<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1> THE SCOUTS OF STONEWALL </h1>
<h2> THE STORY OF THE GREAT VALLEY 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 Scouts of Stonewall,” while an independent story, is in effect a
continuation of the series which began with “The Guns of Bull Run” and
which was carried on in “The Guns of Shiloh.” The present romance reverts
to the Southern side, and is concerned with the fortunes of Harry Kenton
and his friends.</p>
<p>THE CIVIL WAR SERIES</p>
<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 CARDEN, 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 E. 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 E. 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/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> THE SCOUTS OF STONEWALL </SPAN><br/><br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </SPAN> IN THE VALLEY <br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </SPAN> THE FOOT CAVALRY
<br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </SPAN> STONEWALL
JACKSON'S MARCH <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </SPAN> WAR
AND WAITING <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </SPAN> THE
NORTHERN ADVANCE <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </SPAN> KERNSTOWN
<br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </SPAN> ON THE
RIDGES <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </SPAN> THE
MOUNTAIN BATTLE <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </SPAN> TURNING
ON THE FOE <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </SPAN> WINCHESTER
<br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </SPAN> THE
NIGHT RIDE <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </SPAN> THE
CLOSING CIRCLE <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </SPAN> THE
SULLEN RETREAT <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </SPAN> THE
DOUBLE BATTLE <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </SPAN> THE
SEVEN DAYS <br/><br/></p>
</blockquote>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"></SPAN></p>
<h1> THE SCOUTS OF STONEWALL </h1>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER I. IN THE VALLEY </h2>
<p>A young officer in dingy Confederate gray rode slowly on a powerful bay
horse through a forest of oak. It was a noble woodland, clear of
undergrowth, the fine trees standing in rows, like those of a park. They
were bare of leaves but the winter had been mild so far, and a carpet of
short grass, yet green, covered the ground. To the rider's right flowed a
small river of clear water, one of the beautiful streams of the great
Virginia valleys.</p>
<p>Harry Kenton threw his head back a little and drew deep breaths of the
cool, crisp air. The light wind had the touch of life in it. As the cool
puffs blew upon him and filled his lungs his chest expanded and his strong
pulses beat more strongly. But a boy in years, he had already done a man's
work, and he had been through those deeps of passion and despair which war
alone brings.</p>
<p>A year spent in the open and with few nights under roof had enlarged Harry
Kenton's frame and had colored his face a deep red. His great ancestor,
Henry Ware, had been very fair, and Harry, like him, became scarlet of
cheek under the beat of wind and rain.</p>
<p>Had anyone with a discerning eye been there, to see, he would have called
this youth one of the finest types of the South that rode forth so boldly
to war. He sat his saddle with the ease and grace that come only of long
practice, and he controlled his horse with the slightest touch of the
rein. The open, frank face showed hate of nobody, although the soul behind
it was devoted without any reserve to the cause for which he fought.</p>
<p>Harry was on scout duty. Although an officer on the staff of Colonel
Talbot, commander of the Invincibles, originally a South Carolina
regiment, he had developed so much skill in forest and field, he had such
acuteness of eye and ear, that he was sent often to seek the camps of the
enemy or to discover his plans. His friends said that these forest powers
were inherited, that they came from some far-away ancestor who had spent
his life in the wilderness, and Harry knew that what they said was true.</p>
<p>Despite the peaceful aspect of the forest and the lack of human presence
save his own, he rode now on an errand that was full of danger. The Union
camp must lie on the other side of that little river, not many miles
farther on, and he might meet, at any moment, the pickets of the foe. He
meant to take the uttermost risk, but he had no notion of being captured.
He would suffer anything, any chance, rather than that. He had lately come
into contact with a man who had breathed into him the fire and spirit
belonging to legendary heroes. To this man, short of words and plain of
dress, nothing was impossible, and Harry caught from him not merely the
belief, but the conviction also.</p>
<p>Late in the autumn the Invincibles, who had suffered severely at Bull Run
and afterward had been cut down greatly in several small actions in the
mountains, had been transferred to the command of Stonewall Jackson in the
Shenandoah Valley. Disease and the hospital had reduced the regiment to
less than three hundred, but their spirits were as high as ever. Their
ranks were renewed partly with Virginians. Colonel Talbot and
Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire had recovered from small wounds, and St.
Clair and Langdon were whole and as hard as iron. After a period of
waiting they were now longing for action.</p>
<p>There was some complaint among the Invincibles when they were detached
from the main army to the service of Jackson, but Harry did not share in
it. When he heard of the order he remembered that dread afternoon at Bull
Run, when all seemed lost, and the most vivid of his memories was the calm
figure riding back and forth just beyond the pines among which he stood,
and gathering for a fresh charge the stern ranks of his men who were to
turn almost sure defeat into absolutely sure victory. The picture of the
man in the heart of that red glare among the showers of bullets had been
burned so deeply into Harry's memory that he could call it up, almost as
vivid as life itself at any time. Surely that was a leader to follow, and
he, at least, would wish to ride where Stonewall led.</p>
<p>But action did not come as soon as he had expected. Jackson was held by
commands from Richmond. The great army of the South waited, because the
great army of the North, under McClellan, also waited and temporized while
the autumn was passing fast.</p>
<p>But Jackson, while held in the bonds of orders, did not sleep. The most
active youth of his command rode day and night toward the northern end of
the valley, where the forces of the Union were gathering. The movements of
Banks and Kelly and the other Northern commanders were watched continually
by keen eyes trained in the southern forests. Slim striplings passed in
the night through the little towns, and the people, intensely loyal to the
South, gave them the news of everything.</p>
<p>Harry had seen the whole autumn pass and winter come, and the war, save
for a fitful skirmish now and then, stood at a pause in the valley. Yet he
rode incessantly, both with the others and alone, on scouting duty. He
knew every square mile of the country over a wide range, and he had passed
whole nights in the forest, when hail or snow was whistling by. But these
had been few. Mostly mild winds blew and the hoofs of his horse fell on
green turf.</p>
<p>Harry was intensely alert now. He was far from his command, and he knew
that he must see and hear everything or he would soon be in the hands of
the enemy. He rode on rather slowly, and amid continued silence. He saw on
his left a white house with green shutters and a portico. But the shutters
were closed tightly and no smoke rose from the chimneys. Although house
and grounds showed no touch of harm, they seemed to bear the brand of
desolation. The owners had fled, knowing that the sinister march of war
would pass here.</p>
<p>Harry's mood changed suddenly from gladness to depression. The desolate
house brought home to him the terrible nature of war. It meant
destruction, wounds and death, and they were all the worse because it was
a nation divided against itself, people of the same blood and the same
traditions fighting one another.</p>
<p>But youth cannot stay gloomy long, and his spirits presently flowed back.
There was too much tang and life in that crisp wind from the west for his
body to droop, and a lad could not be sad long, with brilliant sunshine
around him and that shining little river before him.</p>
<p>The thrill of high adventure shot up from his soul. He had ceased to hate
the Northern soldiers, if he had ever hated them at all. Now they were
merely brave opponents, with whom he contended, and success demanded of
either skill, daring and energy to the utmost degree. He was resolved not
to fail in any of these qualities.</p>
<p>He left the desolate house a mile behind, and then the river curved a
little. The woods on the farther shore came down in dense masses to the
edge of the stream, and despite the lack of foliage Harry could not see
far into them. The strong, inherited instincts leaped up. His nostrils
expanded and a warning note was sounded somewhere in the back of his
brain.</p>
<p>He turned his horse to the left and entered the forest on his own side of
the river. They were ancient trees that he rode among, with many drooping
and twisted boughs, and he was concealed well, although he could yet see
from his covert the river and the forest on the other shore.</p>
<p>The song of a trumpet suddenly came from the deep woodland across the
shining stream. It was a musical song, mellow and triumphant on every key,
and the forest and hills on either shore gave it back, soft and beautiful
on its dying echoes. It seemed to Harry that the volume of sound, rounded
and full, must come from a trumpet of pure gold. He had read the old
romances of the Round Table, and for the moment his head was full of them.
Some knight in the thicket was sending forth a challenge to him.</p>
<p>But Harry gave no answering defiance. Now the medieval glow was gone, and
he was modern and watchful to the core. He had felt instinctively that it
was a trumpet of the foe, and the Northern trumpets were not likely to
sing there in Virginia unless many Northern horsemen rode together.</p>
<p>Then he saw their arms glinting among the trees, the brilliant beams of
the sun dancing on the polished steel of saber hilt and rifle barrel. A
minute more, and three hundred Union horsemen emerged from the forest and
rode, in beautiful order, down to the edge of the stream.</p>
<p>Harry regarded them with an admiration which was touched by no hate. They
were heavily built, strong young men, riding powerful horses, and it was
easy for anyone to see that they had been drilled long and well. Their
clothes and arms were in perfect order, every horse had been tended as if
it were to be entered in a ring for a prize. It was his thought that they
were not really enemies, but worthy foes. That ancient spirit of the
tournament, where men strove for the sake of striving, came to him again.</p>
<p>The Union horsemen rode along the edge of the stream a little space, and
then plunged into a ford. The water rose to their saddle skirts, but they
preserved their even line and Harry still admired. When all were on his
own shore the golden trumpet sang merrily again, and they turned the heads
of their horses southward.</p>
<p>Harry rode deeper into the ancient wood. They might throw out scouts or
skirmishers and he had no mind to be taken. It was his belief that they
came from Romney, where a Northern army had gathered in great force and
would eventually march toward Jackson at Winchester. But whatever their
errand, here was something for him to watch, and he meant to know what
they intended.</p>
<p>The Northern troop, youths also, the average of their age not much more
than twenty, rode briskly along the edge of the little river, which was a
shining one for them, too, as well as Harry. They knew that no enemy in
force was near, and they did not suspect that a single horseman followed,
keeping in the edge of the woods, his eyes missing nothing that they did.</p>
<p>As for themselves, they were in the open now and the brilliant sunshine
quickened their blood. Some of them had been at Bull Run, but the sting of
that day was going with time. They were now in powerful force at the head
of the great Virginia valleys, and they would sweep down them with such
impact that nothing could stand before them. The trumpet sang its mellow
triumphant note again, and from across a far range of hills came its like,
a low mellow note, faint, almost an echo, but a certain reply. It was the
answer from another troop of their men who rode on a parallel line several
miles away.</p>
<p>The lone lad in the edge of the forest heard the distant note also, but he
gave it no heed. His eyes were always for the troop before him. He had
already learned from Stonewall Jackson that you cannot do two things at
once, but the one thing that you do you must do with all your might.</p>
<p>The troop presently left the river and entered the fields from which the
crops had been reaped long since. When the horsemen came to a fence twelve
men dismounted and threw down enough panels for the others to ride through
without breaking their formation. Everything was done with order and
precision. Harry could not keep from admiring. It was not often that he
saw so early in the war troops who were drilled so beautifully, and who
marched so well together.</p>
<p>Harry always kept on the far side of the fields, and as the fences were of
rails with stakes and riders he was able by bending very low in the saddle
to keep hidden behind them. Nevertheless it was delicate work. He was sure
that if seen he could escape to the forest through the speed of his horse.
But he did not want to be driven off. He wished to follow that troop to
its ultimate destination.</p>
<p>Another mile or two and the Union force bore away to the right, entering
the forest and following a road, where the men rode in files, six abreast.
They did not make much noise, beyond the steady beating of the hoofs, but
they did not seem to seek concealment. Harry made the obvious deduction
that they thought themselves too far beyond the range of the Southern
scouts to be noticed. He felt a thrill of satisfaction, because he was
there and he had seen them.</p>
<p>He rode in the forest parallel with the troop and at a distance of about
four hundred yards. There was scattered undergrowth, enough to hide him,
but not enough to conceal those three hundred men who rode in close files
along a well-used road.</p>
<p>Harry soon saw the forest thinning ahead of him and then the trumpet sang
its mellow, golden note again. From a point perhaps a mile ahead came a
reply, also the musical call of the trumpet. Not an echo, but the voice of
a second trumpet, and now Harry knew that another force was coming to join
the first. All his pulses began to beat hard, not with nervousness, but
with intense eagerness to know what was afoot. Evidently it must be
something of importance or strong bodies of Union cavalry would not be
meeting in the woods in this manner.</p>
<p>After the reply neither trumpet sounded again, and the troop that Harry
was following stopped while yet in the woods. He rode his horse behind a
tall and dense clump of bushes, where, well hidden, he could yet see all
that might happen, and waited.</p>
<p>He heard in a few minutes the beat of many hoofs upon the hard road,
advancing with the precision and regularity of trained cavalry. He saw the
head of a column emerge upon the road and an officer ride forward to meet
the commander of the first troop. They exchanged a few words and then the
united force rode southward through the open woods, with the watchful lad
always hanging on their rear.</p>
<p>Harry judged that the new troop numbered about five hundred men, and eight
hundred cavalry would not march on any mere scouting expedition. His
opinion that this was a ride of importance now became a conviction, and he
hardened his purpose to follow them to the end, no matter what the risk.</p>
<p>It was now about noon, and the sun became warm despite the December day.
The turf softened under the rays and the Union cavalry left an immense
wide trail through the forest. It was impossible to miss it, and Harry,
careful not to ride into an ambush of rear guard pickets, dropped back a
little, and also kept slightly to the left of the great trail. He could
not see the soldiers now, but occasionally he heard the deep sound of so
many hoofs sinking into the soft turf. Beyond that turfy sigh no sound
from the marching men came to him.</p>
<p>The Union troop halted about two o'clock in the afternoon, and the men ate
cold food from the knapsacks. They also rested a full hour, and Harry,
watching from a distance, felt sure that their lack of hurry indicated a
night attack of some kind. They had altered their course slightly, twice,
and when they started anew they did so a third time.</p>
<p>Now their purpose occurred suddenly to Harry. It came in a flash of
intuition, and he did not again doubt it for a moment. The head of the
column was pointed straight toward a tiny village in which food and
ammunition for Stonewall Jackson were stored. The place did not have more
than a dozen houses, but one of them was a huge tobacco barn stuffed with
powder, lead, medicines, which were already worth their weight in gold in
the Confederacy, and other invaluable supplies. It had been planned to
begin their removal on the morrow to the Southern camp at Winchester, but
it would be too late unless he intervened.</p>
<p>If he did not intervene! He, a boy, riding alone through the forest, to
defeat the energies of so many men, equipped splendidly! The Confederacy
was almost wholly agricultural, and was able to produce few such supplies
of its own. Nor could it obtain them in great quantities from Europe as
the Northern navy was drawing its belt of steel about the Southern coasts.
That huge tobacco barn contained a treasure beyond price, and Harry was
resolved to save it.</p>
<p>He did not yet know how he would save it, but he felt that he would. All
the courage of those border ancestors who won every new day of life as the
prize of skill and courage sprang up in him. It was no vain heritage.
Happy chance must aid those who trusted, and, taking a deep curve to the
left, he galloped through the woods. His horse comparatively fresh after
easy riding, went many miles without showing any signs of weariness.</p>
<p>The boy knew the country well, and it was the object of his circuit to
take him ahead of the Union troop and to the village which held a small
guard of perhaps two hundred men. If the happy chance in which he trusted
should fail him after all, these men could carry off a part of the
supplies, and the rest could be destroyed to keep them from falling into
Northern hands.</p>
<p>He gave his horse a little breathing space and then galloped harder than
ever, reckoning that he would reach the village in another hour. He turned
from the woods into one of the narrow roads between farms, just wide
enough for wagons, and increased his speed.</p>
<p>The afternoon sun was declining, filling the west with dusky gold, and
Harry still rode at a great pace along the rough road, wondering all the
while what would be the nature of the lucky chance, in which he was
trusting so firmly. Lower sank the sun and the broad band of dusky gold
was narrowing before the advance of the twilight. The village was not now
more than two miles away, and the road dipped down before him. Sounds like
that made by the force behind him, the rattle of arms, the creak of
leather and the beat of hoofs, came suddenly to his ears.</p>
<p>Harry halted abruptly and reined his horse into some bushes beside the
road. Then he heard the sounds more plainly. They were made by cavalry,
riding slowly. The great pulses in his throat leaped in quick alarm. Was
it possible that they had sent a portion of their force swiftly by another
route, and that it was now between him and the village?</p>
<p>He listened again and with every faculty strained. The cavalrymen were
riding toward him and they could not be a part of the Union force. Then
they must be of his own South. Surely this was the happy chance of which
he had dreamed! Again the great pulses leaped, but with a different
emotion.</p>
<p>Scorning every risk, he reined his horse back into the road and rode
straight forward. The heads of men were just topping the rise, and a few
moments later they and the horses they bestrode came into full view. It
was a thankful thrill that shot through him now. The sun, almost sunk,
sent a last golden shower across them and disclosed the dingy gray of
their uniforms and the lean, tanned faces.</p>
<p>Uttering a shout of joy and holding up a hand to show that he was a
friend, Harry galloped forward. A young man at the head of the troop, a
captain by his uniform, and evidently the leader, gave the signal to his
men to stop, and received the boy who came alone.</p>
<p>“Who are you?” he asked.</p>
<p>“I'm Harry Kenton, a lieutenant in the army of Stonewall Jackson, and an
aide on the staff of Colonel Leonidas Talbot, colonel of the regiment
known as the Invincibles.”</p>
<p>“I've heard of that regiment. South Carolinians at first, but now mostly
Virginians.”</p>
<p>“The Virginians filled up the gaps that were made on the battlefield.”</p>
<p>Harry spoke proudly, and the young captain smiled. The boy regarded him
with increasing interest. Somehow he was reminded of Jeb Stuart, although
this man was younger, not having passed his boyhood long.</p>
<p>It was evident that he was tall. Thick, yellow curls showed from under the
edge of his cap. His face, like Harry's, had turned red before wind and
rain. His dress was a marvel, made of the finest gray without a spot or
stain. A sash of light blue silk encircled his waist, and the costly gray
cloak thrown back a little from his shoulders revealed a silk lining of
the same delicate blue tint. His gauntlets were made of the finest
buckskin, and a gold-hilted small sword swung from his sash.</p>
<p>“A dandy,” thought Harry, “but the bravest of the brave, for all that.”</p>
<p>“My name's Sherburne, Captain Philip Sherburne,” said the young leader.
“I'm from the Valley of Virginia, and so are my men. We belong to
Stonewall Jackson's army, too, but we've been away most of the time on
scouting duty. That's the reason you don't know us. We're going toward
Winchester, after another of our fruitless rides.”</p>
<p>“But it won't be fruitless this time!” exclaimed Harry, eagerly. “A Union
force of nearly a thousand men is on its way to destroy the stores at the
village, the stores that were to be moved to a safer place to-morrow!”</p>
<p>“How do you know?”</p>
<p>“I've seen 'em. I was behind 'em at first and followed 'em for a long time
before I guessed their purpose. Then I curved about 'em, galloped through
the woods, and rode on here, hoping for the lucky chance that has come
with you.”</p>
<p>Harry, as he spoke, saw the eyes of the young captain leap and flame, and
he knew he was in the presence of one of those knightly souls, thrown up
so often in the war, most often by the border States. They were youths who
rode forth to battle in the spirit of high romance.</p>
<p>“You ask us to go back to the village and help defend the stores?” said
Philip Sherburne.</p>
<p>“That's just what I do ask—and expect.”</p>
<p>“Of course. We'd have done it without the asking, and glad of it. What a
chance for us, as well as for you!”</p>
<p>He turned and faced his men. The golden glow of the sun was gone now, but
a silver tint from the twilight touched his face. Harry saw there the
blaze of the knightly spirit that craved adventure.</p>
<p>“Men,” he said in clear, happy tones, “we've ridden for days and days in
quests that brought nothing. Now the enemy is at hand, nearly a thousand
strong, and means to destroy our stores. There are two hundred of you and
there are two hundred more guarding the stores. If there's a single one
among you who says he must ride on to Winchester, let him hold up his
hand.”</p>
<p>Not a hand was raised, and the bold young captain laughed.</p>
<p>“I don't need to put the other side of the question,” he said to Harry.
“They're as eager as I am to scorch the faces of the Yankees.”</p>
<p>The order was given to turn and ride. The “men,” not one of whom was over
twenty-five, obeyed it eagerly, and galloped for the village, every heart
throbbing with the desire for action. They were all from the rich farms in
the valleys. Splendid horsemen, fine marksmen, and alive with youth and
courage, no deed was too great for them. Harry was proud to ride with
them, and he told more of the story to Sherburne as they covered the short
distance to the village.</p>
<p>“Old Jack would order us to do just what we're doing,” said Sherburne. “He
wants his officers to obey orders, but he wants them to think, too.”</p>
<p>Harry saw his eyes flash again, and something in his own mind answered to
the spirit of adventure which burned so brightly in this young man. He
looked over the troop, and as far as he could see the faces of all were
flushed with the same hope. He knew with sudden certainty that the Union
forces would never take that warehouse and its precious contents. These
were the very flower of that cavalry of the South destined to become so
famous.</p>
<p>“You know the village?” said Sherburne to Harry.</p>
<p>“Yes, I passed there last night.”</p>
<p>“What defense has it?”</p>
<p>“About two hundred men. They are strangers to the region, drawn from the
Tidewater country, and I don't think they're as good as most of General
Jackson's men.”</p>
<p>“Lack of discipline, you think?”</p>
<p>“Yes, but the material is fine.”</p>
<p>“All right. Then we'll see that they acquire discipline. Nothing like the
enemy's fire to teach men what war is.”</p>
<p>They were riding at good speed toward the village, while they talked, and
Harry had become at once the friend and lieutenant of young Captain
Sherburne. His manner was so pleasant, so intimate, so full of charm, that
he did not have the power or the will to resist it.</p>
<p>They soon saw Hertford, a village so little that it was not able to put
itself on the map. It stood on the crest of a low hill, and the tobacco
barn was about as large as all the other buildings combined. The twilight
had now merged into night, but there was a bright sky and plenty of stars,
and they saw well.</p>
<p>Captain Sherburne stopped his troop at a distance of three or four hundred
yards, while they were still under cover of the forest.</p>
<p>“What's the name of the commander there?” he asked.</p>
<p>“McGee,” Harry replied. “Means well, but rather obstinate.”</p>
<p>“That's the way with most of these untrained men. We mustn't risk being
shot up by those whom we've come to help. Lasley, give them a call from
the bugle. Make it low and soft though. We don't want those behind us to
hear it.”</p>
<p>Lasley, a boy no older than Harry, rode forward a dozen yards in front of
the troop, put his bugle to his lips and blew a soft, warning call. Harry
had been stirred by the first sound of a hostile trumpet hours before, and
now this, the note of a friend, thrilled him again. He gazed intently at
the village, knowing that the pickets would be on watch, and presently he
saw men appear at the edge of the hill just in front of the great
warehouse. They were the pickets, beyond a doubt, because the silver
starshine glinted along the blades of their bayonets.</p>
<p>The bugler gave one more call. It was a soft and pleasing sound. It said
very plainly that the one who blew and those with him were friends. Two
men in uniform joined the pickets beside the warehouse, and looked toward
the point whence the note of the bugle came.</p>
<p>“Forward!” said Captain Philip Sherburne, himself leading the way, Harry
by his side. The troops, wheeling back into the road and marching by fours
in perfect order, rode straight toward the village.</p>
<p>“Who comes?” was the stern hail.</p>
<p>“A troop of Stonewall Jackson's cavalry to help you,” replied Sherburne.
“You are about to be attacked by a Northern division eight hundred
strong.”</p>
<p>“Who says so?” came the question in a tone tinged with unbelief, and Harry
knew that it was the stubborn and dogmatic McGee who spoke.</p>
<p>“Lieutenant Harry Kenton of the Invincibles, one of Stonewall Jackson's
best regiments, has seen them. You know him; he was here yesterday.”</p>
<p>As he spoke, Captain Sherburne sprang from his horse and pointed to Harry.</p>
<p>“You remember me, Captain McGee,” said Harry. “I stopped with you a minute
yesterday. I rode on a scouting expedition, and I have seen the Union
force myself. It outnumbers us at least two to one, but we'll have the
advantage of the defense.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I know you,” said McGee, his heavy and strong, but not very
intelligent face, brightening a little. “But it's a great responsibility
I've got here. We ought to have had more troops to defend such valuable
stores. I've got two hundred men, captain, and I should say that you've
about the same.”</p>
<p>It was then that Captain Philip Sherburne showed his knightly character,
speaking words that made Harry's admiration of him immense.</p>
<p>“I haven't any men, Captain McGee,” he said, “but you have four hundred,
and I'll help my commander as much as I can.”</p>
<p>McGee's eyes gleamed. Harry saw that while not of alert mind he was
nevertheless a gentleman.</p>
<p>“We work together, Captain Sherburne,” he said gratefully, “and I thank
God you've come. What splendid men you have!”</p>
<p>Captain Sherburne's eyes gleamed also. This troop of his was his pride,
and he sought always to keep it bright and sharp like a polished sword
blade.</p>
<p>“Whatever you wish, Captain McGee. But it will take us all to repel the
enemy. Kenton here, who saw them well, says they have a fine, disciplined
force.”</p>
<p>The men now dismounted and led their horses to a little grove just in the
rear of the warehouse, where they were tethered under the guard of the
villagers, all red-hot partisans of the South. Then the four hundred men,
armed with rifles and carbines, disposed themselves about the warehouse,
the bulk of them watching the road along which the attacking force was
almost sure to come.</p>
<p>Harry took his place with Sherburne, and once more he was compelled to
admire the young captain's tact and charm of manner. He directed
everything by example and suggestion, but all the while he made the heavy
Captain McGee think that he himself was doing it.</p>
<p>Sherburne and Harry walked down the road a little distance.</p>
<p>“Aren't you glad to be here, Kenton?” asked the captain in a somewhat
whimsical tone.</p>
<p>“I'm glad to help, of course.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but there's more. When I came to war I came to fight. And if we save
the stores look how we'll stand in Old Jack's mind. Lord, Kenton, but he's
a queer man! You'd never take any notice of him, if you didn't know who he
was, but I'd rather have one flash of approval from those solemn eyes of
his than whole dictionaries of praise from all the other generals I know.”</p>
<p>“I saw him at Bull Run, when he saved the day.”</p>
<p>“So did I. The regiment that I was with didn't come up until near the
close, but our baptism of battle was pretty thorough, all the same. Hark!
did you think you heard anything, Kenton?”</p>
<p>Harry listened attentively.</p>
<p>“Yes, I hear something,” he replied. “It's very soft, but I should say
that it's the distant beat of hoofs.”</p>
<p>“And of many hoofs.”</p>
<p>“So I think.”</p>
<p>“Then it's our friends of the North, coming to take what we want to keep.
A few minutes more, Kenton, and they'll be here.”</p>
<p>They slipped back toward the warehouse, and Harry's heart began to throb
heavily. He knew that Sherburne's words would soon come true.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER II. THE FOOT CAVALRY </h2>
<p>Captain Sherburne told Captain McGee that the invaders were coming, and
there was a stir in the ranks of the defenders. The cavalrymen,
disciplined and eager, said nothing, but merely moved a little in order to
see better along the road over which the enemy was advancing. The original
defenders, who were infantry, talked in whispers, despite commands, and
exchanged doubts and apprehensions.</p>
<p>Harry walked up and down in front of the warehouse with Captain Sherburne,
and both watched the road.</p>
<p>“If we only had a little artillery, just a light gun or two,” said
Sherburne, “we'd give 'em such a surprise that they'd never get over it.”</p>
<p>“But we haven't got it.”</p>
<p>“No, we haven't, but maybe rifles and carbines will serve.”</p>
<p>The hoofbeats were fast growing louder, and Harry knew that the head of
the Northern column would appear in a minute or two. Every light in the
warehouse or about it and all in the village had been extinguished, but
the moonlight was clear and more stars had come into the full sky.</p>
<p>“We can see well enough for a fight,” murmured Captain Sherburne.</p>
<p>Everybody could hear the hoofbeats now, and again there was a stir in the
ranks of the defenders. The dark line appeared in the road three or four
hundred yards away and then, as the horsemen emerged into the open, they
deployed rapidly by companies. They, too, were trained men, and keen eyes
among their officers caught sight of the armed dark line before the
warehouse. The voice of the trumpet suddenly pealed forth again, and now
it was loud and menacing.</p>
<p>“It's the charge!” cried Sherburne, “and I can see that they're all you
said, Kenton! A magnificent body, truly! Ready, men! Ready! For God's sake
don't fire too soon! Wait for the word! Wait for the word!”</p>
<p>He was all the leader now, and in the excitement of the moment McGee did
not notice it. The superior mind, the one keen to see and to act, was in
control.</p>
<p>“Here, Kenton!” cried Sherburne, “hold back these recruits! My own men
will do exactly as I say!”</p>
<p>Harry ran along the infantry line, and here and there he knocked down
rifles which were raised already, although the enemy was yet three hundred
yards away. But he saw a figure in front of the charging horsemen wave a
sword. Then the trumpet blew another call, short but fierce and menacing,
and the ground thundered as nearly a thousand horsemen swept forward,
uttering a tremendous shout, their sabers flashing in the moonlight.</p>
<p>Harry felt a moment of admiration and then another moment of pity. These
men, charging so grandly, did not know that the defenders had been
reinforced. Nor did they know that they rode straight to what was swift
and sudden death for many of them.</p>
<p>It was hard to stand steady and not pull the trigger, while that line of
flashing steel galloped upon them, but the dismounted cavalrymen looked to
their leader for commands, and the officer held the infantry. Harry's
moment of admiration and pity passed. These were soldiers coming to defeat
and destroy, and it was his business to help prevent it. His own pulse of
battle began to beat hard.</p>
<p>That front of steel, spread wide across the open, was within two hundred
yards now! Then a hundred and fifty! Then a hundred! Then less, and fierce
and sharp like the crack of a rifle came Captain Sherburne's command:
“Fire!”</p>
<p>Four hundred rifles leaped to the shoulder and four hundred fingers
pressed trigger so close together that four hundred rifles sang together
as one. The charge halted in its tracks. The entire front rank was shot
away. Horses and men went down together, and the horses uttered neighs of
pain, far more terrific than the groans of the wounded men. Many of them,
riderless, galloped up and down between the lines.</p>
<p>But the splendid horsemen behind came on again, after the momentary stop.
Half of them armed with short carbines sent a volley at the defenders, who
were shoving in cartridges in frantic haste, and the swordsmen galloped
straight upon the Virginians.</p>
<p>Harry saw a great saber flashing directly in his face. It was wielded by a
man on a powerful horse that seemed wild with the battle fever. The horse,
at the moment, was more terrible than his rider. His mouth was dripping
with foam, and his lips were curled back from his cruel, white teeth. His
eyes, large and shot with blood, were like those of some huge, carnivorous
animal.</p>
<p>The boy recoiled, more in fear of the horse than of the saber, and
snatching a heavy pistol from his belt, fired directly at the great
foam-flecked head. The horse crashed down, but his rider sprang clear and
retreated into the smoke. Almost at the same instant the defenders had
fired the second volley, and the charge was beaten back from their very
faces.</p>
<p>The Southerners at the war's opening had the advantage of an almost
universal familiarity with the rifle, and now they used it well.
Sherburne's two hundred men, always cool and steady, fired like trained
marksmen, and the others did almost as well. Most of them had new rifles,
using cartridges, and no cavalry on earth could stand before such a fire.</p>
<p>Harry again saw the flashing sabers more than once, and there was a vast
turmoil of fire and smoke in front of him, but in a few minutes the
trumpet sounded again, loud and clear over the crash of battle, and now it
was calling to the men to come back.</p>
<p>The two forces broke apart. The horsemen, save for the wounded and dead,
retreated to the forest, and the defenders, victorious for the present,
fired no more, while the wounded, who could, crawled away to shelter. They
reloaded their rifles and at first there was no exultation. They barely
had time to think of anything. The impact had been so terrible and there
had been such a blaze of firing that they were yet in a daze, and scarcely
realized what had happened.</p>
<p>“Down, men! Down!” cried Captain Sherburne, as he ran along the line.
“They'll open fire from the wood!”</p>
<p>All the defenders threw themselves upon the ground and lay there, much
less exposed and also concealed partly. One edge of the wood ran within
two hundred yards of the warehouse, and presently the Northern soldiers,
hidden behind the trees at that point, opened a heavy rifle fire. Bullets
whistled over the heads of the defenders, and kept up a constant patter
upon the walls of the warehouse, but did little damage.</p>
<p>A few of the men in gray had been killed, and all the wounded were taken
inside the warehouse, into which the great tobacco barn had been turned.
Two competent surgeons attended to them by the light of candles, while the
garrison outside lay still and waiting under the heavy fire.</p>
<p>“A waste of lead,” said Sherburne to Harry. “They reckon, perhaps, that
we're all recruits, and will be frightened into retreat or surrender.”</p>
<p>“If we had those guns now we could clear out the woods in short order,”
said Harry.</p>
<p>“And if they had 'em they could soon blow up this barn, everything in it
and a lot of us at the same time. So we are more than even on the matter
of the lack of guns.”</p>
<p>The fire from the wood died in about fifteen minutes and was succeeded by
a long and trying silence. The light of the moon deepened, and silvered
the faces of the dead lying in the open. All the survivors of the attack
were hidden, but the defenders knew that they were yet in the forest.</p>
<p>“Kenton,” said Captain Sherburne, “you know the way to General Jackson's
camp at Winchester.”</p>
<p>“I've been over it a dozen times.”</p>
<p>“Then you must mount and ride. This force is sitting down before us for a
siege, and it probably has pickets about the village, but you must get
through somehow. Bring help! The Yankees are likely to send back for help,
too, but we've got to win here.”</p>
<p>“I'm off in five minutes,” said Harry, “and I'll come with a brigade by
dawn.”</p>
<p>“I believe you will,” said Sherburne. “But get to Old Jack! Get there! If
you can only reach him, we're saved! He may not have any horsemen at hand,
but his foot cavalry can march nearly as fast! Lord, how Stonewall Jackson
can cover ground!”</p>
<p>Their hands met in the hearty grasp of a friendship which was already old
and firm, and Harry, without looking back, slipped into the wood, where
the men from the village were watching over the horses. Sherburne had told
him to take any horse he needed, but he chose his own, convinced that he
had no equal, slipped into the saddle, and rode to the edge of the wood.</p>
<p>“There's a creek just back of us; you can see the water shining through
the break in the trees,” said a man who kept the village store. “The
timber's pretty thick along it, and you'd best keep in its shelter. Here,
you Tom, show him the way.”</p>
<p>A boy of fourteen stepped up to the horse's head.</p>
<p>“My son,” said the storekeeper. “He knows every inch of the ground.”</p>
<p>But Harry waved him back.</p>
<p>“No,” he said. “I'll be shot at, and the boy on foot can't escape. I'll
find my way through. No, I tell you he must not go!”</p>
<p>He almost pushed back the boy who was eager for the task, rode out of the
wood which was on the slope of the hill away from the point of attack, and
gained the fringe of timber along the creek. It was about fifty yards from
cover to cover, but he believed he had not been seen, as neither shout nor
shot followed him.</p>
<p>Yet the Union pickets could not be far away. He had seen enough to know
that the besiegers were disciplined men led by able officers and they
would certainly make a cordon about the whole Southern position.</p>
<p>He rode his horse into a dense clump of trees and paused to listen. He
heard nothing but the faint murmur of the creek, and the occasional rustle
of dry branches as puffs of wind passed. He dismounted for the sake of
caution and silence as far as possible, and led his horse down the fringe
of trees, always keeping well under cover.</p>
<p>Another hundred yards and he stopped again to listen. All those old
inherited instincts and senses leaped into life. He was, for the moment,
the pioneer lad, seeking to detect the ambush of his foe. Now, his acute
ears caught the hostile sound. It was low, merely the footsteps of a man,
steadily walking back and forth.</p>
<p>Harry peeped from his covert and saw a Union sentinel not far away, pacing
his beat, rifle on shoulder, the point of the bayonet tipped with silver
flame from the moon. And he saw further on another sentinel, and then
another, all silent and watchful. He knew that the circle about the
defense was complete.</p>
<p>He could have escaped easily through the line, had he been willing to
leave his horse, and for a few moments he was sorely tempted to do so, but
he recalled that time was more precious than jewels. If he ever got beyond
the line of pickets he must go and go fast.</p>
<p>He was three or four hundred yards from the village and no one had yet
observed him, but he did not believe that he could go much farther
undetected. Some one was bound to hear the heavy footsteps of the horse.</p>
<p>The creek shallowed presently and the banks became very low. Then Harry
decided suddenly upon his course. He would put everything to the touch and
win or lose in one wild dash. Springing upon the back of his horse, he
raked him with the spur and put him straight at the creek. The startled
animal was across in two jumps, and then Harry sent him racing across the
fields. He heard two or three shouts and several shots, but fortunately
none touched him or his mount, and, not looking back, he continually urged
the horse to greater speed.</p>
<p>Bending low he heard the distant sound of hoofbeats behind him, but they
soon died away. Then he entered a belt of forest, and when he passed out
on the other side no pursuit could be seen. But he did not slacken speed.
He knew that all Sherburne had said about Stonewall Jackson was true. He
would forgive no dallying by the way. He demanded of every man his
uttermost.</p>
<p>He turned from the unfenced field into the road, and rode at a full gallop
toward Winchester. The cold wind swept past and his spirits rose high.
Every pulse was beating with exultation. It was he who had brought the
warning to the defenders of the stores. It was he who had brought
Sherburne's troop to help beat off the attack, and now it was he who,
bursting through the ring of steel, was riding to Jackson and sure relief.</p>
<p>His horse seemed to share his triumph. He ran on and on without a swerve
or jar. Once he stretched out his long head, and uttered a shrill neigh.
The sound died in far echoes, and then followed only the rapid beat of his
hoofs on the hard road.</p>
<p>Harry knew that there was no longer any danger to him from the enemy, and
he resolved now not to go to his own colonel, but to ride straight to the
tent of Jackson himself.</p>
<p>The night had never grown dark. Moon and stars still shed an abundant
light for the flying horseman, and presently he caught fleeting glimpses
through the trees of roofs that belonged to Winchester. Then two men in
gray spring into the road, and, leveling their rifles, gave him the
command to stop.</p>
<p>“I'm Lieutenant Kenton of the Invincibles,” he cried, “and I come for
help. A strong force of the Yankees is besieging Hertford, and four
hundred of our men are defending it. There is no time to waste! They must
have help there before dawn, or everything is lost! Which way is General
Jackson's tent?”</p>
<p>“In that field on the hillock!” replied one of the men, pointing two or
three hundred yards away.</p>
<p>Harry raced toward the tent, which rose in modest size out of the
darkness, and sprang to the ground, when his horse reached it. A single
sentinel, rifle across his arms, was standing before it, but the flap was
thrown back and a light was burning inside.</p>
<p>“I'm a messenger for General Jackson!” cried Harry. “I've news that can't
wait!”</p>
<p>The sentinel hesitated a moment, but a figure within stepped to the door
of the tent and Harry for the first time was face to face with Stonewall
Jackson. He had seen him often near or far, but now he stood before him,
and was to speak with him.</p>
<p>Jackson was dressed fully and the fine wrinkles of thought showed on his
brow, as if he had intended to study and plan the night through. He was a
tallish man, with good features cut clearly, high brow, short brown beard
and ruddy complexion. His uniform was quite plain and his appearance was
not imposing, but his eyes of deep blue regarded the boy keenly.</p>
<p>“I'm Lieutenant Kenton, sir, of Colonel Talbot's Invincibles,” replied
Harry to the question which was not spoken, but which nevertheless was
asked. “Our arsenal at Hertford is besieged by a strong force of the
enemy, a force that is likely to be increased heavily by dawn. Luckily
Captain Sherburne and his troop of valley Virginians came up in time to
help, and I have slipped through the besieging lines to bring more aid.”</p>
<p>Harry had touched his cap as he spoke and now he stood in silence while
the blue eyes looked him through.</p>
<p>“I know you. I've observed you,” said Jackson in calm, even tones, showing
not a trace of excitement. “I did not think that the Federal troops would
make a movement so soon, but we will meet it. A brigade will march in half
an hour.”</p>
<p>“Don't I go with it?” exclaimed Harry pleadingly. “You know, I brought the
news, sir!”</p>
<p>“You do. Your regiment will form part of the brigade. Rejoin Colonel
Talbot at once. The Invincibles, with you as guide, shall lead the way.
You have done well, Lieutenant Kenton.”</p>
<p>Harry flushed with pride at the brief words of praise, which meant so much
coming from Stonewall Jackson, and saluting again hurried to his immediate
command. Already the messengers were flying to the different regiments,
bidding them to be up and march at once.</p>
<p>The Invincibles were upon their feet in fifteen minutes, fully clothed and
armed, and ready for the road. The cavalry were not available that night,
and the brigade would march on foot save for the officers. Harry was back
on his horse, and St. Clair and Langdon were beside him. The colonels,
Talbot and St. Hilaire, sat on their horses at the head of the
Invincibles, the first regiment.</p>
<p>“What is it?” said Langdon to Harry. “Have you brought this night march
upon us?”</p>
<p>“I have, and we're going to strike the Yankees before dawn at Hertford,”
replied Harry to both questions.</p>
<p>“I like the nights for rest,” said Langdon, “but it could be worse; I've
had four hours' sleep anyway.”</p>
<p>“You'll have no more this night, that's certain,” said St. Clair. “Look,
General Jackson, himself, is going with us. See him climbing upon Little
Sorrel! Lord pity the foot cavalry!”</p>
<p>General Jackson, mounted upon the sorrel horse destined to become so
famous, rode to the head of the brigade, which was now in ranks, and
beckoned to Harry.</p>
<p>“I've decided to attend to this affair myself, Lieutenant Kenton,” he
said. “Keep by my side. You know the way. Be sure that you lead us right.”</p>
<p>His voice was not raised, but his words had an edge of steel. The cold
blue eyes swept him with a single chilly glance and Harry felt the fear of
God in his soul. Lead them right? His faculties could not fail with
Stonewall Jackson by his side.</p>
<p>The general himself gave the word, the brigade swung into the broad road
and it marched. It did not dawdle along. It marched, and it marched fast.
It actually seemed to Harry after the first mile that it was running,
running toward the enemy.</p>
<p>Not in vain had the infantry of Stonewall Jackson been called foot
cavalry. Harry now for the first time saw men really march. The road spun
behind them and the forest swept by. They were nearly all open-air
Virginians, long of limb, deep of chest and great of muscle. There was no
time for whispering among them, and the exchange of guesses about their
destination. They needed every particle of air in their lungs for the
terrible man who made them march as men had seldom marched before.</p>
<p>Jackson cast a grim eye on the long files that sank away in the darkness
behind him.</p>
<p>“They march very well,” he said, “but they will do better with more
practice. Ride to the rear, Lieutenant Kenton, and see if there are any
stragglers. If you find any order them back into line and if they refuse
to obey, shoot.”</p>
<p>Again his voice was not raised, but an electric current of fiery energy
seemed to leap from this grave, somber man and to infuse itself through
the veins of the lad to whom he gave the orders.</p>
<p>Harry saluted and, wheeling his horse, rode swiftly along the edge of the
forest toward the rear. Now, the spirit of indomitable youth broke forth.
Many in the columns were as young as he and some younger. In the earlier
years of the war, and indeed, to the very close, there was little outward
respect for rank among the citizen soldiers of either army. Harry was
saluted with a running fire of chaff.</p>
<p>“Turn your horse's head, young feller, the enemy ain't that way. He's in
front.”</p>
<p>“He's forgot his toothbrush, Bill, and he's going back in a hurry to get
it.”</p>
<p>“If I had a horse like that I'd ride him in the right direction.”</p>
<p>“Tell 'em in Winchester that the foot cavalry are marchin' a hundred miles
an hour.”</p>
<p>Harry did not resent these comments. He merely flung back an occasional
comment of his own and hurried on until he reached the rear. Then in the
dusk of the road he found four or five men limping along, and ready when
convenient to drop away in the darkness. Harry wasted no time. The fire in
his blood that had come from Jackson was still burning. He snatched a
pistol from his belt and, riding directly at them, cried:</p>
<p>“Forward and into the ranks at once, or I shoot!”</p>
<p>“But we are lame, sir!” cried one of the men. “See my foot is bleeding!”</p>
<p>He held up one foot and red drops were falling from the ragged shoe.</p>
<p>“It makes no difference,” cried Harry. “Barefooted men should be glad to
march for Stonewall Jackson! One, two, three! Hurry, all of you, or I
shoot!”</p>
<p>The men took one look at the flaming face, and broke into a run for the
rear guard. Harry saw them in the ranks and then beat up the woods on
either side of the road, but saw no more stragglers or deserters. Then he
galloped through the edge of the forest and rejoined the general at the
head of the command.</p>
<p>“Were they all marching?” asked Jackson.</p>
<p>“All but four, sir.”</p>
<p>“And the four?”</p>
<p>“They're marching now, too.”</p>
<p>“Good. How far are we from the arsenal?”</p>
<p>“About eight miles, sir.”</p>
<p>“Isn't it nearer nine?”</p>
<p>“I should say nearer eight, sir.”</p>
<p>“You should know, and at any rate we'll soon see.”</p>
<p>Jackson did not speak to him again directly, evidently keeping him at his
side now for sure guidance, but he continually sent other aides along the
long lines to urge more speed. The men were panting, and, despite the cold
of the winter night, beads of perspiration stood on every face. But
Jackson was pitiless. He continually spurred them on, and now Harry knew
with the certainty of fate that he would get there in time. He would reach
Hertford before fresh Union troops could come. He was as infallible as
fate.</p>
<p>There was no breath left for whispering in the ranks of Jackson's men.
Nothing was heard but the steady beat of marching feet, and now and then,
the low command of an officer. But such commands were few. There were no
more stragglers, and the chief himself rode at their head. They knew how
to follow.</p>
<p>The moon faded and many of the stars went back into infinite space. A
dusky film was drawn across the sky, and at a distance the fields and
forest blended into one great shadow. Harry looked back at the brigade
which wound in a long dark coil among the trees. He could not see faces of
the men now, only the sinuous black shape of illimitable length that their
solid lines made.</p>
<p>This long black shape moved fast, and occasionally it gave forth a
sinister glitter, as stray moonbeams fell upon blade or bayonet. It seemed
to Harry that there was something deadly and inevitable about it, and he
began to feel sorry for the Union troops who were besieging the village
and who did not know that Stonewall Jackson was coming.</p>
<p>He cast a sidelong glance at the leader. He rode, leaning a little further
forward in the saddle than usual, and the wintry blue eyes gazed steadily
before him. Harry knew that they missed nothing.</p>
<p>“You are sure that we are on the right road, Mr. Kenton?” said Jackson.</p>
<p>“Quite sure of it, sir.”</p>
<p>The general did not speak again for some time. Then, when he caught the
faint glimmer of water through the dark, he said:</p>
<p>“This is the creek, is it not?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir, and the Yankees can't be more than a mile away.”</p>
<p>“And it's a full hour until dawn. The reinforcements for the enemy cannot
have come up. Lieutenant Kenton, I wish you to stay with me. I will have a
messenger tell Colonel Talbot that for the present you are detached for my
service.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, sir,” said Harry.</p>
<p>“Why?”</p>
<p>“I wish to see how you crumple up the enemy.”</p>
<p>The cold blue eyes gleamed for a moment. Harry more than guessed the
depths of passion and resolve that lay behind the impenetrable mask of
Jackson's face. He felt again the rays of the white, hot fire that burned
in the great Virginian's soul.</p>
<p>A few hundred yards further and the brigade began to spread out in the
dusk. Companies filed off to right and left, and in a few minutes came
shots from the pickets, sounding wonderfully clear and sharp in the
stillness of the night. Red dots from the rifle muzzles appeared here and
there in the woods, and then Harry caught the glint of late starshine on
the eaves of the warehouse.</p>
<p>Jackson drew his horse a little to one side of the road, and Harry,
obedient to orders, followed him. A regiment massed directly behind them
drew up close. Harry saw that it was his own Invincibles. There were
Colonel Leonidas Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire on
horseback, looking very proud and eager. Further away were Langdon and St.
Clair also mounted, but Harry could not see the expression on their faces.</p>
<p>“Tell Colonel Talbot to have the charge sounded and then to attack with
all his might,” said Jackson to his young aide.</p>
<p>Harry carried the order eagerly and rejoined the general at once. The
drums of the Invincibles beat the charge, and on both sides of them the
drums of other regiments played the same tune. Then the drum-beat was lost
in that wild and thrilling shout, the rebel yell, more terrible than the
war-whoop of the Indians, and the whole brigade rushed forward in a vast
half-circle that enclosed the village between the two horns of the curve.</p>
<p>The scattered firing of the pickets was lost in the great shout of the
South, and, by the time the Northern sentinels could give the alarm to
their main body, the rush of Jackson's men was upon them, clearing out the
woods and fields in a few instants and driving the Union horsemen in swift
flight northward.</p>
<p>Harry kept close to his general. He saw a spark of fire shoot from the
blue eye, and the nostrils expand. Then the mask became as impenetrable as
ever. He let the reins fall on the neck of Little Sorrel, and watched his
men as they swept into the open, passed the warehouse, and followed the
enemy into the forest beyond.</p>
<p>But the bugles quickly sounded the recall. It was not Jackson's purpose to
waste his men in frays which could produce little. The pursuing regiments
returned reluctantly to the open where the inhabitants of the village were
welcoming Jackson with great rejoicings. The encounter had been too swift
and short to cause great loss, but all the stores were saved and Captain
Sherburne and Captain McGee rode forward to salute their commander.</p>
<p>“You made a good defense,” said Stonewall Jackson, crisply and briefly.
“We begin the removal of the stores at once. Wagons will come up shortly
for that purpose. Take your cavalry, Captain Sherburne, and scout the
country. If they need sleep they can get it later when there is nothing
else to do.”</p>
<p>Captain Sherburne saluted and Harry saw his face flush with pride. The
indomitable spirit of Jackson was communicated fast to all his men. The
sentence to more work appealed to Sherburne with much greater force than
the sentence of rest could have done. In a moment he and his men were off,
searching the woods and fields in the direction of the Union camp.</p>
<p>“Ride back on the road, Lieutenant Kenton, and tell the wagons to hurry,”
said General Jackson to Harry. “Before I left Winchester I gave orders for
them to follow, and we must not waste time here.”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” said Harry, as he turned and rode into the forest through
which they had come. He, too, felt the same emotion that had made the face
of Sherburne flush with pride. What were sleep and rest to a young
soldier, following a man who carried victory in the hollow of his hand;
not the victory of luck or chance, but the victory of forethought, of
minute preparation, and of courage.</p>
<p>He galloped fast, and the hard road gave back the ring of steel shod
hoofs. A silver streak showed in the eastern sky. The dawn was breaking.
He increased his pace. The woods and fields fled by. Then he heard the
cracking of whips, and the sound of voices urging on reluctant animals.
Another minute and the long line of wagons was in sight straining along
the road.</p>
<p>“Hurry up!” cried Harry to the leader who drove, bareheaded.</p>
<p>“Has Old Jack finished the job?” asked the man.</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“How long did it take him?”</p>
<p>“About five minutes.”</p>
<p>“I win,” called the man to the second driver just behind him. “You 'lowed
it would take him ten minutes, but I said not more'n seven at the very
furthest.”</p>
<p>The train broke into a trot, and Harry, turning his horse, rode by the
side of the leader.</p>
<p>“How did you know that it would take General Jackson so little time to
scatter the enemy?” the boy asked the man.</p>
<p>“'Cause I know Old Jack.”</p>
<p>“But he has not yet done much in independent command.”</p>
<p>“No, but I've seen him gettin' ready, an' I've watched him. He sees
everything, an' he prays. I tell you he prays. I ain't a prayin' man
myself. But when a man kneels down in the bushes an' talks humble an'
respectful to his God, an' then rises up an' jumps at the enemy, it's time
for that enemy to run. I'd rather be attacked by the worst bully and
desperado that ever lived than by a prayin' man. You see, I want to live,
an' what chance have I got ag'in a man that's not only not afraid to die,
but that's willin' to die, an' rather glad to die, knowin' that he's goin'
straight to Heaven an' eternal joy? I tell you, young man, that
unbelievers ain't ever got any chance against believers; no, not in
nothin'.”</p>
<p>“I believe you're right.”</p>
<p>“Right! Of course I'm right! Why did Old Jack order these waggins to come
along an' get them stores? 'Cause he believed he was goin' to save 'em.
An' mebbe he saved 'em, 'cause he believed he was goin' to do it. It works
both ways. Git up!”</p>
<p>The shout of “Git up!” was to his horses, which added a little more to
their pace, and now Harry saw troops coming back to meet them and form an
escort.</p>
<p>In half an hour they were at the village. Already the ammunition and
supplies had been brought forth and were stacked, ready to be loaded on
the wagons. General Jackson was everywhere, riding back and forth on his
sorrel horse, directing the removal just as he had directed the march and
the brief combat. His words were brief but always dynamic. He seemed
insensible to weariness.</p>
<p>It was now full morning, wintry and clear. The small population of the
village and people from the surrounding country, intensely Southern and
surcharged with enthusiasm, were bringing hot coffee and hot breakfast for
the troops. Jackson permitted them to eat and drink in relays. As many as
could get at the task helped to load the wagons. Little compulsion was
needed. Officers themselves toiled at boxes and casks. The spirit of
Jackson had flowed into them all.</p>
<p>“I've gone into training,” said Langdon to Harry.</p>
<p>“Training? What kind of training, Tom?”</p>
<p>“I see that my days of play are over forever, and I'm practicing hard, so
I can learn how to do without food, sleep or rest for months at a time.”</p>
<p>“It's well you're training,” interrupted St. Clair. “I foresee that you're
going to need all the practice you can get. Everything's loaded in the
wagons now, and I wager you my chances of promotion against one of our new
Confederate dollar bills that we start inside of a minute.”</p>
<p>The word “minute” was scarcely out of his mouth, when Jackson gave the
sharp order to march. Sherburne's troop sprang to saddle and led the way,
their bugler blowing a mellow salute to the morning and victory. Many
whips cracked, and the wagons bearing the precious stores swung into line.
Behind came the brigade, the foot cavalry. The breakfast and the loading
of the wagons had not occupied more than half an hour. It was yet early
morning when the whole force left the village and marched at a swift pace
toward Winchester.</p>
<p>General Jackson beckoned to Harry.</p>
<p>“Ride with me,” he said. “I've notified Colonel Talbot that you are
detached from his staff and will serve on mine.”</p>
<p>Although loath to leave his comrades Harry appreciated the favor and
flushed with pleasure.</p>
<p>“Thank you, sir,” he said briefly.</p>
<p>Jackson nodded. He seemed to like the lack of effusive words. Harry knew
that his general had not tasted food. Neither had he. He had actually
forgotten it in his keenness for his work, and now he was proud of the
fact. He was proud, too, of the comradeship of abstention that it gave him
with Stonewall Jackson. As he rode in silence by the side of the great
commander he made for himself an ideal. He would strive in his own
youthful way to show the zeal, the courage and the untiring devotion that
marked the general.</p>
<p>The sun, wintry but golden, rose higher and made fields and forest
luminous. But few among Jackson's men had time to notice the glory of the
morning. It seemed to Harry that they were marching back almost as swiftly
as they had come. Langdon was right and more. They were getting continuous
practice not only in the art of living without food, sleep or rest, but
also of going everywhere on a run instead of a walk. Those who survived it
would be incomparable soldiers.</p>
<p>Winchester appeared and the people came forth rejoicing. Jackson gave
orders for the disposition of the stores and then rode at once to a tent.
He signalled to Harry also to dismount and enter. An orderly took the
horses of both.</p>
<p>“Sit down at the table there,” said Jackson. “I want to dictate to you
some orders.”</p>
<p>Harry sat down. He had forgotten to take off his cap and gloves, but he
removed one gauntlet now, and picked up a pen which lay beside a little
inkstand, a pad of coarse paper on the other side.</p>
<p>Jackson himself had not removed hat or gauntlets either, and the heavy
cavalry cloak that he had worn on the ride remained flung over his
shoulders. He dictated a brief order to his brigadiers, Loring, Edward
Johnson, Garnett, the commander of the Stonewall Brigade, and Ashby, who
led the cavalry, to prepare for a campaign and to see that everything was
ready for a march in the morning.</p>
<p>Harry made copies of all the orders and sealed them.</p>
<p>“Deliver every one to the man to whom it is addressed,” said Jackson, “and
then report to me. But be sure that you say nothing of their contents to
anybody.”</p>
<p>The boy, still burning with zeal, hurried forth with the orders, delivered
them all, and came back to the tent, where he found the general dictating
to another aide. Jackson glanced at him and Harry, saluting, said:</p>
<p>“I have given all the orders, sir, to those for whom they were intended.”</p>
<p>“Very well,” said Jackson. “Wait and I shall have more messages for you to
carry.”</p>
<p>He turned to the second aide, but seeming to remember something, looked at
his watch.</p>
<p>“Have you had any breakfast, Mr. Kenton?” he said.</p>
<p>“No, sir.”</p>
<p>“Any sleep?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“When?”</p>
<p>“I slept well, sir, night before last.”</p>
<p>Harry's reply was given in all seriousness. Jackson smiled. The boy's
reply and his grave manner pleased him.</p>
<p>“I won't give you any more orders just now,” he said. “Go out and get
something to eat, but do not be gone longer than half an hour. You need
sleep, too—but that can wait.”</p>
<p>“I shall be glad to carry your orders, sir, now. The food can wait, too. I
am not hungry.”</p>
<p>Harry spoke respectfully. There was in truth an appealing note in his
voice. Jackson gave him another and most searching glance.</p>
<p>“I think I chose well when I chose you,” he said. “But go, get your
breakfast. It is not necessary to starve to death now. We may have a
chance at that later.”</p>
<p>The faintest twinkle of grim humor appeared in his eyes and Harry,
withdrawing, hastened at once to the Invincibles, where he knew he would
have food and welcome in plenty.</p>
<p>St. Clair and Langdon greeted him with warmth and tried to learn from him
what was on foot.</p>
<p>“There's a great bustle,” said Langdon, “and I know something big is
ahead. This is the last day of the Old Year, and I know that the New Year
is going to open badly. I'll bet you anything that before to-morrow
morning is an hour old this whole army will be running hot-foot over the
country, more afraid of Stonewall Jackson than of fifty thousand of the
enemy.”</p>
<p>“But you've been in training for it,” said Harry with a laugh.</p>
<p>“So I have, but I don't want to train too hard.”</p>
<p>Harry ate and drank and was back at General Jackson's tent in twenty
minutes. He had received a half hour but he was learning already to do
better than was expected of him.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER III. STONEWALL JACKSON'S MARCH </h2>
<p>Harry took some orders to brigadiers and colonels. He saw that
concentration was going on rapidly and he shared the belief of his
comrades that the army would march in the morning. He felt a new impulse
of ambition and energy. It continually occurred to him that while he was
doing much he might do more. He saw how his leader worked, with rapidity
and precision, and without excitement, and he strove to imitate him.</p>
<p>The influence of Jackson was rapidly growing stronger upon the mind of the
brilliant, sensitive boy, so susceptible to splendor of both thought and
action. The general, not yet great to the world, but great already to
those around him, dominated the mind of the boy. Harry was proud to serve
him.</p>
<p>He saw that Jackson had taken no sleep, and he would take none either.
Soon the question was forgotten, and he toiled all through the afternoon,
glad to be at the heart of affairs so important.</p>
<p>Winchester was a sprightly little city, one of the best in the great
valley, inhabited by cultivated people of old families, and Southern to
the core. Harry and his young comrades had found a good welcome there.
They had been in many houses and they had made many friends. The
Virginians liked his bright face and manners. Now they could not fail to
see that some great movement was afoot, and more than once his new friends
asked him its nature, but he replied truthfully that he did not know. In
the throb of great action Winchester disappeared from his thoughts. Every
faculty was bent upon the plans of Jackson, whatever they might be.</p>
<p>The afternoon drew to a close and then the short winter twilight passed
swiftly. The last night of the Old Year had come, and Harry was to enter
at dawn upon one of the most vivid periods in the life of any boy that
ever lived, a period paralleled perhaps only by that of the French lads
who followed the young Bonaparte into the plains of Italy. Harry with all
his dreams, arising from the enormous impression made upon him by Jackson,
could not yet foresee what lay before him.</p>
<p>He was returning on foot from one of his shorter errands. He had ridden
throughout the afternoon, but the time came when he thought the horse
ought to rest, and with the coming of the twilight he had walked. He was
not conscious of any weakness. His body, in a way, had become a mere
mechanism. It worked, because the will acted upon it like a spring, but it
was detached, separate from his mind. He took no more interest in it than
he would in any other machine, which, when used up, could be cast aside,
and be replaced with a new one.</p>
<p>He glanced at the camp, stretching through the darkness. Much fewer fires
were burning than usual, and the men, warned to sleep while they could,
had wrapped themselves already in their blankets. Then he entered the tent
of Jackson with the reply to an order that he had taken to a brigadier.</p>
<p>The general stood by a wall of the tent, dictating to an aide who sat at
the little table, and who wrote by the light of a small oil lamp. Harry
saluted and gave him the reply. Jackson read it. As he read Harry
staggered but recovered himself quickly. The overtaxed body was making a
violent protest, and the vague feeling that he could throw away the old
and used-up machine, and replace it with a new one was not true. He caught
his breath sharply and his face was red with shame. He hoped that his
general had not seen this lamentable weakness of his.</p>
<p>Jackson, after reading the reply, resumed his dictation. Harry was sure
that the general had not seen. He had not noticed the weakness in an aide
of his who should have no weakness at all! But Jackson had seen and in a
few hours of contact he had read the brave, bright young soul of his aide.
He finished the dictation and then turning to Harry, he said quietly:</p>
<p>“I can't think of anything more for you to do, Mr. Kenton, and I suppose
you might as well rest. I shall do so myself in a half hour. You'll find
blankets in the large tent just beyond mine. A half dozen of my aides
sleep in it, but there are blankets enough for all and it's first come
first served.”</p>
<p>Harry gave the usual military salute and withdrew. Outside the tent, the
body that he had used so cruelly protested not only a second time but many
times. It was in very fact and truth detached from the will, because it no
longer obeyed the will at all. His legs wobbled and bent like those of a
paralytic, and his head fell forward through very weakness.</p>
<p>Luckily the tent was only a few yards away, and he managed to reach it and
enter. It had a floor of planks and in the dark he saw three youths, a
little older than himself, already sound asleep in their blankets. He
promptly rolled himself in a pair, stretched his length against the cloth
wall, and balmy sleep quickly came to make a complete reunion of the will
and of the tired body which would be fresh again in the morning, because
he was young and strong and recovered fast.</p>
<p>Harry slept hard all through the night and nature completed her task of
restoring the worn fibers. He was roused shortly after dawn and the cooks
were ready with breakfast for the army. He ate hungrily and when he would
stop, one of his comrades who had slept with him in the tent told him to
eat more.</p>
<p>“You need a lot to go on when you march with Jackson,” he said. “Besides,
you won't be certain where the next is coming from.”</p>
<p>“I've learned that already,” said Harry, as he took his advice.</p>
<p>A half hour later he was on his horse near Jackson, ready to receive his
commands, and in the early hours of the New Year the army marched out of
Winchester, the eager wishes of the whole population following it.</p>
<p>It was the brightest of winter mornings, almost like spring it seemed. The
sky was a curving and solid sheet of sunlight, and the youths of the army
were for the moment a great and happy family. They were marching to
battle, wounds and death, but they were too young and too buoyant to think
much about it.</p>
<p>Harry soon learned that they were going toward Bath and Hancock, two
villages on the railway, both held by Northern troops. He surmised that
Jackson would strike a sudden blow, surprise the garrisons, cut the
railway, and then rush suddenly upon some greater force. A campaign in the
middle of winter. It appealed to him as something brilliant and daring.
The pulses which had beat hard so often lately began to beat hard again.</p>
<p>The army went swiftly across forest and fields. As the brigade had marched
back the night before, so the whole army marched forward to-day. The fact
that Jackson's men always marched faster than other men was forced again
upon Harry's attention. He remembered from his reading an old comment of
Napoleon's referring to war that there were only two or three men in
Europe who knew the value of time. Now he saw that at least one man in
America knew its value, and knew it as fully as Napoleon ever did.</p>
<p>The day passed hour by hour and the army sped on, making only a short halt
at noon for rest and food. Harry joined the Invincibles for a few moments
and was received with warmth by Colonel Leonidas Talbot,
Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire and all his old friends.</p>
<p>“I am sorry to lose you, Harry,” said Colonel Talbot, “but I am glad that
you are on the immediate staff of General Jackson. It's an honor. I feel
already that we're in the hands of a great general, and the feeling has
gone through the whole army. There's an end, so far as this force is
concerned, to doubt and hesitation.”</p>
<p>“And we, the Southerners who are called the cavaliers, are led by a
puritan,” said Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire. “Because if there ever was
a puritan, General Jackson is one.”</p>
<p>Harry passed on, intending to speak with his comrades, Langdon and St.
Clair. He heard the young troops talking freely everywhere, never
forgetting the fact that they were born free citizens as good as anybody,
and never hesitating to comment, often in an unflattering way, upon their
officers. Harry saw a boy who had just taken off his shoes and who was
tenderly rubbing his feet.</p>
<p>“I never marched so fast before,” he said complainingly. “My feet are sore
all over.”</p>
<p>“Put on your shoes an' shut up,” said another boy. “Stonewall Jackson
don't care nothin' about your feet. You're here to fight.”</p>
<p>Harry walked on, but the words sank deep in his mind. It was an uneducated
boy, probably from the hills, who had given the rebuke, but he saw that
the character of Stonewall Jackson was already understood by the whole
army, even to the youngest private. He found Langdon and St. Clair sitting
together on a log. They were not tired, as they were mounted officers, but
they were full of curiosity.</p>
<p>“What's passing through Old Jack's head?” asked Langdon, the irreverent
and the cheerful.</p>
<p>“I don't know, and I don't suppose anybody will ever know all that's
passing there.”</p>
<p>“I'll wager my year's pay against a last year's bird nest that he isn't
leading us away from the enemy.”</p>
<p>“He certainly isn't doing that. We're moving on two little towns, Bath and
Hancock, but there must be bigger designs beyond.”</p>
<p>“This is New Year's Day, as you know,” said St. Clair in his pleasant
South Carolina drawl, “and I feel that Tom there is going to earn the
year's pay that he talks so glibly about wagering.”</p>
<p>“At any rate, Arthur,” said Langdon, “if we go into battle you'll be
dressed properly for it, and if you fall you'll die in a gentleman's
uniform.”</p>
<p>St. Clair smiled, showing that he appreciated Langdon's flippant comment.
Harry glanced at him. His uniform was spotless, and it was pressed as
neatly as if it had just come from the hands of a tailor. The gray jacket
of fine cloth, with its rows of polished brass buttons, was buttoned as
closely as that of a West Point cadet. He seemed to be in dress and manner
a younger brother of the gallant Virginia captain, Philip Sherburne, and
Harry admired him. A soldier who dressed well amid such trying obstacles
was likely to be a soldier through and through. Harry was learning to read
character from extraneous things, things that sometimes looked like
trifles to others.</p>
<p>“I merely came over here to pass the time of day,” he said. “We start
again in two or three minutes. Hark, there go the bugles, and I go with
them!”</p>
<p>He ran back, sprang on his horse a few seconds before Jackson himself was
in the saddle, and rode away again.</p>
<p>The general sent him on no missions for a while, and Harry rode in
silence. Observant, as always, he noticed the long ridges of the
mountains, showing blue in the distance, and the occasional glimmer of
water in the valley. It was beautiful, this valley, and he did not wonder
that the Virginians talked of it so much. He shared their wrath because
the hostile Northern foot already pressed a portion, and he felt as much
eagerness as they to drive away the invader.</p>
<p>He also saw pretty soon that the long lines of the mountains, so blue and
beautiful against the shining sun, were losing their clear and vivid
tints. The sky above them was turning to gray, and their crests were
growing pale. Then a wind chill and sharp with the edge of winter began to
blow down from the slopes. It had been merely playing at summer that
morning and, before the first day of January 1862, closed, winter rushed
down upon Virginia, bringing with it the fiercest and most sanguinary year
the New World ever knew—save the one that followed it, and the one
that followed that.</p>
<p>The temperature dropped many degrees in an hour. Just as the young troops
of Grant, marching to Donelson, deceived by a warm morning had cast aside
their heavy clothing to be chilled to the bone before the day was over, so
the equally young troops of Jackson now suffered in the same way, and from
the same lack of thought.</p>
<p>Most of their overcoats and cloaks were in the wagons, and there was no
time to get them, because Jackson would not permit any delays. They
shivered and grumbled under their breath. Nevertheless the army marched
swiftly, while the dark clouds, laden with snow and cold, marched up with
equal swiftness from the western horizon.</p>
<p>A winter campaign! It did not seem so glorious now to many of the boys who
in the warmth and the sunshine had throbbed with the thought of it. They
inquired once more about those wagons containing their overcoats and
blankets, and they learned that they had followed easier roads, while the
troops themselves were taking short cuts through the forests and across
the fields. They might be reunited at night, and they might not. It was
not considered a matter of the first importance by Jackson.</p>
<p>Harry had been wise enough to retain his military cloak strapped to his
saddle, and he wrapped it about his body, drawing the collar as high as he
could. One of his gauntleted hands held the reins, and the other swung
easily by his side. He would have given his cloak to some one of the
shivering youths who marched on foot near him, but he knew that Jackson
would not permit any such open breach of discipline.</p>
<p>The boy watched the leader who rode almost by his side. Jackson had put on
his own cavalry cloak, but it was fastened by a single button at the top
and it had blown open. He did not seem to notice the fact. Apparently he
was oblivious of heat and cold alike, and rode on, bent a little forward
in the saddle, his face the usual impenetrable mask. But Harry knew that
the brain behind that brow never ceased to work, always thinking and
planning, trying this combination and that, ready to make any sacrifice to
do the work that was to be done.</p>
<p>The long shadows came, and the short day that had turned so cold was over,
giving way to the night that was colder than the day. They were on the
hills now and even the vigorous Jackson felt that it was time to stop
until morning. The night had turned very dark, a fierce wind was blowing,
and now and then a fine sift of snow as sharp as hail was blown against
their faces.</p>
<p>The wagons with the heavy clothing, blankets and food had not come up, and
perhaps would not arrive until the next day. Gloom as dark as the night
itself began to spread among the young troops, but Jackson gave them
little time for bemoaning their fate. Fires were quickly built from fallen
wood. The men found warmth and a certain mental relief in gathering the
wood itself. The officers, many of them boys themselves, shared in the
work. They roamed through the forest dragging in fallen timber, and now
and then, an old rail fence was taken panel by panel to join the general
heap.</p>
<p>The fires presently began to crackle in the darkness, running in long,
irregular lines, and the young soldiers crowded in groups about them. At
the same time they ate the scanty rations they carried in their knapsacks,
and wondered what had become of the wagons. Jackson sent detachments to
seek his supply trains, but Harry knew that he would not wait for it in
the morning. The horses drawing the heavy loads over the slippery roads
would need rest as badly as the men, and Jackson would go on. If food was
not there—well then his troops must march on empty stomachs.</p>
<p>Youth changes swiftly and the high spirits with which the soldiers had
departed in the morning were gone. The night had become extremely cold.
Fierce winds whistled down from the crests of the mountains and pierced
their clothing with myriads of little icy darts. They crept closer and
closer to the fire. Their faces burned while their backs froze, and the
menacing wind, while it chilled them to the marrow with its breath, seemed
to laugh at them in sinister fashion. They thought with many a lament of
their warm quarters in Winchester.</p>
<p>Harry shared the common depression to a certain extent. He had recalled
that morning how the young Napoleon started on his great campaign of
Italy, and there had been in his mind some idea that it would be repeated
in the Virginia valleys, but he recalled at night that the soldiers of the
youthful Bonaparte had marched and fought in warm days in a sunny country.
It was a different thing to conduct a great campaign, when the clouds
heavy with snow were hovering around the mountain tops, and the mercury
was hunting zero. He shivered and looked apprehensively into the chilly
night. His apprehension was not for a human foe, but for the unbroken
spirits of darkness and mystery that can cow us all.</p>
<p>No tents were pitched. Jackson shared the common lot, sitting by a fire
with some of the higher officers, while three or four other young aides
were near. The sifts of snow turned after a while into a fine but steady
snow, which continued half an hour. The backs of the soldiers were covered
with white, while their faces burned. Then there was a shuffling sound at
every fire, as the men turned their backs to the blaze and their faces to
the forest.</p>
<p>Harry watched General Jackson closely. He was sitting on a fallen log,
which the soldiers had drawn near to one of the largest fires, and he was
staring intently into the coals. He did not speak, nor did he seem to take
any notice of those about him. Harry knew, too, that he was not seeing the
coals, but the armies of the enemy on the other side of the cold mountain.</p>
<p>Jackson after a while beckoned to the young aides and he gave to every one
in turn the same command.</p>
<p>“Mount and make a complete circuit of the army. Report to me whether all
the pickets are watchful, and whether any signs of the enemy can be seen.”</p>
<p>Harry had tethered his horse in a little grove near by, where he might be
sheltered as much as possible from the cold, and the faithful animal which
had not tasted food that day, whimpered and rubbed his nose against his
shoulder when he came.</p>
<p>“I'm sorry, old boy,” whispered Harry, “I'd give you food if I could, but
since I can't give you food I've got to give you more work.”</p>
<p>He put on the bridle, leaped into the saddle, which had been left on the
horse's back, and rode away on his mission. The password that night was
“Manassas,” and Harry exchanged it with the pickets who curved in a great
circle through the lone, cold forest. They were always glad to see him.
They were alone, save when two of them met at the common end of a beat,
and these youths of the South were friendly, liking to talk and to hear
the news of others.</p>
<p>Toward the Northern segment of the circle he came to a young giant from
the hills who was walking back and forth with the utmost vigor and shaking
himself as if he would throw off the cold. His brown face brightened with
pleasure when he saw Harry and exchanged the password.</p>
<p>“Two or three other officers have been by here ridin' hosses,” he said in
the voice of an equal speaking to his equal, “an' they don't fill me plum'
full o' envy a-tall, a-tall. I guess a feller tonight kin keep warmer
walkin' on the ground than ridin' on a hoss. What might your name be, Mr.
Officer?”</p>
<p>“Kenton. I'm a lieutenant, at present on the staff of General Jackson.
What is yours?”</p>
<p>“Seth Moore, an' I'm always a private, but at present doin' sentinel duty,
but wishin' I was at home in our double log house 'tween the blankets.”</p>
<p>“Have you noticed anything, Seth?” asked Harry, not at all offended by the
nature of his reply.</p>
<p>“I've seen some snow, an' now an' then the cold top of a mountain, an'—”</p>
<p>“An' what, Seth?”</p>
<p>“Do you see that grove straight toward the north four or five hundred
yards away?”</p>
<p>“Yes, but I can make nothing of it but a black blur. It's too far away to
tell the trunks of the trees apart.”</p>
<p>“It's too fur fur me, too, an' my eyes are good, but ten or fifteen
minutes ago, leftenant, I thought I saw a shadder at the edge of the
grove. It 'peared to me that the shadder was like that of a horse with a
man on it. After a while it went back among the trees an' o' course I lost
it thar.”</p>
<p>“You feel quite sure you saw the shadow, Seth?”</p>
<p>“Yes, leftenant. I'm shore I ain't mistook. I've hunted 'coons an'
'possums at night too much to be mistook about shadders. I reckon, if I
may say so, shadders is my specialty, me bein' somethin' o' a night owl.
As shore as I'm standin' here, leftenant, and as shore as you're settin'
there on your hoss, a mounted man come to the edge of that wood an' stayed
thar a while, watchin' us. I'd have follered him, but I couldn't leave my
beat here, an' you're the first officer I've saw since. It may amount to
nothin, an' then again it mayn't.”</p>
<p>“I'm glad you told me. I'll go into the grove myself and see if anybody is
there now.”</p>
<p>“Leftenant, if I was you I'd be mighty keerful. If it's a spy it'll be
easy enough for him under the cover of the trees to shoot you in the open
comin' toward him.”</p>
<p>Harry knew that Jackson planned a surprise of some kind and Seth Moore's
words about the mounted man alarmed him. He did not doubt the accuracy of
the young mountaineer's eyesight, or his coolness, and he resolved that he
would not go back to headquarters until he knew more about that “shadow.”
But Moore's advice about caution was not to be unheeded.</p>
<p>“If you keep in the edge of our woods here,” said Moore, “an' ride along a
piece you'll come to a little valley. Then you kin go up that an' come
into the grove over thar without being seed.”</p>
<p>“Good advice. I'll take it.”</p>
<p>Harry loosened one of the pistols in his belt and rode cautiously through
the wood as Seth Moore had suggested. The ground sloped rapidly, and soon
he reached the narrow but deep little valley with a dense growth of trees
and underbrush on either side. The valley led upward, and he came into the
grove just as Moore had predicted.</p>
<p>This forest was of much wider extent than he had supposed. It stretched
northward further than he could see, and, although it was devoid of
undergrowth, it was very dark among the trees. He rode his horse behind
the trunk of a great oak, and, pausing there, examined all the forest
within eyeshot.</p>
<p>He saw nothing but the long rows of tree trunks, white on the northern
side with snow, and he heard nothing but the cold rustle of wind among
boughs bare of branches. Yet he had full confidence in the words of Seth
Moore. He could neither see him nor hear him, but he was sure that
somebody besides himself was in the wood. Once more the soul and spirit of
his great ancestor were poured into him, and for the moment he, too, was
the wilderness rover, endowed with nerves preternaturally acute.</p>
<p>Hidden by the great tree trunks he listened attentively. His horse,
oppressed by the cold and perhaps by the weariness of the day, was
motionless and made no sound. He waited two or three minutes and then he
was sure that he heard a slight noise, which he believed was made by the
hoofs of a horse walking very slowly. Then he saw the shadow.</p>
<p>It was the dim figure of a man on horseback, moving very cautiously at
some distance from Harry. He urged his own horse forward a little, and the
shadow stopped instantly. Then he knew that he had been seen, and he sat
motionless in the saddle for an instant or two, not knowing what to do.</p>
<p>After all, the man on horseback might be a friend. He might be some scout
from a band of rangers, coming to join Jackson; and not yet sure that the
army in the woods was his. Recovering from his indecision he rode forward
a little and called:</p>
<p>“Who are you?”</p>
<p>The shadow made no reply, and horse and rider were motionless. They seemed
for an instant to be phantoms, but then Harry knew that they were real. He
was oppressed by a feeling of the weird and menacing. He would make the
sinister figure move and his hand dropped toward his pistol belt.</p>
<p>“Stop, I can fire before you!” cried the figure sharply, and then Harry
suddenly saw a pistol barrel gleaming across the stranger's saddle bow.</p>
<p>Harry checked his hand, but he did not consider himself beaten by any
means. He merely waited, wary and ready to seize his opportunity.</p>
<p>“I don't want to shoot,” said the man in a clear voice, “and I won't
unless you make me. I'm no friend. I'm an enemy, that is, an official
enemy, and I think it strange, Harry Kenton, almost the hand of fate, that
you and I come face to face again under such circumstances.”</p>
<p>Harry stared, and then the light broke. Now he remembered both the voice
and the figure.</p>
<p>“Shepard!” he exclaimed.</p>
<p>“It's so. We're engaged upon the same duty. I've just been inspecting the
army of General Jackson, calculating its numbers, its equipment, and what
it may do. Keep your hand away from that pistol. I might not hit you, but
the chances are that I would. But as I said, I don't want to shoot. It
wouldn't help our cause or me any to maim or kill you. Suppose we call it
peace between us for this evening.”</p>
<p>“I agree to call it peace because I have to do it.”</p>
<p>Shepard laughed, and his laugh was not at all sarcastic or unpleasant.</p>
<p>“Why a rage to kill?” he said. “You and I, Harry Kenton, will find before
this war is over that we'll get quite enough of fighting in battles
without seeking to make slaughter in between. Besides, having met you
several times, I've a friendly feeling for you. Now turn and ride back to
your own lines and I'll go the other way.”</p>
<p>The blood sprang into Harry's face and his heart beat hard. There was
something dominating and powerful in the voice. It now had the tone of a
man who spoke to one over whom he ruled. Yet he could do nothing. He saw
that Shepard was alert and watchful. He felt instinctively that his foe
would fire if he were forced to do so and that he would not miss. Then
despite himself, he felt admiration for the man's skill and power, and a
pronounced intellectual quality that he discovered in him.</p>
<p>“Very well,” he replied, “I'll turn and go back, but I want to tell you,
Mr. Shepard, that while you have been estimating what General Jackson's
army can do you must make that estimate high.”</p>
<p>“I've already done so,” called Shepard—Harry was riding away as he
spoke. The boy at the edge of the wood looked back, but the shadow was
already gone. He rode straight across the open and Seth Moore met him.</p>
<p>“Did you find anything?” the young mountaineer asked.</p>
<p>“Yes, there was a mounted man in a blue uniform, a spy, who has been
watching, but he made off. You had good eyes, Seth, and I'm going to
report this at once to General Jackson.”</p>
<p>Harry knew that he was the bearer of an unpleasant message. General
Jackson was relying upon surprise, and it would not please him to know
that his movements were watched by an active and intelligent scout or spy.
But the man had already shown his greatness by always insisting upon
hearing the worst of everything.</p>
<p>He found the chief, still sitting before one of the fires and reported to
him fully. Jackson listened without comment, but at the end he said to two
of the brigadiers who were sitting with him:</p>
<p>“We march again at earliest dawn. We will not wait for the wagons.”</p>
<p>Then he added to Harry:</p>
<p>“You've done good service. Join the sleepers, there.”</p>
<p>He pointed to a group of young officers rolled in their blankets, and
Harry obeyed quickly.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER IV. WAR AND WAITING </h2>
<p>Harry slept like one dead, but he was awakened at dawn, and he rose yet
heavy with sleep and somewhat stiff from the severe exertions of the day
before. But it all came back in an instant, the army, the march, and the
march yet to come.</p>
<p>They had but a scanty breakfast, the wagons not yet having come up, and in
a half hour they started again. They grumbled mightily at first, because
the day was bleak beyond words, heavy with clouds, and sharp with chill.
The country seemed deserted and certainly that somber air was charged with
no omens of victory.</p>
<p>But in spite of everything the spirits of the young troops began to rise.
They took a pride in this defiance of nature as well as man. They could
endure cold and hunger and weariness as they would endure battle, when it
came. They went on thus three days, almost without food and shelter.
Higher among the hills the snow sometimes beat upon them in a hurricane,
and at night the winds howled as if they had come down fresh from the
Arctic.</p>
<p>The spirits of the young troops, after rising, fell again, and their feet
dragged. Jackson, always watching, noticed it. Beckoning to several of his
staff, including Harry, he rode back along the lines, giving a word of
praise here and two words of rebuke there. They came at last to an entire
brigade, halted by the roadside, some of the men leaning against an old
rail fence.</p>
<p>Jackson looked at the men and his face darkened. It was his own Stonewall
Brigade, the one of which he was so proud, and which he had led in person
into the war. Their commander was standing beside a tree, and riding up to
him he demanded fiercely:</p>
<p>“What is the meaning of this? Why have you stopped?”</p>
<p>“I ordered a stop of a little while for the men to cook their rations,”
replied General Garnett.</p>
<p>Jackson's face darkened yet further, and the blue eyes were menacing.</p>
<p>“There is no time for that,” he said sharply.</p>
<p>“But the men can't go any farther without them. It's impossible.”</p>
<p>“I never found anything impossible with this brigade.”</p>
<p>Jackson shot forth the words as if they were so many bullets, gave Garnett
a scornful look and rode on. Harry followed him, as was his duty, but more
slowly, and looked back. He saw a deep red flush show through Garnett's
sunburn. But the preparations for cooking were stopped abruptly. Within
three minutes the Stonewall Brigade was in line again, marching resolutely
over the frozen road. Garnett had recognized that the impossible was
possible—at least where Jackson led.</p>
<p>Not many stragglers were found as they rode on toward the rear, but every
regiment increased its speed at sight of the stern general. After circling
around the rear he rode back toward the front, and he left Harry and
several others to go more slowly along the flanks and report to him later.</p>
<p>When Harry was left alone he was saluted with the usual good-humored chaff
by the soldiers who again demanded his horse of him, or asked him whether
they were to fight or whether they were training to be foot-racers. Harry
merely smiled, and he came presently to the Invincibles, who were trudging
along stubbornly, with the officers riding on their flanks. Langdon was as
cheerful as usual.</p>
<p>“Things have to come to their worst before they get better,” he said to
Harry, “and I suppose we've about reached the worst. A sight of the enemy
would be pleasant, even if it meant battle.”</p>
<p>“We're marching on Bath,” said Harry, “and we ought to strike it to-night,
though I'm afraid the Yankees have got warning of our coming.”</p>
<p>He was thinking of Shepard, who now loomed very large to him. The
circumstances of their meetings were always so singular that this Northern
scout and spy seemed to him to possess omniscience. Beyond a doubt he
would notify every Northern garrison he could reach of Jackson's coming.</p>
<p>Suddenly the band of South Carolinians, who were still left in the
Invincibles, struck up a song:</p>
<p>“Ho, woodsmen of the mountain-side!<br/>
Ho, dwellers in the vales!<br/>
Ho, ye who by the chafing tide<br/>
Have roughened in the gales!<br/>
Leave barn and byre, leave kin and cot,<br/>
Lay by the bloodless spade:<br/>
Let desk and case and counter rot,<br/>
And burn your books of trade!”<br/></p>
<p>All the Invincibles caught the swing and rush of the verses, and regiments
before them and behind them caught the time, too, if not the words. The
chant rolled in a great thundering chorus through the wintry forest. It
was solemn and majestic, and it quickened the blood of these youths who
believed in the cause for which they fought, just as those on the other
side believed in theirs.</p>
<p>“It was written by one of our own South Carolinians,” said St. Clair, with
pride. “Now here goes the second verse! Lead off, there, Langdon! They'll
all catch it!”</p>
<p>“The despot roves your fairest lands;<br/>
And till he flies or fears,<br/>
Your fields must grow but armed bands<br/>
Your sheaves be sheaves of spears:<br/>
Give up to mildew and to rust<br/>
The useless tools of gain<br/>
And feed your country's sacred dust<br/>
With floods of crimson rain!”<br/></p>
<p>Louder and louder swelled the chorus of ten thousand marching men. It was
not possible for the officers to have stopped them had they wished to do
so, and they did not wish it. Stonewall Jackson, who had read and studied
much, knew that the power of simple songs was scarcely less than that of
rifle and bayonet, and he willingly let them sing on. Now and then, a
gleam came from the blue eyes in his tanned, bearded face.</p>
<p>Harry, sensitive and prone to enthusiasm, was flushed in every vein by the
marching song. He seemed to himself to be endowed with a new life of vigor
and energy. The invader trod the Southern land and they must rush upon him
at once. He was eager for a sight of the blue masses which they would
certainly overcome.</p>
<p>He returned to his place near the head of the column with the staff of the
commander. Night was now close at hand, but Bath was still many miles
away. It was colder than ever, but the wagons had not yet come up and
there were no rations and tents. Only a few scraps of food were left in
the knapsacks.</p>
<p>“Ride to Captain Sherburne,” said General Jackson to Harry, “and tell him
to go forward with his men and reconnoiter.”</p>
<p>“May I go with him, sir?”</p>
<p>“Yes, and then report to me what he and his men find.”</p>
<p>Harry galloped gladly to the vanguard, where the gallant young captain and
his troop were leading. These Virginians preserved their fine appearance.
If they were weary they did not show it. They sat erect in their saddles
and the last button on their uniforms was in place. Their polished spurs
gleamed in the wintry sun.</p>
<p>They set off at a gallop, Harry riding by the side of Captain Sherburne.
Blood again mounted high with the rapid motion and the sense of action.
Soon they left the army behind, and, as the road was narrow and shrouded
in forest, they could see nothing of it. Its disappearance was as complete
as if it had been swallowed up in a wilderness.</p>
<p>They rode straight toward Bath, but after two or three miles they
slackened speed. Harry had told Sherburne of the presence of Shepard the
night before, and the captain knew that they must be cautious.</p>
<p>Another mile, and at a signal from the captain the whole troop stopped.
They heard hoofbeats on the road ahead of them, and the sound was coming
in their direction.</p>
<p>“A strong force,” said Captain Sherburne.</p>
<p>“Probably larger than ours, if the hoofbeats mean anything,” said Harry.</p>
<p>“And Yankees, of course. Here they are!”</p>
<p>A strong detachment of cavalry suddenly rounded a curve in the road and
swept into full view. Then the horsemen stopped in astonishment at the
sight of the Confederate troop.</p>
<p>There was no possibility of either command mistaking the other for a
friend, but Sherburne, despite his youth, had in him the instinct for
quick perception and action which distinguished the great cavalry leaders
of the South like Jeb Stuart, Turner Ashby and others. He drew his men
back instantly somewhat in the shelter of the trees and received the Union
fire first.</p>
<p>As Sherburne had expected, few of the Northern bullets struck home. Some
knocked bark from the trees, others kicked up dirt from the frozen road,
but most of them sang vainly through the empty air and passed far beyond.
Now the Southerners sent their fire full into the Union ranks, and, at
Sherburne's shouted command, charged, with their leader at their head
swinging his sword in glittering circles like some knight of old.</p>
<p>The Southern volley had brought down many horses and men, but the Northern
force was double in numbers and many of the men carried new breech-loading
rifles of the best make. While unused to horses and largely ignorant of
the country, they had good officers and they stood firm. The Southern
charge, meeting a second volley from the breech-loading rifles, broke upon
their front.</p>
<p>Harry, almost by the side of Sherburne, felt the shock as they galloped
into the battle smoke, and then he felt the Virginians reel. He heard
around him the rapid crackle of rifles and pistols, sabers clashing
together, the shouts of men, the terrible neighing of wounded horses, and
then the two forces drew apart, leaving a sprinkling of dead and wounded
between.</p>
<p>It was a half retreat by either, the two drawing back sixty or seventy
yards apiece and then beginning a scattered and irregular fire from the
rifles. But Sherburne, alert always, soon drew his men into the shelter of
the woods, and attempted an attack on his enemy's flank.</p>
<p>Some destruction was created in the Union ranks by the fire from the cover
of the forest, but the officers of the opposing force showed skill, too.
Harry had no doubt from the way the Northern troops were handled that at
least two or three West Pointers were there. They quickly fell back into
the forest on the other side of the road, and sent return volleys.</p>
<p>Harry heard the whistle and whizz of bullets all about them. Bark was
clipped from trees and dry twigs fell. Yet little damage was done by
either. The forest, although leafless, was dense, and trunks and low
boughs afforded much shelter. Both ceased fire presently, seeming to
realize at the same moment that nothing was being done, and hovered among
the trees, each watching for what the other would try next.</p>
<p>Harry kept close to Captain Sherburne, whose face plainly showed signs of
deep disgust. His heart was full of battle and he wished to get at the
enemy. But prudence forbade another charge upon a force double his numbers
and now sheltered by a wood. At this moment it was the boy beside him who
was cooler than he.</p>
<p>“Captain Sherburne,” he suggested mildly, “didn't General Jackson merely
want to find out what was ahead of him? When the army comes up it will
sweep this force out of its way.”</p>
<p>“That's so,” agreed Sherburne reluctantly, “but if we retire they'll claim
a victory, and our men will be depressed by the suspicion of defeat.”</p>
<p>“But the Yankees are retiring already. Look, you can see them withdrawing!
They were on the same business that we were, and it's far more important
for them to be sure that Jackson is advancing than it is for us to know
that an enemy's in front.”</p>
<p>“You're right. We knew already that he was there, and we were watching to
get him. It's foolish for us to stay here, squabbling with a lot of
obstinate Yankees. We'll go back to Jackson as fast as we can. You're a
bright boy, Harry.”</p>
<p>He dropped a hand affectionately on Harry's shoulder, then gave the order
to the men and they turned their horses' heads toward the army. At the
same time they saw with their own eyes the complete withdrawal of the
Union troops, and the proud Virginians were satisfied. It was no defeat.
It was merely a parting by mutual consent, each moving at the same
instant, that is, if the Yankees didn't go first.</p>
<p>They galloped back over the frozen road, and Captain Sherburne admitted
once more to himself the truth of Harry's suggestion. Already the twilight
was coming, and again it was heavy with clouds. In the east all the peaks
and ridges were wrapped about with them, and the captain knew that they
meant more snow. Heavy snow was the worst of all things for the advance of
Jackson.</p>
<p>Captain Sherburne gave another signal to his men and they galloped faster.
The hoofbeats of nearly two hundred horses rang hard on the frozen road,
but with increased speed pulses throbbed faster and spirits rose. The
average age of the troops was not over twenty, and youth thought much of
action, little of consequences.</p>
<p>They saw in a half hour the heads of columns toiling up the slopes, and
then Jackson riding on Little Sorrel, his shoulders bent forward slightly,
the grave eyes showing that the great mind behind them was still at work,
planning, planning, always planning. Their expression did not change when
Sherburne, halting his horse before him, saluted respectfully.</p>
<p>“What did you find, Captain Sherburne?” he asked.</p>
<p>“The enemy, sir. We ran into a force of cavalry about four hundred
strong.”</p>
<p>“And then?”</p>
<p>“We had a smart little skirmish with them, sir, and then both sides
withdrew.”</p>
<p>“Undoubtedly they went to report to their people, as you have come to
report to yours. It looks as if our attempt to surprise Bath might fail,
but we'll try to reach it to-night. Lieutenant Kenton, ride back and give
the brigade commanders orders to hasten their march.”</p>
<p>He detached several others of his staff for the same duty, and in most
cases wrote brief notes for them. Harry noticed how he took it for granted
that one was always willing to do work, and yet more work. He himself had
just ridden back from battle, and yet he was sent immediately on another
errand. He noticed, too, how it set a new standard for everybody. This way
Jackson had of expecting much was rapidly causing his men to offer much as
a matter of course.</p>
<p>While Jackson was writing the notes to the brigadiers he looked up once or
twice at the darkening skies. The great mass of clouds, charged with snow
that had been hovering in the east, was now directly overhead. When he had
finished the last note it was too dark for him to write any more without
help of torch. As he handed the note to the aide who was to take it, a
great flake of snow fell upon his hand.</p>
<p>Harry found that the brigades could move no faster. They were already
toiling hard. The twilight had turned to night, and the clouds covered the
whole circle of the heavens. The snow, slow at first, was soon falling
fast. The soldiers brushed it off for a while, and then, feeling that it
was no use, let it stay. Ten thousand men, white as if wrapped in winding
sheets, marched through the mountains. Now and then, a thin trickle of red
from a foot, encased in a shoe worn through, stained the snow.</p>
<p>The wind was not blowing, and the night, reinforced by the clouds, became
very dark, save the gleam from the white covering of snow upon the earth.
Torches began to flare along the line, and still Jackson marched. Harry
knew what was in his mind. He wished to reach Bath that night and fall
upon the enemy when he was not expected, even though that enemy had been
told that Jackson was coming. The commander in front, whoever he might be,
certainly would expect no attack in the middle of the night and in a
driving snowstorm.</p>
<p>But the fierce spirit of Jackson was forced to yield at last. His men,
already the best marchers on the American continent, could go no farther.
The order was given to camp. Harry more than guessed how bitter was the
disappointment of his commander, and he shared it.</p>
<p>The men, half starved and often stiff with cold, sank down by the
roadside. They no longer asked for the wagons containing their food and
heavy clothing, because they no longer expected them. They passed from
high spirits to a heavy apathy, and now they did not seem to care what
happened. But the officers roused them up as much as possible, made them
build fires with every piece of wood they could find, and then let them
wrap themselves in their blankets and go to sleep—save for the
sentinels.</p>
<p>All night long the snow beat on Jackson's army lying there among the
mountains, and save for a few Union officers not far away, both North and
South wondered what had become of it.</p>
<p>It was known at Washington and Richmond that Jackson had left Winchester,
and then he had dropped into the dark. The eyes of the leaders at both
capitals were fixed upon the greater armies of McClellan and Johnston, and
Stonewall Jackson was not yet fully understood by either. Nevertheless,
the gaunt and haggard President of the North began to feel anxiety about
this Confederate leader who had disappeared with his army in the mountains
of Northern Virginia.</p>
<p>The telegraph wires were not numerous then, but they were kept busy
answering the question about Jackson. Banks and the other Union leaders in
the valley sent reassuring replies. Jackson would not dare to attack them.
They had nearly three times as many men as he, and it did not matter what
had become of him. If he chose to come, the sooner he came, the sooner he
would be annihilated. McClellan himself laughed at the fears about
Jackson. He was preparing his own great army for a march on Richmond, one
that would settle everything.</p>
<p>But the army of Jackson, nevertheless, rose from the snow the next
morning, and marched straight on the Union garrison. The rising was made
near Bath, and the army literally brushed the snow from itself before
eating the half of a breakfast, and taking to the road again, Jackson, on
Little Sorrel, leading them. Harry, as usual, rode near him.</p>
<p>Harry, despite exertions and hardships which would have overpowered him
six months before, did not feel particularly hungry or weary that morning.
No one in the army had caught more quickly than he the spirit of Stonewall
Jackson. He could endure anything, and in another hour or two they would
pass out of this wilderness of forest and snow, and attack the enemy. Bath
was just ahead.</p>
<p>A thrill passed through the whole army. Everybody knew that Jackson was
about to attack. While the first and reluctant sun of dawn was trying to
pierce the heavy clouds, the regiments, spreading out to right and left to
enclose Bath, began to march. Then the sun gave up its feeble attempts,
the clouds closed in entirely, the wind began to blow hard, and with it
came a blinding snow, and then a bitter hail.</p>
<p>Harry had been sent by Jackson to the right flank with orders and he was
to remain there, unless it became necessary to inform the commander that
some regiment was not doing its duty. But he found them all marching
forward, and, falling in with the Invincibles, he marched with them. Yet
it was impossible for the lines to retain cohesion or regularity, so
fierce was the beat of the storm.</p>
<p>It was an alternation of blinding snow and of hail that fairly stung.
Often the officers could not see the men thirty yards distant, and there
was no way of knowing whether the army was marching forward in the
complete half circle as planned. Regiments might draw apart, leaving wide
gaps between, and no one would know it in all that hurricane.</p>
<p>Harry rode by the side of Colonel Leonidas Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel
Hector St. Hilaire, who were leading the Invincibles in person. Both had
gray military cloaks drawn around them, but Harry saw that they were
shivering with cold as they sat on their horses, with the snow
accumulating on their shoulders and on the saddles around them. In truth,
the foot cavalry had rather the better of it, as the hard marching kept up
the circulation.</p>
<p>“Not much like the roses of Charleston,” said Colonel Talbot, faintly
smiling.</p>
<p>“But I'm glad to be here,” said Harry, “although I will admit, sir, that I
did not expect a campaign to the North Pole.”</p>
<p>“Neither did I, but I'm prepared for anything now, under the commander
that we have. Bear in mind, my young friend, that this is for your private
ear only.”</p>
<p>“Of course, sir! What was that? Wasn't it a rifle shot?”</p>
<p>“The report is faint, but it was certainly made by a rifle. And hark,
there are others! We've evidently come upon their outposts! Confound this
storm! It keeps us from seeing more than twenty yards in front of us!”</p>
<p>The scattered rifle fire continued, and the weary soldiers raised their
heads which they had bent to shelter their eyes from the driving snow and
hail. Pulses leaped up again, and blood sparkled. The whole army rushed
forward. The roofs of houses came into view, and there was Bath.</p>
<p>But the firing had been merely that of a small rear guard, skirmishers who
surrendered promptly. The garrison, warned doubtless by Shepard, and then
the scouting troop, had escaped across the river, but Jackson's wintry
march was not wholly in vain. The fleeing Union troops had no time either
to carry away or destroy the great stores of supplies, accumulated there
for the winter, and the starving and freezing Southerners plunged at once
into the midst of plenty, ample compensation to the young privates.</p>
<p>The population, ardently Southern, as everywhere in these Virginia towns,
welcomed the army with wild enthusiasm. Officers and soldiers were taken
into the houses, as many as Bath could hold, and enormous fires were built
in the open spaces for the others. They also showed the way at once to the
magazines, where the Union supplies were heaped up.</p>
<p>Harry, at the direction of his general, went with one of the detachments
to seize these. Their first prize was an old but large storehouse, crammed
full of the things they needed most. The tall mountain youth, Seth Moore,
was one of his men, and he proved to be a prince of looters.</p>
<p>“Blankets! blankets!” cried Moore. “Here they are, hundreds of 'em! An'
look at these barrels! Bacon! Beef! Crackers! An' look at the piles of
cheese! Oh, Lieutenant Kenton, how my mouth waters! Can't I bite into one
o' them cheeses?”</p>
<p>“Not yet,” said Harry, whose own mouth was watering, too, “but you can,
Seth, within ten minutes at the farthest. The whole army must bite at
once.”</p>
<p>“That's fa'r an' squar', but ain't this richness! Cove oysters, cans an'
cans of 'em, an' how I love 'em! An' sardines, too, lots of 'em! Why, I
could bite right through the tin boxes to get at 'em. An' rice, an'
hominy, an' bags o' flour. Why, the North has been sendin' whole train
loads of things down here for us to eat!”</p>
<p>“And she has been sending more than that,” said Harry. “Here are five or
six hundred fine breech-loading rifles, and hundreds of thousands of
cartridges. She's been sending us arms and ammunition with which to fight
her!”</p>
<p>His boyish spirit burst forth. Even though an officer, he could not
control them, and he was radiant as the looting Seth Moore himself. He
went out to report the find and to take measures concerning it. On his way
he met hundreds of the Southern youths who had already put on heavy blue
overcoats found in the captured stores. The great revulsion had come. They
were laughing and cheering and shaking the hands of one another. It was a
huge picnic, all the more glorious because they had burst suddenly out of
the storm and the icy wilderness.</p>
<p>But order was soon restored, and wrapped in warm clothing they feasted
like civilized men, the great fires lighting up the whole town with a
cheerful glow. Harry was summoned to new duties. He was also a new man.
Warmth and food had doubled his vitality, and he was ready for any errand
on which Jackson might send him.</p>
<p>While it was yet snowing, he rode with a half dozen troopers toward the
Potomac. On the other side was a small town which also held a Union
garrison. Scouting warily along the shores, Harry discovered that the
garrison was still there. Evidently the enemy believed in the protection
of the river, or many of their leaders could not yet wholly believe that
Jackson and his army, making a forced march in the dead of winter, were at
hand.</p>
<p>But he had no doubt that his general would attend to these obstinate men,
and he rode back to Bath with the news. Jackson gave his worn troops a
little more rest. They were permitted to spend all that day and night at
Bath, luxuriating and renewing their strength and spirits.</p>
<p>Harry slept, for the first time in many nights, in a house, and he made
the most of it, because he doubted whether he would have another such
chance soon. Dawn found the army up and ready to march away from this
place of delight.</p>
<p>They went up and down the Potomac three or four days, scattering or
capturing small garrisons, taking fresh supplies and spreading
consternation among the Union forces in Northern Virginia and Maryland. It
was all done in the most bitter winter weather and amid storms of snow and
hail. The roads were slippery with sleet, and often the cavalry were
compelled to dismount and lead their horses long distances. There was
little fighting because the Northern enemy was always in numbers too small
to resist, but there was a great deal of hard riding and many captures.</p>
<p>News of Jackson's swoop began to filter through to both Richmond and
Washington. In Richmond they wondered and rejoiced. In Washington they
wondered, but did not rejoice. They had not expected there any blow to be
struck in the dead of winter, and Lincoln demanded of his generals why
they could not do as well. Distance and the vagueness of the news
magnified Jackson's exploits and doubled his numbers. Eyes were turned
with intense anxiety toward that desolate white expanse of snow and ice,
in the midst of which he was operating.</p>
<p>Jackson finally turned his steps toward Romney, which had been the Union
headquarters, and his men, exhausted and half starved, once more dragged
themselves over the sleety roads. Winter offered a fresh obstacle at every
turn. Even the spirits of Harry, who had borrowed so much from the courage
of Jackson, sank somewhat. As they pulled themselves through the hills on
their last stage toward Romney, he was walking. His horse had fallen three
times that day on the ice, and was now too timid to carry his owner.</p>
<p>So Harry led him. The boy's face and hands were so much chapped and
cracked with the cold that they bled at times. But he wasted no sympathy
on himself. It was the common fate of the army. Jackson and his generals,
themselves, suffered in the same way. Jackson was walking, too, for a
while, leading his own horse.</p>
<p>Harry was sent back to bring up the Invincibles, as Romney was now close
at hand, and there might be a fight. He found his old colonel and
lieutenant-colonel walking over the ice. Both were thin, and were black
under the eyes with privation and anxiety. These were not in appearance
the men whom he had known in gay and sunny Charleston, though in spirit
the same. They gave Harry a welcome and hoped that the enemy would wait
for them in Romney.</p>
<p>“I don't think so,” said Harry, “but I've orders for you from General
Jackson to bring up the Invincibles as fast as possible.”</p>
<p>“Tell General Jackson that we'll do our best,” said Colonel Talbot, as he
looked back at his withered column.</p>
<p>They seemed to Harry to be withered indeed, they were so gaunt with
hardship and drawn up so much with cold. Many wore the blue Northern
overcoats that they had captured at Bath, and more had tied up their
throats and ears in the red woolen comforters of the day, procured at the
towns through which they passed. They, too, were gaunt of cheek and black
under the eye like their officers.</p>
<p>The Invincibles under urging increased their speed, but not much. Little
reserve strength was left in them. Langdon and St. Clair, who had been
sent along the line, returned to Colonel Talbot where Harry was still
waiting.</p>
<p>“They're not going as fast as a railroad train,” said Langdon in an aside
to Harry, “but they're doing their best. You can't put in a well more than
you can take out of it, and they're marching now not on their strength,
but their courage. Still, it might be worse. We might all be dead.”</p>
<p>“But we're not dead, by a big margin, and I think we'll make another haul
at Romney.”</p>
<p>“But Old Jack won't let us stay and enjoy it. I never saw a man so much in
love with marching. The steeper the hills and mountains, the colder the
day, the fiercer the sleet and snow, the better he likes it.”</p>
<p>“The fellow who said General Jackson didn't care anything about our feet
told the truth,” said St. Clair, thoughtfully. “The general is not a cruel
man, but he thinks more of Virginia and the South, and our cause, than he
does of us. If it were necessary to do so to win he'd sacrifice us to the
last man and himself with us.”</p>
<p>“And never think twice before doing it. You've sized him up,” said Harry.
The army poured into Romney and found no enemy. Again a garrison had
escaped through the mountain snows when the news reached it that Jackson
was at hand. But they found supplies of food, filled their empty stomachs,
and as Langdon had foretold, quickly started anew in search of another
enemy elsewhere.</p>
<p>But the men finally broke down under the driving of the merciless Jackson.
Many of them began to murmur. They had left the bleeding trail of their
feet over many an icy road, and some said they were ready to lie down in
the snow and die before they would march another mile. A great depression,
which was physical rather than mental, a depression born of exhaustion and
intense bodily suffering, seized the army.</p>
<p>Jackson, although with a will of steel, was compelled to yield. Slowly and
with reluctance, he led his army back toward Winchester, leaving a large
garrison in Romney. But Harry knew what he had done, although nothing more
than skirmishes had been fought. He had cleared a wide region of the
enemy. He had inspired enthusiasm in the South, and he had filled the
North with alarm. The great movement of McClellan on Richmond must beware
of its right flank. A dangerous foe was there who might sting terribly,
and men had learned already that none knew when or whence Jackson might
come.</p>
<p>A little more than three weeks after their departure Harry and his friends
and the army, except the portion left in garrison at Romney, returned to
Winchester, the picturesque and neat little Virginia city so loyal to the
South. It looked very good indeed to Harry as he drew near. He liked the
country, rolling here and there, the hills crested with splendid groves of
great trees. The Little North Mountain a looming blue shadow to the west,
and the high Massanutton peaks to the south seemed to guard it round. And
the valley itself was rich and warm with the fine farms spread out for
many miles. Despite the engrossing pursuit of the enemy and of victory and
glory, Harry's heart thrilled at the sight of the red brick houses of
Winchester.</p>
<p>Here came a period of peace so far as war was concerned, but of great
anxiety to Harry and the whole army. The government at Richmond began to
interfere with Jackson. It thought him too bold, even rash, and it wanted
him to withdraw the garrison at Romney, which was apparently exposed to an
attack by the enemy in great force. It was said that McClellan had more
than two hundred thousand men before Washington, and an overwhelming
division from it might fall at any time upon the Southern force at Romney.</p>
<p>Harry, being a member of Jackson's staff, and having become a favorite
with him, knew well his reasons for standing firm. January, which had
furnished so fierce a month of winter, was going. The icy country was
breaking up under swift thaws, and fields and destroyed roads were a vast
sea of mud in which the feet of infantry, the hoofs of horses and the
wheels of cannon would sink deep.</p>
<p>Jackson did not believe that McClellan had enough enterprise to order a
march across such an obstacle, but recognizing the right of his government
to expect obedience, he sent his resignation to Richmond. Harry knew of
it, his friends knew of it, and their hearts sank like plummets in a pool.</p>
<p>Another portion of the Invincibles had been drawn off to reinforce
Johnston's army before Richmond, as they began to hear rumors now that
McClellan would come by sea instead of land, and their places were filled
with more recruits from the valley of Virginia. Scarcely a hundred of the
South Carolinians were left, but the name, “The Invincibles” and the chief
officers, stayed behind. Jackson had been unwilling to part with Colonel
Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire, experienced and able West
Pointers. Langdon and St. Clair also stayed.</p>
<p>Harry talked over the resignation with these friends of his, and they
showed an anxiety not less than his own. It had become evident to the two
veteran West Pointers that Jackson was the man. Close contact with him had
enabled them to read his character and immense determination.</p>
<p>“I hope that our government at Richmond will decline this resignation and
give him a free hand,” said Colonel Talbot to Harry. “It would be a
terrible loss if he were permitted to drop out of the army. I tell you for
your own private ear that I have taken it upon me to Write a letter of
protest to President Davis himself. I felt that I could do so, because Mr.
Davis and myself were associated closely in the Mexican War.”</p>
<p>The answer came in time from Richmond. Stonewall Jackson was retained and
a freer hand was given to him. Harry and all his comrades felt an immense
relief, but he did not know until long afterward how near the Confederacy
had come to losing the great Jackson.</p>
<p>Benjamin, the Secretary of War, and President Davis both were disposed to
let him go, but the powerful intervention of Governor Letcher of Virginia
induced them to change their minds. Moreover, hundreds of letters from
leading Virginians who knew Jackson well poured in upon him, asking him to
withdraw the resignation. So it was arranged and Jackson remained, biding
his time for the while at Winchester, until he could launch the
thunderbolt.</p>
<p>A pleasant month for Harry, and all the young staff officers passed at
Winchester. The winter of intense cold had now become one of tremendous
rain. It poured and it poured, and it never ceased to pour. Between
Winchester and Washington and McClellan's great army was one vast flooded
area, save where the hills and mountains stood.</p>
<p>But in Winchester the Southern troops were warm and comfortable. It was a
snug town within its half circle of mountains. Its brick and wooden houses
were solid and good. The young officers when they went on errands trod on
pavements of red brick, and oaks and elms and maples shaded them nearly
all the way.</p>
<p>When Harry, who went oftenest on such missions, returned to his general
with the answers, he walked up a narrow street, where the silver maples,
which would soon begin to bud under the continuous rain, grew thickest,
and came to a small building in which other officers like himself wrote at
little tables or waited in full uniform to be sent upon like errands. If
it were yet early he would find Jackson there, but if it were late he
would cross a little stretch of grass to the parsonage, the large and
solid house, where the Presbyterian minister, Dr. Graham, lived, and where
Jackson, with his family, who had joined him, now made his home in this
month of waiting.</p>
<p>It was here that Harry came one evening late in February. It had been
raining as usual, and he wore one of the long Union overcoats captured at
Bath, blue then but a faded grayish brown now. However, the gray
Confederate uniform beneath it was neat and looked fresh. Harry was always
careful about his clothing, and the example of St. Clair inspired him to
greater efforts. Besides, there was a society in Winchester, including
many handsome young women of the old Virginia families, and even a budding
youth who was yet too young for serious sentimentalism, could not ignore
its existence.</p>
<p>It was twilight and the cold rain was still coming down steadily, as Harry
walked across the grass, and looked out of the wet dusk at the manse.
Lights were shining from every window, and there was warmth around his
heart. The closer association of many weeks with Jackson had not only
increased his admiration, but also had given the general a great place in
the affection that a youth often feels for an older man whom he deems a
genius or a hero.</p>
<p>Harry walked upon a little portico, and taking off the overcoat shook out
the rain drops. Then he hung it on a hook against the wall of the house.
The door was open six inches or so, and a ribbon of brilliant light from
within fell across the floor of the portico.</p>
<p>Harry looked at the light and smiled. He was young and he loved gayety. He
smiled again when he heard within the sound of laughter. Then he pushed
the door farther open and entered. Now the laughter rose to a shout, and
it was accompanied by the sound of footsteps. A man, thick of hair and
beard, was running down a stairway. Perched high upon his shoulders was a
child of three or four years, with both hands planted firmly in the thick
hair. The small feet crossed over the man's neck kicked upon his chest,
but he seemed to enjoy the sport as much as the child did.</p>
<p>Harry paused and stood at attention until the man saw him. Then he saluted
respectfully and said to General Jackson:</p>
<p>“I wish to report to you, sir, that I delivered the order to General
Garnett, as you directed, and here, sir, is his reply.”</p>
<p>He handed a note to the general, who read it, thrust it into his pocket,
and said:</p>
<p>“That ends your labors for the day, Lieutenant Kenton. Come in now and
join us.”</p>
<p>He picked up the child again, and carrying it in his arms, led the way
into an inner room, where he gave it to a nurse. Then they passed into the
library, where Dr. Graham, several generals and two or three of
Winchester's citizens were gathered.</p>
<p>All gave Harry a welcome. He knew them well, and he looked around with
satisfaction at the large room, with its rows and rows of books, bound
mostly in dark leather, volumes of theology, history, essays, poetry, and
of the works of Walter Scott and Jane Austen. Jackson himself was a rigid
Presbyterian, and he and Dr. Graham had many a long talk in this room on
religion and other topics almost equally serious.</p>
<p>But to-night they were in a bright mood. A mountaineer had come in with
four huge wild turkeys, which he insisted upon giving to General Jackson
himself, and guests had been asked in to help eat them.</p>
<p>Nearly twenty people sat around the minister's long table. The turkeys, at
least enough for present needs, were cooked beautifully, and all the
succulent dishes which the great Virginia valleys produce so fruitfully
were present. General Jackson himself, at the request of the minister,
said grace, and he said it so devoutly and so sincerely that it always
impressed the hearers with a sense of its reality.</p>
<p>It was full dusk and the rain was beating on the windows, when the black
attendants began to serve the guests at the great board. Several ladies,
including the general's wife, were present. The room was lighted
brilliantly, and a big fire burned in the wide fireplace at the end. To
Harry, three seats away from General Jackson, there was a startling
contrast between the present moment and that swift campaign of theirs
through the wintry mountains where the feet of the soldiers left bloody
trails on the ice and snow.</p>
<p>It was a curious fact that for a few instants the mountain and the great
cold were real and this was but fancy. He looked more than once at the
cheerful faces and the rosy glow of the fire, before he could convince
himself that he was in truth here in Winchester, with all this comfort,
even luxury, around him.</p>
<p>Sitting next to him was a lady of middle age, Mrs. Howard, of prominence
in the town and a great friend of the Grahams. Harry realized suddenly
that while the others were talking he had said nothing, and he felt guilty
of discourtesy. He began an apology, but Mrs. Howard, who had known him
very well since he had been in Winchester, learning to call him by his
first name, merely smiled and the smile was at once maternal and somewhat
sad.</p>
<p>“No apologies are needed, Harry,” she said in a low tone that the others
might not hear. “I read your thoughts. They were away in the mountains
with a marching army. All this around us speaks of home and peace, but it
cannot last. All of you will be going soon.”</p>
<p>“That's true, Mrs. Howard, I was thinking of march and battle, and I
believe you're right in saying that we'll all go soon. That is what we're
for.”</p>
<p>She smiled again a little sadly.</p>
<p>“You're a good boy, Harry,” she said, “and I hope that you and all your
comrades will come back in safety to Winchester. But that is enough
croaking from an old woman and I'm ashamed of myself. Did you ever see a
happier crowd than the one gathered here?”</p>
<p>“Not since I was in my father's house when the relatives would come to
help us celebrate Christmas.”</p>
<p>“When did you hear from your father?” asked Mrs. Howard, whose warm
sympathies had caused Harry to tell her of his life and of his people whom
he had left behind in Kentucky.</p>
<p>“Just after the terrible disaster at Donelson. He was in the fort, but he
escaped with Forrest's cavalry, and he went into Mississippi to join the
army under Albert Sidney Johnston. He sent a letter for me to my home,
Pendleton, under cover to my old teacher, Dr. Russell, who forwarded it to
me. It came only this morning.”</p>
<p>“How does he talk?”</p>
<p>“Hopefully, though he made no direct statement. I suppose he was afraid to
do so lest the letter fall into the hands of the Yankees, but I imagine
that General Johnston's army is going to attack General Grant's.”</p>
<p>“If General Johnston can win a victory it will help us tremendously, but I
fear that man, Grant. They say that he had no more men at Donelson than
we, but he took the fort and its garrison.”</p>
<p>“It's true. Our affairs have not been going well in the West.”</p>
<p>Harry was downcast for a few moments. Much of their Western news had come
through the filter of Richmond, but despite the brighter color that the
Government tried to put on it, it remained black. Forts and armies had
been taken. Nothing had been able to stop Grant. But youth again came to
Harry. He could not resist the bright light and the happy talk about him.
Bitter thoughts fled.</p>
<p>General Jackson was in fine humor. He and Dr. Graham had started to
discuss a problem in Presbyterian theology in which both were deeply
interested, but they quickly changed it in deference to the younger and
lighter spirits about them. Harry had never before seen his general in so
mellow a vein. Perhaps it was the last blaze of the home-loving spirit,
before entering into that storm of battle which henceforth was to be his
without a break.</p>
<p>The general, under urging, told of his life as an orphan boy in his
uncle's rough home in the Virginia wilderness, how he had been seized once
by the wanderlust, then so strong in nearly all Americans, and how he and
his brother had gone all the way down the Ohio to the Mississippi, where
they had camped on a little swampy island, earning their living by cutting
wood for the steamers on the two rivers.</p>
<p>“How old were you two then, General?” asked Dr. Graham.</p>
<p>“The older of us was only twelve. But in those rough days boys matured
fast and became self-reliant at a very early age. We did not run away.
There wasn't much opposition to our going. Our uncle was sure that we'd
come back alive, and though we arrived again in Virginia, five or six
hundred miles from our island in the river, all rags and filled with
fever, we were not regarded as prodigal sons. It was what hundreds, yes,
thousands of other boys did. In our pleasant uplands we soon got rid of
both rags and fever.”</p>
<p>“And you did not wish to return to the wilderness?”</p>
<p>“The temptation was strong at times, but it was defeated by other
ambitions. There was school and I liked sports. These soon filled up my
life.”</p>
<p>Harry knew much more about the life of Jackson, which the modesty of his
hero kept him from telling. Looking at the strong, active figure of the
man so near him he knew that he had once been delicate, doomed in
childhood, as many thought, to consumption, inherited from his mother. But
a vigorous life in the open air had killed all such germs. He was a leader
in athletic sports. He was a great horseman, and often rode as a jockey
for his uncle in the horse races which the open-air Virginians loved so
well, and in which they indulged so much. He could cut down a tree or run
a saw-mill, or drive four horses to a wagon, or seek deer through the
mountains with the sturdiest hunter of them all. And upon top of this
vigorous boyhood had come the long and severe training at West Point, the
most thorough and effective military school the world has ever known.</p>
<p>Harry did not wonder, as he looked at his general, that he could dare and
do so much. He might be awkward in appearance, he might wear his clothes
badly, but the boy at ten years had been a man, doing a man's work and
with a man's soul. He had come into the field, no parade soldier, but with
a body and mind as tough and enduring as steel, the whole surcharged and
heated with a spirit of fire.</p>
<p>Both Harry and Mrs. Howard had become silent and were watching the
general. For some reason Jackson was more moved than usual. His manner did
not depart from its habitual gravity. He made no gestures, but the blue
eyes under the heavy brows were irradiated by a peculiar flashing light.</p>
<p>The long dinner went on. It was more of a festival than a banquet, and
Harry at last gave himself up entirely to its luxurious warmth. The
foreboding that their mellow days in the pleasant little city were over,
was gone, but it was destined to come again. Now, after the dinner was
finished, and the great table was cleared away, they sat and talked, some
in the dining room and some in the library.</p>
<p>It was still raining, that cold rain which at times turns for a moment or
two to snow, and it dashed in gusts against the window panes. Harry was
with some of the younger people in the library, where they were playing at
games. The sport lagged presently and he went to a window, where he stood
between the curtain and the glass.</p>
<p>He saw the outside dimly, the drenched lawn, and the trees beyond, under
which two or three sentinels, wrapped closely in heavy coats, walked to
and fro. He gazed at them idly, and then a shadow passed between him and
them. He thought at first that it was a blurring of the glass by some
stronger gust of rain, but the next moment his experience told him that it
could not be so. He had seen a shadow, and the shadow was that of a man,
sliding along against the wall of the house, in order that he might not be
seen by a sentinel.</p>
<p>Harry's suspicions were up and alive in an instant. In this border country
spies were numerous. It was easy to be a spy where people looked alike and
spoke the same language with the same accent. His suspicions, too,
centered at once upon Shepard, whom he knew to be so daring and skillful.</p>
<p>The lad was prompt to act. He slipped unnoticed into the hall, put on his
greatcoat, felt of the pistol in his belt, opened the front door and
stepped out into the dark and the rain.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER V. THE NORTHERN ADVANCE </h2>
<p>Harry flattened himself against the wall and all his training and
inherited instincts came promptly to his service. He knew that he, too,
would be in the shadow there, where it was not likely that the sentinels
could see him owing to the darkness of the night. Then he moved cautiously
toward the window where he had seen the outline.</p>
<p>The cold rain beat on his face and he saw the figures of the sentinels
moving back and forth, but, black against the black wall, he was confident
that he could not be seen by them. Half way to the window, his eyes now
having gotten used to the darkness, he knelt down and examined the earth,
made soft by the rains. He distinctly saw footprints, undoubtedly those of
a man, leading by the edge of the wall, and now he knew that he had not
been mistaken.</p>
<p>Harry came to the window himself, and, glancing in, he saw that the
merriment was going on unabated. He continued his search, following the
revealing foot prints. He went nearly all the way around the house and
then lost them among heavy shrubbery. He surmised that at this point the
spy—he was sure that it was a spy and sure, too, that it was Shepard—had
left the place, passing between the sentinels in the rainy dark.</p>
<p>He spoke to the sentinels, who knew him well, and they were quite
confident that nobody had come within their lines. But Harry, while
keeping his own counsel, held another opinion and he was equally positive
about it. He was returning to the house, when he heard the tread of hoofs,
and then a horseman spoke with the sentinels. He looked back and
recognized Sherburne.</p>
<p>The young captain was holding himself erect in the saddle, but his horse
and his uniform were covered with red mud. There were heavy black lines
under his eyes and his face, despite his will, showed strong signs of
weariness. Sure that his mission was important, Harry went to him at once.</p>
<p>“Is General Jackson inside?” asked Sherburne.</p>
<p>“Yes, and he has not yet gone to bed,” replied Harry, looking at the
lighted windows.</p>
<p>“Then ask him if I can see him at once. He sent my troop and me on a scout
toward Romney this morning. I have news, news that cannot wait.”</p>
<p>“Of course, he'll see you. Come inside.”</p>
<p>Sherburne slipped from his horse. Harry noticed that it was not his usual
elastic spring. He seemed almost to fall to the ground, and the horse, no
hand on the reins, still stood motionless, his head drooping. It was
evident that Sherburne was in the last stages of exhaustion, and now that
he came nearer his face showed great anxiety as well as weariness.</p>
<p>Harry opened the door promptly and pushed him inside. Then he helped him
off with his wet and muddy overcoat, pushed him into a chair, and said:</p>
<p>“I'll announce you to General Jackson, and he'll see you at once.”</p>
<p>Harry knew that Jackson would not linger a second, when a messenger of
importance came, and he went into the library where the minister and the
general stood talking. General Jackson held in one hand a large
leather-covered volume, and with the forefinger of the other hand he was
pointing to a paragraph in it. The minister was saying something that
Harry did not catch, but he believed that they were arguing some disputed
point of Presbyterian doctrine.</p>
<p>When Jackson saw Harry he closed the book instantly, and put it on the
shelf. He had seen in the eyes of his aide that he was coming with no
common message.</p>
<p>“Captain Sherburne is in the hall, sir,” said the boy. “He has come back
from the scout toward Romney.”</p>
<p>“Bring him in.”</p>
<p>The minister quietly slipped out, as Sherburne entered, but Jackson bade
Harry remain, saying that he might have orders for him to carry.</p>
<p>“What have you to tell me, Captain Sherburne?” asked Jackson.</p>
<p>“We saw the patrols of the enemy, and we took two prisoners. We learned
that McClellan's army is showing signs of moving, and we saw with our own
eyes that Banks and Shields are preparing for the same. They threaten us
here in Winchester.”</p>
<p>“What force do you think Banks has?”</p>
<p>“He must have forty thousand men.”</p>
<p>“A good guess. The figures of my spies say thirty-eight thousand, and we
can muster scarcely five thousand here. We must move.”</p>
<p>Jackson spoke without emotion. His words were cold and dry, even formal.
Harry's heart sank. If eight times their numbers were advancing upon them,
then they must abandon Winchester. They must leave to the enemy this
pleasant little city, so warmly devoted to the Southern cause and confess
weakness and defeat to these friends who had done so much for them during
their stay.</p>
<p>He felt the full bitterness of the blow. The people of the South—little
immigration had gone there—were knit together more closely by ties
of kinship than those of the North. Harry through the maternal line was,
like most Kentuckians, of Virginia descent, and even here in Winchester he
had found cousins, more or less removed it was true, but it was kinship,
nevertheless, and they had made the most of it. It would have been easier
for him were strangers instead of friends to see their retreat.</p>
<p>“Captain Sherburne, you will go to your quarters and sleep. It is obvious
that you need rest,” said Jackson. “Mr. Kenton, you will wait and take the
orders that I am going to write.”</p>
<p>Sherburne saluted and withdrew promptly. Jackson turned to a shelf of the
library on which lay pen, ink and paper, and standing before it rapidly
wrote several notes. It was his favorite attitude—habit of his West
Point days—to write or read standing.</p>
<p>It took him less than five minutes to write the notes, and he handed them
to Harry to deliver without delay to the brigade commanders. His tones
were incisive and charged with energy. Harry felt the electric thrill pass
to himself, and with a quick salute he was once more out in the rain.</p>
<p>Some of the brigadiers were asleep, and grumbled when Harry awoke them,
but the orders soon sent the last remnants of sleep flying. The boy did
not linger, but returned quickly to the manse, where General Jackson met
him at the door. Other aides were coming or going, but all save one or two
windows of the house were dark now, and the merrymaking was over.</p>
<p>“You have delivered the orders?” asked Jackson.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir, all of them.”</p>
<p>Harry also told then of the face that he had seen at the window and his
belief concerning its identity.</p>
<p>“Very likely,” said Jackson, “but we cannot pursue him now. Now go to
headquarters and sleep, but I shall want you at dawn.”</p>
<p>Harry was ready before the first sunlight, and that day consternation
spread through Winchester. The enemy was about to advance in overwhelming
force, and Jackson was going to leave them. Johnston was retreating before
McClellan, and Jackson in the valley must retreat before Banks.</p>
<p>There could be no doubt about the withdrawal of Jackson. The preparations
were hurried forward with the utmost vigor. A train took the sick to
Staunton, and in one of the coaches went Mrs. Jackson to her father's
home. Town and camp were filled with talk of march and battle, and the
younger rejoiced. They felt that a month of waiting had made them rusty.</p>
<p>Amid all the bustle Jackson found time to attend religious services, and
also ordered every wagon that reached the camp with supplies to be
searched. If liquor were found it was thrown at once upon the ground. The
soldiers, even the recruits, knew that they were to follow a God-fearing
man. Oliver Cromwell had come back to earth. But most of the soldiers were
now disciplined thoroughly. The month they had spent at Winchester after
the great raid had been devoted mostly to drill.</p>
<p>The day of departure came and the army, amid the good wishes of many
friends in Winchester, filed out of the town. The great rains, which, it
had seemed, would never cease, had ceased at last. There was a touch of
spring in the air, and in sheltered places the grass was taking on deep
tints of green.</p>
<p>During all the days of preparation Jackson had said nothing about his plan
of retreat. The Virginians, lining the streets and watching so anxiously,
did not know where he would seek refuge. And suddenly as they watched, a
cheer, tremendous and involuntary, burst from them.</p>
<p>The heads of Jackson's columns were turned north. He was not marching away
from the enemy. He was marching toward him. But the burst of elation was
short. Even the civilians in Winchester knew that Jackson was hugely
outnumbered.</p>
<p>Harry himself was astonished, and he gazed at his leader. What fathomless
purpose lay beneath that stern, bearded face? Jackson's eyes expressed
nothing. He and he alone knew what was in his mind.</p>
<p>But the troops asked no word from their leaders. The fact that their faces
were turned toward the north was enough for them. They knew, too, of the
heavy odds that were against them, but they were not afraid.</p>
<p>As Harry watched the young soldiers, many of whom sang as they marched,
his own enthusiasm rose. He had seen companies in brilliant uniforms at
Richmond, but no parade soldiers were here. There were few glimpses of
color in the columns, but the men marched with a strong, elastic step.
They had all been born upon the farms or in the little villages, and they
were familiar with the hills and forests. They had been hunters, too, as
soon as their arms were strong enough to hold rifle or shot gun. Most of
them had killed deer or bear in the mountains, and all of them had known
how to ride from earliest childhood. They had endured every hardship and
they knew how to take care of themselves in any kind of country and in any
kind of weather.</p>
<p>Harry smiled as he looked at their uniforms. How different they were from
some of the gay young companies of Charleston! These uniforms had been
spun for them and made for them by their own mothers and wives and sisters
or sweethearts. They were all supposed to be gray, but there were many
shades of gray, sometimes verging to a light blue, with butternut as the
predominant color. They wore gray jackets, short of waist and
single-breasted. Caps were giving way to soft felt hats, and boots had
already been supplanted by broad, strong shoes, called brogans.</p>
<p>Many of the soldiers carried frying pans and skillets hung on the barrels
of their rifles, simple kitchen utensils which constituted almost the
whole of their cooking equipment. Their blankets and rubber sheets for
sleeping were carried in light rolls on their backs. A toothbrush was
stuck in a buttonhole. On their flanks or in front rode the cavalry, led
by the redoubtable Turner Ashby, and there was in all their number
scarcely a single horseman who did not ride like the Comanche Indian, as
if he were born in the saddle. Ashby was a host in himself. He had often
ridden as much as eighty miles a day to inspect his own pickets and those
of the enemy, and it was told of him that he had once gone inside the
Union lines in the disguise of a horse doctor.</p>
<p>The Northern cavalry, unused to the saddle, compared very badly with those
of the South in the early years of the war. Ashby's men, moreover, rode
over country that they had known all their lives. There was no forest
footpath, no train among the hills hidden from them. But the cannon of
Jackson's army was inferior. Here the mechanical genius of the North
showed supreme.</p>
<p>Such was the little army of Jackson, somber to see, which marched forth
upon a campaign unrivalled in the history of war. The men whom they were
to meet were of staunch stock and spirit themselves. Banks, their
commander, had worked in his youth as a common laborer in a cotton mill,
and had forced himself up by vigor and energy, but Shields was a veteran
of the Mexican War. Most of the troops had come from the west, and they,
too, were used to every kind of privation and hardship.</p>
<p>Harry's duties carried him back and forth with the marching columns, but
he lingered longest beside the Invincibles, only a regiment now, and that
regiment composed almost wholly of Virginians. St. Clair was still in the
smartest of uniforms, a contrast to the others, and as he nodded to Harry
he told him that the troops expected to meet the enemy before night.</p>
<p>“I don't know how they got that belief,” he said, “but I know it extends
to all our men. What about it, Harry?”</p>
<p>“Stonewall Jackson alone knows, and he's not telling.”</p>
<p>“They say that Banks is coming with ten to one!” said Langdon, “but it
might be worse than that. It might be a hundred to one.”</p>
<p>“It's hardly as bad as ten to one, Tom,” said Harry with a laugh. “Ashby's
men say it's only eight to one, and they know.”</p>
<p>“It's all right, then,” said Langdon, squaring his shoulders, and looking
ferocious. “Ten to one would be a little rough on us, but I don't mind
eight to one at all! at all! They say that the army of Banks is not many
miles away. Is it so, Harry?”</p>
<p>“I suppose so. That's the news the cavalry bring in.”</p>
<p>Harry rode on, saluting Colonel Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire
as he passed. They returned the salutes, but said nothing, and in a few
minutes he was with General Jackson again.</p>
<p>It was now March, and the spring was making headway in the great valley.
The first flush of green was over everything. The snows were gone, the
rains that followed were gone, too, and the earth was drying rapidly under
the mild winds that blew from the mountains. It was evident to all that
the forces of war were unloosed with the departure of winter.</p>
<p>The day was filled with excitement for Harry. The great Federal army was
now so near that the rival pickets were almost constantly in touch. Only
stern orders from Jackson kept his fiery cavalry from making attacks which
might have done damage, but not damage enough. Banks, the Union leader,
eminent through politics rather than war, having been Governor of
Massachusetts, showed the utmost caution. Feeling secure in his numbers he
resolved to risk nothing until he gained his main object—Winchester—and
the efforts of Turner Ashby and his brilliant young lieutenants like
Sherburne, could not lead him into any trap.</p>
<p>Night came and the Southern army stopped for supper and rest. The Northern
army was then only four miles from Winchester, and within a half hour
hostile pickets had been firing at one another. Yet the men ate calmly and
lay down under the trees. Jackson called a council in a little grove.
General Garnett, the commander of the Stonewall Brigade, all the colonels
of the regiments, and the most trusted young officers of his staff were
present. A little fire of fallen wood lighted up the anxious and earnest
faces.</p>
<p>Jackson spoke rapidly. Harry had never before seen him show so much
emotion and outward fire. He wanted to bring up all his men and attack the
Union army at once. He believed that the surprise and the immense dash of
the Southern troops would overcome the great odds. But the other officers
shook their heads sadly. There had been a confusion of orders. Their own
troops had been scattered and their supply trains were far away. If they
attacked they would surely fall.</p>
<p>Jackson reluctantly gave up his plan and walked gloomily away. But he
turned presently and beckoned to Harry and others of his staff. His eyes
were shining. Some strange mood seemed to possess him.</p>
<p>“Mount at once, gentlemen,” he said, “and ride with me. I'm going to
Winchester.”</p>
<p>One or two of the officers opened their mouths to protest, but checked the
words when they saw Jackson's stern face. They sprang into the saddle, and
scorning possible attack or capture by roving Union cavalry, galloped to
the town.</p>
<p>Jackson drew rein before the manse, where Dr. Graham was already standing
at the open door to meet him, runners from the town carrying ahead the
news that Jackson was returning with his staff. It seemed that something
the general had said to the minister the day before troubled him. Harry
inferred from the words he heard that Jackson had promised the minister
too much and now he was stung by conscience. Doubtless he had told Dr.
Graham that he would never let the Federals take Winchester, and he had
come to apologize for his mistake. Harry was not at all surprised. In
fact, as he came to know him thoroughly, he was never surprised at
anything this strange man and genius did.</p>
<p>Harry's surmise was right. Jackson was torn with emotion at being
compelled to abandon Winchester, and he wanted to explain how it was to
the friend whom he liked so well. He had thoughts even yet of striking the
enemy that night and driving him away. Looking the minister steadily in
the face, but not seeing him, seeing instead a field of battle, he said
slowly, biting each word:</p>
<p>“I—will—yet—carry—out—this plan. I—will—think.
It—must be done.”</p>
<p>The minister said nothing, standing and staring at the general like one
fascinated. He had never seen Jackson that way before. His face was lined
with thought and his eyes burned like coals of fire. His hand fiercely
clinched the hilt of his sword. He, who showed emotion so rarely, was
overcome by it now.</p>
<p>But the fire in his eyes died, his head sank, and his hand fell from his
sword.</p>
<p>“No, no,” he said sadly. “I must not try it. Too many of my brave men
would fall. I must withdraw, and await a better time.”</p>
<p>Saying good-by to his friend he mounted and rode in silence from
Winchester again, and silently the people saw him go. His staff followed
without a word. When they reached a high hill overlooking the town Jackson
paused and the others paused with him. All turned as if by one accord and
looked at Winchester.</p>
<p>The skies were clear and a silver light shone over the town. It was a
beautiful, luminous light and it heightened the beauty of spire, roof, and
wall. Jackson looked at it a long time, the place where he had spent such
a happy month, and then, his eye blazing again, he lifted his hand and
exclaimed with fierce energy:</p>
<p>“That is the last council of war I will ever hold!”</p>
<p>Harry understood him. He knew that Jackson now felt that the council had
been too slow and too timid. Henceforth he would be the sole judge of
attack and retreat. But the general's emotion was quickly suppressed.
Taking a last look at the little city that he loved so well, he rode
rapidly away, and his staff followed closely at his heels.</p>
<p>That was a busy and melancholy night. The young troops, after all, were
not to fight the enemy, but were falling back. Youth takes less account
than age of odds, and they did not wish to retreat. Harry who had seen
that look upon Jackson's face, when he gazed back at Winchester, felt that
he would strike some mighty counter-blow, but he did not know how or when.</p>
<p>The army withdrew slowly toward Strasburg, twenty-five miles away, and the
next morning the Union forces in overwhelming numbers occupied Winchester.
Meantime the North was urging McClellan with his mighty army to advance on
Richmond, and Stonewall Jackson and his few thousands who had been driven
out of Winchester were forgotten. The right flank of McClellan, defended
by Banks and forty thousand men, would be secure.</p>
<p>There was full warrant for the belief of McClellan. It seemed to Harry as
they retreated up the valley that they were in a hopeless checkmate. What
could a few thousand men, no matter how brave and hardy, do against an
army as large as that of Banks? But he was cheered somewhat by the
boldness and activity of the cavalry under Ashby. These daring horsemen
skirmished continually with the enemy, and Harry, as he passed back and
forth with orders, saw much of it.</p>
<p>Once he drew up with the Invincibles, now a Virginia instead of a South
Carolina regiment, and sitting on horseback with his old friends, watched
the puffs of smoke to the rear, where Ashby's men kept back the persistent
skirmishers of the North.</p>
<p>“Colonel,” said Harry to Colonel Talbot, “what do you think of it? Shall
we ever make headway against such a force? Or shall we be compelled to
retreat until we make a junction with the main army under General
Johnston?”</p>
<p>Colonel Talbot glanced back at the puffs of white smoke, and suddenly his
eyes seemed to flash with the fire that Harry had seen in Jackson's when
he looked upon the Winchester that he must leave.</p>
<p>“No, Harry, I don't believe we'll keep on retreating,” he replied. “I was
with General Taylor when he fell back before the Mexican forces under
Santa Anna which outnumbered him five to one. But at Buena Vista he
stopped falling back, and everybody knows the glorious victory we won
there over overwhelming odds. The Yankees are not Mexicans. Far from it.
They are as brave as anybody. But Stonewall Jackson is a far greater
general than Zachary Taylor.”</p>
<p>“I'm hoping for the best,” said Harry.</p>
<p>“We'll all wait and see,” said the colonel.</p>
<p>They stopped falling back at Mount Jackson, twenty-five miles from
Winchester, and the army occupied a strong position. Harry felt
instinctively that they would fall back no more, and his spirits began to
rise again. But the facts upon which his hopes were based were small.
Jackson had less than five thousand men, and in the North he was wiped off
the map. It was no longer necessary for cabinet members and generals to
take him into consideration.</p>
<p>Jackson now out of the way, the main portion of the army under Banks was
directed to march eastward to Manassas, while a heavy detachment still
more than double Jackson's in numbers remained in the valley. Meanwhile
McClellan, with his right flank clear, was going by sea to Richmond,
goaded to action at last by the incessant demands of a people which had a
right to expect much of his great and splendidly equipped army.</p>
<p>Harry was with Stonewall Jackson when the news of these movements reached
them, brought by Philip Sherburne, who, emulating his commander, Turner
Ashby, seemed never to rest or grow weary.</p>
<p>“General Banks is moving eastward to cover the eastern approaches to
Washington,” said the young captain, “while General Shields with 12,000
men is between us and Winchester.”</p>
<p>“So,” said Jackson. Sherburne looked at him earnestly, but he gave no
sign.</p>
<p>“Ride back to your chief and tell him I thank him for his vigilance and to
report to me promptly everything that he may discover,” said Jackson. “You
may ride with him also, Mr. Kenton, and return to me in an hour with such
news as you may have.”</p>
<p>Harry went gladly. Sometimes he longed to be at the front with Turner
Ashby, there where the rifles were often crackling.</p>
<p>“What will he do? Will he turn now?” said Sherburne anxiously to Harry.</p>
<p>“I heard General Jackson say that he would never hold another council of
war, and he's keeping his word. Nobody knows his plans, but I think he'll
attack. I feel quite sure of it, captain.”</p>
<p>They came soon to a field in which Turner Ashby was sitting on a horse,
examining points further down the valley with a pair of powerful glasses.
Sherburne reported briefly and Ashby nodded, but did not take the glasses
from his eyes. Harry also looked down the valley and his strong sight
enabled him to detect tiny, moving figures which he knew were those of
Union scouts and skirmishers.</p>
<p>Despite his youth and the ardor of battle in his nostrils, Harry felt the
tragedy of war in this pleasant country. It was a noble landscape, that of
the valley between the blue mountains. Before him stretched low hills,
covered here and there with fine groups of oak or pine without
undergrowth. Houses of red brick, with porticoes and green shutters, stood
in wide grounds. Most of them were inhabited yet, and their owners always
brought information to the soldiers of the South, never to those of the
North.</p>
<p>The earth had not yet dried fully from the great rains, and horses and
cannon wheels sank deep in the mud, whenever they left the turnpike
running down the center of the valley and across which a Northern army
under Shields lay. The men in blue occupied a wide stretch of grassy
fields on the east, and on the west a low hill, with a small grove growing
on the crest. Dominating the whole were the lofty cliffs of North Mountain
on the west. The main force of the North, strengthened with cannon, lay to
the east of the turnpike. But on the hill to the west were two strong
batteries and near it were lines of skirmishers. Shields, a veteran of the
Mexican war himself, was not present at this moment, but Kimball,
commanding in his absence, was alert and did not share the general belief
that Stonewall Jackson might be considered non-existent.</p>
<p>Harry, things coming into better view, the longer he looked, saw much of
the Union position, and Turner Ashby presently handed him the glasses.
Then he plainly discerned the guns and a great mass of infantry, with the
colors waving above them in the gentle breeze.</p>
<p>“They're there,” said Turner Ashby, dryly. “If we want to attack they're
waiting.”</p>
<p>Harry rode back to Jackson, and told him that the whole Union force was in
position in front, and then the boy knew at once that a battle was coming.
The bearded, silent man showed no excitement, but sent orders thick and
fast to the different parts of his army. The cavalry led by Ashby began to
press the enemy hard in front of a little village called Kernstown. A
regiment with two guns led the advance on the west of the turnpike, and
the heavier mass of infantry marched across the fields on the left.</p>
<p>Harry, as his duty bade him, kept beside his general, who was riding near
the head of the infantry. The feet of men and horses alike sank deep in
the soft earth of the fields, but they went forward at a good pace,
nevertheless. Their blood was hot and leaping. There was an end to
retreats. They saw the enemy and they were eager to rush upon him.</p>
<p>The pulses in Harry's temples were beating hard. He already considered
himself a veteran of battle, but he could not see it near without feeling
excitement. A long line of fire had extended across the valley. White
puffs of smoke arose like innumerable jets of steam. The crackle of the
rifles was incessant and at the distance sounded like the ripping of heavy
cloth.</p>
<p>Then came a deep heavy crash that made the earth tremble. The two
batteries on the hill had opened at a range of a mile on Jackson's
infantry. Those men of the North were good gunners and Harry heard the
shells and solid shot screaming and hissing around. Despite his will he
could not keep from trembling for a while, but presently it ceased,
although the fire was growing heavier.</p>
<p>But the Southern infantry were so far away that the artillery fire did not
harm. Ever urged on by Jackson, they pressed through fields and marshy
ground, their destination a low ridge from which, as a place of advantage,
they could reply to the Union batteries. From the east and from a point
near a church called the Opequon came the thunder of their own guns
advancing up the other side of the turnpike.</p>
<p>Now the great marching qualities of Jackson's men were shown. Not in vain
had they learned to be foot cavalry. They pressed forward through the deep
mud and always the roar of the increasing fire called them on. Before them
stretched the ridge and Harry was in fear lest the enemy spring forward
and seize it first.</p>
<p>But no foe appeared in front of them in the fields, and then with a rush
they were at the foot of the ridge. Another rush and they had climbed it.
Harry from its crest saw the wide field of combat and he knew that the
greater battle had just begun.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER VI. KERNSTOWN </h2>
<p>The long winding lines of the two armies spread over a maze of fields,
woods and thickets, with here and there a stone wall and scattered low
hills, which could be used as points of strength. Jackson's men, led by
able officers, were pushing forward with all their might. The woods, the
thickets and the mud nullified to some extent the superior power of the
Northern artillery, but the rifles were pouring forth shattering volleys,
many at close range.</p>
<p>Harry felt his horse stagger just after he reached the crest of the hill,
but he took no notice of it until a few minutes later, when the animal
began to shiver. He leaped clear just in time, for when the shiver ceased,
the horse plunged forward, fell on his side and lay dead. As Harry
straightened himself on his feet a bullet went through the brim of his
cap, and another clipped his epaulet.</p>
<p>“Those must be western men shooting at you, Harry,” said a voice beside
him. “But it could have been worse. You're merely grazed, when you could
have been hit and hit deep.”</p>
<p>It was Langdon, cool and imperturbable, who was speaking. He was regarding
Harry rather quizzically, as the boy mechanically brushed the mud from his
clothes.</p>
<p>“Force of habit,” said Langdon, and then he suddenly grasped Harry and
pulled him to his knees. There was a tremendous crash in front of them,
and a storm of bullets swept over their heads.</p>
<p>“I saw a Yankee officer give the word, and then a million riflemen rose
from the bushes and fired straight at us!” shouted Langdon. “You stay
here! See the Invincibles are all about you!”</p>
<p>Harry saw that he had in truth fallen among the Invincibles. There was St.
Clair, immaculate, a blazing red spot in either cheek, gazing at the great
swarms of riflemen in front. Colonel Leonidas Talbot and
Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire, those veteran West Pointers, were
stalking up and down in front of their lines, fiercely bidding their men
to lie down. But Harry knew that his duty was elsewhere.</p>
<p>“I belong to the general!” he exclaimed. “I must join him!”</p>
<p>Casting one glance of regret at the fallen horse that had served him so
well he rushed toward General Jackson, who with the rest of his staff had
dismounted. The general, showing no emotion or anxiety, was watching the
doubtful combat.</p>
<p>Along the whole line the battle was deepening. The able West Pointers on
the Northern side were hurrying forward fresh troops. Shields himself was
coming with new battalions. The men from Ohio and the states further west,
expert like the Southerners in the use of the rifle, and confident of
victory, were pouring a heavy and unbroken fire upon the thinner Southern
lines. They, too, knew the value of cover and, cool enough to think about
it, they used every thicket, and grove and ridge that they could reach.</p>
<p>The roar of the battle was heard plainly in Winchester, and the people of
the town, although it was now held by the North, wished openly for the
success of the South. The Northern troops, as it happened, nearly all
through the war, were surrounded by people who were against them. The
women at the windows and on the house tops looked eagerly for the red
flare in the South which should betoken the victorious advance of Jackson,
sweeping his enemies before him.</p>
<p>But Jackson was not advancing. All the valor and courage of the South so
far had been in vain. Harry, standing near his commander, and awaiting any
order that might be given him, saw new masses of the enemy advancing along
every road and through the fields. The Union colors, held aloft in front
of the regiments, snapped defiantly in the wind. And those western
riflemen, from their cover, never ceased to pour showers of bullets upon
the Southern lines. They had already cut a swath of dead, and many wounded
were dragging themselves to the rear.</p>
<p>It seemed to Harry, looking over the field, that the battle was lost. The
Northern troops were displaying more tenacity than the Southern officers
had expected. Moreover, they were two to one, in strong positions, and
with a much superior artillery. As he looked he saw one of the Virginia
regiments reel back before the attack of much greater numbers and retreat
in some disorder. The victors came on, shouting in triumph, but in a few
minutes their officers rallied them, another Virginia regiment rushed to
their relief, and the two, united, hurled themselves upon the advancing
enemy. The Union troops were driven back with great loss, and Harry
noticed that the fire from their two great batteries was weakening. He
could not keep from shouting in joy, but he was glad that the sound of his
voice was drowned in the thunder of the battle.</p>
<p>General Jackson had no orders for him at present, and Harry watched with
extraordinary fascination the battle which was unrolling itself in film
after film before him. He saw a stone fence running down the center of a
field, and then he saw beyond it a great mass of Northern infantry
advancing with bayonets shining and colors waving. From his own side a
regiment was running toward it.</p>
<p>Who would reach the fence first? The pulses in Harry's temple beat so hard
that they hurt. He could not take his eyes from that terrible race, a race
of human beings, a race of life and death. The sun blazed down on the
rival forces as they sped across the field. But the Southerners reached
the wall first. Not in vain had Jackson trained his foot cavalry to march
faster anywhere than any other troops in the world.</p>
<p>Harry saw the Virginians sink down behind the fence, the crest of which a
moment later blazed with fire for a long distance. He saw the whole front
line of the Northern troops disappear, while those behind were thrown into
confusion. The Southerners poured in a second volley before they could
recover and the whole force broke and retreated. Other troops were brought
up but in the face of everything the Virginians held the fence.</p>
<p>But Shields was an able officer. Moreover he and Jackson had been thrown
together in former years, and he knew him. He divined some of the
qualities of Jackson's mind, and he felt that the Southern general, the
field being what it was, was going to push hardest at the center. He
accumulated his own forces there in masses that increased continually. He
had suffered a wound the previous day in a skirmish, and he could not be
at the very front, but he delivered his orders through Kimball, who was in
immediate command upon the field. Five regiments in reserve were suddenly
hurled forward and struck the Confederates a tremendous blow.</p>
<p>Harry saw these regiments emerge from the woods and thickets and he saw
the gray lines reel before them. Jackson, pointing toward this new and
furious conflict, said to Harry:</p>
<p>“Jump on the horse there and tell the officer in command that he must
stand firm at all hazards!”</p>
<p>Harry sprang upon a horse not his own, and galloped away. The moment he
came into view the western riflemen began to send bullets toward him. His
horse was struck, but went on. Another bullet found him, and then a third,
which was mortal. Harry leaped clear of the second horse that had been
killed under him, and ran toward the officer in charge of the stricken
troops. But they were retreating already. They moved slowly, but they
moved backward.</p>
<p>Harry joined with the officers in their entreaties to the men to stand,
but the pressure upon them was too great. General Garnett, the commander
of the Stonewall Brigade, had given an order of his own accord to retreat,
and all that part of the line was falling back. The Northern leader,
seeing the breach, continually pushed forward fresh troops and more
cannon, while the deadly riflemen in the thickets did more harm than the
great guns.</p>
<p>The Southerners were compelled to fall back. One gun was lost. Jackson
from the crest of the hill had seen with amazement the retreat of the
famous Stonewall Brigade that he had once led in person. He galloped
across the field, reckless of bullets, and fiercely bade Garnett turn and
hold his ground. A drummer stood near and Jackson, grasping him by the
shoulder with a firm right hand, fairly dragged him to the crest of a
little hill, and bade him beat the rally.</p>
<p>While Jackson still held him he gave the call to stand and fight. But the
Southerners could not. The men in blue, intoxicated with victory, pushed
forward in thousands and thousands. Their heavy masses overbore all
resistance. Jackson, Garnett, Harry and all the officers, young and old
were swept from the field by that flood, crested with fire and steel. It
was impossible to preserve order and cohesion. The broken regiments were
swept back in a confused mass.</p>
<p>Jackson galloped about, trying to rally his men, and his staff gave all
the help they could. Harry was on foot once more, waving the sword of
which he was so proud. But nothing could stay the tremendous pressure of
the Union army. Their commanders always pushed them forward and always
fresh men were coming. Skilled cannoneers sent grape shot, shell and round
shot whistling through the Southern ranks. The Northern cavalry whipped
around the Southern flanks and despite the desperate efforts of Ashby,
Sherburne, and the others, began to clip off its wings.</p>
<p>Harry often wondered afterward how his life was preserved. It seemed
impossible that he could have escaped such a storm from rifle and cannon,
but save for the slight scratches, sustained earlier in the action, he
remained untouched. He did not think of it at the time, only of the
avalanche that was driving them back. He saw before him a vast red flame,
through which bayonets and faces of men showed, ever coming nearer.</p>
<p>Now the North was sure of victory. The shouts of joy ran up and down their
whole front. The batteries were pushed nearer and nearer, and sent in
terrible volleys at short range. The riflemen who had done such deadly
work rose from the woods and thickets, and rushed forward, loading and
firing as they came. The Southern force seemed to be nothing but a
hopeless mass of fugitives.</p>
<p>Anyone save Jackson would have despaired even of saving his army. But he
dreamed yet of victory. He galloped back for a strong detachment of
Virginians who had not yet come upon the field, but could not get them up
in time to strike a heavy blow.</p>
<p>It was apparent even to Harry and all the other young lieutenants that the
battle was lost. He must have shed tears then, because afterward he found
furrows in the mud and burned gunpowder on his face. The combat now was
not for victory, but for existence. The Southerners fought to preserve the
semblance of an army, and it was well for them that they were valiant
Virginians led by a great genius, and dauntless officers.</p>
<p>Stonewall Jackson, in this the only defeat he ever sustained in
independent command, never lost his head for a moment. By gigantic
exertions he formed a new line at last. The fresher troops covered the
shattered regiments. The retreating artillery was posted anew.</p>
<p>Jackson galloped back and forth on Little Sorrel. Everywhere his courage
and presence of mind brought the men back from despair to hope. Once anew
was proved the truth of Napoleon's famous maxim that men are nothing, a
man everything. The soldiers on the Northern side were as brave as those
on the Southern but they were not led by one of those flashing spirits of
war which emerge but seldom in the ages, men who in all the turmoil and
confusion of battle can see what ought to be done and who do it.</p>
<p>The beaten Southern army, but a few thousands, now was formed anew for a
last stand. A portion of them seized a stone fence, and others took
position in thick timber. The cavalry of Turner Ashby raged back and
forth, seeking to protect the flanks, and in the east, coming shadows
showed that the twilight might yet protect the South from the last blow.</p>
<p>Harry, in the thick of furious battle, had become separated from his
commander. He was still on foot and his sword had been broken at the hilt
by a bullet, but he did not yet know it. Chance threw him once more among
the Invincibles. He plunged through the smoke almost into the arms of
Langdon.</p>
<p>“And here is our Harry again!” shouted the irrepressible South Carolinian.
“Stonewall Jackson has lost a battle, but he hasn't lost an army. Night
and our courage will save us! Here, take this rifle!”</p>
<p>He picked up a loaded rifle which some falling soldier had dropped and
thrust it into Harry's hand.</p>
<p>The boy took the rifle and began mechanically to fire and load and fire
again at the advancing blue masses. He resolved himself for a minute into
a private soldier, and shouted and fired with the rest. The twilight
deepened and darkened in the east, but the battle did not cease. The
Northern leaders, grim and determined men, seeing their victory sought to
press it to the utmost, and always hurried forward infantry, cavalry and
artillery. Had the Southern army been commanded by any other than Jackson
it would have been destroyed utterly.</p>
<p>Jackson, resourceful and unconquerable, never ceased his exertions.
Wherever he appeared he infused new courage into his men. Harry had seized
a riderless horse and was once more in the saddle, following his leader,
taking orders and helping him whenever he could. The Virginians who had
seized the stone fence and the wood held fast. The eye of Jackson was on
them, and they could do nothing else. An Ohio and a Virginia regiment on
either side lost and retook their colors six times each. One of the flags
had sixty bullets through it. An Indiana regiment gave way, but reinforced
by another from the state rallied and returned anew to the attack. A
Virginia regiment also retreated but was brought back by its colonel, and
fought with fresh courage.</p>
<p>The numerous Northern cavalry forced its way around the Southern flanks,
and cut in on the rear, taking many prisoners. Then the horsemen appeared
in a great mass on the Southern left, and had not time and chance
intervened at the last moment Stonewall Jackson might have passed into
obscurity.</p>
<p>The increasing twilight was now just merging into night, and a wood
stretched between the Northern cavalry and the Southern flank. The
Northern horsemen hesitated, not wishing to become entangled among trees
and brush in the dark, and in a few minutes the Southern infantry, falling
back swiftly after beating off the attacks on their front, passed out of
the trap. Sherburne and Funsten, two of Ashby's most valiant cavalry
leaders, came up with their squadrons, and covered the retreat, fighting
off the Northern horsemen as Jackson and his army disappeared in the
woods, and night came over the lost field.</p>
<p>The Southern army retired, beaten, but sullen and defiant. It did not go
far, but stopped at a point where the supply train had been placed. Fires
were built and some of the men ate, but others were so much exhausted that
without waiting for food they threw themselves upon the ground, and in an
instant were fast asleep.</p>
<p>Harry, for the moment, a prey to black despair, followed his general. Only
one other officer, a major, was with him. Harry watched him closely, but
he did not see him show any emotion. Little Sorrel like his master,
although he had been under fire a hundred times, had passed through the
battle without a scratch. Now he walked forward slowly, the reins lying
loose upon his neck.</p>
<p>Harry was not conscious of weariness. He had made immense exertions, but
his system was keyed so high by excitement that the tension held firmly
yet a little longer. The night had come on heavy and dark. Behind him he
could hear the fitful sounds of the Northern and Southern cavalry still
skirmishing with each other. Before him he saw dimly the Southern
regiments, retreating in ragged lines. It was almost more than he could
stand, and his feelings suddenly found vent in an angry cry.</p>
<p>General Jackson heard him and understood.</p>
<p>“Don't be grieved, my boy,” he said quietly. “This is only the first
battle.”</p>
<p>The calm, unboastful courage strengthened Harry anew. If he should grieve
how much more should the general who had led in the lost battle, and upon
whom everybody would hasten to put the blame! He felt once more that flow
of courage and fire from Jackson to himself, and he felt also his splendid
fortune in being associated with a man whose acts showed all the marks of
greatness. Like so many other young officers, mere boys, he was fast
maturing in the furnace of a vast war.</p>
<p>The general ceased to follow the troops, but turned aside into what seemed
to be a thin stretch of forest. But Harry saw that the trees grew in rows
and he exclaimed:</p>
<p>“An orchard!”</p>
<p>It seemed to strike Jackson's fancy.</p>
<p>“Well,” he said, “an orchard is a good place to sleep in. Can't we make a
fire here? I fear that we shall have to burn some fence rails tonight.”</p>
<p>Harry and the major—Hawks was his name—hitched the horses, and
gathered a heap of dry fence rails. The major set fire to splinters with
matches and, in a few minutes a fine fire was crackling and blazing,
taking away the sharp chill of the March night.</p>
<p>Harry saw other fires spring up in the orchard, and he went over to one of
them, where some soldiers were cooking food.</p>
<p>“Give me a piece of meat and bread,” he said to a long Virginian.</p>
<p>“Set, Sonny, an' eat with us!”</p>
<p>“I don't want it for myself.”</p>
<p>“Then who in nation are you beggin' fur?”</p>
<p>“For General Jackson. He's sitting over there.”</p>
<p>“Thunderation! The gen'ral himself! Here, boy!”</p>
<p>Bearing a big piece of meat in one hand and a big piece of bread in the
other Harry returned to Jackson, who had not yet tasted food that day. The
general ate heartily, but almost unconsciously. He seemed to be in a deep
study. Harry surmised that his thoughts were on the morrow. He had learned
already that Stonewall Jackson always looked forward.</p>
<p>Harry foraged and obtained more food for himself, and other officers of
the staff who were coming up, some bearing slight wounds that they
concealed. He also secured the general's cloak, which was strapped to his
saddle and insisted upon his putting it on.</p>
<p>The fire was surrounded presently by officers. Major Hawks had laid
together and as evenly as possible a number of fence rails upon which
Jackson was to sleep, but as yet no one was disposed to slumber. They had
finished eating, but they remained in a silent and somber circle about the
fire.</p>
<p>Jackson stood up presently and his figure, wrapped in the long cloak was
all dark. The light did not fall upon his face. All the others looked at
him. Among them was one of Ashby's young troopers, a bold and reckless
spirit. It was a time, too, when the distinction between officers and
privates in the great citizen armies was not yet sharply defined. And this
young trooper, some spirit of mockery urging him on, stood up and said to
his general:</p>
<p>“The Yankees didn't seem to be in any hurry to leave Winchester, did they,
general?”</p>
<p>Harry drew a quick, sharp breath, and there was a murmur among the
officers, but Stonewall Jackson merely turned a tranquil look upon the
presumptuous youth. Then he turned it back to the bed of coals and said in
even tones:</p>
<p>“Winchester is a pleasant town to stay in, sir.”</p>
<p>The young cavalryman, not abashed at all, continued:</p>
<p>“We heard the Yankees were retreating, but I guess they're retreating
after us.”</p>
<p>Harry half rose and so did several of the older officers, but Jackson
replied quietly:</p>
<p>“I think I may tell you, young sir, that I am satisfied with the result.”</p>
<p>The audacity of the youthful trooper could not carry him further. He
caught threatening looks from the officers and slipped away in the
darkness. Silence fell anew around the fire, and Jackson still stood,
gazing into the coals. Soon, he turned abruptly, strode away into the
darkness, but came back after a while, lay down on the fence rails and
slept soundly.</p>
<p>Harry put four or five rails side by side to protect his body from the
cold ground, lay down upon them and threw a cloak over himself. Now he
relaxed or rather collapsed completely. The tension that had kept him up
so long was gone, and he felt that he could not have risen from the rails
had he wished. He saw wavering fires and dusky figures beside them, but
sleep came in a few minutes to soothe and heal.</p>
<p>Bye and bye all the army, save the sentinels, slept and the victorious
Northern army only two or three miles away also slept, feeling that it had
done enough for one day.</p>
<p>Shields that night was sending messages to the North announcing his
victory, but he was cherishing no illusions. He told how fierce had been
the attack, and with what difficulty it had been beaten off, and in
Washington, reading well between the lines they felt that another attack
and yet others might come from the same source.</p>
<p>Harry sleeping on his bed of fence rails did not dream of the
extraordinary things that the little army of Jackson, beaten at Kernstown
was yet to do. McClellan was just ready to start his great army by sea for
the attack on Richmond, when suddenly the forgotten or negligible Jackson
sprang out of the dark and fixed himself on his flank.</p>
<p>The capital, despite victory, was filled with alarm and the President
shared it. The veteran Shields knew this man who had led the attack, and
he did not seek to hide the danger. The figure of Stonewall Jackson,
gigantic and menacing, showed suddenly through the mists. If McClellan
went on to Richmond with the full Northern strength he might launch
himself on Washington.</p>
<p>The great scheme of invasion was put out of joint. Shields, although
victorious for the time, could not believe that Jackson would attack with
so small an army unless he expected reinforcements, and he sent swift
expresses to bring back a division of 8,000 men which was marching to
cover Washington. Banks, his superior officer, on the way to Washington,
too, heard the news at Harper's Ferry and halted there, and Lincoln,
detaching a whole corps of nearly 40,000 men from McClellan's army,
ordered them to remain at Manassas to protect the capital against Jackson.
A dispatch was sent to Banks ordering him to push the valley campaign with
his whole strength.</p>
<p>But when Harry rose the next morning from his fence rails he knew nothing
of these things. Nor did anyone else in the Southern army, unless it was
Stonewall Jackson who perhaps half-divined them. Harry thought afterward
that he had foreseen much when he said to the impudent cavalryman that he
was satisfied with the result at Kernstown.</p>
<p>They lingered there a little and then began a retreat, unharrassed by
pursuit. Scouts of the enemy were seen by Ashby's cavalry, who hung like a
curtain between them and the army, but no force strong enough to do any
harm came in sight. Harry had secured another horse and most of his duty
was at the rear, where he was often sent by the general to get the latest
news from Ashby.</p>
<p>He quickly met Sherburne over whose dress difficulties had triumphed at
last. His fine cloak, rent in many places, was stained with mud and there
was one large dark spot made by his own blood. His face was lined deeply
by exhaustion and deep disappointment.</p>
<p>“They were too much for us this time, Harry,” he said bitterly. “We can't
beat two to one all the time. How does the general take it?”</p>
<p>“As if it were nothing. He'll be ready to fight again in a few days, and
we must have struck a hard blow anyhow. The enemy are not pursuing.”</p>
<p>“That's true,” said Sherburne more cheerfully. “Your argument is a good
one.”</p>
<p>The army came to a ridge called Rude's Hill and stopped there. Harry was
already soldier enough to see that it was a strong position. Before it
flowed a creek which the melting snows in the mountains had swollen to a
depth of eight or ten feet, and on another side was a fork of the
Shenandoah, also swollen. Here the soldiers began to fortify and prepare
for a longer stay while Jackson sent for aid.</p>
<p>Harry was not among the messengers for help. Jackson had learned his great
ability as a scout, and now he often sent him on missions of observation,
particularly with Captain Sherburne, to whom St. Clair and Langdon were
also loaned by Colonel Talbot. Thus the three were together when they rode
with Sherburne and a hundred men a few days after their arrival at the
ridge.</p>
<p>They were well wrapped in great coats, because the weather, after
deceiving for a while with the appearance of spring, had turned cold
again. The enemy's scouts and spies were keeping back, where they could
blow on their cold fingers or walk a while to restore the circulation to
their half frozen legs.</p>
<p>Sherburne was his neat and orderly self again and St. Clair was fully his
equal. Langdon openly boasted that he was going to have a dressing contest
between them for large stakes as soon as the war was over. But all the
young Southerners were in good spirits now. They had learned of the alarm
caused in the North by Kernstown, and that a third of McClellan's army had
been detached to guard against them. Nor had Banks and Shields yet dared
to attack them.</p>
<p>“There's what troubles Banks,” said Sherburne, pointing with his saber to
a towering mass of mountains which rose somber and dark in the very center
of the Shenandoah Valley. “He doesn't know which side of the Massanuttons
to take.”</p>
<p>Harry looked up at these peaks and ridges, famous now in the minds of all
Virginians, towering a half mile in the air, clothed from base to summit
with dense forest of oak and pine, although today the crests were wrapped
in snowy mists. They cut the Shenandoah valley into two smaller valleys,
the wider and more nearly level one on the west. Only a single road by
which troops could pass crossed the Massanuttons, and that road was held
by the cavalry of Ashby.</p>
<p>“If Banks comes one way and he proves too strong for us we can cross over
to the other,” said Sherburne. “If he divides his force, marching into
both valleys, we may beat one part of his army, then pass the mountain and
beat the other.”</p>
<p>Sherburne had divined aright. It was the mighty mass of the Massanuttons
that weighed upon Banks. As he looked up at the dark ridges and misty
crests his mind was torn by doubts. His own forces, great in number though
they were, were scattered. Fremont to his right on the slopes of the
Alleghanies had 25,000 men; there were other strong detachments under
Milroy and Schenck, and he had 17,000 men under his own eye. So he was
hesitating while the days were passing and Jackson growing stronger.</p>
<p>“I suppose the nature of the country helps us a lot,” said Harry as he
looked up at the Massanuttons, following Sherburne's pointing saber.</p>
<p>“It does, and we need help,” said Sherburne. “Even as it is they would
have been pushing upon us if it hadn't been for the cavalry and the
artillery. Every time a detachment advanced we'd open up on it with a
masked battery from the woods, and if pickets showed their noses too close
horsemen were after them in a second. We've had them worried to death for
days and days, and when they do come in force Old Jack will have something
up his sleeve.”</p>
<p>“I wonder,” said Harry.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER VII. ON THE RIDGES </h2>
<p>As they rode in the shadow of the Massanuttons Harry continued to wonder.
The whole campaign in the valley had become to him an interminable maze.
Stonewall Jackson might know what he intended to do, but he was not
telling. Meanwhile they marched back and forth. There was incessant
skirmishing between cavalry and pickets, but it did not seem to signify
anything. Banks, sure of his overwhelming numbers, pressed forward, but
always cautiously and slowly. He did not march into any trap. And Harry
surmised that Jackson, much too weak to attack, was playing for time.</p>
<p>Sherburne and his troop paused at the very base of the Massanuttons and
Harry, who happened to be with them, looked up again at the lofty summits
standing out so boldly and majestically in the middle of the valley. The
oaks and maples along their slopes were now blossoming into a green that
matched the tint of the pines, but far up on the crests there was still a
line of snow, and white mists beyond.</p>
<p>“Why not climb the highest summit?” he said to Sherburne. “You have
powerful glasses and we could get a good view of what is going on up the
valley.”</p>
<p>“Most of those slopes are not slopes at all. They're perpendicular like
the side of a house. The horses could never get up.”</p>
<p>“But they can certainly go part of the way, and some of us can climb the
rest on foot.”</p>
<p>Sherburne's eyes sparkled. The spirit of adventure was strong within him.
Moreover the task, if done, was worth while.</p>
<p>“Good for you, Harry,” he exclaimed. “We'll try it! What do you say, St.
Clair, you and Langdon?”</p>
<p>“I follow where you lead, and I hope that you lead to the top of the
mountain,” replied St. Clair.</p>
<p>“Likely it's cold up there,” said Langdon, “but there are higher and
colder mountains and I choose this one.”</p>
<p>They had learned promptness and decision from Stonewall Jackson, and
Sherburne at once gave the order to ascend. Several men in his troop were
natives of that part of the valley, and they knew the Massanuttons well.
They led and the whole troop composed of youths followed eagerly. Bye and
bye they dismounted and led their horses over the trails which grew
slippery with wet and snow as they rose higher.</p>
<p>When they paused at times to rest they would all look northward over the
great valley, where a magnificent panorama had gradually risen into view.
They saw a vast stretch of fields turning green, neat villages, dark belts
of forest, the gleam of brooks and creeks, and now and then, the glitter
from a Northern bayonet.</p>
<p>At length the chief guide, a youth named Wallace, announced that the
horses could go no farther. Even in summer when the snow was all gone and
the earth was dry they could not find a footing. Now it was certain death
for them to try the icy steeps.</p>
<p>Sherburne ordered the main body of the troop to halt in a forested and
sheltered glen in the side of the mountain, and, choosing Harry, St.
Clair, Langdon, the guide Wallace, and six others, he advanced with them
on foot. It was difficult climbing, and more than once they were bruised
by falls, but they learned to regard such accidents as trifles, and ardent
of spirit they pressed forward.</p>
<p>“I think we'll get a good view,” said Sherburne. “See how brilliantly the
sun is shining in the valley.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and the mists on the crests are clearing away,” said Harry.</p>
<p>“Then with the aid of the glasses we can get a sweep up the valley for
many miles. Now boys, here we go! up! up!”</p>
<p>If it had not been for the bushes they could never have made the ascent,
as they were now in the region of snow and ice and the slopes were like
glass. Often they were compelled to crawl, and it was necessary, too, to
exercise a good deal of care in crawling.</p>
<p>St. Clair groaned as he rose after climbing a rock, and brushed the knees
of his fine gray trousers.</p>
<p>“Cheer up, Arthur,” said Langdon, “it could have been worse. The sharp
stones there might have cut holes through them.”</p>
<p>But in spite of every difficulty and danger they went steadily toward the
summit, and streamers of mist yet floating about the mountain often
enclosed them in a damp shroud. Obviously, however, the clouds and vapors
were thinning, and soon the last shred would float away.</p>
<p>“It ain't more'n a hundred feet more to the top,” said Wallace, “an' it's
shore that the sun will be shinin' there.”</p>
<p>“Shining for us, of course,” said Langdon. “It's a good omen.”</p>
<p>“I wish I could always look for the best as you do, Tom,” said St. Clair.</p>
<p>“I'm glad I can. Gay hearts are better than riches. As sure as I climb,
Arthur, I see the top.”</p>
<p>“Yes, there it is, the nice snowy bump above us.”</p>
<p>They dragged themselves upon the loftiest crest, and, panting, stood there
for a few minutes in several inches of snow. Then the wind caught up the
last shreds and tatters of mist, and whipped them away southward. Every
one of them drew a deep, sharp breath, as the great panorama of the valley
to the northward and far below was unrolled before them.</p>
<p>The brilliant sunshine of early spring played over everything, but far
down in the valley they seemed to see by contrast the true summer of the
sunny south, which is often far from sunny. But seen from the top of the
mountain the valley was full of golden rays. Now the roofs of the villages
showed plainly and they saw with distinctness the long silver lines that
marked the flowing of the rivers and creeks. To the east and to the west
further than the eye could reach rose the long line of dim blue mountains
that enclosed the valley.</p>
<p>But it was the glitter of the bayonets in the valley that caused the
hearts of the Virginians to beat most fiercely. Banners and guidons,
clusters of white tents, and dark swarms of men marked where the foot of
the invading stranger trod their soil. The Virginians loved the great
valley. Enclosed between the blue mountains it was the richest and most
beautiful part of all their state. It hurt them terribly to see the
overwhelming forces of the North occupying its towns and villages and
encamped in its fields.</p>
<p>Harry, not a Virginian himself, but a brother by association, understood
and shared their feeling. He saw Sherburne's lips moving and he knew that
he was saying hard words between his teeth. But Sherburne's eyes were at
the glasses, and he looked a long time, moving them slowly from side to
side. After a while he handed them to Harry.</p>
<p>The boy raised the glasses and the great panorama of the valley sprang up
to his eyes. It seemed to him that he could almost count the soldiers in
the camps. There was a troop of cavalry riding to the southward, and
further to the left was another. Directly to the north was their
battlefield of Kernstown, and not far beyond it lay Winchester. He saw
such masses of the enemy's troops and so many signs of activity among them
that he felt some movement must be impending.</p>
<p>“What do you think of it, Harry?” said Sherburne.</p>
<p>“Banks must be getting ready to move forward.”</p>
<p>“I think so, too. I wish we had his numbers.”</p>
<p>“More men are coming for us. We'll have Ewell's corps soon, and General
Jackson himself is worth ten thousand men.”</p>
<p>“That's so, Harry, but ten thousand men are far too few. McDowell's whole
corps is available, and with it the Yankees can now turn more than seventy
thousand men into the valley.”</p>
<p>“And they can fight, too, as we saw at Kernstown,” said St. Clair.</p>
<p>“That's so, and I'm thinking they'll get their stomachs full of it pretty
soon,” said Langdon. “Yesterday about dusk I went out in some bushes after
firewood, and I saw a man kneeling. It struck me as curious, and I went up
closer. What do you think? It was Old Jack praying. Not any mock prayer,
but praying to his Lord with all his heart and soul. I'm not much on
praying myself, but I felt pretty solemn then, and I slid away from there
as quick and quiet as you please. And I tell you, fellows, that when
Stonewall Jackson prays it's time for the Yankees to weep.”</p>
<p>“You're probably right, Langdon,” said Captain Sherburne, “but it's time
for us to be going back, and we'll tell what we've seen to General
Jackson.”</p>
<p>As they turned away a crunching in the snow on the other slope caused them
to stop. The faces of men and then their figures appeared through the
bushes. They were eight or ten in number and all wore blue uniforms. Harry
saw the leader, and instantly he recognized Shepard. It came to him, too,
in a flash of prescience, that Shepard was just the man whom he would meet
there.</p>
<p>Sherburne, who had seen the blue uniforms, raised a pistol and fired. Two
shots were fired by the Union men at the same instant, and then both
parties dropped back from the crest, each on its own side.</p>
<p>Sherburne's men were untouched and Harry was confident that Shepard's had
been equally lucky—the shots had been too hasty—but it was
nervous and uncomfortable work, lying there in the snow, and waiting for
the head of an enemy to appear over the crest.</p>
<p>Harry was near Captain Sherburne, and he whispered to him:</p>
<p>“I know the man whose face appeared first through the bushes.”</p>
<p>“Who is he?”</p>
<p>“His name is Shepard. He's a spy and scout for the North, and he is brave
and dangerous. He was in Montgomery when President Davis was inaugurated.
I saw him in Washington when I was there as a spy myself. I saw him again
in Winchester just before the battle of Kernstown, and now here he is once
more.”</p>
<p>“Must be a Wandering Jew sort of a fellow.”</p>
<p>“He wanders with purpose. He has certainly come up here to spy us out.”</p>
<p>“In which he is no more guilty than we are.”</p>
<p>“That's true, but what are we going to do about it, captain?”</p>
<p>“Blessed if I know. Wait till I take a look.”</p>
<p>Captain Sherburne raised himself a little, in order to peep over the crest
of the ridge. A rifle cracked on the other side, a bullet clipped the top
of his cap, and he dropped back in the snow, unhurt but startled.</p>
<p>“This man, Shepard, is fully as dangerous as you claim him to be,” he said
to Harry.</p>
<p>“Can you see anything of them?” asked St. Clair.</p>
<p>“Not a thing,” said Harry.</p>
<p>“If we show they shoot, and if they show we shoot,” said Langdon. “Seems
to me it's about the most beautiful case of checkmate that I've known.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps we can stalk them,” said St. Clair.</p>
<p>“And perhaps they can stalk us,” said Langdon. “But I think both sides are
afraid to try it.”</p>
<p>“You're right, Langdon,” said Captain Sherburne, “It's a case of
checkmate. I confess that I don't know what to do.”</p>
<p>“We could wait here while they waited too, and if we waited long enough it
would get so dark we couldn't see each other. But captain, you are a
kind-hearted and sympathetic man, do you see any fun in sitting in the
snow on top of a mountain, waiting to kill men whom you don't want to kill
or to be killed by men who don't want to kill you?”</p>
<p>“No, Tom, I don't,” replied Captain Sherburne with a laugh, “and you're
talking mighty sound sense. This is not like a regular battle. We've
nothing to gain by shooting those men, and they've nothing to gain by
shooting us. The Massanuttons extend a long distance and there's nothing
to keep scouts and spies from climbing them at other places. We'll go away
from here.”</p>
<p>He gave the order. They rose and crept as softly as they could through the
snow and bushes down the side of the mountain. Harry looked back
occasionally, but he saw no faces appear on the crest. Soon he heard
Langdon who was beside him laughing softly to himself.</p>
<p>“What's the matter, Tom?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Harry, if I could take my pistol and shoot straight through this mountain
the bullet when it came out on the other side would hit a soldier in blue
clothes, going at the same rate of speed down the mountain.”</p>
<p>“More than likely you're right, Tom, if they're sensible, and that man
Shepard certainly is.”</p>
<p>Further down they met some of their own men climbing up. The troop had
heard the shots and was on the way to rescue, if rescue were needed.
Captain Sherburne explained briefly and they continued the descent,
leading their horses all the way, and breathing deep relief, when they
stood at last in the plain.</p>
<p>“I'll remember that climb,” said Langdon to Harry as he sprang into the
saddle, “and I won't do it again when there's snow up there, unless
General Jackson himself forces me up with the point of a bayonet.”</p>
<p>“The view was fine.”</p>
<p>“So it was, but the shooting was bad. Not a Yank, not a Reb fell, and I'm
not unhappy over it. A curious thing has happened to me, Harry. While I'm
ready to fight the Yankee at the drop of the hat I don't seem to hate 'em
as much as I did when the war began.”</p>
<p>“Same here. The war ought not to have happened, but we're in it, and to my
way of thinking we're going to be in it mighty deep and long.”</p>
<p>Langdon was silent for a little while, but nothing could depress him long.
He was soon chattering away as merrily as ever while the troop rode back
to General Jackson. Harry regarded him with some envy. A temperament that
could rejoice under any circumstances was truly worth having.</p>
<p>Sherburne reported to Ashby who in return sent him to the commander, Harry
going with him to resume his place on the staff. Jackson heard the report
without comment and his face expressed nothing. Harry could not see that
he had changed much since he had come to join him. A little thinner, a
little more worn, perhaps, but he was the same quiet, self-contained man,
whose blue eyes often looked over and beyond the one to whom he was
talking, as if he were maturing plans far ahead.</p>
<p>Harry occupied a tent for the time with two or three other young officers,
and being permitted a few hours off duty he visited his friends of the
Invincibles, Colonel Leonidas Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St.
Hilaire. The two old comrades already had heard the results of the scout
from St. Clair and Langdon, but they gave Harry a welcome because they
liked him. They also gave him a camp stool, no small luxury in an army
that marches and fights hard, using more gunpowder than anything else.</p>
<p>Harry put the stool against a tree, sat on it and leaned back against the
trunk, feeling a great sense of luxury. The two men regarded him with a
benevolent eye. They, too, were enjoying luxuries, cigars which a cavalry
detail had captured from the enemy. It struck Harry at the moment that
although one was of British descent and the other of French they were very
much alike. South Carolina had bred them and then West Point had cast them
in her unbreakable mold. Neat, precise, they sat rigidly erect, and smoked
their cigars.</p>
<p>“Do you like it on the staff of General Jackson, Harry,” asked Colonel
Talbot.</p>
<p>“I felt regrets at leaving the Invincibles,” replied Harry truthfully,
“but I like it. I think it a privilege to be so near to General Jackson.”</p>
<p>“A leader who has fought only one battle in independent command and who
lost that,” said Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire, thoughtfully—he
knew that Harry would repeat nothing, “and who nevertheless has the utmost
confidence of his men. He does not joke with them as the young Napoleon
did with his soldiers. He has none of the quality that we call magnetic
charm, and yet his troops are eager to follow him anywhere. He has won no
victories, but his men believe him capable of many. He takes none of his
officers into his confidence, but all have it. Incredible, but true. Why
is it?”</p>
<p>He put his cigar back in his mouth and puffed meditatively. Colonel
Leonidas Talbot, who also had been puffing meditatively while
Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire was speaking, now took his cigar
from his mouth, blew away the delicate rings of smoke, and said in an
equally thoughtful tone:</p>
<p>“It occurs to me, Hector, that it is the power of intellect. Stonewall
Jackson has impressed the whole army down to the last and least little
drummer with a sense of his mental force. I tell you, sir, that he is a
thinker, and thinkers are rare, much more rare than people generally
believe. There is only one man out of ten thousand who does not act wholly
according to precedent and experience. Habit is so powerful that when we
think we are thinking we are not thinking at all, we are merely recalling
the experiences of ourselves or somebody else. And of the rare individuals
who leave the well-trod paths of thought to think new thoughts, only a
minutely small percentage think right. This minutely small fraction
represents genius, the one man in a million or rather ten million, or, to
be more accurate, the one man in a hundred million.”</p>
<p>Colonel Leonidas Talbot put the cigar back in his mouth and puffed with
regularity and smoothness. Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire, in his
turn, took his cigar from his mouth once more, blew away the fine white
rings of smoke and said:</p>
<p>“Leonidas, it appears to me that you have hit upon the truth, or as our
legal friends would say, the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the
truth. I am in the middle of life and I realize suddenly that in all the
years I have lived I have met but few thinkers, certainly not more than
half a dozen, perhaps not more than three or four.”</p>
<p>He put his cigar back in his mouth and the two puffed simultaneously and
with precision, blowing out the fine, delicate rings of smoke at exactly
the same time. Gentlemen of the old school they were, even then, but Harry
recognized, too, that Colonel Leonidas Talbot had spoken the weighty
truth. Stonewall Jackson was a thinker, and thinkers are never numerous in
the world. He resolved to think more for himself if he could, and he sat
there trying to think, while he absently regarded the two colonels.</p>
<p>Colonel Leonidas Talbot, after two minutes perhaps, took the cigar from
his mouth once more and said to Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire:</p>
<p>“Fine cigars the Yankees make, Hector.”</p>
<p>“Quite true, Leonidas. One of the best I have ever smoked.”</p>
<p>“Not more than a dozen left.”</p>
<p>“Then we must get more.”</p>
<p>“But how?”</p>
<p>“Stonewall Jackson will think of a way.”</p>
<p>Harry, despite his respect for them, was compelled to laugh. But the two
colonels laughed with him.</p>
<p>“The words of my friend Leonidas have been proved true within a few
minutes,” said Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire. “In doubt we turned
at once and with involuntary impulse to Stonewall Jackson to think of a
way. He has impressed us, as he has impressed the privates, with his
intellectual power.”</p>
<p>Harry sat with them nearly an hour. He had not only respect but affection
also for them. Old-fashioned they might be in some ways, but they were
able military men, thoroughly alert, and he knew that he could learn much
from them. When he left them he returned to General Jackson and a few more
days of waiting followed.</p>
<p>Winter was now wholly gone and spring, treacherous at first, was becoming
real and reliable. Reports heavy and ominous were coming from McClellan.
He would disembark and march up the peninsula on Richmond with a vast and
irresistible force. Jackson might be drawn off from the valley to help
Johnston in the defense of the capital. But Banks with his great army
would then march down it as if on parade.</p>
<p>Harry heard one morning that a new man was put in command of the Southern
forces in Northern Virginia. Robert Edward Lee was his name, and it was a
good name, too. He was the son of that famous Light Horse Harry Lee who
was a favorite of Washington in the Revolution. Already an elderly man, he
was sober and quiet, but the old West Pointers passed the word through
Jackson's army that he was full of courage and daring.</p>
<p>Harry felt the stimulus almost at once. A fresh wind seemed to be blowing
down the Valley of Virginia. Lee had sent word to Jackson that he might do
what he could, and that he might draw to his help also a large division
under Ewell. The news spread through the army and there was a great
buzzing. Young Virginia was eager to march against any odds, and Harry was
with them, heart and soul.</p>
<p>Nor were they kept waiting now. The news had scarcely spread through the
army when they heard the crack of carbines in their front. The cavalry of
Ashby, increased by many recruits, was already skirmishing with the
vanguard of Banks. It was the last day of April and Harry, sent to the
front, saw Ashby drive in all the Northern cavalry. When he returned with
the news Jackson instantly lifted up his whole division and marched by the
flank through the hills, leaving Ewell with his men to occupy Banks in
front. The mind of the “thinker” was working, and Harry knew it as he rode
behind him. He did not know what this movement meant, but he had full
confidence in the man who led them.</p>
<p>Yet the marching, like all the other marching they had done, was of the
hardest. The ground, torn by hoofs, cannon wheels and the feet of marching
men, was a continuous quagmire. Ponds made newly by the rains stood
everywhere. Often it required many horses and men to drag a cannon out of
the mud. The junior officers, and finally those of the highest rank,
leaped from their horses and gave aid. Jackson himself carried boughs and
stones to help make a road.</p>
<p>Despite the utmost possible exertions the army could make only five miles
in a single day and at the approach of night it flung itself upon the
ground exhausted.</p>
<p>“I call this the Great Muddy Army,” said St. Clair, ruefully to Harry, as
he surveyed his fine uniform, now smeared over with brown liquid paste.</p>
<p>“It might have been worse,” said Langdon. “Suppose we had fallen in a
quicksand and had been swallowed up utterly. 'Tis better to live muddy
than not to live at all.”</p>
<p>“It would be better to call it the Great Tired Army just now,” said Harry.
“To keep on pulling your feet all day long out of mud half a yard deep is
the most exhausting thing I know or ever heard of.”</p>
<p>“Where are we going?” asked St. Clair.</p>
<p>“Blessed if I know,” replied Harry, “nor does anybody else save one. It's
all hid under General Jackson's hat.”</p>
<p>“I guess it's Staunton,” said Langdon. “That's a fine town, as good as
Winchester. I've got kinsfolk there. I came up once from South Carolina
and made them a visit.”</p>
<p>But it was not Staunton, although Staunton, hearing of the march, had been
joyfully expecting Jackson's men. The fine morning came, warm and
brilliant with sunshine, raising the spirits of the troops. The roads
began to dry out fast and marching would be much easier. But Jackson,
leading somberly on Little Sorrel, turned his back on Staunton.</p>
<p>The Virginians stared in amazement when the heads of columns turned away
from that trim and hospitable little city, which they knew was so
fervently attached to their cause. Before them rose the long line of the
Blue Ridge and they were marching straight toward it.</p>
<p>They marched a while in silence, and then a groan ran through the ranks.
It was such a compound of dismay and grief that it made Harry shiver. The
Virginians were leaving their beloved and beautiful valley, leaving it all
to the invader, leaving the pretty little places, Winchester and Staunton
and Harrisonburg and Strasburg and Front Royal, and all the towns and
villages in which their families and relatives lived. Every one of the
Virginians had blood kin everywhere through the valley.</p>
<p>The men began to whisper to one another, but the order of silence was
passed sternly along the line. They marched on, sullen and gloomy, but
after a while their natural courage and their confidence in their
commander returned. Their spirits did not desert them, even when they left
the valley behind them and began to climb the Blue Ridge.</p>
<p>Up, up, they went through dense forests. Harry remembered their ascent of
the Massanuttons, but the snows were gone now. They pressed on until they
reached the crest of the ridges and there the whole army paused, high up
in the air, while they looked with eager interest at the rolling Virginia
country stretching toward the east until it sank under the horizon.</p>
<p>Harry saw smoke that marked the passing of trains, and he believed that
they were now on their way to Richmond to help defend the capital against
McClellan. He glanced at Jackson, but the commander was as tight-lipped as
ever. Whatever was under that hat remained the secret of its owner.</p>
<p>They descended the mountains and came to a railway station, where many
cars were waiting. Troops were hurried aboard expecting to start for
Richmond, and then a sudden roar burst from them. The trains did not move
toward Richmond, but back, through defiles that would lead them again into
their beloved valley. Cheers one after another rolled through the trains,
and Harry, who was in a forward car with the Invincibles, joined in as
joyfully as the best Virginian of them all.</p>
<p>The boy was so much exhausted that he fell into a doze on a seat. But
afterward he dimly remembered that he heard the two colonels talking. They
were trying to probe into the depths of Jackson's mind. They surmised that
this march over the mountains had been made partly to delude Banks. They
were right, at least as far as the delusion of Banks went. He had been
telegraphing that the army of Jackson was gone, on its way to Richmond,
and that there was nothing in front of him save a few skirmishers.</p>
<p>The Virginians left their trains in the valley again, waited for their
wagons and artillery, and then marched on to Staunton, that neat little
city that was so dear to so many of them. But the mystery of what was
under Jackson's hat remained a mystery. They passed through Staunton, amid
the cheering people, women and children waving hats, scarfs and
handkerchiefs to their champions. But the terrible Stonewall gave them no
chance to dally in that pleasant place. Staunton was left far behind and
they never stopped until they went into camp on the side of another range
of mountains.</p>
<p>Here in a great forest they built a few fires, more not being allowed, and
after a hasty supper most of the men lay down in their blankets to rest.
But the young officers did not sleep. A small tent for Jackson had been
raised by the side of the Invincibles, and Harry, sitting on a log, talked
in low tones with Langdon and St. Clair. The three were of the opinion
that some blow was about to be struck, but what it was they did not know.</p>
<p>“The Yankees must have lost us entirely,” said Langdon. “To tell you the
truth, boys, I've lost myself. I've been marching about so much that I
don't know east from west and north from south. I'm sure that this is the
Southern army about us, but whether we're still in Virginia or not is
beyond me. What do you say, Arthur?”</p>
<p>“It's Virginia still, Tom, but we've undoubtedly done a lot of marching.”</p>
<p>“A lot of it! 'Lot' is a feeble word! We've marched a million miles in the
last few days. I've checked 'em off by the bunions on the soles of my
feet.”</p>
<p>“Look out, boys,” said St. Clair. “Here comes the general!”</p>
<p>General Jackson was walking toward them. His face had the usual intense,
preoccupied look, but he smiled slightly when he saw the three lads.</p>
<p>“Come, young gentlemen,” he said, “we're going to take a look at the
enemy.”</p>
<p>A group of older officers joined him, and the three lads followed
modestly. They reached a towering crag and from it Harry saw a deep valley
fringed with woods, a river rushing down its center and further on a
village. Both banks of the river were thick with troops, men in blue. Over
and beyond the valley was a great mass of mountains, ridge on ridge and
peak on peak, covered with black forest, and cut by defiles and ravines so
narrow that it was always dark within them.</p>
<p>Harry felt a strange, indescribable thrill. The presence of the enemy and
the wild setting of the mountains filled him with a kind of awe.</p>
<p>“It's a Northern army under Milroy,” whispered St. Clair, who now heard
Jackson talking to the older officers.</p>
<p>“Then there's going to be a battle,” said Harry.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER VIII. THE MOUNTAIN BATTLE </h2>
<p>General Jackson and several of his senior officers were examining the
valley with glasses, but Harry, with eyes trained to the open air and long
distances, could see clearly nearly all that was going on below. He saw
movement among the masses of men in blue, and he saw officers on
horseback, galloping along the banks of the river. Then he saw cannon in
trenches with their muzzles elevated toward the heights, and he knew that
the Union troops must have had warning of Jackson's coming. And he saw,
too, that the officers below also had glasses through which they were
looking.</p>
<p>There was a sudden blaze from the mouth of one of the cannon. A shell shot
upward, whistling and shrieking, and burst far above their heads. Harry
heard pieces of falling metal striking on the rocks behind them. The
mountains sent back the cannon's roar in a sinister echo.</p>
<p>A second gun flashed and again the shell curved over their heads. But
Jackson paid no heed. He was still watching intently through his glasses.</p>
<p>“The enemy is up and alert,” whispered St. Clair to Harry. “I judge that
these are Western men used to sleeping with their eyes open.”</p>
<p>“Like as not a lot of them are mountain West Virginians,” said Harry.
“They are strong for the North, and it's likely, too, that they're the men
who have discovered Jackson's advance.”</p>
<p>“And they mean to make it warm for us. Listen to those guns! It's hard
shooting aiming at men on heights, but it shows what they could do on
level ground.”</p>
<p>Jackson presently retired with his officers, and Harry, parting from his
friends of the Invincibles, went with him. Back among the ridges all the
troops were under arms, the weary ones having risen from their blankets
which were now tied in rolls on their backs. They had not yet been able to
bring the artillery up the steeps. Harry saw that the faces of all were
eager as they heard the thunder of the guns in the valley below. Among the
most eager was a regiment of Georgians arrived but recently with the
reinforcements.</p>
<p>Many of the men, speaking from the obscurity of the crowded ranks, did not
scorn to hurl questions at their officers.</p>
<p>“Are we goin' to fight the Yankees at last?”</p>
<p>“I'd rather take my chances with the bullets than march any more.”</p>
<p>“Lead us down an' give us a chance at 'em.”</p>
<p>Colonel Leonidas Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire were
among the officers who had gone with Jackson to the verge of the cliff,
and now when they heard the impertinent but eager questions from the
massed ranks they looked at each other and smiled. It was not according to
West Point, but these were recruits and here was enthusiasm which was a
pearl beyond price.</p>
<p>General Jackson beckoned to Harry and three other young staff officers.</p>
<p>“Take glasses,” he said, “go back to the verge of the cliff, and watch for
movements on the part of the enemy. If any is made be sure that you see
it, and report it to me at once.”</p>
<p>The words were abrupt, sharp, admitting of no question or delay, and the
four fairly ran. Harry and his comrades lay down at the edge of the cliff
and swept the valley with their glasses. The great guns were still firing
at intervals of about a minute. The gunners could not see the Southern
troops drawn back behind the ridges, but Harry believed that they might be
guided by signals from men on opposite slopes. But if signalmen were there
they were hidden by the forest even from his glasses.</p>
<p>The smoke from the cannon was gathering heavily in the narrow valley, so
heavily that it began to obscure what was passing there in the Northern
army. But the four, remembering the injunction of Jackson, a man who must
be obeyed to the last and minutest detail, still sought to pierce through
the smoke both with the naked eye and with glasses. As a rift appeared
Harry saw a moving mass of men in blue. It was a great body of troops and
the sun shining through the rift glittered over bayonets and rifle
barrels. They were marching straight toward a slope which led at a rather
easy grade up the side of the mountain.</p>
<p>“They're not waiting to be attacked! They're attacking!” cried Harry,
springing to his feet and running to the point where he knew Jackson
stood. Jackson received his news, looked for himself, and then began to
push on the troops. A shout arose as the army pressed forward to meet the
enemy who were coming so boldly.</p>
<p>“We ought to beat 'em, as we have the advantage of the heights,” exclaimed
Sherburne, who was now on foot.</p>
<p>But the advantage was the other way. Those were staunch troops who were
advancing, men of Ohio and West Virginia, and while they were yet on the
lower slopes their cannon, firing over their heads, swept the crest with
shot and shell. The eager Southern youths, as invariably happens with
those firing downward, shot too high. The Northern regiments now opening
with their rifles and taking better aim came on in splendid order.</p>
<p>“What a magnificent charge!” Harry heard Sherburne exclaim.</p>
<p>The rifles by thousands were at work, and the unceasing crash sent echoes
far through the mountains. The Southerners at the edge of the cliff were
cut down by the fire of their enemy from below. Their loss was now far
greater than that of the North, and their officers sought to draw them
back from the verge, to a ridge where they could receive the charge, just
as it reached the crest and pour into them their full fire. The eager
young regiment from Georgia refused to obey.</p>
<p>“Have we come all these hundreds of miles from Georgia to run before
Yankees?” they cried, and stood there pulling trigger at the enemy, while
their own men fell fast before the bitter Northern hail.</p>
<p>Harry, too, was forced to admire the great resolution and courage with
which the Northern troops came upward, but he turned away to be ready for
any command that Jackson might give him. The general stood by a rock
attentively watching the fierce battle that was going on, but not yet
giving any order. But Harry fancied that he saw his eyes glisten as he
beheld the ardor of his troops.</p>
<p>A detachment of Virginians, posted in the rear, seeing a break in the
first line, rushed forward without orders, filled the gap and came face to
face with the men in blue. Harry thought he saw Jackson's eyes glisten
again, but he was not sure.</p>
<p>The crash of the battle increased fast. The Southern troops had no
artillery, but as the Northern charge came nearer the crest their bullets
ceased to fly over the heads of their enemies, but struck now in the
ranks. The ridges were enveloped in fire and smoke. A fresh Southern
regiment was thrown in and the valiant Northern charge broke. The brave
men of Ohio and West Virginia, although they fought desperately and
encouraged one another to stand fast, were forced slowly back down the
slope.</p>
<p>Harry and a half dozen others beside him heard Jackson say, apparently to
himself, “The battle will soon be over.” Harry knew instinctively that it
was true. He had got into the habit of believing every thing Jackson said.
The end came in fifteen minutes more, and with it came the night.</p>
<p>The soldiers in their ardor had not noticed that the long shadows were
creeping over the mountains. The sun had already sunk in a blood-red blur
behind the ridges, and as the men in blue slowly yielded the last slope
darkness which was already heavy in the defiles and ravines swept down
over the valley.</p>
<p>Jackson had won, but his men had suffered heavily and moreover he had
stood on the defense. He could not descend into the valley in the face of
the Northern resistance which was sure to be fierce and enduring. The
Northern cannon were beginning to send curving shells again over the
cliffs, sinister warnings of what the Virginians might expect if they came
down to attack. Harry and the other staff officers peering over the crest
saw many fires burning along the banks of the river. Milroy seemed to be
still bidding Jackson defiance.</p>
<p>Harry saw no preparations for a return assault. Jackson was inspecting the
ground, but his men were going over the field gathering up the wounded and
burying the dead. The Georgians had suffered terribly—most of all—for
their rash bravery, and the whole army was subdued. There was less of
exuberant youth, and more of grim and silent resolve.</p>
<p>Harry worked far into the night carrying orders here and there. The moon
came out and clothed the strange and weird battlefield in a robe of
silver. The heavens were sown with starshine, but it all seemed mystic and
unreal to the excited nerves of the boy. The mountains rose to two, three
times their real height, and the valley in which the Northern fires burned
became a mighty chasm.</p>
<p>It was one o'clock in the morning before Jackson himself left the field
and went to his headquarters at a little farmhouse on the plateau. His
faithful colored servant was waiting for him with food. He had not touched
any the whole day, but he declined it saying that he needed nothing but
sleep. He flung himself booted and clothed upon a bed and was sound asleep
in five minutes.</p>
<p>There was a little porch on one side of the house, and here Harry, who had
received no instructions from his general, camped. He rolled himself in
his cavalry cloak, lay down on the hard floor which was not hard to him,
and slept like a little child.</p>
<p>He was awakened at dawn as one often is by a presence, even though that
presence be noiseless. He felt a great unwillingness to get up. That was a
good floor on which he slept, and the cavalry cloak wrapped around him was
the finest and warmest that he had ever felt. He did not wish to abandon
either. But will triumphed. He opened his eyes and sprang quickly to his
feet.</p>
<p>Stonewall Jackson was standing beside him looking intently toward the
valley. The edge of a blazing sun barely showed in the east, and in the
west all the peaks and ridges were yet in the dusk. Morning was coming in
silence. There was no sound of battle or of the voices of men.</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon. I fear that I have overslept myself!” exclaimed Harry.</p>
<p>“Not at all,” said Jackson with a slight smile. “The others of the staff
are yet asleep. You might have come inside. A little room was left on the
floor there.”</p>
<p>“I never had a better bed and I never slept better.” The general smiled
again and gave Harry an approving glance.</p>
<p>“Soldiers, especially boys, learn quickly to endure any kind of hardship,”
he said. “Come, we'll see if the enemy is still there.”</p>
<p>Harry fancied from his tone that he believed Milroy gone, but knowing
better than to offer any opinion of his own he followed him toward the
edge of the valley. The pickets saluted as the silent figures passed. The
sun in the east was rising higher over the valley, and in the west the
peaks and ridges were coming out of the dusk.</p>
<p>The general carried his glasses slung over his shoulder, but he did not
need them. One glance into the valley and they saw that the army of Milroy
was gone. It had disappeared, horse, foot and guns, and Harry now knew
that the long row of camp fires in the night had been a show, but only a
brave show, after all.</p>
<p>The whole Southern army awoke and poured down the slopes. Yes, Milroy, not
believing that he was strong enough for another battle, had gone down the
valley. He had fought one good battle, but he would reach Banks before he
fought another.</p>
<p>The Southern troops felt that they had won the victory, and Jackson sent a
message to Richmond announcing it. Never had news come at a more opportune
time. The fortunes of the South seemed to be at the lowest ebb. Richmond
had heard of the great battle of Shiloh, the failure to destroy Grant and
the death of Albert Sidney Johnston. New Orleans, the largest and richest
city in the Confederacy, had been taken by the Northern fleet—the
North was always triumphant on the water—and the mighty army of
McClellan had landed on the Peninsula of Virginia for the advance on
Richmond.</p>
<p>It had seemed that the South was doomed, and the war yet scarcely a year
old. But in the mountains the strange professor of mathematics had struck
a blow and he might strike another. Both North and South realized anew
that no one could ever tell where he was or what he might do. The great
force, advancing by land to co-operate with McClellan, hesitated, and drew
back.</p>
<p>But Jackson's troops knew nothing then of what was passing in the minds of
men at Washington and Richmond. They were following Milroy and that
commander, wily as well as brave, was pressing his men to the utmost in
order that he might escape the enemy who, he was sure, would pursue with
all his power. He knew that he had fought with Stonewall Jackson and he
knew the character of the Southern leader.</p>
<p>Sherburne brought his horses through a defile into the valley and his men,
now mounted, led the pursuit. Jackson in his eagerness rode with him and
Harry was there, too. Behind them came the famous foot cavalry. Thus
pursuer and pursued rolled down the valley, and Harry exulted when he
looked at the path of the fleeing army. The traces were growing fresher
and fresher. Jackson was gaining.</p>
<p>But there were shrewd minds in Milroy's command. The Western men knew many
devices of battle and the trail, and Milroy was desperately bent upon
saving his force, which he knew would be overwhelmed, if overtaken by
Jackson's army. Now he had recourse to a singular device.</p>
<p>Harry, riding with Captain Sherburne, noticed that the trees were dry
despite the recent rains. On the slopes of the mountains the water ran off
fast, and the thickets were dry also. Then he saw a red light in the
forest in front of them. General Jackson saw it at the same time.</p>
<p>“What is that?” he exclaimed.</p>
<p>“It looks like a forest fire, general,” replied Sherburne.</p>
<p>“You're right, captain, and it's growing.”</p>
<p>As they galloped forward they saw the red light expand rapidly and spread
directly across their path. The whole forest was on fire. Great flames
rose up the trunks of trees and leaped from bough to bough. Sparks flew in
millions and vast clouds of smoke, picked up by the wind, were whirled in
their faces.</p>
<p>The troop of cavalry was compelled to pause and General Jackson, brushing
the smoke from his eyes, said:</p>
<p>“Clever! very clever! Milroy has put a fiery wall between us.”</p>
<p>The device was a complete success. The pursuing men in gray could pass
around the fire at points, and wait at other points for it to burn out,
but they lost so much time that their cavalry were able only to skirmish
with the Northern rear guard. Then when night came on Milroy escaped under
cover of the thick and smoky darkness.</p>
<p>Harry slept on the ground that night, but the precious cloak was around
him. He slept beyond the dawn as the pursuit was now abandoned, but when
he arose smoke was still floating over the valley and the burned forests.
He was stiff and sore, but the fierce hunger that assailed him made him
forget the aching of his bones. He had eaten nothing for thirty-six hours.
He had forgotten until then that there was such a thing as food. But the
sight of Langdon holding a piece of frying bacon on a stick afflicted him
with a raging desire.</p>
<p>“Give me that bacon, Tom,” he cried, “or I'll set the rest of the forest
on fire!”</p>
<p>“No need, you old war-horse. I was just bringing it to you. There's plenty
more where this came from. The foot cavalry took it at McDowell, and like
the wise boys they are brought it on with them. Come and join us. Your
general is already riding a bit up the valley, and, as he didn't call you,
it follows that he doesn't want you.”</p>
<p>Harry followed him gladly. The Invincibles had found a good place, and
were cooking a solid breakfast. They had bacon and ham and coffee and
bread in abundance, and for a while there was a great eating and drinking.</p>
<p>To youth which had marched and fought without food it was not a breakfast.
It was a banquet and a feast. Young frames which recover quickly responded
at once. Now and then, the musical clatter of iron spoons and knives on
iron cups and plates was broken by deep sighs of satisfaction. But they
did not speak for a while. There was lost time to be made up, and they did
not know when they would get another such chance—the odds were
always against it.</p>
<p>“Enough is enough,” said Langdon at last. “It took a lot to make enough,
but it's enough. You have to be a soldier, Harry, to appreciate what it is
to eat, sleep and rest. I'm willing to wager my uniform against a last
winter's snowball that we don't get another such meal in a month. Old Jack
won't let us.”</p>
<p>“To my mind,” said St. Clair, “we're going right into the middle of big
things. We've chased the Yankees out of the mountains into the valley, and
we'll follow hot on their heels. We've already learned enough of General
Jackson to know that he doesn't linger.”</p>
<p>“Linger!” exclaimed Langdon indignantly. “Even if there was no fighting to
be done he'd march us from one end of the valley to the other just to keep
us in practice. Hear that bugle! Off we go! Five minutes to get ready! Or
maybe it is only three!”</p>
<p>It was more than five minutes, but not much more, when the whole army was
on the march again, but the foot cavalry forgot to grumble when they came
again into their beloved valley, across which, and up and down which, they
had marched so much.</p>
<p>They threw back their shoulders, their gait became more jaunty and they
burst into cheers, at the sight of the rich rolling country, now so
beautiful in spring's heavy green. Far off the mountains rose, dark and
blue, but they were only the setting for the gem and made it more
precious.</p>
<p>“It's ours,” said Sherburne proudly to Harry. “We left it to the Yankees
for a little while, but we've come back to claim it, and if the unbidden
tenant doesn't get out at once we'll put him out. Harry, haven't you got
Virginia kinfolks? We want to adopt you and call you a Virginian.”</p>
<p>“Lots of them. My great-grandfather, Governor Ware, was born in Maryland,
but all the people on my mother's side were of Virginia origin.”</p>
<p>“I might have known it. Kentucky is the daughter of Virginia though a
large part of Kentucky takes sides with the Yankees. But that's not your
fault. Remember, for the time being you're a Virginian, one of us by right
of blood and deed.”</p>
<p>“Count me among 'em at once,” said Harry. He felt a certain pride in this
off-hand but none the less real adoption, because he knew that it was a
great army with which he marched, and it might immortalize itself.</p>
<p>“What's the news, Harry?” asked Sherburne. “You're always near Old Jack,
and if he lets anything come from under that old hat of his, which isn't
often, it's because he's willing for it to be known.”</p>
<p>“He's said this, and he doesn't mean it to be any secret. Banks is at
Strasburg with a big army, but he's fortified himself there and he doesn't
know just what to do. He doesn't for the life of him know which way
Jackson is coming, nor do I. But I do know that Ewell with his division is
going to join us at last and we'll have a sizable army.”</p>
<p>“And that means bigger things!” exclaimed Sherburne, joyously. “Between
you and me, Harry, Banks won't sleep soundly again for many a night!”</p>
<p>As they marched on the valley people came out joyously to meet them. Even
women and girls on horseback, galloping, reined in their horses to tell
them where the Union forces lay. Always they had information for Jackson,
never any for the North. Here scouts and spies were scarcely needed by the
Southern army. Before night Stonewall Jackson knew as much of his enemy as
any general needed to know.</p>
<p>They camped at dusk and Langdon, contrary to his prediction, enjoyed
another ample meal and plenty of rest. Jackson allowed no tent to be set
for himself. The night was warm and beautiful and the songs of birds came
from the trees. The general had eaten sparingly, and now he sat on a log
in deep thought. Presently he looked up and said:</p>
<p>“Lieutenant Kenton, do you and Lieutenant Dalton ride forward in that
direction and meet General Ewell. He is coming, with his staff, to see me.
Escort him to the camp.”</p>
<p>He pointed out the direction and in an instant Harry and Dalton, also of
the staff, were in the camp, following the line of that pointing finger.
They had the password and as they passed a little beyond the pickets they
saw a half dozen horsemen riding rapidly toward them in the dusk.</p>
<p>“General Ewell, is it not, sir?” said Harry, as he and Dalton gave the
salute.</p>
<p>“I'm General Ewell,” replied the foremost horseman. “Do you come from
General Jackson?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir. His camp is just before you. You can see the lights now. He has
directed us to meet you and escort you.”</p>
<p>“Then lead the way.”</p>
<p>The two young lieutenants, guiding General Ewell and his staff, were soon
inside Jackson's camp, but Harry had time to observe Ewell well. He had
already heard of him as a man of great vigor and daring. He had made a
name for judgment and dash in the Indian wars on the border. Men spoke of
him as a soldier, prompt to obey his superior and ready to take
responsibility if his superior were not there. Harry knew that Jackson
expected much of him.</p>
<p>He saw a rather slender man with wonderfully bright eyes that smiled much,
a prominent and pronounced nose and a strong chin. When he took off his
hat at the meeting with Jackson he disclosed a round bald head, which he
held on one side when he talked.</p>
<p>Jackson had risen from the log as Ewell rode up and leaped from his
magnificent horse—his horses were always of the best—and he
advanced, stretching out his hand. Ewell clasped it and the two talked.
The staffs of the two generals had withdrawn out of ear shot, but Harry
noticed that Ewell did much the greater part of the talking, his head
cocked on one side in that queer, striking manner. But Harry knew, too,
that the mind and will of Jackson were dominant, and that Ewell readily
acknowledged them as so.</p>
<p>The conference did not last long. Then the two generals shook hands again
and Ewell sprang upon his horse. Jackson beckoned to Harry.</p>
<p>“Lieutenant Kenton,” he said, “ride with General Ewell to his camp. You
will then know the way well, and he may wish to send me some quick
dispatch.”</p>
<p>Harry, nothing loath, was in the saddle in an instant, and at the wish of
General Ewell rode by his side.</p>
<p>“You have been with him long?” said Ewell.</p>
<p>“From the beginning of the campaign here, sir.”</p>
<p>“Then you were at both Kernstown and McDowell. A great general, young
man.”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir. He will march anywhere and fight anything.”</p>
<p>“That's my own impression. We've heard that his men are the greatest
marchers in the world. My own lads under him will acquire the same merit.”</p>
<p>“We know, sir, that your men are good marchers already.”</p>
<p>General Ewell laughed with satisfaction.</p>
<p>“It's true,” he said. “When I told my second in command that we were going
to march to join General Jackson he wanted to bring tents. I told him that
would load us up with a lot of tent poles and that he must bring only a
few, for the sick, perhaps. There must be no baggage, just food and
ammunition. I told 'em that when we joined General Jackson we'd have
nothing to do but eat and fight.”</p>
<p>He seemed now to be speaking to himself rather than to Harry, and the boy
said nothing. Ewell, relapsing into silence, urged his horse to a gallop
and the staff perforce galloped, too. Such a pace soon brought them to the
camp of the second army, and as they rode past the pickets Harry heard the
sound of stringed music.</p>
<p>“The Cajuns,” said one of the staff, a captain named Morton. Harry did not
know what “Cajuns” meant, but he was soon to learn. Meanwhile the sound of
the music was pleasant in his ear, and he saw that the camp, despite the
lateness of the hour, was vivid with life.</p>
<p>General Ewell gave Harry into Captain Morton's care, and walked away to a
small tent, where he was joined by several of his senior officers for a
conference. But after they had tethered their horses for the night,
Captain Morton took Harry through the camp.</p>
<p>Harry was full of eagerness and curiosity and he asked to see first the
strange “Cajuns,” those who made the music.</p>
<p>“They are Louisiana French,” said Morton, “not the descendants or the
original French settlers in that state, but the descendants of the French
by the way of Nova Scotia.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I see, the Acadians, the exiles.”</p>
<p>“Yes, that's it. The name has been corrupted into Cajuns in Louisiana.
They are not like the French of New Orleans and Baton Rouge and the other
towns. They are rural and primitive. You'll like them. Few of them were
ever more than a dozen miles from home before. They love music, and
they've got a full regimental band with them. You ought to hear it play.
Why, they'd play the heart right out of you.”</p>
<p>“I like well enough the guitars and banjos that they're playing now. Seems
to me that kind of music is always best at night.”</p>
<p>They had now come within the rim of light thrown out by the fires of the
Acadians, and Harry stood there looking for the first time at these dark,
short people, brought a thousand miles from their homes.</p>
<p>They were wholly unlike Virginians and Kentuckians. They had black eyes
and hair, and their naturally dark faces were burned yet darker by the sun
of the Gulf. Yet the dark eyes were bright and gay, sparkling with
kindliness and the love of pleasure. The guitars and banjos were playing
some wailing tune, with a note of sadness in the core of it so keen and
penetrating that it made the water come to Harry's eyes. But it changed
suddenly to something that had all the sway and lilt of the rosy South.
Men sprang to their feet and clasping arms about one another began to sway
back and forth in the waltz and the polka.</p>
<p>Harry watched with mingled amazement and pleasure. Most of the South was
religious and devout. The Virginians of the valley were nearly all staunch
Presbyterians, and Stonewall Jackson, staunchest of them all, never wanted
to fight on Sunday. The boy himself had been reared in a stern Methodist
faith, and the lightness in this French blood of the South was new to him.
But it pleased him to see them sing and dance, and he found no wrong in
it, although he could not have done it himself.</p>
<p>Captain Morton noticed Harry's close attention and he read his mind.</p>
<p>“They surprised me, too, at first,” he said, “but they're fine soldiers,
and they've put cheer into this army many a time when it needed it most.
Taylor, their commander, is a West Pointer and he's got them into
wonderful trim. They're well clothed and well shod. They never straggle
and they're just about the best marchers we have. They'll soon be rated
high among Jackson's foot cavalry.”</p>
<p>Harry left the Acadians with reluctance, and when he made the round of the
camp General Ewell, who had finished the conference, told him that he
would have no message to send that night to Jackson. He might go to sleep,
but the whole division would march early in the morning. Harry wrapped
himself again in his cloak, found a place soft with moss under a tree, and
slept with the soft May wind playing over his face and lulling him to
deeper slumber.</p>
<p>He rode the next morning with General Ewell and the whole division to join
Jackson's army. It was a trim body of men, well clad, fresh and strong,
and they marched swiftly along the turnpike, on both sides of which
Jackson was encamped further on.</p>
<p>Harry felt a personal pride in being with Ewell when the junction was to
be made. He felt that, in a sense, he was leading in this great
reinforcement himself, and he looked back with intense satisfaction at the
powerful column marching so swiftly along the turnpike.</p>
<p>They came late in the day to Jackson's pickets, and then they saw his
army, scattered through the fields on either side of the road.</p>
<p>Harry rejoiced once more in the grand appearance of the new division.
Every coat or tunic sat straight. Every shoe-lace was tied, and they
marched with the beautiful, even step of soldiers on parade. They were to
encamp beyond Jackson's old army, and as they passed along the turnpike it
was lined on either side by Jackson's own men, cheering with vigor.</p>
<p>The colonel who was in immediate charge of the encampment, a man who had
never seen General Jackson, asked Harry where he might find him. Harry
pointed to a man sitting on the top rail of a fence beside the road.</p>
<p>“But I asked for General Jackson,” said the colonel.</p>
<p>“That's General Jackson.”</p>
<p>The colonel approached and saluted. General Jackson's clothes were soiled
and dusty. His feet, encased in cavalry boots that reached beyond the
knees, rested upon a lower rail of the fence. A worn cap with a dented
visor almost covered his eyes. The rest of his face was concealed by a
heavy, dark beard.</p>
<p>“General Jackson, I believe,” said the officer, saluting.</p>
<p>“Yes. How far have those men marched?” The voice was kindly and approving.</p>
<p>“We've come twenty-six miles, sir.”</p>
<p>“Good. And I see no stragglers.”</p>
<p>“We allow no stragglers.”</p>
<p>“Better still. I haven't been able to keep my own men from straggling, and
you'll have to teach them.”</p>
<p>At that moment the Acadian band began to play, and it played the merriest
waltz it knew. Jackson gazed at it, took a lemon from his pocket and began
to suck the juice from it meditatively. The officer stood before him in
some embarrassment.</p>
<p>“Aren't they rather thoughtless for such serious work as war?” asked the
Presbyterian general.</p>
<p>“I am confident, sir, that their natural gayety will not impair their
value as soldiers.”</p>
<p>Jackson put the end of the lemon back in his mouth and drew some juice
from it. The colonel bowed and retired. Then Jackson beckoned to Harry,
who stood by.</p>
<p>“Follow him and tell him,” he said, “that the band can play as much as it
likes. I noticed, too, that it plays well.”</p>
<p>Jackson smiled and Harry hurried after the officer, who flushed with
gratification, when the message was delivered to him.</p>
<p>“I'll tell it to the men,” he said, “and they'll fight all the better for
it.”</p>
<p>That night it was a formidable army that slept in the fields on either
side of the turnpike, and in the silence and the dark, Stonewall Jackson
was preparing to launch the thunderbolt.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER IX. TURNING ON THE FOE </h2>
<p>Harry was awakened at the first shoot of dawn by the sound of trumpets. It
was now approaching the last of May and the cold nights had long since
passed. A warm sun was fast showing its edge in the east, and, bathing his
face at a brook and snatching a little breakfast, he was ready. Stonewall
Jackson was already up, and his colored servant was holding Little Sorrel
for him.</p>
<p>The army was fast forming into line, the new men of Ewell resolved to
become as famous foot cavalry as those who had been with Jackson all
along. Ewell himself, full of enthusiasm and already devoted to his chief,
was riding among them, and whenever he spoke to one of them he cocked his
head on one side in the peculiar manner that was habitual with him. Now
and then, as the sun grew warmer, he took off his hat and his bald head
gleamed under the yellow rays.</p>
<p>“Which way do you think we're going?” said the young staff officer, George
Dalton, to Harry—Dalton was a quiet youth with a good deal of the
Puritan about him and Harry liked him.</p>
<p>“I'm not thinking about it at all,” replied Harry with a laugh. “I've quit
trying to guess what our general is going to do, but I fancy that he means
to lead us against the enemy. He has the numbers now.”</p>
<p>“I suppose you're right,” said Dalton. “I've been trying to guess all
along, but I think I'll give it up now and merely follow where the general
leads.”</p>
<p>The bugles blew, the troops rapidly fell into line and marched northward
along the turnpike, the Creole band began to play again one of those
lilting waltz tunes, and the speed of the men increased, their feet rising
and falling swiftly to the rhythm of the galloping air. Jackson, who was
near the head of the column, looked back and Harry saw a faint smile pass
over his grim face. He saw the value of the music.</p>
<p>“I never heard such airs in our Presbyterian church,” said Dalton to
Harry.</p>
<p>“But this isn't a church.”</p>
<p>“No, it isn't, but those Creole tunes suit here. They put fresh life into
me.”</p>
<p>“Same here. And they help the men, too. Look how gay they are.”</p>
<p>Up went the shining sun. The brilliant blue light, shot with gold, spread
from horizon to horizon, little white clouds of vapor, tinted at the edges
with gold from the sun, floated here and there. It was beautiful May over
all the valley. White dust flew from the turnpike under the feet of so
many marching men and horses, and the wheels of cannon. Suddenly the
Georgia troops that had suffered so severely at McDowell began to sing a
verse from the Stars and Bars, and gradually the whole column joined in:</p>
<p>“Now Georgia marches to the front<br/>
And close beside her come<br/>
Her sisters by the Mexique sea<br/>
With pealing trump and drum,<br/>
Till answering back from hill and glen<br/>
The rallying cry afar,<br/>
A nation hoists the Bonnie Blue Flag<br/>
That bears a single star.”<br/></p>
<p>It was impossible not to feel emotion. The face of the most solemn
Presbyterian of them all flushed and his eyes glowed. Now the band, that
wonderful band of the Acadians, was playing the tune, and the mighty
chorus rolled and swelled across the fields. Harry's heart throbbed hard.
He was with the South, his own South, and he was swayed wholly by feeling.</p>
<p>The Acadians were leading the army. Harry saw Jackson whispering something
to a staff officer. The officer galloped forward and spoke to Taylor, the
commander of the Louisiana troops. Instantly the Acadians turned sharply
from the turnpike and walked in a diagonal line through the fields. The
whole army followed and they marched steadily northward and eastward.</p>
<p>Harry had another good and close view of the Massanuttons, now one vast
mass of dark green foliage, and it caused his thoughts to turn to Shepard.
He had no doubt that the wary and astute Northern scout was somewhere near
watching the march of Stonewall. He had secured a pair of glasses of his
own and he scanned the fields and forests now for a sight of him and his
bold horsemen. But he saw no blue uniforms, merely farmers and their wives
and children, shouting with joy at the sight of Jackson, eager to give him
information, and eager to hide it from Banks.</p>
<p>But Harry was destined to have more than another view of the Massanuttons.
Jackson marched steadily for four days, crossing the Massanuttons at the
defile, and coming down into the eastern valley. The troops were joyous
throughout the journey, although they had not the least idea for what they
were destined, and Ewell's men made good their claim to a place of equal
honor in the foot cavalry.</p>
<p>They were now in the division of the great valley known as the Luray, and
only when they stopped did Harry and his comrades of the staff learn that
the Northern army under Kenly was only ten miles away at Front Royal.</p>
<p>The preceding night had been one of great confidence, even of
light-heartedness in Washington. The worn and melancholy President felt
that a triumphant issue of the war was at hand. The Secretary of War was
more than sanguine, and the people in the city joyfully expected speedy
news of the fall of Richmond. McClellan was advancing with an overwhelming
force on the Southern capital, and the few regiments of Jackson were lost
somewhere in the mountains. In the west all things were going well under
Grant.</p>
<p>It was only a few who, recognizing that the army of Jackson was lost to
Northern eyes, began to ask questions about it. But they were laughed
down. Jackson had too few men to do any harm, wherever he might be. Nobody
suspected that at dawn Jackson, with a strong force, would be only a
little more than three score miles from the Union capital itself. Even
Banks himself, who was only half that distance from the Southern army, did
not dream that it was coming.</p>
<p>When the sun swung clear that May morning there was a great elation in
this army which had been lost to its enemies for days and which the
unknowing despised. They ate a good breakfast, and then, as the Creole
band began to play its waltzes again, they advanced swiftly on Front
Royal.</p>
<p>“We'll be attacking in two hours,” said Dalton.</p>
<p>“In less time than that, I'm thinking,” said Harry. “Look how the men are
speeding it up!”</p>
<p>The band ceased suddenly. Harry surmised that it had been stopped, in
order to suppress noise as much as possible, now that they were
approaching the enemy. Cheering and loud talking also were stopped, and
they heard now the heavy beat of footsteps, horses and men, and the rumble
of vehicles, cannon and wagons. The morning was bright and hot. A haze of
heat hung over the mountains, and to Harry the valley was more beautiful
and picturesque than ever. He had again flitting feelings of melancholy
that it should be torn so ruthlessly by war.</p>
<p>If Shepard and other Northern scouts were near, they were lax that
morning. Not a soul in the garrison at Front Royal dreamed of Jackson's
swift approach. They were soon to have a terrible awakening.</p>
<p>Harry saw Jackson raise the visor of his old cap a little, and he saw the
eyes beneath it gleam.</p>
<p>“We must be near Front Royal,” he said to Dalton.</p>
<p>“It's just beyond the woods there. It's not more than half a mile away.”</p>
<p>The army halted a moment and Jackson sent forward a long line of
skirmishers through the wood. Sherburne's cavalry were to ride just behind
them, and he dispatched Harry and Dalton with the captain. At the first
sound of the firing the whole army would rush upon Front Royal.</p>
<p>The skirmishers, five hundred strong, pressed forward through the wood.
They were sun-browned, eager fellows, every one carrying a rifle, and all
sharpshooters.</p>
<p>It seemed to Harry that the skirmishers were through the wood in an
instant, like a force of Indians bursting from ambush upon an unsuspecting
foe. The Northern pickets were driven in like leaves before a whirlwind.
The rattle and then the crash of rifles beat upon the ears, and the
Southern horsemen were galloping through the streets of the startled
village by the time the Northern commander, posted with his main force
just behind the town, knew that Jackson had emerged from the wilderness
and was upon him. Banks not dreaming of Jackson's nearness, had taken away
Kenly's cavalry, and there were only pickets to see.</p>
<p>The Northern commander was brave and capable. He drew up his men rapidly
on a ridge and planted his guns in front, but the storm was too heavy and
swift.</p>
<p>Harry saw the front of the Southern army burst into fire, and then a
deadly sleet of shell and bullets was poured upon the Northern force. He
and Dalton did not have time to rejoin Jackson, but they kept with
Sherburne's force as the group of wild horsemen swung around toward the
Northern rear, intending to cut it off.</p>
<p>Harry heard the Southern bugles playing mellow and triumphant tunes, and
they inflamed his brain. All the little pulses in his head began to beat
heavily. Millions of black specks danced before his eyes, but the air
about them was red. He began to shout with the others. The famous rebel
yell, which had in it the menacing quality of the Indian war whoop, was
already rolling from the half circle of the attacking army, as it rushed
forward.</p>
<p>Kenly hung to his ground, fighting with the courage of desperation, and
holding off for a little while the gray masses that rushed upon him. But
when he heard that the cavalry of Sherburne was already behind him, and
was about to gain a position between him and the river, he retreated as
swiftly as he could, setting fire to all his tents and stores, and
thundering in good order with his remaining force over the bridge.</p>
<p>These Northern men, New Yorkers largely, were good material, like their
brethren of Ohio and West Virginia. Despite the surprise and the
overwhelming rush of Jackson, they stopped to set fire to the bridge, and
they would have closed that avenue of pursuit had not the Acadians rushed
forward, heedless of bullets and flames, and put it out. Yet the bridge
was damaged and the Southern pursuit could cross but slowly. Kenly, seeing
his advantage, and cool and ready, drew up his men on a hill and poured a
tremendous fire upon the bridge.</p>
<p>Harry saw the daring deed of the men from the Gulf coast, and he clapped
his hands in delight. But he had only a moment's view. Sherburne was
curving away in search of a ford and all his men galloped close behind
him.</p>
<p>Near the town the river was deep and swift and the horsemen would be swept
away by it, but willing villagers running at the horses' heads led them to
fords farther down.</p>
<p>“Into the river, boys!” shouted Sherburne, as he with Harry and Dalton by
his side galloped into the stream. It seemed to Harry that the whole river
was full of horsemen in an instant, and then he saw Stonewall Jackson
himself, riding Little Sorrel into the stream.</p>
<p>Harry's horse stumbled once on the rocky bottom, but recovered his
footing, and the boy urged him on toward the bank, bumping on either side
against those who were as eager as he. He was covered with water and foam,
churned up by so many horses, but he did not notice it. In a minute his
horse put his forefeet upon the bank, pulled himself up, and then they
were all formed up by Jackson himself for the pursuit.</p>
<p>“They run! They run already!” cried Sherburne.</p>
<p>They were not running, exactly, but Kenly, always alert and cool, had seen
the passage of the ford by the Virginians, and unlimbering his guns, was
retreating in good order, but swiftly, his rear covered by the New York
cavalry.</p>
<p>Now Harry saw all the terrors of war. It was not sufficient for Jackson to
defeat the enemy. He must follow and destroy him. More of his army crossed
at the fords and more poured over the bridge.</p>
<p>The New York cavalry, despite courage and tenacity, could not withstand
the onset of superior numbers. They were compelled to give way, and Kenly
ordered his infantry, retreating on the turnpike, to turn and help them.
Jackson had not waited for his artillery, but his riflemen poured volley
after volley of bullets upon the beaten army, while his cavalry, galloping
in the fields, charged it with sabers on either flank.</p>
<p>Harry was scarcely conscious of what he was doing. He was slashing with
his sword and shooting with the rest. Sometimes his eyes were filled with
dust and smoke and then again they would clear. He heard the voices of
officers shouting to both cavalry and infantry to charge, and then there
was a confused and terrible melee.</p>
<p>Harry never remembered much of that charge, and he was glad that he did
not. He preferred that it should remain a blur in which he could not pick
out the details. He was conscious of the shock, when horse met horse and
body met body. He saw the flash of rifle and pistol shots, and the gleam
of sabers through the smoke, and he heard a continuous shouting kept up by
friend and foe.</p>
<p>Then he felt the Northern army, struck with such terrific force, giving
way. Kenly had made a heroic stand, but he could no longer support the
attacks from all sides. One of his cannon was taken and then all. He
himself fell wounded terribly. His senior officers also fell, as they
tried to rally their men, who were giving way at all points.</p>
<p>Sherburne wheeled his troop away again and charged at the Northern
cavalry, which was still in order. Harry had seen Jackson himself give the
command to the captain. It was the redoubtable commander who saw all and
understood all, who always struck, with his sword directly at the weak
point in the enemy's armor. Harry saw that eye glittering as he had never
seen it glitter before, and the command was given in words of fire that
communicated a like fire to every man in the troop.</p>
<p>The Northern cavalry cut to pieces, Kenly's whole army dissolved. The
attack was so terrific, so overwhelming, and was pushed home so hard, that
panic ran through the ranks of those brave men. They fled through the
orchards and the fields, and Jackson never ceased to urge on the pursuit,
taking whole companies here and there, and seizing scattered fugitives.</p>
<p>Ashby, with the chief body of the cavalry, galloped on ahead to a railway
station, where Pennsylvania infantry were on guard. They had just got
ready a telegraphic message to Banks for help, but his men rushed the
station before it could be sent, tore up the railroad tracks, cut the
telegraph wires, carried by storm a log house in which the Pennsylvanians
had taken refuge, and captured them all.</p>
<p>The Northern army had ceased to exist. Save for some fugitives, it had all
fallen or was in the hands of Jackson, and the triumphant cheers of the
Southerners rang over the field. Banks, at Strasburg, not far away, did
not know that Kenly's force had been destroyed. Three hours after the
attack had been made, an orderly covered with dust galloped into his camp
and told him that Kenly was pressed hard—he did not know the full
truth himself.</p>
<p>Banks, whose own force was cut down by heavy drafts to the eastward, was
half incredulous. It was impossible that Jackson could be at Front Royal.
He was fifty or sixty miles away, and the attack must be some cavalry raid
which would soon be beaten off. He sent a regiment and two guns to see
what was the matter. He telegraphed later to the Secretary of War at
Washington that a force of several thousand rebels gathered in the
mountains was pushing Kenly hard.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the victorious Southerners were spending a few moments in
enjoying their triumph. They captured great quantities of food and
clothing which Kenly had not found time to destroy, and which they
joyously divided among themselves.</p>
<p>Harry found the two colonels and all the rest of the Invincibles lying
upon the ground in the fields. Some of them were wounded, but most were
unhurt. They were merely panting from exhaustion. Colonel Leonidas Talbot
sat up when he saw Harry, and Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire also
sat up.</p>
<p>“Good afternoon, Harry,” said Colonel Talbot, politely. “It's been a warm
day.”</p>
<p>“But a victorious one, sir.”</p>
<p>“Victorious, yes; but it is not finished. I fancy that in spite of
everything we have not yet learned the full capabilities of General
Jackson, eh, Hector?”</p>
<p>“No, sir, we haven't,” replied Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire,
emphatically. “I never saw such an appetite for battle. In Mexico General
Winfield Scott would press the enemy hard, but he was not anxious to march
twenty miles and fight a battle every day.”</p>
<p>Harry found St. Clair and Langdon not far away from their chief officers.
St. Clair had brushed the dust off his clothing, but he was regarding
ruefully two bullet holes in the sleeve of his fine gray tunic.</p>
<p>“He has neither needle nor thread with which to sew up those holes,” said
Langdon, with wicked glee, “and he must go into battle again with a tunic
more holy than righteous. It's been a bad day for clothes.”</p>
<p>“A man doesn't fight any worse because he's particular about his uniform,
does he?” asked St. Clair.</p>
<p>“You don't. That's certain, old fellow,” said Langdon, clapping him on the
back. “And just think how much worse it might have been. Those bullets,
instead of merely going through your coat sleeve, might have gone through
your arm also, shattering every bone in it. Now, Harry, you ride with Old
Jack. Tell us what he means to do. Are we going to rest on our rich and
numerous laurels, or is it up and after the Yanks hot-foot?”</p>
<p>“He's not telling me anything,” replied Harry, “but I think it's safe to
predict that we won't take any long and luxurious rest. Nor will we ever
take any long and luxurious rest while we're led by Stonewall Jackson.”</p>
<p>Jackson marched some distance farther toward Strasburg, where the army of
Banks, yet unbelieving, lay, and as the night was coming on thick and
black with clouds, went into camp. But among their captured stores they
had ample food now, and tents and blankets to protect themselves from the
promised rain.</p>
<p>The Acadians, who were wonderful cooks, showed great culinary skill as
well as martial courage. They were becoming general favorites, and they
prepared all sorts of appetizing dishes, which they shared freely with the
Virginians, the Georgians and the others. Then the irrepressible band
began. In the fire-lighted woods and on the ground yet stained by the red
of battle, it played quaint old tunes, waltzes and polkas and roundelays,
and once more the stalwart Pierres and Raouls and Luciens and Etiennes,
clasping one another in their arms, whirled in wild dances before the
fires.</p>
<p>The heavy clouds opened bye and bye, and then all save the sentinels fled
to shelter. Harry and Dalton, who had been watching the dancing, went to a
small tent which had been erected for themselves and two more. Next to it
was a tent yet smaller, occupied by the commander-in-chief, and as they
passed by it they heard low but solemn tones lifted in invocation to God.
Harry could not keep from taking one fleeting glance. He saw Jackson on
his knees, and then he went quickly on.</p>
<p>The other two officers had not yet come, and Dalton and he were alone in
the tent. It was too dark inside for Harry to see Dalton's face, but he
knew that his comrade, too, had seen and heard.</p>
<p>“It will be hard to beat a general who prays,” said Dalton. “Some of our
men laugh at Jackson's praying, but I've always heard that the Puritans,
whether in England or America, were a stern lot to face.”</p>
<p>“The enemy at least won't laugh at him. I've heard that they had great fun
deriding a praying professor of mathematics, but I fancy they've quit it.
If they haven't they'll do so when they hear of Front Royal.”</p>
<p>The tent was pitched on the bare ground, but they had obtained four
planks, every one about a foot wide and six feet or so long. They were
sufficient to protect them from the rain which would run under the tent
and soak into the ground. Harry had long since learned that a tent and a
mere strip of plank were a great luxury, and now he appreciated them at
their full value.</p>
<p>He wrapped himself in the invaluable cloak, stretched his weary body upon
his own particular plank, and was soon asleep. He was awakened in the
night by a low droning sound. He did not move on his plank, but lay until
his eyes became used partially to the darkness. Then he saw two other
figures also wrapped in their cloaks and stretched on their planks, dusky
and motionless. But the fourth figure was kneeling on his plank and Harry
saw that it was Dalton, praying even as Stonewall Jackson had prayed.</p>
<p>Then Harry shut his eyes. He was not devout himself, but in the darkness
of the night, with the rain beating a tattoo on the canvas walls of the
tent, he felt very solemn. This was war, red war, and he was in the midst
of it. War meant destruction, wounds, agony and death. He might never
again see Pendleton and his father and his aunt and his cousin, Dick
Mason, and Dr. Russell and all his boyhood and school friends. It was no
wonder that George Dalton prayed. He ought to be praying himself, and
lying there and not stirring he said under his breath a simple prayer that
his mother had taught him when he was yet a little child.</p>
<p>Then he fell asleep again, and awoke no more until the dawn. But while
Harry slept the full dangers of his situation became known to Banks far
after midnight at Strasburg. The regiment and the two guns that he had
sent down the turnpike to relieve Kenly had been fired upon so incessantly
by Southern pickets and riflemen that they were compelled to turn back.
Everywhere the Northern scouts and skirmishers were driven in. Despite the
darkness and rain they found a wary foe whom they could not pass.</p>
<p>It was nearly two o'clock in the morning when Banks was aroused by a staff
officer who said that a man insisted upon seeing him. The man, the officer
said, claimed to have news that meant life or death, and he carried on his
person a letter from President Lincoln, empowering him to go where he
pleased. He had shown that letter, and his manner indicated the most
intense and overpowering anxiety.</p>
<p>Banks was surprised, and he ordered that the stranger be shown in at once.
A tall man, wrapped in a long coat of yellow oilcloth, dripping rain, was
brought into the room. He held a faded blue cap in his hand, and the
general noticed that the hand was sinewy and powerful. The front of the
coat was open a little at the top, disclosing a dingy blue coat. His high
boots were spattered to the tops with mud.</p>
<p>There was something in the man's stern demeanor and his intense, burning
gaze that daunted Banks, who was a brave man himself. Moreover, the
general was but half dressed and had risen from a warm couch, while the
man before him had come in on the storm, evidently from some great danger,
and his demeanor showed that he was ready for other and instant dangers.
For the moment the advantage was with the stranger, despite the difference
in rank.</p>
<p>“Who are you?” asked the general.</p>
<p>“My name, sir, is Shepard, William J. Shepard. I am a spy or a scout in
the Union service. I have concealed upon me a letter from President
Lincoln, empowering me to act in such a capacity and to go where I please.
Do you wish to see it, sir?”</p>
<p>Shepard spoke with deference, but there was no touch of servility in his
tone.</p>
<p>“Show me the letter,” said Banks.</p>
<p>Shepard thrust a hand into his waistcoat and withdrew a document which he
handed to the general. Banks glanced through it rapidly.</p>
<p>“It's from Lincoln,” he said; “I know that handwriting, but it would not
be well for you to be captured with that upon you.”</p>
<p>“If I were about to be captured I should destroy it.”</p>
<p>“Why have you come here? What message do you bring?”</p>
<p>“The worst possible message, sir. Stonewall Jackson and an army of twenty
thousand men will be upon you in the morning.”</p>
<p>“What! What is this you say! It was only a cavalry raid at Front Royal!”</p>
<p>“It was no cavalry raid at Front Royal, sir! It was Jackson and his whole
army! I ought to have known, sir! I should have got there and have warned
Kenly in time, but I could not! My horse was killed by a rebel
sharpshooter in the woods as I was approaching! I could not get up in
time, but I saw what happened!”</p>
<p>“Kenly! Kenly, where is he?”</p>
<p>“Mortally wounded or dead, and his army is destroyed! They made a brave
stand, even after they were defeated at the village. They might have got
away had anybody but Jackson been pursuing. But he gave them no chance.
They were enveloped by cavalry and infantry, and only a few escaped.”</p>
<p>“Good God!” exclaimed Banks, aghast.</p>
<p>“Nor is that all, sir. They are close at hand! They will attack you at
dawn! They are in full force! Ewell's army has joined Jackson and Jackson
leads them all! We must leave Strasburg at once or we are lost!”</p>
<p>Shepard's manner admitted of no doubt. Banks hurried forth and sent
officers to question the pickets. All the news they brought was
confirmatory. Even in the darkness and rain shots had been fired at them
by the Southern skirmishers. Banks sent for all of his important officers,
the troops were gathered together, and leaving a strong rear-guard, they
began a rapid march toward Winchester, which Jackson had loved so well.</p>
<p>Swiftness and decision now on the other side had saved the Northern army
from destruction. Banks did not realize until later, despite the urgent
words of Shepard, how formidable was the danger that threatened him.
Jackson, despite all the disadvantages of the darkness and the rain,
wished to get his army up before daylight, but the deep mud formed by the
pouring rain enabled Banks to slip away from the trap.</p>
<p>The Southern troops, moreover, were worn to the bone. They had come ninety
miles in five days over rough roads, across streams without bridges, and
over a high mountain, besides fighting a battle of uncommon fierceness.
There were limits even to the endurance of Jackson's foot cavalry.</p>
<p>Harry was first awake in the little tent. He sat up and looked at the
other three on their planks who were sleeping as if they would never wake
any more. A faint tint of dawn was appearing at the open flap of the door.
The four had lain down dressed fully, and Harry, as he sprang from his
board, cried:</p>
<p>“Up, boys, up! The army is about to move!”</p>
<p>The three also sprang to their feet, and went outside. Although the dawn
was as yet faint, the army was awakening rapidly, or rather was being
awakened. The general himself appeared a moment later, dressed fully, the
end of a lemon in his mouth, his face worn and haggard by incredible
hardships, but his eyes full of the strength that comes from an
unconquerable will.</p>
<p>He nodded to Harry, Dalton and the others.</p>
<p>“Five minutes for breakfast, gentlemen,” he said, “and then join me on
horseback, ready for the pursuit of the enemy!”</p>
<p>The few words were like the effects of a galvanic battery on Harry.
Peculiarly susceptible to mental power, Jackson was always a stimulus to
him. Close contact revealed to him the fiery soul that lay underneath the
sober and silent exterior, and, in his own turn, he caught fire from it.
Youthful, impressionable and extremely sensitive to great minds and great
deeds, Stonewall Jackson had become his hero, who could do no wrong.</p>
<p>Five minutes for the hasty breakfast and they were in the saddle just
behind Jackson. The rain had ceased, the sun was rising in a clear sky,
the country was beautiful once more, and down a long line the Southern
bugles were merrily singing the advance. Very soon scattered shots all
along their front showed that they were in touch with the enemy.</p>
<p>The infantry and cavalry left by Banks as a curtain between himself and
Jackson did their duty nobly that morning. The pursuit now led into a
country covered with forest, and using every advantage of such shelter,
the Northern companies checked the Southern advance as much as was humanly
possible. Many of them were good riflemen, particularly those from Ohio,
and the cavalry of Ashby, Funsten and Sherburne found the woods very warm
for them. Horses were falling continually, and often their riders fell
with them to stay.</p>
<p>Harry, in the center with the commander, heard the heavy firing to both
right and left, and he glanced often at Jackson. He saw his lips move as
if he were talking to himself, and he knew that he was disappointed at
this strong resistance. Troops could move but slowly through woods in the
face of a heavy rifle fire, and meanwhile Banks with his main body was
escaping to Winchester.</p>
<p>“Mr. Kenton,” said Jackson sharply, “ride to General Ashby and tell him to
push the enemy harder! We must crush at least a portion of this army! It
is vital!”</p>
<p>Harry was off as soon as the last words left the general's lips. He
spurred his horse from the turnpike, leaped a low rail fence, and galloped
across a field toward a forest, where Ashby's cavalry were advancing and
the rifles were cracking fast.</p>
<p>Bullets from the Northern skirmishers flew over him and beside him, as he
flew about the field, but he thought little of them. He was growing so
thoroughly inured to war that he seldom realized the dangers until they
were passed.</p>
<p>Neither he nor his horse was hurt—their very speed, perhaps, saved
them and they entered the wood, where the Southern cavalry were riding.</p>
<p>“General Ashby!” he cried to the first man he saw. “Where is he? I've a
message from General Jackson!”</p>
<p>The soldier pointed to a figure on horseback but a short distance away,
and Harry galloped up.</p>
<p>“General Jackson asks you to press the enemy harder!” he said to Ashby.
“He wishes him to be driven in rapidly!”</p>
<p>A faint flush came into the brown cheeks of Ashby.</p>
<p>“He shall be obeyed,” he replied. “We're about to charge in full force!
Hold, young man! You can't go back now! You must charge with us!”</p>
<p>He put his hand on Harry's rein as he spoke, and the boy saw that a strong
force of Northern cavalry had now appeared in the fields directly between
him and his general. Ashby turned the next instant to a bugler at his
elbow and exclaimed fiercely:</p>
<p>“Blow! Blow with all your might!”</p>
<p>The piercing notes of the charge rang forth again and again. Ashby,
shouting loudly and continuously and waving his sword above his head,
galloped forward. His whole cavalry force galloped with him and swept down
upon the defenders.</p>
<p>Nor did Ashby lack support. The Acadians led by Taylor swung forward on a
run, and a battery, coming at the double quick, unlimbered and opened
fire. Jackson had directed all, he had brought up the converging lines,
and the whole Northern rear guard, two thousand cavalry, some infantry and
a battery, were caught. Just before them lay the little village of
Middletown, and in an instant they were driven into its streets, where
they were raked by shot and shell from the cannon, while the rifles of the
cavalry and of the Louisiana troops swept them with bullets.</p>
<p>Again the Northern soldiers, brave and tenacious though they might be,
could make no stand against the terrible rush of Jackson's victorious and
superior numbers. They had no such leading as their foes. The man, the
praying professor, was proving himself everything.</p>
<p>As at Front Royal, the Northern force was crushed. It burst from the
village in fragments, and fled in many directions. But Jackson urged on
the pursuit. Ashby's cavalry charged again and again, taking prisoners
everywhere.</p>
<p>The people of Middletown, as red-hot for the South as were those of Front
Royal, rushed from their houses and guided the victors along the right
roads. They pointed where two batteries and a train of wagons were fleeing
toward Winchester, and Ashby, with his cavalry, Harry still at his elbow,
raced in pursuit.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER X. WINCHESTER </h2>
<p>Ashby's troopers put the armed guard of the wagons to flight in an
instant, and then they seized the rich pillage in these wagons. They were
not yet used to the stern discipline of regular armies and Ashby strove in
vain to bring most of them back to the pursuit of the flying enemy. Harry
also sought to help, but they laughed at him, and he had not yet come to
the point where he could cut down a disobedient soldier. Nor had the
soldiers reached the point where they would suffer such treatment from an
officer. Had Harry tried such a thing it is more than likely that he would
have been cut down in his turn.</p>
<p>But the delay and similar delays elsewhere helped the retreating Northern
army. Banks, feeling that the pursuit was not now so fierce, sent back a
strong force with artillery under a capable officer, Gordon, to help the
rear. The scattered and flying detachments also gathered around Gordon and
threw themselves across the turnpike.</p>
<p>Harry felt the resistance harden and he saw the pursuit of the Southern
army slow up. The day, too, was waning. Shadows were already appearing in
the east and if Jackson would destroy Banks' army utterly he must strike
quick and hard. Harry at that moment caught sight of the general on the
turnpike, on Little Sorrel, the reins lying loose on the horse's neck, his
master sitting erect, and gazing at the darkening battlefield which was
spread out before him.</p>
<p>Harry galloped up and saluted.</p>
<p>“I could not come back at once, sir,” he said, “because the enemy was
crowded in between Ashby and yourself.”</p>
<p>“But you've come at last. I was afraid you had fallen.”</p>
<p>Harry's face flushed gratefully. He knew now that Stonewall Jackson would
have missed him.</p>
<p>“If the night were only a little further away,” continued Jackson, “we
could get them all! But the twilight is fighting for them! And they fight
for themselves also! Look, how those men retreat! They do well for troops
who were surprised and routed not so long ago!”</p>
<p>He spoke in a general way to his staff, but his tone expressed decided
admiration. Harry felt again that the core of the Northern resistance was
growing harder and harder. The hostile cannon blazed down the road, and
the men as they slowly retired sent sheets of rifle bullets at their
pursuers. Detachments of their flying cavalry were stopped, reformed on
the flanks, and had the temerity to charge the victors more than once.</p>
<p>Harry did not notice now that the twilight was gone and the sun had sunk
behind the western mountains. The road between pursuer and pursued was
lighted up by the constant flashes of cannon and rifles, and at times he
fancied that he could see the vengeful and threatening faces of those whom
he followed, but it was only fancy, fancy bred by battle and its
excitement.</p>
<p>The pursued crossed a broad marshy creek, the Opequon, and suddenly formed
in line of battle behind it with the cavalry on their flanks. The infantry
poured in heavier volleys than before and their horsemen, charging
suddenly upon a Virginia regiment that was trying to cross, sent it back
in rapid retreat.</p>
<p>After the great volleys it was dark for a moment or two and then Harry saw
that General Jackson and his staff were sitting alone on their horses on
the turnpike. The Northern rifles flashed again on the edge of the creek,
and from a long stone fence, behind which they had also taken refuge for a
last stand.</p>
<p>Harry and his comrades urged Jackson off the turnpike, where he was a fair
target for the rifles whenever there was light, and into the bushes beside
it. They were just in time, as the night was illuminated an instant later
by cannon flashes and then a shower of bullets swept the road where
Jackson and his staff had been.</p>
<p>Harry thought that they would stop now, but he did not yet know fully his
Stonewall Jackson. He ordered up another Virginia regiment, which,
reckless of death, charged straight in front, crossed the creek and drove
the men in blue out of their position.</p>
<p>Yet the Northern troops, men from Massachusetts, refused to be routed.
They fell back in good order, carrying their guns with them, and stopping
at intervals to fire with cannon and rifles at their pursuers. Jackson and
his staff spurred through the Opequon. Water and mud flew in Harry's face,
but he did not notice them. He was eager to be up with the first, because
Jackson was still urging on the pursuit, even far into the night. Banks
with his main force had escaped him for the time, but he did not mean that
the Northern commander should make his retreat at leisure.</p>
<p>Harry had never passed through such a night. It contained nothing but
continuous hours of pursuit and battle. The famous foot cavalry had
marched nearly twenty miles that day, they had fought a hard combat that
afternoon, and they were still fighting. But Jackson allowed not a
moment's delay. He was continually sending messengers to regiments and
companies to hurry up, always to hurry up, faster, and faster and yet
faster.</p>
<p>Harry carried many such messages. In the darkness and the confusion his
clothing was half torn off him by briars and bushes. His horse fell twice,
stumbling into gulleys, but fortunately neither he nor his rider was
injured. Often he was compelled to rein up suddenly lest he ride over the
Southern lads themselves. All around him he heard the panting of men
pushed to the last ounce of their strength, and often there was swearing,
too. Once in the darkness he heard the voice of a boy cry out:</p>
<p>“Oh, Lord, have mercy on me and let me go to Hades! The Devil will have
mercy on me, but Stonewall Jackson never will!”</p>
<p>Harry did not laugh, nor did he hear anyone else laugh. He had expressed
the opinion that many of them held at that moment. Stonewall Jackson was
driving them on in the darkness and the light that he furnished them was a
flaming sword. It was worse to shirk and face him, than it was to go on
and face the cannon and rifles of the enemy.</p>
<p>They called upon their reserves of strength for yet another ounce, and it
came. The pursuit thundered on, through the woods and bushes and across
the hills and valleys, but the men in blue, in spite of everything,
retained their ranks on the turnpike, retreated in order, and facing at
intervals, sent volley after volley against the foe. It was impossible for
the Southern army to ride them down or destroy them with cannon and rifle.</p>
<p>Harry came back about midnight from one of his messages, to Jackson, who
was again riding on the turnpike. Most of his staff were gone on like
errands, but General Taylor who led the Acadians was now with him. Off in
front the rifles were flashing, and again and again, bullets whistled near
them. Harry said nothing but fell in behind Jackson and close to him to
await some new commission.</p>
<p>They heard the thunder of a horse's hoofs behind them, and a man galloped
up, he as well as his horse breathing hard.</p>
<p>He was the chief quartermaster of the army, and Jackson recognized him at
once, despite the dark.</p>
<p>“Where are the wagon trains?” exclaimed Jackson, shouting forth his words.</p>
<p>“They're far behind. They were held up by a bad road in the Luray valley.
We did our best, sir,” replied the officer, his voice trembling with
weariness and nervousness.</p>
<p>“And the ammunition wagons, where are they?”</p>
<p>The voice was stern, even accusing, but the officer met Jackson's gaze
firmly.</p>
<p>“They are all right, sir,” he replied. “I sacrificed the other wagons for
them, though. They're at hand.”</p>
<p>“You have done well, sir,” said Jackson, and Harry thought he saw him
smile. No food for his veterans, but plenty of powder. It was exactly what
would appeal to Stonewall Jackson.</p>
<p>“Supply more powder and bullets to the men,” said Jackson presently. “Keep
on pushing the enemy! Never stop for a moment.”</p>
<p>Harry mechanically put his hand in his pocket, why he did not know, but he
felt a piece of bread and meat that he had put there in the morning. He
fingered the foreign substance a moment, and it occurred to him that it
was good to eat. It occurred to him next that he had not eaten anything
since morning, and this body of his, which for the time being seemed to be
dissevered from mind, might be hungry.</p>
<p>He took out the food and looked at it. It was certainly good to the eyes,
and the body was not so completely dissevered after all, as it began to
signal the mind that it was, in very truth, hungry. He was about to raise
the food to his lips and then he remembered.</p>
<p>Spurring forward a little he held out the bread and meat to Jackson.</p>
<p>“It's cold and hard, sir,” he said, “but you'll find it good.”</p>
<p>“It's thoughtful of you,” said Jackson. “I'll take half and see that you
eat the rest. Give none of it to this hungry horde around me. They're able
to forage for themselves.”</p>
<p>Jackson ate his half and Harry his. That reminded most of the officers
that they had food also, and producing it they divided it and fell to with
an appetite. As they ate, a shell from one of the retreating Northern
batteries burst almost over their heads and fragments of hot metal struck
upon the hard road. They ate on complacently. When Jackson had finished
his portion he took out one of his mysterious lemons and began to suck the
end of it.</p>
<p>Midnight was now far behind and the pursuit never halted. One of the
officers remarked jokingly that he had accepted an invitation to take
breakfast on the Yankee stores in Winchester the next morning. Jackson
made no comment. Harry a few minutes later uttered a little cry.</p>
<p>“What is it?” asked Jackson.</p>
<p>“We're coming upon our old battlefield of Kernstown. I know those hills
even in the dark.”</p>
<p>“So we are. You have good eyes, boy. It's been a long march, but here we
are almost back in Winchester.”</p>
<p>“The enemy are massing in front, sir,” said Dalton. “It looks as if they
meant to make another stand.”</p>
<p>The Massachusetts troops, their hearts bitter at the need to retreat, were
forming again on a ridge behind Kernstown, and the Pennsylvanians and
others were joining them. Their batteries opened heavily on their
pursuers, and the night was lighted again with the flame of many cannon
and rifles.</p>
<p>But their efforts were vain against the resistless advance of Jackson. The
peal of the Southern trumpets was heard above cannon and rifles, always
calling upon the men to advance, and, summoning their strength anew, they
hurled themselves upon the Northern position.</p>
<p>Fighting hard, but unable to turn the charge, the men in blue were driven
on again, leaving more prisoners and more spoil in the hands of their
pursuers. The battle at three o'clock in the morning lasted but a short
time.</p>
<p>The sound of the retreating column, the footsteps, the hoof-beats and the
roll of the cannon, died away down the turnpike. But the sound of the army
marching in pursuit died, also. Jackson's men could call up no further
ounce of strength. The last ounce had gone long ago. Many of them, though
still marching and at times firing, were in a mere daze. The roads swam
past them in a dark blur and more than one babbled of things at home.</p>
<p>It would soon be day and there was Winchester, where the kin of so many of
them lived, that Winchester they had left once, but to which they were now
coming back as conquerors, conquerors whose like had not been seen since
the young Napoleon led his republican troops to the conquest of Italy. No,
those French men were not as good as they. They could not march so long
and over such roads. They could not march all day and all night, too,
fighting and driving armies of brave men before them as they fought. Yes,
the Yankees were brave men! They were liars who said they wouldn't fight!
If you didn't believe it, all you had to do was to follow Stonewall
Jackson and see!</p>
<p>Such thoughts ran in many a young head in that army and Harry's, too, was
not free from them, although it was no new thing to him to admit that the
Yankees could and would fight just as well as the men of his South. The
difference in the last few days lay in the fact that the Southern army was
led by a man while the Northern army was led by mere men.</p>
<p>The command to halt suddenly ran along the lines of Jackson's troops, and,
before it ceased to be repeated, thousands were lying prostrate in the
woods or on the grass. They flung themselves down just as they were,
reckless of horses or wagons or anything else. Why should they care? They
were Jackson's men. They had come a hundred miles, whipping armies as they
came, and they were going to whip more. But now they meant to rest and
sleep a little while, and they would resume the whipping after sunrise.</p>
<p>It was but a little while until dawn and they lay still. Harry, who had
kept his eyes open, felt sorry for them as they lay motionless in the
chill of the dawn, like so many dead men.</p>
<p>Jackson himself took neither sleep nor rest. Without even a cloak to keep
off the cold of dawn, he walked up and down, looking at the silent ranks
stretched upon the ground, or going forward a little to gaze in the
direction of Winchester. Nothing escaped his eye, and he heard everything.
Dalton, too, had refused to lie down and he stood with Harry. The two
gazed at the sober figure walking slowly to and fro.</p>
<p>“He begins to frighten me,” whispered Dalton. “He now seems to me at
times, Harry, not to be human, or rather more than human. It has been more
than a day and night now since he has taken a second of rest, and he
appears to need none.”</p>
<p>“He is human like the rest of us, but the flame in him burns stronger. He
gets cold and hungry and tired just as we do, but his will carries him on
all the same.”</p>
<p>“I'm thankful that I fight with him and not against him,” said Dalton
earnestly.</p>
<p>“Yes, and you're going to march again with him in five minutes. See the
gray blur in the east, George. It's the dawn and Jackson never waits on
the morning.”</p>
<p>Jackson was already giving the order for the men to awake and march forth
to battle. It seemed to most of them that they had closed their eyes but a
minute before. They rose, half awake, without food, cold, and stiff from
the frightful exertions of the day and night before, and advanced
mechanically in line.</p>
<p>The sun again was yellow and bright in a clear blue sky, and soon the day
would be warm. As they heard the sound of the trumpets they shook sleep
wholly from their eyes, and, as they moved, much of the soreness went from
their bones. Not far before them was Winchester.</p>
<p>Banks was in Winchester with his army. The fierce pursuit of the night
before had filled him with dismay, but with the morning he recalled his
courage and resolved to make a victorious stand with the valiant troops
that he led. Many of his officers told him how these men had fought
Jackson all through the night, and he found abundant cause for courage.</p>
<p>Harry and Dalton sprang into the saddle again, and, as they rode with
Jackson, they saw that the whole Southern army was at hand. Ewell was
there and the cavalry and the Acadians, their band saluting the morning
with a brave battle march. It sent the blood dancing through Harry's
veins. He forgot his immense exertions, dangers and hardships and that he
had had no sleep in twenty-four hours.</p>
<p>Before him lay the enemy. It was no longer Jackson who retreated before
overwhelming numbers. He had the larger force now, at least where the
battle was fought, and although the Northern troops in the valley exceeded
him three or four to one, he was with his single army destroying their
detached forces in detail.</p>
<p>General Jackson, General Taylor and several other high officers were just
in front of the first Southern line, and Harry and Dalton sat on their
horses a few yards in the rear. The two generals were examining the
Northern position minutely through their glasses, and the chief, turning
presently to Harry, said:</p>
<p>“You have young and strong eyes. Tell me what you can see.”</p>
<p>Harry raised the splendid pair of glasses that he had captured in one of
the engagements and took a long, careful look.</p>
<p>“I can see west of the turnpike,” he said, “at least four or five
regiments and a battery of eight big guns. I think, too, that there is a
force of cavalry behind them. On the right, sir, I see stone fences and
the windings of the creeks with large masses of infantry posted behind
them.”</p>
<p>He spoke modestly, but with confidence.</p>
<p>“Your eyesight agrees with mine,” said Jackson. “We outnumber them, but
they have the advantage of the defense. But it shall not avail them.”</p>
<p>He spoke to himself rather than to the others, but Harry heard every word
he said, and he already felt the glow of the victory that Jackson had
promised. He now considered it impossible for Jackson to promise in vain.</p>
<p>The sun was rising on another brilliant morning, and the two armies that
had been fighting all through the dark now stood face to face in full
force in the light. Behind the Northern army was Winchester in all the
throes of anxiety or sanguine hope.</p>
<p>The people had heard two or three days before that Jackson was fighting
his way back toward the north, winning wherever he fought. They had heard
in the night the thunder of his guns coming, always nearer, and the
torrents of fugitives in the dark had told them that the Northern army was
pushed hard. Now in the morning they were looking eagerly southward,
hoping to see Jackson's gray legions driving the enemy before him. But it
was yet scarcely full dawn, and for a while they heard nothing.</p>
<p>Jackson waited a little and scanned the field again. The morning had now
come in the west as well as in the east, and he saw the strong Northern
artillery posted on both sides of the turnpike, threatening the Southern
advance.</p>
<p>“We must open with the cannon,” he said, and he dispatched Harry and
Dalton to order up the guns.</p>
<p>The Southern batteries were pushed forward, and opened with a terrific
crash on their enemy, telling the waiting people in Winchester that the
battle had begun. The infantry and cavalry on either side, eager despite
their immense exertions and loss of rest and lack of food, were held back
by their officers, while the artillery combat went on.</p>
<p>Jackson, anxious to see the result, rode a little further forward, and the
group of staff officers, of course, went with him. Some keen-eyed Northern
gunner picked them out, and a shell fell near. Then came another yet
nearer, and when it burst it threw dirt all over them.</p>
<p>“A life worth so much as General Jackson's should not be risked this way,”
whispered Dalton to Harry, “but I don't dare say anything to him.”</p>
<p>“Nor do I, and if we did dare he'd pay no attention to us. Our gunners
don't seem to be driving their gunners away. Do you notice that, George?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I do and so does General Jackson. I can see him frowning.”</p>
<p>The Northern batteries, nearly always of high quality, were doing valiant
service that morning. The three batteries on the left of the turnpike and
another of eight heavy rifled guns on the right, swept the whole of
Jackson's front with solid shot, grape and shell. The Southern guns,
although more numerous, were unable to crush them. The batteries of the
South were suffering the more. One of them was driven back with the loss
of half its men and horses. At another every officer was killed.</p>
<p>“They outshoot us,” said Dalton to Harry, “and they make a splendid stand
for men who have been kept on the run for two days and nights.”</p>
<p>“So they do,” said Harry, “but sooner or later they'll have to give way. I
heard General Jackson say that we would win a victory.”</p>
<p>Dalton glanced at him.</p>
<p>“So you feel that way, too,” he said very seriously. “I got the belief
some time ago. If he says we'll win we'll win. His prediction settles it
in my mind.”</p>
<p>“There's a fog rising from the creek,” said Harry, “and it's growing
heavier. I think Ewell was to march that way with his infantry and it will
hold him back. Chance is against us.”</p>
<p>“His guns have been out of action, but there they come again! I can't see
them, but I can hear them through the mist.”</p>
<p>“And here goes the main force on our left. Stonewall is about to strike.”</p>
<p>Harry had discovered the movement the moment it was begun. The whole
Stonewall brigade, the Acadians and other regiments making a formidable
force, moved to the left and charged. Gordon, Banks' able assistant, threw
in fresh troops to meet the Southern rush, and they fired almost point
blank in the faces of the men in gray. Harry, riding forward with the
eager Jackson, saw many fall, but the Southern charge was not checked for
a moment. The men, firing their rifles, leaped the stone fences and
charged home with the bayonet. The Northern regiments were driven back in
disorder and their cavalry sweeping down to protect them, were met by such
a sleet of bullets that they, too, were driven back.</p>
<p>Now all the Southern regiments came up. Infantry, cavalry and artillery
crossed the creek and the ridges and formed in a solid line which nothing
could resist. The enemy, carrying away what cannon he could, was driven
swiftly before them. The rebel yell, wild and triumphant, swelled from ten
thousand throats as Jackson's army rushed forward, pursuing the enemy into
Winchester.</p>
<p>Harry was shouting with the rest. He couldn't help it. The sober Dalton
had snatched off his cap, and he, too, was shouting. Then Harry saw
Jackson himself giving way to exultation, for the first time. He was back
at Winchester which he loved so well, he had defeated the enemy before it,
and now he was about to chase him through its streets. He spurred his
horse at full speed down a rocky hill, snatched off his cap, whirled it
around his head and cried at the top of his voice again and again:</p>
<p>“Chase them to the Potomac! Chase them to the Potomac!”</p>
<p>Harry and Dalton, hearing the cry, took it up and shouted it, too. Before
them was a vast bank of smoke and dust, shot with fire, and the battle
thundered as it rolled swiftly into Winchester. The Northern officers,
still strove to prevent a rout. They performed prodigies of valor. Many of
them fell, but the others, undaunted, still cried to the men to turn and
beat off the foe.</p>
<p>Winchester suddenly shot up from the dust and smoke. The battle went on in
the town more fiercely than ever. Torrents of shell and bullets swept the
narrow streets, but many of the women did not hesitate to appear at the
windows and shout amid all the turmoil and roar of battle cheers and
praise for those whom they considered their deliverers. Over all rose the
roar and flame of a vast conflagration where Banks had set his storehouses
on fire, but the women cheered all the more when they saw it.</p>
<p>Harry did his best to keep up with his general, but Jackson still seemed
to be aflame with excitement. He was in the very front of the attack and
he cried to his men incessantly to push on. It was not enough to take
Winchester. They must follow the beaten army to the Potomac.</p>
<p>Harry had a vision of flame-swept streets, of the whizzing of bullets and
shell, of men crowded thick between the houses, and of the faces of women
at windows, handkerchiefs and veils in their hands. Before him was a red
mist sown with sparks, but every minute or two the mist was rent open by
the blast of a cannon, and then the fragments of shell whistled again
about his ears. He kept his eyes on Jackson, endeavoring to follow him as
closely as possible.</p>
<p>He heard suddenly a cry behind him. He saw Dalton's horse falling, and
then Dalton and the horse disappeared. He felt a catch at the heart, but
it was not a time to remember long. The Southern troops were still pouring
forward driving hard on the Northern resistance.</p>
<p>He heard a moment or two later a voice by his side and there was Dalton
again mounted.</p>
<p>“I thought you were gone!” Harry shouted.</p>
<p>“I was gone for a minute but it was only my horse that stayed. He was shot
through the heart but I caught another—plenty of riderless ones are
galloping about—and here I am.”</p>
<p>The houses and the narrow streets offered some support to the defense of
Banks, but he was gradually driven through the town and out into the
fields beyond. Then the women, careless of bullets, came out of the houses
and weeping and cheering urged on the pursuit. It always seemed to Harry
that the women of this section hated the North more than the men did, and
now it was in very fact and deed the fierce women of the South cheering on
their men.</p>
<p>He came in the fields into contact with the Invincibles. St. Clair was on
foot, his horse killed, but Langdon was still riding, although there was a
faint trickle of blood from his shoulder. Some grim demon seized him as he
saw Harry.</p>
<p>“We said we were coming back to Winchester,” he shouted in his comrade's
ear, “and we have come, but we don't stay. Harry, how long does Old Jack
expect us to march and fight without stopping?”</p>
<p>“Until you get through.”</p>
<p>Then the Invincibles, curving a little to the right, were lost in the
flame and smoke, and the pursuit, Jackson continually urging it, swept on.
He seemed to Harry to be all fire. He shouted again and again. “We must
follow them to the Potomac! To the Potomac! To the Potomac!” He sent his
staff flying to every regimental commander with orders. He had the horses
cut from the artillery and men mounted on them to continue the pursuit. He
inquired continually for the cavalry. Harry, after returning from his
second errand with orders, was sent on a third to Ashby. There was no time
to write any letter. He was to tell him to come up with cavalry and attack
the Federal rear with all his might.</p>
<p>Harry found Ashby far away on the right, and with but fifty men. The rest
had been scattered. He galloped back to his general and reported. He saw
Jackson bite his lip in annoyance, but he said nothing. Harry remained by
his side and the chase went on through the fields. Winchester was left out
of sight behind, but the crashing of the rifles and the shouts of the
troopers did not cease.</p>
<p>The Northern army had not yet dissolved. Although many commands were
shattered and others destroyed, the core of it remained, and, as it
retreated, it never ceased to strike back. Harry saw why Jackson was so
anxious to bring up his cavalry. A strong charge by them and the fighting
half of the Northern force would be split asunder. Then nothing would be
left but to sweep up the fragments.</p>
<p>But Jackson's men had reached the limit of human endurance. They were not
made of steel as their leader was, and the tremendous exultation of spirit
that had kept them up through battle and pursuit began to die. Their
strength, once its departure started, ebbed fast. Their knees crumpled
under them and the weakest fell unwounded in the fields. The gaps between
them and the Northern rear-guard widened, and gradually the flying army of
Banks disappeared among the hills and woods.</p>
<p>Banks, deeming himself lucky to have saved a part of his troops, did not
stop until he reached Martinsburg, twenty-two miles north of Winchester.
There he rested a while and resumed his flight, other flying detachments
joining him as he went. He reached the Potomac at midnight with less than
half of his army, and boats carried the wearied troops over the broad
river behind which they found refuge.</p>
<p>Most of the victors meanwhile lay asleep in the fields north of
Winchester, but others had gone back to the town and were making an
equitable division of the Northern stores among the different regiments.
Harry and Dalton were sent with those who went to the town. On their way
Harry saw St. Clair and Langdon lying under an apple tree, still and
white. He thought at first they were dead, but stopping a moment he saw
their chests rising and falling with regular motion, and he knew that they
were only sleeping. The whiteness of their faces was due to exhaustion.</p>
<p>Feeling great relief he rode on and entered the exultant town. He marked
many of the places that he had known before, the manse where the good
minister lived, the churches and the colonnaded houses, in more than one
of which he had passed a pleasant hour.</p>
<p>Here Harry saw people that he knew. They could not do enough for him. They
wanted to overwhelm him with food, with clothes, with anything he wanted.
They wanted him to tell over and over again of that wonderful march of
theirs, how they had issued suddenly from the mountains in the wake of the
flying Milroy, how they had marched down the valley winning battle after
battle, marching and fighting without ceasing, both by day and by night.</p>
<p>He was compelled to decline all offers of hospitality save food, which he
held in his hands and ate as he went about his work. When he finished he
went back to his general, and being told that he was wanted no more for
the night, wrapped himself in his cloak and lay down under an apple tree.</p>
<p>He felt then that mother-earth was truly receiving him into her kindly
lap. He had not closed his eyes for nearly two days—it seemed a
month—and looking back at all through which he had passed it seemed
incredible. Human beings could not endure so much. They marched through
fire, where Stonewall Jackson led, and they never ceased to march. He saw
just beyond the apple tree a dusky figure walking up and down. It was
Jackson. Would he never rest? Was he not something rather more than normal
after all? Harry was very young and he rode with his hero, seeing him do
his mighty deeds.</p>
<p>But nature had given all that it had to yield, and soon he slept, lying
motionless and white like St. Clair and Langdon. But all through the night
the news of Jackson's great blow was traveling over the wires. He had
struck other fierce blows, but this was the most terrible of them all.
Alarm spread through the whole North. Lincoln and his Cabinet saw a great
army of rebels marching on Washington. A New York newspaper which had
appeared in the morning with the headline, “Fall of Richmond,” appeared at
night with the headline “Defeat of General Banks.” McDowell's army, which,
marching by land, was to co-operate with McClellan in the taking of
Richmond, was recalled to meet Jackson. The governors of the loyal states
issued urgent appeals for more troops.</p>
<p>Harry learned afterward how terribly effective had been the blow. The
whole Northern campaign had been upset by the meteoric appearance of
Jackson and the speed with which he marched and fought. McDowell's army of
40,000 men and a hundred guns had been scattered, and it would take him
much time to get it all together again. McClellan, advancing on Richmond,
was without the support on his right which McDowell was to furnish and was
compelled to hesitate.</p>
<p>But Jackson's foot cavalry were soon to find that they were not to rest on
their brilliant exploits. As eager as ever, their general was making them
ready for another great advance further into the North.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XI. THE NIGHT RIDE </h2>
<p>Harry was back with the general in a few hours, but now he was allowed a
little time for himself. It seemed to occur suddenly to Jackson that the
members of his staff, especially the more youthful ones, could not march
and fight more than two or three days without food and rest.</p>
<p>“You've done well, Harry,” he said—he was beginning to call the boy
by his first name.</p>
<p>The words of praise were brief, and they were spoken in a dry tone, but
they set Harry's blood aflame. He had been praised by Stonewall Jackson,
the man who considered an ordinary human being's best not more than third
rate. Harry, like all the others in the valley army, saw that Jackson was
setting a new standard in warfare.</p>
<p>Tremendously elated he started in search of his friends. He found the
Invincibles, that is, all who were left alive, stretched flat upon their
sides or backs in the orchard. It seemed to him that St. Clair and Langdon
had not moved a hair's breadth since he had seen them there before. But
their faces were not so white now. Color was coming back.</p>
<p>He put the toe of his boot against Langdon's side and shoved gently but
firmly. Langdon awoke and sat up indignantly.</p>
<p>“How dare you, Harry Kenton, disturb a gentleman who is occupied with his
much-needed slumbers?” he asked.</p>
<p>“General Jackson wants you.”</p>
<p>“Old Jack wants me! Now, what under the sun can he want with me?”</p>
<p>“He wants you to take some cavalry, gallop to Washington, go all around
the city, inspect all its earthworks and report back here by nightfall.”</p>
<p>“You're making that up, Harry; but for God's sake don't make that
suggestion to Old Jack. He'd send me on that trip sure, and then have me
hanged as an example in front of the whole army, when I failed.”</p>
<p>“I won't say anything about it.”</p>
<p>“You're a bright boy, Harry, and you're learning fast. But things could be
a lot worse. We could have been licked instead of licking the enemy. I
could be dead instead of lying here on the grass, tired but alive. But,
Harry, I'm growing old fast.”</p>
<p>“How old are you, Tom?”</p>
<p>“Last week I was nineteen, to-day I'm ninety-nine, and if this sort of
thing keeps up I'll be a hundred and ninety-nine next week.”</p>
<p>St. Clair also awoke and sat up. In some miraculous manner he had restored
his uniform to order and he was as neat and precise as usual.</p>
<p>“You two talk too much,” he said. “I was in the middle of a beautiful
dream, when I heard you chattering away.”</p>
<p>“What was your dream, Arthur?” asked Harry.</p>
<p>“I was in St. Andrew's Hall in Charleston, dancing with the most beautiful
girl you ever saw. I don't know who she was, I didn't identify her in my
dream. There were lots of other beautiful girls there dancing with fellows
like myself, and the roses were everywhere, and the music rose and fell
like the song of angels, and I was so happy and—I awoke to find
myself here on a hillside with a ragged army that's been marching and
fighting for days and weeks, and which, for all I know, will keep it up
for years and years longer.”</p>
<p>“I've a piece of advice for you, Arthur,” said Langdon.</p>
<p>“What is it?”</p>
<p>“Quit dreaming. It's a bad habit, especially when you're in war. The dream
is sure to be better than the real thing. You won't be dancing again in
Charleston for a long time, nor will I. All those beautiful girls you were
dreaming about but couldn't name will be without partners until we're a
lot older than we are now.”</p>
<p>Langdon spoke with a seriousness very uncommon in him, and lay back again
on the ground, where he began to chew a grass stem meditatively.</p>
<p>“Go back to sleep, boys, you'll need it,” said Harry lightly. “Our next
march is to be a thousand miles, and we're to have a battle at every
milestone.”</p>
<p>“You mean that as a joke, but it wouldn't surprise me at all if it came
true,” said Langdon, as he closed his eyes again.</p>
<p>Harry went on and found the two colonels sitting in the shadow of a stone
fence. One of them had his arm in a sling, but he assured Harry the wound
was slight. They gave him a glad and paternal welcome.</p>
<p>“In the kind of campaign we're waging,” said Colonel Leonidas Talbot, “I
assume that anybody is dead until I see him alive. Am I not right, eh,
Hector?”</p>
<p>“Assuredly you're right, Leonidas,” replied Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St.
Hilaire. “Our young men don't get frightened because they don't have time
to think about it. Before we can get excited over the battle in which we
are engaged we've begun the next one. It is also a matter of personal
pride to me that one of the best bodies of troops in the service of
General Jackson is of French descent like myself.”</p>
<p>“The Acadians, colonel,” said Harry. “Grand troops they are.”</p>
<p>“It is the French fighting blood,” said Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St.
Hilaire, with a little trace of the grandiloquent in his tone. “Slurs have
been cast at the race from which I sprang since the rout and flight at
Waterloo, but how undeserved they are! The French have burned more
gunpowder and have won more great battles without the help of allies than
any other nation in Europe. And their descendants in North America have
shown their valor all the way from Quebec to New Orleans, although we are
widely separated now, and scarcely know the speech of one another.”</p>
<p>“It's true, Hector,” said Colonel Leonidas Talbot. “I think I've heard you
say as much before, but it will bear repeating. Do you think, Hector, that
you happen to have about you a cigarette that has survived the campaign?”</p>
<p>“Several of them, Leonidas. Here, help yourself. Harry, I would offer one
to you, but I do not recommend the cigarette to the young. You don't
smoke! So much the better. It's a bad habit, permissible only to the old.
Leonidas, do you happen to have a match?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Hector, I made sure about that before I asked you for the
cigarettes. Be careful when you light it. There is only one match for the
cigarettes of both.”</p>
<p>“I'll bring you a coal from one of the campfires,” said Harry, springing
up.</p>
<p>But Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire waved him down courteously,
though rather reprovingly.</p>
<p>“You would never fire a cannon shot to kill a butterfly,” he said, “and
neither will I ever light a delicate cigarette with a huge, shapeless coal
from a campfire. It would be an insult to the cigarette, and after such an
outrage I could never draw a particle of flavor from it. No, Harry, we
thank you, you mean well, but we can do it better.”</p>
<p>Harry sat down again. The two colonels, who had been through days of
continuous marching and fighting, knelt in the lee of the fence, and
Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire also shaded the operation with his
hat as an additional protection. Colonel Leonidas Talbot carefully struck
the match. The flame sputtered up and his friend brought his hat closer to
protect it. Then both lighted their cigarettes, settled back against the
fence, and a deep peace appeared upon their two faces.</p>
<p>“Hector,” said Colonel Talbot, “only we old soldiers know how little it
takes to make a man happy.”</p>
<p>“You speak truly, Leonidas. In the last analysis it's a mere matter of
food, clothes and shelter, with perhaps a cigarette or two. In Mexico,
when we advanced from Vera Cruz to the capital, it was often very cold on
the mountains. I can remember coming in from some battle, aching with
weariness and cold, but after I had eaten good food and basked half an
hour before a fire I would feel as if I owned the earth. Physical comfort,
carried to the very highest degree, produces mental comfort also.”</p>
<p>“Sound words, Hector. The starved, the cold and the shelterless can never
be happy. God knows that I am no advocate of war, although it is my trade.
It is a terrible thing for people to kill one another, but it does grind
you down to the essentials. Because it is war you and I have an acute
sense of luxury, lying here against a stone fence, smoking a couple of
cigarettes.”</p>
<p>“That is, Leonidas, we are happy when we have attained what we have needed
a long time, and which we have been a long time without. It has occurred
to me that the cave-man, in all his primitive nakedness, must have had
some thrilling moments, moments of pleasures of the body, the mind and the
imagination allied, which we modern beings cannot feel.”</p>
<p>“To what moments do you allude, Hector?”</p>
<p>“Suppose that he has just eluded a monstrous saber-toothed tiger, and has
slipped into his cave by the opening, entirely too small for any great
beast of prey. He is in his home. A warm fire is burning on a flat stone.
His wife—beautiful to him—is cooking savory meats for him.
Around the walls are his arms and their supplies. They eat placidly while
the huge tiger from which he has escaped by a foot or less roars and
glowers without. The contrast between the danger and that house, which is
the equivalent to a modern palace, comes home to him with a thrill more
keen and penetrating than anything we can ever feel.</p>
<p>“The man and his wife eat their evening meal, and retire to their bed of
dry leaves in the corner. They fall asleep while the frenzied and
ferocious tiger is still snarling and growling. They know he cannot get at
them, and his gnashings and roarings are merely a lullaby, soothing them
to the sweetest of slumbers. You could not duplicate that in the age in
which we live, Leonidas.”</p>
<p>“No, Hector, we couldn't. But, as for me, I can spare such thrills. It
seems to me that we have plenty of danger of our own just now. I must say,
however, that you put these matters in a fine, poetic way. Have you ever
written verses, Hector?”</p>
<p>“A few, but never for print, Leonidas. I am happy to think that a few
sonnets and triolets of mine are cherished by middle-aged but yet handsome
women of Charleston that we both know.”</p>
<p>Harry left them still talking in rounded sentences and always in perfect
agreement. He thought theirs a beautiful friendship, and he hoped that he
should have friendships like it, when he was as old as they.</p>
<p>But he and all the other prophets were right. The restless Jackson soon
took up the northward march again. He was drawing farther and farther away
from McClellan and the Southern army before Richmond, and the great storm
that was gathering there. The army of Banks was not yet wholly destroyed,
and there were other Northern and undestroyed armies in the valley. His
task there was not yet finished. Jackson pushed on toward Harper's Ferry
on the Potomac. He was now, though to the westward, further north than
Washington itself, and with other armies in his rear he was taking daring
risks. But as usual, he kept his counsels to himself. All was hidden under
that battered cap to become later an old slouch hat, and the men who
followed him were content to go wherever he led.</p>
<p>The old Stonewall Brigade was in the van and Jackson and his staff were
with it. The foot cavalry refreshed by a good rest were marching again at
a great rate.</p>
<p>Harry was detached shortly after the start, and was sent to General Winder
with orders for him to hurry forward with the fine troops under his
command. Before he could leave Winder he ran into a strong Northern force
at Charleston, and the Southern division attacked at once with all the
dash and vigor that Jackson had imparted to his men. They had, too, the
confidence bred by continuous victory, while the men in blue were
depressed by unbroken defeats.</p>
<p>The Northern force was routed in fifteen or twenty minutes and fled toward
the river, leaving behind it all its baggage and stores. Harry carried the
news to Jackson and saw the general press his thin lips together more
closely than ever. He knew that the hope of destroying Banks utterly was
once more strong in the breast of their leader. The members of the staff
were all sent flying again with messages to the regiments to hurry.</p>
<p>The whole army swung forward at increased pace. Jackson did not know what
new troops had come for Banks, but soon he saw the heights south of
Harper's Ferry, and the same glance told him that they were crowded with
soldiers. General Saxton with seven thousand men and eighteen guns had
undertaken to hold the place against his formidable opponent.</p>
<p>General Jackson held a brief council, and, when it was over, summoned
Harry and Dalton to him.</p>
<p>“You are both well mounted and have had experience,” he said. “You
understand that the army before us is not by any means the only one that
the Yankees have. Shields, Ord and Fremont are all leading armies against
us. We can defeat Saxton's force, but we must not be caught in any trap.
Say not a word of this to anybody, but ride in the direction I'm pointing
and see if you can find the army of Shields. Other scouts are riding east
and west, but you must do your best, nevertheless. Perhaps both of you
will not come back, but one of you must. Take food in your saddle bags and
don't neglect your arms.”</p>
<p>He turned instantly to give orders to others and Harry and Dalton mounted
and rode, proud of their trust, and resolved to fulfill it. Evening was
coming as they left the army, and disappeared among the woods. They had
only the vague direction given by Jackson, derived probably from reports,
brought in by other scouts, but it was their mission to secure definite
and exact information.</p>
<p>“You know this country, George, don't you?” asked Harry.</p>
<p>“I've ridden over all of it. They say that Shields with a large part of
McDowell's army is approaching the valley through Manassas Gap. It's a
long ride from here, Harry, but I think we'd better make for it. This
horse of mine is one of the best ever bred in the valley. He could carry
me a hundred miles by noon to-morrow.”</p>
<p>“Mine's not exactly a plough horse,” said Harry, as he stroked the mane of
his own splendid bay, one especially detailed for him on this errand. “If
yours can go a hundred miles by noon to-morrow so can mine.”</p>
<p>“Suppose, then, we go a little faster.”</p>
<p>“Suits me.”</p>
<p>The riders spoke a word or two. The two grand horses stretched out their
necks, and they sped away southward. For a while they rode over the road
by which they had come. It was yet early twilight and they saw many marks
of their passage, a broken-down wagon, a dead horse, an exploded caisson,
and now and then something from which they quickly turned away their eyes.</p>
<p>Dalton knew the roads well, and at nightfall they bore in toward the
right. They had already come a long distance, and in the darkness they
went more slowly.</p>
<p>“I think there's a farmhouse not much further on,” said Dalton, “and we'll
ask there for information. It's safe to do so because all the people
through here are on our side. There, you can see the house now.”</p>
<p>The moonlight disclosed a farmhouse, surrounded by a lawn that was well
sprinkled with big trees, but as they approached Harry and Dalton
simultaneously reined their horses back into the wood. They had seen a
dozen troopers on the lawn, and the light was good enough to show that
their uniforms were or had been blue. A woman was standing in the open
door of the house, and one of the men, who seemed to be the leader, was
talking to her.</p>
<p>“Yankee scouts,” whispered Harry.</p>
<p>“Undoubtedly. The Yankee generals are waking up—Jackson has made 'em
do it, but I didn't expect to find their scouts so far in the valley.”</p>
<p>“Nor I. Suppose we wait here, George, until they leave.”</p>
<p>“It's the thing to do.”</p>
<p>They rode a little further into the woods where they were safe from
observation, and yet could watch what was passing at the house. But they
did not have to wait long. The troopers evidently got little satisfaction
from the woman to whom they were talking and turned their horses. Harry
saw her disappear inside, and he fairly heard the door slam when it
closed. The men galloped southward down the road.</p>
<p>Harry heard a chuckle beside him and he turned in astonishment.</p>
<p>“I'm laughing,” said Dalton, “because I've got a right to laugh. Here in
the valley we are all kin to one another just as you people in Kentucky
are all related. The woman who stood in the doorway is Cousin Eliza
Pomeroy. She's about my seventh cousin, but she's my cousin just the same,
and if we could have heard it we would have enjoyed what she was saying to
those Yankees.”</p>
<p>“Oughtn't we to stop also and get news, if we can?”</p>
<p>“Of course. We must have a talk with Cousin Eliza.”</p>
<p>They emerged from the woods, opened the gate and rode upon the lawn. Not a
ray of light came from the house anywhere. Every door and shutter was
fast.</p>
<p>“Knock on the door with the hilt of your sword, Harry,” said Dalton. “It
will bring Cousin Eliza. She can't have gone to sleep yet.”</p>
<p>Harry dismounted and holding the reins of his horse over his arm, knocked
loudly. There was no reply.</p>
<p>“Beat harder, Harry. She's sure to hear.”</p>
<p>Harry beat upon that door until he bruised the hilt of his sword. At last
it was thrown open violently, and a powerful woman of middle years
appeared.</p>
<p>“I thought you Yankees had gone forever!” she exclaimed. “You'd better
hurry or Stonewall Jackson will get you before morning!”</p>
<p>“We're not Yankees, ma'am,” said Harry, politely. “We're Southerners,
Stonewall Jackson's own men, scouts from his army, here looking for news
of the enemy.”</p>
<p>“A fine tale, young man. You're trying to fool me with your gray uniform.
Stonewall Jackson's men are fifteen miles north of here, chasing the
Yankees by thousands into the Potomac. They say he does it just as well by
night as by day, and that he never sleeps or rests.”</p>
<p>“What my comrade tells you is true. Good evening, Cousin Eliza!” said a
gentle voice beyond Harry.</p>
<p>The woman started and then stepped out of the door. Dalton rode forward a
little where the full moonlight fell upon him.</p>
<p>“You remember that summer six years ago when you spanked me for stealing
the big yellow apples in the orchard.”</p>
<p>“George! Little George Dalton!” she cried, and as Dalton got off his horse
she enclosed him in a powerful embrace, although he was little no longer.</p>
<p>“And have you come from Stonewall Jackson?” she asked breathless with
eagerness.</p>
<p>“Straight from him. I'm on his staff and so is my friend here. This is
Harry Kenton of Kentucky, Mrs. Pomeroy, and he's been through all the
battles with us. We were watching from the woods and we saw those Yankees
at your door. They didn't get any information, I know that, but I'm
thinking that we will.”</p>
<p>Cousin Eliza Pomeroy laughed a low, deep laugh of pride and satisfaction.</p>
<p>“Come into the house,” she exclaimed. “I'm here with four children. Jim,
my husband, is with Johnston's army before Richmond, but we've been able
to take care of ourselves thus far, and I reckon we'll keep on being able.
I can get hot coffee and good corn cakes ready for you inside of fifteen
minutes.”</p>
<p>“It's not food we want, Cousin Eliza,” said Dalton. “We want something far
better, what those Yankees came for—news. So I think we'd better
stay outside and run no risk of surprise. The Yankees might come back.”</p>
<p>“That's so. You'll grow up into a man with a heap of sense, George. I've
got real news, and I was waiting for a chance to send it through to
Stonewall Jackson. Billy! Billy!”</p>
<p>A small boy, not more than twelve, but clothed fully, darted from the
inside of the house. He was well set up for his age, and his face was keen
and eager.</p>
<p>“This is Billy Pomeroy, my oldest son,” said Cousin Eliza Pomeroy, with a
swelling of maternal pride. “I made him get in bed and cover himself up,
boots and all, when the Yankees came. Billy has been riding to-day. He
ain't very old, and he ain't very big, but put him on a horse and he's
mighty nigh a man.”</p>
<p>The small, eager face was shining.</p>
<p>“What did you see, Billy, when you rode so far?” asked Dalton.</p>
<p>“Yankees! Yankees, Cousin George, and lots of 'em, toward Manassas Gap! I
saw some of their cavalry this side of the Gap, and I heard at the store
that there was a big army on the other side, marching hard to come through
it, and get in behind our Stonewall.”</p>
<p>Harry looked at Dalton.</p>
<p>“That confirms the rumors we heard,” he said.</p>
<p>“You can believe anything that Billy tells you,” said Mrs. Pomeroy.</p>
<p>“I know it,” said Dalton, “but we've got to go on and see these men for
ourselves. Stonewall Jackson is a terrible man, Cousin Eliza. If we tell
him that the Yankees are coming through Manassas Gap and closing in on his
rear, he'll ask us how we know it, and when we reply that a boy told us
he'll break us as unfit to be on his staff.”</p>
<p>“And I reckon Stonewall Jackson will be about right!” said Cousin Eliza
Pomeroy, who was evidently a woman of strong mind. “Billy, you lead these
boys straight to Manassas Gap.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, Cousin Eliza!” exclaimed Dalton. “Billy's been riding hard all
day, and we can find the way.”</p>
<p>“What do you think Billy's made out of?” asked his mother contemptuously.
“Ain't he a valley boy? Ain't he Jim Pomeroy's son and mine? I want you to
understand that Billy can ride anything, and he can ride it all day long
and all night long, too!”</p>
<p>“Make 'em let me go, ma!” exclaimed Billy, eagerly. “I can save time. I
can show 'em the shortest way!”</p>
<p>Harry and George glanced at each other. Young Billy Pomeroy might be of
great value to them. Moreover, the choice was already made for them,
because Billy was now running to the stable for his horse.</p>
<p>“He goes with us, or rather he leads us, Cousin Eliza,” said Dalton.</p>
<p>Billy appeared the next instant, with his horse saddled and bridled, and
his own proud young self in the saddle.</p>
<p>“Billy, take 'em straight,” said his Spartan mother, as she drew him down
in the saddle and kissed him, and Billy, more swollen with pride than
ever, promised that he would. But the mother's voice broke a little when
she said to Dalton:</p>
<p>“He's to guide you wherever you want to go, but you must bring him back to
me unhurt.”</p>
<p>“We will, Cousin Eliza,” said Dalton earnestly.</p>
<p>Then they galloped away in the dark with Billy leading and riding like a
Comanche. He had taken a fresh horse from the stall and it was almost as
powerful as those ridden by Harry and Dalton.</p>
<p>“See the mountains,” said Billy, pointing eastward to a long dark line
dimly visible in the moonlight. “That's the Blue Ridge, and further south
is the Gap, but you can't see it at night until you come right close to
it.”</p>
<p>“Do you know any path through the woods, Billy?” asked Harry. “We don't
want to run the risk of capture.”</p>
<p>“I was just about to lead you into it,” replied the boy, still rejoicing
in the importance of his role. “Here it is.”</p>
<p>He turned off from the road into a path leading into thick forest, wide
enough for only one horse at a time. Billy, of course, led, Harry
followed, and Dalton brought up the rear. The path, evidently a short cut
used by farmers, was enclosed by great oaks, beeches and elms, now in full
leaf, and it was dark there. Only a slit of moonlight showed from above,
and the figures of the three riders grew shadowy.</p>
<p>“They'll never find us here, will they, Billy?” said Harry.</p>
<p>“Not one chance in a thousand. Them Yankees don't know a thing about the
country. Anyway, if they should come into the path at the other end, we'd
hear them long before they heard us.”</p>
<p>“You're right, Billy, and as we ride on we'll all three listen with six
good ears.”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” said Billy.</p>
<p>Harry, although only a boy himself, was so much older than Billy, who
addressed him as “sir,” that he felt himself quite a veteran.</p>
<p>“Billy,” he said, “how did it happen that you were riding down this way,
so far from home, to-day?”</p>
<p>“'Cause we heard there was Yanks in the Gap. Ma won't let me go an' fight
with Stonewall Jackson. She says I ain't old enough an' big enough, but
she told me herself to get on the horse an' ride down this way, an' see if
what we heard was true. I saw 'em in little bunches, an' then that gang
come to our house to-night, less 'n ten minutes after I come back. We'll
be at a creek, sir, in less than five minutes. It runs down from the
mountains, an' it's pretty deep with all them big spring rains. I guess
we'll have to swim, sir. We could go lower down, where there's always a
ford, but that's where the Yankees would be crossing.”</p>
<p>“We'll swim, if necessary, Billy.”</p>
<p>“When even the women and little children fight for us, the South will be
hard to conquer,” was Harry's thought, but he said no more until they
reached the creek, which was indeed swollen by the heavy rains, and was
running swiftly, a full ten feet in depth.</p>
<p>“Hold on, Billy, I'll lead the way,” said Harry.</p>
<p>But Billy was already in the stream, his short legs drawn up, and his
horse swimming strongly. Harry and Dalton followed without a word, and the
three emerged safely on the eastern side.</p>
<p>“You're a brave swimmer, Billy,” said Harry admiringly.</p>
<p>“'Tain't nothin, sir. I didn't swim. It was my horse. I guess he'd take me
across the Mississippi itself. I wouldn't have anything to do but stick on
his back. Look up, sir, an' you can see the mountains close by.”</p>
<p>Harry and Dalton looked up through the rift in the trees, and saw almost
over them the lofty outline of the Blue Ridge, the eastern rampart of the
valley, heavy with forest from base to top.</p>
<p>“We must be near the Gap,” said Dalton.</p>
<p>“We are,” said Billy. “We've been coming fast. It's nigh on to fifteen
miles from here to home.”</p>
<p>“And must be a full thirty to Harper's Ferry,” said Dalton.</p>
<p>“Does this path lead to some point overlooking the Gap,” asked Harry,
“where we can see the enemy if he's there, and he can't see us?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir. We can ride on a slope not more than two miles from here and
look right down into the Gap.”</p>
<p>“And if troops are there we'll be sure to see their fires,” said Dalton.
“Lead on, Billy.”</p>
<p>Billy led with boldness and certainty. It was the greatest night of his
life, and he meant to fulfill to the utmost what he deemed to be his duty.
The narrow path still wound among mighty trees, the branches of which met
now and then over their heads, shutting out the moonlight entirely. It led
at this point toward the north and they were rapidly ascending a shoulder
of the mountain, leaving the Gap on their right.</p>
<p>Harry, riding on such an errand, felt to the full the weird quality of
mountains and forest, over which darkness and silence brooded. The foliage
was very heavy, and it rustled now and then as the stray winds wandered
along the slopes of the Blue Ridge. But for that and the hoofbeats of
their own horses, there was no sound save once, when they heard a
scuttling on the bark of a tree. They saw nothing, but Billy pronounced it
a wildcat, alarmed by their passage.</p>
<p>The three at length came out on a level place or tiny plateau. Billy, who
rode in advance, stopped and the others stopped with him.</p>
<p>“Look,” said the boy, pointing to the bottom of the valley, about five
hundred feet below.</p>
<p>A fire burned there and they could discern men around it, with horses in
the background.</p>
<p>“Yankees,” said Billy. “Look at 'em through the glasses.”</p>
<p>Harry raised his glasses and took a long look. They had the full moonlight
where they stood and the fire in the valley below was also a help. He saw
that the camp was made by a strong cavalry force. Many of them were asleep
in their blankets, but the others sat by the fire and seemed to be
talking.</p>
<p>Then he passed the glasses to Dalton, who also, after looking long and
well, passed them to Billy, as a right belonging to one who had been their
real leader, and who shared equally with them their hardships and dangers.</p>
<p>“How large would you say that force is, George?” asked Harry.</p>
<p>“Three or four hundred men at least. There's a great bunch of horses. I
should judge, too, from the careless way they've camped, that they've no
fear of being attacked. How many do you think they are, Billy?”</p>
<p>“Just about what you said, Cousin George. Are you going to attack them?”</p>
<p>Harry and Dalton laughed.</p>
<p>“No, Billy,” replied Dalton. “You see we're only three, and there must be
at least three hundred down there.”</p>
<p>“But we've been hearin' that Stonewall Jackson's men never mind a hundred
to one,” said Billy, in an aggrieved tone. “We hear that's just about what
they like.”</p>
<p>“No, Billy, my boy. We don't fight a hundred to one. Nobody does, unless
it's like Thermopylae and the Alamo.”</p>
<p>“Then what are we going to do?” continued Billy in his disappointed tone.</p>
<p>“I think, Billy, that Harry and I are going to dismount, slip down the
mountainside, see what we can see, hear what we can hear, and that you'll
stay here, holding and guarding the horses until we come back.”</p>
<p>“I won't!” exclaimed Billy in violent indignation. “I won't, Cousin
George. I'm going down the mountain with you an' Mr. Kenton.”</p>
<p>“Now, Billy,” said Dalton soothingly, “you've got a most important job
here. You're the reserve, and you also hold the means of flight. Suppose
we're pursued hotly, we couldn't get away without the horses that you'll
hold for us. Suppose we should be taken. Then it's for you to gallop back
with the news that Shields' whole army will be in the pass in the morning,
and under such circumstances, your mother would send you on to General
Jackson with a message of such immense importance.”</p>
<p>“That's so,” said Billy with conviction, in the face of so much eloquence
and logic, “but I don't want you fellows to be captured.”</p>
<p>Dalton and Harry dismounting, gave the reins of their horses into the
hands of Billy, and the small fingers clutched them tightly.</p>
<p>“Stay exactly where you are, Billy,” said Harry. “We want to find you
without trouble when we come back.”</p>
<p>“I'll be here,” said Billy proudly.</p>
<p>Harry and Dalton began the descent through the bushes and trees. They had
not the slightest doubt that this was the vanguard of the Northern army
which they heard was ten thousand strong, and that this force was merely a
vanguard for McDowell, who had nearly forty thousand men. But they knew
too well to go back to Stonewall Jackson with mere surmise, however
plausible.</p>
<p>“We've got to find out some way or other whether their army is certainly
at hand,” whispered Dalton.</p>
<p>Harry nodded, and said:</p>
<p>“We must manage to overhear some of their talk, though it's risky
business.”</p>
<p>“But that's what we're here for. They don't seem to be very watchful, and
as the woods and bushes are thick about 'em we may get a chance.”</p>
<p>They continued their slow and careful descent. Harry glanced back once
through an opening in the bushes and saw little Billy, holding the reins
of the three horses and gazing intently after them. He knew that among all
the soldiers of Jackson's army, no matter how full of valor and zeal they
might be, there was not one who surpassed Billy in eagerness to serve.</p>
<p>They reached the bottom of the slope, and lay for a few minutes hidden
among dense bushes. Both had been familiar with country life, they had
hunted the 'possum and the coon many a dark night, and now their forest
lore stood them in good stead. They made no sound as they passed among the
bushes and trailing vines, and they knew that they were quite secure in
their covert, although they lay within a hundred yards of one of the
fires.</p>
<p>Harry judged that most of the men whom they saw were city bred. It was an
advantage that the South had over the North in a mighty war, waged in a
country covered then mostly with forest and cut by innumerable rivers and
creeks, that her sons were familiar with such conditions, while many of
those of the North, used to life in the cities, were at a loss, when the
great campaigns took them into the wilderness.</p>
<p>Both he and Dalton, relying upon this knowledge, crept a little closer,
but they stopped and lay very close, when they saw a man advancing to a
hillock, carrying under his arm a bundle which they took to be rockets.</p>
<p>“Signals,” whispered Dalton. “You just watch, Harry, and you'll see 'em
answered from the eastward.”</p>
<p>The officer on the summit of the hillock sent up three rockets, which
curved beautifully against the blue heavens, then sank and died. Far to
the eastward they saw three similar lights flame and die.</p>
<p>“How far away would you say those answering rockets were?” whispered
Harry.</p>
<p>“It's hard to say about distances in the moonlight, but they may be three
or four miles. I take it, Harry, that they are sent up by the Northern
main force.”</p>
<p>“So do I, but we've got to get actual evidence in words, or we've got to
see this army. I'm afraid to go back to General Jackson with anything
less. Now, we won't have time to go through the Gap, see the army and get
back to the general before things begin to happen, so we've got to stick
it out here, until we get what we want.”</p>
<p>“True words, Harry, and we must risk going a little nearer. See that line
of bushes running along there in the dark? It will cover us, and we're
bound to take the chance. We must agree, too, Harry, that if we're
discovered, neither must stop in an attempt to save the other. If one
reaches Jackson it will be all right.”</p>
<p>“Of course, George. We'll run for it with all our might, and if it's only
one it's to be the better runner.”</p>
<p>They lay almost flat on their stomachs, and passing through the grass,
reached the line of bushes. Here they could rise from such an
uncomfortable position, and stooping they came within fifty yards of the
first fire, where they saw very clearly the men who were not asleep, and
who yet moved about. Most of them were not yet sunburned, and Harry judged
at once that they had come from the mills and workshops of New York or New
England. As far as he could see they had no pickets, and he inferred their
belief that no enemy was nearer than Jackson's army, at least thirty miles
away. Perhaps the little band of horsemen who had knocked at Mrs.
Pomeroy's door had brought them the information.</p>
<p>They lay there nearly an hour, not thinking of the danger, but consumed
with impatience. Officers passed near them talking, but they could catch
only scraps, not enough for their purpose. A set of signals was sent up
again and was answered duly from the same point to the east of the Gap.
But after long waiting, they were rewarded. Few of the officers or men
ever went far from the fires. They seemed to be at a loss in the dark and
silent wilderness which was absolute confirmation to Harry that they were
city dwellers.</p>
<p>Two officers, captains or majors, stopped within twenty feet of the
crouching scouts, and gazed for a long time through the Gap toward the
west into the valley, at the northern end of which Jackson and his army
lay.</p>
<p>“I tell you, Curtis,” one of them said at last, “that if we get through
the Gap to-morrow and Fremont and the others also come up, Jackson can't
possibly get away. We'll have him and his whole force in a trap and with
three or four to one in our favor, it will be all over.”</p>
<p>“It's true, if it comes out as you say, Penfield,” said the other, “but
there are several 'ifs,' and as we have reason to know, it's hard to put
your hand on Jackson. Why, when we thought he was lost in the mountains he
came out of them like an avalanche, and some of our best troops were
buried under that avalanche.”</p>
<p>“You're too much of a pessimist, Curtis. We've learned a lot in the last
few days. As sure as you and I stand here the fox will be trapped. Why,
he's trapped already. We'll be through the Gap here with ten thousand men
in the morning, squarely in Jackson's rear. To-morrow we'll have fifty or
sixty thousand good troops between him and Richmond and Johnston. His army
will be taken or destroyed, and the Confederacy will be split asunder.
McClellan will be in Richmond with an overwhelming force, and within a
month the war will be practically over.”</p>
<p>“There's no doubt of that, if we catch Jackson, and it certainly looks as
if the trap were closing down upon him. In defeating Banks and then
following him to the Potomac he has ruined himself and his cause.”</p>
<p>Harry felt a deadly fear gripping at his heart. What these men were saying
was probably true. Every fact supported their claim. The tough and
enduring North, ready to sustain any number of defeats and yet win, was
pouring forward her troops with a devotion that would have wrung tears
from a stone. And she was destined to do it again and again through dark
and weary years.</p>
<p>The two men walked further away, still talking, but Harry and Dalton could
no longer hear what they were saying. The rockets soared again in the
pass, and were answered in the east, but now nearer, and the two knew that
it was not worth while to linger any longer. They knew the vital fact that
ten thousand men were advancing through the pass, and that all the rest
was superfluity. And time had a value beyond price to their cause.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XII. THE CLOSING CIRCLE </h2>
<p>“George,” said Harry, “we must chance it now and get back to the horses.
We've got to reach General Jackson before the Northern army is through the
pass.”</p>
<p>“You lead,” said Dalton. “I don't think we'll have any danger except when
we are in that strip of grass between these bushes and the woods.”</p>
<p>Harry started, and when he reached the grass threw himself almost flat on
his face again, crawling forward with extreme caution. Dalton, close
behind him, imitated his comrade. The high grass merely rippled as they
passed and the anxious Northern officers walking back and forth were not
well enough versed in woodcraft to read from any sign that an enemy was
near.</p>
<p>Once Dalton struck his knee against a small bush and caused its leaves to
rustle. A wary and experienced scout would have noticed the slight, though
new noise, and Harry and Dalton, stopping, lay perfectly still. But the
officers walked to and fro, undisturbed, and the two boys resumed their
creeping flight.</p>
<p>When they reached the forest, they rose gladly from their knees, and ran
up the slope, still bearing in mind that time was now the most pressing of
all things. They whistled softly as they neared the little plateau, and
Billy's low answering whistle came back. They hurried up the last reach of
the slope, and there he was, the eyes shining in his eager face, the three
bridles clutched tightly in his small right hand.</p>
<p>“Did you get what you wanted?” he asked in a whisper.</p>
<p>“We did, Billy,” answered Harry.</p>
<p>“I saw 'em sendin' up shootin' stars an' other shootin' stars way off to
the east answerin', an' I didn't know what it meant.”</p>
<p>“It was their vanguard in the Gap, talking to their army several miles to
the eastward. But we lay in the bushes, Billy, and we heard what their
officers said. All that you heard was true. Ten thousand Yankees will be
through the pass in the morning, and Stonewall Jackson will have great
cause to be grateful to William Pomeroy, aged twelve.”</p>
<p>The boy's eyes fairly glowed, but he was a man of action.</p>
<p>“Then I guess that we've got to jump on our horses and ride lickety split
down the valley to give warnin' to General Jackson,” he said.</p>
<p>Harry knew what was passing in the boy's mind, that he would go with them
all the way to Jackson, and he did not have the heart to say anything to
the contrary just then. But Dalton replied:</p>
<p>“Right you are, Billy. We ride now as if the woods were burning behind
us.”</p>
<p>Billy was first in the saddle and led the way. The horses had gained a
good rest, while Harry and Dalton were stalking the troopers in the
valley, and, after they had made the descent of the slope, they swung into
a long easy gallop across the level.</p>
<p>The little lad still kept his place in front. Neither of the others would
have deprived him of this honor which he deserved so well. He sat erect,
swinging with his horse, and he showed no sign of weariness. They took no
precautions now to evade a possible meeting with the enemy. What they
needed was haste, haste, always haste. They must risk everything to carry
the news to Jackson. A mere half hour might mean the difference between
salvation and destruction.</p>
<p>Harry felt the great tension of the moment. The words of the Northern
officers had made him understand what he already suspected. The whole fate
of the Confederacy would waver in the balance on the morrow. If Jackson
were surrounded and overpowered, the South would lose its right arm. Then
the armies that engulfed him would join McClellan and pour forward in an
overwhelming host on Richmond.</p>
<p>Their hoofbeats rang in a steady beat on the road, as they went forward on
that long easy gallop which made the miles drop swiftly behind them. The
skies brightened, and the great stars danced in a solid sheet of blue.
They were in the gently rolling country, and occasionally they passed a
farmhouse. Now and then, a watchful dog barked at them, but they soon left
him and his bark behind.</p>
<p>Harry noticed that Billy's figure was beginning to waver slightly, and he
knew that weariness and the lack of sleep were at last gaining the mastery
over his daring young spirit. It gave him relief, as it solved a problem
that had been worrying him. He rode up by the side of Billy, but he said
nothing. The boy's eyelids were heavy and the youthful figure was
wavering, but it was in no danger of falling. Billy could have ridden his
horse sound asleep.</p>
<p>Harry presently saw the roof of Mrs. Pomeroy's house showing among the
trees.</p>
<p>“It's less than half a mile to your house, Billy,” he said.</p>
<p>“But I'm not going to stop there. I'm goin' on with you to General
Jackson, an' I'm goin' to help him fight the Yankees.”</p>
<p>Harry was silent, but when they galloped up to the Pomeroy house, Billy
was nearly asleep.</p>
<p>The door sprang open as they approached, and the figure of the stalwart
woman appeared. Harry knew that she had been watching there every minute
since they left. He was touched by the dramatic spirit of the moment, and
he said:</p>
<p>“Mrs. Pomeroy, we bring back to you the most gallant soldier in Stonewall
Jackson's army of the Valley of Virginia. He led us straight to the Gap
where we were able to learn the enemy's movements, a knowledge which may
save the Confederacy from speedy destruction. We bring him back to you,
safe and unharmed, and sleeping soundly in his saddle.”</p>
<p>He lifted Billy from the saddle and put him in his mother's arms.</p>
<p>“Billy's a hero, Cousin Eliza,” said Dalton. “Few full-grown men have done
as important deeds in their whole lives as he has done to-night. When he
awakens he'll be angry because he didn't go with us, but you tell him
we'll see that he's a duly enrolled member of General Jackson's army.
Stonewall Jackson never forgets such deeds as his.”</p>
<p>“It's a proud woman I am to-night,” said Mrs. Pomeroy. “Good-bye, Cousin
George, and you, too, Mr. Kenton. I can see that you're in a hurry to be
off, and you ought to be. I want to see both of you in my house again in
better days.”</p>
<p>She went inside, carrying the exhausted and sleeping boy in her arms, and
Harry and Dalton galloped away side by side.</p>
<p>“How's your horse, Harry?” asked Dalton.</p>
<p>“Fine. Smooth as silk! How's yours?”</p>
<p>“The machinery moves without a jar. I may be stiff and sore myself, but
I'm so anxious to get to General Jackson that I haven't time to think
about it.”</p>
<p>“Same here. Suppose we speed 'em up a little more.”</p>
<p>They came into the turnpike, and now the horses lengthened out their
stride as they fled northward. It was yet some time until dawn, but the
two young riders took the cold food from their knapsacks and ate as they
galloped on. It was well that they had good horses, staunch and true, as
they were pushing them hard now.</p>
<p>Harry looked toward the west, where the dark slope of Little North
Mountain closed in the valley from that side, and he felt a shiver which
he knew did not come from the night air. He knew that a powerful Northern
force was off there somewhere, and he wondered what it was doing. But he
and Dalton had done their duty. They had uncovered one hostile force, and
doubtless other men who rode in the night for Jackson would attend to the
rest.</p>
<p>Both Harry and Dalton had been continuously in the saddle for many hours
now, but they did not notice their weariness. They were still upborne by a
great anxiety and a great exaltation, too. Feeling to the full the
imminence and immensity of the crisis, they were bending themselves heart
and soul to prevent it, and no thought of weariness could enter their
minds. Each was another Billy, only on a larger and older scale.</p>
<p>Later on, the moon and all the stars slipped away, and it became very
dark. Harry felt that it was merely a preliminary to the dawn, and he
asked Dalton if he did not think so, too.</p>
<p>“It's too dark for me to see the face of my watch,” said Dalton, “but I
know you're right, Harry. I can just feel the coming of the dawn. It's
some quality in the air. I think it grows a little colder than it has been
in the other hours of the night.”</p>
<p>“I can feel the wind freshening on my face. It nips a bit for a May
morning.”</p>
<p>They slackened speed a little, wishing to save their horses for a final
burst, and stopped once or twice for a second or two to listen for the
sound of other hoofbeats than their own. But they heard none.</p>
<p>“If the Yankee armies are already on the turnpike they're not near us.
That's sure,” said Dalton.</p>
<p>“Do you know how many men they have?”</p>
<p>“Some of the spies brought in what the general believed to be pretty
straight reports. The rumors said that Shields was advancing to Manassas
Gap with ten thousand men, and from what we heard we know that is true. A
second detachment, also ten thousand strong, from McDowell's army is
coming toward Front Royal, and McDowell has twenty thousand men east of
the Blue Ridge. What the forces to the west are I don't know but the enemy
in face of the general himself on the Potomac must now number at least ten
thousand.”</p>
<p>Harry whistled.</p>
<p>“And at the best we can't muster more than fifteen thousand fit to carry
arms!” he exclaimed.</p>
<p>Dalton leaned over in the dark, and touched his comrade on the shoulder.</p>
<p>“Harry,” he said, “don't forget Old Jack. Where Little Sorrel leads there
is always an army of forty thousand men. I'm not setting myself up to be
very religious, but it's safe to say that he was praying to-night, and
when Old Jack prays, look out.”</p>
<p>“Yes, if anybody can lead us out of this trap it will be Old Jack,” said
Harry. “Look, there's the dawn coming over the Blue Ridge, George.”</p>
<p>A faint tint of gray was appearing on the loftiest crests of the Blue
Ridge. It could scarcely be called light yet, but it was a sign to the two
that the darkness there would soon melt away. Gradually the gray shredded
off and then the ridges were tipped with silver which soon turned to gold.
Dawn rushed down over the valley and the pleasant forests and fields
sprang into light.</p>
<p>Then they heard hoofbeats behind them coming fast. The experienced ears of
both told them that it was only a single horseman who came, and, drawing
their pistols, they turned their horses across the road. When the rider
saw the two threatening figures he stopped, but in a moment he rode on
again. They were in gray and so was he.</p>
<p>“Why, it's Chris Aubrey of the general's own staff!” exclaimed Dalton.
“Don't you know him, Harry?”</p>
<p>“Of course I do. Aubrey, we're friends. It's Dalton and Kenton.”</p>
<p>Aubrey dashed his hands across his eyes, as if he were clearing a mist
from them. He was worn and weary, and his look bore a singular resemblance
to that of despair.</p>
<p>“What is it, Chris?” asked Dalton with sympathy.</p>
<p>“I was sent down the Luray Valley to learn what I could and I discovered
that Ord was advancing with ten thousand men on Front Royal, where General
Jackson left only a small garrison. I'm going as fast as my horse can take
me to tell him.”</p>
<p>“We're on the same kind of a mission, Chris,” said Harry. “We've seen the
vanguard of Shields, ten thousand strong coming through Manassas Gap, and
we also are going as fast as our horses can take us to tell General
Jackson.”</p>
<p>“My God! Does it mean that we are about to be surrounded?”</p>
<p>“It looks like it,” said Harry, “but sometimes you catch things that you
can't hold. George and I never give up faith in Old Jack.”</p>
<p>“Nor do I,” said Aubrey. “Come on! We'll ride together! I'm glad I met you
boys. You give me courage.”</p>
<p>The three now rode abreast and again they galloped. One or two early
farmers going phlegmatically to their fields saw them, but they passed on
in silence. They had grown too used to soldiers to pay much attention to
them. Moreover, these were their own.</p>
<p>The whole valley was now flooded with light. To east and to west loomed
the great walls of the mountains, heavy with foliage, cut here and there
by invisible gaps through which Harry knew that the Union troops were
pouring.</p>
<p>They caught sight of moving heads on a narrow road coming from the west
which would soon merge into theirs. They slackened speed for a moment or
two, uncertain what to do, and then Aubrey exclaimed:</p>
<p>“It's a detachment of our own cavalry. See their gray uniforms, and that's
Sherburne leading them!”</p>
<p>“So it is!” exclaimed Harry, and he rode forward joyfully. Sherburne gave
all three of them a warm welcome, but he was far from cheerful. He led a
dozen troopers and they, like himself, were covered with dust and were
drooping with weariness. It was evident to Harry that they had ridden far
and hard, and that they did not bring good news.</p>
<p>“Well, Harry,” said Sherburne, still attempting the gay air, “chance has
brought us together again, and I should judge from your appearance that
you've come a long way, bringing nothing particularly good.”</p>
<p>“It's so. George and I have been riding all night. We were in Manassas Gap
and we learned definitely that Shields is coming through the pass with ten
thousand men.”</p>
<p>“Fine,” said Sherburne with a dusty smile. “Ten thousand is a good round
number.”</p>
<p>“And if we'll give him time enough,” continued Harry, “McDowell will come
with twice as many more.”</p>
<p>“Look's likely,” said Sherburne.</p>
<p>“We've been riding back toward Jackson as fast as we could,” continued
Harry, “and a little while ago Aubrey riding the same way overtook us.”</p>
<p>“And what have you seen, Aubrey?” asked Sherburne.</p>
<p>“I? Oh, I've seen a lot. I've been down by Front Royal in the night, and
I've seen Ord with ten thousand men coming full tilt down the Luray
Valley.”</p>
<p>“What another ten thousand! It's funny how the Yankees run to even tens of
thousands, or multiples of that number.”</p>
<p>“I've heard,” said Harry, “that the force under Banks and Saxton in front
of Jackson was ten thousand also.”</p>
<p>“I'm sorry, boys, to break up this continuity,” said Sherburne with a
troubled laugh, “but it's fifteen thousand that I've got to report.
Fremont is coming from the west with that number. We've seen 'em. I've no
doubt that at this moment there are nearly fifty thousand Yankees in the
valley, with more coming, and all but ten thousand of them are in General
Jackson's rear.”</p>
<p>It seemed that Sherburne, daring cavalryman, had lost his courage for the
moment, but the faith of the stern Presbyterian youth, Dalton, never
faltered.</p>
<p>“As I told Harry a little while ago, we have at least fifty thousand men,”
he said.</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” asked Sherburne.</p>
<p>“I count Stonewall Jackson as forty thousand, and the rest will bring the
number well over fifty thousand.”</p>
<p>Sherburne struck his gauntleted hand smartly on his thigh.</p>
<p>“You talk sense, Dalton!” he exclaimed. “I was foolish to despair! I
forgot how much there was under Stonewall Jackson's hat! They haven't
caught the old fox yet!”</p>
<p>They galloped on anew, and now they were riding on the road, over which
they had pursued so hotly the defeated army of Banks. They would soon be
in Jackson's camp, and as they approached their hearts grew lighter. They
would cast off their responsibilities and trust all to the leader who
appeared so great to them.</p>
<p>“I see pickets now,” said Aubrey. “Only five more minutes, boys, but as
soon as I give my news I'll have to drop. The excitement has kept me up,
but I can't last any longer.”</p>
<p>“Nor I,” said Harry, who realized suddenly that he was on the verge of
collapse. “Whether our arrival is to be followed by a battle or a retreat
I'm afraid I won't be fit for either.”</p>
<p>They gave the password, and the pickets pointed to the tent of Jackson.
They rode straight to him, and dismounted as he came forth from the tent.
They were so stiff and sore from long riding that Dalton and Aubrey fell
to their knees when they touched the ground, but they quickly recovered,
and although they stood somewhat awkwardly they saluted with the deepest
respect. Jackson's glance did not escape their mishap, and he knew the
cause, but he merely said:</p>
<p>“Well, gentlemen.”</p>
<p>“I have to report, sir,” said Sherburne, speaking first as the senior
officer, “that General Fremont is coming from the west with fifteen
thousand men, ready to fall upon your right flank.”</p>
<p>“Very good, and what have you seen, Captain Aubrey?”</p>
<p>“Ord with ten thousand men is in our rear and is approaching Front Royal.”</p>
<p>“Very good. You have done faithful work, Captain Aubrey. What have you
seen, Lieutenant Kenton and Lieutenant Dalton?”</p>
<p>“General Shields, sir, is in Manassas Gap this morning with ten thousand
men, and he and General Ord can certainly meet to-day if they wish. We
learned also that General McDowell can come up in a few days with twenty
thousand more.”</p>
<p>The face of Stonewall Jackson never flinched. It looked worn and weary but
not more so than it did before this news.</p>
<p>“I thank all of you, young gentlemen,” he said in his quiet level tones.
“You have done good service. It may be that you're a little weary. You'd
better sleep now. I shall call you when I want you.”</p>
<p>The four saluted and General Jackson went back into the tent. Aubrey made
a grimace.</p>
<p>“We may be a little tired!” he said. “Why, I haven't been out of the
saddle for twenty-four hours, and I felt so anxious that every one of
those hours was a day long.”</p>
<p>“But it's a lot to get from the general an admission that you may be even
a little tired,” said Dalton. “Remember the man for whom you ride.”</p>
<p>“That's so,” said Aubrey, “and I oughtn't to have said what I did. We've
got to live up to new standards.”</p>
<p>Sherburne, Aubrey and Dalton picked out soft spots on the grass and almost
instantly were sound asleep, but Harry lingered a minute or two longer. He
saw across the river the glitter of bayonets and the dark muzzles of
cannon. He also saw many troops moving on the hills and he knew that he
was looking upon the remains of Banks' army reinforced by fresh men, ready
to dispute the passage or fight Jackson if he marched northward in any
other way, while the great masses of their comrades gathered behind him.</p>
<p>Harry felt again for a moment that terrible sinking of the heart which is
such close kin to despair. Enemies to the north of them, enemies to the
south of them, and to the east and to the west, enemies everywhere. The
ring was closing in. Worse than that, it had closed in already and
Stonewall Jackson was only mortal. Neither he nor any one else could lead
them through the overwhelming ranks of such a force.</p>
<p>But the feeling passed quickly. It could not linger, because the band of
the Acadians was playing, and the dark men of the Gulf were singing. Even
with the foe in sight, and a long train of battles and marches behind
them, with others yet worse to come, they began to dance, clasped in one
another's arms.</p>
<p>Many of the Acadians had already gone to a far land and they would never
again on this earth see Antoinette or Celeste or Marie, but the sun of the
south was in the others and they sang and danced in the brief rest allowed
to them.</p>
<p>Harry liked to look at them. He sat on the grass and leaned his back
against a tree. The music raised up the heart and it was wonderfully
lulling, too. Why worry? Stonewall Jackson would tell them what to do.</p>
<p>The rhythmic forms grew fainter, and he slept. He was awakened the next
instant by Dalton. Harry opened his eyes heavily and looked reproachfully
at his friend.</p>
<p>“I've slept less than a minute,” he said.</p>
<p>Dalton laughed.</p>
<p>“So it seemed to me, too, when I was awakened,” he said, “but you've slept
a full two hours just as I did. What do you expect when you're working for
Stonewall Jackson. You'll be lucky later on whenever you get a single
hour.”</p>
<p>Harry brushed the traces of sleep from his eyes and stood up straight.</p>
<p>“What's wanted?” he asked.</p>
<p>“You and I and some others are going to take a little railroad trip,
escorted by Stonewall Jackson. That's all I know and that's all anybody
knows except the general. Come along and look your little best.”</p>
<p>Harry brushed out his wrinkled uniform, straightened his cap, and in a
minute he and Dalton were with the group of staff officers about Jackson.
There was still a section of railway in the valley held by the South, and
Jackson and his aides were soon aboard a small train on their way back to
Winchester. Harry, glancing from the window, saw the troops gathering up
their ammunition and the teamsters hitching up their horses.</p>
<p>“It's going to be a retreat up the valley,” he whispered to Dalton. “But
masses more than three to one are gathering about us.”</p>
<p>“I tell you again, you just trust Old Jack.”</p>
<p>Harry looked toward the far end of the coach where Jackson sat with the
older members of his staff. His figure swayed with the train, but he
showed no sign of weariness or that his dauntless soul dwelt in a physical
body. He was looking out at the window, but it was obvious that he did not
see the green landscape flashing past. Harry knew that he was making the
most complex calculations, but like Dalton he ceased to wonder about them.
He put his faith in Old Jack, and let it go at that.</p>
<p>There was very little talking in the train. Despite every effort, Harry's
eyes grew heavy and he began to doze a little. He would waken entirely at
times and straighten up with a jerk. Then he would see the fields and
forests still rushing past, now and then a flash as they crossed a stream,
and always the sober figure of the general, staring, unseeing, through the
window.</p>
<p>He suddenly became wide-awake, when he heard sharp comment in the coach.
All the older officers were gazing through the windows with the greatest
interest. Harry saw a man in Confederate uniform galloping across the
fields and waving his hands repeatedly to the train which was already
checking speed.</p>
<p>“A staff officer with news,” said Dalton.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Harry, “and I'm thinking it will seem bad news to you and me.”</p>
<p>The train stopped in a field, and the officer, panting and covered with
dust and perspiration, rode alongside. Jackson walked out on the steps,
followed by his eager officers.</p>
<p>“What is it?” asked Jackson.</p>
<p>“The Northern army has retaken Front Royal. The Georgia regiment you left
in garrison there has been driven out and without support is marching
northward. I have here, sir, a dispatch from Colonel Connor, the commander
of the Georgians.”</p>
<p>He handed the folded paper to the general, who received it but did not
open it for a moment. There was something halfway between a sigh and a
groan from the officers, but Jackson said nothing. He smiled, but, as
Harry saw it, it was a strange and threatening smile. Then he opened the
dispatch, read it carefully, tore it into tiny bits and threw them away.
Harry saw the fragments picked up by the wind and whirled across the
field. Jackson nearly always destroyed his dispatches in this manner.</p>
<p>“Very good,” he said to the officer, “you can rejoin Colonel Connor.”</p>
<p>He went back to his seat. The train puffed, heaved and started again.
Jackson leaned against the back of the seat and closed his eyes. He seemed
to be asleep. But the desire for sleep was driven from Harry. The news of
the retaking of Front Royal had stirred the whole train. Officers talked
of it in low tones, but with excitement. The Northern generals were acting
with more than their customary promptness. Already they had struck a blow
and Ord with his ten thousand men had undoubtedly passed from the Luray
Valley into the main Valley of Virginia to form a junction with Shields
and his ten thousand.</p>
<p>What would Jackson do? Older men in the train than Harry and Dalton were
asking that question, but he remained silent. He kept his eyes closed for
some time, and Harry thought that he must be fast asleep, although it
seemed incredible that a man with such responsibilities could sleep at
such a time. But he opened his eyes presently and began to talk with a
warm personal friend who occupied the other half of the seat.</p>
<p>Harry did not know the tenor of this conversation then, but he heard of it
later from the general's friend. Jackson had remarked to the man that he
seemed to be surrounded, and the other asked what he would do if the
Northern armies cut him off entirely. Jackson replied that he would go
back toward the north, invade Maryland and march straight on Baltimore and
Washington. Few more daring plans have ever been conceived, but, knowing
Jackson as he learned to know him, Harry always believed that he would
have tried it.</p>
<p>But the Southern leaders within that mighty and closing ring in the valley
were not the only men who had anxious minds. At the Union capital they did
not know what had become of Jackson. They knew that he was somewhere
within the ring, but where? He might pounce upon a division, deal another
terrible blow and then away! In a week he had drawn the eyes of the world
upon him, and his enemies no longer considered anything impossible to him.
Many a patriot who was ready to die rather than see the union of the
states destroyed murmured: “If he were only on our side!” There was
already talk of recalling McClellan's great army to defend Washington.</p>
<p>The object of all this immense anxiety and care was riding peacefully in a
train to Winchester, talking with a friend but conscious fully of his
great danger. It seemed that the Northern generals with their separate
armies were acting in unison at last, and must close down on their prey.</p>
<p>They came again into Winchester, the town torn so often by battle and its
anxieties, and saw the Presbyterian minister, his face gray with care,
greet Jackson. Then the two walked toward the manse, followed at a
respectful distance by the officers of the staff.</p>
<p>Harry soon saw that the whole of Winchester was in gloom. They knew there
of the masses in blue converging on Jackson, and few had hope. While
Jackson remained at the manse he sat upon the portico within call. There
was little sound in Winchester. The town seemed to have passed into an
absolute silence. Most of the doors and shutters were closed.</p>
<p>And yet the valley had never seemed more beautiful to Harry. Far off were
the dim blue mountains that enclosed it on either side, and the bright
skies never bent in a more brilliant curve.</p>
<p>He felt again that overpowering desire to sleep, and he may have dozed a
little when he sat there in the sun, but he was wide awake when Jackson
called him.</p>
<p>“I want you to go at once to Harper's Ferry with this note,” he said, “and
give it to the officer in command. He will bring back the troops to
Winchester, and you are to come with him. You can go most of the way on
the train and then you must take to your horse. The troops will march back
by the valley turnpike.”</p>
<p>Harry saluted and was off. He soon found that other officers were going to
the various commands with orders similar to his, and he no longer had any
doubt that the whole force would be consolidated and would withdraw up the
valley. He was right. Jackson had abandoned the plan of entering Maryland
and marching on Baltimore and Washington, and was now about to try
another, fully as daring, but calling for the most sudden and complicated
movements. He had arranged it all, as he rode in the train, most of it as
he leaned against the back of the seat with his eyes shut.</p>
<p>Harry was soon back in Harper's Ferry, and the troops there immediately
began their retreat. Most all of them knew of the great danger that
menaced their army, but Harry, a staff officer, understood better than the
regimental commanders what was occurring. The Invincibles were in their
division and he rode with the two colonels, St. Clair and Happy Tom
Langdon. They went at a swift pace and behind them came the steady beat of
the marching troops on the turnpike.</p>
<p>“You have been with General Jackson in Winchester, Harry,” said Colonel
Leonidas Talbot in his precise manner, “and I judge that you must have
formed some idea of his intentions. This indicates a general retreat
southward, does it not?”</p>
<p>“I think so, sir. General Jackson has said nothing, but I know that orders
have been sent to all our detachments to draw in. He must have some plan
of cutting his way through toward the south. What do you think, Colonel
St. Hilaire?”</p>
<p>“It must be so,” replied Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire, “but how
he will do it is beyond me. When I look around at all these blue
mountains, Leonidas, it seems to me that we're enclosed by living
battlements.”</p>
<p>“Or that Jackson is like the tiger in the bush, surrounded by the
beaters.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and sometimes it's woe to the beaters when they come too near.”</p>
<p>Harry dropped back with his younger friends who were by no means of sad
demeanor. St. Clair had restored his uniform to its usual immaculate
neatness or in some manner he had obtained a new one. Tom Langdon was
Happy Tom again.</p>
<p>“We've eaten well, and we've slept well,” said Langdon, “and Arthur and I
are restored completely. He's the finest dandy in the army again, and I'm
ready for another week's run with Jackson. I know I won't get another
chance to rest in a long time, but Old Stonewall needn't think I can't
march as long as he can.”</p>
<p>“You'll get your fill of it,” said Harry, “and of fighting, too. Take a
look all around you. No, not a half circle, but a complete circle.”</p>
<p>“Well, I've twisted my neck until my head nearly falls off. What signifies
the performance?”</p>
<p>“There was no time when you were turning around the circle that your eyes
didn't look toward Yankees. Nearly fifty thousand of 'em are in the
valley. We're in a ring of steel, Happy.”</p>
<p>“Well, Old Jack will just take his sword and slash that steel ring apart.
And if he should fail I'm here. Lead me to 'em, Harry.”</p>
<p>Langdon's spirits were infectious. Even the marching men who heard Happy
Tom laugh, laughed with him and were more cheerful. They marched faster,
too, and from other points men were coming quickly to Jackson at
Winchester. They were even coming into contact with the ring of steel
which was closing in on them. Fremont, advancing with his fifteen thousand
from the mountains, met a heavy fire from a line of ambushed riflemen. Not
knowing where Jackson was or what he was doing, and fearing that the great
Confederate commander might be before him with his whole army, he stopped
at Cedar Creek and made a camp of defense.</p>
<p>Shields, in the south, moving forward, found a swarm of skirmishers in his
front, and presently the Acadians, sent in that direction by Jackson,
opened up with a heavy fire on his vanguard. Shields drew back. He, too,
feared that Jackson with his entire army was before him and rumor
magnified the Southern force. Meanwhile the flying cavalry of Ashby
harassed the Northern advance at many points.</p>
<p>All the time the main army of Jackson was retreating toward Winchester,
carrying with it the prisoners and a vast convoy of wagons filled with
captured ammunition and stores. Jackson had foreseen everything. He had
directed the men who were leading these forces to pass around Winchester
in case he was compelled to abandon it, circle through the mountains and
join him wherever he might be.</p>
<p>But Harry when he returned to Winchester breathed a little more freely. He
felt in some manner that the steel ring did not compress so tightly.
Jackson, acting on the inside of the circle, had spread consternation. The
Northern generals could not communicate with one another because either
mountains or Southern troops came between. Prisoners whom the Southern
cavalry brought in told strange stories. Rumor in their ranks had
magnified Jackson's numbers double or triple. Many believed that a great
force was coming from Richmond to help him. Jackson was surrounded, but
the beaters were very wary about pressing in on him.</p>
<p>Yet the Union masses in the valley had increased. McDowell himself had now
come, and he sent forward cavalry details which, losing the way, were
compelled to return. Fremont on the west at last finding the line of
riflemen before him withdrawn, pushed forward, and saw the long columns of
the Southern army with their wagons moving steadily toward the south. His
cavalry attacking were driven off and the Southern division went on.</p>
<p>Harry with the retreating division wondered at these movements and admired
their skill. Jackson's army, encumbered as it was with prisoners and
stores, was passing directly between the armies of Fremont and Shields,
covering its flanks with clouds of skirmishers and cavalry that beat off
every attack of the hostile vanguards, and that kept the two Northern
armies from getting into touch.</p>
<p>Jackson had not stopped at Winchester. He had left that town once more to
the enemy and was still drawing back toward the wider division of the
valley west of the Massanuttons. The great mind was working very fast now.
The men themselves saw that warlike genius incarnate rode on the back of
Little Sorrel. Jackson was slipping through the ring, carrying with him
every prisoner and captured wagon.</p>
<p>His lightning strokes to right and to left kept Shields and Fremont dazed
and bewildered, and McDowell neither knew what was passing nor could he
get his forces together. Harry saw once more and with amazement the dark
bulk of the Massanuttons rising on his left and he knew that these great
isolated mountains would again divide the Union force, while Jackson
passed on in the larger valley.</p>
<p>He felt a thrill, powerful and indescribable. Jackson in very truth had
slashed across with his sword that great ring of steel and was passing
through the break, leaving behind not a single prisoner, nor a single
wagon. Sixty-two thousand men had not only failed to hold sixteen
thousand, but their scattered forces had suffered numerous severe defeats
from the far smaller army. It was not that the Northern men were inferior
to the Southern in courage and tenacity, but the Southern army was led by
a genius of the first rank, unmatched as a military leader in modern
times, save by Napoleon and Lee.</p>
<p>It was the last day of May and the twilight was at hand. The dark masses
of Little North Mountain to the west and of the Massanuttons to the east
were growing dim. Harry rode by the side of Dalton a few paces in the rear
of Jackson, and he watched the somber, silent man, riding silently on
Little Sorrel. There was nothing bright or spectacular about him. The
battered gray uniform was more battered than ever. In place of the worn
cap an old slouched hat now shaded his forehead and eyes. But Harry knew
that their extraordinary achievements had not been due to luck or chance,
but were the result of the mighty calculations that had been made in the
head under the old slouched hat.</p>
<p>Harry heard behind him the long roll and murmur of the marching army, the
wheels of cannon and wagons grating on the turnpike, the occasional neigh
of a horse, the rattle of arms and the voices of men talking low. Most of
these men had been a year and a half ago citizens untrained for war. They
were not mere creatures of drill, but they were intelligent, and they
thought for themselves. They knew as well as the officers what Jackson had
done and henceforth they looked upon him as something almost superhuman.
Confident in his genius they were ready to follow wherever Jackson led, no
matter what the odds.</p>
<p>These were exactly the feelings of both Harry and Dalton. They would never
question or doubt again. Both of them, with the hero worship of youth felt
a mighty swell of pride, that they should ride with so great a leader, and
be so near to him.</p>
<p>The army marched on in the darkening hours, leaving behind it sixty
thousand men who closed up the ring only to find their game gone.</p>
<p>Harry heard from the older staff officers that they would go on up the
valley until they came to the Gaps of the Blue Ridge. There in an
impregnable position they could turn and fight pursuit or take the railway
to Richmond and join in the defense against McClellan. It all depended on
what Jackson thought, and his thoughts were uniformly disclosed by action.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the news was spreading through the North that Jackson had
escaped, carrying with him his prisoners and captured stores. Odds had
counted for nothing. All the great efforts directed from Washington had
been unavailing. All the courage and energy of brave men had been in vain.
But the North did not cease her exertions for an instant. Lincoln, a man
of much the same character as Jackson, but continually thwarted by
mediocre generals, urged the attack anew. Dispatches were sent to all the
commanders ordering them to push the pursuit of Jackson and to bring him
to battle.</p>
<p>Cut to the quick by their great failure, Fremont, Shields, Ord, Banks,
McDowell and all the rest, pushed forward on either side of the
Massanuttons, those on the west intending to cross at the gap, join their
brethren, and make another concerted attempt at Jackson's destruction.</p>
<p>But Harry ceased to think of armies and battles as he rode on in the dark.
He was growing sleepy again and he dozed in his saddle. Half consciously
he thought of his father and wondered where he was. He had received only
one letter from him after Shiloh, but he believed that he was still with
the Confederate army in the west, taking an active part. Much as he loved
his father it was the first time that he had been in his thoughts in the
last two weeks. How could any one think of anything but the affair of the
moment at such a time, when the seconds were ticked off by cannon-shots!</p>
<p>In this vague and pleasant dream he also remembered Dick Mason, his
cousin, who was now somewhere there in the west fighting on the other
side. He thought of Dick with affection and he liked him none the less
because he wore the blue. Then, curiously enough, the last thing that he
remembered was his Tacitus, lying in his locked desk in the Pendleton
Academy. He would get out that old fellow again some day and finish him.
Then he fell sound asleep in his saddle, and the horse went steadily on,
safely carrying his sleeping master.</p>
<p>He did not awake until midnight, when Dalton's hand on his shoulder caused
him to open his eyes.</p>
<p>“I've been asleep, too, Harry,” said Dalton, “but I woke up first. We're
going into camp here for the rest of the night.”</p>
<p>“I'm glad to stop,” said Harry, “but I wonder what the dawn will bring.”</p>
<p>“I wonder,” said Dalton.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XIII. THE SULLEN RETREAT </h2>
<p>Harry, like the rest of the army, slept soundly through the rest of the
night and they rose to a brilliant first day of June. The scouts said that
the whole force of Fremont was not far behind, while the army of Shields
was marching on a parallel line east of the Massanuttons, and ready at the
first chance to form a junction with Fremont.</p>
<p>Youth seeks youth and Harry and Dalton found a little time to talk with
St. Clair and Langdon.</p>
<p>“We've broken their ring and passed through,” said Langdon, “but as sure
as we live we'll all be fighting again in a day. If the Yankees follow too
hard Old Jack will turn and fight 'em. Now, why haven't the Yankees got
sense enough to let us alone and go home?”</p>
<p>“They'll never do it,” said Dalton gravely. “We've got to recognize that
fact. I'm never going to say another word about the Yankees not being
willing to fight.”</p>
<p>“They're too darned willing,” said Happy Tom. “That's the trouble.”</p>
<p>“I woke up just about the dawn,” said Dalton. “Everybody was asleep, but
the general, and I saw him praying.”</p>
<p>“Then it means fighting and lots of it,” said St. Clair. “I'm going to
make the best use I can of this little bit of rest, as I don't expect
another chance for at least a month. Stonewall Jackson thinks that one
hour a day for play keeps Jack from being a dull boy.”</p>
<p>“Just look at our colonels, will you?” said Happy Tom. “They're believers
in what Arthur says.”</p>
<p>Colonel Leonidas Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire were
sitting in a corner of a rail fence opposite each other, and their bent
gray heads nearly touched. But their eyes were on a small board between
them and now and then they moved carved figures back and forth.</p>
<p>“They're playing chess,” whispered Happy Tom. “They found the board and
set of men in the captured baggage, and this is their first chance to use
them.”</p>
<p>“They can't possibly finish a game,” said Harry.</p>
<p>“No,” said Tom, “they can't, and it's just as well. Why anybody wants to
play chess is more than I can understand. I'd rather watch a four-mile
race between two turtles. It's a lot swifter and more thrilling.”</p>
<p>“It takes intelligence to play chess, Happy,” said St. Clair.</p>
<p>“And time, too,” rejoined Happy. “If a thing consumes a lifetime anyway,
what's the use of intelligence?”</p>
<p>A bugle sounded. The two colonels raised their gray heads and gave the
chess men and the board to an orderly. The four boys returned to their
horses, and in a few minutes Jackson's army was once more on the march,
the Acadian band near the head of the column playing as joyously as if it
had never lost a member in battle. The mountains and the valley between
were bathed in light once more. The heavy dark green foliage on the slopes
of the Massanuttons rested the eye and the green fields of the valley were
cheering.</p>
<p>“I don't believe I'd ever forget this valley if I lived to be a thousand,”
said Harry. “I've marched up and down it so much and every second of the
time was so full of excitement.”</p>
<p>“Here's one day of peace, or at least it looks so,” said Dalton.</p>
<p>But Jackson beckoned to Harry, bade him ride to the rear and report if
there was any sign of the enemy. They had learned to obey quickly and
Harry galloped back by the side of the marching army. Even now the men
were irrepressible and he was saluted with the old familiar cries:</p>
<p>“Hey, Johnny Reb, come back! You're going toward the Yankees, not away
from 'em.”</p>
<p>“Let him go ahead, Bill. He's goin' to tell the Yankees to stop or he'll
hurt 'em.”</p>
<p>“That ain't the way to ride a hoss, bub. Don't set up so straight in the
saddle.”</p>
<p>Harry paid no attention to this disregard of his dignity as an officer. He
had long since become used to it, and, if they enjoyed it, he was glad to
furnish the excuse. He reached the rear guard of scouts and skirmishers,
and, turning his horse, kept with them for a while, but they saw nothing.
Sherburne, with a detachment of the cavalry was there, and Ashby, who
commanded all the horse, often appeared.</p>
<p>“Fremont's army is not many miles behind,” said Sherburne. “If we were to
ride a mile or two toward it we could see its dust. But the Yanks are
tired and they can't march fast. I wish I knew how far up the Luray
Shields and his army are. We've got to look out for that junction of
Shields and Fremont.”</p>
<p>“We'll pass the Gap before they can make the junction,” said Harry
confidently.</p>
<p>“How's Old Jack looking?”</p>
<p>“Same as ever.”</p>
<p>“That is, like a human sphinx. Well, you can never tell from his face what
he's thinking, but you can be sure that he's thinking something worth
while.”</p>
<p>“You think then I can report to him that the pursuit will not catch up
to-day?”</p>
<p>“I'm sure of it. I've talked with Ashby also about it and he says they're
yet too far back. Harry, what day is this?”</p>
<p>Harry smiled at the sudden question, but he understood how Sherburne, amid
almost continuous battle, had lost sight of time.</p>
<p>“I heard someone say it was the first of June,” he replied.</p>
<p>“No later than that? Why, it seemed to me that it must be nearly autumn.
Do you know, Harry, that on this very day, two years ago, I was up there
in those mountains to the west with a jolly camping party. I was just a
boy then, and now here I am an old man.”</p>
<p>“About twenty-three, I should say.”</p>
<p>“A good guess, but anyway I've been through enough to make me feel sixty.
I promise you, Harry, that if ever I get through this war alive I'll shoot
the man who tries to start another. Look at the fields! How fine and green
they are! Think of all that good land being torn up by the hoofs of
cavalry and the wheels of cannon!”</p>
<p>“If you are going to be sentimental I'll leave you,” said Harry, and the
action followed the word. He rode away, because he was afraid he would
grow sentimental himself.</p>
<p>The army continued its peaceful march up the valley and most of the night
that followed. Harry was allowed to obtain a few hours sleep in the latter
part of the night in one of the captured wagons. It was a covered wagon
and he selected it because he noticed that the night, even if it was the
first of June, was growing chill. But he had no time to be particular
about the rest. He did not undress—he had not undressed in days—but
lying between two sacks of meal with his head on a third sack he sank into
a profound slumber.</p>
<p>When Harry awoke he felt that the wagon was moving. He also heard the
patter of rain on his canvas roof. It was dusky in there, but he saw in
front of him the broad back of the teamster who sat on the cross seat and
drove.</p>
<p>“Hello!” exclaimed Harry, sitting up. “What's happened?”</p>
<p>A broad red face was turned to him, and a voice issuing from a slit almost
all the way across its breadth replied:</p>
<p>“Well, if little old Rip Van Winkle hasn't waked up at last! Why, you've
slept nigh on to four hours, and nobody in Stonewall Jackson's army is
ever expected to sleep more'n three and that's gospel truth, as shore's my
name is Sam Martin.”</p>
<p>“But, Sam, you don't tell me what's happened!”</p>
<p>“It's as simple as A, B, C. We're movin' ag'in, and that fine June day
yestiddy that we liked so much is gone forever. The second o' June ain't
one little bit like the first o' June. It's cold and it's wet. Can't you
hear the rain peltin' on the canvas? Besides, the Yanks are comin' up,
too. I done heard the boomin' o' cannon off there toward the rear.”</p>
<p>“Oh, why wasn't I called! Here I am sleeping away, and the enemy is
already in touch with us!”</p>
<p>“Don't you worry any 'bout that, sonny. Don't you be so anxious to git
into a fight, 'cause you'll have plenty of chances when you can't keep out
o' it. 'Sides, Gin'ral Jackson ain't been expectin' you. We're up near the
head o' the line an' 'bout an hour ago when we was startin' a whiskered
man on a little sorrel hoss rid up an' said: 'Which o' my staff have you
got in there? I remember 'signin' one to you last night.' I bows very low
an' I says: 'Gin'ral Jackson, I don't know his name. He was too sleepy to
give it, but he's a real young fellow, nice an' quiet. He ain't give no
trouble at all. He's been sleepin' so hard I think he has pounded his ear
clean through one o' them bags o' meal.' Gin'ral Jackson laughs low an'
just a little, and then he takes a peek into the wagon. 'Why, it's young
Harry Kenton!' he says. 'Let him sleep on till he wakes. He deserves it!'
Then he lets fall the canvas an' he ups an' rides away. An' if I was in
your place, young Mr. Kenton, I'd feel mighty proud to have Stonewall
Jackson say that I deserved more rest.”</p>
<p>“I am proud, but I've got to go now. I don't know where I'll find my
horse.”</p>
<p>“I know, an' what's more I'll tell. An orderly came back with him saddled
an' bridled an' he's hitched to this here wagon o' mine. Good-bye, Mr.
Kenton, I'm sorry you're goin' 'cause you've been a nice, pleasant
boarder, sayin' nothin' an' givin' no trouble.”</p>
<p>Harry thanked him, and then in an instant was out of the wagon and on his
horse. It required only a few minutes to overtake Jackson and his staff,
who were riding soberly along in the rain. He noticed with relief that he
was not the last to join the chief. Two or three others came up later.
Jackson nodded pleasantly to them all as they came.</p>
<p>But the morning was gloomy in the extreme. Harry was glad to shelter
himself with the heavy cavalry cloak from the cold rain. All the skies
were covered with sullen clouds, and the troops trudged silently on in
deep mud. Now and then a wind off the mountains threshed the rain sharply
into their faces. From the rear came the deep, sullen mutter which Harry
so readily recognized as the sound of the big guns. Sam Martin was right.
The enemy was most decidedly “in touch.”</p>
<p>Dalton handed Harry some cold food and he ate it in the saddle. Jackson
rode on saying nothing, his head bowed a little, his gaze far away. The
officers of his staff were also silent. Jackson after a while reined his
horse out of the road, and his staff, of course, followed. The troops
filed past and Jackson said:</p>
<p>“We will soon pass the Gap in the Massanuttons, and Shields cannot come
out there ahead of us. That danger is left behind.”</p>
<p>“What of the junction between Shields and Fremont, General?” asked one of
the older officers.</p>
<p>Jackson cast one glance at the somber heavens.</p>
<p>“Providence favors us,” he said. “The south fork of the Shenandoah flows
between Fremont and Shields. It is swollen already by the rains and the
rushing torrents from the mountains, and if I read the skies right we're
going to have other long and heavy rains. They can't ford the Shenandoah
and they can't stop to bridge it. It will be a long time before they can
bring a united force against us.”</p>
<p>But while he spoke the mutter of the guns grew louder. Jackson listened
attentively a long time, and then sent several of his staff officers to
the rear with orders to the cavalry, the Invincibles under Talbot, and one
other regiment to hold the enemy off at all costs. As Harry galloped back
the mutter of the cannon grew into thunder. There was also the sharper
crash of rifle fire. Presently he saw the flash of the firing and numerous
spires of smoke rising.</p>
<p>His own message was to the Invincibles and he delivered the brief note to
Colonel Talbot, who read it quickly and then tore it up.</p>
<p>“Stay with us a while, Harry,” he said, “and you can then report more
fully to the general what is going on. They crowd us hard. Look how their
sharpshooters are swarming in the woods and fields yonder.”</p>
<p>An orchard to the left of the road and only a short distance away was
filled with the Union riflemen. Running from tree to tree and along the
fences they sent bullets straight into the ranks of the Invincibles. Four
guns were turned and swept the orchard with shell, but the wary
sharpshooters darted to another point, and again came the hail of bullets.
Colonel Talbot bade his weary men turn, but at the moment, Sherburne, with
a troop of cavalry, swept down on the riflemen and sent them flying. Harry
saw Colonel Talbot's lips moving, and he knew that he was murmuring thanks
because Sherburne had come so opportunely.</p>
<p>“We're not having an easy time,” he said to Harry. “They press us hard. We
drive them back for a time, and they come again. They have field guns,
too, and they are handled with great skill. If I do not mistake greatly,
they are under the charge of Carrington, who, you remember, fought us at
that fort in the valley before Bull Run, John Carrington, old John
Carrington, my classmate at West Point, a man who wouldn't hurt a fly, but
who is the most deadly artillery officer in the world.”</p>
<p>Harry remembered that famous duel of the guns in the hills and Colonel
Talbot's admiration of his opponent, Carrington. Now he could see it
shining in his eyes as strongly as ever.</p>
<p>“Why are you so sure, colonel, that it's Carrington?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Because nobody else could handle those field guns as he does. He brings
'em up, sends the shot and shell upon us, then hitches up like lightning,
is away before we can charge, and in a minute or two is firing into our
line elsewhere. Trust Carrington for such work, and I'm glad he hasn't
been killed. John's the dearest soul in the world, as gentle as a woman.
Down! Down! all of you! There are the muzzles of his guns in the bushes
again!”</p>
<p>Colonel Talbot's order was so sharp and convincing that most of the
Invincibles mechanically threw themselves upon their faces, just as four
field pieces crashed and the shell and shrapnel flew over their heads.
That rapid order had saved them, but the officers on horseback were not so
lucky. A captain was killed, Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire was grazed on
the shoulder, and the horse of Colonel Talbot was killed under him.</p>
<p>But Colonel Talbot, alert and agile, despite his years, sprang clear of
the falling horse and said emphatically to his second in command,
Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire:</p>
<p>“The last doubt is gone! It's Carrington as sure as we live!”</p>
<p>Then he gave a quick order to his men to rise and fire with the rifles,
but the woods protected the gunners, and, when Sherburne with his cavalry
charged into the forest, Carrington and his guns were gone.</p>
<p>Colonel Talbot procured another horse, and the Invincibles, sore of body
and mind, resumed their slow and sullen retreat. Harry left them and rode
further along the front of the rear guard. Under the somber skies and in
the dripping rain there was a long line of flashing rifles and the flaming
of big guns at intervals.</p>
<p>Fremont was pushing the pursuit and pushing it hard. Harry recognized anew
the surpassing skill of Jackson in keeping his enemies separated by
mountains and streams, while his own concentrated force marched on. He
felt that Fremont would hold Jackson in battle if he could until the other
Northern armies came up, and he felt also that Jackson would lead Fremont
beyond a junction with the others and then turn. Yet these Northern men
were certainly annoying. They did not seem to mind defeats. Here they were
fighting as hard as ever, pursuing and not pursued.</p>
<p>Harry, turning to the left, saw a numerous body of cavalry under Ashby,
supported by guns also, and he joined them. Ashby on his famous white
horse was riding here and there, exposing himself again and again to the
fire of the enemy, who was pressing close. He nodded to Harry, whom he
knew.</p>
<p>“You can report to General Jackson,” he said, “that the enemy is
continually attacking, but that we are continually beating him off.”</p>
<p>Just as he spoke a trumpet sounded loud and clear in the edge of a wood
only three or four hundred yards away. There was a tremendous shout from
many men, and then the thunder of hoofs. A cavalry detachment, more than a
thousand strong, rushed down upon them, and to right and left of the
horse, regiments of infantry, supported by field batteries, charged also.</p>
<p>The movement was so sudden, so violent and so well-conceived that Ashby's
troops were swept away, despite every effort of the leader, who galloped
back and forth on his white horse begging them to stand. So powerful was
the rush that the cavalry were finally driven in retreat and with them the
Invincibles.</p>
<p>Some of the troops, worn by battles and marches until the will weakened
with the body, broke and ran up the road. Harry heard behind him the
triumphant shouts of their pursuers and he saw the Northern bayonets
gleaming as they came on in masses. Ashby was imploring his men to stand
but they would not. The columns pressing upon them were too heavy and they
scarcely had strength enough left to fight.</p>
<p>More and yet more troops came into battle. The Northern success for the
time was undoubted. The men in blue were driving in the Southern rear
guard, and Ashby was unable to hold the road.</p>
<p>But the two colonels at last succeeded in drawing the Invincibles across
the turnpike, where they knelt in good order and sent volley after volley
into the pursuing ranks. Fremont's men wavered and then stopped, and
Ashby, upbraiding his horsemen and calling their attention to the resolute
stand of the infantry, brought them into action again. Infantry and
cavalry then uniting, drove back the Northern vanguard, and, for the time
being, the Southern rear guard was safe once more.</p>
<p>But the Invincibles and the cavalry were almost exhausted. Harry found St.
Clair wounded, not badly, but with enough loss of blood for Colonel Talbot
to send him to one of the wagons. He insisted that he was still fit to
help hold the road, but Colonel Talbot ordered two of the soldiers to put
him in the wagon and he was compelled to submit.</p>
<p>“We can't let you die now from loss of blood, you young fire-eater,” said
Colonel Talbot severely, “because you may be able to serve us better by
getting killed later on.”</p>
<p>St. Clair smiled wanly and with his formal South Carolina politeness said:</p>
<p>“Thanks, sir, it helps a lot when you're able to put it in such a
satisfactory way.”</p>
<p>Harry, who was unhurt, gave St. Clair a strong squeeze of the hand.</p>
<p>“You'll be up and with us again soon, Arthur,” he said consolingly, and
then he rode away to Ashby.</p>
<p>“You may tell General Jackson that we can hold them back,” said the
cavalry leader grimly. “You have just seen for yourself.”</p>
<p>“I have, sir,” replied Harry, and he galloped away from the rear. But he
soon met the general himself, drawn by the uncommonly heavy firing. Harry
told him what had happened, but the expression of Jackson's face did not
change.</p>
<p>“A rather severe encounter,” he said, “but Ashby can hold them.”</p>
<p>All that day, nearly all that night and all the following day Harry passed
between Jackson and Ashby or with them. It was well for the Virginians
that they were practically born on horseback and were trained to open air
and the forests. For thirty-six hours the cavalry were in the saddle
almost without a break. And so was Harry. He had forgotten all about food
and rest. He was in a strange, excited mood. He seemed to see everything
through a red mist. In all the thirty-six hours the crash of rifles or the
thud of cannon ceased scarcely for a moment. It went on just the same in
day or in night. The Northern troops, although led by no such general as
Stonewall Jackson, showed the splendid stuff of which they were made. They
were always eager to push hard and yet harder.</p>
<p>The Southern troops burnt the bridges over the creeks as they retreated,
but the Northern men waded through the water and followed. The clouds of
cavalry were always in touch. A skirmish was invariably proceeding at some
point. Toward evening of the second day's pursuit, they came to Mount
Jackson, to which they had retreated once before, and there went into camp
in a strong place.</p>
<p>But the privates themselves knew that they could not stay there long. They
might turn and beat off Fremont's army, but then they would have to reckon
with the second army under Shields and the yet heavier masses that
McDowell was bringing up. But Jackson himself gave no sign of
discouragement. He went cheerfully among the men, and saw that attention,
as far as possible at such a time, was given to their needs. Harry hunted
up St. Clair and found him with a bandaged shoulder sitting in his wagon.
He was sore but cheerful.</p>
<p>“The doctor tells me, Harry, that I can take my place in the line in three
more days,” he said, “but I intend to make it two. I fancy that we need
all the men we can get now, and that I won't be driven back to this
wagon.”</p>
<p>“If I were as well fixed as you are, Arthur,” said Langdon, who appeared
at this moment on the other side of the wagon, “I'd stay where I was. But
it's so long since I've been hauled that I'm afraid the luxury would
overpower me. Think of lying on your back and letting the world float
peacefully by! Did I say 'think of it'? I was wrong. It is unthinkable.
Now, Harry, what plans has Old Jack got for us?”</p>
<p>“I don't know.”</p>
<p>“Well, he'll get us out of this. We're sure of that. But when? That's the
question.”</p>
<p>The question remained without an answer. Early the next morning they were
on the march again under lowering skies. The heavens from horizon to
horizon were a sodden gray and began to drip rain. Harry was sent again to
the rear-guard, where Ashby's cavalry hung like a curtain, backed by the
Invincibles and one or two other skeleton regiments.</p>
<p>Harry joined Sherburne and now the drip of the rain became a steady beat.
Chilling winds from the mountains swept over them. He had preserved
through thick and thin, through battle and through march that big cavalry
cloak, and now he buttoned it tightly around him.</p>
<p>He saw down the road puffs of smoke and heard the lashing fire of rifles,
but it did not make his pulses beat any faster now. He had grown so used
to it that it seemed to be his normal life. A bullet fired from a rifle of
longer range than the others plumped into the mud at the feet of his
horse, but he paid no attention to it.</p>
<p>He joined Sherburne, who was using his glasses, watching through the
heavy, thick air the Northern advance. The brilliant young cavalryman,
while as bold and enduring as ever, had changed greatly in the last two or
three weeks. The fine uniform was stained and bedraggled. Sherburne
himself had lost more than twenty pounds and his face was lined and
anxious far more than the face of a mere boy of twenty-three should have
been.</p>
<p>“I think they'll press harder than ever,” said Sherburne.</p>
<p>“Why?”</p>
<p>“The Shenandoah river, or rather the north fork of it, isn't far ahead.
They'd like to coop us up against it and make us fight, while their army
under Shields and all their other armies—God knows how many they
have—are coming up.”</p>
<p>“The river is bridged, isn't it?”</p>
<p>“Yes, but it takes a good while to get an army such as ours, loaded down
with prisoners and spoil, across it, and if they rushed us just when we
were starting over it, we'd have to turn and give battle. Jupiter, how it
rains! Behold the beauties of war, Harry!”</p>
<p>The wind suddenly veered a little, and with it the rain came hard and
fast. It seemed to blow off the mountains in sheets and for a moment or
two Harry was blinded. The beat of the storm upon leaves and earth was so
hard that the cracking of the rifles was dulled and deadened. Nevertheless
the rifle fire went on, and as well as Harry could judge, without any
decrease in violence.</p>
<p>“Hear the bugles now!” said Sherburne. “Their scouts are warning them of
the approach to the Shenandoah. They'll be coming up in a minute or two in
heavier force. Ah, see, Ashby understands, too! He's massing the men to
hold them back!”</p>
<p>The rain still poured with all the violence of a deluge, but the Northern
force, horse and cannon, pushed forward through the mud and opened with
all their might. Ashby's cavalry and the infantry in support replied.
There was something grim and awful to Harry in this fight in the raging
storm. Now and then, he could not see the flame of the firing for the rain
in his eyes. By a singular chance a bullet cut the button of his cloak at
the throat and the cloak flew open there. In a minute he was soaked
through and through with water, but he did not notice it.</p>
<p>The cavalry, the Invincibles and the other regiments were making a
desperate stand in order that the army might cross the bridge of the
Shenandoah. Harry was seized with a sort of fury. Why should these men try
to keep them from getting across? It was their right to escape. Presently
he found himself firing with his pistols into the great pillar of fire and
smoke and rain in front of him. Mud splashed up by the horses struck him
in the face now and then, and stung like gunpowder, but he began to shout
with joy when he saw that Ashby was holding back the Northern vanguard.</p>
<p>Ahead of him the Southern army was already rumbling over the bridge, while
the swollen and unfordable waters of the Shenandoah raced beneath it. But
the Northern brigades pressed hard. Harry did not know whether the rain
helped them or hurt them, but at any rate it was terribly uncomfortable.
It poured on them in sheets and sheets and the earth seemed to be a huge
quagmire. He wondered how the men were able to keep their ammunition dry
enough to fire, but that they did was evident from the crash that went on
without ceasing.</p>
<p>“In thinking of war before I really knew it,” said Harry, “I never thought
much of weather.”</p>
<p>“Does sound commonplace, but it cuts a mighty big figure I can tell you.
If it hadn't rained so hard just before Waterloo Napoleon would have got
up his big guns more easily, winning the battle, and perhaps changing the
history of the world. Confound it, look at that crowd pushing forward
through the field to take us in the flank!”</p>
<p>“Western men, I think,” said Harry. “Here are two of our field guns,
Sherburne! Get 'em to throw some grape in there!”</p>
<p>It was lucky that the guns approached at that moment. Their commander, as
quick of eye as either Harry or Sherburne, unlimbered and swept back the
western men who were seeking to turn their flank. Then Sherburne, with a
charge of his cavalry, sent them back further. But at the call of Ashby's
trumpet they turned quickly and galloped after Jackson's army, the main
part of which had now passed the bridge.</p>
<p>“I suppose we'll burn the bridge after we cross it,” said Harry.</p>
<p>“Of course.”</p>
<p>“But how on earth can we set fire to it with this Noah's flood coming
down?”</p>
<p>“I don't know. They'll manage it somehow. Look, Harry, see the flames
bursting from the timbers now. Gallop, men! Gallop! We may get our faces
scorched in crossing the bridge, but when we're on the other side it won't
be there for the Yankees!”</p>
<p>The Invincibles and the other infantry regiments all were advancing at the
double quick, with the cavalry closing up the rear. Behind them many
bugles rang and through the dense rain they saw the Northern cavalry
leaders swinging their sabers and cheering on their men, and they also saw
behind them the heavy masses of infantry coming up.</p>
<p>Harry knew that it was touch-and-go. The bulk of the army was across, and
if necessary they must sacrifice Ashby's cavalry, but that sacrifice would
be too great. Harry had never seen Ashby and his gallant captains show
more courage. They fought off the enemy to the very last and then galloped
for the bridge, under a shower of shell and grape and bullets. Ashby's own
horse was killed under him, falling headlong in the mud, but in an instant
somebody supplied him with a fresh one, upon which he leaped, and then
they thundered over the burning bridge, Ashby and Sherburne the last two
to begin the crossing.</p>
<p>Harry, who was just ahead of Ashby and Sherburne, felt as if the flames
were licking at them. With an involuntary motion he threw up his hands to
protect his eyes from the heat, and he also had a horrible sensation lest
the bridge, its supporting timbers burned through, should fall, sending
them all into the rushing flood.</p>
<p>But the bridge yet held and Harry uttered a gasp of relief as the feet of
his horse struck the deep mud on the other side. They galloped on for two
or three hundred yards, and then at the command of Ashby turned.</p>
<p>The bridge was a majestic sight, a roaring pyramid that shot forth clouds
of smoke and sparks in myriads.</p>
<p>“How under the sun did we cross it?” Harry exclaimed.</p>
<p>“We crossed it, that's sure, because here we are,” said Sherburne. “I
confess myself that I don't know just how we did it, Harry, but it's quite
certain that the enemy will never cross it. The fire's too strong.
Besides, they'd have our men to face.”</p>
<p>Harry looked about, and saw several thousand men drawn up to dispute the
passage, but the Northern troops recognizing its impossibility at that
time, made no attempt. Nevertheless their cannon sent shells curving over
the stream, and the Southern cannon sent curving shells in reply. But the
burning bridge roared louder and the pyramid of flame rose higher. The
rain, which had never ceased to pour in a deluge, merely seemed to feed
it.</p>
<p>“Ah, she's about to go now,” exclaimed Sherburne.</p>
<p>The bridge seemed to Harry to rear up before his eyes like a living thing,
and then draw together a mass of burning timbers. The next moment the
whole went with a mighty crash into the river, and the blazing fragments
floated swiftly away on the flood. The deep and rapid Shenandoah flowed a
barrier between the armies of Jackson and Fremont.</p>
<p>“A river can be very beautiful without a bridge, Harry, can't it?” said a
voice beside him.</p>
<p>It was St. Clair, a heavy bandage over his left shoulder, but a smoking
rifle in his right hand, nevertheless.</p>
<p>“I couldn't stand it any longer, Harry,” he said. “I had to get up and
join the Invincibles, and you see I'm all right.”</p>
<p>Harry was compelled to laugh at the sodden figure, from which the rain ran
in streams. But he admired St. Clair's spirit.</p>
<p>“It was by a hair's breadth, Arthur,” he said.</p>
<p>“But we won across, just the same, and now I'm going back to that wagon to
finish my cure. I fancy that we'll now have a rest of six or eight hours,
if General Jackson doesn't think so much time taken from war a mere
frivolity.”</p>
<p>The Southern army drew off slowly, but as soon as it was out of sight the
tenacious Northern troops undertook to follow. They attempted to build a
bridge of boats, but the flood was so heavy that they were swept away.
Then Fremont set men to work to rebuild the bridge, which they could do in
twenty-four hours, but Jackson, meanwhile, was using every one of those
precious hours.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XIV. THE DOUBLE BATTLE </h2>
<p>The twenty-four hours were a rest, merely by comparison. There was no
pursuit, at least, the enemy was not in sight, but the scouts brought word
that the bridge over the Shenandoah would be completed in a day and night,
and that Fremont would follow. Jackson's army triumphantly passed the last
defile of the Massanuttons and the army of Shields did not appear issuing
from it. It was no longer possible for them to be struck in front and on
the flank at the same time, and the army breathed a mighty sigh of relief.
At night of the next day Harry was sitting by the camp of the Invincibles,
having received a brief leave of absence from the staff, and he detailed
the news to his eager friends.</p>
<p>“General Jackson is stripping again for battle,” he said to Colonel
Leonidas Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire. “He's sent all
the sick and wounded across a ferry to Staunton, and he's dispatched his
prisoners and captured stores by another road. So he has nothing left but
men fit for battle.”</p>
<p>“Which includes me,” said St. Clair proudly, showing his left shoulder
from which the bandage had been taken, “I'm as well as ever.”</p>
<p>“Men get well fast with Stonewall Jackson,” said Colonel Talbot. “I'll
confess to you lads that I thought it was all up with us there in the
lower valley, when we were surrounded by the masses of the enemy, and I
don't see yet how we got here.”</p>
<p>“But we are here, Leonidas,” said Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire,
“and that's enough for us to know.”</p>
<p>“Right, Hector, old friend. It's enough for us to know. Do you by chance
happen to have left two of those delightful cigarettes?”</p>
<p>“Just two, Leonidas, one for you and one for me, and now is a chance to
smoke 'em.”</p>
<p>The young lieutenants drew to one side while the two old friends smoked
and compared notes. They did not smoke, but they compared notes also, as
they rested on the turf. The rain had ceased and the grass was dry. They
saw through the twilight the dark mass of the Massanuttons, the extreme
southern end, and Happy Tom Langdon waved his hand toward the mountain,
like one who salutes a friend.</p>
<p>“Good old mountain,” he said. “You've been a buffer between us and the
enemy more than once, but it took a mind like Stonewall Jackson's to keep
moving you around so you would stand between the armies of the enemy and
make the Yankees fight, only one army at a time.”</p>
<p>“You're right,” said Harry, who was enjoying the deep luxury of rest. “I
didn't know before that mountains could be put to such good use. Look, you
can see lights on the ridge now.”</p>
<p>They saw lights, evidently those of powerful lanterns swung to and fro,
but they did not understand them, nor did they care much.</p>
<p>“Signals are just trifles to me now,” said Happy Tom. “What do I care for
lights moving on a mountain four or five miles away, when for a month, day
and night without stopping, a million Yankees have been shooting rifle
bullets at me, and a thousand of the biggest cannon ever cast have been
pouring round shot, long shot, shell, grape, canister and a hundred other
kinds of missiles that I can't name upon this innocent and unoffending
head of mine.”</p>
<p>“They'll be on us tomorrow, Happy,” said St. Clair, more gravely. “This
picnic of ours can't last more than a day.”</p>
<p>“I think so, too,” said Harry. “So long, boys, I've got to join Captain
Sherburne. The general has detached me for service with him under Ashby,
and you know that when you are with them, something is going to happen.”</p>
<p>Harry slept well that night, partly in a camp and partly in a saddle, and
he found himself the next day with Ashby and Sherburne near a little town
called Harrisonburg. They were on a long hill in thick forest, and the
scouts reported that the enemy was coming. The Northern armies were
uniting now and they were coming up the valley, expecting to crush all
opposition.</p>
<p>“Take your glasses, Harry,” said Sherburne, “and you'll see a strong force
crossing the fields, but it's not strong enough. We've a splendid position
here in the forest and you just watch. Ah, here come your friends, the
Invincibles. See, Ashby is forming them in the center, while we, of the
horse, take the flanks.”</p>
<p>The men in blue, catching sight of the Confederate uniforms in the wood,
charged with a shout, but they did not know the strength of the force
before them. The Invincibles poured in a deadly fire at close range, and
then Ashby's cavalry with a yell charged on either flank. The Northern
troops, taken by surprise, gave way, and the Southern force followed,
firing continuously.</p>
<p>They came within a half mile of Harrisonburg, and the main Northern army
of Fremont was at hand. The general who had pursued so long, saw his men
retreating, and, filled with chagrin and anger, he hurried forward heavier
forces of both cavalry and infantry. Other troops came to the relief of
Ashby also, and Harry saw what he thought would be only a heavy skirmish
grow into a hot battle of size.</p>
<p>Fremont, resolved that the North should win a battle in the open field,
and rejoiced that he had at last brought his enemy to bay, never ceased to
hurry his troops to the combat. Formidable lines of the western riflemen
rushed on either flank, and before their deadly rifles Ashby's cavalry
wavered. Harry saw with consternation that they were about to give way,
but Ashby galloped up to the unbroken lines of infantry and ordered them
to charge.</p>
<p>The words were scarcely out of his mouth, when his horse, shot through,
fell to the ground. Ashby fell with him, but he sprang instantly to his
feet, and shouted in a loud voice:</p>
<p>“Charge men, for God's sake! Charge! Charge!” With a rush and roar, the
Invincibles and their comrades swept forward, but at the same instant
Harry saw Ashby fall again. With a cry of horror he leaped from his horse
and ran to him, lifting him in his arms. But he quickly laid him back on
the grass. Ashby had been shot through the heart and killed instantly.</p>
<p>Harry gazed around him, struck with grief and dismay, but he saw only the
resistless rush of the infantry. The Invincibles and their comrades were
avenging the death of Turner Ashby. Tired of retreating and hot for action
they struck the Northern division with a mighty impact, shattering it and
driving it back rapidly. The Southern cavalry, recovering also, struck it
on the flank, and the defeat was complete. Fremont's wish was denied him.
After so much hard marching and such a gallant and tenacious pursuit, he
had gone the way of the other Northern generals who opposed Jackson, and
was beaten.</p>
<p>Although they had driven back the vanguard, winning a smart little
victory, and telling to Fremont and Shields that the pursuit of Jackson
had now become dangerous, there was gloom in the Southern army. The
horsemen did not know until they trotted back and saw Harry kneeling
beside his dead body, that the great Ashby was gone. For a while they
could not believe it. Their brilliant and daring leader, who had led
Jackson's vanguard in victory, and who had hung like a covering curtain in
retreat, could not have fallen. It seemed impossible that the man who had
led for days and days through continuous showers of bullets could have
been slain at last by some stray shot.</p>
<p>But they lifted him up finally and carried him away to a house in the
little neighboring village of Port Republic, Sherburne and the other
captains, hot from battle, riding with uncovered heads. He was put upon a
bed there, and Harry, a staff officer, was selected to ride to Jackson
with the news. He would gladly have evaded the errand, but it was obvious
that he was the right messenger.</p>
<p>He rode slowly and found Jackson coming up with the main force, Dr.
McGuire, his physician, and Colonel Crutchfield, his chief of artillery,
riding on either side of him. The general gave one glance at Harry's
drooping figure.</p>
<p>“Well,” he said, “have we not won the victory? From a hilltop our glasses
showed the enemy in flight.”</p>
<p>“Yes, general,” said Harry, taking off his hat, “we defeated the enemy,
but General Ashby is dead.”</p>
<p>Jackson and his staff were silent for a moment, and Harry saw the general
shrink as if he had received a heavy blow.</p>
<p>“Ashby killed! Impossible!” he exclaimed.</p>
<p>“It's true, sir. I helped to carry his body to a house in Port Republic,
where it is now lying.”</p>
<p>“Lead us to that house, Mr. Kenton,” said Jackson.</p>
<p>Harry rode forward in silence, and the others followed in the same
silence. At the house, after they had looked upon the body, Jackson asked
to be left alone awhile with all that was left of Turner Ashby. The others
withdrew and Harry always believed that Jackson prayed within that room
for the soul of his departed comrade.</p>
<p>When he came forth his face had resumed its sternness, but was without
other expression, as usual.</p>
<p>“He will not show grief, now,” said Sherburne, “but I think that his soul
is weeping.”</p>
<p>“And a bad time for Fremont and Shields is coming,” said Harry.</p>
<p>“It's a risk that we all take in war,” said Dalton, who was more of a
fatalist than any of the others.</p>
<p>The chief wrote a glowing official tribute to Ashby, saying that his
“daring was proverbial, his powers of endurance almost incredible, his
character heroic, and his sagacity almost intuitive in divining the
purposes and movements of the enemy.” Yet deeply as Harry had been
affected by Ashby's death, it could not remain in his mind long, because
they had passed the Massanuttons now, and Fremont and Shields following up
the valley must soon unite.</p>
<p>Harry believed that Jackson intended to strike a blow. The situation of
the Confederacy was again critical—it seemed to Harry that it was
always critical—and somebody must wield the sword, quick and strong.
McClellan with his great and well-trained army was before Richmond. It was
only the rapid marches and lightning strokes of Jackson that had kept
McDowell with another great army from joining him, but to keep back this
force of McDowell until they dealt with McClellan, there must be yet other
rapid marches and lightning strokes.</p>
<p>Harry's sleep that night was the longest in two weeks, but he was up at
dawn, and he was directed by Jackson to ride forward with Sherburne toward
the southern base of the Massanuttons, observe the approach of both
Fremont and Shields and report to him.</p>
<p>Harry was glad of his errand. He always liked to ride with Sherburne, who
was a fount of cheerfulness, and he was still keyed up to that
extraordinary intensity and pitch of excitement that made all things
possible. He now understood how the young soldiers of Napoleon in Italy
had been able to accomplish so much. It was the man, a leader of
inspiration and genius, surcharging them all with electrical fire.</p>
<p>Sherburne's troop was a portion of a strong cavalry force, which divided
as it reached the base of the Massanuttons, a half passing on either side.
Sherburne and Harry rode to the right in order to see the army of Shields.
The day was beautiful, with a glorious June sun and gentle winds, but
Harry, feeling something strange about it, realized presently that it was
the silence. For more than two weeks cannon had been thundering and rifles
crashing in the valley, almost without cessation. Neither night nor storm
had caused any interruption.</p>
<p>It seemed strange, almost incredible now, but they heard birds singing as
they flew from tree to tree, and peaceful rabbits popped up in the brush.
Yet before they went much further they saw the dark masses of the Northern
army under Shields moving slowly up the valley, and anxious for the
junction with Fremont.</p>
<p>But the Northern generals were again at a loss. Jackson had turned
suddenly and defeated Fremont's vanguard with heavy loss, but what had
become of him afterward? Fremont and Shields were uncertain of the
position of each other, and they were still more uncertain about
Jackson's. He might fall suddenly upon either, and they grew very cautious
as they drew near to the end of the Massanuttons.</p>
<p>Sherburne and Harry, after examining the Northern army through their
glasses, rode back with a dozen men to the south base of the Massanuttons.
Most of them were signal officers, and Harry and Sherburne, dismounting,
climbed the foot of the mountain with them. When they stood upon the crest
and looked to right and left in the clear June air, they beheld a
wonderful sight.</p>
<p>To the south along Mill Creek lay Jackson's army. To the west massed in
the wider valley was the army of Fremont, which had followed them so
tenaciously, and to the east, but just separated from it by the base of
the Massanuttons, were the masses of Shields advancing slowly.</p>
<p>Harry through his powerful glasses could see the horsemen in front
scouting carefully in advance of either army, and once more he appreciated
to the full Jackson's skill in utilizing the mountains and rivers to keep
his enemies apart. But what would he do now that they were passing the
Massanuttons, and there was no longer anything to separate Shields and
Fremont. He dismissed the thought. There was an intellect under the old
slouch hat of the man who rode Little Sorrel that could rescue them from
anything.</p>
<p>“Quite a spectacle,” said Sherburne. “A man can't often sit at ease on a
mountaintop and look at three armies. Now, Barron, you are to signal from
here to General Jackson every movement of our enemies, but just before
either Shields or Fremont reaches the base of the mountain, you're to slip
down and join us.”</p>
<p>“We'll do it, sir,” said Barron, the chief signal officer. “We're not
likely to go to sleep up here with armies on three sides of us.”</p>
<p>Sherburne, Harry and two other men who were not to stay slowly descended
the mountain. Harry enjoyed the breathing space. On the mountainside he
was lifted, for a while, above the fierce passions of war. He saw things
from afar and they were softened by distance. He drew deep breaths of the
air, crisp and cool, on the heights, and Sherburne, who saw the glow on
his face, understood. The same glow was on his own face.</p>
<p>“It's a grand panorama, Harry,” he said, “and we'll take our fill of it
for a few moments.” They stood on a great projection of rock and looked
once more and for a little while into the valley and its divisions. The
two Northern armies were nearer now, and they were still moving. Harry saw
the sun flashing over thousands of bayonets. He almost fancied he could
hear the crack of the teamsters' whips as the long lines of wagons in the
rear creaked along.</p>
<p>They descended rapidly, remounted their horses and galloped back to
Jackson.</p>
<p>They buried Ashby that day, all the leading Southern officers following
him to his grave, and throughout the afternoon the silence was continued.
But the signals on the mountain worked and worked, and the signalmen with
Jackson replied. No movement of the two pursuing armies was unknown to the
Southern leader.</p>
<p>Harry, with an hour's leave, visited once more his friends of the
Invincibles. He had begged a package of fine West Indian cigarettes from
Sherburne, and he literally laid them at the feet of the two colonels—he
found them sitting together on the grass, lean gray men who seemed to be
wholly reduced to bone and muscle.</p>
<p>“This is a great gift, Harry, perhaps greater than you think,” said
Colonel Leonidas Talbot gravely. “I tried to purchase some from the
commissariat, but they had none—it seems that General Stonewall
Jackson doesn't consider cigarettes necessary for his troops. Anyhow, the
way our Confederate money is going, I fancy a package of cigarettes will
soon cost a hundred dollars. Here, Hector, light up. We divide this box,
half and half. That's right, isn't it, Harry?”</p>
<p>“Certainly, sir.”</p>
<p>Harry passed on to the junior officers and found St. Clair and Happy Tom
lying on the grass. Happy pretended to rouse from sleep when Harry came.</p>
<p>“Hello, old omen of war,” he said. “What's Old Jack expecting of us now?”</p>
<p>“I told you never to ask me such a question as that again. The general
isn't what you'd call a garrulous man. How's your shoulder, Arthur?”</p>
<p>“About well. The muscles were not torn. It was just loss of blood that
troubled me for the time.”</p>
<p>“I hear,” said Langdon, “that the two Yankee armies are to join soon. The
Massanuttons won't be between them much longer, and then they'll have only
one of the forks of the river to cross before they fall upon each other's
breasts and weep with joy. Harry, it seems to me that we're always coming
to a fork of the Shenandoah. How many forks does it have anyhow?”</p>
<p>“Only two, but the two forks have forks of their own. That's the reason
we're always coming to deep water and by the same token the Yankees are
always coming to it, too, which is a good thing for us, as we get there
first, when the bridges are there, and when the Yankees come they are
gone.”</p>
<p>But not one of these boys understood the feeling in the Northern armies.
Late the day before a messenger from Shields had got through the
Massanuttons to Fremont, and had informed him that an easy triumph was at
hand. Jackson and his army, he said, fearing the onset of overwhelming
numbers, was retreating in great disorder.</p>
<p>The two generals were now convinced of speedy victory. They had
communicated at last, and they could have some concert of movement.
Jackson was less than thirty miles away, and his army was now but a
confused mass of stragglers which would dissolve under slight impact. Both
had defeats and disappointments to avenge, and they pushed forward now
with increased speed, Shields in particular showing the greatest energy in
pursuit. But the roads were still deep in mud, and his army was forced to
toil on all that day and the next, while the signalmen on the top of the
Massanuttons told every movement he made to Stonewall Jackson.</p>
<p>The signals the second evening told Jackson that the two Northern armies
were advancing fast, and that he would soon have before him an enemy
outnumbering him anywhere from two to three to one. He had been talking
with Ewell just before the definite news was brought, and Harry, Dalton
and other officers of the staff stood near, as their duty bade them.</p>
<p>Harry knew the nature of the information, as it was not a secret from any
member of the staff, and now they all stood silently on one side and
watched Jackson. Even Ewell offered no suggestion, but kept his eyes fixed
anxiously on his chief. Harry felt that another one of those critical
moments, perhaps the most dangerous of all, had arrived. They had fought
army after army in detail, but now they must fight armies united, or fly.
He did not know that the silent general was preparing the most daring and
brilliant of all his movements in the valley. In the face of both Shields
and Fremont his courage flamed to the highest, and the brain under the old
slouch hat grew more powerful and penetrating than ever. And flight never
for a moment entered into his scheme.</p>
<p>Jackson at length said a few words to Ewell, who sprang upon his horse and
rode away to his division. Then, early in the morning, Jackson led the
rest of the army into a strange district, the Grottoes of the Shenandoah.
It was a dark region, filled beneath with great caves and covered thickly
with heavy forest, through the leaves of which the troops caught views of
the Massanuttons to the north or of the great masses of the Blue Ridge to
the east, while far to the west lay other mountains, range on range. But
all around them the country was wooded heavily.</p>
<p>The army did not make a great amount of noise when it camped in the forest
over the caves, and the fires were few. Perhaps some of the men were
daunted by the dangers which still surrounded them so thickly after so
many days of such fierce fighting. At any rate, they were silent. The
Acadians had played no music for a day now, and the band lay upon the
ground sunk in deep slumber.</p>
<p>Harry had not been sent on any errand, and he was sitting on a stone,
finishing his supper, when Dalton, who had been away with a message,
returned.</p>
<p>“What's happened, George?” asked Harry.</p>
<p>“Nothing yet, but a lot will happen soon.”</p>
<p>“Where have you been?”</p>
<p>“I've been on the other side of the Shenandoah. You needn't open your
eyes. It's so. Moreover, Ewell's whole division is over there, and it will
meet the vanguard of Fremont as he advances. I think I begin to see the
general's scheme.”</p>
<p>“I do, too. Ewell will fight off Fremont, holding him there until Jackson
can annihilate Shields. Then he will retreat over the river to Jackson,
burning the bridge behind him.”</p>
<p>Dalton nodded.</p>
<p>“Looks that way to a man up a tree,” he said.</p>
<p>“It's like the general,” said Harry. “He could bring his whole army on
this side, burn the bridge, and in full force attack Shields, but he
prefers to defeat them both.”</p>
<p>“Yes; but I wish to Heaven we had more men.”</p>
<p>“Sh! Here comes the general,” said Harry.</p>
<p>The two were silent as General Jackson and an officer passed. The general
spoke a word or two to the boys and went on. They were but ordinary words,
but both felt uplifted because he had spoken to them.</p>
<p>Morning found them motionless in the forest, over the caves. They ate a
hasty breakfast and waited. But the scouts were all out, and presently
Harry and Dalton were sent toward the Shenandoah. Finding nothing there,
they crossed over the bridge and came to Ewell's division, where they had
plenty of acquaintances.</p>
<p>The sun was now high, and while they were talking with their friends, they
heard the faint report of rifle shots far in their front. Presently the
scouts came running back, and said that the enemy was only two miles away
and was advancing to the attack.</p>
<p>Ewell took off his hat and his bald head glistened in the sun's rays. But,
like Jackson, he was always cool, and he calmly moved his troops into
position along a low ridge, with heavy woods on either flank. Harry knew
the ground, alas, too well. It was among the trees just behind the ridge
that Turner Ashby had been slain. Ewell had before him Fremont with two to
one, and the rest of the army under Jackson's immediate command was four
miles away, facing Shields.</p>
<p>“Do you hear anything behind you, Harry?” asked Dalton.</p>
<p>“No, why do you ask?”</p>
<p>“If we heard the booming of guns, and we'd hear 'em at four miles, we'd
know that General Jackson himself was engaged. But as there's no sound,
Shields hasn't come up, and we'll wait here a while to see if we can't
have something important to report.”</p>
<p>“I don't think so,” said Harry. “We know that the enemy is about to attack
here in full force, and that's enough to know about this side of the
river. We ought to gallop back to General Jackson and tell him.”</p>
<p>“You're right, Harry,” said the Virginian, in whom the sense of duty was
strong. “The general may be attacked by the time we get there, and he'll
want to know exactly how things are.”</p>
<p>They galloped back as fast as they could and found that General Jackson
had moved his headquarters to the little village of Port Republic. They
found him and told him the news as he was mounting his horse, but at the
same time an excited and breathless messenger came galloping up from
another direction. The vanguard of Shields had already routed his pickets,
and the second Northern army was pressing forward in full force.</p>
<p>As he spoke, the Northern cavalry came in sight, and if those Northern
horsemen had known what a prize was almost within their hands, they would
have spared no exertion.</p>
<p>“Make for the bridge! Make for the bridge, general!” cried Dalton.</p>
<p>The horsemen in blue were not coming fast. They rode cautiously through
the streets. Southern villages were not friendly to them, and this caution
saved Stonewall Jackson. He was on his horse in an instant, galloping for
the bridge, and Harry and Dalton were hot behind him. They thundered over
the bridge with the Northern cavalry just at their heels, and escaped by a
hair's breadth. But the chief of artillery and Dr. McGuire and one of the
captains, Willis, were captured, and the rest of the staff was dispersed.</p>
<p>“My God!” exclaimed Harry, when the Northern cavalry stopped at the
bridge. “What an escape!”</p>
<p>He was thinking of Jackson's escape, not his own, and while he was
wondering what the general would do, he saw him ride to the bank of the
river and watch the Northern cavalry on the other side. Then Harry and
Dalton uttered a shout as they saw a Southern battery push forward from
the village and open on the cavalry. An infantry regiment, which had been
forming in the town, also came up at full speed, uttering the long,
high-pitched rebel yell.</p>
<p>The Northern vanguard, which had come so near to such a high achievement,
was driven back with a rush, and a Southern battery appearing on its
flank, swept it with shell as it retreated. So heavy was the Southern
attack, that the infantry also were driven back and their guns taken. The
entire vanguard was routed, and as it received no support, even Harry and
Dalton knew that the main army under Shields had not yet come up.</p>
<p>“That was the closest shave I ever saw,” said Dalton. “So it was,” said
Harry. “But just listen to that noise behind you!”</p>
<p>A tremendous roar and crash told them that the battle between Ewell and
Fremont had opened. Jackson beckoned to Harry, Dalton and the members of
his staff who had reassembled. The three, who were captured, subsequently
escaped in the confusion and turmoil and rejoined their general. Setting a
powerful force to guard the bridge, Jackson said to his staff:</p>
<p>“While we are waiting for Shields to come up with his army, we'll ride
over and see how the affair between Ewell and Fremont is coming on.”</p>
<p>The roar and crash told them it was coming on with great violence, but
Fremont, so strong in pursuit was not so strong in action. Now that he was
face to face with the enemy, he did not attack with all his might. He
hesitated, not from personal fear, but from fear on account of his army.
The whole force of Jackson might be in front of him, and the apprehensions
that he did not feel in pursuit assailed him when he looked at the ridge
covered with the enemy.</p>
<p>Harry and Dalton watched with breathless interest. A portion of Fremont's
army, but not all of it, just when it was needed most, was sent to the
charge. Led by the pickets and skirmishers they came forward gallantly, a
long line of glittering bayonets. In the thick woods on their flank lay
three Southern regiments, ambushed and not yet stirring. No sunlight
penetrated there to show their danger to the soldiers who were breasting
the slope.</p>
<p>Harry foresaw all, and he drew a long breath for brave men who were
marching to a certain fate.</p>
<p>“Why don't they look! Why don't they look!” he found himself exclaiming.</p>
<p>The next instant the entire wood burst into flame. Picking their aim and
firing at short range, the Southern riflemen sent sheet after sheet of
bullets into the charging ranks. It was more than human blood and flesh
could stand, and the Northern regiments gave way. But it was not a rout.
They retreated on their reserves, and stood there recovering themselves,
while the Southern riflemen reloaded, but did not pursue. The regiments
which had done the deadly work sank back in the woods, and seemingly the
battle was over.</p>
<p>Harry had not been under fire. He and Dalton, the rest of Jackson's staff
and the general himself merely watched. Nor did Jackson give any further
orders to his able lieutenant, Ewell. He allowed him to make the battle
his own, and in Harry's opinion he was making it right.</p>
<p>There came a silence that seemed interminably long to Harry. The sunlight
blazed down, and the two armies stood looking at each other across a field
that was strewn with the fallen. It would have been folly for the men in
blue to charge again, and it was the chief business of the Southern troops
to hold them back. Therefore they stood in their positions and watched.
Harry judged that the bulk of Fremont's army was not yet up. It was this
failure to bring superior numbers to bear at the right time that was
always the ruin of the Northern generals in the valley, because the genius
on the other side invariably saw the mistake and profited by it.</p>
<p>Harry and Dalton still waited, wondering. Jackson himself sat quietly on
his horse, and issued no order. The Northern troops were motionless, and
Harry, who knew how precious time was, with the rest of Fremont's army
coming up, wondered again. But Trimble, the commander of the Southern
riflemen hidden in the wood, saw a chance. He would send his men under
cover of the forest and hurl them suddenly upon the Northern flank. Ewell
gave his consent, and said that he would charge, too, if the movement were
successful.</p>
<p>Harry, watching, saw the Southern regiments in the wood steal from the
forest, pass swiftly up a ravine, and then, delivering a shattering fire
at short range, charge with the bayonet upon the Northern flank. The men
in blue, surprised by so fierce an onset, gave way. Uttering the rebel
yell, the Southerners followed and pushed them further and further.
Ewell's quick eye, noting the success, sent forward his own center in a
heavy charge.</p>
<p>Fremont, from the rear, hurried forward new troops, but they were beaten
as fast as they arrived. The batteries were compelled to unlimber and take
to flight, the fresh brigade dispatched by Fremont was routed, and the
whole Southern line pressed forward, driving the Northern army before it.</p>
<p>“General Jackson was wise in trusting to General Ewell,” said Dalton to
Harry. “He's won a notable victory. I wonder how far he'll push it.”</p>
<p>“Not far, I think. All Ewell's got to do is to hold Fremont, and he has
surely held him. There's Shields on the other side of the river with whom
we have to deal. Do you know, George, that all the time we've been sitting
here, watching that battle in front of us, I've been afraid we'd hear the
booming of the guns on the other side of the river, telling that Shields
was up.”</p>
<p>“We scorched their faces so badly there in Cross Keys that they must be
hesitating. Lord, Harry, how old Stonewall plays with fire. To attack and
defeat one army with the other only a few miles away must take nerves all
of steel.”</p>
<p>“But if Ewell keeps on following Fremont he'll be too far away when we
turn to deal with Shields.”</p>
<p>“But he won't go too far. There are the trumpets now recalling his army.”</p>
<p>The mellow notes were calling in the eager riflemen, who wished to
continue the pursuit, but the army was not to retire. It held the
battlefield, and now that the twilight was coming the men began to build
their fires, which blazed through the night within sight of those of the
enemy. The sentinels of the two armies were within speaking distance of
one another, and often in the dark, as happened after many another battle
in this war, Yank and Reb passed a friendly word or two. They met, too, on
the field, where they carried away their dead and wounded, but on such
errands there was always peace.</p>
<p>Those hours of the night were precious, but Fremont did not use them.
Defeated, he held back, magnifying the numbers of his enemy, fearing that
Jackson was in front of him with his whole army, and once more out of
touch with his ally, Shields.</p>
<p>But Stonewall Jackson was all activity. The great war-like intellect was
working with the utmost precision and speed. Having beaten back Fremont,
he was making ready for Shields. The first part of the drama, as he had
planned it, had been carried through with brilliant success, and he meant
that the next should be its equal.</p>
<p>Harry was not off his horse that night. He carried message after message
to generals and colonels and captains. He saw the main portion of Ewell's
army withdrawn from Fremont's front, leaving only a single brigade to hold
him, in case he should advance at dawn. But he saw the fires increased,
and he carried orders that the men should build them high, and see that
they did not go down.</p>
<p>When he came back from one of these errands about midnight, just after the
rise of the moon, he found General Jackson standing upon the bank of the
river, giving minute directions to a swarm of officers. His mind missed
nothing. He directed not only the movements of the troops, but he saw also
that the trains of ammunition and food were sent to the proper points.
About half way between midnight and morning he lay down and slept in a
small house near the river bank. Shortly before dawn the commander of a
battery, looking for one of his officers, entered the house and saw
Jackson, dressed for the saddle, sword, boots, spurs and all, lying on his
face upon the bed, asleep. On a small table near him stood a short piece
of tallow candle, sputtering dimly. But the officer saw that it was
Jackson, and he turned on tiptoe to withdraw.</p>
<p>The general awoke instantly, sat up and demanded who was there. When the
officer explained, he said he was glad that he had been awakened, asked
about the disposition of the troops, and gave further commands. He did not
go to sleep again.</p>
<p>But Harry's orders carried him far beyond midnight, and he had no thought
of sleep. Once more repressed but intense excitement had complete hold of
him. He could not have slept had the chance been given to him. The bulk of
the army was now in front of Shields, and the pickets were not only in
touch, but were skirmishing actively. All through the late hours after
midnight Harry heard the flash of their firing in front of him.</p>
<p>The cavalry under Sherburne and other daring leaders were exchanging shots
with the equally daring cavalry of the enemy.</p>
<p>As the dawn approached the firing was heavier. Harry knew that the day
would witness a great battle, and his heart was filled with anxiety. The
army led by Shields showed signs of greater energy and tenacity than that
led by Fremont. The Northern troops that had fought so fiercely at
Kernstown were there, and they also had leaders who would not be daunted
by doubts and numbers. Harry wondered if they had heard of the defeat of
Fremont at Cross Keys.</p>
<p>He looked at the flashing of the rifles in the dusk, and before dawn rode
back to the house where his commander slept. He was ready and waiting when
Jackson came forth, and Dalton appearing from somewhere in the dusk, sat
silently on his horse by his side.</p>
<p>The general with his staff at once rode toward the front, and the masses
of the Southern army also swung forward. Harry saw that, according to
Jackson's custom, they would attack, not wait for it. It was yet dusky,
but the firing in their front was increasing in intensity. There was a
steady crash and a blaze of light from the rifle muzzles ran through the
forest.</p>
<p>He took an order to the Acadians to move forward behind two batteries, and
as he came back he passed the Invincibles, now a mere skeleton regiment,
but advancing in perfect order, the two colonels on their flanks near
their head. He also saw St. Clair and Langdon, but he had time only to
wave his hand to them, and then he galloped back to Jackson.</p>
<p>The dusk rapidly grew thinner. Then the burnished sun rose over the hills,
and Harry saw the Northern army before them, spread across a level between
the river and a spur of the Blue Ridge, and also on the slopes and in the
woods. A heavy battery crowned one of the hills, another was posted in a
forest, and there were more guns between. Harry saw that the position was
strong, and he noted with amazement that the Northern forces did not seem
to outnumber Jackson's. It was evident that Shields, with the majority of
his force was not yet up. He glanced at Jackson. He knew that the fact
could not have escaped the general, but he saw no trace of exultation on
his face.</p>
<p>There was another fact that Harry did not then know. Nearly all the men
who had fought successfully against Jackson at Kernstown were in that
vanguard, and Tyler, who had deemed himself a victor there, commanded
them. Everybody else had been beaten by Stonewall Jackson, but not they.
Confident of victory, they asked to be led against the Southern army, and
they felt only joy when the rising sunlight disclosed their foe. There
were the men of Ohio and West Virginia again, staunch and sturdy.</p>
<p>Harry knew instinctively that the battle would be fierce, pushed to the
utmost. Jackson had no other choice, and as the sunlight spread over the
valley, although the mountains were yet in mist, the cannon on the flanks
opened with a tremendous discharge, followed by crash after crash, North
and South replying to each other. A Southern column also marched along the
slope of the hills, in order to take Tyler's men in flank. Harry looked
eagerly to see the Northern troops give way, but they held fast. The
veterans of Ohio and West Virginia refused to give ground, and Winder, who
led the Southern column, could make no progress.</p>
<p>Harry watched with bated breath and a feeling of alarm. Were they to lose
after such splendid plans and such unparalleled exertions? The sun, rising
higher, poured down a flood of golden beams, driving the mists from the
mountains and disclosing the plain and slopes below wrapped in fire, shot
through with the gleam of steel from the bayonets.</p>
<p>Tyler, who commanded the Northern vanguard, proved himself here, as at
Kernstown, a brave and worthy foe. He, too, had eyes to see and a brain to
think. Seeing that his Ohio and West Virginia men were standing fast
against every attack made by Winder, he hurried fresh troops to their aid
that they might attack in return.</p>
<p>The battle thickened fast. At the point of contact along the slopes and in
the woods, there was a continued roar of cannon and rifles. Enemies came
face to face, and the men of Jackson, victorious on so many fields, were
slowly pressed back. A shout of triumph rose from the Union lines, and the
eager Tyler brought yet more troops into action. Two of Ewell's battalions
heard the thunder of the battle and rushed of their own accord to the
relief of their commander. But they were unable to stem the fury of Ohio
and West Virginia, and they were borne back with the others, hearing as it
roared in their ears that cry of victory from their foe, which they had so
often compelled that foe himself to hear.</p>
<p>But it was more bitter to none than to Harry. Sitting on his horse in the
rear he saw in the blazing sunlight everything that passed. He saw for the
first time in many days the men in gray yielding. The incredible was
happening. After beating Fremont, after all their superb tactics, they
were now losing to Shields.</p>
<p>He looked at Jackson, hoping to receive some order that would take him
into action, but the general said nothing. He was watching the battle and
his face was inscrutable. Harry wondered how he could preserve his calm,
while his troops were being beaten in front, and the army of Fremont might
thunder at any moment on his flank or rear. Truly the nerves that could
remain steady in such moments must be made of steel triply wrought.</p>
<p>The Northern army, stronger and more resolute than ever, was coming on, a
long blue line crested with bayonets. The Northern cannon, posted well,
and served with coolness and precision, swept the Southern ranks. The men
in gray retreated faster and some of their guns were taken. The Union
troops charged upon them more fiercely than ever, and the regiments
threatened to fall into a panic.</p>
<p>Then Jackson, shouting to his staff to follow, spurred forward into the
mob and begged them to stand. He rode among them striking some with the
flat of his sword and encouraging others. His officers showed the same
energy and courage, but the columns, losing cohesion seemed on the point
of dissolving, in the face of an enemy who pressed them so hard. Harry
uttered a groan which nobody heard in all the crash and tumult. His heart
sank like lead. Hope was gone clean away.</p>
<p>But at the very moment that hope departed he heard a great cheer, followed
a moment later by a terrific crash of rifles and cannon. Then he saw those
blessed Acadians charging in the smoke along the slope. They had come
through the woods, and they rushed directly upon the great Northern
battery posted there. But so well were those guns handled and so fierce
was their fire that the Acadians were driven back. They returned to the
charge, were driven back again, but coming on a third time took all the
battery except one gun. Then with triumphant shouts they turned them on
their late owners.</p>
<p>The whole Southern line seemed to recover itself at once. The remainder of
Ewell's troops reached the field and enabled their comrades to turn and
attack. The Stonewall Brigade in the center, where Jackson was, returned
to the charge. In a few minutes fickle fortune had faced about completely.
The Union men saw victory once more snatched from their hands. Their
columns in the plain were being raked by powerful batteries on the flank,
many of the guns having recently been theirs. They must retreat or be
destroyed.</p>
<p>The brave and skillful Tyler reluctantly gave the order to retreat, and
when Harry saw the blue line go back he shouted with joy. Then the rebel
yell, thrilling, vast and triumphant, swelled along the whole line, which
lifted up itself and rushed at the enemy, the cavalry charging fiercely on
the flanks.</p>
<p>Shields got up fresh troops, but it was too late. The men in gray were
pouring forward, victorious at every point, and sweeping everything before
them, while the army of Fremont, arriving at the river at noon, saw burned
bridges, the terrible battlefield on the other side strewn with the
fallen, and the Southern legions thundering northward in pursuit of the
second army, superior in numbers to their own, that they had defeated in
two days.</p>
<p>Every pulse in Harry beat with excitement. His soul sprang up at once from
the depths to the stars. This, when hope seemed wholly gone, was the
crowning and culminating victory. The achievement of Jackson equaled
anything of which he had ever heard. While the army of Fremont was held
fast on the other side of the river, the second army under Shields, beaten
in its turn, was retreating at a headlong rate down the valley. The
veterans of Kernstown had fought magnificently, but they had been
outgeneralled, and, like all others, had gone down in defeat before
Jackson.</p>
<p>Jackson, merciless alike in battle and pursuit, pushed hard after the men
in blue for nine or ten miles down the river, capturing cannon and
prisoners. The Ohio and West Virginia men began at last to reform again,
and night coming on, Jackson stopped the pursuit. He still could not
afford to go too far down the valley, lest the remains of Fremont's army
appear in his rear.</p>
<p>As they went back in the night, Harry and Dalton talked together in low
tones. Jackson was just ahead of them, riding Little Sorrel, silent, his
shoulders stooped a little, his mind apparently having passed on from the
problems of the day, which were solved, to those of the morrow, which were
to be solved. He replied only with a smile to the members of his staff who
congratulated him now upon his extraordinary achievement, surpassing
everything that he had done hitherto in the valley. For Harry and Dalton,
young hero-worshippers, he had assumed a stature yet greater. In their
boyish eyes he was the man who did the impossible over and over again.</p>
<p>The great martial brain was still at work. Having won two fresh victories
in two days and having paralyzed the operations of his enemies, Jackson
was preparing for other bewildering movements. Harry and Dalton and all
the other members of the staff were riding forth presently in the dusk
with the orders for the different brigades and regiments to concentrate at
Brown's Gap in the mountains, from which point Jackson could march to the
attack of McClellan before Richmond, or return to deal blows at his
opponents in the valley, as he pleased. But whichever he chose, McDowell
and sixty thousand men would not be present at the fight for Richmond.
Jackson with his little army had hurled back the Union right, and the two
Union armies could not be united in time.</p>
<p>The whole Southern army was gathered at midnight in Brown's Gap, and the
men who had eaten but little and slept but little in forty-eight hours and
who had fought two fierce and victorious battles in that time, throwing
themselves upon the ground slept like dead men.</p>
<p>While they slept consternation was spreading in the North. Lincoln, ever
hopeful and never yielding, had believed that Jackson was in disorderly
flight up the valley, and so had his Secretary of War, Stanton. The fact
that this fleeing force had turned suddenly and beaten both Fremont and
Shields, each of whom had superior forces, was unbelievable, but it was
true.</p>
<p>But Lincoln and the North recalled their courage and turned hopeful eyes
toward McClellan.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XV. THE SEVEN DAYS </h2>
<p>Harry did not awaken until late the next morning. Jackson, for once,
allowed his soldiers a long rest, and they were entitled to it. When he
rose from his blankets, he found fires burning, and the pleasant odor of
coffee, bacon and other food came to his nostrils. Many wounded were
stretched on blankets, but, as usual, they were stoics, and made no
complaint.</p>
<p>The army, in truth, was joyous, even more, it was exultant. Every one had
the feeling that he had shared in mighty triumphs, unparalleled exploits,
but they gave the chief credit to their leader, and they spoke admiringly
and affectionately of Old Jack. The whole day was passed in luxury long
unknown to them. They had an abundance of food, mostly captured, and their
rations were not limited.</p>
<p>The Acadian band reappeared and played with as much spirit as ever, and
once more the dark, strong men of Louisiana, clasped in one another's
arms, danced on the grass. Harry sat with St. Clair, Happy Tom and Dalton
and watched them.</p>
<p>“I was taught that dancing was wicked,” said Dalton, “but it doesn't look
wicked to me, and I notice that the general doesn't forbid it.”</p>
<p>“Wicked!” said St. Clair, “why, after we take Washington, you ought to
come down to Charleston and see us dance then. It's good instead of
wicked. It's more than that. It's a thing of beauty, a grace, a joy,
almost a rite.”</p>
<p>“All that Arthur says is true,” said Happy Tom. “I'm a Sea Islander
myself, but we go over to Charleston in the winter. Still, I think you'll
have to do without me at those dances, Arthur. I shall probably be kept
for some time in the North, acting as proconsul for Pennsylvania or
Massachusetts.”</p>
<p>“Which way do you think we are going from here, Harry?” asked St. Clair.
“I don't think it's possible for General Jackson to stay longer than
twenty-four hours in one place, and I know that he always goes to you for
instructions before he makes any movement.”</p>
<p>“That's so. He spoke to me this morning asking what he ought to do, but I
told him the troops needed a rest of one day, but that he mustn't make it
more than one day or he'd spoil 'em.”</p>
<p>Happy Tom, who was lying on the ground, sat up abruptly.</p>
<p>“If ever you hear of Old Stonewall spoiling anybody or anything,” he said,
“just you report it to me and I'll tell you that it's not so.”</p>
<p>“I believe,” said Dalton, “that we're going to leave the valley. Both
Shields and Fremont are still retreating. Our cavalry scouts brought in
that word this morning. We've heard also that Johnston and McClellan
fought a big battle at a place called Seven Pines, and that after it
McClellan hung back, waiting for McDowell, whom Old Jack has kept busy.
General Johnston was wounded at Seven Pines and General Robert Edward Lee
is now in command of our main army.”</p>
<p>“That's news! It's more! It's history!” exclaimed St. Clair. “I think
you're right, Harry. Two to one that we go to Richmond. And for one I'll
be glad. Then we'll be right in the middle of the biggest doings!”</p>
<p>“I'm feeling that way, too,” said Happy Tom. “But I know one thing.”</p>
<p>“What's that?”</p>
<p>“Not a soul in all this army, except Old Jack himself, will know a thing
about it, until it's done, and maybe we won't know very much then. I
passed Old Jack about an hour ago and he saw me as clearly and plainly as
I see you, but he did not tell me a thing about his plans. He did not even
say a word. Did not speak. Just cut me dead.”</p>
<p>Not one of the four was destined for some days to learn what Jackson
intended. His highest officers even were kept in the same ignorance. While
the bulk of the army did little, the cavalry under Munford, who had
succeeded Ashby, were exceedingly active. The horsemen were like a swarm
of hornets in front of Jackson, and so great was their activity that the
Northern leaders were unable to gauge their numbers. Fremont, exposed to
these raids, retreated farther down the valley, leaving two hundred of his
wounded and many stores in the hands of Munford.</p>
<p>Then Jackson crossed South River and marched into extensive woods by the
Shenandoah, where his army lay for five full days. It was almost
incredible to Harry and his friends that they should have so long a rest,
but they had it. They luxuriated there among the trees in the beautiful
June weather, listening to the music of the Acadians, eating and drinking
and sleeping as men have seldom slept before.</p>
<p>But while the infantry was resting the activity of the cavalry never
ceased. These men, riding over the country in which most of them were
born, missed no movement of the enemy, and maintained the illusion that
their numbers were four or five times the fact. Harry, trying to fathom
Jackson's purpose, gave it up after that comparatively long stay beside
the Shenandoah. He did not know that it was a part of a complicated plan,
that Lee and Jackson, although yet apart, were now beginning their
celebrated work together. Near Richmond, Northern prisoners saw long lines
of trains moving north and apparently crowded with soldiers. For Jackson,
of course! And intended to help him in his great march on Washington! But
Jackson hung a complete veil about his own movements. His highest officers
told one another in confidence things that they believed to be true, but
which were not. It was the general opinion among them that Jackson would
soon leave in pursuit of Fremont.</p>
<p>The pleasant camp by the Shenandoah was broken up suddenly, and the men
began to march—they knew not where. Officers rode among them with
stern orders, carried out sternly. In front, and on either flank, rode
lines of cavalry who allowed not a soul to pass either in or out. An
equally strong line of cavalry in the rear drove in front of it every
straggler or camp follower. There was not a single person inside the whole
army of Jackson who could get outside it except Jackson himself.</p>
<p>An extraordinary ban of ignorance was also placed upon them, and it was
enforced to the letter. No soldier should give the name of a village or a
farm through which he passed, although the farm might be his father's, or
the village might be the one in which he was born. If a man were asked a
question, no matter what, he must answer, “I don't know.”</p>
<p>The young Southern soldiers, indignant at first, enjoyed it as their
natural humor rose to the surface.</p>
<p>“Young fellow,” said Happy Tom to St. Clair, “what's your name?”</p>
<p>“I don't know.”</p>
<p>“Don't know your own name. Why, you must be feeble minded! Are you?”</p>
<p>“I don't know.”</p>
<p>“Well, you may not know, but you look it. Do you think Old Jack is a good
general?”</p>
<p>“I don't know.”</p>
<p>“Do you think he's feeble-minded like yourself?”</p>
<p>“I don't know.”</p>
<p>“What! You dare to intimate that Stonewall Jackson, the greatest general
the world has ever known, is feeble-minded! You have insulted him, and in
his name I challenge you to fight me, sir. Do you accept?”</p>
<p>“I don't know.”</p>
<p>The two looked at each other and grinned. The ignorance of the army grew
dense beyond all computation. Long afterward, “I don't know,” became a
favorite and convenient reply, even when the knowledge was present.</p>
<p>It was nearly two weeks after Port Republic before the troops had any idea
where they were going. They came to a little place called Hanover Junction
and they thought they were going to turn there and meet McDowell, but they
passed on, and one evening they encamped in a wood. As they were eating
supper they heard the muttering thunder of guns toward the south, and
throughout the brigades the conviction spread that they were on the way to
Richmond.</p>
<p>The next night, Harry, who was asleep, was touched by a light hand. He
awoke instantly, and when he saw General Jackson standing over him, he
sprang up.</p>
<p>“I am going on a long ride,” said the general briefly, “and I want only
one man to go with me. I've chosen you. Get your horse. We start in five
minutes.”</p>
<p>Harry, a little dazed yet from sleep and the great honor that had been
thrust upon him, ran, nevertheless, for his horse, and was ready with a
minute to spare.</p>
<p>“Keep by my side,” said Jackson curtly, and the two rode in silence from
the camp, watched in wonder by the sentinels, who saw their general and
his lone attendant disappear in the forest to the south.</p>
<p>It was then one o'clock in the morning of a moonlight night, and the
errand of Jackson was an absolute secret. Three or four miles from the
camp a sentinel slipped from the woods and stopped them. He was one of
their own pickets, on a far out-lying post, but to the amazement of Harry,
Jackson did not tell who he was.</p>
<p>“I'm an officer on Stonewall Jackson's staff, carrying dispatches,” he
said. “You must let me pass.”</p>
<p>“It's not enough. Show me an order from him.”</p>
<p>“I have no order,” replied the equable voice, “but my dispatches are of
the greatest importance. Kindly let me pass immediately.”</p>
<p>The sentinel shook his head.</p>
<p>“Draw back your horses,” he said. “Without an order from the general you
don't go a step further.”</p>
<p>Harry had not spoken a word. He had ceased to wonder why Jackson refused
to reveal his identity. If he did not do so it must be for some excellent
reason, and, meanwhile, the boy waited placidly.</p>
<p>“So you won't let us pass,” said Jackson. “Is the commander of the picket
near by?”</p>
<p>“I can whistle so he'll hear me.”</p>
<p>“Then will you kindly whistle?”</p>
<p>The sentinel looked again at the quiet man on the horse, put his fingers
to his lips and blew loudly. An officer emerged from the woods and said:</p>
<p>“What is it, Felton?”</p>
<p>Then he glanced at the man on the horse and started violently.</p>
<p>“General Jackson!” he exclaimed.</p>
<p>The sentinel turned pale, but said nothing.</p>
<p>“Yes, I'm General Jackson,” said the general, “and I ride with this
lieutenant of my staff on an errand. But both of you must swear to me that
you have not seen me.”</p>
<p>Then he turned to the sentinel.</p>
<p>“You did right to stop us,” he said. “I wish that all our sentinels were
as faithful as you.”</p>
<p>Then while the man glowed with gratitude, he and Harry rode on. Jackson
was in deep thought and did not speak. Harry, a little awed by this
strange ride, looked up at the trees and the dusky heavens. He heard the
far hoot of an owl, and he shivered a little. What if a troop of Northern
cavalry should suddenly burst upon them. But no troop of the Northern
horse, nor horse of any kind, appeared. Instead, Jackson's own horse began
to pant and stumble. Soon he gave out entirely.</p>
<p>It was not yet day, but dimly to the right they saw the roof of a house
among some trees. It was a poor Virginia farm that did not have horses on
it, and Jackson suggested to Harry that they wake up the people and secure
two fresh mounts.</p>
<p>The commander of an army and his young aide walked a little distance down
a road, entered a lawn, drove off two barking dogs, and knocked loud on
the front door of the house with the butts of their riding whips. A head
was at last thrust out of an upper window, and a sleepy and indignant
voice demanded what they wanted.</p>
<p>“We're two officers from General Jackson's army riding on important duty,”
replied the general, in his usual mild tones. “Our horses have broken down
and we want to obtain new ones.”</p>
<p>“What's your names? What's your rank?” demanded the gruff voice.</p>
<p>“We cannot give our names.”</p>
<p>“Then clear out! You're frauds! If I find you hanging about here I'll
shoot at you, and I tell you for your good that I'm no bad shot.”</p>
<p>The shutter of the window closed with a bang, but the two dogs that had
been driven off began to bark again at a safe distance. Harry glanced at
his general.</p>
<p>“Isn't that a stable among the trees?” asked Jackson.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“Then we'll find our horses there. Get the other two and bring them here.”</p>
<p>Harry obeyed promptly, and they opened the stable, finding good horses, of
which they selected the two best to which they changed their saddles and
bridles.</p>
<p>“We'll leave our own horses for our inhospitable friends,” said General
Jackson, “and he'll not suffer by the exchange.”</p>
<p>Mounting the fresh horses they rode rapidly, and, after the coming of the
dawn, Harry saw that they were approaching Richmond, and he guessed now
what was coming.</p>
<p>General Jackson had in his pocket a pass sent to him by General Lee, and
they swiftly went through the lines of pickets, and then on through
Richmond. People were astir in the streets of the Southern capital, and
many of them saw the bearded man in an old uniform and a black slouch hat
riding by, accompanied by only a boy, but not one of them knew that this
was Stonewall Jackson, whose fame had been filling their ears for a month
past. Nor, if they had known him would they have divined how much ill his
passage boded to the great army of McClellan.</p>
<p>They went through Richmond and on toward the front. Midday passed, and at
three o'clock they reached the house in which Lee had established his
headquarters.</p>
<p>“Who is it?” asked a sentinel at the door.</p>
<p>“Tell General Lee that General Jackson is waiting.”</p>
<p>The sentinel hurried inside, General Jackson and his aide dismounted, and
a moment later General Lee came out, extending his hand, which Jackson
clasped. The two stood a moment looking at each other. It was the first
time that they had met in the war, but Harry saw by the glance that passed
that each knew the other a man, not an ordinary man, nor even a man of ten
thousand, but a genius of the kind that appears but seldom. It was all the
more extraordinary that the two should appear at the same time, serving
together in perfect harmony, and sustaining for so long by their united
power and intellect a cause that seemed lost from the first.</p>
<p>It was not any wonder that Harry gazed with all his eyes at the memorable
meeting. He knew Jackson, and he was already learning much of Lee.</p>
<p>He saw in the Confederate commander-in-chief a man past fifty, ruddy of
countenance, hair and beard short, gray and thick, his figure tall and
powerful, and his expression at once penetrating and kind. He was dressed
in a fine gray uniform, precise and neat.</p>
<p>Such was Robert Edward Lee, and Harry thought him the most impressive
human being upon whom he had ever looked.</p>
<p>“General Jackson,” said General Lee, “this is a fortunate meeting. You
have saved the Confederacy.”</p>
<p>General Jackson made a gesture of dissent, but General Lee took him by the
arm and they went into the house. General Jackson turned a moment at the
door and motioned to Harry to follow. The boy went in, and found himself
in a large room. Three men had risen from cane chairs to meet the visitor.
One, broad of shoulders, middle-aged and sturdy, was Longstreet. The
others more slender of figure were the two Hills.</p>
<p>The major generals came forward eagerly to meet Jackson, and they also had
friendly greetings for his young aide. Lee handed them glasses of milk
which they drank thirstily.</p>
<p>“You'll find an aide of mine in the next room,” said General Lee to Harry.
“He's a little older than you are but you should get along together.”</p>
<p>Harry bowed and withdrew, and the aide, Charlie Gordon, gave him a hearty
welcome. He was three or four years Harry's senior, something of a
scholar, but frank and open. When they had exchanged names, Gordon said:</p>
<p>“Stretch out a bit on this old sofa. You look tired. You've been riding a
long distance. How many miles have you come?”</p>
<p>“I don't know,” replied Harry, as he lay luxuriously on the sofa, “but we
started at one o'clock this morning and it is now three o'clock in the
afternoon.”</p>
<p>“Fourteen hours. It's like what we've been hearing of Stonewall Jackson. I
took a peep at him from the window as you rode up.”</p>
<p>“I suppose you didn't see much but dust.”</p>
<p>“They certainly tell extraordinary things of General Jackson. It can't be
possible that all are true!”</p>
<p>“It is possible. They're all true—and more. I tell you, Gordon, when
you hear anything wonderful about Stonewall Jackson just you believe it.
Don't ask any questions, or reasons but believe it.”</p>
<p>“I think I shall,” said Gordon, convinced, “but don't forget, Kenton, that
we've got a mighty man here, too. You can't be with General Lee long
without feeling that you're in the presence of genius.”</p>
<p>“And they're friends, not jealous of each other. You could see that at a
glance.”</p>
<p>“The coming of Jackson is like dawn bursting from the dark. I feel,
Kenton, that McClellan's time is at hand.”</p>
<p>Harry slept a little after a while, but when he awoke the generals were
still in council in the great room.</p>
<p>“I let you sleep because I saw you needed it,” said Gordon with a smile,
“but I think they're about through in there now. I hear them moving
about.”</p>
<p>General Jackson presently called Harry and they rode away. The young aide
was sent back to the valley army with a message for it to advance as fast
as possible in order that it might be hurled on McClellan's flank. Others
carried the same message, lest there be any default of chance.</p>
<p>While the army of Jackson swept down by Richmond to join Lee it was lost
again to the North. At Washington they still believed it in the valley,
advancing on Fremont or Shields. Banks and McDowell had the same belief.
McClellan was also at a loss. Two or three scouts had brought in reports
that it was marching toward Richmond, but he could not believe them.</p>
<p>The Secretary of War at Washington telegraphed to McClellan that the Union
armies under McDowell, Banks, Fremont and Shields were to be consolidated
in one great army under McDowell which would crush Jackson utterly in the
valley. At the very moment McClellan was reading this telegram the army of
Jackson, far to the south of McDowell, was driving in the pickets on his
own flank.</p>
<p>Jackson's men had come into a region quite different from the valley.
There they marched and fought over firm ground, and crossed rivers with
hard rocky banks. Now they were in a land of many deep rivers that flowed
in a slow yellow flood with vast swamps between. Most of it was heavy with
forest and bushes, and the heat was great. At night vast quantities of
mosquitoes and flies and other insects fed bounteously upon them.</p>
<p>The Invincibles lifted up their voices and wept.</p>
<p>“Can't you persuade Old Jack to take us back to the valley, Harry?” said
Happy Tom. “If I'm to die I'd rather be shot by an honest Yankee soldier
than be stung to death by these clouds of bloodsuckers. Oh, for our happy
valley, where we shot at our enemy and he shot at us, both standing on
firm ground!”</p>
<p>“You won't be thinking much about mosquitoes and rivers soon,” said Harry.
“Listen to that, will you! You know the sound, don't you?”</p>
<p>“Know it! Well, I ought to know it. It's the booming of cannon, but it
doesn't frighten these mosquitoes and flies a particle. A cannon ball
whistling by my head would scare me half to death, but it wouldn't disturb
them a bit. They'd look with an evil eye at that cannon ball as it flew by
and say to it in threatening tones: 'What are you doing here? Let this
fellow alone. He belongs to us.'”</p>
<p>“Which way is McClellan coming, Harry?” asked St. Clair.</p>
<p>“Off there to the east, where you hear the guns.”</p>
<p>“How many men has he?”</p>
<p>“Anywhere from a hundred thousand to a hundred and thirty thousand. There
are various reports.”</p>
<p>Langdon, who had been listening, whistled.</p>
<p>“It doesn't look like a picnic for the Invincibles,” he said. “When I
volunteered for this war I didn't volunteer to fight a pitched battle
every day. What did you volunteer for, Harry?”</p>
<p>“I don't know.”</p>
<p>The three laughed. Jackson's famous order certainly fitted well there.</p>
<p>“And you don't know, either,” said Happy Tom, “what all that thunder off
there to the south and east means. It's the big guns, but who are fighting
and where?”</p>
<p>“There's to be a general attack on McClellan along the line of the
Chickahominy river,” said Harry, “and our army is to be a part of the
attacking force, but my knowledge goes no further.”</p>
<p>“Then I'm reckoning that some part of our army has attacked already,” said
Happy Tom. “Maybe they're ahead of time, or maybe the rest are behind
time. But there they go! My eyes, how they're whooping it up!”</p>
<p>The cannonade was growing in intensity and volume. Despite the sunset they
saw an almost continuous flare of red on the horizon. The three boys felt
some awe as they sat there and listened and looked. Well they might!
Battle on a far greater scale than anything witnessed before in America
had begun already. Two hundred thousand men were about to meet in
desperate conflict in the thickets and swamps along the Chickahominy.</p>
<p>Richmond had already heard the crash of McClellan's guns more than once,
but apprehension was passing away. Lee, whom they had learned so quickly
to trust, stood with ninety thousand men between them and McClellan, and
with him was the redoubtable Jackson and his veterans of the valley with
their caps full of victories.</p>
<p>McClellan had the larger force, but Lee was on the defensive in his own
country, a region which offered great difficulties to the invader.</p>
<p>Harry and his comrades wondered why Jackson did not move, but he remained
in his place, and when Harry fell asleep he still heard the thudding of
the guns across the vast reach of rivers and creeks, swamps and thickets.
When he awoke in the morning they were already at work again, flaring at
intervals down there on the eastern horizon. The whole wet, swampy
country, so different from his own, seemed to be deserted by everything
save the armies. No rabbits sprang up in the thickets and there were no
birds. Everything had fled already in the presence of war.</p>
<p>But the army marched. After a brief breakfast the brigades moved down the
road, and Harry saw clearly that these veterans of the valley were
tremulous with excitement. Youthful, eager, and used to victory, they were
anxious to be at the very center of affairs which were now on a gigantic
scale. And the throbbing of the distant guns steadily drew them on.</p>
<p>“We'll get all we want before this is through,” said Dalton gravely to
Harry.</p>
<p>“I think so, too. Listen to those big guns, George! And I think I can hear
the crack of rifles, too. Our pickets and those of the enemy must be in
contact in the forest there on our left.”</p>
<p>“I haven't a doubt of it, but if we rode that way like as not we'd strike
first a swamp, or a creek twenty feet deep. I get all tangled up in this
kind of a country.”</p>
<p>“So do I, but it doesn't make any difference. We just stick along with Old
Jack.”</p>
<p>The army marched on a long time, always to the accompaniment of that
sinister mutter in the southeast. Then they heard the note of a bugle in
front of them and Jackson with his staff rode forward near a little church
called Walnut Grove, where Lee and his staff sat on their horses waiting.
Harry noticed with pride how all the members of Lee's staff crowded
forward to see the renowned Jackson.</p>
<p>It was his general upon whom so many were looking, but there was curiosity
among Stonewall's men, too, about Lee. As Harry drew back a little while
the two generals talked, he found himself again with the officers of the
Invincibles.</p>
<p>“He has grown gray since we were with him in Mexico, Hector,” he heard
Colonel Leonidas Talbot say to Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire.</p>
<p>“Yes, Leonidas, grayer but stronger. What a brow and eye!”</p>
<p>St. Clair and Langdon, who had never seen Lee before, were eager.</p>
<p>“Is he the right man for Old Jack to follow, Harry?” asked Happy Tom.</p>
<p>“I don't think there's any doubt of it, Happy. I saw how they agreed the
first time they met, and you can see it now. You'll find them working
together as smooth as silk. Ah, here we go again!”</p>
<p>“Then if it's as you say I suppose it's all up with McClellan, and I
needn't trouble my mind about the matter any more. Hereafter I'll just go
ahead and obey orders.”</p>
<p>The words were light, but there was no frivolity in the minds of the
three. Despite the many battles through which they had already gone their
hearts were beating hard just then, while that roaring was going on on the
horizon, and they knew that a great battle was at hand.</p>
<p>Lee and his staff rode toward the battle, and then, to the amazement of
his men, Jackson led his army into the deep woods away from the sound of
the thundering guns which had been calling to them so incessantly. Harry
was mystified and the general vouchsafed no word, even to his own staff.
They marched on through woods, across fields, along the edges of swamps,
and that crash of battle grew fainter behind them, but never died out.</p>
<p>“What do you think it means?” Harry whispered to Dalton.</p>
<p>“Don't know. I'm not thinking. I'm not here to think at such times. All
the thinking we need is going on under the old slouch hat there. Harry,
didn't we go with him all through the valley? Can't we still trust him?”</p>
<p>“I can and will.”</p>
<p>“Same here.”</p>
<p>The army curved about again. Harry, wholly unfamiliar with the country,
did not notice it until the roar of the battle began to rise again,
showing that they were coming nearer. Then he divined the plan. Jackson
was making this circuit through the woods to fall on the Northern flank.
It was the first of the great turning movements which Lee and Jackson were
to carry through to brilliant success so often.</p>
<p>“Look at the red blaze beyond those bushes,” said Dalton, “and listen how
rapidly the sound of the battle is growing in volume. I don't know where
we are, but I do know now that Old Jack is leading us right into the thick
of it.”</p>
<p>The general rode forward and stopped his horse on the crest of a low hill.
Then Harry and Dalton, looking over the bushes and swamps, saw a great
blue army stationed behind a creek and some low works.</p>
<p>“It's McClellan!” exclaimed Dalton.</p>
<p>“Or a part of him,” said Harry.</p>
<p>It was a wing of the Northern army. McClellan himself was not there, but
many brave generals were, Porter, Slocum and the others. The batteries of
this army were engaged in a heavy duel with the Southern batteries in
front, and the sharpshooters in the woods and bushes kept up a continuous
combat that crackled like the flames of a forest fire.</p>
<p>Harry drew a long breath.</p>
<p>“This is the biggest yet,” he said.</p>
<p>Dalton nodded.</p>
<p>The soldiers of Jackson were already marching off through the woods,
floundering through deep mud, crossing little streams swollen by heavy
rains, but eager to get into action.</p>
<p>It was very difficult for the mounted men, and Harry and Dalton at last
dismounted and led their horses. The division made slow progress and as
they struggled on the battle deepened. Now and then as they toiled through
the muck they saw long masses of blue infantry on a ridge, and with them
the batteries of great guns which the gunners of the North knew so well
how to use.</p>
<p>Their own proximity was discovered after a while, and shell and bullets
began to fly among them, but they emerged at last on firm ground and on
the Northern flank.</p>
<p>“It's hot and growing hotter,” said Dalton.</p>
<p>“And we'll help increase the heat if we ever get through these morasses,”
said Harry.</p>
<p>He felt the bridle suddenly pulled out of his hand, and turned to catch
his runaway horse, but the horse had been shot dead and his body had
fallen into the swamp. Dalton's horse also was killed presently by a piece
of shell, but the two plunged along on foot, endeavoring to keep up with
the general.</p>
<p>The fire upon them was increasing fast. Some of the great guns on the
ridge were now searching their ranks with shell and shrapnel and many a
man sank down in the morass, to be lost there forever. But Jackson never
ceased to urge them on. They were bringing their batteries that way, too,
and men and horses alike tugged at the cannon.</p>
<p>“If we ever get through,” said Harry, “we're bound to do big things.”</p>
<p>“We'll get through, never fear,” said Dalton. “Isn't Old Jack driving us?”</p>
<p>“Here we are!” Harry shouted suddenly as his feet felt firm ground.</p>
<p>“And here's the whole division, too!” exclaimed Dalton.</p>
<p>The regiments and brigades of Jackson emerged from the forest, and with
them came six batteries of cannon which they had almost carried over the
swamp. The whole battlefield now came into sight, but the firing and the
smoke were so great that it seemed to change continuously in color and
even in shape. At one moment there was a ridge where none had been before,
then where Harry had seen a creek there was only dry land. But he knew
that they were illusions of the eyes, due to the excited brain behind
them.</p>
<p>Harry saw the six batteries of Jackson planted in a long row on the hard
ground, and then open with a terrific crash on the defenders of the ridge.
The sound was so tremendous that he was deafened for a few moments. By the
time his hearing was restored fully the batteries fired again and the
Northern batteries on the hill replied. Then the mass of infantry charged
and Harry and Dalton on foot, waving their swords and wild with
excitement, charged with them.</p>
<p>The plans of Lee and Jackson, working together for the first time in a
great battle, went through. When Lee heard the roar of Jackson's guns on
the flank he, too, sent word to his division commanders to charge with
their full strength. In an instant the Northern army was assailed both in
front and on the side, by a great force, rushing forward, sure of victory
and sending the triumphant rebel yell echoing through the woods of the
Chickahominy.</p>
<p>Harry felt the earth tremble beneath him as nearly a hundred thousand men
closed in deadly conflict. He could hear nothing but the continued roar,
and he saw only a vast, blurred mass of men and guns. But he was conscious
that they were going forward, up the hill, straight toward the enemy's
works, and he felt sure of victory.</p>
<p>He had grounds for his faith. Lee with the smaller army, had nevertheless
brought superior numbers upon the field at the point of action. Porter and
Slocum were staunch defenders. The Northern army, though shattered by
cannon and rifle fire, stood fast on the ridge until the charging lines
were within ten feet of them. Then they gave way, but carried with them
most of their cannon, reformed further back, and fought again.</p>
<p>Harry found himself shouting triumphantly over one of the captured guns,
but the Southern troops were allowed no time to exult. The sun was already
sinking over the swamps and the battlefield, but Lee and Jackson lifted up
their legions and hurled them anew to the attack. McClellan was not there
when he was needed most, but Porter did all that a man could do. Only two
of his eighty guns had been taken, and he might yet have made a stand, but
the last of Jackson's force suddenly emerged from the forest and again he
was struck with terrible impact on the flank.</p>
<p>The Northern army gave way again. The Southern brigades rushed forward in
pursuit, capturing many prisoners, and giving impulse to the flight of
their enemies. Their riflemen shot down the horses drawing the retreating
cannon. Many of the guns were lost, twenty-two of them falling into
Southern hands. Some of the newer regiments melted entirely away under an
attack of such fierceness. Nothing stopped the advance of Lee and Jackson
but the night, and the arrival of a heavy reinforcement sent by McClellan.
The new force, six thousand strong, was stationed in a wood, the guns that
had escaped were turned upon the enemy, Porter and Slocum rallied their
yet numerous force, and when the dark came down the battle ceased with the
Northern army in the east defeated again, but not destroyed.</p>
<p>As Harry rode over the scene of battle that night he shuddered. The
fields, the forests and the swamps were filled with the dead and the
wounded. Save Shiloh, no other such sanguinary battle had yet been fought
on American soil. Nearly ten thousand of the Southern youths had fallen,
killed or wounded. The North, standing on the defensive, had not lost so
many, but the ghastly roll ran into many thousands.</p>
<p>That night, as had happened often in the valley, the hostile sentinels
were within hearing of each other, but they fired no shots. Meanwhile, Lee
and Jackson, after the victory, which was called Gaines' Mill, planned to
strike anew.</p>
<p>Harry awoke in the morning to find that most of the Northern army was
gone. The brigades had crossed the river in the night, breaking down the
bridges behind them. He saw the officers watching great columns of dust
moving away, and he knew that they marked the line of the Northern march.
But the Southern scouts and skirmishers found many stragglers in the
woods, most of them asleep or overpowered by weariness. Thus they found
the brilliant General Reynolds, destined to a glorious death afterward at
Gettysburg, sound asleep in the bushes, having been lost from his command
in the darkness and confusion. The Southern army rested through the
morning, but in the afternoon was on the march again. Harry found that
both St. Clair and Langdon had escaped without harm this time, but Happy
Tom had lost some of his happiness.</p>
<p>“This man Lee is worse than Jackson,” he lamented. “We've just fought the
biggest battle that ever was, and now we're marching hot-foot after
another.”</p>
<p>Happy Tom was right. Lee and Jackson had resolved to give McClellan no
rest. They were following him closely and Stuart with the cavalry hung in
a cloud on his flanks. They pressed him hard the next day at White Oak
Swamp, Jackson again making the circular movement and falling on his
flank, while Longstreet attacked in front. There was a terrible battle in
thick forest and among deep ravines, but the darkness again saved the
Northern army, which escaped, leaving cannon and men in the hands of the
enemy.</p>
<p>Harry lay that night in a daze rather than sleep. He was feverish and
exhausted, yet he gathered some strength from the stupor in which he lay.
All that day they marched along the edge of a vast swamp, and they heard
continually the roar of a great battle on the horizon, which they were not
able to reach. It was Glendale, where Longstreet and one of the Hills
fought a sanguinary draw with McClellan. But the Northern commander,
knowing that a drawn battle in the enemy's country was equivalent to a
defeat, continued his retreat and the Southern army followed, attacking at
every step. The roar of artillery resounded continuously through the woods
and the vanguard of one army and the rear guard of the other never ceased
their rifle fire.</p>
<p>Neither Harry nor his young comrades could ever get a clear picture of the
vast, confused battle amid the marshes of the Chickahominy, extending over
so long a period and known as the Seven Days, but it was obvious to them
now that Richmond was no longer in danger. The coming of Jackson had
enabled Lee to attack McClellan with such vigor and fierceness that the
young Northern general was forced not only to retreat, but to fight
against destruction.</p>
<p>But the Union mastery of the water, always supreme, was to come once more
to the relief of the Northern army. As McClellan made his retreat,
sometimes losing and sometimes beating off the enemy, but always leaving
Richmond further and further behind, he had in mind his fleet in the
James, and then, if pushed to the last extremity, the sea by which they
had come.</p>
<p>But there were many staunch fighters yet in his ranks, and the Southern
leaders were soon to find that they could not trifle with the Northern
army even in defeat. He turned at Malvern Hill, a position of great
strength, posted well his numerous and powerful artillery, and beat off
all the efforts of Lee and Jackson and Longstreet and the two Hills, and
Armistead and the others. More than five thousand of the Southern troops
fell in the fruitless charges. Then McClellan retreated to the James River
and his gunboats and the forces of the North were not to come as near
Richmond again for nearly three years.</p>
<p>The armies of Lee and Jackson marched back toward the Southern capital,
for the possession of which forty thousand men had fallen in the Seven
Days. Harry rode with Dalton, St. Clair and Langdon. They had come through
the inferno unhurt, and while they shared in the rejoicings of the
Virginia people, they had seen war, continued war, in its most terrible
aspects, and they felt graver and older.</p>
<p>By the side of them marched the thin ranks of the Invincibles, with the
two colonels, erect and warlike, leading them. Just ahead was Stonewall
Jackson, stooped slightly in the saddle, the thoughtful blue eyes looking
over the heads of his soldiers into the future.</p>
<p>“If he hadn't made that tremendous campaign in the valley,” said Dalton,
“McClellan allied with McDowell would have come here with two hundred
thousand men and it would have been all over.”</p>
<p>“But he made it and he saved us,” said Harry, glancing at his hero.</p>
<p>“And I'm thinking,” said Happy Tom Langdon, glancing toward the North,
“that he'll have to make more like it. The Yankees will come again,
stronger than ever.”</p>
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