Cold and gray in the mist of the morning
the long columns have filed down from the heights,
and are massed at the water’s edge. It is
chill December, and the frost has eaten deep into
the ruddy soil of Virginia, but the Rappahannock flows
swiftly along, uncrusted by the ice that fetters Northern
streams, yet steaming in the biting air. Fog-wreaths
rise from the rippling surface, and all along the crowded
shore the clouds hang dense and heavy. Nowhere
can one see in any direction more than a dozen yards
away; all beyond is wrapped in swirling, eddying fog-bank.
Here in the thronging ranks, close at hand, men speak
in low tones as they stamp upon the frozen ground
or whip their mittened hands across the broad blue
chests to restore circulation and drive the ache and
numbness away. Here and there are some who have
turned their light blue capes up over their heads,
and take no part in the low-toned chat. Leaning
on their muskets, they let their thoughts go wandering
far away, for all men know that bloody work is coming.
The engineers are hammering at their bulky pontoons
now, and down at the water’s edge the clumsy
boats are moored, waiting for chess and balk carriers
to be told off, and the crews to man the heavy sweeps.
Up on the heights to the rear, planted thickly on
every knoll and ridge, are the black-mouthed guns,
and around them are grouped the squads of ghostly,
grisly, fog-dripping cannoneers. One may walk
along that line of heights for mile after mile, and
find there only grim ranges of batteries and waiting
groups of men. All is silence; all is alertness;
all is fog. Back of the lines of unlimbered cannon,
sheltered as far as possible from returning fire,
the drivers and horses and the heavy-laden caissons
are shrouded in the mist-veil, and the staff officers,
groping to and fro, have to ask their way from battery
to battery, or go yards beyond their real objective
point. Little fires are burning here and there,
and battery-lanterns are flickering in the gloom.
Out on the face of the stream, too, one can see from
the northern shore weird, dancing lights, like will-o’-the-wisps,
go twinkling through the fog; and far across the waters,
from time to time, there is heard the sudden crack
of rifle. The Southern pickets are beginning
to catch faint glimpses of those lights, and are opening
fire, for vigilant officers are there to interpret
every sound and sight, and with the first break of
the wintry dawn they grasp the meaning of the murmur
that has come for hours from the upper shore.
“The Yanks are laying bridges” is the word
that goes from mouth to mouth, and long before the
day is fairly opened the nearing sounds and the will-o’-the-wisp
lights out there in the fog tell the shivering pickets
that the foe is more than half-way across. Daybreak
brings strong forces into line along the southern bank,
all eyes straining through the fog. Out to the
front the ping! ping! of the rifles has become rapid
and incessant, and by broad daylight all the river
bank and the walls of the buildings that command a
view of it are packed with gray riflemen ready for
work the instant those bridge-heads loom into view.
When seven o’clock comes, and the fog thins just
a little, there are the bridge-ends, sure enough,
poking drearily into space, but the only signs of
the builders are the motionless forms in blue that
are stretched here and there about the boats or planks,
only faintly visible through the mist; the working
parties have been forced to give it up. Back
they come, what is left of them, and tell their tale
among the sympathizing blue overcoats in the wearying
ranks, and officers ride away up the slopes, and there
are moments of suspense and question, and then the
thud of sponge-staff and rammer among the batteries,
and a sudden flash and roar, tearing the mists asunder;
another, another; and then, up and down along the line
of heights, the order goes, and gun after gun belches
forth its charge of shot and shell, and back from
the walls of Fredericksburg comes the direful echo
and the crash of falling roof or gable. “Depress
those muzzles!” is the growling order.
“The whole bank is alive with rebs, and we must
shell ’em out before those bridges can be finished.”
The elevating screws are spun in their beds, the shell
fuzes cut down to the very edge. Some guns are
so near the river that they are rammed with grape and
canister; and so, for an hour, the thundering cannonade
goes on, and the infantry crouch below, and swear
and shiver, and once in a while set up a cheer when
occasion seems to warrant it. And then, covered
by this furious fog-bombardment, the engineers again
push forward their bridge-builders, and cram their
pontoons, and launch them forth upon the stream.
It is all useless. No sooner do they reach the
bridge-end when down they go by the dozens before
the hot fire of a thousand Southern rifles. So
dense is the fog that the gunners cannot aim.
Shot, shell, and canister go shrieking through roof
and wall, and ripping up streets and crossings; but
the plucky riflemen hug the shore in stern determination,
and again the bridges are abandoned.
And so a cold and cheerless morning
ebbs away; and at last, towards noon, there comes
relief. The sun bursts through the clouds, and
licks up the fog-bank. The mist-veil is withdrawn,
and there stands Fredericksburg, with shattered roof
and spire, backed by a long line of gun-bristling
heights, and there are the unfinished bridges jutting
helplessly out two thirds across the water. A
number of the heavy pontoons are still moored close
to shore, and while all along under the bank the regiments
are ranging into battle order, two or three of them
are tumbling into those clumsy arks, cramming them
with armed men, and then pushing off into the stream.
Failing in working across a narrow causeway, the “Yanks”
are taking to their boats and sending over a flotilla.
It is a daring, desperate feat, but it tells.
Despite the fierce resistance, despite the heavy loss
that befalls them, animated by the cheers of their
comrades, they push ahead, answering the fire as well
as they can, and at last, one after another, the boats
are grounded on the southern shore, and, though sadly
diminished in numbers, the men leap forth and go swarming
up the bank, driving the gray pickets to cover.
Others hurry across and reinforce them; then more and
more, until they are strong enough to seize the nearest
buildings and hold the approaches, and then the working
parties leap forward; the bridge is finished with
a will, and the comrades of their brigade come tramping
cheerily across. Three splendid regiments are
they which made that daring venture, mere companies
in numbers as compared with their early strength,
and one of them is the th Massachusetts,
now led by a captain. Colonel Putnam stands at
his side at this moment of triumph and partial rest.
He commands the brigade that has done this brilliant
work, and now is receiving the thanks sent over from
corps headquarters; and the mounted officer, the first
one across the bridge, who bears the general’s
congratulations, is his young chief-of-staff, Major
Abbot.
There has been fierce fighting through
the streets, stubborn resistance on part of the occupants
of the town, and determined effort on part of the
thronging force of Union men who are constantly gaining
accessions as the brigades come marching over.
Just at sunset, with the town fully in their possession,
there is sudden turmoil and excitement among the blue-coats
gathered around an old brick building near the western
edge. There is rushing to and fro; then savage
exclamations, shouts of “Kill him!” “Hang
him!” “Run him down to the creek and duck
him!” and the brigade commander, with Major
Abbot and one or two other mounted officers, has quite
as much as he can do to rescue from the hands of an
infuriated horde of soldiers a bruised, battered, slouching
hulk of a man in a dingy Confederate uniform.
He implores their protection, and it is only when
they see the piteous, haggard, upturned face, and hear
the wail of his voice, that Putnam and Abbot recognize
the deserter, Rix. Abbot is off his horse and
by his side in an instant. Sternly ordering back
the men who had grappled and were dragging him, the
major holds Rix by the coat-collar and gazes at him
in silent amaze.
“In God’s name, how came
you here, and in this garb?” he finally asks.
Weak with sickness, suffering, and
the horrible fright he has undergone, the bully of
former days simply shudders and cringes now. He
crouches at Abbot’s feet, gazing fearfully around
him at the circle of vengeful, powder-blackened faces.
“Don’t let them touch
me, Mr. Abbot! Oh, for God’s sake help me.
I’m ’most dead, anyhow. I can’t
talk now. We’re ’most starved, too,
and Mr. Hollins is dying.”
“Hollins!” exclaims Abbot,
almost losing his hold on the collar and dropping
the limp creature to earth. “What do you
mean? where?”
“In there; in the bedroom up-stairs.
Oh, major, don’t leave me here; these men will
murder me!” he implores, clutching the skirts
of Abbot’s heavy overcoat; but Colonel Putnam
signals “Go on,” and, leaving his abject
prisoner, Abbot hastens up the stairs of the old brick
house, and there, in a low-ceilinged room, stretched
upon the bed, with wild, wandering eyes and fevered
lips, with features drawn and ghastly, lies the man
who has so bitterly sinned against him, and whom he
has so often longed to meet eye to eye but
not this way.
And it is an awful look of recognition
that greets him, too. Shot through and through
as he is, tortured with thirst and suffering, praying
for help and longing for the sight of some friendly
face, it seems a retribution almost too cruel that,
in his extreme hour, the man sent by Heaven to minister
to his needs should be the one he has so foully wronged,
the one of whom he lives in dread. He covers his
eyes with a gesture of dismay, and turns fearfully
to the wall. There is a moment of silence, broken
only by the rattle of the window in its casing as
it shudders to the distant boom of the guns far down
the line. Then Abbot steps to the bedside and
places his gauntleted hand upon the shoulder of the
stricken man.
“Hollins! How are you wounded? Have
you seen a surgeon?”
No answer for a moment, and the question is gently
repeated.
“Shot through the body rifle-ball.
There was a surgeon here last night, but he’s
gone.”
“Lie still then until I get
one. I would bring Doctor Thorn, but he has too
much to do with too much to do just now.”
He comes near saying “with our own men,”
but checks himself in time. He cannot “kick
the man that is down” with such a speech as
that, and it is not long before he reappears, and
brings with him a surgeon from one of the arriving
regiments. Colonel Putnam, too, comes up the stairs,
but merely to take a look at the situation, and place
a guard over both the wounded man and his strange,
shivering companion, Rix. Some of the soldiers
are sent for water, and others start a fire in the
little stove in the adjoining room. The doctor
makes his examination, and does what he can for his
sinking patient, but when he comes out he tells Abbot
that Hollins has not many hours to live, “and
he wants to see you,” he adds. “Did
you know him?”
There is a strange scene in the cramped
little room of the quaint old house that night.
By the light of two or three commissary candles and
the flickering glare from the fire one can see the
features of the watchers and of the fast-dying man.
Abbot sits by the bedside; Colonel Putnam is standing
at the foot, and the adjutant of the th
Massachusetts has been reading aloud from his notes
the statement he has taken down from the lips of the
former quartermaster. One part of it needs verification
from authority not now available. Mr. Hollins
avers that he is not a deserter to the enemy as appearances
would indicate, but a prisoner paroled by them.
The statement, so far as it bears
upon his official connection with the regiment, is
about as follows:
“I had personal reasons for
going back to the Monocacy reasons that
could not be explained to the satisfaction of a commanding
officer. I had to see Mr. Abbot to explain
a wrong I had done him, and avert, if possible, the
consequences. I left without permission, and rode
back, but found all the roads picketed, and I was
compelled to hide with a farmer near Boonsboro’
until Rix reached me. He had been my clerk, and
was an expert penman. He fixed the necessary papers
for me, and, with the aid of certain disguises I had,
it was not so hard to get around. I meant to
resign, but feared that, if offered through the regular
channels, it would be refused, and I be brought to
trial because of the condition of my accounts.
Then I found that I was too late to undo the wrong
I had done, and it was while trying to make partial
amends that I came so near being captured by Colonel
Putnam at Frederick. It made me desperate.
That night I took the first horse I could find, and
rode down the valley, believing all was lost, and
that I must get away from that part of the country.
Money found me a hiding-place when my papers would
no longer serve. Then money bribed a messenger
to carry word of my condition to Rix, who had been
sent to the regiment at Harper’s Ferry.
He got away and joined me, and made out some more papers
for me, and then started, by night and alone, to get
home, where he said he had money. Mine was about
gone by that time, and here I lay in hiding until
Stuart came sweeping down the Monocacy on his way back
to Virginia, and I was glad to be captured and carried
along. I gave him my proper name and rank, and
when Rix came back the army had left that part of the
country, and he followed me into Virginia. He
said he would be shot, anyway, if captured; and the
next I heard of him I being then a prisoner
in Richmond was that he had enlisted in
a Virginia regiment, and was dying here in Fredericksburg.
He had been devoted to me, and needed me. I gave
my parole, and was allowed to come here to nurse him.
He was recovering and able to be about when the bombardment
opened, and I was shot at the river bank, whither
I had gone to bid him good-bye, and was carried here.
The rest that I have to say is for Major Abbot alone
to hear.”
Putnam and the adjutant, after a few
questions, withdraw; and at last, with even the soldier
nurse excluded, the dying man is alone with the one
officer of his regiment who had striven to befriend
him, and whom he has so basely rewarded.
“There is no time for lamenting
or empty talk of forgiveness and remorse. It
is time you heard the truth, Abbot. I always envied
you at college. I envied every man who had birth
or wealth or position. I had some brains, but
was poor, burdened with the care of a vagabond brother
who was well-nigh a jail-bird, and whose only talent
was penmanship. He would have been a forger then
if it hadn’t been for me. For me he afterwards
became one. You know who I mean now Rix.
Mr. Winthrop gave me opportunities, and I worked.
I had little money, though, but time and again I was
called to his house, saw his daughter, and I was ambitious.
When she went abroad I followed; was as discreetly
attentive as my wit could make me and when
I failed to make the impression I hoped, and we returned,
I learned the reason she was engaged to
you. It made me determine that I would undermine
it. You did not love her, nor she you. It
was a family match, and not one that would make either
of you happy. My life in the regiment was a hell,
because they seemed to seemed to know me
for what I was. And you simply tolerated me.
It made a devil of me, Abbot, and I vowed that proud
girl should love me and turn from you if I had to
hang for the means that brought it about. I was
quartermaster at Edwards’s Ferry, and Rix was
the man who fetched and carried the mails. ’Twas
easy enough to abstract her letters or yours from
time to time, but the case needed something more than
that. Neglect would not rouse her; jealousy might.
One day there came the picture of those girls at Hastings
(Abbot’s hands begin to clinch; he has listened
coldly up to this point), and I saw the group that
was sent to them, and the pretty letter written by
their secretary, Miss Warren. Then came her letter
saying she was Guthrie Warren’s sister.
I knew him well at college, and an idea occurred to
me. I took your picture, wrote a note, and had
Rix copy it, and sent it in your name. When the
answer came Rix and I were on the lookout for it,
and got it, and wrote again and again. I had
matter enough to work on with my knowledge of Warren,
and then his death intensified the interest.
I don’t care to look in your face now, Abbot,
for I’m not a fearless man; nothing but a beaten,
broken, cowardly scoundrel; but I began trying on
that sweet and innocent country girl the arts against
which your fiance my highbred kinswoman, had
been proof; I was bound to punish her pride.
But I found my pretty correspondent as shy, as maidenly
and reserved, with all her sister-love and pride,
as the other was superior. It was game worth bringing
down, by Heaven! and I grew desperate. I was
drinking then, and getting snarled up in my accounts,
and you had turned a cold shoulder on me; and then
came the campaign and Rix’s break and more difficulties,
and I was at my wit’s end to keep the letters
from you; and just before Second Bull Run came Miss
Winthrop’s letters challenging me to prove that
you did not care for her, and I sent her three of
Miss Warren’s letters. But, worse than
that, I had been wooing another in your name; and,
because she would not betray an undue interest, I became
more engrossed; became more warmly interested; and
soon it was not for the sake of showing your fiance
a love-letter from another woman, but to satisfy the
cravings of my own heart. I began more and more
to strive to win this dainty, innocent, pure-minded
girl. Aye, sir, I was wooing over your name;
but ’twas I who loved; yes, loved her,
Abbot. Now, what think you of me and what I
suffered?”
He pauses a moment, choked and quivering.
He motions with his hand to the cup of stimulant the
doctor has left him. Abbot coldly hands it to
him, and finds that he must raise him from the pillow
before he can swallow. He is stirred to his inmost
soul with wrath and indignation against this ruthless
traitor, even when the fates have laid him low.
It is hard to touch him gently, but he steps to his
side and does what he can, bidding him use no exertion
and be calm as possible. A few painful, hurried
breaths, and then Hollins goes on again.
“Though not once had she confessed
her love, I felt I was gaining. She sent me her
photograph. It is here, on my breast; I have carried
it day and night.” Abbot’s muscles
grew rigid again and his stern face sets with a sterner
look. “But I was in constant worry about
my affairs and the coming of those letters. Then
when you were wounded and left behind at South Mountain
I felt that the crisis had come. I had
to get back there. Something told me she would
hasten to you. They came, and I had the agony
of seeing him her father returning
from his visit to you; Rix told me of it afterwards.
Then I strove madly to see her; to tell her the truth,
though I knew she would only despise and spurn me.
I scrawled a note confessing my crime, but sending
no name; gave it to the woman to give to the doctor,
and then tore myself away. I was the rebel spy
the colonel nearly caught, and from that time I have
been a fugitive; and now a chance shot
ends it all. Rix has been faithful to me, poor
devil, and I came here to do what I could for him.
Voila tout! Abbot, don’t let them shoot
him. He isn’t worth it. Give me more
of that brandy.”
He lies back on the grimy pillow,
breathing fast and painfully. Abbot stands in
silence a moment. Then his voice, stern and constrained,
is heard in question:
“Have you any messages, Hollins?
Is there any way in which I can serve you?”
“It seems tough but
the only friend I have to close my eyes is the man
I plotted against and nearly despoiled of his lady-love,”
mutters Hollins. Either he is wandering a little
bit or the brandy is potent enough to blur his sense
of the nearness of death. “I wanted to tell
you the truth not that I look for forgiveness.
I know your race well enough. You’ll see
fair play, but love and hate are things you don’t
change in much. I’ve no right to ask anything
of you, but who is there? My
God! I believe your wife that is to be was about
the only friend I had in the world except
Rix. He brought me back the letters, and says
she was so good to him. I hope he didn’t
ask her for money. He swears he didn’t,
but he’s such a liar! We both are, for that
matter. I’m glad, though, now, that my
lies didn’t hurt you. They didn’t,
did they, Abbot? You’re still engaged?”
“I am engaged.”
“Oh, well; if I only hadn’t
brought that damnable sorrow to that poor child, and
if I could only feel that they wouldn’t shoot
Rix, it wouldn’t be so bad my going
now. What will they do with Rix?”
“He must stand trial for desertion,
I fancy. The men nearly lynched him as it was.”
“I know, and you saved him.
Isn’t it all strange?” Here for over a
year we two have been plotting against you, and now,
at the last, you’re the only friend we have.
“Where is he?”
“Down below, under guard.
You shall see him whenever you feel like it.
Is there any one else you want to see, Hollins?”
“Any one any one?
Ah, God! Yes, with a longing that burns.
It is her face. It is she Bessie!”
His hand steals feebly into his breast, and he drags
slowly forth a little packet of oiled silk. This
he hugs close to his fluttering heart, and his eyes
seek those of the young soldier standing there so
strong, so self-reliant and erect. His glance
seems envious, even now, with the fast-approaching
angel’s death-seal dimming their light, and
the clammy dew gathering on his brow.
“It was your picture I sent
her, just as you seem to stand there now. It
was I who won her, but she thinks I looked like you.”
“Pardon me, Hollins,”
breaks in Abbot, with a voice that trembles despite
every effort at self-control, and trembles, too, through
the very coldness of the tone. “Colonel
Putnam is not far off. There are others whom
you might like to see; and shall I send Rix to you?”
“No not now no
use. Promise me this, Abbot. No matter where
or how I’m buried never mind coffin,
or the flag, or the volleys, or the prayers; I don’t
deserve They won’t help me. You
see to it, will you, that this is buried on my heart?
It’s her picture, and some letters. Promise.”
Abbot slowly bows his head.
“I promise, Hollins, if it will comfort you.”
“If there were only some way some
way to tell her. I loved her so. She might
forgive when she knew how I died. You may see
her, Abbot. Stop! take these three letters; they’re
addressed to you, anyway. Take them to her, by
and by, and tell her, will you? but let the picture
go with me.”
The clutching fingers of one hand
clasp about the slim envelope that contains the little
photograph; the fingers of the other hand are plucking
nervously at the blanket that is thrown over the dying
man. There is another moment of silence, and
then Abbot again asks him if he will have his brother
brought to him. Hollins nods, and Abbot goes to
the door and whispers a few words to the orderly.
When he returns a feeble hand gropes its way towards
him, and Hollins looks up appealingly.
“I’m so much weaker.
I’m going fast. Would you shake hands, Abbot?
What! Then you bear me no ill-will?”
“I do not, Hollins.”
The clouding eyes seem to seek his wistfully, wonderingly.
“And yet I wronged you so.”
“Do not think of me. That all
came right.”
“I know I know.
It is her heart I may have broken Bessie’s.
My God! What could she have thought when he came
back to her after seeing you?”
“He told her her lover was dead. I made
inquiries.”
“Thank God for that! But
all the same she is sorrowing suffering and
it’s all my doing. I believe I could die
content, almost happy, if I knew she had not if
I knew I had not brought her
misery.”
“Are you sure, Hollins?”
“Sure! Heaven, yes! Why, Abbot?
Do you do you know?”
“She seems happy, Hollins.
She is to be married in the spring; I don’t
know just when.”
There is another moment of intense
silence in the little room. Outside the muffled
tramp of the night patrols and the gruff challenge
of sentries fall faintly on the ear. Within there
is only the quick breathing of the sinking man.
There is a long, long look from the dying eyes; a
slow movement towards the well-nigh pulseless heart.
Then comes the sound of heavy feet upon the stair,
and presently the uncouth form of Rix is at the threshold,
a piteous look in his haggard face. Abbot raises
a hand in warning, and glances quickly from the prisoner
at the door to the frame whence fast is ebbing the
imprisoned soul. The hand that had faintly clasped
his is slowly creeping up to the broad and brawny
chest, so feeble now. Far across the rippling
waters of the Rappahannock the notes of a bugle, prolonged
and distant, soft and solemn, float upon the still
night air. ‘Tis the soldiers’ signal
“Lights Out!” the soldiers’
rude yet never-forgotten lullaby. An instant
gleam as of recognition hovers in the glazing eyes.
Then follow a few faint gasps; then one
last gesture as the arm falls limp and nerveless;
but it draws forth her precious picture and lays it
at a rival’s feet.