Shorty has an adventure with
A lone, lorn widder lady.”
“I wonder what has become
of our Jew spy, Shorty?” said Si, as he and
Shorty sat on the bank of Duck River and watched the
rebel pickets lounging under the beeches on the other
side. “We hain’t heard nothin’
of him for more’n a month now.”
“He’s probably hung,”
answered Shorty. “He was entirely too smart
to live long. A man can’t go on always pokin’
his finger into a rattlesnake’s jaw without
gittin’ it nipped sooner or later.”
“I’m looking fur a man
called Si Klegg,” they heard behind them.
Looking around they saw the tall, gaunt woman whom
they had turned back from entering the camp a few
days before, under the belief that she was trying
to smuggle in whisky.
“What in the world can she want
o’ me?” thought Si; but he answered:
“That’s my name. What’ll you
have?”
A flash of recognition filled at once
her faded blue eyes. Without taking her pipe
from between her yellow, snaggly teeth she delivered
a volley of tobacco-juice at an unoffending morning-glory,
and snapped out:
“O, y’r him, air ye?
Y’r the dratted measly sapsucker that bounced
me ‘bout takin’ likker inter camp.
What bizniss wuz hit o’ your’n whether
I tuk likker in or not? Jest wanted t’ be
smart, didn’t ye? Jest wanted t’
interfere with a lone, lorn widder lady makin’
a honest livin’ for herself and 10 children.
My olé man ketched the black ager layin’
out in the brush to dodge the conscripters. It
went plumb to his heart an’ killed him.
He wa’n’t no great loss, nohow, fur he’d
eat more in a week than he’d kill, ketch, or
raise in a year. When his light went out I’d
only one less mouth to feed, and got rid o’ his
jawin’ an’ cussin’ all the time.
But that hain’t nothin’ t’ do with
you. You ’s jest puttin’ on a lettle
authority kase ye could. But all men air alike
that-a-way. Elect a man Constable, an’ he
wants t’ put on more airs than the Guv-nor;
marry him, an’ he makes ye his slave.”
“I should think it’d be
a bold man that’d try to make you his slave.
Madam,” Si ventured.
“Y’ she’d think,”
she retorted, with her arms akimbo. “Who
axed y’ t’ think, young feller? What
d’ y’ do hit with. Why d’ y’
strain y’rself doin’ somethin’ y’
ain’t used t’?”
It did Shorty so much good to see
Si squelched, that he chuckled aloud and called out:
“Give it to him, old Snuff-Dipper.
He’s from the Wabash, an’ hain’t
no friends. He’s bin itchin’ a long
time for jest such a skinnin’ as you’re
givin’ him.”
“Who air y’ callin’
Snuff-Dipper?” she retorted, turning angrily
on Shorty. “What’ve ye got t’
say agin snuff-dippin’, anyway, y’ terbacker-chawin’,
likker-guzzlin’, wall-oyed, splay-footed, knock-kneed
oaf? What air y’ greasy hirelings a-comin’
down heah fo’, t’ sass and slander Southern
ladies, who air yo’ superiors?”
“Give it to him, old Corncob
Pipe,” yelled Si “He needs lambastin’
worse’n any man in the regiment. But what
did you want to see me for?”
“I wanted to see yo’
bekase I got a letter to yo’ from a friend
o’ mine, who said yo’ wuz gentlemen,
an’ rayly not Yankees at all. He said that
yo’ wuz forced into the army agin yo’
will.”
“Gracious, what a liar that
man must be,” murmured Shorty to himself.
“An’ yo’ rayly
had no heart to fight for the nigger, an’ that
yo’d treat me like a sister.”
“A sister,” Shorty exploded
internally. “Think of a feller’s havin’
a sister like that. Why, I wouldn’t throw
her in a soap-grease barrel.”
“Who was this friend. Madam?”
said Si, “and where is his letter?”
“I don’t know whether
to give it to yo’ or not,” said she.
“Y’re not the men at all that he ascribed
to me. He said yo’ wuz very good-lookin’,
perlite gentlemen, who couldn’t do too much for
a lady.”
“Sorry we’re not as handsome
as you expected,” said Si; “but mebbe
that’s because we’re in fatigue uniforms.
You ought to see my partner there when he’s
fixed up for parade. He’s purtier’n
a red wagon then. Let me see the letter.
I can tell then whether we’re the men or not.”
“Kin yo’ read?” she asked suspiciously.
“O, yes,” answered Si
laughingly at the thought almost universal in the
South that reading and writing were-like
the Gift of Tongues-a special dispensation
to a few favored individuals only. “I can
read and do lots o’ things that common people
can’t. I’m seventh son of a seventh
son, born with a caul on my head at the time o’
the full moon. Let me see the letter.”
She was not more than half convinced,
but unhooked her dress and took a note from her bosom,
which she stuck out toward Si, holding tightly on
to one end in the meanwhile. Si read, in Levi
Rosenbaum’s flourishing, ornate handwriting:
“Corporal Josiah
Klegg, Co. Q, 200th Indiana Volunteers,
in Camp on Duck River.”
“That means me,” said
Si, taking hold of the end of the envelope. “There
ain’t but one 200th Injianny Volunteers; there’s
no other Co. Q, and I’m the only Josiah
Klegg.”
The woman still held on to the other end of the letter.
“It comes,” continued
Si, “from a man a little under medium size,
with black hair and eyes, dresses well, talks fast,
and speaks a Dutch brogue.”
“That’s him,” said
the woman, relinquishing the letter, and taking a
seat under the shade of a young cucumber tree, where
she proceeded to fill her pipe, while awaiting the
reading of the missive.
Si stepped off a little ways, and
Shorty looked over his shoulder as he opened the letter
and read:
“Dear Boys:
This will be handed you, if it reaches you at
all, by Mrs. Bolster,
who has more about her than you
think."
“I don’t know about that,”
muttered Shorty; “the last time I had the pleasure
o’ meetin’ the lady she had ‘steen
dozen bottles o’ head-bust about her.”
“She’s a
Confederate, as far as she goes.”
Si continued reading,
“which is not very far.
She don’t go but a little ways. A jay-bird
that did not have any more brains would not build
much of a nest. But she is very useful to
me, and I want you to get in with her. As
soon as you read this I want Si to give her that
pair of horn combs I gave him. Do it at once.
Sincerely your friend,
“Levi Rosenbaum.”
Si knit his brows in perplexity and
wonderment over this strange message. He looked
at Shorty, but Shorty’s face was as blank of
explanation as his own. He fumbled around in his
blouse pocket, drew forth the combs, and handed them
to the woman. Her dull face lighted up visibly.
She examined the combs carefully, as if fitting them
to a description, and, reaching in her bosom, pulled
out another letter and handed it to Si.
When this was opened Si read:
“Dear Boys: Now you will
understand the comb business. I wanted to
make sure that my letter reached the right men, and
the combs were the only things I could think of at
the moment. Mrs. B. will prize them, though
she will never think of using them, either on
herself or one of her shock-headed brats.
I want you to play it on her as far as your consciences
will allow. Pretend that you are awful sick of
this Abolition war, and tired fighting for the
nigger, and all that stuff. Make her the
happiest woman in Tennessee by giving her
all the coffee you can spare. That will
fetch her quicker and surer than anything else.
Like most Southern women, she is a coffee-drinker
first and a rebel afterward, and if some preacher
would tell her that heaven is a place where she
will get all the Yankee coffee she can drink,
she would go to church regularly for the rest of
her life. Tell her a lot of news-as
much of it true as you can and think best; as
much of it otherwise as you can invent.
Follow her cautiously when she leaves camp. Don’t
let her see you do so. You will find that
she will lead you to a nest of spies, and the
place where all the whisky is furnished to sell
in camp. I write you thus freely because I am
certain that this will get in your hands. I know
that your regiment is out here, because I have
been watching it for a week, with reference to
its being attacked. It won’t be for
at least awhile, for there’s another hen on.
But make up to the old lady as much as your consciences
and stomachs will allow you. It will be
for the best interests of the service.
“Sincerely your
friend, Levi Rosenbaum.”
“I wonder what game Levi is
up to?” Si said, as he stood with the letter
in his hand and looked at the woman. “I’ll
give her all the coffee I can and be very civil to
her, but that’s as far as I’ll go.
The old rebel cat. I’ll not lie to her
for 40 Levi Rosenbaums.”
“Well, I will,” said Shorty.
“You fix her up with the coffee, and leave the
rest to me. I always had a fancy for queer animals,
and run off from home once to travel with a menagerie.
I’d like to take her up North and start
a side-show with her. ‘The Queen o’
the Raccoon Mountains,’ or the ‘Champion
Snuff-Dipper o’ the Sequatchie Valley.’
How’d that do for a sign?”
“Well, go ahead,” said Si. “But
expect no help from me.”
“Mr. Klegg, when I want your
help in courtin’ a lady I’ll let you know,”
said Shorty with dignity. Si went back to the
tent to see about getting the coffee, and Shorty approached
Mrs. Bolster with an engaging expression on his countenance.
She was knocking the ashes out of her pipe.
“Let me fill your pipe up again.
Madam, with something very choice,” said he,
pulling out a plug of bright natural leaf. “Here’s
some terbacker the like o’ which you never see
in all your born days. It was raised from seed
stole from the private stock of the High-muk-a-muk
o’ Turkey, brung acrost the ocean in a silver
terbacker box for the use o’ President Buchanan,
and planted in the new o’ the moon on a piece
o’ ground that never before had raised nothin’
but roses and sweet-williams. My oldest brother,
who is a Senator from Oshkosh, got just one plug of
it, which he divided with me.”
“O, my! is that true?” she gurgled.
“It’s as true as that
you are a remarkably fine lookin’ woman,”
he said with unblushing countenance, as he began whittling
off some of the tobacco to fill her pipe. “I
was struck by your appearance as soon as I saw you.
I always was very fond of the Southern ladies.”
“Sakes alive, air y’?”
she asked; “then what air yo’uns down here
foutin’ we’uns fur?"
“That’s a long story,
m’m,” answered Shorty. “It was
a trick o’ the Abolition politicians that got
us into it. I’m awful sick o’ the
war (that we hain’t gone ahead and knocked the
heads offen this whole crowd instead o’
layin’ ’round here in camp for months)”
he added as a mental reservation, “and wisht
I was out of it (after we’ve hung Jeff Davis
on a sour-apple tree). Then I might settle down
here and marry some nice woman. You’re
a widder, I believe you said.”
“Yes, I’m a widder,”
she answered, taking her pipe from her mouth and giving
him what she intended for a languishing smile, but
which Shorty afterward said reminded him of a sun-crack
in a mud fence. “Yes, I’m a widder.
Bin so for gwine on six months. Sakes alive, but
ye do talk nice. You air the best-lookin’
Yankee I’ve ever seed.” “Nothin’
painfully bashful about her,” thought Shorty.
“But I must be careful not to let her get me
near a Justice of the Peace. She’d marry
me before I could ketch my breath. Madam,”
he continued aloud.
“Yo’ may call me Sophrony,”
she said, with another cavernous smile.
“Well, Sophrony, let me present
you with half o’ this plug o’ famous terbacker.”
He drew his jackknife and sliced the plug in two.
“Take it, with my warmest respects. Here
comes my partner with some coffee I’ve sent
him for, and which I want you to have. It is not
as much as I’d like to give you, but it’s
all that I have. Some other day you shall have
much more.”
“Law’s sakes.” she
bubbled, as the fragrant odor of the coffee reached
her nose, and she hefted the package. “Yo’
air jest the nicest man I ever did see in all my born
days. I didn’t s’pose thar wuz so
nice a man, or sich a good-lookin’ one,
in the hull Yankee army, or in the oonfederit either,
fur that matter. But, then, yo’ ain’t
no real blue-bellied Yankee.”
“No, indeed, Sophrony.
I never saw New England in all my life, nor did any
o’ my people. They wuz from Virginny (about
500 miles, as near as I kin calculate)” he added
to himself as a mental poultice.
“Say, Mister, why don’t you leave the
Yankee army?”
“Can’t,” said Shorty,
despairingly. “If I tried to git back home
the Provos ’ll ketch me. If I go the
other way the rebel’s ketch me. I’m
betwixt the devil and the deep sea.”
She sat and smoked for several minutes
in semblance of deep thought, and spat with careful
aim at one after another of the prominent weeds around.
Then she said:
“If yo’ want t’
splice with me, I kin take keer o’ yo’.
I’ve helped run off several o’ the boys
who wuz sick o’ this Abolition war. Thar’s
two o’ them now with Bill Phillips’s gang
makin’ it hot for the Yankee trains and camps.
They’re makin’ more’n they ever did
soljerin’, an’ havin’ a much better
time, for they take whatever they want, no matter
who it belongs to. D’ yo’ know
Groundhog, a teamster? He’s in cahoots
with us.”
“Oh!” said Shorty to himself.
“Here’s another lay altogether. Guess
it’s my duty to work it for all that it’s
worth."
“Is it a bargain?” she
said suddenly, stretching out her long, skinny hand.
“Sophrony,” said Shorty,
taking her hand, “this is so sudden. I never
thought o’ marryin’-at least
till this cruel war is over. I don’t know
what kind of a husband I’d make. I don’t
know whether I could fill the place o’ your
late husband!”
“Yo’re not gwine t’
sneak out,” she said, with a fierce flash in
her gray eyes. “If yo’ do I’ll
have yo’ pizened.”
“Now, who’s talkin’
about backin’ out?” said Shorty in a fever
of placation, for he was afraid that some of the other
boys would overhear the conversation. “Don’t
talk so loud. Come, let’s walk on toward
your home. We kin talk on the way.”
The proposition appeared reasonable.
She took the bridle of her horse in her arm, and together
they walked out through the guard-line. The sentries
gave Shorty a deep, knowing wink as he passed.
He went the more willingly, as he was anxious to find
out more about the woman, and the operations of the
gang with which she was connected. She had already
said enough to explain several mysterious things of
recent occurrence. Night came down and as her
ungainliness was not thrust upon him as it was in
the broad glare of day, he felt less difficulty in
professing a deep attachment for her. He even
took her hand. On her part she grew more open
and communicative at every step, and Shorty had no
difficulty in understanding that there was gathered
around her a gang that was practicing about everything
detrimental to the army. They were by turns spies,
robbers, murderers, whisky smugglers, horse-thieves,
and anything else that promised a benefit to themselves.
Ostensibly they were rebels, but this did not prevent
their preying upon the rebels when occasion offered.
Some were deserters from the rebel army, some were
evading the conscript laws, two or three were deserters
from our army.
Shorty and the woman had reached a
point nearly a half-mile outside of the guard-line
when he stopped and said:
“I can’t go no farther
now. I must go back.” “Why must
yo’ go back?” she demanded, with
a sudden angry suspicion. “I thought
yo’ wuz gwine right along with me.”
“Why, no. I never thought
o’ that. I must go back and get my things
before I go with you,” said Shorty, as the readiest
way of putting her off.
“Plague take y’r things,”
she said. “Let ’em go. Yo’
kin git plenty more jest as good from the next Yankee
camp. Yo’ slip back some night with the
boys an’ git yo’r own things, if y’r
so dratted stuck on ’em. Come along now.”
She took hold of his wrist with a
grip like iron. Shorty had no idea that a woman
could have such strength.
“I want to go back and git my
partner,” said Shorty. “Me and him
’ve bin together all the time we’ve
bin in the army. He’ll go along with me,
I’m sure. Me and him thinks alike on everything,
and what one starts the other jines in. I want
to go back an’ git him.”
“I don’t like that partner
o’ your’n. I don’t want him.
I’ll be a better partner t’ yo’
than ever he was. Yo’ mustn’t think
more o’ him than yo’ do o’
me.”
“Look here, Sophrony,”
said Shorty desperately, “I cannot an’
will not go with you to-night. I’m expectin’
important letters from home to-morrow, and I must
go back an’ git ’em. I’ve a
thousand things to do before I go away. Have
some sense. This thing’s bin sprung on me
so suddenly that it ketches me unawares.”
With the quickness of a flash she
whipped out a long knife from somewhere, and raised
it, and then hesitated a second.
“I believe yo’re foolin’
me, and if I wuz shore I’d stick yo’.
But I’m gwine t’ give yo’ a
chance. Yo’ kin go back now, an’ I’ll
come for yo’ ter-morrer. If you go
back on me hit’ll be a mouty sorry day for yo’.
Mind that now.”
Shorty gallantly helped her mount,
and then hurried back to camp.