than you was when you
set, an' you're broader 'cross the chest. No, 'tain't wuth while to
'pologize. You've got a right to be hungry, an' you mustn't forget Ma's
cookin' either. She's never had her beat in all these mountains."</p>
<p>"Shut up, Seth," said Mrs. Leffingwell, genially, "you'll make the young
stranger think you're plum' foolish, which won't be wide of the mark
either."</p>
<p>"I'm grateful," said Dick falling into the spirit of it, "but what pains
me, Mrs. Leffingwell, is the fact that Mr. Leffingwell will only nibble at
your food. I don't understand it, as he looks like a healthy man."</p>
<p>"'Twouldn't do for me to be too hearty," said Leffingwell, "or I'd keep
Mandy here cookin' all the time."</p>
<p>They seemed pleasant people to Dick, good, honest mountain types, and he
was glad that he had found their house. The room in which they sat was
large, apparently used for all purposes, kitchen, dining-room,
sitting-room, and bedroom. An old-fashioned squirrel rifle lay on hooks
projecting from the wall, but there was no other sign of a weapon. There
was a bed at one end of the room and another at the other, which could be
hidden by a rough woolen curtain running on a cord. Dick surmised that
this bed would be assigned to him.</p>
<p>Their appetites grew lax and finally ceased. Then Leffingwell yawned and
stretched his arms.</p>
<p>"Stranger," he said, "we rise early an' go to bed early in these parts.
Thar ain't nothin' to keep us up in the evenin's, an' as you've had a
hard, long ride I guess you're just achin' fur sleep."</p>
<p>Dick, although he had been unwilling to say so, was in fact very sleepy.
The heavy supper and the heat of the room pulled so hard on his eyelids
that he could scarcely keep them up. He murmured his excuses and said he
believed he would like to retire.</p>
<p>"Don't you be bashful about sayin' so," exclaimed Leffingwell heartily,
"'cause I don't think I could keep up more'n a half hour longer."</p>
<p>Mrs. Leffingwell drew the curtain shutting off one bed and a small space
around it. Dick, used to primitive customs, said good-night and retired
within his alcove, taking his saddle bags. There was a small window near
the foot of the room, and when he noticed it he resolved to let in a
little air later on. The mountaineers liked hot rooms all the time, but he
did not. This window contained no glass, but was closed with a broad
shutter.</p>
<p>The boy undressed and got into bed, placing his saddle bags on the foot of
it, and the pistol that he carried in his belt under his head. He fell
asleep almost immediately and had he been asked beforehand he would have
said that nothing could awake him before morning. Nevertheless he awoke
before midnight, and it was a very slight thing that caused him to come
out of sleep. Despite the languor produced by food and heat a certain
nervous apprehension had been at work in the boy's mind, and it followed
him into the unknown regions of sleep. His body was dead for a time and
his mind too, but this nervous power worked on, almost independently of
him. It had noted the sound of voices nearby, and awakened him, as if he
had been shaken by a rough hand.</p>
<p>He sat up in his bed and became conscious of a hot and aching head. Then
he remembered the window, and softly drawing two pegs that fastened it in
order that he might not awaken his good hosts, he opened it inward a few
inches.</p>
<p>The cold air poured in at the crevice and felt like heaven on his face.
His temples quit throbbing and his head ceased to ache. He had not noticed
at first the cause that really awakened him, but as he settled back into
bed, grateful for the fresh air, the same mysterious power gave him a
second warning signal.</p>
<p>He heard the hum of voices and sat up again. It was merely the
Leffingwells in the bed at the far end of the room, talking! Perhaps he
had not been asleep more than an hour, and it was natural that they should
lie awake a while, talking about the coming of this young stranger or any
other event of the day that interested them. Then he caught a tone or an
inflection that he did not remember to have been used by either of the
Leffingwells. A third signal of alarm was promptly registered on his
brain.</p>
<p>He leaned from the bed and pulling aside the curtain a half an inch or so,
looked into the room. The fire had died down except a few coals which cast
but a faint light. Yet it was sufficient to show Dick that the two
Leffingwells had not gone to bed. They were sitting fully clothed before
the fireplace, and three other persons were with them.</p>
<p>As Dick stared his eyes grew more used to the half dusk and he saw
clearly. The three strangers were young men, all armed heavily, and the
resemblance of two of them to the Leffingwells was so striking that he had
no doubt they were their sons. Now he understood about those empty stalls.
The third man, who had been sitting with his shoulder toward Dick, turned
his face presently, and the boy with difficulty repressed an exclamation.
It was the one who had reined his horse across the road to stop him. A
fourth and conclusive signal of alarm was registered upon his brain.</p>
<p>He began to dress rapidly and without noise. Meanwhile he listened
intently and could hear the words they spoke. The woman was pleading with
them to let him go. He was only a harmless lad, and while these were dark
days, a crime committed now might yet be punished.</p>
<p>"A harmless boy," said the strange man. "He's quick, an' strong enough, I
tell you. You should have seen how he rode me down, and then shot Garmon
in the arm."</p>
<p>"I'd like to have that hoss of his," said the elder Leffingwell. "He's the
finest brute I ever laid eyes on. Sech power an' sech action. I noticed
him at once, when Mason come ridin' up. S'pose we jest take the hoss and
send the boy on."</p>
<p>"A hoss like that would be knowed," protested the woman. "What if sojers
come lookin' fur him!"</p>
<p>"We could run him off in the hills an' keep him there a while," said
Leffingwell. "I know places where sojers wouldn't find that hoss in a
thousand years. What do you say to that, Kerins?"</p>
<p>"Good as fur as it goes," replied Kerins, "but it don't go fur enough by a
long shot. The Yanks whipped the Johnnies in a big battle at Mill Spring.
Me an' my pardners have been hangin' 'roun' in the woods, seein' what
would happen. Now, we know that this boy rode straight from the tent of
General Thomas hisself. He's a Union sojer, an' young as he is, he's an
officer. He wouldn't be sent out by General Thomas hisself 'less it was on
big business. He's got messages, dispatches of some kind that are worth a
heap to somebody. With all the armies gatherin' in the south an' west of
the state it stands to reason that them dispatches mean a lot. Now, we've
got to get 'em an' get the full worth of 'em from them to whom they're
worth the most."</p>
<p>"He's got a pistol," said the elder Leffingwell, "I seed it in his belt.
If he wakes before we grab him he'll shoot."</p>
<p>The man Kerins laughed.</p>
<p>"He'll never get a chance to shoot," he said. "Why, after all he went
through today, he'll sleep like a log till mornin'."</p>
<p>"That's so," said one of the young Leffingwells, "an' Kerins is right. We
ought to grab them dispatches. Likely in one way or another we kin git a
heap fur 'em."</p>
<p>"Shut up, Jim, you fool," said his mother sharply. "Do you want murder on
your hands? Stealin' hosses is bad enough, but if that boy has got the big
dispatches you say he has, an' he's missin', don't you think that sojers
will come after him? An' they'll trace him to this house, an' I tell you
that in war trials don't last long. Besides, he's a nice boy an' he spoke
nice all the time to pap an' me."</p>
<p>But her words did not seem to make any impression upon the others, except
her husband, who protested again that it would be enough to take the
horse. As for the dispatches it wasn't wise for them to fool with such
things. But Kerins insisted on going the whole route and the young
Leffingwells were with him.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Dick had dressed with more rapidity than ever before in his
life, fully alive to the great dangers that threatened. But his fear was
greatest lest he might lose the precious dispatches that he bore. For a
few moments he did not know what to do. He might take his pistols and
fight, but he could not fight them all with success. Then that pleasant
flood of cold air gave him the key.</p>
<p>While they were still talking he put his saddle bags over his arm, opened
the shutter its full width, and dropped quietly to the ground outside,
remembering to take the precaution of closing the shutter behind him, lest
the sudden inrush of cold startle the Leffingwells and their friends.</p>
<p>It was an icy night, but Dick did not stop to notice it. He ran to the
stable, saddled and bridled his horse in two minutes, and in another
minute was flying westward over the flinty road, careless whether or not
they heard the beat of his horse's hoofs.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER VIII. A MEETING AT NIGHT </h2>
<p>Dick heard above the thundering hoofbeats only a single shout, and then,
as he glanced backward, the house was lost in the moonlight. When he
secured his own horse he had noticed that all the empty stalls were now
filled, no doubt by the horses of the young Leffingwells and Kerins, but
he was secure in his confidence that none could overtake the one he rode.</p>
<p>He felt of that inside pocket of his vest. The precious dispatch was
there, tightly pinned into its hidden refuge, and as for himself,
refreshed, warm, and strong after food, rest, and sleep, he felt equal to
any emergency. He had everything with him. The stout saddle bags were
lying across the saddle. He had thrust the holster of pistols into them,
but he took it out now, and hung it in its own place, also across the
saddle.</p>
<p>Although he was quite sure there would be no pursuit—the elder
Leffingwells would certainly keep their sons from joining it—he sent
his great horse straight ahead at a good pace for a long time, the road
being fairly good. His excitement and rapid motion kept him from noticing
at first the great bitterness of the cold.</p>
<p>When he had gone five or six miles he drew his horse down to a walk. Then,
feeling the intensity of the cold as the mercury was far below zero, he
dismounted, looped the reins over his arms, and walked a while. For
further precaution he took his blanket-roll and wrapped the two blankets
about his body, especially protecting his neck and ears.</p>
<p>He found that the walking, besides keeping him warmer, took all the
stiffness out of his muscles, and he continued on foot several miles. He
passed two brooks and a creek, all frozen over so solidly that the horse
passed on them without breaking the ice. It was an extremely difficult
task to make the animal try the ice, but after much delicate coaxing and
urging he always succeeded.</p>
<p>He saw two more cabins at the roadside, but he did not think of asking
hospitality at either. The night was now far advanced and he wished to put
many more miles between him and the Leffingwell home before he sought rest
again.</p>
<p>He mounted his horse once more, and increased his speed. Now the reaction
came after so much exertion and excitement. He began to feel depressed. He
was very young and he had no comrade. The loneliness of the winter night
in a country full of dangers was appalling. It seemed to him, as his heart
sank, that all things had conspired against him. But the moment of despair
was brief. He summoned his courage anew and rode on bravely, although the
sense of loneliness in its full power remained.</p>
<p>The moonlight was quite bright. The sky was a deep silky blue, in which
myriads of cold stars shone and danced. By and by he skirted for a while
the banks of a small river, which he knew flowed southward into the
Cumberland, and which would not cross his path. The rays of the moonlight
on its frozen surface looked like darts of cold steel.</p>
<p>He left the river presently and the road bent a little toward the north.
Then the skies darkened somewhat but lightened again as the dawn began to
come. The red but cold edge of the sun appeared above the mountains that
he had left behind, and then the morning came, pale and cold.</p>
<p>Dick stopped at a little brook, broke the ice and drank, letting his horse
drink after him. Then he ate heartily of the cold bread and meat in his
knapsack. Pitying his horse he searched until he found a little grass not
yet killed by winter in the lee of the hill, and waited until he cropped
it all.</p>
<p>He mounted and resumed his journey through a country in which the hills
were steadily becoming lower, with larger stretches of level land
appearing between them. By night he should be beyond the last low swell of
the mountains and into the hill region proper. As he calculated distances
his heart gave a great thump. He was to locate Buell some distance north
of Green River, and his journey would take him close to Pendleton.</p>
<p>The boy was torn by great and conflicting emotions. He would carry out
with his life the task that Thomas had assigned to him, and yet he wished
to stop near Pendleton, if only for an hour.</p>
<p>Yes an hour would do! And it could not interfere with his duty! But
Pendleton was a Southern stronghold. Everybody there knew him, and they
all knew, too, that he was in the service of the North. How could he pass
by without being seen and what might happen then? The terrible conflict
went on in his mind, and it was stilled only when he decided to leave it
to time and chance.</p>
<p>He rode that day almost without interruption, securing an ample dinner,
where no one chose to ask questions, accepting him at his own statement of
himself and probably believing it. He heard that a small Southern force
was to the southward, probably marching toward Bowling Green, where a
great Confederate army under Albert Sidney Johnston was said to be
concentrated. But the news gave him no alarm. His own road was still
leading west slightly by north.</p>
<p>When night came he was in the pleasant and fertile hill country, dotted
with double brick houses, and others of wood, all with wide porticos,
supported by white pillars. It looked smiling and prosperous even in
winter. The war had done no ravages here, and he saw men at work about the
great barns.</p>
<p>He slept in the house of a big farmer, who liked the frank voice and eyes
of the lad, and who cared nothing for any errand upon which he might be
riding. He slept, too, without dreams, and without awakening until the
morning, when he shared a solid breakfast with the family.</p>
<p>Dick obtained at the farmhouse a fresh supply of cold food for his saddle
bags, to be held against an emergency, although it was likely now that he
could obtain all he needed at houses as he passed. Receiving the good
wishes of his hosts he rode on through the hills. The intense cold which
kept troops from marching much really served him, as the detachments about
the little towns stayed in their camps.</p>
<p>The day was quite clear, with the mercury still well below zero, but his
heavy clothing kept him warm and comfortable. His great horse showed no
signs of weariness. Apparently his sinews were made of steel.</p>
<p>Noon came, but Dick did not seek any farmhouse for what was called dinner
in that region. Instead he ate from his saddle bags as he rode on. He did
not wish to waste time, and, moreover, he had taken his resolution. He
would go near Pendleton. It was on his most direct route, but he would
pass in the night.</p>
<p>As the cold twilight descended he came into familiar regions. Like all
other young Kentuckians he was a great horseman, and with Harry Kenton and
other lads of his age he had ridden nearly everywhere in a circuit of
thirty miles around Pendleton.</p>
<p>It was with many a throb of the heart that he now recognized familiar
scenes. He knew the fields, the forests and the houses. But he was glad
that the night had come. Others would know him, and he did not wish to be
seen when he rode on such an errand. He had been saving his horse in the
afternoon, but now he pushed him forward at a much faster gait. The great
horse responded willingly and Dick felt the powerful body working beneath
him, smooth and tireless like a perfect machine.</p>
<p>He passed nobody on the road. People hugged their fires on such a cold
night, and he rode hour after hour without interruption. It was nearly
midnight when he stopped on a high hill, free of forest, and looked down
upon Pendleton. The wonderful clearness of the winter night helped him.
All the stars known to man were out, and helped to illuminate the world
with a clear but cold radiance.</p>
<p>Although a long distance away Dick could see Pendleton clearly. There was
no foliage on the trees now, and nearly every house was visible. The great
pulse in his throat throbbed hard as he looked. He saw the steeples of the
churches, the white pillars of the court house, and off to one side the
academy in which he and Harry Kenton had gone to school together. He saw
further away Colonel Kenton's own house on another hill. It, too, had
porticos, supported by white pillars which gleamed in the moonlight.</p>
<p>Then his eyes traveled again around the half circle before him. The place
for which he was looking could not be seen. But he knew that it would be
so. It was a low house, and the evergreens about it, the pines and cedars
would hide it at any time. But he knew the exact spot, and he wanted his
eyes to linger there a little before he rode straight for it.</p>
<p>Now the great pulse in his throat leaped, and something like a sob came
from him. But it was not a sob of unhappiness. He clucked to his horse and
turned from the main road into a narrower one that led by the low house
among the evergreens. Yet he was a boy of powerful will, and despite his
eagerness, he restrained his horse and advanced very slowly. Sometimes he
turned the animal upon the dead turf by the side of the road in order that
his footsteps might make no sound.</p>
<p>He drew slowly nearer, and when he saw the roof and eaves of the low house
among the evergreens the great pulse in his throat leaped so hard that it
was almost unbearable. He reached the edge of the lawn that came down to
the road, and hidden by the clipped cone of a pine he saw a faint light
shining.</p>
<p>He dismounted, opened the gate softly, and led his horse upon the lawn,
hitching him between two pines that grew close together, concealing him
perfectly.</p>
<p>"Be quiet, old fellow," he whispered, stroking the great intelligent head.
"Nobody will find you here and I'll come back for you."</p>
<p>The horse rubbed his nose against his arm but made no other movement. Then
Dick walked softly toward the house, pulses beating hard and paused just
at the edge of a portico, where he stood in the shadow of a pillar. He saw
the light clearly now. It shone from a window of the low second story. It
came from her window and her room. Doubtless she was thinking at that very
moment of him. His throat ached and tears came into his eyes. The light,
clear and red, shone steadily from the window and made a band across the
lawn.</p>
<p>He picked a handful of sand from the walk that led to the front door and
threw it against the window. He knew that she was brave and would respond,
but waiting only a moment or two he threw a second handful fully and
fairly against the glass.</p>
<p>The lower half of the window was thrown open and a head appeared, where
the moonlight fell clearly upon it. It was the head of a beautiful woman,
framed in thick, silken yellow hair, the eyes deep blue, and the skin of
the wonderful fairness so often found in that state. The face was that of
a woman about thirty-seven or eight years of age, and without a wrinkle or
flaw.</p>
<p>"Mother!" called Dick in a low voice as he stepped from the shadow of the
pillar.</p>
<p>There was a cry and the face disappeared like a flash from the window. But
he had only a few moments to wait. Her swift feet brought her from the
room, down the stairway, and along the hall to the door, which she threw
open. The next instant Mrs. Mason had her son in her arms.</p>
<p>"Oh, Dick, Dicky, boy, how did you come!" she exclaimed. "You were here
under my window, and I did not even know that you were alive!"</p>
<p>Her tears of joy fell upon his face and he was moved profoundly. Dick
loved his beautiful young mother devoutly, and her widowhood had bound
them all the more closely together.</p>
<p>"I've come a long distance, and I've come in many ways, mother," he
replied, "by train, by horseback, and I have even walked."</p>
<p>"You have come here on foot?"</p>
<p>"No, mother. I rode directly over your own smooth lawn on one of the
biggest horses you ever saw, and he's tied now between two of the pine
trees. Come, we must go in the house. It's too cold for you out here. Do
you know that the mercury is about ten degrees below zero."</p>
<p>"What a man you have grown! Why, you must be two inches taller than you
were, when you went away, and how sunburned and weather-beaten you are,
too! Oh, Dicky, this terrible, terrible war! Not a word from you in months
has got through to me!"</p>
<p>"Nor a word from you to me, mother, but I have not suffered so much so
far. I was at Bull Run, where we lost, and I was at Mill Spring, where we
won, but I was unhurt."</p>
<p>"Perhaps you have come back to stay," she said hopefully.</p>
<p>"No, mother, not to stay. I took a chance in coming by here to see you,
but I couldn't go on without a few minutes. Inside now, mother, your hands
are growing cold."</p>
<p>They went in at the door, and closed it behind them. But there was another
faithful soul on guard that night. In the dusky hail loomed a gigantic
black figure in a blue checked dress, blue turban on head.</p>
<p>"Marse Dick?" she said.</p>
<p>"Juliana!" he exclaimed. "How did you know that I was here?"</p>
<p>"Ain't I done heard Miss Em'ly cry out, me always sleepin' so light, an' I
hears her run down the hail. An' then I dresses an' comes an' sees you two
through the crack o' the do', an' then I waits till you come in."</p>
<p>Dick gave her a most affectionate greeting, knowing that she was as true
as steel. She rejoiced in her flowery name, as many other colored women
rejoiced in theirs, but her heart inhabited exactly the right spot in her
huge anatomy. She drew mother and son into the sitting-room, where low
coals still burned on the hearth. Then she went up to Mrs. Mason's bedroom
and put out the light, after which she came back to the sitting-room, and,
standing by a window in silence, watched over the two over whom she had
watched so long.</p>
<p>"Why is it that you can stay such a little while?" asked Mrs. Mason.</p>
<p>"Mother," replied Dick in a low tone, "General Thomas, who won the battle
at Mill Spring, has trusted me. I bear a dispatch of great importance. It
is to go to General Buell, and it has to do with the gathering of the
Union troops in the western and southern parts of our state, and in
Tennessee. I must get through with it, and in war, mother, time counts
almost as much as battles. I can stop only a few minutes even for you."</p>
<p>"I suppose it is so. But oh, Dicky, won't this terrible war be over soon?"</p>
<p>"I don't think so, mother. It's scarcely begun yet."</p>
<p>Mrs. Mason said nothing, but stared into the coals. The great negress,
Juliana, standing at the window, did not move.</p>
<p>"I suppose you are right, Dick," she said at last with a sigh, "but it is
awful that our people should be arrayed so against one another. There is
your cousin, Harry Kenton, a good boy, too, on the other side."</p>
<p>"Yes, mother, I caught a glimpse of him at Bull Run. We came almost face
to face in the smoke. But it was only for an instant. Then the smoke
rushed in between. I don't think anything serious has happened to him."</p>
<p>Mrs. Mason shuddered.</p>
<p>"I should mourn him next to you," she said, "and my brother-in-law,
Colonel Kenton, has been very good. He left orders with his people to
watch over us here. Pendleton is strongly Southern as you know, but nobody
would do us any harm, unless it was the rough people from the hills."</p>
<p>Colonel Kenton's wife had been Mrs. Mason's elder sister, and Dick, as he
also sat staring into the coals, wondered why people who were united so
closely should yet be divided so much.</p>
<p>"Mother," he said, "when I came through the mountains with my friends we
stopped at a house in which lived an old, old woman. She must have been
nearly a hundred. She knew your ancestor and mine, the famous and learned
Paul Cotter, from whom you and I are descended, and she also knew his
friend and comrade, the mighty scout and hunter, Henry Ware, who became
the great governor of Kentucky."</p>
<p>"How strange!"</p>
<p>"But the strangest is yet to be told. Harry Kenton, when he went east to
join Beauregard before Bull Run, stopped at the same house, and when she
first saw him she only looked into the far past. She thought it was Henry
Ware himself, and she saluted him as the governor. What do you think of
that, mother?"</p>
<p>"It's a startling coincidence."</p>
<p>"But may it not be an omen? I'm not superstitious, mother, but when things
come together in such a queer fashion it's bound to make you think. When
Harry's paths and mine cross in such a manner maybe it means that we shall
all come together again, and be united as we were."</p>
<p>"Maybe."</p>
<p>"At any rate," said Dick with a little laugh, "we'll hope that it does."</p>
<p>While the boy was not noticing his mother had made a sign to Juliana, who
had crept out of the room. Now she returned, bearing food upon a tray, and
Dick, although he was not hungry, ate to please his mother.</p>
<p>"You will stay until morning?" she said.</p>
<p>"No, mother. I can't afford to be seen here. I must leave in the dark."</p>
<p>"Then until it is nearly morning."</p>
<p>"Nor that either, mother. My time is about up already. I could never
betray the trust that General Thomas has put in me. My dispatches not only
tell of the gathering of our own troops, but they contain invaluable
information concerning the Confederate concentration which General Thomas
learned from his scouts and spies. Mother, I think a great battle is
coming here in the west."</p>
<p>She shuddered, but she did not seek again to delay him in his duty.</p>
<p>"I am proud," she said, "that you have won the confidence of your general,
and that you ride upon such an important errand. I should have been glad
if you had stayed at home, Dick, but since you have chosen to be a
soldier, I am rejoiced that you have risen in the esteem of your officers.
Write to me as often as you can. Maybe none of your letters will reach me,
but at least start them. I shall start mine, too."</p>
<p>"Of course, mother," said Dick, "and now it's time for me to ride hard."</p>
<p>"Why, you have been here only a half hour!"</p>
<p>"Nearer an hour, mother, and on this journey of mine time means a lot. I
must say good-bye now to you and Juliana."</p>
<p>The two women followed him down the lawn to the point where his horse was
hitched between the two big pines. Mrs. Mason patted the horse's great
head and murmured to him to carry her son well.</p>
<p>"Did you ever see a finer horse, mother?" said Dick proudly. "He's the
very pick of the army."</p>
<p>He threw his arms around her neck, kissed her more than once, sprang into
the saddle and rode away in the darkness.</p>
<p>The two women, the black and the white, sisters in grief, and yet happy
that he had come, went slowly back into the house to wait, while the boy,
a man's soul in him, strode on to war.</p>
<p>Dick was far from Pendleton when the dawn broke, and now he had full need
of caution. His horse was bearing him fast into debatable ground, where
every man suspected his neighbor, and it remained for force alone to tell
to which side the region belonged. But the extreme delicacy of the tension
came to Dick's aid. People hesitated to ask questions, lest questions
equally difficult be asked of them in return. It was a great time to mind
one's own business.</p>
<p>He rode on, fortune with him for the present, and his course was still
west slightly by north. He slept under roofs, and he learned that in the
country into which he had now come the Union sympathizers were more
numerous than the Confederate. The majority of the Kentuckians, whatever
their personal feelings, were not willing to shatter the republic.</p>
<p>He heard definitely that here in the west the North was gathering armies
greater than any that he had supposed. Besides the troops from the three
states just across the Ohio River the hardy lumbermen and pioneers were
pouring down from Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota. Hunters in deerskin
suits and buffalo moccasins had already come from the far Nebraska
Territory.</p>
<p>The power of the west and the northwest was converging upon his state,
which gave eighty thousand of its men to the Northern cause, while half as
many more went away to the Southern armies, particularly to the one under
the brilliant and daring Albert Sidney Johnston, which hung a sinister
menace before the Northern front. One hundred and twenty thousand troops
sent to the two armies by a state that contained but little more than a
million people! It was said at the time that as Kentucky went, so would go
the fortunes of the Union and in the end it was so.</p>
<p>But these facts and reckonings were not much in Dick's mind just then. He
was thinking of Buell's camp and of the message that he bore. Again and
again he felt of that little inside pocket of his vest to see that it was
there, although he knew that by no chance could he have lost it.</p>
<p>When he was within fifteen miles of Buell's camp a heavy snow began to
fall. But he did not mind it. The powerful horse that had borne him so
well carried him safely on to his destination, and before the sundown of
that day the young messenger was standing before General Don Carlos Buell,
one of the most puzzling characters whom he was to meet in the whole
course of the war. He had found Thomas a silent man, but he found Buell
even more so. He received Dick in an ordinary tent, thanked him as he
saluted and handed him the dispatch, and then read General Thomas'
message.</p>
<p>Dick saw before him a shortish, thickset man, grim of feature, who did not
ask him a word until he had finished the dispatch.</p>
<p>"You know what this contains?" he said, when he came to the end.</p>
<p>"Yes, General Thomas made me memorize it, that I might destroy it if I
were too hard pressed."</p>
<p>"He tells us that Johnston is preparing for some great blow and he gives
the numbers and present location of the hostile forces. Valuable
information for us, if it is used. You have done well, Mr. Mason. To what
force were you attached?"</p>
<p>"A small division of Pennsylvania troops under Major Hertford. They were
to be sent by General Thomas to General Grant at Cairo, Illinois."</p>
<p>"And you would like to join them."</p>
<p>"If you please, sir."</p>
<p>"In view of your services your wish is granted. It is likely that General
Grant will need all the men whom he can get. A detachment leaves here
early in the morning for Elizabethtown, where it takes the train for
Louisville, proceeding thence by water to Cairo. You shall go with these
men. They are commanded by Colonel Winchester. You may go now, Mr. Mason."</p>
<p>He turned back to his papers and Dick, thinking his manner somewhat curt,
left his tent. But he was pleased to hear that the detail was commanded by
Colonel Winchester. Arthur Winchester was a man of forty-one or two who
lived about thirty miles north of Pendleton. He was a great landowner, of
high character and pleasant manners. Dick had met him frequently in his
childhood, and the Colonel received him with much warmth.</p>
<p>"I'm glad to know, Dick," he said familiarly, "that you're going with us.
I'm fond of Pendleton, and I like to have one of the Pendleton boys in my
command. If all that we hear of this man Grant is true, we'll see action,
action hot and continuous."</p>
<p>They rode to Elizabethtown, where Dick was compelled to leave his great
horse for Buell's men, and went by train to Louisville, going thence by
steamer down the Ohio River to Cairo, at its junction with the
Mississippi, where they stood at last in the presence of that general
whose name was beginning to be known in the west.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER IX. TAKING A FORT </h2>
<p>Dick was with Colonel Winchester when he was admitted to the presence of
the general who had already done much to strengthen the Union cause in the
west, and he found him the plainest and simplest of men, under forty,
short in stature, and careless in attire. He thanked Colonel Winchester
for the reinforcement that he had brought him, and then turned with some
curiosity to Dick.</p>
<p>"So you were at the battle of Mill Spring," he said. "It was hot, was it
not?"</p>
<p>"Hot enough for me," replied Dick frankly.</p>
<p>Grant laughed.</p>
<p>"They caught a Tartar in George Thomas," he said, "and I fancy that others
who try to catch him will be glad enough to let him go."</p>
<p>"He is a great man, sir," said Dick with conviction.</p>
<p>Then Grant asked him more questions about the troops and the situation in
Eastern Kentucky, and Dick noticed that all were sharp and penetrating.</p>
<p>"Your former immediate commander, Major Hertford, and some of his men are
due here today," said Grant. "General Thomas, knowing that his own
campaign was over, sent them north to Cincinnati and they have come down
the river to Cairo. When they reach here they will be attached to the
regiment of Colonel Winchester."</p>
<p>Dick was overjoyed. He had formed a strong liking for Major Hertford and
he was quite sure that Warner and Sergeant Whitley would be with him. Once
more they would be reunited, reunited for battle. He could not doubt that
they would go to speedy action as the little town at the junction of the
mighty rivers resounded with preparation.</p>
<p>When Colonel Winchester and the boy had saluted and retired from General
Grant's tent they saw the smoke pouring from the funnels of numerous
steamers in the Mississippi, and they saw thousands of troops encamped in
tents along the shores of both the Ohio and Mississippi. Heavy cannon were
drawn up on the wharves, and ammunition and supplies were being
transferred from hundreds of wagons to the steamers. It was evident to any
one that this expedition, whatever it might be, was to proceed by water.
It was a land of mighty rivers, close together, and a steamer might go
anywhere.</p>
<p>As Dick and Colonel Winchester, on whose staff he would now be, were
watching this active scene, a small steamer, coming down the Ohio, drew in
to a wharf, and a number of soldiers in faded blue disembarked. The boy
uttered a shout of joy.</p>
<p>"What is it, Dick?" asked Colonel Winchester.</p>
<p>"Why, sir, there's my former commander, Colonel Newcomb, and just behind
him is my comrade, Lieutenant George Warner of Vermont, and not far away
is Sergeant Whitley, late of the regular army, one of the best soldiers in
the world. Can I greet them, colonel?"</p>
<p>"Of course."</p>
<p>Dick rushed forward and saluted Colonel Newcomb, who grasped him warmly by
the hand.</p>
<p>"So you got safely through, my lad," he said. "Major Hertford, who came
down the Kentucky with his detachment and joined us at Carrollton at the
mouth of that river, told us of your mission. The major is bringing up the
rear of our column, but here are other friends of yours."</p>
<p>Dick the next moment was wringing the hand of the Vermont boy and was
receiving an equally powerful grip in return.</p>
<p>"I believed that we would meet you here," said Warner, "I calculated that
with your courage, skill and knowledge of the country the chances were at
least eighty per cent in favor of your getting through to Buell. And if
you did get through to Buell I knew that at least ninety per cent of the
circumstances would represent your desire and effort to come here. That
was a net percentage of seventy-two in favor of meeting you here in Cairo,
and the seventy-two per cent has prevailed, as it usually does."</p>
<p>"Nothing is so bad that it can't be worse," said Sergeant Whitley, as he
too gave Dick's hand an iron grasp, "and I knew that when we lost you we'd
be pretty glad to see you again. Here you are safe an' sound, an' here we
are safe an' sound, a most satisfactory condition in war."</p>
<p>"But not likely to remain so long, judging from what we see here," said
Warner. "We hear that this man Grant is a restless sort of a person who
thinks that the way to beat the enemy is just to go in and beat him."</p>
<p>Major Hertford came up at that moment, and he, too, gave Dick a welcome
that warmed his heart. But the boy did not get to remain long with his old
comrades. The Pennsylvania regiment had been much cut down through the
necessity of leaving detachments as guards at various places along the
river, but it was yet enough to make a skeleton and its entity was
preserved, forming a little eastern band among so many westerners.</p>
<p>Dick, at General Grant's order, was transferred permanently to the staff
of Colonel Winchester, and he and the other officers slept that night in a
small building in the outskirts of Cairo. He knew that a great movement
was at hand, but he was becoming so thoroughly inured to danger and
hardship that he slept soundly all through the night.</p>
<p>They heard early the next morning the sound of many trumpets and Colonel
Winchester's regiment formed for embarkation. All the puffing steamers
were now in the Ohio, and Dick saw with them many other vessels which were
not used for carrying soldiers. He saw broad, low boats, with flat
bottoms, their sides sheathed in iron plates. They were floating batteries
moved by powerful engines beneath. Then there were eight huge mortars, a
foot across the muzzle, every one mounted separately upon a strong barge
and towed. Some of the steamers were sheathed in iron also.</p>
<p>Dick's heart throbbed hard when he saw the great equipment. The fighting
ships were under the command of Commodore Foote, an able man, but General
Grant and his lieutenants, General McClernand and General Smith, commanded
the army aboard the transports. On the transport next to them Dick saw the
Pennsylvanians and he waved his hand to his friends who stood on the deck.
They waved back, and Dick felt powerfully the sense of comradeship. It
warmed his heart for them all to be together again, and it was a source of
strength, too.</p>
<p>The steamer that bore his regiment was named the River Queen, and many of
her cabins had been torn away to make more room for the troops who would
sleep in rows on her decks, as thick as buffaloes in a herd. The soldiers,
like all the others whom he saw, were mostly boys. The average could not
be over twenty, and some were not over sixteen. But they had the
adaptability of youth. They had scattered themselves about in easy
positions. One was playing an accordion, and another a fiddle. The
officers did not interrupt them.</p>
<p>As Dick looked over the side at the yellow torrent some one said beside
him:</p>
<p>"This is a whopping big river. You don't see them as deep as this where I
come from."</p>
<p>Dick glanced at the speaker, and saw a lad of about his own age, of medium
height, but powerfully built, with shoulders uncommonly thick. His face
was tanned brown, but his eyes were blue and his natural complexion was
fair. He was clad completely in deerskin, mocassins on his feet and a
raccoon skin cap on his head. Dick had noticed the Nebraska hunters in
such garb, but he was surprised to see this boy dressed in similar fashion
among the Kentuckians.</p>
<p>The youth smiled when he saw Dick's glance of surprise.</p>
<p>"I know I look odd among you," he said, "and you take me for one of the
Nebraska hunters. So I am, but I'm a Kentuckian, too, and I've a right to
a place with you fellows. My name is Frank Pennington. I was born about
forty miles north of Pendleton, but when I was six months old my parents
went out on the plains, where I've hunted buffalo, and where I've fought
Indians, too. But I'm a Kentuckian by right of birth just as you are, and
I asked to be assigned to the regiment raised in the region from which we
came."</p>
<p>"And mighty welcome you are, too," said Dick, offering his hand. "You
belong with us, and we'll stick together on this campaign."</p>
<p>The two youths, one officer and one private, became fast friends in a
moment. Events move swiftly in war. Both now felt the great engines
throbbing faster beneath them, and the flotilla, well into the mouth of
the Ohio, was leaving the Mississippi behind them. But the Ohio here for a
distance is apparently the mightier stream, and they gazed with interest
and a certain awe at the vast yellow sheet enclosed by shores, somber in
the gray garb of winter. It was the beginning of February, and cold winds
swept down from the Illinois prairies. Cairo had been left behind and
there was no sign of human habitation. Some wild fowl, careless of winter,
flew over the stream, dipped toward the water, and then flew away again.</p>
<p>As far as the eye was concerned the wilderness circled about them and
enclosed them. The air was cold and flakes of snow dropped upon the decks
and the river, but were gone in an instant. The skies were an unbroken
sheet of gray. The scene so lonely and desolate contained a majesty that
impressed them all, heightened for these youths by the knowledge that many
of them were going on a campaign from which they would never return.</p>
<p>"Looks as wild as the great plains on which I've hunted with my father,"
said Pennington.</p>
<p>"But we hunt bigger game than buffalo," said Dick.</p>
<p>"Game that is likely to turn and hunt us."</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Do you know where we're going?"</p>
<p>"Not exactly, but I can make a good guess. I know that we've taken on
Tennessee River pilots, and I'm sure that we'll turn into the mouth of
that river at Paducah. I infer that we're to attack Fort Henry, which the
Confederates have erected some distance up the Tennessee to guard that
river."</p>
<p>"Looks likely. Do you know much about the fort?"</p>
<p>"I've heard of it only since I came to Cairo. I know that it stands on
low, marshy ground facing the Tennessee, and that it contains seventeen
big guns. I haven't heard anything about the size of its garrison."</p>
<p>"But we'll have a fight, that's sure," said young Pennington. "I've been
in battle only once—at Columbus—but the Johnny Rebs don't give
up forts in a hurry."</p>
<p>"There's another fort, a much bigger one, named Donelson, on the
Cumberland," said Dick. "Both the forts are in Tennessee, but as the two
rivers run parallel here in the western parts of the two states, Fort
Donelson and Fort Henry are not far apart. I risk a guess that we attack
both."</p>
<p>"You don't risk much. I tell you, Dick, that man Grant is a holy terror.
He isn't much to look at, but he's a marcher and a fighter. We fellows in
the ranks soon learn what kind of a man is over us. I suppose it's like
the horse feeling through the bit the temper of his rider. President
Lincoln has stationed General Halleck at St. Louis with general command
here in the West. General Halleck thinks that General Grant is a meek
subordinate without ambition, and will always be sending back to him for
instructions, which is just what General Halleck likes, but we in the
ranks have learned to know our Grant better."</p>
<p>Dick's eyes glistened.</p>
<p>"So you think, then," he said, "that General Grant will push this campaign
home, and that he'll soon be where he can't get instructions from General
Halleck?"</p>
<p>"Looks that way to a man up a tree," said Pennington slowly, and solemnly
winking his left eye.</p>
<p>They were officer and private, but they were only lads together, and they
talked freely with each other. Dick, after a while, returned to his
commanding officer, Colonel Winchester, but there was little to do, and he
sat on the deck with him, looking out over the fleet, the transports, the
floating batteries, the mortar boats, and the iron-clads. He saw that the
North, besides being vastly superior in numbers and resources, was the
supreme master on the water through her equipment and the mechanical skill
of her people. The South had no advantage save the defensive, and the
mighty generals of genius who appeared chiefly on her Virginia line.</p>
<p>Dick had inherited a thoughtful temperament from his famous ancestor, Paul
Cotter, whose learning had appeared almost superhuman to the people of his
time, and he was extremely sensitive to impressions. His mind would
register them with instant truth. As he looked now upon this floating army
he felt that the Union cause must win. On land the Confederates might be
invincible or almost so, but the waters of the rivers and the sea upheld
the Union cause.</p>
<p>The fleet steamed on at an even pace. Foote, the commodore who had
daringly reconnoitered Fort Henry from a single gunboat in the Tennessee,
managed everything with alertness and skill. The transports were in the
center of the stream. The armed and armored vessels kept on the flanks.</p>
<p>The river, a vast yellow sheet, sometimes turning gray under the gray,
wintry skies, seemed alone save for themselves. Not a single canoe or
skiff disturbed its surface. Toward evening the flakes of snow came again,
and the bitter wind blew once more from the Illinois prairies. All the
troops who were not under shelter were wrapped in blankets or overcoats.
Dick and the colonel, with the heavy coats over their uniforms, did not
suffer. Instead, they enjoyed the cold, crisp air, which filled their
lungs and seemed to increase their power.</p>
<p>"When shall we reach the Tennessee?" asked Dick.</p>
<p>"You will probably wake up in the morning to find yourself some distance
up that stream."</p>
<p>"I've never seen the Tennessee."</p>
<p>"Though not the equal of the Ohio, it would be called a giant river in
many countries. The whole fleet, if it wanted to do it, could go up it
hundreds of miles. Why, Dick, these boats can go clear down into Alabama,
into the very heart of the Confederacy, into the very state at the capital
of which Jefferson Davis was inaugurated President of the seceding
states."</p>
<p>"I was thinking of that some time ago," said Dick. "The water is with us."</p>
<p>"Yes, the water is with us, and will stay with us."</p>
<p>They were silent a little while longer and watched the coming of the early
winter twilight over the waters and the lonely land. The sky was so heavy
with clouds that the gray seemed to melt into the brown. The low banks
slipped back into the dark. They saw only the near surface of the river,
the dark hulls of the fleet, occasional showers of sparks from smoke
stacks, and an immense black cloud made by the smoke of the fleet,
trailing behind them far down the river.</p>
<p>"Dick," said Colonel Winchester suddenly, "as you came across Kentucky
from Mill Spring, and passed so near Pendleton it must have been a great
temptation to you to stop and see your mother."</p>
<p>"It was. It was so great that I yielded to it. I was at our home about
midnight for nearly an hour. I hope I did nothing wrong, colonel."</p>
<p>"No, Dick, my boy. Some martinets might find fault with you, but I should
blame you had you not stopped for those few moments. A noble woman, your
mother, Dick. I hope that she is watched over well."</p>
<p>Dick glanced at the colonel, but he could not see his face in the
deepening twilight.</p>
<p>"My uncle, Colonel Kenton, has directed his people to give her help in
case of need," he replied, "but that means physical help against raiders
and guerillas. Otherwise she has sufficient for her support."</p>
<p>"That is well. War is terrible on women. And now, Dick, my lad, we'll get
our supper. This nipping air makes me hungry, and the Northern troops do
not suffer for lack of food."</p>
<p>The officers ate in one of the cabins, and when the supper was finished
deep night had come over the river, but Dick, standing on the deck, heard
the heavy throb of many engines, and he knew that a great army was still
around him, driven on by the will of one man, deep into the country of the
foe.</p>
<p>The decks, every foot of plank it seemed, were already covered with the
sleeping boys, wrapped in their blankets and overcoats. He saw his friend,
the young hunter from Nebraska, lying with his head on his arm, sound
asleep, a smile on his face.</p>
<p>Dick watched until the first darkness thinned somewhat, and the stars came
out. Then he retired to one of the cabins, which he shared with three or
four others, and slept soundly until he was aroused for breakfast. He had
not undressed, and, bathing his face, he went out at once on the deck.
Many of the soldiers were up, there was a hum of talk, and all were
looking curiously at the river up which they were steaming.</p>
<p>They were in the Tennessee, having passed in the night the little town of
Paducah—now an important city—at its mouth. It was not so
broad as the Ohio, but it was broad, nevertheless, and it had the aspect
of great depth. But here, as on the Ohio, they seemed to be steaming
through the wilderness. The banks were densely wooded, and the few houses
that may have been near were hidden by the trees. No human beings appeared
upon the banks.</p>
<p>Dick knew why the men did not come forth to see the ships. The
southwestern part of the state, the old Jackson's Purchase, and the region
immediately adjacent, was almost solidly for the South. They would not
find here that division of sentiment, with the majority inclined to the
North, that prevailed in the higher regions of Kentucky. The country
itself was different. It was low and the waters that came into the
Tennessee flowed more sluggishly.</p>
<p>But Dick was sure that keen eyes were watching the fleet from the
undergrowth, and he had no doubt that every vessel had long since been
counted and that every detail of the fleet had been carried to the
Southern garrisons in the fort.</p>
<p>The cold was as sharp as on the day before, and Dick, like the others,
rejoiced in the hot and abundant breakfast. The boats, an hour or two
later, stopped at a little landing, and many of the lads would gladly have
gone ashore for a few moments, risking possible sharpshooters in the
woods, but not one was allowed to leave the vessels. But Dick's steamer
lay so close to the one carrying the Pennsylvanians that he could talk
across the few intervening feet of water with Warner and Whitley. He also
took the opportunity to introduce his new friend Pennington, of Nebraska.</p>
<p>"Are you the son of John Pennington, who lived for a little while at Fort
Omaha?" asked the sergeant.</p>
<p>"Right you are," replied the young hunter, "I'm his third son."</p>
<p>"Then you're the third son of a brave man. I was in the regular army and
often we helped the pioneers against the Indians. I remember being in one
fight with him against the Sioux on the Platte, and in another against the
Northern Cheyennes in the Jumping Sand Hills."</p>
<p>"Hurrah!" cried Pennington. "I'm sorry I can't jump over a section of the
Tennessee River and shake hands with you."</p>
<p>"We'll have our chance later," said the sergeant. At that moment the fleet
started again, and the boats swung apart. Through Dick's earnest
solicitation young Pennington was taken out of the ranks and attached to
the staff of Colonel Winchester as an orderly. He was well educated,
already a fine campaigner, and beyond a doubt he would prove extremely
useful.</p>
<p>They steamed the entire day without interruption. Now and then the river
narrowed and they ran between high banks. The scenery became romantic and
beautiful, but always wild. The river, deep at any time, was now swollen
fifteen feet more by floods on its upper courses, and the water always
lapped at the base of the forest.</p>
<p>Dick and Pennington, standing side by side, saw the second sun set over
their voyage, and it was as wild and lonely as the first. There was a
yellow river again, and hills covered with a bare forest. Heavy gray
clouds trooped across the sky, and the sun was lost among them before it
sank behind the hills in the west.</p>
<p>Dick and Pennington, wrapped in their blankets and overcoats, slept upon
the deck that night, with scores of others strewed about them. They were
awakened after eleven o'clock by a sputter of rifle shots. Dick sat up in
a daze and heard a bullet hum by his ear. Then he heard a powerful voice
shouting: "Down! Down, all of you! It's only some skirmishers in the
woods!" Then a cannon on one of the armor clads thundered, and a shell
ripped its way through the underbrush on the west bank. Many exclamations
were uttered by the half-awakened lads.</p>
<p>"What is it? Has an army attacked us?"</p>
<p>"Are we before the fort and under fire?"</p>
<p>"Take your foot off me, you big buffalo!"</p>
<p>It was Colonel Winchester who had commanded them to keep down, but Dick, a
staff officer, knew that it did not apply to him. Instead he sprang erect
and assisted the senior officers in compelling the others to lie flat upon
the decks. He saw several flashes of fire in the undergrowth, but he had
logic enough to know that it could only be a small Southern band. Three or
four more shells raked the woods, and then there was no reply.</p>
<p>The boats steamed steadily on. Only one or two of the young soldiers had
been hurt and they but lightly. All rolled themselves again in their
blankets and coats and went back to sleep.</p>
<p>The second awakening was about half way between midnight and dawn.
Something cold was continually dropping on Dick's face and he awoke to
find hundreds of sheeted and silent white forms lying motionless upon the
deck. Snow was falling swiftly out of a dark sky, and the fleet was moving
slowly. In the darkness and stillness the engines throbbed powerfully, and
the night was lighted fitfully by the showers of sparks that gushed now
and then from the smoke stacks.</p>
<p>Dick thought of rising and brushing the snow from his blankets, but he was
so warm inside them that he yawned once or twice and went to sleep again.
When he awoke it was morning again, the snow had ceased and the men were
brushing it from themselves and the decks.</p>
<p>The young soldiers, as they ate breakfast, spoke of the rifle shots that
had been fired at them the night before and, since little damage had been
done, they appreciated the small spice of danger. The wildness and mystery
of their situation appealed to them, too. They were like explorers,
penetrating new regions.</p>
<p>"To most of us it's something like the great plains," said Pennington to
Dick. "There you seldom know what you're coming to; maybe a blizzard,
maybe a buffalo herd, and maybe a band of Indians, and you take a pleasure
in the uncertainty. But I suppose it's not the same to you, this being
your state."</p>
<p>"I don't know much about Western Kentucky," said Dick, "my part lies to
the center and east, but anyway, our work is to be done in Tennessee.
Those two forts, which I'm sure we're after, lie in that state."</p>
<p>"And when do you think we'll reach 'em?"</p>
<p>"Tomorrow, I suppose."</p>
<p>The day passed without any interruption to the advance of the fleet,
although there was occasional firing, but not of a serious nature. Now and
then small bands of Confederate skirmishers sent rifle shots from high
points along the bank toward the fleet, but they did no damage and the
ships steamed steadily on.</p>
<p>The third night out came, and again the young soldiers slept soundly, but
the next morning, soon after breakfast, the whole fleet stopped in the
middle of the river. A thrill of excitement ran through the army when the
news filtered from ship to ship that they were now in Tennessee, and that
Fort Henry, which they were to attack, was just ahead.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, they seemed to be yet in the wilderness. The Tennessee, in
flood, spread its yellow waters through forest and undergrowth, and the
chill gray sky still gave a uniform somber, gray tint to everything.
Bugles blew in the boats, and every soldier began to put himself and his
weapons in order. The command to make a landing had been given, and
Commodore Foote was feeling about for a place.</p>
<p>Dick now realized the enormous advantage of supremacy upon the water. Had
the Confederates possessed armored ships to meet them, the landing of a
great army under fire would be impossible, but now they chose their own
time and went about it unvexed.</p>
<p>A place was found at last, a rude wharf was constructed hastily, and the
fleet disgorged the army, boat by boat. Vast quantities of stores and
heavy cannon were also brought ashore. Despite the cold, Dick and his
comrades perspired all the morning over their labors and were covered with
mud when the camp was finally constructed at some distance back of the
Tennessee, on the high ground beyond the overflow. The transports remained
at anchor, but the fighting boats were to drop down the stream and attack
the fort at noon the next day from the front, while the army assailed it
at the same time from the rear.</p>
<p>The detachment of Pennsylvanians was by the side of Colonel Winchester's
Kentucky regiment, and Colonel Newcomb and his staff messed with Colonel
Winchester and his officers. There was water everywhere, and before they
ate they washed the mud off themselves as best they could.</p>
<p>"I suppose," said Warner, "that seventy per cent of our work henceforth
will be marching through the mud, and thirty per cent of it will be
fighting the rebels in Fort Henry. I hear that we're not to attack until
tomorrow, so I mean to sleep on top of a cannon tonight, lest I sink out
of sight in the mud while I'm asleep."</p>
<p>"There's some pleasure," said Pennington, "in knowing that we won't die of
thirst. You could hardly call this a parched and burning desert."</p>
<p>But as they worked all the remainder of the day on the construction of the
camp, they did not care where they slept. When their work was over they
simply dropped where they stood and slumbered soundly until morning.</p>
<p>The day opened with a mixture of rain, snow, and fiercely cold winds.
Grant's army moved out of its camp to make the attack, but it was hampered
by the terrible weather and the vast swamp through which its course must
lead. Colonel Winchester, who knew the country better than any other high
officer, was sent ahead on horseback with a small detachment to examine
the way. He naturally took Dick and Pennington, who were on his staff, and
by request, Colonel Newcomb, Major Hertford, Warner and Sergeant Whitley
went also. The whole party numbered about a hundred men.</p>
<p>Dick and the other lads rejoiced over their mission. It was better to ride
ahead than to remain with an army that was pulling itself along slowly
through the mud. The fort itself was only about three miles away, and as
it stood upon low, marshy ground, the backwater from the flooded Tennessee
had almost surrounded it.</p>
<p>Despite their horses, Winchester's men found their own advance slow. They
had to make many a twist and turn to avoid marshes and deep water before
they came within the sight of the fort, and then Dick's watch told him
that it was nearly noon, the time for the concerted attacks of army and
fleet. But it was certain now that the army could not get up until several
hours later, and he wondered what would happen.</p>
<p>They saw the fort very clearly from their position on a low hill, and they
saw that the main Confederate force was gathered on a height outside,
connected with the fort, and as well as he could judge, the mass seemed to
number three or four thousand men.</p>
<p>"What does that mean?" he asked Colonel Winchester.</p>
<p>"I surmise," replied the colonel, "that Tilghman, the Confederate
commander, is afraid his men may be caught in a trap. We know his troops
are merely raw militia, and he has put them where they can retreat in case
of defeat. He, himself, with his trained cannoneers, is inside the fort."</p>
<p>"There can be no attack until tomorrow," said Colonel Newcomb. "It will be
impossible for General Grant's army to get here in time."</p>
<p>"You are certainly right about the army, but I'm not so sure that you're
right about the attack. Look what's coming up the river."</p>
<p>"The fleet!" exclaimed Newcomb in excitement. "As sure as I'm here it's
the fleet, advancing to make the attack alone. Foote is a daring and
energetic man, and the failure of the army to co-operate will not keep him
back."</p>
<p>"Daring and energy, seventy per cent, at least," Dick heard Warner murmur,
but he paid no more attention to his comrades because all his interest was
absorbed in the thrilling spectacle that was about to be unfolded before
them.</p>
<p>The fleet, the armor clads, the floating batteries, and the mortar boats,
were coming straight toward the fort. Colonel Winchester lent Dick his
glasses for a moment, and the boy plainly saw the great, yawning mouths of
the mortars. Then he passed the glasses back to the colonel, but he was
able to see well what followed with the naked eye. The fleet came on,
steady, but yet silent.</p>
<p>There was a sudden roar, a flash of fire and a shell was discharged from
one of the seventeen great guns in the fort. But it passed over the boat
at which it was aimed, and a fountain of water spurted up where it struck.
The other guns replied rapidly, and the fleet, with a terrific roar,
replied. It seemed to Dick that the whole earth shook with the confusion.
Through the smoke and flame he saw the water gushing up in fountains, and
he also saw earth and masonry flying from the fort.</p>
<p>"It's a fine fight," said Colonel Winchester, suppressed excitement
showing in his tone. "By George, the fleet is coming closer. Not a boat
has been sunk! What a tremendous roar those mortars make. Look! One of
their shells has burst directly on the fort!"</p>
<p>The fleet, single handed, was certainly making a determined and powerful
attack upon the fort, which standing upon low, marshy ground, was not much
above the level of the boats, and offered a fair target to their great
guns. Both fort and fleet were now enveloped in a great cloud of smoke,
but it was repeatedly rent asunder by the flashing of the great guns, and,
rapt by the spectacle from which he could not take his eyes, Dick saw that
all the vessels of the fleet were still afloat and were crowding closer
and closer.</p>
<p>The artillery kept up a steady crash now, punctuated by the hollow boom of
the great mortars, which threw huge, curving shells. The smoke floated far
up and down the river, and the Southern troops on the height adjoining the
fort moved back and forth uneasily, uncertain what to do. Finally they
broke and retreated into the forest.</p>
<p>But General Tilghman, the Confederate commander, and the heroic gunners
inside the fort, only sixty in number, made the most heroic resistance.
The armor clad boats were only six hundred yards away now, and were
pouring upon them a perfect storm of fire.</p>
<p>Their intrenchments, placed too low, gave them no advantage over the
vessels. Shells and solid shot rained upon them. Some of the guns were
exploded and others dismounted by this terrible shower, but they did not
yet give up. As fast as they could load and fire the little band sent back
their own fire at the black hulks that showed through the smoke.</p>
<p>"The fleet will win," Dick heard Colonel Winchester murmur. "Look how
magnificently it is handled, and it converges closer and closer. A
fortification located as this one is cannot stand forever a fire like
that."</p>
<p>But the fleet was not escaping unharmed. A shell burst the boiler of the
Essex, killing and wounding twenty-nine men. Nevertheless, the fire of the
boats increased rather than diminished, and Dick saw that Colonel
Winchester's words were bound to come true.</p>
<p>Inside the fort there was only depression. It had been raked through by
shells and solid shot. Most of the devoted band were wounded and scarcely
a gun could be worked. Tilghman, standing amid his dead and wounded, saw
that hope was no longer left, and gave the signal.</p>
<p>Dick and his comrades uttered a great shout as they saw the white flag go
up over Fort Henry, and then the cannonade ceased, like a mighty crash of
thunder that had rolled suddenly across the sky.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER X. BEFORE DONELSON </h2>
<p>Dick was the first in Colonel Winchester's troop to see the white flag
floating over Fort Henry and he uttered a shout of joy.</p>
<p>"Look! look!" he cried, "the fleet has taken the fort!"</p>
<p>"So it has," said Colonel Winchester, "and the army is not here. Now I
wonder what General Grant will say when he learns that Foote has done the
work before he could come."</p>
<p>But Dick believed that General Grant would find no fault, that he would
approve instead. The feeling was already spreading among the soldiers that
this man, whose name was recently so new among them, cared only for
results. He was not one to fight over precedence and to feel petty
jealousies.</p>
<p>The smoke of battle was beginning to clear away. Officers were landing
from the boats to receive the surrender of the fort, and Colonel
Winchester and his troops galloped rapidly back toward the army, which
they soon met, toiling through swamps and even through shallow overflow
toward the Tennessee. The men had been hearing for more than an hour the
steady booming of the cannon, and every face was eager.</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester rode straight toward a short, thickset figure on a
stout bay horse near the head of one of the columns. This man, like all
the others, was plastered with mud, but Colonel Winchester gave him a
salute of deep respect.</p>
<p>"What does the cessation of firing mean, Colonel?" asked General Grant.</p>
<p>"It means that Fort Henry has surrendered to the fleet. The Southern
force, which was drawn up outside, retreated southward, but the fort, its
guns and immediate defenders, are ours."</p>
<p>Dick saw the faintest smile of satisfaction pass over the face of the
General, who said:</p>
<p>"Commodore Foote has done well. Ride back and tell him that the army is
coming up as fast as the nature of the ground will allow."</p>
<p>In a short time the army was in the fort which had been taken so gallantly
by the navy, and Grant, his generals, and Commodore Foote, were in anxious
consultation. Most of the troops were soon camped on the height, where the
Southern force had stood, and there was great exultation, but Dick, who
had now seen so much, knew that the high officers considered this only a
beginning.</p>
<p>Across the narrow stretch of land on the parallel river, the Cumberland,
stood the great fort of Donelson. Henry was a small affair compared with
it. It was likely that men who had been stationed at Henry had retreated
there, and other formidable forces were marching to the same place. The
Confederate commander, Johnston, after the destruction of his eastern wing
at Mill Spring by Thomas, was drawing in his forces and concentrating. The
news of the loss of Fort Henry would cause him to hasten his operations.
He was rapidly falling back from his position at Bowling Green in
Kentucky. Buckner, with his division, was about to march from that place
to join the garrison in Donelson, and Floyd, with another division, would
soon be on the way to the same point. Floyd had been the United States
Secretary of War before secession, and the Union men hated him. It was
said that the great partisan leader, Forrest, with his cavalry, was also
at the fort.</p>
<p>Much of this news was brought in by farmers, Union sympathizers, and Dick
and his comrades, as they sat before the fires at the close of the short
winter day, understood the situation almost as well as the generals.</p>
<p>"Donelson is ninety per cent and Henry only ten per cent," said Warner.
"So long as the Johnnies hold Donelson on the Cumberland, they can build
another fort anywhere they please along the Tennessee, and stop our fleet.
This general of ours has a good notion of the value of time and a swift
blow, and, although I'm neither a prophet nor the son of a prophet, I
predict that he will attack Donelson at once by both land and water."</p>
<p>"How can he attack it by water?" asked Pennington. "The distance between
them is not great, but our ships can't steam overland from the Tennessee
to the Cumberland."</p>
<p>"No, but they can steam back up the Tennessee into the Ohio, thence to the
mouth of the Cumberland, and down the Cumberland to Donelson. It would
require only four or five days, and it will take that long for the army to
invade from the land side."</p>
<p>Dick had his doubts about the ability of the army and the fleet to
co-operate. Accustomed to the energy of the Southern commanders in the
east he did not believe that Grant would be allowed to arrange things as
he chose. But several days passed and they heard nothing from the
Confederates, although Donelson was only about twenty miles away. Johnston
himself, brilliant and sagacious, was not there, nor was his lieutenant,
Beauregard, who had won such a great reputation by his victory at the
first Bull Run.</p>
<p>Dick was just beginning to suspect a truth that later on was to be
confirmed fully in his mind. Fortune had placed the great generals of the
Confederacy, with the exception of Albert Sidney Johnston, in the east,
but it had been the good luck of the North to open in the west with its
best men.</p>
<p>Now he saw the energy of Grant, the short man of rather insignificant
appearance. Boats were sent down the Tennessee to meet any reinforcements
that might be coming, take them back to the Ohio, and thence into the
Cumberland. Fresh supplies of ammunition and food were brought up, and it
became obvious to Dick that the daring commander meant to attack Donelson,
even should its garrison outnumber his own besieging force.</p>
<p>Along a long line from Western Tennessee to Eastern Kentucky there was a
mighty stir. Johnston had perceived the energy and courage of his
opponent. He had shared the deep disappointment of all the Southern
leaders when Kentucky failed to secede, but instead furnished so many
thousands of fine troops to the Union army.</p>
<p>Johnston, too, had noticed with alarm the tremendous outpouring of rugged
men from the states beyond the Ohio and from the far northwest. The
lumbermen who came down in scores of thousands from Michigan, Wisconsin
and Minnesota, were a stalwart crowd. War, save for the bullets and shell,
offered to them no hardships to which they were not used. They had often
worked for days at a time up to their waists in icy water. They had
endured thirty degrees below zero without a murmur, they had breasted
blizzard and cyclone, they could live on anything, and they could sleep
either in forest or on prairie, under the open sky.</p>
<p>It was such men as these, including men of his own state, and men of the
Tennessee mountains, whom Johnston, who had all the qualities of a great
commander, had to face. The forces against him were greatly superior in
number. The eastern end of his line had been crushed already at Mill
Spring, the extreme western end had suffered a severe blow at Fort Henry,
but Jefferson Davis and the Government at Richmond expected everything of
him. And he manfully strove to do everything.</p>
<p>There was a mighty marching of men, some news of which came through to
Dick and his comrades with Grant. Johnston with his main army, the very
flower of the western South, fell back from Bowling Green, in Kentucky,
toward Nashville, the capital of Tennessee. But Buckner, with his
division, was sent from Bowling Green to help defend Donelson against the
threatened attack by Grant, and he arrived there six days after the fall
of Henry. On the way were the troops of Floyd, defeated in West Virginia,
but afterwards sent westward. Floyd was at the head of them. Forrest, the
great cavalry leader, was also there with his horsemen. The fort was
crowded with defenders, but the slack Pillow did not yet send forward
anybody to see what Grant was doing, although he was only twenty miles
away.</p>
<p>All eyes were now turned upon the west. The center of action had suddenly
shifted from Kentucky to Tennessee. The telegraph was young yet, but it
was busy. It carried many varying reports to the cities North and South.
The name of this new man, Grant, spelled trouble. People were beginning to
talk much about him, and already some suspected that there was more in the
back of his head than in those of far better known and far more
pretentious northern generals in the east. None at least could dispute the
fact that he was now the one whom everybody was watching.</p>
<p>But the Southern people, few of whom knew the disparity of numbers, had
the fullest confidence in the brilliant Johnston. He was more than twenty
years older than his antagonist, but his years had brought only experience
and many triumphs, not weakness of either mind or body. At his right hand
was the swarthy and confident Beauregard, great with the prestige of Bull
Run, and Hardee, Bragg, Breckinridge and Polk. And there were many
brilliant colonels, too, foremost among whom was George Kenton.</p>
<p>A tremor passed through the North when it was learned that Grant intended
to plunge into the winter forest, cross the Cumberland, and lay siege to
Donelson. He was going beyond the plans of his superior, Halleck, at St.
Louis. He was too daring, he would lose his army, away down there in the
Confederacy. But others remembered his successes, particularly at Belmont
and Fort Henry. They said that nothing could be won in war without risk,
and they spoke of his daring and decision. They recalled, too, that he was
master upon the waters, that there was no Southern fleet to face his, as
it sailed up the Southern rivers. The telegraph was already announcing
that the gunboats, which had been handled with such skill and courage,
would be in the Cumberland ready to co-operate with Grant when he should
move on Donelson.</p>
<p>Buell was moving also to form another link in the steel chain that was
intended to bind the Confederacy in the west. Here again the mastery of
the rivers was of supreme value to the North. Buell embarked his army on
boats on Green River in the very heart of Kentucky, descended that river
to the Ohio, passing down the latter to Smithland, where the Cumberland,
coming up from the south, entered it, and met another convoy destined for
the huge invasion.</p>
<p>But the first convoy had come, also by boat, from another direction, and
from points far distant. There were fresh regiments of farmers and
pioneers from Iowa, Nebraska, and Minnesota. They were all eager, full of
enthusiasm, anxious to be led against the enemy, and confident of triumph.</p>
<p>Grant and his army, meanwhile, lying in the bleak forest beside the
Tennessee, knew little of what was being said of them in the great world
without. All their thoughts were of Donelson, across there on the other
river, and the men asked to be led against it. Inured to the hardships of
border life, there was little sickness among them, despite the winter and
the overflow of the flooded streams. They gathered the dead wood that
littered the forest, built numerous fires, and waited as patiently as they
could for the word to march.</p>
<p>The Pennsylvanians were still camped with the Kentucky regiment to which
Dick now belonged, and the fifth evening after the capture of Henry he and
his friends sat by one of the big fires.</p>
<p>"We'll advance either tomorrow or the next day," said Warner. "The chances
are at least ninety per cent in favor of my statement. What do you say,
sergeant?"</p>
<p>"I'd raise the ninety per cent to one hundred," replied Whitley. "We are
all ready an' as you've observed, gentlemen, General Grant is a man who
acts."</p>
<p>"The Johnnies evidently expect us," said Pennington. "Our scouts have seen
their cavalry in the woods watching us, but only in the last day or two.
It's strange that they didn't begin it earlier."</p>
<p>"They say that General Pillow, who commands them, isn't of much force,"
said Dick.</p>
<p>"Well, it looks like it," said Warner, "but from what we hear he'll have
quite an army at Donelson. General Grant will have his work cut out for
him. The Johnnies, besides having their fort, can go into battle with just
about as many men as we have, unless he waits for reinforcements, which I
am quite certain he isn't going to do."</p>
<p>That evening several bags of mail were brought to the camp on a small
steamer, which had come on three rivers, the Green, the Ohio, and the
Tennessee, and Dick, to his great surprise and delight, received a letter
from his mother. He had written several letters himself, but he had no way
of knowing until now that any of them had reached her. Only one had
succeeded in getting through, and that had been written from Cairo.</p>
<p>"My dearest son," she wrote, "I am full of joy to know that you have
reached Cairo in safety and in health, though I dread the great expedition
upon which you say you are going. I hear in Pendleton many reports about
General Grant. They say that he does not spare his men. The Southern
sympathizers here say that he is pitiless and cares not how many thousands
of his own soldiers he may sacrifice, if he only gains his aim. But of
that I know not. I know it is a characteristic of our poor human nature to
absolve one's own side and to accuse those on the other side.</p>
<p>"I was in Pendleton this morning, and the reports are thick; thick from
both Northerners and Southerners, that the armies are moving forward to a
great battle. They have all marched south of us, and I do not know either
whether these reports are true or false, though I fear that they are true.
Your uncle, Colonel Kenton, is with General Johnston, and I hear is one of
his most trusted officers. Colonel Kenton is a good man, and it would be
one of the terrible tragedies of war if you and he were to meet on the
field in this great battle, which so many hear is coming.</p>
<p>"I am very glad that you are now in the regiment of Colonel Winchester,
and that you are an aide on his staff. It is best to be with one's own
people. I have known Colonel Winchester a long time, and he has all the
qualities that make a man, brave and gentle. I hope that you and he will
become the best of friends."</p>
<p>There was much more in the letter, but it was only the little details that
concern mother and son. Dick was sitting by the fire when he read it. Then
he read it a second time and a third time, folded it very carefully and
put it in the pocket in which he had carried the dispatch from General
Thomas.</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester was sitting near him, and Dick noticed again what a
fine, trim man he was. Although a little over forty, his figure was still
slender, and he had an abundant head of thick, vital hair. His whole
effect was that of youth. His glance met Dick's and he smiled.</p>
<p>"A letter from home?" he said.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir, from mother. She writes to me that she is glad I am in your
command. She speaks very highly of you, sir, and my mother is a woman of
uncommon penetration."</p>
<p>A faint red tinted the tanned cheeks of the colonel. Dick thought it was
merely the reflection of the fire.</p>
<p>"Would you care for me to read what she says about you?" asked Dick.</p>
<p>"If you don't mind."</p>
<p>Dick drew out the letter again and read the paragraph.</p>
<p>"Your mother is a very fine woman," said Colonel Winchester.</p>
<p>"You're right, sir," said Dick with enthusiasm.</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester said no more, but rose presently and went to the tent
of General Grant, where a conference of officers was to be held. Dick
remained by the fire, where Warner and Pennington soon joined him.</p>
<p>"Our scouts have exchanged some shots with the enemy," said Pennington,
"and they have taken one or two prisoners, bold fellows who say they're
going to lick the spots off us. They say they have a big army at Donelson,
and they're afraid of nothing except that Grant won't come on. Between
ourselves, the Johnny Rebs are getting ready for us."</p>
<p>It was Dick's opinion, too, that the Southern troops were making great
preparations to meet them, but, like the others, he was feeling the strong
hand on the reins. He did not notice here the doubt and uncertainty that
had reigned at Washington before the advance on Bull Run; in Grant's army
were order and precision, and with perfect confidence in his commander he
rolled himself in his blankets that night and went to sleep.</p>
<p>The order to advance did not come the next morning, and Dick, for a few
moments, thought it might not come at all. The reports from Donelson were
of a formidable nature, and Grant's own army was not provided for a winter
campaign. It had few wagons for food and ammunition, and some of the
regiments from the northwest, cherishing the delusion that winter in
Tennessee was not cold, were not provided with warm clothing and
sufficient blankets.</p>
<p>But Warner abated his confidence not one jot.</p>
<p>"The chance of our moving against Donelson is one hundred per cent," he
said. "I passed the General today and his lips were shut tight together,
which means a resolve to do at all costs what one has intended to do. I
still admit that the prophets and the sons of prophets live no more, but I
predict with absolute certainty that we will move in the morning."</p>
<p>The Vermonter's faith was justified. The army, being put in thorough trim,
started at dawn upon its momentous march. Wintry fogs were rising from the
great river and the submerged lowlands, and the air was full of raw,
penetrating chill. An abundant breakfast was served to everybody, and then
with warmth and courage the lads of the west and northwest marched forward
with eagerness to an undertaking which they knew would be far greater than
the capture of Fort Henry.</p>
<p>Dick and Pennington, as staff officers, were mounted, although the horses
that had been furnished to them were not much more than ponies. Warner
rode with Colonel Newcomb and Major Hertford, who led the slender
Pennsylvania detachment beside the Kentucky regiment. Thus the army
emerged from its camp and began the march toward the Cumberland. It was
now about fifteen thousand strong, but it expected reinforcements, and its
fleet held the command of the rivers.</p>
<p>As they entered the leafless forest Dick saw ahead of them, perhaps a
quarter of a mile away, a numerous band of horsemen wearing faded
Confederate gray. They were the cavalry of Forrest, but they were too few
to stay the Union advances. There was a scattered firing of rifles, but
the heavy brigades of Grant moved steadily on, and pushed them out of the
way. Forrest could do no more than gallop back to the fort with his men
and report that the enemy was coming at last.</p>
<p>"Those fellows ride well," said Pennington, as the last of Forrest's
cavalrymen passed out of sight, "and if we were not in such strong force I
fancy they would sting us pretty hard."</p>
<p>"We'll see more of 'em," said Dick. "This is the enemy's country, and we
needn't think that we're going to march as easy as you please from one
victory to another."</p>
<p>"Maybe not," said Pennington, "but I'll be glad when we get Donelson. I've
been hearing so much about that place that I'm growing real curious."</p>
<p>Their march across the woods suffered no further interruption. Sometimes
they saw Confederate cavalrymen at a distance in front, but they did not
try to impede Grant's advance. When the sun was well down in the west, the
vanguard of the army came within sight of the fortress that stood by the
Cumberland. At that very moment the troops under Floyd, just arrived, were
crossing the river to join the garrison in the fortress.</p>
<p>Dick looked upon extensive fortifications, a large fort, a redoubt upon
slightly higher ground, other batteries at the water's edge, powerful
batteries upon a semi-circular hill which could command the river for a
long distance, and around all of these extensive works, several miles in
length, including a deep creek on the north. Inside the works was the
little town of Dover, and they were defended by fifteen thousand men, as
many as Grant had without.</p>
<p>When Dick beheld this formidable position bristling with cannon, rifles
and bayonets, his heart sank within him. How could one army defeat
another, as numerous as itself, inside powerful intrenchments, and in its
own country? Nor could they prevent Southern reinforcements from reaching
the other side of the river and crossing to the fort under the shelter of
its numerous great guns. He was yet to learn the truth, or at least the
partial truth, of Napoleon's famous saying, that in war an army is
nothing, a man is everything. The army to which he belonged was led by a
man of clear vision and undaunted resolution. The chief commander inside
the fort had neither, and his men were shaken already by the news of Fort
Henry, exaggerated in the telling.</p>
<p>But after the first sinking of the heart Dick felt an extraordinary
thrill. Sensitive and imaginative, he was conscious even at the moment
that he looked in the face of mighty events. The things of the minute did
not always appeal to him with the greatest force. He had, instead, the
foreseeing mind, and the meaning of that vast panorama of fortress, hills,
river and forest did not escape him.</p>
<p>"Well, Dick, what do you think of it?" asked Pennington.</p>
<p>"We've got our work cut out for us, and if I didn't know General Grant I'd
say that we're engaged in a mighty rash undertaking."</p>
<p>"Just what I'd say, also. And we need that fleet bad, too, Dick. I'd like
to see the smoke of its funnels as the boats come steaming up the
Cumberland."</p>
<p>Dick knew that the fleet was needed, not alone for encouragement and
fighting help, but to supply an even greater want. Grant's army was short
of both food and ammunition. The afternoon had turned warm, and many of
the northwestern lads, still clinging to their illusions about the climate
of the lower Mississippi Valley, had dropped their blankets. Now, with the
setting sun, the raw, penetrating chill was coming back, and they shivered
in every bone.</p>
<p>But the Union army, in spite of everything, gradually spread out and
enfolded the whole fortress, save on the northern side where Hickman Creek
flowed, deep and impassable. The general's own headquarters were due west
of Fort Donelson, and Colonel Winchester's Kentucky regiment was stationed
close by.</p>
<p>Low campfires burned along the long line of the Northern army, and Dick
and others who sat beside him saw many lights inside the great enclosure
held by the South. An occasional report was heard, but it was only the
pickets exchanging shots at long range and without hurt. Dick and
Pennington wrapped their blankets about them and sat with their backs
against a log, ready for any command from Colonel Winchester. Now and then
they were sent with orders, because there was much moving to and fro, the
placing of men in position and the bringing up of cannon.</p>
<p>Thus the night moved slowly on, raw, cold and dark. Mists and fogs rose
from the Cumberland as they had risen from the Tennessee. This, too, was a
great river. Dick was glad when the last of his errands was done, and he
could come back to the fire, and rest his back once more against the log.
The fire was only a bed of coals now, but they gave out much grateful
heat.</p>
<p>Dick could see General Grant's tent from where he sat. Officers of high
rank were still entering it or leaving it, and he was quite sure that they
were planning an attack on the morrow.</p>
<p>But the idea of an assault did not greatly move him now. He was too tired
and sleepy to have more than a vague impression of anything. He saw the
coals glowing before him, and then he did not see them. He had gone sound
asleep in an instant.</p>
<p>The next morning was gray and troubled, with heavy clouds, rolling across
the sky. The rising sun was blurred by them, and as the men ate their
breakfasts some of the great guns from the fort began to fire at the
presumptuous besieger. The heavy reports rolled sullenly over the desolate
forests, but the Northern cannon did not yet reply. The Southern fire was
doing no damage. It was merely a threat, a menace to those who should dare
the assault.</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester signalled to Dick and Pennington, and mounting their
horses they rode with him to the crest of the highest adjacent hill.
Presently General Grant came and with him were the generals, McClernand
and Smith. Colonel Newcomb also arrived, attended by Warner. The high
officers examined the fort a long time through their glasses, but Dick
noticed that at times they watched the river. He knew they were looking
there for the black plumes of smoke which should mark the coming of the
steamers out of the Ohio.</p>
<p>But nothing showed on the surface of the Cumberland. The river, dark gray
under lowering clouds, flowed placidly on, washing the base of Fort
Donelson. At intervals of a minute or two there was a flash of fire from
the fort, and the menacing boom of the cannon rolled through the desolate
forest. Now and then, a gun from one of the Northern batteries replied.
But it was as yet a desultory battle, with much noise and little danger,
merely a threat of what was to come.</p>
<p>After a while Colonel Winchester wrote something on a slip of paper:</p>
<p>"Take this to our lieutenant-colonel," he said. "It is an order for the
regiment to hold itself in complete readiness, although no action may come
for some time. Then return here at once."</p>
<p>Dick rode back swiftly, but on his way he suddenly bent over his saddle
bow. A shell from the fort screamed over his head in such a menacing
fashion that it seemed to be only a few inches from him. But it passed on,
leaving him unharmed, and burst three hundred yards away.</p>
<p>Dick instantly straightened up in the saddle, looked around, breathed a
sigh of relief when he saw that no one had noticed his sudden bow, and
galloped on with the order. The lieutenant-colonel read it and nodded.
Then Dick rode back to the hill where the generals were yet watching in
vain for those black plumes of smoke on the Cumberland.</p>
<p>They left the hill at last and the generals went to their brigades.
General Grant was smoking a cigar and his face was impassive.</p>
<p>"We're to open soon with the artillery," said Colonel Winchester to Dick.
"General Grant means to push things."</p>
<p>The desultory firing, those warning guns, ceased entirely, and for a while
both armies stood in almost complete silence. Then a Northern battery on
the right opened with a tremendous crash and the battle for Donelson had
begun. A Southern battery replied at once and the firing spread along the
whole vast curve. Shells and solid shot whistled through the air, but the
troops back of the guns crouched in hasty entrenchments, and waited.</p>
<p>The great artillery combat went on for some time. To many of the lads on
either side it seemed for hours. Then the guns on the Northern side ceased
suddenly, bugles sounded, and the regiments, drawn up in line, rushed at
the outer fortifications.</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester and his staff had dismounted, but Dick and Pennington,
keeping by the colonel's side, drew their swords and rushed on shouting.
The Southerners inside the fort fired their cannon as fast as they could
now, and at closer range opened with the rifles. Dick heard once again
that terrible shrieking of metal so close to his ears, and then he heard,
too, cries of pain. Many of the young soldiers behind him were falling.</p>
<p>The fire now grew so hot and deadly that the Union regiments were forced
to give ground. It was evident that they could not carry the formidable
earthworks, but on the right, where Dick's regiment charged, and just
above the little town of Dover, they pressed in far enough to secure some
hills that protected them from the fire of the enemy, and from which
Southern cannon and rifles could not drive them. Then, at the order of
Grant, his troops withdrew elsewhere and the battle of the day ceased. But
on the low hills above Dover, which they had taken, the Union regiments
held their ground, and from their position the Northern cannon could
threaten the interior of the Southern lines.</p>
<p>Dick's regiment stood here, and beside them were the few companies of
Pennsylvanians so far from their native state. Neither Dick nor Pennington
was wounded. Warner had a bandaged arm, but the wound was so slight that
it would not incapacitate him. The officers were unhurt.</p>
<p>"They've driven our army back," said Pennington, "and it was not so hard
for them to do it either. How can we ever defeat an army as large as our
own inside powerful works?"</p>
<p>But Dick was learning fast and he had a keen eye.</p>
<p>"We have not failed utterly," he said. "Don't you see that we have here a
projection into the enemy's lines, and if those reinforcements come it
will be thrust further and further? I tell you that general of ours is a
bull dog. He will never let go."</p>
<p>Yet there was little but gloom in the Union camp. The short winter day,
somber and heavy with clouds, was drawing to a close. The field upon which
the assault had taken place was within the sweep of the Southern guns.
Some of the Northern wounded had crawled away or had been carried to their
own camp, but others and the numerous dead still lay upon the ground.</p>
<p>The cold increased. The Southern winter is subject to violent changes. The
clouds which had floated up without ceasing were massing heavily. Now the
young troops regretted bitterly the blankets that they had dropped on the
way or left at Fort Henry. Detachments were sent back to regain as many as
possible, but long before they could return a sharp wind with an edge of
ice sprang up, the clouds opened and great flakes poured down, driven into
the eyes of the soldiers by the wind.</p>
<p>The situation was enough to cause the stoutest heart to weaken, but the
unflinching Grant held on. The Confederate army within the works was
sheltered at least in part, but his own, outside, and with the desolate
forest rimming it around, lay exposed fully to the storm. Dick, at
intervals, saw the short, thickset figure of the commander passing among
the men, and giving them orders or encouragement. Once he saw his face
clearly. The lips were pressed tightly together, and the whole countenance
expressed the grimmest determination. Dick was confirmed anew in his
belief that the chief would never turn back.</p>
<p>The spectacle, nevertheless, was appalling. The snow drove harder and
harder. It was not merely a passing shower of flakes. It was a storm. The
snow soon lay upon the ground an inch deep, then three inches, then four
and still it gained. Through the darkness and the storm the Southern
cannon crashed at intervals, sending shells at random into the Union camp
or over it. There was full need then for the indomitable spirit of Grant
and those around him to encourage anew the thousands of boys who had so
lately left the farms or the lumber yards.</p>
<p>Dick and his comrades, careless of the risk, searched over the battlefield
for the wounded who were yet there. They carried lanterns, but the
darkness was so great and the snow drove so hard and lay so deep that they
knew many would never be found.</p>
<p>Back beyond the range of the fort's cannon men were building fires with
what wood they could secure from the forest. All the tents they had were
set up, and the men tried to cook food and make coffee, in order that some
degree of warmth and cheer might be provided for the army beset so sorely.</p>
<p>The snow, after a while, slackening somewhat, was succeeded by cold much
greater than ever. The shivering men bent over the fires and lamented anew
the discarded blankets. Dick did not sleep an instant that terrible night.
He could not. He, Pennington, and Warner, relieved from staff service,
worked all through the cold and darkness, helping the wounded and seeking
wood for the fires. And with them always was the wise Sergeant Whitley, to
whom, although inferior in rank, they turned often and willingly for
guidance and advice.</p>
<p>"It's an awful situation," said Pennington; "I knew that war would furnish
horrors, but I didn't expect anything like this."</p>
<p>"But General Grant will never retreat," said Dick. "I feel it in every
bone of me. I've seen his face tonight."</p>
<p>"No, he won't," said the experienced sergeant, "because he's making every
preparation to stay. An' remember, Mr. Pennington, that while this is
pretty bad, worse can happen. Remember, too, that while we can stand this,
we can also stand whatever worse may come. It's goin' to be a fight to a
finish."</p>
<p>Far in the night the occasional guns from the Southern fortress ceased.
The snow was falling no longer, but it lay very deep on the ground, and
the cold was at its height. Along a line of miles the fires burned and the
men crowded about them. But Dick, who had been working on the snowy plain
that was the battlefield, and who had heard many moans there, now heard
none. All who lay in that space were sleeping the common sleep of death,
their bodies frozen stiff and hard under the snow.</p>
<p>Dick, sitting by one of the fires, saw the cold dawn come, and in those
chill hours of nervous exhaustion he lost hope for a moment or two. How
could anybody, no matter how resolute, maintain a siege without ammunition
and without food. But he spoke cheerfully to Pennington and Warner, who
had slept a little and who were just awakening.</p>
<p>The pale and wintry sun showed the defiant Stars and Bars floating over
Donelson, and Dick from his hill could see men moving inside the
earthworks. Certainly the Southern flags had a right to wave defiance at
the besieging army, which was now slowly and painfully rising from the
snow, and lighting the fires anew.</p>
<p>"Well, what's the program today, Dick?" asked Pennington.</p>
<p>"I don't know, but it's quite certain that we won't attempt another
assault. It's hopeless."</p>
<p>"That's true," said Warner, who was standing by, "but we—hark, what
was that?"</p>
<p>The boom of a cannon echoed over the fort and forest, and then another and
another. To the northward they saw thin black spires of smoke under the
horizon.</p>
<p>"It's the fleet! It's the fleet!" cried Warner joyously, "coming up the
Cumberland to our help! Oh, you men of Donelson, we're around you now, and
you'll never shake us off!"</p>
<p>Again came the crash of great guns from the fleet, and the crash of the
Southern water batteries replying.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XI. THE SOUTHERN ATTACK </h2>
<p>The excitement in the Union army was intense and joyous. The cheers rolled
like volleys among these farmer lads of the West. Dick, Warner and
Pennington stood up and shouted with the rest.</p>
<p>"I should judge that our chances of success have increased at least fifty,
yes sixty, per cent," said Warner. "As we have remarked before, this
control of the water is a mighty thing. We fight the Johnnie Rebs for the
land, but we have the water already. Look at those gunboats, will you?
Aren't they the sauciest little things you ever saw?"</p>
<p>Once more the navy was showing, as it has always shown throughout its
career, its daring and brilliant qualities. Foote, the commodore, although
he had had no time to repair his four small fighting boats after the
encounter with Fort Henry, steamed straight up the river and engaged the
concentric fire from the great guns of the Southern batteries, which
opened upon him with a tremendous crash. The boys watched the duel with
amazement. They did not believe that small vessels could live under such
fire, but live they did. Great columns of smoke floated over them and hid
them at times from the watchers, but when the smoke lifted a little or was
split apart by the shattering fire of the guns the black hulls of the
gunboats always reappeared, and now they were not more than three or four
hundred yards from Donelson.</p>
<p>"I take it that this is a coverin' fire," said Sergeant Whitley, who stood
by. "Four little vessels could not expect to reduce such a powerful
fortress as Donelson. It's not Fort Henry that they're fightin' now."</p>
<p>"The chances are at least ninety-five per cent in favor of your
supposition," said Warner.</p>
<p>The sergeant's theory, in fact, was absolutely correct. Further down the
river the transports were unloading regiment after regiment of fresh
troops, and vast supplies of ammunition and provisions. Soon five thousand
men were formed in line and marched to Grant's relief, while long lines of
wagons brought up the stores so badly needed. Now the stern and silent
general was able to make the investment complete, but the fiery little
fleet did not cease to push the attack.</p>
<p>There was a time when it seemed that the gunboats would be able to pass
the fortress and rake it from a point up the river. Many of the guns in
the water batteries had been silenced, but the final achievement was too
great for so small a force. The rudder of one of Foote's gunboats was shot
away, the wheel of another soon went the same way, and both drifted
helplessly down the stream. The other two then retreated, and the fire of
both fort and fleet ceased.</p>
<p>But there was joy in the Union camp. The soldiers had an abundance of food
now, and soon the long ring of fires showed that they were preparing it.
Their forces had been increased a third, and there was a fresh outburst of
courage and vigor. But Grant ordered no more attacks at present. After the
men had eaten and rested a little, picks and spades were swung along a
line miles in length. He was fortifying his own position, and it was
evident to his men that he meant to stay there until he won or was
destroyed.</p>
<p>Dick was conscious once more of a sanguine thrill. Like the others, he
felt the strong hand over him, and the certainty that they were led with
judgment and decision made him believe that all things were possible. Yet
the work of fortifying continued but a little while. The men were
exhausted by cold and fatigue, and were compelled to lay down their tools.
The fires were built anew, and they hovered about them for shelter and
rest.</p>
<p>The wan twilight showed the close of the wintry day, and with the
increasing chill a part of Dick's sanguine feeling departed. The gallant
little fleet, although it had brought fresh men and supplies and had
protected their landing, had been driven back. The investment of the fort
was complete only on one side of the river, and steamers coming up the
Cumberland from Nashville might yet take off the garrison in safety. Then
the work of the silent general, all their hardship and fighting would be
at least in part a failure. The Vermont youth, who seemed to be always of
the same temper, neither very high nor very low, noticed his change of
expression.</p>
<p>"Don't let your hopes decrease, Dick," he said. "Remember that at least
twenty per cent of the decline is due to the darkness and inaction. In the
morning, when the light comes once more, and we're up and doing again,
you'll get back all the twenty per cent you're losing now."</p>
<p>"It's not to be all inaction with you boys tonight, even," said Colonel
Winchester, who overheard his closing words. "I want you three to go with
me on a tour of inspection or rather scouting duty. It may please you to
know that it is the special wish of General Grant. Aware that I had some
knowledge of the country, he has detailed me for the duty, and I choose
you as my assistants. I'm sure that the skill and danger such a task
requires will make you all the more eager for it."</p>
<p>The three youths responded quickly and with zeal, and Sergeant Whitley,
when he was chosen, too, nodded in silent gratitude. The night was dark,
overcast with clouds, and in an hour Colonel Winchester with his four
departed upon his perilous mission. He was to secure information in regard
to the Southern army, and to do that they were to go very near the
Southern lines, if not actually inside them. Such an attempt would be
hazardous in the extreme in the face of a vigilant watch; but on the other
hand they would be aided by the fact that both North and South were of
like blood and language. Even more, many of those in the opposing camps
came from the same localities, and often were of kin.</p>
<p>Dick's regiment had been stationed at the southern end of the line, near
the little town of Dover, but they now advanced northward and westward,
marching for a long time along their inner line. It was Colonel
Winchester's intention to reach Hickman Creek, which formed their northern
barrier, creep in the fringe of bushes on its banks, and then approach the
fort.</p>
<p>When they reached the desired point the night was well advanced, and yet
dark with the somber clouds hanging over river and fort and field of
battle. The wind blew out of the northwest, sharp and intensely cold. The
snow crunched under their feet. But the four had wrapped themselves in
heavy overcoats, and they were so engrossed in their mission that neither
wind nor snow was anything to them.</p>
<p>They passed along the bank of the creek, keeping well within the shadow of
the bushes, leaving behind them the last outpost of the Union army, and
then slowly drew near to the fort. They saw before them many lights
burning in the darkness, and at last they discerned dim figures walking
back and forth. Dick knew that these were the Southern sentinels. The four
went a little nearer, and then crouched down in the snow among some low
bushes.</p>
<p>Now they saw the Southern sentinels more distinctly. Some, in fact, were
silhouetted sharply as they passed before the Southern fires. Northern
sharpshooters could have crept up and picked off many of them, as the
Southern sharpshooters in turn might have served many of the Northern
watchers, but in this mighty war there was little of such useless and
merciless enterprise. The men soon ceased to have personal animosity, and,
in the nights between the great battles, when the armies yet lay face to
face, the hostile pickets would often exchange gossip and tobacco. Even in
a conflict waged so long and with such desperation the essential
kindliness of human nature would assert itself.</p>
<p>The four, as they skirted the Southern line, noticed no signs of further
preparations by the Confederates. No men were throwing up earthworks or
digging trenches. As well as they could surmise, the garrison, like the
besieging army, was seeking shelter and rest, and from this fact the keen
mind of Colonel Arthur Winchester divined that the defense was confused
and headless.</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester knew most of the leaders within Donelson. He knew that
Pillow was not of a strong and decided nature. Nor was Floyd, who would
rank first, of great military capacity. Buckner had talent and he had
served gallantly in the Mexican War, but he could not prevail over the
others. The fame of Forrest, the Tennessee mountaineer, was already
spreading, but a cavalryman could do little for the defense of a fort
besieged by twenty thousand well equipped men, led by a general of
unexcelled resolution.</p>
<p>All that Colonel Winchester surmised was true. Inside the fort confusion
and doubt reigned. The fleeing garrison from Fort Henry had brought
exaggerated reports of Grant's army. Very few of the thousands of young
troops had ever been in battle before. They, too, suffered though in a
less degree from cold and fatigue, but many were wounded. Pillow and
Floyd, who had just arrived with his troops, talked of one thing and then
another. Floyd, who might have sent word to his valiant and able chief,
Johnston, did not take the trouble or forgot to inform him of his
position. Buckner wanted to attack Grant the next morning with the full
Southern strength, and a comrade of his on old battlefields, Colonel
George Kenton, seconded him ably. The black-bearded Forrest strode back
and forth, striking the tops of his riding boots with a small riding whip,
and saying ungrammatically, but tersely and emphatically:</p>
<p>"We mustn't stay here like hogs in a pen. We must git at 'em with all our
men afore they can git at us."</p>
<p>The illiterate mountaineer and stock driver had evolved exactly the same
principle of war that Napoleon used.</p>
<p>But Colonel Winchester and his comrades could only guess at what was going
on in Donelson, and a guess always remains to be proved. So they must
continue their perilous quest. Once they were hailed by a Southern
sentinel, but Colonel Winchester replied promptly that they belonged to
Buckner's Kentuckians and had been sent out to examine the Union camp. He
passed it off with such boldness and decision that they were gone before
the picket had time to express a doubt.</p>
<p>But as they came toward the center of the line, and drew nearer to the
fort itself, they met another picket, who was either more watchful or more
acute. He hailed them at a range of forty or fifty yards, and when Colonel
Winchester made the same reply he ordered them to halt and give the
countersign. When no answer came he fired instantly at the tall figure of
Colonel Winchester and uttered a loud cry of, "Yankees!"</p>
<p>Luckily the dim light was tricky and his bullet merely clipped the
colonel's hair. But there was nothing for the four to do now save to run
with all their undignified might for their own camp.</p>
<p>"Come on, lads!" shouted Colonel Winchester. "Our scouting is over for the
time!"</p>
<p>The region behind them contained patches of scrub oaks and bushes, and
with their aid and that of the darkness, it was not difficult to escape;
but Dick, while running just behind the others, stepped in a hole and
fell. The snow and the dead leaves hid the sound of his fall and the
others did not notice it. As he looked up he saw their dim forms
disappearing among the bushes. He rose to his own feet, but uttered a
little cry as a ligament in his ankle sent a warning throb of pain through
his body.</p>
<p>It was not a wrench, only a bruise, and as he stretched his ankle a few
times the soreness went away. But the last sound made by the retreating
footsteps of his comrades had died, and their place had been taken by
those of his pursuers, who were now drawing very near.</p>
<p>Dick had no intention of being captured, and, turning off at a right
angle, he dropped into a gully which he encountered among some bushes. The
gully was about four feet deep and half full of snow. Dick threw himself
full length on his side, and sank down in the snow until he was nearly
covered. There he lay panting hard for a few moments, but quite sure that
he was safe from discovery. Only a long and most minute search would be
likely to reveal the dark line in the snow beneath the overhanging bushes.</p>
<p>Dick's heart presently resumed its normal beat, and then he heard the
sound of voices and footsteps. Some one said:</p>
<p>"They went this way, sir, but they were running pretty fast."</p>
<p>"They'd good cause to run," said a brusque voice. "You'd a done it, too,
if you'd expected to have the bullets of a whole army barkin' at your
heels."</p>
<p>The footsteps came nearer, crunching on the snow, which lay deep there
among the bushes. They could not be more than a dozen feet away, but Dick
quivered only a little. Buried as he was and with the hanging bushes over
him he was still confident that no one could see him. He raised himself
the least bit, and looking through the boughs, saw a tanned and dark face
under the broad brim of a Confederate hat. Just then some one said:</p>
<p>"We might have trailed 'em, general, but the snow an' the earth have
already been tramped all up by the army."</p>
<p>"They're not wuth huntin' long anyway," said the same brusque voice. "A
few Yankees prowlin' about in the night can't do us much harm. It's hard
fightin' that'll settle our quarrel."</p>
<p>General Forrest came a little closer and Dick, from his concealment in the
snow, surmising his identity, saw him clearly, although himself unseen. He
was fascinated by the stern, dark countenance. The face of the unlettered
mountaineer was cut sharp and clear, and he had the look of one who knew
and commanded. In war he was a natural leader of men, and he had already
assumed the position.</p>
<p>"Don't you agree with me, colonel?" he said over his shoulder to some one.</p>
<p>"I think you're right as usual, General Forrest," replied a voice with a
cultivated intonation, and Dick started violently in his bed of snow,
because he instantly recognized the voice as that of his uncle, Colonel
George Kenton, Harry's father. A moment later Colonel Kenton himself stood
where the moonlight fell upon his face. Dick saw that he was worn and
thin, but his face had the strong and resolute look characteristic of
those descended from Henry Ware, the great borderer.</p>
<p>"You know, general, that I endorse all your views," continued Colonel
Kenton. "We are unfortunate here in having a division of counsels, while
the Yankees have a single and strong head. We have underrated this man
Grant. Look how he surprised us and took Henry! Look how he hangs on here!
We've beaten him on land and we've driven back his fleet, but he hangs on.
To my mind he has no notion of retreating. He'll keep on pounding us as
long as we are here."</p>
<p>"That's his way, an' it ought to be the way of every general," growled
Forrest. "You cut down a tree by keepin' on cuttin' out chips with an axe,
an' you smash up an army by hittin' an' hittin' an' keepin' on hittin'. We
ought to charge right out of our works an' jump on the Yankees with all
our stren'th."</p>
<p>The two walked on, followed by the soldiers who had come with them, and
Dick heard no more. But he was too cautious to stir for a long while. He
lay there until the cold began to make its way through his boots and heavy
overcoat. Then he rose carefully, brushed off the snow, and began his
retreat toward the Union lines. Four or five hundred yards further on and
he met Colonel Winchester and his own comrades come back to search for
him. They welcomed him joyfully.</p>
<p>"We did not miss you until we were nearly to our own pickets," said the
colonel. "Then we concluded that you had fallen and had been taken by the
enemy, but we intended to see if we could find you. We've been hovering
about here for some time."</p>
<p>Dick told what he had seen and heard, and the colonel considered it of
much importance.</p>
<p>"I judge from what you heard that they will attack us," he said. "Buckner
and Forrest will be strongly for it, and they're likely to have their way.
We must report at once to General Grant."</p>
<p>The Southern attack had been planned for the next morning, but it did not
come then. Pillow, for reasons unknown, decided to delay another day, and
his fiery subordinates could do nothing but chafe and wait. Dick spent
most of the day carrying orders for his chief, and the continuous action
steadied his nerves.</p>
<p>As he passed from point to point he saw that the Union army itself was far
from ready. It was a difficult task to get twenty thousand raw farmer
youths in proper position. They moved about often without cohesion and
sometimes without understanding their orders. Great gaps remained in the
line, and a daring and skilful foe might cut the besieging force asunder.</p>
<p>But Grant had put his heavy guns in place, and throughout the day he
maintained a slow but steady fire upon the fort. Great shells and solid
shot curved and fell upon Donelson. Grant did not know what damage they
were doing, but he shrewdly calculated that they would unsteady the nerves
of the raw troops within. These farmer boys, as they heard the unceasing
menace of the big guns, would double the numbers of their foe, and
attribute to him an unrelaxing energy.</p>
<p>Thus another gray day of winter wore away, and the two forces drew a
little nearer to each other. Far away the rival Presidents at Washington
and Richmond were wondering what was happening to their armies in the dark
wilderness of Western Tennessee.</p>
<p>The night was more quiet than the one that had just gone before. The
booming of the cannon as regular as the tolling of funeral bells had
ceased with the darkness, but in its place the fierce winter wind had
begun to blow again. Dick, relaxed and weary after his day's work, hovered
over one of the fires and was grateful for the warmth. He had trodden
miles through slush and snow and frozen earth, and he was plastered to the
waist with frozen mud, which now began to soften and fall off before the
coals.</p>
<p>Warner, who had been on active duty, too, also sank to rest with a sigh of
relief.</p>
<p>"It's battle tomorrow, Dick," he said, "and I don't care. As it didn't
come off today the chances are at least eighty per cent that it will
happen the next day. You say that when you were lying in the snow last
night, Dick, you saw your uncle and that he's a colonel in the rebel army.
It's queer."</p>
<p>"You're wrong, George, it isn't queer. We're on opposite sides, serving at
the same place, and it's natural that we should meet some time or other.
Oh, I tell you, you fellows from the New England and the other Northern
States don't appreciate the sacrifices that we of the border states make
for the Union. Up there you are safe from invasion. Your houses are not on
the battlefields. You are all on one side. You don't have to fight against
your own kind, the people you hold most dear. And when the war is over,
whether we win or lose, you'll go back to unravaged regions."</p>
<p>"You wrong me there, Dick. I have thought of it. It's the people of the
border, whether North or South, who pay the biggest price. We risk our
lives, but you risk your lives also, and everything else, too."</p>
<p>Dick wrapped himself in a heavy blanket, pillowed his head on a log before
one of the fires and dozed a while. His nerves had been tried too hard to
permit of easy sleep. He awoke now and then and over a wide area saw the
sinking fires and the moving forms of men. He felt that a sense of
uneasiness pervaded the officers. He knew that many of them considered
their forces inadequate for the siege of a fortress defended by a large
army, but he felt with the sincerity of conviction also, that Grant would
never withdraw.</p>
<p>He heard from Colonel Winchester about midnight in one of his wakeful
intervals that General Grant was going down the river to see Commodore
Foote. The brave leader of the fleet had been wounded severely in the last
fight with the fort, and the general wished to confer with him about the
plan of operations. But Dick heard only vaguely. The statement made no
impression upon him at that time. Yet he was conscious that the feeling of
uneasiness still pervaded the officers. He noticed it in Colonel
Winchester's tone, and he noticed it, too, in the voices of Colonel
Newcomb and Major Hertford, who came presently to confer with Winchester.</p>
<p>But the boy fell into his doze again, while they were talking. Warner and
Pennington, who had done less arduous duties, were sound asleep near him,
the low flames now and then throwing a red light on their tanned faces. It
seemed to him that it was about half way between midnight and morning, and
the hum and murmur had sunk to a mere minor note. But his sleepy eyes
still saw the dim forms of men passing about, and then he fell into his
uneasy doze again.</p>
<p>When he awoke once more it was misty and dark, but he felt that the dawn
was near. In the east a faint tint of silver showed through the clouds and
vapors. Heavy banks of fog were rising from the Cumberland and the flooded
marshes. The earth began to soften as if unlocking from the hard frost of
the night.</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester stood near him and his position showed that he was
intensely awake. He was bent slightly forward, and every nerve and muscle
was strained as if he were eager to see and hear something which he knew
was there, but which he could not yet either see or hear.</p>
<p>Dick threw off his blanket and sprang to his feet. At the same moment
Colonel Winchester motioned him to awaken Warner and Pennington, which he
did at once in speed and silence. That tint of silver, the lining of the
fogs and vapors, shone more clearly through, and spread across the East.
Dick knew now that the dawn was at hand.</p>
<p>The loud but mellow notes of a trumpet came from a distant point toward
Donelson, and then others to right and left joined and sang the same
mellow song. But it lasted only for a minute. Then it was lost in the
rapid crackle of rifles, which spread like a running fire along a front of
miles. The sun in the east swung clear of the earth, its beams shooting a
way through fogs and vapors. The dawn had come and the attack had come
with it.</p>
<p>The Southerners, ready at last, were rushing from their fort and works,
and, with all the valor and fire that distinguished them upon countless
occasions, they were hurling themselves upon their enemy. The fortress
poured out regiment after regiment. Chafing so long upon the defense
Southern youth was now at its best. Attacking, not attacked, the farmer
lads felt the spirit of battle blaze high in their breasts. The long,
terrible rebel yell, destined to be heard upon so many a desperate field,
fierce upon its lower note, fierce upon its higher note, as fierce as ever
upon its dying note, and coming back in echoes still as fierce, swelled
over forest and fort, marsh and river.</p>
<p>The crackling fire of the pickets ceased. They had been driven back in a
few moments upon the army, but the whole regiment of Colonel Winchester
was now up, rifle in hand, and on either side of it, other regiments
steadied themselves also to receive the living torrent.</p>
<p>The little band of Pennsylvanians were on the left of the Kentuckians and
were practically a part of them. Colonel Newcomb and Major Hertford stood
amid their men, encouraging them to receive the shock. But Dick had time
for only a glance at these old comrades of his. The Southern wave, crested
with fire and steel, was rolling swiftly upon them, and as the Southern
troops rushed on they began to fire as fast as they could pull the
trigger, fire and pull again.</p>
<p>Bullets in sheets struck in the Union ranks. Hundreds of men went down.
Dick heard the thud of lead and steel on flesh, and the sudden cries of
those who were struck. It needs no small courage to hold fast against more
than ten thousand men rushing forward at full speed and bent upon victory
or death.</p>
<p>Dick felt all the pulses in his temples beating hard, and he had a
horrible impulse to break and run, but pride kept him firm. As an officer,
he had a small sword, and snatching it out he waved it, while at the same
time he shouted to the men to meet the charge.</p>
<p>The Union troops returned the fire. Thousands of bullets were sent against
the ranks of the rushing enemy. The gunners sprang to their guns and the
deep roar of the cannon rose above the crash of the small arms. But the
Southern troops, the rebel yell still rolling through the woods, came on
at full speed and struck the Union front.</p>
<p>It seemed to Dick that he was conscious of an actual physical shock.
Tanned faces and gleaming eyes were almost against his own. He looked into
the muzzles of rifles, and he saw the morning sun flashing along the edges
of bayonets. But the regiment, although torn by bullets, did not give
ground. The charge shivered against them, and the Southern troops fell
back. Yet it was only for a moment. They came again to be driven back as
before, and then once more they charged, while their resolute foe swung
forward to meet them rank to rank.</p>
<p>Dick was not conscious of much except that he shouted continuously to the
men to stand firm, and wondered now and then why he had not been hit. The
Union men and their enemy were reeling back and forth, neither winning,
neither losing, while the thunder of battle along a long and curving front
beat heavily on the drums of every ear. The smoke, low down, was scattered
by the cannon and rifles, but above it gathered in a great cloud that
seemed to be shot with fire.</p>
<p>The two colonels, Winchester and Newcomb, were able and valiant men.
Despite their swelling losses they always filled up the ranks and held
fast to the ground upon which they had stood when they were attacked. But
for the present they had no knowledge how the battle was going elsewhere.
The enemy just before them allowed no idle moments.</p>
<p>Yet Grant, as happened later on at Shiloh, was taken by surprise. When the
first roar of the battle broke with the dawn he was away conferring with
the wounded naval commander, Foote. His right, under McClernand, had been
caught napping, and eight thousand Southern troops striking it with a
tremendous impact just as the men snatched up their arms, drove it back in
heavy loss and confusion. Its disaster was increased when a Southern
general, Baldwin, led a strong column down a deep ravine near the river
and suddenly hurled it upon the wavering Union flank.</p>
<p>Whole regiments retreated now, and guns were lost. The Southern officers,
their faces glowing, shouted to each other that the battle was won. And
still the combat raged without the Union commander, Grant, although he was
coming now as fast as he could with the increasing roar of conflict to
draw him on. The battle was lost to the North. But it might be won back
again by a general who would not quit. Only the bulldog in Grant, the
tenacious death grip, could save him now.</p>
<p>Dick and his friends suddenly became conscious that both on their right
and left the thunder of battle was moving back upon the Union camp. They
realized now that they were only the segment of a circle extending forward
practically within the Union lines, and that the combat was going against
them. The word was given to retreat, lest they be surrounded, and they
fell back slowly disputing with desperation every foot of ground that they
gave up. Yet they left many fallen behind. A fourth of the regiment had
been killed or wounded already, and there were tears in the eyes of
Colonel Winchester as he looked over the torn ranks of his gallant men.</p>
<p>Now the Southerners, meaning to drive victory home, were bringing up their
reserves and pouring fresh troops upon the shattered Union front. They
would have swept everything away, but in the nick of time a fresh Union
brigade arrived also, supported the yielding forces and threw itself upon
the enemy.</p>
<p>But Grant had not yet come. It seemed that in the beginning fortune played
against this man of destiny, throwing all her tricks in favor of his
opponents. The single time that he was away the attack bad been made, and
if he would win back a lost battle there was great need to hurry.</p>
<p>The Southern troops, exultant and full of fire and spirit, continually
rolled back their adversaries. They wheeled more guns from the fort into
position and opened heavily on the yielding foe. If they were beaten back
at any time they always came on again, a restless wave, crested with fire
and steel.</p>
<p>Dick's regiment continued to give ground slowly. It had no choice but to
do so or be destroyed. It seemed to him now that he beheld the wreck of
all things. Was this to be Bull Run over again? His throat and eyes burned
from the smoke and powder, and his face was black with grime. His lips
were like fire to the touch of each other. He staggered in the smoke
against some one and saw that it was Warner.</p>
<p>"Have we lost?" he cried. "Have we lost after doing so much?"</p>
<p>The lips of the Vermonter parted in a kind of savage grin.</p>
<p>"I won't say we've lost," he shouted in reply, "but I can't see anything
we've won."</p>
<p>Then he lost Warner in the smoke and the regiment retreated yet further.
It was impossible to preserve cohesion or keep a line formed. The
Southerners never ceased to press upon them with overwhelming weight.
Pillow, now decisive in action, continually accumulated new forces upon
the Northern right. Every position that McClernand had held at the opening
of the battle was now taken, and the Confederate general was planning to
surround and destroy the whole Union army. Already he was sending
messengers to the telegraph with news for Johnston of his complete
victory.</p>
<p>But the last straw had not yet been laid upon the camel's back. McClernand
was beaten, but the hardy men of Kentucky, East Tennessee and the
northwest still offered desperate resistance. Conspicuous among the
defenders was the regiment of young pioneers from Nebraska, hunters,
Indian fighters, boys of twenty or less, who had suffered already every
form of hardship. They stood undaunted amid the showers of bullets and
shells and cried to the others to stand with them.</p>
<p>Yet the condition of the Union army steadily grew worse. Dick himself, in
all the smoke and shouting and confusion, could see it. The regiments that
formed the core of resistance were being pared down continually. There was
a steady dribble of fugitives to the rear, and those who fought felt
themselves going back always, like one who slips on ice.</p>
<p>The sun, far up the heavens, now poured down beams upon the vast cloud of
smoke and vapor in which the two armies fought. The few people left in
Dover, red hot for the South, cheered madly as they saw their enemy driven
further and further away.</p>
<p>Grant, the man of destiny, ill clad and insignificant in appearance, now
came upon the field and saw his beaten army. But the bulldog in him shut
down its teeth and resolved to replace defeat with victory. His greatest
qualities, strength and courage in the face of disaster, were now about to
shine forth. His countenance showed no alarm. He rode among the men
cheering them to renewed efforts. He strengthened the weak places in the
line that his keen eyes saw. He infused a new spirit into the army. His
own iron temper took possession of the troops, and that core of
resistance, desperate when he came, suddenly hardened and enlarged.</p>
<p>Dick felt the change. It was of the mind, but it was like a cool breath
upon the face. It was as if the winds had begun to blow courage. A great
shout rolled along the Northern line.</p>
<p>"Grant has come!" exclaimed Pennington, who was bleeding from a slight
wound in the shoulder, but who was unconscious of it. "And we've quit
retreating!"</p>
<p>The Nebraska youth had divined the truth. Just when a complete Southern
victory seemed to be certain the reversal of fortune came. The coolness,
the courage, and the comprehensive eye of Grant restored the battle for
the North. The Southern reserves had not charged with the fire and spirit
expected, and, met with a shattering fire by the Indiana troops, they fell
back. Grant saw the opportunity, and massing every available regiment, he
hurled it upon Pillow and the Southern center.</p>
<p>Dick felt the wild thrill of exultation as they went forward instead of
going back, as they had done for so many hours. Just in front of him was
Colonel Winchester, waving aloft a sword, the blade of which had been
broken in two by a bullet, and calling to his men to come on. Warner and
Pennington, grimed with smoke and mud and stained here and there with
blood, were near also, shouting wildly.</p>
<p>The smoke split asunder for a moment, and Dick saw the long line of
charging troops. It seemed to be a new army now, infused with fresh spirit
and courage, and every pulse in the boy's body began to beat heavily with
the hope of victory. The smoke closed in again and then came the shock.</p>
<p>Exhausted by their long efforts which had brought victory so near the
Southern troops gave way. Their whole center was driven in, and they lost
foot by foot the ground that they had gained with so much courage and
blood. Grant saw his success and he pressed more troops upon his weakening
enemy. The batteries were pushed forward and raked the shattered Southern
lines.</p>
<p>Pillow, who had led the attack instead of Floyd, seeing his fortunes pass
so suddenly from the zenith to the nadir, gathered his retreating army
upon a hill in front of their intrenchments, but he was not permitted to
rest there. A fresh Northern brigade, a reserve, had just arrived upon the
field. Joining it to the forces of Lew Wallace, afterwards famous as a
novelist, Grant hurled the entire division upon Pillow's weakened and
discouraged army.</p>
<p>Winchester's regiment joined in the attack. Dick felt himself swept along
as if by a torrent. His courage and the courage of those around him was
all the greater now, because hope, sanguine hope, had suddenly shot up
from the very depths of despair. Their ranks had been thinned terribly,
but they forgot it for the time and rushed upon their enemy.</p>
<p>The battle had rolled back and forth for hours. Noon had come and passed.
The troops of Pillow had been fighting without ceasing for six hours, and
they could not withstand the new attack made with such tremendous spirit
and energy. They fought with desperation, but they were compelled at last
to yield the field and retreat within their works. Their right and left
suffered the same fate. The whole Confederate attack was repulsed. Bull
Run was indeed reversed. There the South snatched victory from defeat and
here the North came back with a like triumph.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XII. GRANT'S GREAT VICTORY </h2>
<p>The night, early and wintry, put an end to the conflict, the fiercest and
greatest yet seen in the West. Thousands of dead and wounded lay upon the
field and the hearts of the Southern leaders were full of bitterness. They
had seen the victory, won by courage and daring, taken from them at the
very last moment. The farmer lads whom they led had fought with splendid
courage and tenacity. Defeat was no fault of theirs. It belonged rather to
the generals, among whom had been a want of understanding and concert,
fatal on the field of action. They saw, too, that they had lost more than
the battle. The Union army had not only regained all its lost positions,
but on the right it had carried the Southern intrenchments, and from that
point Grant's great guns could dominate Donelson. They foresaw with dismay
the effect of these facts upon their young troops.</p>
<p>When the night fell, and the battle ceased, save for the fitful boom of
cannon along the lines, Dick sank against an earthwork, exhausted. He
panted for breath and was without the power to move. He regarded vaguely
the moving lights that had begun to show in the darkness, and he heard
without comprehension the voices of men and the fitful fire of the cannon.</p>
<p>"Steady, Dick! Steady!" said a cheerful voice. "Now is the time to
rejoice! We've won a victory, and nothing can break General Grant's death
grip on Donelson!"</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester was speaking, and he put a firm and friendly hand on
the boy's shoulder. Dick came back to life, and, looking into his
colonel's face, he grinned. Colonel Winchester could have been recognized
only at close range. His face was black with burned gunpowder. His
colonel's hat was gone and his brown hair flew in every direction. He
still clenched in his hand the hilt of his sword, of which a broken blade
not more than a foot long was left. His clothing had been torn by at least
a dozen bullets, and one had made a red streak across the back of his left
hand, from which the blood fell slowly, drop by drop.</p>
<p>"You don't mind my telling you, colonel, that you're no beauty," said
Dick, who felt a sort of hysterical wish to laugh. "You look as if the
whole Southern army had tried to shoot you up, but had merely clipped you
all around the borders."</p>
<p>"Laugh if it does you good," replied Colonel Winchester, a little gravely,
"but, young sir, you must give me the same privilege. This battle, while
it has not wounded you, has covered you with its grime. Come, the fighting
is over for this day at least, and the regiment is going to take a rest—what
there is left of it."</p>
<p>He spoke the last words sadly. He knew the terrible cost at which they had
driven the Southern army back into the fort, and he feared that the full
price was yet far from being paid. But he preserved a cheerful manner
before the brave lads of his who had fought so well.</p>
<p>Dick found that Warner and Pennington both had wounds, although they were
too slight to incapacitate them. Sergeant Whitley, grave and unhurt,
rejoined them also.</p>
<p>The winter night and their heavy losses could not discourage the Northern
troops. They shared the courage and tenacity of their commander. They
began to believe now that Donelson, despite its strength and its
formidable garrison, would be taken. They built the fires high, and ate
heartily. They talked in sanguine tones of what they would do in the
morrow. Excited comment ran among them. They had passed from the pit of
despair in the morning to the apex of hope at night. Exhausted, all save
the pickets fell asleep after a while, dreaming of fresh triumphs on the
morrow.</p>
<p>Had Dick's eyes been able to penetrate Donelson he would have beheld a
very different scene. Gloom, even more, despair, reigned there. Their
great effort had failed. Bravery had availed nothing. Their frightful
losses had been suffered in vain. The generals blamed one another. Floyd
favored the surrender of the army, but fancying that the Union troops
hated him with special vindictiveness, and that he would not be safe as a
prisoner, decided to escape.</p>
<p>Pillow declared that Grant could yet be beaten, but after a while changed
to the view of Floyd. They yet had two small steamers in the Cumberland
which could carry them up the river. They left the command to Buckner, the
third in rank, and told him he could make the surrender. The black-bearded
Forrest said grimly: "I ain't goin' to surrender my cavalry, not to
nobody," and by devious paths he led them away through the darkness and to
liberty. Colonel George Kenton rode with him.</p>
<p>The rumor that a surrender was impending spread to the soldiers. Not yet
firm in the bonds of discipline confusion ensued, and the high officers
were too busy escaping by the river to restore it. All through the night
the two little steamers worked, but a vast majority of the troops were
left behind.</p>
<p>But Dick could know nothing of this at the time. He was sleeping too
heavily. He had merely taken a moment to snatch a bit of food, and then,
at the suggestion of his commanding officer, he had rolled himself in his
blankets. Sleep came instantly, and it was not interrupted until Warner's
hand fell upon his shoulder at dawn, and Warner's voice said in his ear:</p>
<p>"Wake up, Dick, and look at the white flag fluttering over Donelson."</p>
<p>Dick sprang to his feet, sleep gone in an instant, and gazed toward
Donelson. Warner had spoken the truth. White flags waved from the walls
and earthworks.</p>
<p>"So they're going to surrender!" said Dick. "What a triumph!"</p>
<p>"They haven't surrendered yet," said Colonel Winchester, who stood near.
"Those white flags merely indicate a desire to talk it over with us, but
such a desire is nearly always a sure indication of yielding, and our lads
take it so. Hark to their cheering."</p>
<p>The whole Union army was on its feet now, joyously welcoming the sight of
the white flags. They threw fresh fuel on their fires which blazed along a
circling rim of miles, and ate a breakfast sweetened with the savor of
triumph.</p>
<p>"Take this big tin cup of coffee, Dick," said Warner. "It'll warm you
through and through, and we're entitled to a long, brown drink for our
victory. I say victory because the chances are ninety-nine per cent out of
a hundred that it is so. Let x equal our army, let y equal victory, and
consequently x plus y equals our position at the present time."</p>
<p>"And I never thought that we could do it," said young Pennington, who sat
with them. "I suppose it all comes of having a general who won't give up.
I reckon the old saying is true, an' that Hold Fast is the best dog of
them all."</p>
<p>Now came a period of waiting. Colonel Winchester disappeared in the
direction of General Grant's headquarters, but returned after a while and
called his favorite aide, young Richard Mason.</p>
<p>"Dick," he said, "we have summoned the Southerners to surrender, and I
want you to go with me to a conference of their generals. You may be
needed to carry dispatches."</p>
<p>Dick went gladly with the group of Union officers, who approached Fort
Donelson under the white flag, and who met a group of Confederate officers
under a like white flag. He noticed in the very center of the Southern
group the figure of General Buckner, a tall, well-built man in his early
prime, his face usually ruddy, now pale with fatigue and anxiety. Dick,
with his uncle, Colonel Kenton, and his young cousin, Harry Kenton, had
once dined at his house.</p>
<p>Nearly all the officers, Northern and Southern, knew one another well.
Many of them had been together at West Point. Colonel Winchester and
General Buckner were well acquainted and they saluted, each smiling a
little grimly.</p>
<p>"I bring General Grant's demand for the surrender of Fort Donelson, and
all its garrison, arms, ammunition, and other supplies," said Colonel
Winchester. "Can I see your chief, General Floyd?"</p>
<p>The lips of Buckner pressed close together in a smile touched with irony.</p>
<p>"No, you cannot see General Floyd," he said, "because he is now far up the
Cumberland."</p>
<p>"Since he has abdicated the command I wish then to communicate with
General Pillow."</p>
<p>"I regret that you cannot speak to him either. He is as far up the
Cumberland as General Floyd. Both departed in the night, and I am left in
command of the Southern army at Fort Donelson. You can state your demands
to me, Colonel Winchester."</p>
<p>Dick saw that the brave Kentuckian was struggling to hide his chagrin, and
he had much sympathy for him. It was in truth a hard task that Floyd and
Pillow had left for Buckner. They had allowed themselves to be trapped and
they had thrown upon him the burden of surrendering. But Buckner proceeded
with the negotiations. Presently he noticed Dick.</p>
<p>"Good morning, Richard," he said. "It seems that in this case, at least,
you have chosen the side of the victors."</p>
<p>"Fortune has happened to be on our side, general," said Dick respectfully.
"Could you tell me, sir, if my uncle, Colonel Kenton, is unhurt?"</p>
<p>"He was, when he was last with us," replied General Buckner, kindly.
"Colonel Kenton went out last night with Forrest's cavalry. He will not be
a prisoner."</p>
<p>"I am glad of that," said the boy.</p>
<p>And he was truly glad. He knew that it would hurt Colonel Kenton's pride
terribly to become a prisoner, and although they were now on opposite
sides, he loved and respected his uncle.</p>
<p>The negotiations were completed and before night the garrison of Donelson,
all except three thousand who had escaped in the night with Floyd and
Pillow and Forrest, laid down their arms. The answer to Bull Run was
complete. Fifteen thousand men, sixty-five cannon, and seventeen thousand
rifles and muskets were surrendered to General Grant. The bulldog in the
silent westerner had triumphed. With only a last chance left to him he had
turned defeat into complete victory, and had dealt a stunning blow to the
Southern Confederacy, which was never able like the North to fill up its
depleted ranks with fresh men.</p>
<p>Time alone could reveal to many the deadly nature of this blow, but Dick,
who had foresight and imagination, understood it now at least in part. As
he saw the hungry Southern boys sharing the food of their late enemies his
mind traveled over the long Southern line. Thomas had beaten it in Eastern
Kentucky, Grant had dealt it a far more crushing blow here in Western
Kentucky, but Albert Sidney Johnston, the most formidable foe of all, yet
remained in the center. He was a veteran general with a great reputation.
Nay, more, it was said by the officers who knew him that he was a man of
genius. Dick surmised that Johnston, after the stunning blow of Donelson,
would be compelled to fall back from Tennessee, but he did not doubt that
he would return again.</p>
<p>Dick soon saw that all his surmises were correct. The news of Donelson
produced for a little while a sort of paralysis at Richmond, and when it
reached Nashville, where the army of Johnston was gathering, it was at
first unbelievable. It produced so much excitement and confusion that a
small brigade sent to the relief of Donelson was not called back, and
marched blindly into the little town of Dover, where it found itself
surrounded by the whole triumphant Union army, and was compelled to
surrender without a fight.</p>
<p>Panic swept through Nashville. Everybody knew that Johnston would be
compelled to fall back from the Cumberland River, upon the banks of which
the capital of Tennessee stood. Foote and his gunboats would come steaming
up the stream into the very heart of the city. Rumor magnified the number
and size of his boats. Again the Southern leaders felt that the rivers
were always a hostile coil girdling them about, and lamented their own
lack of a naval arm.</p>
<p>Floyd had drawn off in the night from Donelson his own special command of
Virginians and when he arrived at Nashville with full news of the defeat
at the fortress, and the agreement to surrender, the panic increased. Many
had striven to believe that the reports were untrue, but now there could
be no doubt.</p>
<p>And the panic gained a second impetus when the generals set fire to the
suspension bridge over the river and the docks along its banks. The
inhabitants saw the signal of doom in the sheets of flame that rolled up,
and all those who had taken a leading part in the Southern cause prepared
in haste to leave with Johnston's army. The roads were choked with
vehicles and fleeing people. The State Legislature, which was then in
session, departed bodily with all the records and archives.</p>
<p>But Dick, after the first hours of triumph, felt relaxed and depressed.
After all, the victory was over their own people, and five thousand of the
farmer lads, North and South, had been killed or wounded. But this feeling
did not last long, as on the very evening of victory he was summoned to
action. Action, with him, always made the blood leap and hope rise. It was
his own regimental chief, Arthur Winchester, who called him, and who told
him to make ready for an instant departure from Donelson.</p>
<p>"You are to be a cavalryman for a while, Dick," said Colonel Winchester.
"So much has happened recently that we scarcely know how we stand. Above
all, we do not know how the remaining Southern forces are disposed, and I
have been chosen to lead a troop toward Nashville and see. You, Warner,
Pennington, that very capable sergeant, Whitley, and others whom you know
are to go with me. My force will number about three hundred and the horses
are already waiting on the other side."</p>
<p>They were carried over the river on one of the boats, and the little
company, mounting, prepared to ride into the dark woods. But before they
disappeared, Dick looked back and saw many lights gleaming in captured
Donelson. Once more the magnitude of Grant's victory impressed him.
Certainly he had struck a paralyzing blow at the Southern army in the
west.</p>
<p>But the ride in the dark over a wild and thinly-settled country soon
occupied Dick's whole attention. He was on one side of Colonel Winchester
and Warner was on the other. Then the others came four abreast. At first
there was some disposition to talk, but it was checked sharply by the
leader, and after a while the disposition itself was lacking.</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester was a daring horseman, and Dick soon realized that it
would be no light task to follow where he led. Evidently he knew the
country, as he rode with certainty over the worst roads that Dick had ever
seen. They were deep in mud which froze at night, but not solidly enough
to keep the feet of the horses from crushing through, making a crackle as
they went down and a loud, sticky sigh as they came out. All were
spattered with mud, which froze upon them, but they were so much inured to
hardship now that they paid no attention to it.</p>
<p>But this rough riding soon showed so much effect upon the horses that
Colonel Winchester led aside into the woods and fields, keeping parallel
with the road. Now and then they stopped to pull down fences, but they
still made good speed. Twice they saw at some distance cabins with the
smoke yet rising from the chimneys, but the colonel did not stop to ask
any questions. Those he thought could be asked better further on.</p>
<p>Twice they crossed creeks. One the horses could wade, but the other was so
deep that they were compelled to swim. On the further bank of the second
they stopped a while to rest the horses and to count the men to see that
no straggler had dropped away in the darkness. Then they sprang into the
saddle again and rode on as before through a country that seemed to be
abandoned.</p>
<p>There was a certain thrill and exhilaration in their daring ride. The
smoke and odors of the battle about Donelson were blown away. The dead and
the wounded, the grewsome price even of victory, no longer lay before
their eyes, and the cold air rushing past freshened their blood and gave
it a new sparkle. Every one in the little column knew that danger was
plentiful about them, but there was pleasure in action in the open.</p>
<p>Their general direction was Nashville, and now they came into a country,
richer, better cultivated, and peopled more thickly. Toward night they saw
on a gentle hill in a great lawn and surrounded by fine trees a large red
brick house, with green shutters and portico supported by white pillars.
Smoke rose from two chimneys. Colonel Winchester halted his troop and
examined the house from a distance for a little while.</p>
<p>"This is the home of wealthy people," he said at last to Dick, "and we may
obtain some information here. At least we should try it."</p>
<p>Dick had his doubts, but he said nothing.</p>
<p>"You, Mr. Pennington, Mr. Warner and Sergeant Whitley, dismount with me,"
continued the colonel, "and we'll try the house."</p>
<p>He bade his troop remain in the road under the command of the officer next
in rank, and he, with those whom he had chosen, opened the lawn gate. A
brick walk led to the portico and they strolled along it, their spurs
jingling. Although the smoke still rose from the chimneys no door opened
to them as they stepped into the portico. All the green shutters were
closed tightly.</p>
<p>"I think they saw us in the road," said Dick, "and this is a house of
staunch Southern sympathizers. That is why they don't open to us."</p>
<p>"Beat on the door with the hilt of your sword, sergeant," said the colonel
to Whitley. "They're bound to answer in time."</p>
<p>The sergeant beat steadily and insistently. Yet he was forced to continue
it five or six minutes before it was thrown open. Then a tall old woman
with a dignified, stern face and white hair, drawn back from high brows,
stood before them. But Dick's quick eyes saw in the dusk of the room
behind her a girl of seventeen or eighteen.</p>
<p>"What do you want?" asked the woman in a tone of ice. "I see that you are
Yankee soldiers, and if you intend to rob the house there is no one here
to oppose you. Its sole occupants are myself, my granddaughter, and two
colored women, our servants. But I tell you, before you begin, that all
our silver has been shipped to Nashville."</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester flushed a deep crimson, and bit his lips savagely.</p>
<p>"Madame," he said, "we are not robbers and plunderers. These are regular
soldiers belonging to General Grant's army."</p>
<p>"Does it make any difference? Your armies come to ravage and destroy the
South."</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester flushed again but, remembering his self-control, he
said politely:</p>
<p>"Madame, I hope that our actions will prove to you that we have been
maligned. We have not come here to rob you or disturb you in any manner.
We merely wished to inquire of you if you had seen any other Southern
armed forces in this vicinity."</p>
<p>"And do you think, sir," she replied in the same uncompromising tones, "if
I had seen them that I would tell you anything about it?"</p>
<p>"No, Madame," replied the Colonel bowing, "whatever I may have thought
before I entered your portico I do not think so now."</p>
<p>"Then it gives me pleasure to bid you good evening, sir," she said, and
shut the door in his face.</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester laughed rather sorely.</p>
<p>"She had rather the better of me," he said, "but we can't make war on
women. Come on, lads, we'll ride ahead, and camp under the trees. It's
easy to obtain plenty of fuel for fires."</p>
<p>"The darkness is coming fast," said Dick, "and it is going to be very
cold, as usual."</p>
<p>In a half hour the day was fully gone, and, as he had foretold, the night
was sharp with chill, setting every man to shivering. They turned aside
into an oak grove and pitched their camp. It was never hard to obtain
fuel, as the whole area of the great civil war was largely in forest, and
the soldiers dragged up fallen brushwood in abundance. Then the fires
sprang up and created a wide circle of light and cheerfulness.</p>
<p>Dick joined zealously in the task of finding firewood and his search took
him somewhat further than the others. He passed all the way through the
belt of forest, and noticed fields beyond. He was about to turn back when
he heard a faint, but regular sound. Experience told him that it was the
beat of a horse's hoofs and he knew that some distance away a road must
lead between the fields.</p>
<p>He walked a hundred yards further, and climbing upon a fence waited. From
his perch he could see the road about two hundred yards beyond him, and
the hoof beats were rapidly growing louder. Some one was riding hard and
fast.</p>
<p>In a minute the horseman or rather horsewoman, came into view. There was
enough light for Dick to see the slender figure of a young girl mounted on
a great bay horse. She was wrapped in a heavy cloak, but her head was
bare, and her long dark hair streamed almost straight out behind her, so
great was the speed at which she rode.</p>
<p>She struck the horse occasionally with a small riding whip, but he was
already going like a racer. Dick remembered the slim figure of a girl, and
it occurred to him suddenly that this was she whom he had seen in the dusk
of the room behind her grandmother. He wondered why she was riding so
fast, alone and in the winter night, and then he admitted with a thrill of
admiration that he had never seen any one ride better. The hoof beats
rose, died away and then horse and girl were gone in the darkness. Dick
climbed down from the fence and shook himself. Was it real or merely
fancy, the product of a brain excited by so much siege and battle?</p>
<p>He picked up a big dead bough in the wood, dragged it back to the camp and
threw it on one of the fires.</p>
<p>"What are you looking so grave about, Dick?" asked Warner.</p>
<p>"When I went across that stretch of woods I saw something that I didn't
expect to see."</p>
<p>"What was it?"</p>
<p>"A girl on a big horse. They came and they went so fast that I just got a
glimpse of them."</p>
<p>"A girl alone, galloping on a horse on a wintry night like this through a
region infested by hostile armies! Why Dick, you're seeing shadows! Better
sit down and have a cup of this good hot coffee."</p>
<p>But Dick shook his head. He knew now that he had seen reality, and he
reported it to Colonel Winchester.</p>
<p>"Are you sure it was the girl you saw at the big house?" asked Colonel
Winchester. "It might have been some farmer's wife galloping home from an
errand late in the evening."</p>
<p>"It was the girl. I am sure of it," said Dick confidently.</p>
<p>Just at that moment Sergeant Whitley came up and saluted.</p>
<p>"What is it, sergeant?" asked the Colonel.</p>
<p>"I have been up the road some distance, sir, and I came to another road
that crossed it. The second road has been cut by hoofs of eight or nine
hundred horses, and I am sure, sir, that the tracks are not a day old."</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester looked grave. He knew that he was deep in the country
of the enemy and he began to put together what Dick had seen and what the
sergeant had seen. But the thought of withdrawing did not occur to his
brave soul. He had been sent on an errand by General Grant and he meant to
do it. But he changed his plans for the night. He had intended to keep
only one man in ten on watch. Instead, he kept half, and Sergeant Whitley,
veteran of Indian wars, murmured words of approval under his breath.</p>
<p>Whitley and Pennington were in the early watch. Dick and Warner were to
come on later. The colonel spoke as if he would keep watch all night. All
the horses were tethered carefully inside the ring of pickets.</p>
<p>"It doesn't need any mathematical calculation," said Warner, "to tell that
the colonel expects trouble of some kind tonight. What its nature is, I
don't know, but I mean to go to sleep, nevertheless. I have already seen
so much of hardship and war that the mere thought of danger does not
trouble me. I took a fort on the Tennessee, I took a much larger one on
the Cumberland, first defeating the enemy's army in a big battle, and now
I am preparing to march on Nashville. Hence, I will not have my slumbers
disturbed by a mere belief that danger may come."</p>
<p>"It's a good resolution, George," said Dick, "but unlike you, I am subject
to impulses, emotions, thrills and anxieties."</p>
<p>"Better cure yourself," said the Vermonter, as he rolled himself in the
blankets and put his head on his arm. In two minutes he was asleep, but
Dick, despite his weariness, had disturbed nerves which refused to let him
sleep for a long time. He closed his eyes repeatedly, and then opened them
again, merely to see the tethered horses, and beyond them the circle of
sentinels, a clear moonlight falling on their rifle barrels. But it was
very warm and cosy in the blankets, and he would soon fall asleep again.</p>
<p>He was awakened about an hour after midnight to take his turn at the
watch, and he noticed that Colonel Winchester was still standing beside
one of the fires, but looking very anxious. Dick felt himself on good
enough terms, despite his youth, to urge him to take rest.</p>
<p>"I should like to do so," replied Colonel Winchester, "but Dick I tell
you, although you must keep it to yourself, that I think we are in some
danger. Your glimpse of the flying horsewoman, and the undoubted fact that
hundreds of horsemen have crossed the road ahead of us, have made me put
two and two together. Ah, what is it, sergeant?"</p>
<p>"I think I hear noises to the east of us, sir," replied the veteran.</p>
<p>"What kind of noises, sergeant?"</p>
<p>"I should say, sir, that they're made by the hoofs of horses. There, I
hear them again, sir. I'm quite sure of it, and they're growing louder!"</p>
<p>"And so do I!" exclaimed Colonel Winchester, now all life and activity.
"The sounds are made by a large body of men advancing upon us! Seize that
bugle, Dick, and blow the alarm with all your might!"</p>
<p>Dick snatched up the bugle and blew upon it a long shrill blast that
pierced far into the forest. He blew and blew again, and every man in the
little force sprang to his feet in alarm. Nor were they a moment too soon.
From the woods to the east came the answering notes of a bugle and then a
great voice cried:</p>
<p>"Forward men an' wipe 'em off the face of the earth!"</p>
<p>It seemed to Dick that he had heard that voice before, but he had no time
to think about it, as the next instant came the rush of the wild horsemen,
a thousand strong, leaning low over their saddles, their faces dark with
the passion of anger and revenge, pistols, rifles, and carbines flashing
as they pulled the trigger, giving way when empty to sabres, which gleamed
in the moonlight as they were swung by powerful hands.</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester's whole force would have been ridden down in the
twinkling of an eye if it had not been for the minute's warning. His men,
leaping to their feet, snatched up their own rifles and fired a volley at
short range. It did more execution among the horses than among the
horsemen, and the Southern rough riders were compelled to waver for a
moment. Many of their horses went down, others uttered the terrible
shrieking neigh of the wounded, and, despite the efforts of those who rode
them, strove to turn and flee from those flaming muzzles. It was only a
moment, but it gave the Union troop, save those who were already slain,
time to spring upon their horses and draw back, at the colonel's shouted
command, to the cover of the wood. But they were driven hard. The
Confederate cavalry came on again, impetuous and fierce as ever, and urged
continually by the great partisan leader, Forrest, now in the very dawn of
his fame.</p>
<p>"It was no phantom you saw, that girl on the horse!" shouted Warner in
Dick's ear, and Dick nodded in return. They had no time for other words,
as Forrest's horsemen, far outnumbering them, now pressed them harder than
ever. A continuous fire came from their ranks and at close range they rode
in with the sabre.</p>
<p>Dick experienced the full terror and surprise of a night battle. The
opposing forces were so close together that it was often difficult to tell
friend from enemy. But Forrest's men had every advantage of surprise,
superior numbers and perfect knowledge of the country. Dick groaned aloud
as he saw that the best they could do was to save as many as possible. Why
had he not taken a shot at the horse of that flying girl?</p>
<p>"We must keep together, Dick!" shouted Warner. "Here are Pennington and
Sergeant Whitley, and there's Colonel Winchester. I fancy that if we can
get off with a part of our men we'll be doing well."</p>
<p>Pennington's horse, shot through the head, dropped like a stone to the
ground, but the deft youth, used to riding the wild mustangs of the
prairie, leaped clear, seized another which was galloping about riderless,
and at one bound sprang into the saddle.</p>
<p>"Good boy!" shouted Dick with admiration, but the next moment the horsemen
of Forrest were rushing upon them anew. More men were killed, many were
taken, and Colonel Winchester, seeing the futility of further resistance,
gathered together those who were left and took flight through the forest.</p>
<p>Tears of mortification came to Dick's eyes, but Sergeant Whitley, who rode
on his right hand, said:</p>
<p>"It's the only thing to do. Remember that however bad your position may be
it can always be worse. It's better for some of us to escape than for all
of us to be down or be taken."</p>
<p>Dick knew that his logic was good, but the mortification nevertheless
remained a long time. There was some consolation, however, in the fact
that his own particular friends had neither fallen nor been taken.</p>
<p>They still heard the shouts of pursuing horsemen, and shots rattled about
them, but now the covering darkness was their friend. They drew slowly
away from all pursuit. The shouts and the sounds of trampling hoofs died
behind them, and after two hours of hard riding Colonel Winchester drew
rein and ordered a halt.</p>
<p>It was a disordered and downcast company of about fifty who were left. A
few of these were wounded, but not badly enough to be disabled. Colonel
Winchester's own head had been grazed, but he had bound a handkerchief
about it, and sat very quiet in his saddle.</p>
<p>"My lads," he said, and his tone was sharp with the note of defiance. "We
have been surprised by a force greatly superior to our own, and scarcely a
sixth of us are left. But it was my fault. I take the blame. For the
present, at least, we are safe from the enemy, and I intend to continue
with our errand. We were to scout the country all the way to Nashville. It
is also possible that we will meet the division of General Buell advancing
to that city. Now, lads, I hope that you all will be willing to go on with
me. Are you?"</p>
<p>"We are!" roared fifty together, and a smile passed over the wan face of
the colonel. But he said no more then. Instead he turned his head toward
the capital city of the state, and rode until dawn, his men following
close behind him. The boys were weary. In truth, all of them were, but no
one spoke of halting or complained in any manner.</p>
<p>At sunrise they stopped in dense forest at the banks of a creek, and
watered their horses. They cooked what food they had left, and after
eating rested for several hours on the ground, most of them going to
sleep, while a few men kept a vigilant watch.</p>
<p>When Dick awoke it was nearly noon, and he still felt sore from his
exertions. An hour later they all mounted and rode again toward Nashville.
Near night they boldly entered a small village and bought food. The
inhabitants were all strongly Southern, but villagers love to talk, and
they learned there in a manner admitting of no doubt, that the Confederate
army was retreating southward from the line of the Cumberland, that the
state capital had been abandoned, and that to the eastward of them the
Union army, under Buell, was advancing swiftly on Nashville.</p>
<p>"At least we accomplished our mission," said Colonel Winchester with some
return of cheerfulness. "We have discovered the retreat of General
Johnston's whole army, and the abandonment of Nashville, invaluable
information to General Grant. But we'll press on toward Nashville
nevertheless."</p>
<p>They camped the next night in a forest and kept a most vigilant watch. If
those terrible raiders led by Forrest should strike them again they could
make but little defense.</p>
<p>They came the next morning upon a good road and followed it without
interruption until nearly noon, when they saw the glint of arms across a
wide field. Colonel Winchester drew his little troop back into the edge of
the woods, and put his field glasses to his eyes.</p>
<p>"There are many men, riding along a road parallel to ours," he said. "They
look like an entire regiment, and by all that's lucky, they're in the
uniforms of our own troops. Yes, they're our own men. There can be no
mistake. It is probably the advance guard of Buell's army."</p>
<p>They still had a trumpet, and at the colonel's order it was blown long and
loud. An answering call came from the men on the parallel road, and they
halted. Then Colonel Winchester's little troop galloped forward and they
were soon shaking hands with the men of a mounted regiment from Ohio. They
had been sent ahead by Buell to watch Johnston's army, but hearing of the
abandonment of Nashville, they were now riding straight for the city.
Colonel Winchester and his troop joined them gladly and the colonel rode
by the side of the Ohio colonel, Mitchel.</p>
<p>Dick and his young comrades felt great relief. He realized the terrible
activity of Forrest, but that cavalry leader, even if he had not now gone
south, would hesitate about attacking the powerful regiment with which
Dick now rode. Warner and Pennington shared his feelings.</p>
<p>"The chances are ninety per cent in our favor," said the Vermonter, "that
we'll ride into Nashville without a fight. I've never been in Tennessee
before, and I'm a long way from home, but I'm curious to see this city.
I'd like to sleep in a house once more."</p>
<p>They rode into Nashville the next morning amid frowning looks, but the
half deserted city offered no resistance.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XIII. IN THE FOREST </h2>
<p>Dick spent a week or more in Nashville and he saw the arrival of one of
General Grant's divisions on the fleet under Commodore Foote. Once more he
appreciated the immense value of the rivers and the fleet to the North.</p>
<p>He and the two lads who were now knitted to him by sympathy, and hardships
and dangers shared, enjoyed their stay in Nashville. It was pleasant to
sleep once more in houses and to be sheltered from rain and frost and
snow. It was pleasant, too, for these youths, who were devoted to the
Union, to think that their armies had made such progress in the west. The
silent and inflexible Grant had struck the first great blow for the North.
The immense Confederate line in the west was driven far southward, and the
capital of one of the most vigorous of the secessionist states was now
held by the Union.</p>
<p>But a little later, news not so pleasant came to them. The energy and
success of Grant had aroused jealousy. Halleck, his superior, the general
of books and maps at St. Louis, said that he had transcended the limits of
his command. He was infringing upon territory of other Northern generals.
Halleck had not found him to be the yielding subordinate who would win
successes and let others have the credit.</p>
<p>Grant was practically relieved of his command, and when Dick heard it he
felt a throb of rage. Boy as he was, he knew that what had been won must
be held. Johnston had stopped at Murfreesborough, thirty or forty miles
away. His troops had recovered from their panic, caused by the fall of
Donelson. Fresh regiments and brigades were joining him. His army was
rising to forty thousand men, and officers like Colonel Winchester began
to feel apprehensive.</p>
<p>Now came a period of waiting. The Northern leaders, as happened so often
in this war, were uncertain of their authority, and were at
cross-purposes. They seldom had the power of initiative that was permitted
to the Southern generals, and of which they made such good use. Dick saw
that the impression made by Donelson was fading. The North was reaping no
harvest, and the South was lifting up its head again.</p>
<p>While he was in Nashville he received a letter from his mother in reply to
one of his that he had written to her just after Donelson. She was very
thankful that her son had gone safely through the battle, and since he
must fight in war, which was terrible in any aspect, she was glad that he
had borne himself bravely. She was glad that Colonel Kenton had escaped
capture. Her brother-in-law was always good to her and was a good man. She
had also received a letter from his son, her nephew, written from
Richmond, She loved Harry Kenton, too, and sympathized with him, but she
could not see how both sides could prevail.</p>
<p>Dick read the letter over and over again and there was a warm glow about
his heart. What a brave woman his mother was! She said nothing about his
coming back home, or leaving the war. He wrote a long reply, and he told
her only of the lighter and more cheerful events that they had
encountered. He described Warner, Pennington, and the sergeant, and said
that he had the best comrades in the world. He told, too, of his gallant
and high-minded commander, Colonel Arthur Winchester.</p>
<p>He was sure that the letter would reach her promptly, as it passed all the
way through territory now controlled by the North. The next day after
sending it he heard with joy that Grant was restored to his command, and
two days later Colonel Winchester and his men were ordered to join him at
Pittsburg Landing, on the Tennessee River. They heard also that Buell,
with his whole division, was soon to march to the same place, and they saw
in it an omen of speedy and concentrated action.</p>
<p>"I imagine," said Warner, "that we'll soon go down in Mississippi hunting
Johnston. We must outnumber the Johnny Rebs at least two to one. I'm not a
general, though any one can see that I ought to be, and if we were to
follow Johnston's army and crush it the war would soon be ended in the
west."</p>
<p>"You've got a mighty big 'if'," said Dick. "If we march into Mississippi
we get pretty far from our base. We'll have to send a long distance
through hostile country for fresh supplies and fresh troops, while the
Southerners will be nearer to their own. Besides, it's not so certain that
we can destroy Johnston when we find him."</p>
<p>"Your talk sounds logical, and that being the case, I'll leave our future
movements to General Grant. Anyway, it's a good thing not to have so much
responsibility on your shoulders."</p>
<p>They came in a few days to the great camp on the Tennessee. Spring was now
breaking through the crust of winter. Touches of green were appearing on
the forests and in the fields. Now and then the wonderful pungent odor of
the wilderness came to them and life seemed to have taken on new zest.
They were but boys in years, and the terrible scenes of Donelson could not
linger with them long.</p>
<p>They found Colonel Newcomb and the little detachment of Pennsylvanians
with Grant, and Colonel Winchester, resuming command of his regiment,
camped by their side, delighted to be with old friends again. Colonel
Winchester had lost a portion of his regiment, but there were excuses. It
had happened in a country well known to the enemy and but little known to
him, and he had been attacked in overwhelming force by the rough-riding
Forrest, who was long to be a terror to the Union divisions. But he had
achieved the task on which he had been sent, and he was thanked by his
commander.</p>
<p>Dick, as he went on many errands or walked about in the course of his
leisure hours with his friends, watched with interest the growth of a
great army. There were more men here upon the banks of the Tennessee than
he had seen at Bull Run. They were gathered full forty thousand strong,
and General Buell's army also, he learned, had been put under command of
General Grant and was advancing from Nashville to join him.</p>
<p>Dick also observed with extreme interest the ground upon which they were
encamped and the country surrounding it. There was the deep Tennessee,
still swollen by spring rains, upon the left bank of which they lay, with
the stream protecting one flank. In the river were some of the gunboats
which had been of such value to Grant. All about them was rough, hilly
country, almost wholly covered with brushwood and tall forest. There were
three deep creeks, given significant names by the pioneers. Lick Creek
flowed to the south of them into the Tennessee, and Owl Creek to the north
sought the same destination. A third, Snake Creek, was lined with deep and
impassable swamps to its very junction with the river.</p>
<p>Some roads of the usual frontier type ran through this region, and at a
point within the Northern lines stood a little primitive log church that
they called Shiloh. It was of the kind that the pioneers built everywhere
as they moved from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Shiloh belonged to a
little body of Methodists. Dick went into it more than once. There was no
pastor and no congregation now, but the little church was not molested. He
sat more than once on an uncompromising wooden bench, and looked out
through a window, from which the shutter was gone, at the forest and the
army.</p>
<p>Sitting here in this primitive house of worship, he would feel a certain
sadness. It seemed strange that a great army, whose purpose was to destroy
other armies, should be encamped around a building erected in the cause of
the Prince of Peace. The mighty and terrible nature of the war was borne
in upon him more fully than ever.</p>
<p>But optimism was supreme among the soldiers. They had achieved the great
victory of Donelson in the face of odds that had seemed impossible. They
could defeat all the Southern forces that lay between them and the Gulf.
The generals shared their confidence. They did not fortify their camp.
They had not come that far South to fight defensive battles. It was their
place to attack and that of the men in gray to defend. They had advanced
in triumph almost to the Mississippi line, and they would soon be pursuing
their disorganized foe into that Gulf State.</p>
<p>Several new generals came to serve under Grant. Among them was one named
Sherman, to whom Dick bore messages several times, and who impressed him
with his dry manner and curt remarks which were yet so full of sense.</p>
<p>It was Sherman's division, in fact, that was encamped around the little
church, and Dick soon learned his opinions. He did not believe that they
would so easily conquer the South. He did not look for any triumphal
parade to the Gulf. In the beginning of the war he had brought great
enmity and criticism upon himself by saying that 200,000 men at least
would be needed at once to crush the Confederacy in the west alone. And
yet it was to take more than ten times that number four bitter years to
achieve the task in both west and east.</p>
<p>But optimism continued to reign in the Union army. Buell would arrive soon
with his division and then seventy thousand strong they would resume their
march southward, crushing everything. Meanwhile it was pleasant while they
waited. They had an abundance of food. They were well sheltered from the
rains. The cold days were passing, nature was bursting into its spring
bloom, and the crisp fresh winds that blew from the west and south were
full of life and strength. It was a joy merely to breathe.</p>
<p>One rainy day the three boys, who had met by chance, went into the little
church for shelter from a sudden spring rain. From the shutterless window
Dick saw Sergeant Whitley scurrying in search of a refuge, and they called
to him. He came gladly and took a seat in one of the rough wooden pews of
the little church of Shiloh. The three boys had the greatest respect for
the character and judgment of the sergeant, and Dick asked him when he
thought the army would march.</p>
<p>"They don't tell these things to sergeants," said Whitley.</p>
<p>"But you see and you know a lot about war."</p>
<p>"Well, you've noticed that the army ain't gettin' ready to march. When
General Buell gets here we'll have nigh onto seventy thousand men, and
seventy thousand men can't lift themselves up by their bootstraps an'
leave, all in a mornin'."</p>
<p>"But we don't have to hurry," said Pennington. "There's no Southern army
west of the Alleghanies that could stand before our seventy thousand men
for an hour."</p>
<p>"General Buell ain't here yet."</p>
<p>"But he's coming."</p>
<p>"But he ain't here yet," persisted the sergeant, "an' he can't be here for
several days, 'cause the roads are mighty deep in the spring mud. Don't
say any man is here until he is here. An' I tell you that General
Johnston, with whom we've got to deal, is a great man. I wasn't with him
when he made that great march through the blizzards an' across the plains
to Salt Lake City to make the Mormons behave, but I've served with them
that was. An' I've never yet found one of them who didn't say General
Johnston was a mighty big man. Soldiers know when the right kind of a man
is holdin' the reins an' drivin' 'em. Didn't we all feel that we was bein'
driv right when General Grant took hold?"</p>
<p>"We all felt it," said the three in chorus.</p>
<p>"Of course you did," said the sergeant, "an' now I've got a kind of uneasy
feelin' over General Johnston. Why don't we hear somethin' from him? Why
don't we know what he's doin'? We haven't sent out any scoutin' parties.
On the plains, no matter how strong we was, we was always on the lookout
for hostile Indians, while here we know there is a big Confederate army
somewhere within fifty miles of us, but don't take the trouble to look it
up."</p>
<p>"That's so," said Warner. "Caution represents less than five per cent of
our effectiveness. But I suppose we can whip the Johnnies anyway."</p>
<p>"Of course we can," said Pennington, who was always of a most buoyant
temperament.</p>
<p>Sergeant Whitley went to the shutterless window, and looked out at the
forest and the long array of tents.</p>
<p>"The rain is about over," he said. "It was just a passin' shower. But it
looks as if it had already added a fresh shade of green to the leaves and
grass. Cur'us how quick a rain can do it in spring, when everything is
just waitin' a chance to grow, and bust into bloom. I've rid on the plains
when everything was brown an' looked dead. 'Long come a big rain an' the
next day everything was green as far as the eye could reach an' you'd see
little flowers bloomin' down under the shelter of the grass."</p>
<p>"I didn't know you had a poetical streak in you, sergeant," said Dick, who
marked his abrupt change from the discussion of the war to a far different
topic.</p>
<p>"I think some of it is in every man," replied Sergeant Whitley gravely. "I
remember once that when we had finished a long chase after some Northern
Cheyennes through mighty rough and dry country we came to a little valley,
a kind of a pocket in the hills, fed by a fine creek, runnin' out of the
mountains on one side, into the mountains on the other. The pocket was
mebbe two miles long an' mebbe a mile across, an' it was chock full of
green trees an' green grass, an' wild flowers. We enjoyed its comforts,
but do you think that was all? Every man among us, an' there was at least
a dozen who couldn't read, admired its beauties, an' begun to talk softer
an' more gentle than they did when they was out on the dry plains. An' you
feel them things more in war than you do at any other time."</p>
<p>"I suppose you do," said Dick. "The spring is coming out now in Kentucky
where I live, and I'd like to see the new grass rippling before the wind,
and the young leaves on the trees rustling softly together."</p>
<p>"Stop sentimentalizing," said Warner. "If you don't it won't be a minute
before Pennington will begin to talk about his Nebraska plains, and how
he'd like to see the buffalo herds ten million strong, rocking the earth
as they go galloping by."</p>
<p>Pennington smiled.</p>
<p>"I won't see the buffalo herds," he said, "but look at the wild fowl going
north."</p>
<p>They left the window as the rain had ceased, and went outside. All this
region was still primitive and thinly settled, and now they saw flocks of
wild ducks and wild geese winging northward. The next day the heavens
themselves were darkened by an immense flight of wild pigeons. The country
cut up by so many rivers, creeks and brooks swarmed with wild fowl, and
more than once the soldiers roused up deer from the thickets.</p>
<p>The second day after the talk of the four in the little church Dick, who
was now regarded as a most efficient and trusty young staff officer, was
sent with a dispatch to General Buell requesting him to press forward with
as much speed as he could to the junction with General Grant. Several
other aides were sent by different routes, in order to make sure that at
least one would arrive, but Dick, through his former ride with Colonel
Winchester to Nashville, had the most knowledge of the country, and hence
was likely to reach Buell first.</p>
<p>As the boy rode from the camp and crossed the river into the forest he
looked back, and he could not fail to notice to what an extent it was yet
a citizen army, and not one of trained soldiers. The veteran sergeant had
already called his attention to what he deemed grave omissions. In the
three weeks that they had been lying there they had thrown up no
earthworks. Not a spade had touched the earth. Nor was there any other
defense of any kind. The high forest circled close about them, dense now
with foliage and underbrush, hiding even at a distance of a few hundred
yards anything that might lie within. The cavalry in these three weeks had
made one scouting expedition, but it was slight and superficial, resulting
in nothing. The generals of divisions posted their own pickets separately,
leaving numerous wide breaks in the line, and the farmer lads, at the
change of guard, invariably fired their rifles in the air, to signify the
joy of living, and because it was good to hear the sound.</p>
<p>Now that he was riding away from them, these things impressed Dick more
than when he was among them. Sergeant Whitley's warning and pessimistic
words came back to him with new force, but, as he rode into the depths of
the forest, he shook off all depression. Those words, "Seventy thousand
strong!" continually recurred to him. Yes, they would be seventy thousand
strong when Buell came up, and the boys were right. Certainly there was no
Confederate force in the west that could resist seventy thousand troops,
splendidly armed, flushed with victory and led by a man like Grant.</p>
<p>Seventy thousand strong! Dick's heart beat high at the unuttered words.
Why should Grant fortify? It was for the enemy, not for him, to do such a
thing. Nor was it possible that Johnston even behind defenses could resist
the impact of the seventy thousand who had been passing from one victory
to another, and who were now in the very heart of the enemy's country.</p>
<p>His heart continued to beat high and fast as he rode through the green
forest. Its strong, sweet odors gave a fillip to his blood, and he pressed
his horse to new speed. He rode without interruption night and day, save a
few hours now and then for sleep, and reached the army of Buell which deep
in mud was toiling slowly forward.</p>
<p>Buell was not as near to Shiloh as Dick had supposed, but his march had
suffered great hindrances. Halleck, in an office far away in St. Louis,
had undertaken to manage the campaign. His orders to Buell and his command
to Grant had been delayed. Buell, who had moved to the town of Columbia,
therefore had started late through no fault of his.</p>
<p>Duck River, which Buell was compelled to cross, was swollen like all the
other streams of the region, by the great rains and was forty feet deep.
The railway bridge across it had been wrecked by the retreating
Confederates and he was compelled to wait there two weeks until his
engineers could reconstruct it.</p>
<p>War plays singular chances. Halleck in St. Louis, secure in his plan of
campaign, had sent an order after Dick left Shiloh, for Buell to turn to
the north, leaving Grant to himself, and occupy a town that he named.
Through some chance the order never reached Buell. Had it done so the
whole course of American history might have been changed. Grant himself,
after the departure of the earlier messengers, changed his mind and sent
messengers to Nelson, who led Buell's vanguard, telling him not to hurry.
This army was to come to Pittsburg Landing or Shiloh partly by the
Tennessee, and Grant stated that the vessels for him would not be ready
until some days later. It was the early stage of the war when generals
behaved with great independence, and Nelson, a rough, stubborn man, after
reading the order marched on faster than ever. It seemed afterward that
the very stars were for Grant, when one order was lost, and another
disobeyed.</p>
<p>But Dick was not to know of these things until later. He delivered in
person his dispatch to General Buell, who remembered him and gave him a
friendly nod, but who was as chary of speech as ever. He wrote a brief
reply to the dispatch and gave it sealed to Dick.</p>
<p>"The letter I hand you," he said, "merely notifies General Grant that I
have received his orders and will hurry forward as much as possible. If on
your return journey you should deem yourself in danger of falling into the
hands of the enemy destroy it at once."</p>
<p>Dick promised to do so, saluted, and retired. He spent only two hours in
General Buell's camp, securing some fresh provisions to carry in his
saddle bags and allowing his horse a little rest. Then he mounted and took
as straight a course as he could for General Grant's camp at Pittsburg
Landing.</p>
<p>The boy felt satisfied with himself. He had done his mission quickly and
exactly, and he would have a pleasant ride back. On his strong, swift
horse, and with a good knowledge of the road, he could go several times
faster than Buell's army. He anticipated a pleasant ride. The forest
seemed to him to be fairly drenched in spring. Little birds flaming in
color darted among the boughs and others more modest in garb poured forth
a full volume of song. Dick, sensitive to sights and sounds, hummed a tune
himself. It was the thundering song of the sea that he had heard Samuel
Jarvis sing in the Kentucky Mountains:</p>
<p>They bore him away when the day had fled,<br/>
And the storm was rolling high,<br/>
And they laid him down in his lonely bed<br/>
By the light of an angry sky.<br/>
The lightning flashed and the wild sea lashed<br/>
The shore with its foaming wave,<br/>
And the thunder passed on the rushing blast,<br/>
As it howled o'er the rover's grave.<br/></p>
<p>He pressed on, hour after hour, through the deep woods, meeting no one,
but content. At noon his horse suddenly showed signs of great weariness,
and Dick, remembering how much he had ridden him over muddy roads, gave
him a long rest. Besides, there was no need to hurry. The Southern army
was at Corinth, in Mississippi, three or four days' journey away, and
there had been no scouts or skirmishers in the woods between.</p>
<p>After a stop of an hour he remounted and rode on again, but the horse was
still feeling his great strain, and he did not push him beyond a walk. He
calculated that nevertheless he would reach headquarters not long after
nightfall, and he went along gaily, still singing to himself. He crossed
the river at a point above the army, where the Union troops had made a
ferry, and then turned toward the camp.</p>
<p>About sunset he reached a hill from which he could look over the forest
and see under the horizon faint lights that were made by Grant's campfires
at Pittsburg Landing. It was a welcome sight. He would soon be with his
friends again, and he urged his horse forward a little faster.</p>
<p>"Halt!" cried a sharp voice from the thicket.</p>
<p>Dick faced about in amazement, and saw four horsemen in gray riding from
the bushes. The shock was as great as if he had been struck by a bullet,
but he leaned forward on his horse's neck, kicked him violently with his
heels and shouted to him. The horse plunged forward at a gallop. The boy,
remembering General Buell's instructions, slipped the letter from his
pocket, and in the shelter of the horse's body dropped it to the ground,
where he knew it would be lost among the bushes and in the twilight.</p>
<p>"Halt!" was repeated more loudly and sharply than ever. Then a bullet
whizzed by Dick's ear, and a second pierced the heart of his good horse.
He tried to leap clear of the falling animal, and succeeded, but he fell
so hard among the bushes that he was stunned for a few moments. When he
revived and stood up he saw the four horsemen in gray looking curiously at
him.</p>
<p>"'Twould have been cheaper for you to have stopped when we told you to do
it," said one in a whimsical tone.</p>
<p>Dick noticed that the tone was not unkind—it was not the custom to
treat prisoners ill in this great war. He rubbed his left shoulder on
which he had fallen and which still pained him a little.</p>
<p>"I didn't stop," he said, "because I didn't know that you would be able to
hit either me or my horse in the dusk."</p>
<p>"I s'pose from your way of lookin' at it you was right to take the chance,
but you've learned now that we Southern men are tol'able good
sharpshooters."</p>
<p>"I knew it long ago, but what are you doing here, right in the jaws of our
army? They might close on you any minute with a snap. You ought to be with
your own army at Corinth."</p>
<p>Dick noticed that the men looked at one another, and there was silence for
a moment or two.</p>
<p>"Young fellow," resumed the spokesman, "you was comin' from the direction
of Columbia, an' your hoss, which I am sorry we had to kill, looked as if
he was cleaned tuckered out. I judge that you was bearin' a message from
Buell's army to Grant's."</p>
<p>"You mustn't hold me responsible for your judgment, good or bad."</p>
<p>"No, I reckon not, but say, young fellow, do you happen to have a chaw of
terbacker in your clothes?"</p>
<p>"If I had any I'd offer it to you, but I never chew."</p>
<p>The man sighed.</p>
<p>"Well, mebbe it's a bad habit," he said, "but it's powerful grippin'. I'd
give a heap for a good twist of old Kentucky. Now we're goin' to search
you an' it ain't wuth while to resist, 'cause we've got you where we want
you, as the dog said to the 'coon when he took him by the throat. We're
lookin' for letters an' dispatches, 'cause we're shore you come from
Buell, but if we should run across any terbacker we'll have to he'p
ourselves to it. We ain't no robbers, 'cause in times like these it ain't
no robbery to take terbacker."</p>
<p>Dick noticed that while they talked one of the men never ceased to cover
him with a rifle. They were good-humored and kindly, but he knew they
would not relax an inch from their duty.</p>
<p>"All right," he said, "go ahead. I'll give you a good legal title to
everything you may find."</p>
<p>He knew that the letter was lying in the bushes within ten feet of them
and he had a strong temptation to look in that direction and see if it
were as securely hidden as he had thought, but he resisted the impulse.</p>
<p>Two of the men searched him rapidly and dexterously, and much to their
disappointment found no dispatch.</p>
<p>"You ain't got any writin' on you, that's shore," said the spokesman. "I'd
expected to find a paper, an' I had a lingerin' hope, too, that we might
find a little terbacker on you 'spite of what you said."</p>
<p>"You don't think I'd lie about the tobacco, would you?"</p>
<p>"Sonny, it ain't no lyin' in a big war to say you ain't got no terbacker,
when them that's achin' for it are standin' by, ready to grab it. If you
had a big diamond hid about you, an' a robber was to ask you if you had
it, you'd tell him no, of course."</p>
<p>"I think," said Dick, "that you must be from Kentucky. You've got our
accent."</p>
<p>"I shorely am, an' I'm a longer way from it than I like. I noticed from
the first that you talked like me, which is powerful flatterin' to you.
Ain't you one of my brethren that the evil witches have made take up with
the Yankees?"</p>
<p>"I'm from the same state," replied Dick, who saw no reason to conceal his
identity. "My name is Richard Mason, and I'm an aide on the staff of
Colonel Arthur Winchester, who commands a Kentucky regiment in General
Grant's army."</p>
<p>"I've heard of Colonel Winchester. The same that got a part of his
regiment cut up so bad by Forrest."</p>
<p>"Yes, we did get cut up. I was there," confessed Dick a little
reluctantly.</p>
<p>"Don't feel bad about it. It's likely to happen to any of you when Forrest
is around. Now, since you've introduced yourself so nice I'll introduce
myself. I'm Sergeant Robertson, in the Orphan Brigade. It's a Kentucky
brigade, an' it gets its nickname 'cause it's made up of boys so young
that they call me gran'pa, though I'm only forty-four. These other three
are Bridge, Perkins, and Connor, just plain privates."</p>
<p>The three "just plain privates" grinned.</p>
<p>"What are you going to do with me?" asked Dick.</p>
<p>"We're goin' to give you a pleasant little ride. We killed your hoss, for
which I 'pologize again, but I've got a good one of my own, and you'll
jump up behind me."</p>
<p>A sudden spatter of rifle fire came from the direction of the Northern
pickets.</p>
<p>"Them sentinels of yours have funny habits," said Robertson grinning.
"Just bound to hear their guns go off. They're changin' the guard now."</p>
<p>"How do you know that?" asked Dick.</p>
<p>"Oh, I know a heap. I'm a terrible wise man, but bein' so wise I don't
tell all I know or how I happen to know it. Hop up, sonny."</p>
<p>"Don't you think I'll be a lot of trouble to you," said Dick, "riding
behind you thirty or forty miles to your camp?"</p>
<p>The four men exchanged glances, and no one answered. The boy felt a sudden
chill, and his hair prickled at the roots. He did not know what had caused
it, but surely it was a sign of some danger.</p>
<p>The night deepened steadily as they were talking. The twilight had gone
long since. The last afterglow had faded. The darkness was heavy with
warmth. The thick foliage of spring rustled gently. Dick's sensation that
something unusual was happening did not depart.</p>
<p>The four men, after looking at one another, looked fixedly at Dick.</p>
<p>"Sonny," said Robertson, "you ain't got no call to worry 'bout our
troubles. As I said, this is a good, strong hoss of mine, an' it will
carry us just as far as we go an' no further."</p>
<p>It was an enigmatical reply, and Dick saw that it was useless to ask them
questions. Robertson mounted, and Dick, without another word, sprang up
behind him. Two of the privates rode up close, one on either side, and the
other kept immediately behind. He happened to glance back and he saw that
the man held a drawn pistol on his thigh. He wondered at such extreme
precautions, and the ominous feeling increased.</p>
<p>"Now, lads," said Robertson to his men, "don't make no more noise than you
can help. There ain't much chance that any Yankee scoutin' party will be
out, but if there should be one we don't want to run into it. An' as for
you, Mr. Mason, you're a nice boy. We all can see that, but just as shore
as you let go with a yell or anything like it at any time or under any
circumstances, you'll be dead the next second."</p>
<p>A sudden fierce note rang in his voice, and Dick, despite all his courage,
shuddered. He felt as if a nameless terror all at once threatened not only
him, but others. His lips and mouth were dry.</p>
<p>Robertson spoke softly to his horse, and then rode slowly forward through
the deep forest. The others rode with him, never breaking their compact
formation, and preserving the utmost silence. Dick did not ask another
question. Talk and fellowship were over. Everything before him now was
grim and menacing.</p>
<p>The dense woods and the darkness hid them so securely that they could not
have been seen twenty yards away, but the men rode on at a sure pace, as
if they knew the ground well. The silence was deep and intense, save for
the footsteps of the horses and now and then a night bird in the tall
trees calling.</p>
<p>Before they had gone far a man stepped from a thicket and held up a rifle.</p>
<p>"Four men from the Orphan Brigade with a prisoner," said Robertson.</p>
<p>"Advance with the prisoner," said the picket, and the four men rode
forward. Dick saw to both left and right other pickets, all in the gray
uniform of the South, and his heart grew cold within him. The hair on his
head prickled again at its roots, and it was a dreadful sensation. What
did it mean? Why these Southern pickets within cannon shot of the Northern
lines?</p>
<p>The men rode slowly on. They were in the deep forest, but the young
prisoner began to see many things under the leafy canopy. On his right the
dim, shadowy forms of hundreds of men lay sleeping on the grass. On his
left was a massed battery of great guns, eight in number.</p>
<p>Further and further they went, and there were soldiers and cannon
everywhere, but not a fire. There was no bed of coals, not a single torch
gleamed anywhere. Not all the soldiers were sleeping, but those who were
awake never spoke. Silence and darkness brooded over a great army in gray.
It was as if they marched among forty thousand phantoms, row on row.</p>
<p>The whole appalling truth burst in an instant upon the boy. The Southern
army, which they had supposed was at Corinth, lay in the deep woods within
cannon shot of its foe, and not a soul in all Grant's thousands knew of
its presence there! And Buell was still far away! It seemed to Dick that
for a little space his heart stopped beating. He foresaw it all, the
terrible hammer-stroke at dawn, the rush of the fiery South upon her
unsuspecting foe, and the cutting down of brigades, before sleep was gone
from their eyes.</p>
<p>Not in vain had the South boasted that Johnston was a great general. He
had not been daunted by Donelson. While his foe rested on his victory and
took his ease, he was here with a new army, ready to strike the unwary.
Dick shivered suddenly, and, with a violent impulse, clutched the waist of
the man in front of him. It may have been some sort of physical telepathy,
but Robertson understood. He turned his head and said in a whisper:</p>
<p>"You're right. The whole Southern army is here in the woods, an' we'd
rather lose a brigade tonight than let you escape."</p>
<p>Dick felt a thrill of the most acute agony. If he could only escape! There
must be some way! If he could but find one! His single word would save the
lives of thousands and prevent irreparable defeat! Again he clutched the
waist of the man in front of him and again the man divined.</p>
<p>"It ain't no use," he said, although his tone was gentle, and in a way
sympathetic. "After all, it's your own fault. You blundered right in our
way, an' we had to take you for fear you'd see us, an' give the alarm. It
was your unlucky chance. You'd give a million dollars if you had it to
slip out of our hands and tell Ulysses Grant that Albert Sidney Johnston
with his whole army is layin' in the woods right alongside of him, ready
to jump on his back at dawn, an' he not knowin' it."</p>
<p>"I would," said Dick fervently.</p>
<p>"An' so would I if I was in your place. Just think, Mr. Mason, that of all
the hundreds of thousands of men in the Northern armies, of all the twenty
or twenty-five million people on the Northern side, there's just one, that
one a boy, and that boy you, who knows that Albert Sidney Johnston is
here."</p>
<p>"Held fast as I am, I'm sorry now that I do know it."</p>
<p>"I can't say that I blame you. I said you'd give a million dollars to be
able to tell, but if you're to measure such things with money it would be
worth a hundred million an' more, yes, it would be cheap at three or four
hundred millions for the North to know it. But, after all, you can't
measure such things with money. Maybe you think I talk a heap, but I'm
stirred some, too."</p>
<p>They rode on a little farther over the hilly ground, covered with thick
forest or dense, tall scrub. But there were troops, troops, everywhere,
and now and then the batteries. They were mostly boys, like their
antagonists of the North, and the sleep of most of them was the sleep of
exhaustion, after a forced and rapid march over heavy ground from Corinth.
But Dick knew that they would be fresh in the morning when they rose from
the forest, and rushed upon their unwarned foe.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XIV. THE DARK EVE OF SHILOH </h2>
<p>Dick noticed as they went further into the forest how complete was the
concealment of a great army, possible only in a country wooded so heavily,
and in the presence of a careless enemy. The center was like the front of
the Southern force. Not a fire burned, not a torch gleamed. The horses
were withdrawn so far that stamp or neigh could not be heard by the Union
pickets.</p>
<p>"We'll stop here," said Robertson at length. "As you're a Kentuckian, I
thought it would be pleasanter for you to be handed over to Kentuckians.
The Orphan Brigade to which I belong is layin' on the ground right in
front of us, an' the first regiment is that of Colonel Kenton. I'll hand
you over to him, an'—not 'cause I've got anything ag'inst you—I'll
be mighty glad to do it, too, 'cause my back is already nigh breakin' with
the responsibility."</p>
<p>Dick started violently.</p>
<p>"What's hit you?" asked Robertson.</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing. You see, I'm nervous."</p>
<p>"You ain't tellin' the truth. But I don't blame you an' it don't matter
anyway. Here we are. Jump down."</p>
<p>Dick sprang to the ground, and the others followed. While they held the
reins they stood in a close circle about him. He had about as much chance
of escape as he had of flying.</p>
<p>Robertson walked forward, saluted some one who stood up in the dark, and
said a few words in a low tone.</p>
<p>"Bring him forward," said a clear voice, which Dick recognized at once.</p>
<p>The little group of men opened out and Dick, stepping forth, met his uncle
face to face. It was now the time of Colonel George Kenton to start
violently.</p>
<p>"My God! You, Dick!" he exclaimed. "How did you come here?"</p>
<p>"I didn't come," replied the boy, who was now feeling more at ease. "I was
brought here by four scouts of yours, who I must say saw their duty and
did it."</p>
<p>Colonel Kenton grasped his hand and shook it. He was very fond of this
young nephew of his. The mere fact that he was on the other side did not
alter his affection.</p>
<p>"Tell me about it, Dick," he said. "And you, Sergeant Robertson, you and
your men are to be thanked for your vigilance and activity. You can go off
duty. You are entitled to your rest."</p>
<p>As they withdrew the sergeant, who passed by Dick and who had not missed a
word of the conversation between him and his uncle, said to him:</p>
<p>"At least, young sir, I've returned you to your relatives, an' you're a
minor, as I can see."</p>
<p>"It's so," said Dick as the sergeant passed on.</p>
<p>"They have not ill treated you?" said Colonel Kenton.</p>
<p>"No, they've been as kind as one enemy could be to another."</p>
<p>"It is strange, most strange, that you and I should meet here at such a
time. Nay, Dick, I see in it the hand of Providence. You're to be saved
from what will happen to your army tomorrow."</p>
<p>"I'd rather not be saved in this manner."</p>
<p>"I know it, but it is perhaps the only way. As sure as the stars are in
Heaven your army will be destroyed in the morning, an' you'd be destroyed
with it. I'm fond of you, Dick, and so I'd rather you'd be in our rear, a
prisoner, while this is happening."</p>
<p>"General Grant is a hard man to crush."</p>
<p>"Dick! Dick, lad, you don't know what you're talking about! Look at the
thing as it stands! We know everything that you're doing. Our spies look
into the very heart of your camp. You think that we are fifty miles away,
but a cannon shot from the center of our camp would reach the center of
yours. Why, while we are here, ready to spring, this Grant, of whom you
think so much, is on his way tonight to the little village of Savannah to
confer with Buell. In the dawn when we strike and roll his brigades back
he will not be here. And that's your great general!"</p>
<p>Dick knew that his uncle was excited. But he had full cause to be. There
was everything in the situation to inflame an officer's pride and
anticipation. It was not too dark for Dick to see a spark leap from his
eyes, and a sudden flush of red appear in either tanned cheek. But for
Dick the chill came again, and once more his hair prickled at the roots.
The ambush was even more complete than he had supposed, and General Grant
would not be there when it was sprung.</p>
<p>"Dick," said Colonel Kenton, "I have talked to you as I would not have
talked to anyone else, but even so, I would not have talked to you as I
have, were not your escape an impossibility. You are unharmed, but to
leave this camp you would have to fly."</p>
<p>"I admit it, sir."</p>
<p>"Come with me. There are men higher in rank than I who would wish to see a
prisoner taken as you were."</p>
<p>Dick followed him willingly and without a word. Aware that he was not in
the slightest physical danger he was full of curiosity concerning what he
was about to see. The words, "men higher in rank than I," whipped his
blood.</p>
<p>Colonel Kenton led through the darkness to a deep and broad ravine, into
which they descended. The sides and bottom of this ravine were clothed in
bushes, and they grew thick on the edges above. It was much darker here,
but Dick presently caught ahead of him the flicker of the first light that
he had seen in the Southern army.</p>
<p>The boy's heart began to beat fast and hard. All the omens foretold that
he was about to witness something that he could never by any possibility
forget. They came nearer to the flickering light, and he made out seated
figures around it. They were men wrapped in cavalry cloaks, because the
night air had now grown somewhat chill, and Dick knew instinctively that
these were the Southern generals preparing for the hammer-stroke at dawn.</p>
<p>A sentinel, rifle in hand, met them. Colonel Kenton whispered with him a
moment, and he went to the group. He returned in a moment and escorted
Dick and his uncle forward. Colonel Kenton saluted and Dick involuntarily
did the same.</p>
<p>It was a small fire, casting only a faint and flickering light, but Dick,
his eyes now used to the dusk, saw well the faces of the generals. He knew
at once which was Johnston, the chief. He seemed older than the rest,
sixty at least, but his skin was clear and ruddy, and the firm face and
massive jaw showed thought and power. Yet the countenance appeared gloomy,
as if overcast with care. Perhaps it was another omen!</p>
<p>By the side of Johnston sat a small but muscular man, swarthy, and in
early middle years. His face and gestures when he talked showed clearly
that he was of Latin blood. It was Beauregard, the victor of Bull Run, now
second in command here, and he made a striking contrast to the stern and
motionless Kentuckian who sat beside him and who was his chief. There was
no uneasy play of Johnston's hands, no shrugging of the shoulders, no
jerking of the head. He sat silent, his features a mask, while he listened
to his generals.</p>
<p>On the other side was Braxton Bragg, brother-in-law of Jefferson Davis,
who could never forget Bragg's kinship, and the service that he had done
fifteen years before at Buena Vista, when he had broken with his guns the
last of Santa Anna's squares, deciding the victory. By the side of him was
Hardee, the famous tactician, taught in the best schools of both America
and Europe. Then there was Polk, who, when a youth, had left the army to
enter the church and become a bishop, and who was now a soldier again and
a general. Next to the bishop-general sat the man who had been
Vice-President of the United States and who, if the Democracy had held
together would now have been in the chair of Lincoln, John C.
Breckinridge, called by his people the Magnificent, commonly accounted the
most splendid looking man in America.</p>
<p>"Bring the prisoner forward, Colonel Kenton," said General Johnston, a
general upon whom the South, with justice, rested great hopes.</p>
<p>Dick stepped forward at once and he held himself firmly, as he felt the
eyes of the six generals bent upon him. He was conscious even at the
moment that chance had given him a great opportunity. He was there to see,
while the military genius of the South planned in the shadow of a dark
ravine a blow which the six intended to be crushing.</p>
<p>"Where was the prisoner taken?" said Johnston to Colonel Kenton.</p>
<p>"Sergeant Robertson and three other men of my command seized him as he was
about to enter the Northern lines. He was coming from the direction of
Buell, where it is likely that he had gone to take a dispatch."</p>
<p>"Did you find any answer upon him."</p>
<p>"My men searched him carefully, sir, but found nothing."</p>
<p>"He is in the uniform of a staff officer. Have you found to what regiment
in the Union army he belongs?"</p>
<p>"He is on the staff of Colonel Arthur Winchester, who commands one of the
Kentucky regiments. I have also to tell you, sir, that his name is Richard
Mason, and that he is my nephew."</p>
<p>"Ah," said General Johnston, "it is one of the misfortunes of civil war
that so many of us fight against our own relatives. For those who live in
the border states yours is the common lot."</p>
<p>But Dick was conscious that the six generals were gazing at him with
renewed interest.</p>
<p>"Your surmise about his having been to Buell is no doubt correct," said
Beauregard quickly and nervously. "You left General Buell this morning,
did you not, Mr. Mason?"</p>
<p>Dick remained silent.</p>
<p>"It is also true that Buell's army is worn down by his heavy march over
muddy roads," continued Beauregard as if he had not noticed Dick's failure
to reply.</p>
<p>Dick's teeth were shut firmly, and he compressed his lips. He stood
rigidly erect, gazing now at the flickering flames of the little fire.</p>
<p>"I suggest that you try him on some other subject than Buell, General
Beauregard," said the bishop-general, a faint twinkle appearing in his
eyes. Johnston sat silent, but his blue eyes missed nothing.</p>
<p>"It is true also, is it not," continued Beauregard, "that General Grant
has gone or is going tonight to Savannah to meet General Buell, and confer
with him about a speedy advance upon our army at Corinth?"</p>
<p>Dick clenched his teeth harder than ever, and a spasm passed over his
face. He was conscious that six pairs of eyes, keen and intent, ready to
note the slightest change of countenance and to read a meaning into it,
were bent upon him. It was only by a supreme effort that he remained
master of himself, but after the single spasm his countenance remained
unmoved.</p>
<p>"You do not choose to answer," said Bragg, always a stern and ruthless
man, "but we can drag what you know from you."</p>
<p>"I am a prisoner of war," replied Dick steadily. "I was taken in full
uniform. I am no spy, and you cannot ill treat me."</p>
<p>"I do not mean that we would inflict any physical suffering upon you,"
said Bragg. "The Confederacy does not, and will never resort to such
methods. But you are only a boy. We can question you here, until, through
very weakness of spirit, you will be glad to tell us all you know about
Buell's or any other Northern force."</p>
<p>"Try me, and see," said Dick proudly.</p>
<p>The blue eye of the silent Johnston flickered for an instant.</p>
<p>"But it is true," said Beauregard, resuming his role of cross-examiner,
"that your army, considering itself secure, has not fortified against us?
It has dug no trenches, built no earthworks, thrown up no abatis!"</p>
<p>The boy stood silent with folded arms, and Colonel George Kenton, standing
on one side, threw his nephew a glance of sympathy, tinged with
admiration.</p>
<p>"Still you do not answer," continued Beauregard, and now a strong note of
irony appeared in his tone, "but perhaps it is just as well. You do your
duty to your own army, and we miss nothing. You cannot tell us anything
that we do not know already. Whatever you may know we know more. We know
tonight the condition of General Grant's army better than General Grant
himself does. We know how General Buell and his army stand better than
General Buell himself does. We know the position of your brigades and the
missing links between them better than your own brigade commanders do."</p>
<p>The eyes of the Louisianian flashed, his swarthy face swelled and his
shoulders twitched. The French blood was strong within him. Just so might
some general of Napoleon, some general from the Midi, have shown his
emotion on the eve of battle, an emotion which did not detract from
courage and resolution. But the Puritan general, Johnston, raised a
deprecatory hand.</p>
<p>"It is enough, General Beauregard," he said. "The young prisoner will tell
us nothing. That is evident. As he sees his duty he does it, and I wish
that our young men when they are taken may behave as well. Mr. Mason, you
are excused. You remain in the custody of your uncle, but I warn you that
there is none who will guard better against the remotest possibility of
your escape."</p>
<p>It was involuntary, but Dick gave his deepest military salute, and said in
a tone of mingled admiration and respect:</p>
<p>"General Johnston, I thank you."</p>
<p>The commander-in-chief of the Southern army bowed courteously in return,
and Dick, following his uncle, left the ravine.</p>
<p>The six generals returned to their council, and the boy who would not
answer was quickly forgotten. Long they debated the morrow. Several have
left accounts of what occurred. Johnston, although he had laid the
remarkable ambush, and was expecting victory, was grave, even gloomy. But
Beauregard, volatile and sanguine, rejoiced. For him the triumph was won
already. After their great achievement in placing their army, unseen and
unknown, within cannon shot of the Union force, failure was to him
impossible.</p>
<p>Breckinridge, like his chief, Johnston, was also grave and did not say
much. Hardee, as became one of his severe military training, discussed the
details, the placing of the brigades and the time of attack by each. Polk,
the bishop-general, and Bragg, also had their part.</p>
<p>As they talked in low tones they moved the men over their chessboard. Now
and then an aide was summoned, and soon departed swiftly and in silence to
move a battery or a regiment a little closer to the Union lines, but
always he carried the injunction that no noise be made. Not a sound that
could be heard three hundred yards away came from all that great army,
lying there in the deep woods and poised for its spring.</p>
<p>Meanwhile security reigned in the Union camp. The farm lads of the west
and northwest had talked much over their fires. They had eaten good
suppers, and by and by they fell asleep. But many of the officers still
sat by the coals and discussed the march against the Southern army at
Corinth, when the men of Buell should join those of Grant. The pickets,
although the gaps yet remained between those of the different brigades,
walked back and forth and wondered at the gloom and intensity of the woods
in front of them, but did not dream of that which lay in the heart of the
darkness.</p>
<p>The Southern generals in the ravine lingered yet a little longer. A
diagram had been drawn upon a piece of paper. It showed the position of
every Southern brigade, regiment, and battery, and of every Northern
division, too. It showed every curve of the Tennessee, the winding lines
of the three creeks, Owl, Lick, and Snake, and the hills and marshes.</p>
<p>The last detail of the plan was agreed upon finally, and they made it very
simple, lest their brigades and regiments should lose touch and become
confused in the great forest. They were to attack continually by the
right, press the Union army toward the right always, in order to rush in
and separate it from Pittsburg Landing on the Tennessee, and from the
fleet and its stores. Then they meant to drive it into the marshes
enclosed by the river and Snake Creek and destroy it.</p>
<p>The six generals rose, leaving the little fire to sputter out. General
Johnston was very grave, and so were all the others as they started toward
their divisions, except Beauregard, who said in sanguine tones:</p>
<p>"Gentlemen, we shall sleep tomorrow night in the enemy's camp."</p>
<p>Word, in the mysterious ways of war, had slid through the camp that the
generals were in council, and many soldiers, driven by overwhelming
curiosity, had crept through the underbrush to watch the figures by the
fire in the ravine. They could not hear, they did not seek to hear, but
they were held by a sort of spell. When they saw them separate, every one
moving toward his own headquarters, they knew that there was nothing to
await now but the dawn, and they stole back toward their own headquarters.</p>
<p>Dick had gone with Colonel Kenton to his own regiment, in the very heart
of the Orphan Brigade, and on his way his uncle said:</p>
<p>"Dick, you will sleep among my own lads, and I ask you for your own sake
to make no attempt to escape tonight. You would certainly be shot."</p>
<p>"I recognize that fact, sir, and I shall await a better opportunity."</p>
<p>"What to do with you in the morning I don't know, but we shall probably be
able to take care of you. Meanwhile, Dick, go to sleep if you can. See,
our boys are spread here through the woods. If it were day you'd probably
find at least a dozen among them whom you know, and certainly a hundred
are of blood kin to you, more or less."</p>
<p>Dick saw the dim forms stretched in hundreds on the ground, and, thanking
his uncle for his kindness, he stretched himself upon an unoccupied bit of
turf and closed his eyes. But it was impossible for young Richard Mason to
sleep. He felt again that terrible thrill of agony, because he, alone, of
all the score and more of Northern millions, knew that the Southern trap
was about to fall, and he could not tell.</p>
<p>Never was he further from sleep. His nerves quivered with actual physical
pain. He opened his eyes again and saw the dim forms lying in row on row
as far in the forest as his eye could reach. Then he listened. He might
hear the rifle of some picket, more wary or more enterprising than the
others, sounding the alarm. But no such sound came to his ears. It had
turned warmer again, and he heard only the Southern wind, heavy with the
odors of grass and flower, sighing through the tall forest.</p>
<p>An anger against his own surged up in his breast. Why wouldn't they look?
How could they escape seeing? Was it possible for one great army to remain
unknown within cannon shot of another a whole night? It was incredible,
but he had seen it, and he knew it. Fierce and bitter words rose to his
lips, but he did not utter them.</p>
<p>Dick lay a long time, with his eyes open, and the night was passing as
peacefully as if there would be no red dawn. Occasionally he heard a faint
stir near him, as some restless soldier turned on his side in his sleep,
and now and then a muttered word from an officer who passed near in the
darkness.</p>
<p>Hours never passed more slowly. Colonel Kenton had gone back toward the
Northern lines, and the boy surmised that he would be one of the first in
the attack at dawn. He began to wonder if dawn would ever really come.
Stars and a fair moon were out, and as nearly as he could judge from them
it must be about three o'clock in the morning. Yet it seemed to him that
he had been lying there at least twelve hours.</p>
<p>He shut his eyes again, but sleep was as far from him as ever. After
another long and almost unendurable period he opened them once more, and
it seemed to him that there was a faint tint of gray in the east. He sat
up, and looking a long time, he was sure of it. The gray was deepening and
broadening, and at its center it showed a tint of silver. The dawn was at
hand, and every nerve in the boy's body thrilled with excitement and
apprehension.</p>
<p>A murmur and a shuffling sound arose all around him. The sleepers were
awake, and they stood up, thousands of them. Cold food was given to them,
and they ate it hastily. But they fondled their rifles and muskets, and
turned their faces toward the point where the Northern army lay, and from
which no sound came.</p>
<p>Dick shivered all over. His head burned and his nerves throbbed. Too late
now! He had hoped all through the long night that something would happen
to carry a warning to that unsuspecting army. Nothing had happened, and in
five minutes the attack would begin.</p>
<p>He stood up at his full height and sought to pierce with his eyes the
foliage in front of him, but the massed ranks of the Southerners now stood
between, and the batteries were wheeling into line.</p>
<p>A great throb and murmur ran through the forest. Dick looked upon faces
brown with the sun, and eyes gleaming with the fierce passion of victory
and revenge. They were going to avenge Henry and Donelson and all the long
and mortifying retreat from Kentucky. Dick saw them straining and looking
eagerly at their officers for the word to advance.</p>
<p>As if by a concerted signal the long and mellow peal of many trumpets came
from the front, the officers uttered the shout to charge, the wild and
terrible rebel yell swelled from forty thousand throats, and the Southern
army rushed upon its foe.</p>
<p>The red dawn of Shiloh had come.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XV. THE RED DAWN OF SHILOH </h2>
<p>Dick stood appalled when he heard that terrible shout in the dawn, and the
crash of cannon and rifles rolling down upon the Union lines. It was
already a shout of triumph and, as he gazed, he saw through the woods the
red line of flame, sweeping on without a halt.</p>
<p>The surprise had been complete. Hardee, leading the Southern advance,
struck Peabody's Northern brigade and smashed it up instantly. The men did
not have time to seize their rifles. They had no chance to form into
ranks, and the officers themselves, as they shouted commands, were struck
down. Men killed or wounded were falling everywhere. Almost before they
had time to draw a free breath the remnants of the brigade were driven
upon those behind it.</p>
<p>Hardee also rushed upon Sherman, but there he found a foe of tough mettle.
The man who had foreseen the enormous extent of the war, although taken by
surprise, too, did not lose his courage or presence of mind. His men had
time to seize their arms, and he formed a hasty line of battle. He also
had the forethought to send word to the general in his rear to close up
the gap between him and the next general in the line. Then he shifted one
of his own brigades until there was a ravine in front of it to protect his
men, and he hurried a battery to his flank.</p>
<p>Never was Napoleon's maxim that men are nothing, a man is everything, more
justified, and never did the genius of Sherman shine more brilliantly than
on that morning. It was he, alone, cool of mind and steady in the face of
overwhelming peril, who first faced the Southern rush. He inspired his
troops with his own courage, and, though pale of face, they bent forward
to meet the red whirlwind that was rushing down upon them.</p>
<p>Like a blaze running through dry grass the battle extended in almost an
instant along the whole front, and the deep woods were filled with the
roar of eighty thousand men in conflict. And Grant, as at Donelson, was
far away.</p>
<p>The thunder and blaze of the battle increased swiftly and to a frightful
extent. The Southern generals, eager, alert and full of success, pushed in
all their troops. The surprised Northern army was giving away at all
points, except where Sherman stood. Hardee, continuing his rush, broke the
Northern line asunder, and his brigades, wrapping themselves around
Sherman, strove to destroy him.</p>
<p>Although he saw his lines crumbling away before him, Sherman never
flinched. The ravine in front of him and rough ground on one side defended
him to a certain extent. The men fired their rifles as fast as they could
load and reload, and the cannon on their flanks never ceased to pour shot
and shell into the ranks of their opponents. The gunners were shot down,
but new ones rose at once in their place. The fiercest conflict yet seen
on American soil was raging here. North would not yield, South ever rushed
anew to the attack, and a vast cloud of mingled flame and smoke enclosed
them both.</p>
<p>Dick had stood as if petrified, staring at the billows of flame, while the
thunder of great armies in battle stunned his ears. He realized suddenly
that he was alone. Colonel Kenton had said the night before that he did
not know what to do with him, but that he would find a way in the morning.
But he had been forgotten, and he knew it was natural that he should be.
His fate was but a trifle in the mighty event that was passing. There was
no time for any one in the Southern army to bother about him.</p>
<p>Then he understood too, that he was free. The whole Orphan Brigade had
passed on into the red heart of the battle, and had left him there alone.
Now his mind leaped out of its paralysis. All his senses became alert. In
that vast whirlwind of fire and smoke no one would notice that a single
youth was stealing through the forest in an effort to rejoin his own
people.</p>
<p>Action followed swift upon thought. He curved about in the woods and then
ran rapidly toward the point where the fire seemed thinnest. He did not
check his pace until he had gone at least a mile. Then he paused to see if
he could tell how the battle was going. Its roar seemed louder than ever
in his ears, and in front of him was a vast red line, which extended an
unseen distance through the forest. Now and then the wild and thrilling
rebel yell rose above the roar of cannon and the crash of rifles.</p>
<p>Dick saw with a sinking of the heart—and yet he had known that it
would be so—that the red line of flame had moved deeper into the
heart of the Northern camp. It had passed the Northern outposts and, at
many points, it had swept over the Northern center. He feared that there
was but a huddled and confused mass beyond it.</p>
<p>He saw something lying at his feet. It was a Confederate military cloak
which some officer had cast off as he rushed to the charge. He picked it
up, threw it about his own shoulders, and then tossed away his cap. If he
fell in with Confederate troops they would not know him from one of their
own, and it was no time now to hold cross-examinations.</p>
<p>He took a wide curve, and, after another mile, came to a hillock, upon
which he stood a little while, panting. Again he was appalled at the sight
he beheld. Bull Run and Donelson were small beside this. Here eighty
thousand men were locked fast in furious conflict. Raw and undisciplined
many of these farmer lads of the west and south were, but in battle they
showed a courage and tenacity not surpassed by the best trained troops
that ever lived.</p>
<p>The floating smoke reached Dick where he stood and stung his eyes, and a
powerful odor of burned gunpowder assailed his nostrils. But neither sight
nor odors held him back. Instead, they drew him on with overwhelming
force. He must rejoin his own and do his best however little it counted in
the whole.</p>
<p>It was now well on into the morning of a brilliant and hot Sunday. He did
not know it, but the combat was raging fiercest then around the little
church, which should have been sacred. Drawing a deep breath of an air
which was shot with fire and smoke, and which was hot to his lungs, Dick
began to run again. Almost before he noticed it he was running by the side
of a Southern regiment which had been ordered to veer about and attack
some new point in the Northern line. Keeping his presence of mind he
shouted with them as they rushed on, and presently dropped away from them
in the smoke.</p>
<p>He was conscious now of a new danger. Twigs and bits of bark began to rain
down upon him, and he heard the unpleasant whistle of bullets over his
head. They were the bullets of his own people, seeking to repel the
Southern charge. A minute later a huge shell burst near him, covering him
with flying earth. At first he thought he had been hit by fragments of the
shell, but when he shook himself he found that he was all right.</p>
<p>He took yet a wider curve and before he was aware of the treacherous
ground plunged into a swamp bordering one of the creeks. He stood for a
few moments in mud and water to his waist, but he knew that he had passed
from the range of the Union fire. Twigs and bark no longer fell around him
and that most unpleasant whizz of bullets was gone.</p>
<p>He pulled himself out of the mire and ran along the edge of the creek
toward the roar of the battle. He knew now that he had passed around the
flank of the Southern army and could approach the flank of his own. He ran
fast, and then began to hear bullets again. But now they were coming from
the Southern army. He threw away the cloak and presently he emerged into a
mass of men, who, under the continual urging of their officers, were
making a desperate defense, firing, drawing back, reloading and firing
again. In front, the woods swarmed with the Southern troops who drove
incessantly upon them.</p>
<p>Dick snatched up a rifle—plenty were lying upon the ground, where
the owners had fallen with them—and fired into the attacking ranks.
Then he reloaded swiftly, and pressed on toward the Union center.</p>
<p>"What troops are these?" he asked of an officer who was knotting a
handkerchief about a bleeding wrist.</p>
<p>"From Illinois. Who are you?"</p>
<p>"I'm Lieutenant Richard Mason of Colonel Arthur Winchester's Kentucky
regiment. I was taken prisoner by the enemy last night, but I escaped this
morning. Do you know where my regiment is?"</p>
<p>"Keep straight on, and you'll strike it or what's left of it, if anything
at all is left. It's a black day."</p>
<p>Dick scarcely caught his last words, as he dashed on through bullets,
shell and solid shot over slain men and horses, over dismantled guns and
gun carriages, and into the very heart of the flame and smoke. The thunder
of the battle was at its height now, because he was in the center of it.
The roar of the great guns was continuous, but the unbroken crash of
rifles by the scores of thousands was fiercer and more deadly.</p>
<p>The officer had pointed toward the Kentucky regiment with his sword, and
following the line Dick ran directly into it. The very first face he saw
was that of Colonel Winchester.</p>
<p>"Dick, my lad," shouted the Colonel, "where have you come from?"</p>
<p>"From the Southern army. I was taken prisoner last night almost within
sight of our own, but when they charged this morning they forgot me and
here I am."</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester suddenly seized him by the shoulders and pushed him
down. The regiment was behind a small ridge which afforded some
protection, and all were lying down except the senior officers.</p>
<p>"Welcome, Dick, to our hot little camp! The chances are about a hundred
per cent out of a hundred per cent that this is the hottest place on the
earth today!"</p>
<p>The long, thin figure of Warner lay pressed against the ground. A
handkerchief, stained red, was bound about his head and his face was pale,
but indomitable courage gleamed from his eyes. Just beyond him was
Pennington, unhurt.</p>
<p>"Thank God you haven't fallen, and that I've found you!" exclaimed Dick.</p>
<p>"I don't know whether you're so lucky after all," said Warner. "The
Johnnies have been mowing us down. They dropped on us so suddenly this
morning that they must have been sleeping in the same bed with us last
night, and we didn't know it. I hear that we're routed nearly everywhere
except here and where Sherman stands. Look out! Here they come again!"</p>
<p>They saw tanned faces and fierce eyes through the smoke, and the bullets
swept down on them in showers. Lucky for them that the little ridge was
there, and that they had made up their minds to stand to the last. They
replied with their own deadly fire, yet many fell, despite the shelter,
and to both left and right the battle swelled afresh. Dick felt again that
rain of bark and twigs and leaves. Sometimes a tree, cut through at its
base by cannon balls, fell with a crash. Along the whole curving line the
Southern generals ever urged forward their valiant troops.</p>
<p>Now the courage and skill of Sherman shone supreme. Dick saw him often
striding up and down the lines, ordering and begging his men to stand
fast, although they were looking almost into the eyes of their enemies.</p>
<p>The conflict became hand to hand, and assailant and assailed reeled to and
fro. But Sherman would not give up. The fiercest attacks broke in vain on
his iron front. McClernand, with whom he had quarreled the day before as
to who should command the army while Grant was away, came up with
reinforcements, and seeing what the fearless and resolute general had
done, yielded him the place.</p>
<p>The last of the charges broke for the time upon Sherman, and his exhausted
regiment uttered a shout of triumph, but on both sides of him the Southern
troops drove their enemy back and yet further back. Breckinridge, along
Lick Creek, was pushing everything before him. The bishop-general was
doing well. Many of the Northern troops had not yet recovered from their
surprise. A general and three whole regiments, struck on every side, were
captured.</p>
<p>It seemed that nothing could deprive the Southern army of victory,
absolute and complete. General Johnston had marshalled his troops with
superb skill, and intending to reap the full advantage of the surprise, he
continually pushed them forward upon the shattered Northern lines. He led
in person and on horseback the attack upon the Federal center. Around and
behind him rode his staff, and the wild rebel yell swept again through the
forest, when the soldiers saw the stern and lofty features of the chief
whom they trusted, leading them on.</p>
<p>But fate in the very moment of triumph that seemed overwhelming and sure
was preparing a terrible blow for the South. A bullet struck Johnston in
the ankle. His boot filled with blood, and the wound continued to bleed
fast. But, despite the urging of his surgeon, who rode with him, he
refused to dismount and have the wound bound up. How could he dismount at
such a time, when the battle was at its height, and the Union army was
being driven into the creeks and swamps! He was wounded again by a piece
of shell, and he sank dying from his horse. His officers crowded around
him, seeking to hide their irreparable loss from the soldiers, the most
costly death, with the exception of Stonewall Jackson's, sustained by the
Confederacy in the whole war.</p>
<p>But the troops, borne on by the impetus that success and the spirit of
Johnston had given them, drove harder than ever against the Northern line.
They crashed through it in many places, seizing prisoners and cannon.
Almost the whole Northern camp was now in their possession, and many of
the Southern lads, hungry from scanty rations, stopped to seize the plenty
that they found there, but enough persisted to give the Northern army no
rest, and press it back nearer and nearer to the marshes.</p>
<p>The combat redoubled around Sherman. Johnston was gone, but his generals
still shared his resolution. They turned an immense fire upon the point
where stood Sherman and McClernand, now united by imminent peril. Their
ranks were searched by shot and shell, and the bullets whizzed among them
like a continuous swarm of hornets.</p>
<p>Dick was still unwounded, but so much smoke and vapor had drifted about
his face that he was compelled at times to rub his eyes that he might see.
He felt a certain dizziness, too, and he did not know whether the
incessant roaring in his ears came wholly from the cannon and rifle fire
or partly from the pounding of his blood.</p>
<p>"I feel that we are shaking," he shouted in the ears of Warner, who lay
next to him. "I'm afraid we're going to give ground."</p>
<p>"I feel it, too," Warner shouted back. "We've been here for hours, but
we're shot to pieces. Half of our men must be killed or wounded, but how
old Sherman fights!"</p>
<p>The Southern leaders brought up fresh troops and hurled them upon Sherman.
Again the combat was hand to hand, and to the right and left the supports
of the indomitable Northern general were being cut away. Those brigades
who had proved their mettle at Donelson, and who had long stood fast, were
attacked so violently that they gave way, and the victors hurled
themselves upon Sherman's flank.</p>
<p>Dick and his two young comrades perceived through the flame and smoke the
new attack. It seemed to Dick that they were being enclosed now by the
whole Southern army, and he felt a sense of suffocation. He was dizzy from
such a long and terrible strain and so much danger, and he was not really
more than half conscious. He was loading and firing his rifle
mechanically, but he always aimed at something in the red storm before
them, although he never knew whether he hit or missed, and was glad of it.</p>
<p>The division of Sherman had been standing there seven hours, sustaining
with undaunted courage the resolute attacks of the Southern army, but the
sixth sense warning Dick that it had begun to shake at last was true. The
sun had now passed the zenith and was pouring intense and fiery rays upon
the field, sometimes piercing the clouds of smoke, and revealing the faces
of the men, black with sweat and burned gunpowder.</p>
<p>A cry arose for Grant. Why did not their chief show himself upon the
field! Was so great a battle to be fought with him away? And where was
Buell? He had a second great army. He was to join them that day. What good
would it be for him to come tomorrow? Many of them laughed in bitter
derision. And there was Lew Wallace, too! They had heard that he was near
the field with a strong division. Then why did he not come upon it and
face the enemy? Again they laughed that fierce and bitter laugh deep down
in their throats.</p>
<p>The attack upon Sherman never ceased for an instant. Now he was assailed
not only from the front, but from both flanks, and some even gaining the
rear struck blows upon his division there. One brigade upon his left was
compelled to give way, scattered, and lost its guns. The right wing was
also driven in, and the center yielded slowly, although retaining its
cohesion.</p>
<p>The three lads were on their feet now, and it seemed to them that
everything was lost. They could see the battle in front of them only, but
rumors came to them that the army was routed elsewhere. But neither
Sherman nor McClernand would yield, save for the slow retreat, yielding
ground foot by foot only. And there were many unknown heroes around them.
Sergeant Whitley blazed with courage and spirit.</p>
<p>"We could be worse off than we are!" he shouted to Dick. "General Buell's
army may yet come!"</p>
<p>"Maybe we could be worse off than we are, but I don't see how it's
possible!" shouted Dick in return, a certain grim humor possessing him for
the moment.</p>
<p>"Look! What I said has come true already!" shouted the sergeant. "Here is
shelter that will help us to make a new stand!"</p>
<p>In their slow retreat they reached two low hills, between which a small
ravine ran. It was not a strong position, but Sherman used it to the
utmost. His men fired from the protecting crests of the hills, and he
filled the ravine with riflemen, who poured a deadly fire upon their
assailants.</p>
<p>Now Sherman ordered them to stand fast to the last man, because it was by
this road that the division of Lew Wallace must come, if it came at all.
But Southern brigades followed them and the battle raged anew, as fierce
and deadly as ever.</p>
<p>Although their army was routed at many points the Northern officers showed
indomitable courage. Driven back in the forest they always strove to form
the lines anew, and now their efforts began to show some success. Their
resistance on the right hardened, and on the left they held fast to the
last chain of hills that covered the wharves and their stores at the river
landing. As they took position here two gunboats in the river began to
send huge shells over their heads at the attacking Southern columns,
maintaining a rapid and heavy fire which shook assailants and strengthened
defenders. Again the water had come to the help of the North, and at the
most critical moment. The whole Northern line was now showing a firmer
front, and Grant, himself, was directing the battle.</p>
<p>Fortune, which had played a game with Grant at Donelson, played a far
greater one with him on the far greater field of Shiloh. The red dawn of
Shiloh, when Johnston was sweeping his army before him, had found him at
Savannah far from the field of battle. The hardy and vigorous Nelson had
arrived there in the night with Buell's vanguard, and Grant had ordered it
to march at speed the next day to join his own army. But he, himself, did
not reach the field of Shiloh until 10 o'clock, when the fiercest battle
yet known on the American continent had been raging for several hours.</p>
<p>Grant and his staff, as they rode away from his headquarters, heard the
booming of cannon in the direction of Shiloh. Some of them thought it was
a mere skirmish, but it came continuously, like rolling thunder, and their
trained ears told them that it rose from a line miles in length. One seeks
to penetrate the mind of a commanding general at such a time, and see what
his feelings were. Again the battle had been joined, and was at its
height, and he away!</p>
<p>Those trained ears told him also that the rolling thunder of the cannon
was steadily moving toward them. It could mean only that the Northern army
had been driven from its camp and that the Southern army was pushing its
victory to the utmost. In those moments his agony must have been intense.
His great army not only attacked, but beaten, and he not there! He and his
staff urged their horses forward, seeking to gain from them new ounces of
speed, but the country was difficult. The hills were rough and there were
swamps and mire. And, as they listened, the roar of battle steadily came
nearer and nearer. There was no break in the Northern retreat. The sweat,
not of heat but of mental agony, stood upon their faces. Grant was not the
only one who suffered.</p>
<p>Now they met some of those stragglers who flee from every battlefield, no
matter what the nation. Their faces were white with fear and they cried
out that the Northern army was destroyed. Officers cursed them and struck
at them with the flats of their swords, but they dodged the blows and
escaped into the bushes. There was no time to pursue them. Grant and his
staff never ceased to ride toward the storm of battle which raged far and
wide around the little church of Shiloh.</p>
<p>The stream of fugitives increased, and now they saw swarms of men who
stood here and there, not running, but huddled and irresolute. Never did
Fortune, who brought this, her favorite, from the depths, bring him again
in her play so near to the verge of destruction. When he came upon the
field, the battle seemed wholly lost, and the whole world would have cried
that he was to blame.</p>
<p>But the bulldog in Grant was never of stauncher breed than on that day.
His face turned white, and he grew sick at the sight of the awful
slaughter. A bullet broke the small sword at his side, but he did not
flinch. Preserving the stern calm that always marked him on the field he
began to form his lines anew and strengthen the weaker points.</p>
<p>Yet the condition of his army would have appalled a weaker will. It had
been driven back three miles. His whole camp had been taken. His second
line also had been driven in. Many thousands of men had fallen and other
thousands had been taken. Thirty of his cannon were in the hands of the
enemy, and although noon had now come and gone there was no sound to
betoken the coming of the troops led by Wallace or Nelson. Well might
Grant's own stout heart have shrunk appalled from the task before him.</p>
<p>Wallace was held back by confused orders, pardonable at such a time. The
eager Nelson was detained at Savannah by Buell, who thought that the
sounds of the engagement they heard in the Shiloh woods was a minor
affair, and who wanted Nelson to wait for boats to take him there.</p>
<p>It seemed sometimes to Dick long afterward, when the whole of the great
Shiloh battle became clear, that Fortune was merely playing a game of
chess, with the earth as a board, and the armies as pawns. Grant's army
was ambushed with its general absent. The other armies which were almost
at hand were delayed for one reason or another. While as for the South,
the genius that had planned the attack and that had carried it forward was
quenched in death, when victory was at its height.</p>
<p>But for the present the lad had little time for such thoughts as these.
The success of Sherman in holding the new position infused new courage
into him and those around him. The men in gray, wearied with their immense
exertions, and having suffered frightful losses themselves, abated
somewhat the energy and fierceness of their attack.</p>
<p>The dissolved Northern regiments had time to reform. Grant seized a new
position along a line of hills, in front of which ran a deep ravine filled
with brushwood. He and his officers appreciated the advantage and they
massed the troops there as fast as they could.</p>
<p>Now Fortune, after having brought Grant to the verge of the pit, was
disposed to throw chances in his way. The hills and the ravine were one.
Another, and most important it was, was the presence of guns of the
heaviest calibre landed some days ago from the fleet, and left there until
their disposition could be determined. A quick-witted colonel, Webster by
name, gathered up all the gunners who had lost their own guns and who had
been driven back in the retreat, and manned this great battery of siege
guns, just as the Southern generals were preparing to break down the last
stand of the North.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, a terrible rumor had been spreading in the ranks of the
Southern troops. The word was passed from soldier to soldier that their
commander, Johnston, whom they had believed invincible, had been killed,
and they did not trust so much Beauregard, who was left in command, nor
those who helped. Their fiery spirit abated somewhat. There was no
decrease of courage, but continuous victory did not seem so easy now.</p>
<p>Confusion invaded the triumphant army also. Beauregard had divided the
leadership on the field among three of his lieutenants. Hardee now urged
on the center, Bragg commanded the right, and Polk, the bishop-general,
led the left. It was Bragg's division that was about to charge the great
battery of siege guns that the alert Webster had manned so quickly. Five
minutes more and Webster would have been too late. Here again were the
fortunes of Grant brought to the very verge of the pit. The Northern
gunboats at the mouth of Lick Creek moved forward a little, and their guns
were ready to support the battery.</p>
<p>The Kentucky regiment was wedged in between the battery and a brigade, and
it was gasping for breath. Colonel Winchester, slightly wounded in three
places, commanded his men to lie down, and they gladly threw themselves
upon the earth.</p>
<p>There was a momentary lull in the battle. Wandering winds caught up the
banks of smoke and carried most of them away. Dick, as he rose a little,
saw the Southern troops massing in the forest for an attack upon their new
position. They seemed to be only a few yards away and he clearly observed
the officers walking along the front of the lines. It flashed upon him
that they must hold these hills or Grant's army would perish. Where was
Buell? Why did he not come? If the Southerners destroyed one Northern army
today they would destroy another tomorrow! They would break the two halves
of the Union force in the west into pieces, first one and then the other.</p>
<p>"What do you see, Dick?" asked Warner, who was lying almost flat upon his
face.</p>
<p>"The Confederate army is getting ready to wipe us off the face of the
earth! Up with your rifle, George! They'll be upon us in two minutes!"</p>
<p>They heard a sudden shout behind them. It was a glad shout, and well it
might be. Nelson, held back by Buell's orders, had listened long to the
booming of the cannon off in the direction of Shiloh. Nothing could
convince him that a great battle was not going on, and all through the
morning he chafed and raged. And as the sound of the cannon grew louder he
believed that Grant's army was losing.</p>
<p>Nelson obtained Buell's leave at last to march for Shiloh, but it was a
long road across hills and creeks and through swamps. The cannon sank deep
in the mire, and then the ardent Nelson left them behind. Now he knew
there was great need for haste. The flashing and thundering in front of
them showed to the youngest soldier in his command that a great battle was
in progress, and that it was going against the North. His division at last
reached Pittsburg Landing and was carried across the river in the
steamers. One brigade led by Ammen outstripped the rest, and rushed in
behind the great battery and to its support, just as the Southern bugles
once more sounded the charge.</p>
<p>Dick shouted with joy, too, when he saw the new troops. The next moment
the enemy was upon them, charging directly through a frightful discharge
from the great guns. The riddled regiments, which had fought so long, gave
way before the bayonets, but the fresh troops took their places and poured
a terrible fire into the assaulting columns. And the great guns of the
battery hurled a new storm of shell and solid shot. The ranks of the
Southern troops, worn by a full day of desperate fighting, were broken.
They had crossed the ravine into the very mouths of the Northern guns, but
now they were driven back into the ravine and across it. Cannon and rifles
rained missiles upon them there, and they withdrew into the woods, while
for the first time in all that long day a shout of triumph rose from the
Union lines.</p>
<p>Another lull came in the battle.</p>
<p>"What are they doing now, Dick?" asked the Vermonter.</p>
<p>"I can't see very well, but they seem to be gathering in the forest for a
fresh attack. Do you know, George, that the sun is almost down?"</p>
<p>"It's certainly time. It's been at least a month since the Johnnies ran
out of the forest in the dawn, and jumped on us."</p>
<p>It was true that the day was almost over, although but few had noticed the
fact. The east was already darkening, and a rosy glow from the west fell
across the torn forest. Here and there a dead tree, set on fire by the
shells, burned slowly, little flames creeping along trunk and boughs.</p>
<p>Bragg was preparing to hurl his entire force upon Sherman and the battery.
At that moment Beauregard, now his chief, arrived. But a few minutes of
daylight were left and the swarthy Louisianian looked at the great losses
in his own ranks. He believed that the army of Buell was so far away that
it could not arrive that night and he withheld the charge.</p>
<p>The Southern army withdrew a little into the woods, the night rushed down,
and Shiloh's terrible first day was over.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XVI. THE FIERCE FINISH OF SHILOH </h2>
<p>Dick, who had been lying under cover just behind the crest of one of the
low ridges, suddenly heard the loud beating of his heart. He did not know,
for a moment or two, that the sound came so distinctly because the mighty
tumult which had been raging around him all day had ceased, as if by a
concerted signal. Those blinding flashes of flame no longer came from the
forest before him, the shot and shell quit their horrible screaming, and
the air was free from the unpleasant hiss of countless bullets.</p>
<p>He stretched himself a little and stood up. The lads all around him were
standing up, and were beginning to talk to each other in the high-pitched,
shouting voices that they had been compelled to use all day long, not yet
realizing to the full that the tumult of the battle had ceased. The boy
felt stiff and sore in every bone and muscle, and, although the cannon and
rifles were silent, there was still a hollow roaring in his ears. His eyes
were yet dim from the smoke, and his head felt heavy and dull. He gazed
vacantly at the forest in front of him, and wondered dimly why the
Southern army was not still there, attacking, as it had attacked for so
many hours.</p>
<p>But the deep woods were silent and empty. Coils and streamers of smoke
floated about among the trees, and suddenly a gray squirrel hopped out on
a bough and began to chatter wildly. Dick, despite himself, laughed, but
the laugh was hysterical. He could appreciate the feelings of the
squirrel, which probably had been imprisoned in a hollow of the tree all
day long, listening to this tremendous battle, and squirrels were not used
to such battles. It was a trifle that made him laugh, but everything was
out of proportion now. Life did not go on in the usual way at all. The
ordinary occupations were gone, and people spent most of their time trying
to kill one another.</p>
<p>He rubbed his hands across his eyes and cleared them of the smoke. The
battle was certainly over for the day at least, and neither he nor his
comrades had sufficient vitality yet to think of the morrow. The twilight
was fast deepening into night. The last rosy glow of the sun faded, and
thick darkness enveloped the vast forest, in which twenty thousand men had
fallen, and in which most of them yet lay, the wounded with the dead.</p>
<p>There was presently a deep boom from the river, and a shell fired by one
of the gunboats curved far over their heads and dropped into the forest,
where the Southern army was encamped. All through the night and at short
but regular intervals the gunboats maintained this warning fire,
heartening the Union soldiers, and telling them at every discharge that
however they might have to fight for the land, the water was always
theirs.</p>
<p>Dick saw Colonel Winchester going among his men, and pulling himself
together he saluted his chief.</p>
<p>"Any orders, sir?" he said.</p>
<p>"No, Dick, my boy, none for the present," replied the colonel, a little
sadly. "Half of my poor regiment is killed or wounded, and the rest are so
exhausted that they are barely able to move. But they fought
magnificently, Dick! They had to, or be crushed! It is only here that we
have withstood the rush of the Southern army, and it is probable that we,
too, would have gone had not night come to our help."</p>
<p>"Then we have been beaten?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Dick, we have been beaten, and beaten badly. It was the surprise
that did it. How on earth we could have let the Southern army creep upon
us and strike unaware I don't understand. But Dick, my boy, there will be
another battle tomorrow, and it may tell a different tale. Some prisoners
whom we have taken say that Johnston has been killed, and Beauregard is no
such leader as he."</p>
<p>"Will the army of General Buell reach us tonight?"</p>
<p>"Buell, himself, is here. He has been with Grant for some time, and all
his brigades are marching at the double quick. Lew Wallace arrived less
than half an hour ago with seven thousand men fresh and eager for battle.
Dick! Dick, my boy, we'll have forty thousand new troops on the field at
the next dawn, and before God we'll wipe out the disgrace of today! Listen
to the big guns from the boats as they speak at intervals! Why, I can
understand the very words they speak! They are saying to the Southern
army: 'Look out! Look out! We're coming in the morning, and it's we who'll
attack now!'"</p>
<p>Dick saw that Colonel Winchester himself was excited. The pupils of his
eyes were dilated, and a red spot glowed in either cheek. Like all the
other officers he was stung by the surprise and defeat, and he could
barely wait for the morning and revenge.</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester walked away to a council that had been called, and Dick
turned to Pennington and Warner, who were not hurt, save for slight
wounds. Warner had recovered his poise, and was soon as calm and dry as
ever.</p>
<p>"Dick," he said, "we're some distance from where we started this morning.
There's nothing like being shoved along when you don't want to go. The
next time they tell me there's nothing in a thicket I expect to search it
and find a rebel army at least a hundred thousand strong right in the
middle of it."</p>
<p>"How large do you suppose the Southern army was?" asked Pennington.</p>
<p>"I had a number of looks at it," replied Warner, "and I should say from
the way it acted that it numbered at least three million men. I know that
at times not less than ten thousand were aiming their rifles at my own
poor and unworthy person. What a waste of energy for so many men to shoot
at me all at once. I wish the Johnnies would go away and let us alone!"</p>
<p>The last words were high-pitched and excited. His habitual self-control
broke down for a moment, and the tremendous excitement and nervous tension
of the day found vent in his voice. But in a few seconds he recovered
himself and looked rather ashamed.</p>
<p>"Boys," he said, "I apologize."</p>
<p>"You needn't," said Pennington. "There have been times today when I felt
brave as a lion, and lots of other times I was scared most to death. It
would have helped me a lot then, if I could have opened my mouth and
yelled at the top of my voice."</p>
<p>Sergeant Daniel Whitley was leaning against a stump, and while he was
calmly lighting a pipe he regarded the three boys with a benevolent gaze.</p>
<p>"None of you need be ashamed of bein' scared," he said. "I've been in a
lot of fights myself, though all of them were mere skirmishes when put
alongside of this, an' I've been scared a heap today. I've been scared for
myself, an' I've been scared for the regiment, an' I've been scared for
the whole army, an' I've been scared on general principles, but here we
are, alive an' kickin', an' we ought to feel powerful thankful for that."</p>
<p>"We are," said Dick. Then he rubbed his head as if some sudden thought had
occurred to him.</p>
<p>"What is it, Dick?" asked Warner.</p>
<p>"I've realized all at once that I'm tremendously hungry. The Confederates
broke up our breakfast. We never had time to think of dinner, and now its
nothing to eat."</p>
<p>"Me, too," said Pennington. "If you were to hit me in the stomach I'd give
back a hollow sound like a drum. Why don't somebody ring the supper bell?"</p>
<p>But fires were soon lighted along their whole front, and provisions were
brought up from the rear and from the steamers. The soldiers, feeling
their strength returning, ate ravenously. They also talked much of the
battle. Many of them were yet under the influence of hysterical
excitement. They told extraordinary stories of the things they had seen
and done, and they believed all they told were true. They ate fiercely, at
first almost like wolves, but after a while they resolved into their true
state as amiable young human beings and were ashamed of themselves.</p>
<p>All the while Buell's army of the Ohio was passing over the river and
joining Grant's army of the Tennessee. Regiment after regiment and brigade
after brigade crossed. The guns that Nelson had been forced to leave
behind were also brought up and were taken over with the other batteries.
While the shattered remnants of the army of the Tennessee were resting,
the fresh army of the Ohio was marching by it in the late hours of the
night in order to face the Southern foe in the morning.</p>
<p>The Southern army itself lay deep in the woods from which it had driven
its enemy. Always the assailant through the day, its losses had been
immense. Many thousands had fallen, and no new troops were coming to take
their place. Continual reinforcements came to the North throughout the
night, not a soldier came to the South. Beauregard, at dawn, would have to
face twice his numbers, at least half of whom were fresh troops.</p>
<p>Another conference was held by the Southern generals in the forest, but
now the central figure, the great Johnston, was gone. The others, however,
summoned their courage anew, and passed the whole night arranging their
forces, cheering the men, and preparing for the morn. Their scouts and
skirmishers kept watch on the Northern camp, and the Southerners believed
that while they had whipped only one army the day before, they could whip
two on the morrow.</p>
<p>Dick and his friends meanwhile were lying on the earth, resting, but not
able to sleep. The nerves, drawn so tightly by the day's work, were not
yet relaxed wholly. A deep apathy seized them all. Dick, from a high point
on which he lay, saw the dark surface of the Tennessee, and the lights on
the puffing steamers as they crossed, bearing the Army of the Ohio. His
mind did not work actively now, but he felt that they were saved. The deep
river, although it was on their flank, seemed to flow as a barrier against
the foe, and it was, in fact, a barrier more and more, as without its
command the second Union army could never have come to the relief of the
first.</p>
<p>Dick, after a while, saw Colonel Winchester, and other officers near him.
They were talking of their losses. They gave the names of many generals
and colonels who had been killed. Presently they moved away, and he fell
into an uneasy sleep, or rather doze, from which he was awakened after a
while by a heavy rumbling sound of a distant cannonade.</p>
<p>The boy sprang up, wondering why any one should wish to renew the battle
in the middle of the night, and then he saw that it was no battle. The
sound was thunder rolling heavily on the southern horizon, and the night
had become very dark. Vivid flashes of lightning cut the sky, and a strong
wind rushed among the trees. Heavy drops of water struck him in the face
and then the rain swept down.</p>
<p>Dick did not seek protection from the storm, nor did any of those near
him. The cool drops were grateful to their faces after the heat and strife
of the day. Their pulses became stronger, and the blood flowed in a
quickened torrent through their veins. They let it pour upon them, merely
seeking to keep their ammunition dry.</p>
<p>Ten thousand wounded were yet lying untouched in the forest, but the rain
was grateful to them, too. When they could they turned their fevered faces
up to it that it might beat upon them and bring grateful coolness.</p>
<p>Deep in the night a council like that of the Southern generals was held in
the Northern camp, also. Grant, his face an expressionless mask, presided,
and said but little. Buell, Sherman, McClernand, Nelson, Wallace and
others, were there, and Buell and Sherman, like their chief, spoke little.
The three men upon whom most rested were very taciturn that night, but it
is likely that extraordinary thoughts were passing in the minds of every
one of the three.</p>
<p>Grant, after a day in which any one of a dozen chances would have wrecked
him, must have concluded that in very deed and truth he was the favorite
child of Fortune. When one is saved again and again from the very verge he
begins to believe that failure is impossible, and in that very belief lies
the greatest guard against failure.</p>
<p>It is said of Grant that in the night after his great defeat around the
church of Shiloh, he was still confident, that he told his generals they
would certainly win on the morrow, and he reminded them that if the Union
army had suffered terribly, the Southern army must have suffered almost
equally so, and would face them at dawn with numbers far less than their
own. He had not displayed the greatest skill, but he had shown the
greatest moral courage, and now on the night between battles it was that
quality that was needed most.</p>
<p>Dick, not having slept any the night before, and having passed through a
day of fierce battle, was overcome after midnight, and sank into a sleep
that was mere lethargy. He awoke once before dawn and remembered, but
vaguely, all that had happened. Yet he was conscious that there was much
movement in the forest. He heard the tread of many feet, the sound of
commands, the neigh of horses and the rumbling of cannon wheels. The Army
of the Ohio was passing to the exposed flank of the Army of the Tennessee
and at dawn it would all be in line. He also caught flitting glimpses of
the Tennessee, and of the steamers loaded with troops still crossing, and
he heard the boom of the heavy cannon on the gunboats which still, at
regular and short intervals, sent huge shells curving into the forest
toward the camp of the Southern army. He also saw near him Warner and
Pennington sound asleep on the ground, and then he sank back into his own
lethargic slumber.</p>
<p>He was awakened by the call of a trumpet, and, as he rose, he saw the
whole regiment or rather, what was left of it, rising with him. It was not
yet dawn, and a light rain was falling, but smoldering fires disclosed the
ground for some distance, and also the river on which the gunboats and
transports were now gathered in a fleet.</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester beckoned to him.</p>
<p>"All right this morning, Dick?" he said.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir; I'm ready for my duty."</p>
<p>"And you, too, Warner and Pennington?"</p>
<p>"We are, sir," they replied together.</p>
<p>"Then keep close beside me. I don't know when I may want you for a
message. Daybreak will be here in a half hour. The entire Army of the
Ohio, led by General Buell in person will be in position then or very
shortly afterward, and a new, and, we hope, a very different battle will
begin."</p>
<p>Food and coffee were served to the men, and while the rain was still
falling they formed in line and awaited the dawn. The desire to retrieve
their fortunes was as strong among the farmer lads as it was among the
officers who took care to spread among them the statement that Buell's
army alone was as numerous as the Southern force, and probably more
numerous since their enemy must have sustained terrible losses. Thus they
stood patiently, while the rain thinned and the sun at last showed a red
edge through floating clouds.</p>
<p>They waited yet a little while longer, and then the boom of a heavy gun in
the forest told them that the enemy was advancing to begin the battle
afresh. Again it was the Southern army that attacked, although it was no
surprise now. Yet Beauregard and his generals were still sanguine of
completing the victory. Their scouts and skirmishers had failed to
discover that the entire army of Buell also was now in front of them.</p>
<p>Bragg was gathering his division on the left to hurl it like a thunderbolt
upon Grant's shattered brigades. Hardee and the bishop-general were in the
center, and Breckinridge led the right. But as they moved forward to
attack the Union troops came out to meet them. Nelson had occupied the
high ground between Lick and Owl Creeks, and his and the Southern troops
met in a fierce clash shortly after dawn.</p>
<p>Beauregard, drawn by the firing at that point, and noticing the courage
and tenacity with which the Northern troops held their ground, sending in
volley after volley, divined at once that these were not the beaten troops
of the day before, but new men. This swarthy general, volatile and
dramatic, nevertheless had great penetration. He understood on the instant
a fact that his soldiers did not comprehend until later. He knew that the
whole army of Buell was now before him.</p>
<p>For the moment it was Beauregard and Buell who were the protagonists,
instead of Grant and Johnston as on the day before. The Southern leader
gathered all his forces and hurled them upon Nelson. Weary though the
Southern soldiers were, their attack was made with utmost fire and vigor.
A long and furious combat ensued. A Southern division under Cheatham
rushed to the help of their fellows. Buell's forces were driven in again
and again, and only his heavy batteries enabled him to regain his lost
ground.</p>
<p>Buell led splendid troops that he had trained long and rigidly, and they
had not been in the conflict the day before. Fresh and with unbroken
ranks, not a man wounded or missing, they had entered the battle and both
Grant and Buell, as well as their division commanders, expected an easy
victory where the Army of the Ohio stood.</p>
<p>Buell, to his amazement, saw himself reduced to the defensive. He and
Grant had reckoned that the decimated brigades of the South could not
stand at all before him, but just as on the first day they came on with
the fierce rebel yell, hurling themselves upon superior numbers, taking
the cannon of their enemy, losing them, and retaking them and losing them
again, but never yielding.</p>
<p>The great conflict increased in violence. Buell, a man of iron courage,
saw that his soldiers must fight to the uttermost, not for victory only,
but even to ward off defeat. The dawn was now far advanced. The rain had
ceased, and the sun again shot down sheaves of fiery rays upon a vast low
cloud of fire and smoke in which thousands of men met in desperate combat.</p>
<p>Nine o'clock came. It had been expected by Grant that Buell long before
that time would have swept everything before him. But for three hours
Buell had been fighting to keep himself from being swept away. The
Southern troops seemed animated by that extraordinary battle fever and
absolute contempt of death which distinguished them so often during this
war. Buell's army was driven in on both flanks, and only the center held
fast. It began to seem possible that the South, despite her reduced ranks
might yet defeat both Northern armies. Another battery dashed up to the
relief of the men in blue. It was charged at once by the men in gray so
fiercely that the gunners were glad to escape with their guns, and once
more the wild rebel yell of triumph swelled through the southern forest.</p>
<p>Dick, standing with his comrades on one of the ridges that they had
defended so well, listened to the roar of conflict on the wing, ever
increasing in volume, and watched the vast clouds of smoke gathering over
the forest. He could see from where he stood the flash of rifle fire and
the blaze of cannon, and both eye and ear told him that the battle was not
moving back upon the South.</p>
<p>"It seems that we do not make headway, sir," he said to Colonel
Winchester, who also stood by him, looking and listening.</p>
<p>"Not that I can perceive," replied the colonel, "and yet with the rush of
forty thousand fresh troops of ours upon the field I deemed victory quick
and easy. How the battle grows! How the South fights!"</p>
<p>Colonel Winchester walked away presently and joined Sherman, who was
eagerly watching the mighty conflict, into which he knew that his own worn
and shattered troops must sooner or later be drawn. He walked up and down
in front of his lines, saying little but seeing everything. His tall form
was seen by all his men. He, too, must have felt a singular thrill at that
moment. He must have known that his star was rising. He, more than any
other, with his valor, penetrating mind and decision had saved the
Northern army from complete destruction the first day at Shiloh. He had
not been able to avert defeat, but he had prevented utter ruin. His
division alone had held together in the face of the Southern attack until
night came.</p>
<p>Sherman must have recalled, too, how his statement that the North would
need 200,000 troops in the west alone had been sneered at, and he had been
called mad. But he neither boasted nor predicted, continuing to watch
intently the swelling battle.</p>
<p>"I had enough fighting yesterday to last me a hundred years," said Warner
to Dick, "but it seems that I'm to have more today. If the Johnnies had
any regard for the rules of war they'd have retreated long ago."</p>
<p>"We'll win yet," said Dick hopefully, "but I don't think we can achieve
any big victory. Look, there's General Grant himself."</p>
<p>Grant was passing along his whole line. While leaving the main battle to
Buell he retained general command and watched everything. He, too,
observed the failure of Buell's army to drive the enemy before them, and
he must have felt a sinking of the heart, but he did not show it. Instead
he spoke only of victory, when he made any comment at all, and sent the
members of his staff to make new arrangements. He must bring into action
every gun and man he had or he would yet lose.</p>
<p>It was now 10 o'clock and the new battle had lasted with the utmost fury
and desperation for four hours. Dick, after General Grant rode on, felt as
if a sudden thrill had run through the whole army. He saw men rising from
the earth and tightening their belts. He saw gunners gathering around
their guns and making ready with the ammunition. He knew the remains of
Grant's army were about to march upon the enemy, helping the Army of the
Ohio to achieve the task that had proved so great.</p>
<p>Sherman, McClernand and other generals now passed among their troops,
cheering them, telling them that the time had come to win back what they
had lost the day before, and that victory was sure. They called upon them
for another great effort, and a shout rolled along the line of willing
soldiers.</p>
<p>Sherman's whole division now raised itself up and rushed at the enemy,
Dick and his comrades in the front of their own regiment. The whole
Northern line was now engaged. Grant, true to his resolution, had hurled
every man and every gun upon his foe.</p>
<p>The Southern generals felt the immense weight of the numbers that were now
driving down upon them. Their decimated ranks could not withstand the
charge of two armies. In the center where Buell's men, having stood fast
from the first, were now advancing, they were compelled to give way and
lost several guns. On the wings the heavy Northern brigades were advancing
also, and the whole Southern line was pushed back. So much inferior was
the South in numbers that her enemy began to overlap her on the flanks
also.</p>
<p>A tremendous shout of exultation swept through the Northern ranks, as they
felt themselves advancing. The promises of their generals were coming
true, and there is nothing sweeter than victory after defeat. Fortune,
after frowning upon her so long, was now smiling upon the North. The
exultant cheer swept through the ranks again, and back came the defiant
rebel yell.</p>
<p>A young soldier often feels what is happening with as true instinct as a
general. Dick now knew that the North would recover the field, and that
the South, cut down fearfully, though having performed prodigies of valor,
must fight to save herself. He felt that the resistance in front of them
was no longer invincible. He saw in the flash of the firing that the
Southern ranks were thin, very thin, and he knew that there was no break
in their own advance.</p>
<p>Now the sanguine Northern generals planned the entire destruction of the
Southern army. There was only one road by which Beauregard could retreat
to Corinth. A whole Northern division rushed in to block the way. Sherman,
in his advance, came again to the ground around the little Methodist
chapel of Shiloh which he had defended so well the day before, and crowded
his whole force upon the Southern line at that point. Once more the
primitive church in the woods looked down upon one of the most sanguinary
conflicts of the whole war. If Sherman could break through the Southern
line here Beauregard's whole army would be lost.</p>
<p>But the Southern soldiers were capable of another and a mighty effort.
Their generals saw the danger and acted with their usual promptness and
decision. They gathered together their shattered brigades and hurled them
like a thunderbolt upon the Union left and center. The shock was terrific.
Sherman, with all his staunchness and the valor of his men, was compelled
to give way. McClernand, too, reeled back, others were driven in also.
Whole brigades and regiments were cut to pieces or thrown in confusion.
The Southerners cut a wide gap in the Northern army, through which they
rushed in triumph, holding the Corinth road against every attack and
making their rear secure.</p>
<p>Sherman's division, after its momentary repulse, gathered itself anew,
and, although knowing now that the Southern army could not be entrapped,
drove again with all its might upon the positions around the church. They
passed over the dead of the day before, and gathered increasing vigor, as
they saw that the enemy was slowly drawing back.</p>
<p>Grant reformed his line, which had been shattered by the last fiery and
successful attack of the South. Along the whole long line the trumpets
sang the charge, and brigades and batteries advanced.</p>
<p>But the end of Shiloh was at hand. Despite the prodigies of valor
performed by their men, the Southern generals saw that they could not
longer hold the field. The junction of Grant and Buell, after all, had
proved too much for them. The bugles sounded the retreat, and reluctantly
they gave up the ground which they had won with so much courage and
daring. They retreated rather as victors than defeated men, presenting a
bristling front to the enemy until their regiments were lost in the
forest, and beating off every attempt of skirmishers or cavalry to molest
them.</p>
<p>It was the middle of the afternoon when the last shot was fired, and the
Southern army at its leisure resumed its march toward Corinth, protected
on the flanks by its cavalry, and carrying with it the assurance that
although not victorious over two armies it had been victorious over one,
and had struck the most stunning blow yet known in American history.</p>
<p>When the last of the Southern regiments disappeared in the deep woods,
Dick and many of those around him sank exhausted upon the ground. Even had
they been ordered to follow they would have been incapable of it. Complete
nervous collapse followed such days and nights as those through which they
had passed.</p>
<p>Nor did Grant and Buell wish to pursue. Their armies had been too terribly
shaken to make another attack. Nearly fifteen thousand of their men had
fallen and the dead and wounded still lay scattered widely through the
woods. The South had lost almost as many. Nearly a third of her army had
been killed or wounded in the battle, and yet they retired in good order,
showing the desperate valor of these sons of hers.</p>
<p>The double army which had saved itself, but which had yet been unable to
destroy its enemy, slept that night in the recovered camp. The generals
discussed in subdued tones their narrow escape, and the soldiers, who now
understood very well what had happened, talked of it in the same way.</p>
<p>"We knew that it was going to be a big war," said Dick, "but it's going to
be far bigger than we thought."</p>
<p>"And we won't make that easy parade down to the Gulf," said Warner. "I'm
thinking that a lot of lions are in the path."</p>
<p>"But we'll win!" said Dick. "In the end we'll surely win!"</p>
<p>Then after dreaming a little with his eyes open he fell asleep, gathering
new strength for mighty campaigns yet to come.</p>
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