The shadow of an east Tennessee
vendetta.
The long roll turned out to be
occasioned by the burning of a Union Tennesseean’s
house by a squad of revengeful guerrillas, but the
regiment had to stay under arms until a party of cavalry
went out and made an investigation. The men stacked
their arms, and lay around on the ground to get what
sleep was possible, and which was a good deal, for
the night was pleasant, and there are worse beds than
the mossy hillside on a July night.
“Too bad that your weddin’
night had to be broken up so,” said Si sympathetically,
as he and Shorty and the bridegroom sat together on
a knoll and watched the distant flames. “But
you needn’t ’ve come with us this
time; nobody expected you to.”
“Why, I s’posed this wuz
part o’ the régler thing,” answered
Nate in amazement. “I s’posed that
wuz the way yo’uns allers married folkses
in the army. Allers something happens at weddin’s
down hyah. Mos’ ginerully hit’s a
free fout betwixt the young fellers o’ the
bride’s an’ bridegroom’s famblies,
from ‘sputin’ which fambly’s made
the best match. When Brother Wils married Becky
Barnstable we Hartburn boys said that Wils moût-ve
looked higher. The Barnstable boys done tuk hit
up, an’ said the Barnstables wuz ez good ez
the Hartburns ary day in the week, an’ at the
weddin’ Nels Barnstable had his eye gouged out,
Ike Barnstable wuz knocked down with a flail, an’
had what the doctor called discussion o’ the
brain, and olé Sandy Barnstable cut off Pete
Hartburn’s ear with a bowie. They-uns
reopened the argyment at the infair, an’ laid
out two o’ the Hartburns with ox-gads. I
don’t think they orter used ox-gads. Tain’t
gentlemanly. D’ye think so? Knives,
an’ pistols, an’ guns, an’ even flails
an’ axes, is all right, when you can’t
git nothin’ better, but I think ox-gads is low
an’ onery.”
Si and Shorty looked at the gentle,
drawling, mild-eyed young Tennesseean with amazement.
A young girl could not have seemed softer or more
pliant, yet he quietly talked of savage fighting as
one of the most casual things in life.
“Well,” said Shorty, “if
that’s the way you celebrat weddin’s and
in-fairs down here in Tennessee, I don’t wonder
that you welcome a battle for a change. I think
I’d prefer a debate with guns to one with axes
and flails and anything that’d come handy.
It’s more reg’ler to have umpires and
referees, and the thing conducted accordin’ to
the rules of the P. R. Then when you git through you
know for sure who’s licked.”
“Jist ‘cordin’ t’
how one’s raised,” remarked Nate philosophically.
“I’ve allers done seed a big furse
o’ some kind at a weddin’. Don’t
all yo’uns have none at yo’uns’s
weddin’s?”
“Nothin’ worse’n
gittin’ the girl’s dad to consent,”
answered Shorty, “and scratchin’ ’round
to git the money to git married on to buy a new suit
o’ clothes, fee the preacher, pay for the license,
and start housekeepin’. That’s enough
for one lifetime.”
“Well, mam an’ the gals
made Wils’s weddin’ cloze,” said
Nate reflectively. “He had his own sheep,
which he sheared in the Spring. They’uns
carded, spun, dyed, an’ wove the wool themselves,
an’ made him the purtiest suit o’ cloze
ever seed on the mountings.”
“Your mother and sisters goin’
to make your weddin’ suit, Si?” asked
Shorty. “What’d he have to pay for
the license?”
“License? What’s that?” asked
Nate.
“License? Why, a license,”
explained Si, “is something you git from the
County Clerk. It’s leave to git married,
and published in the County paper.”
“Don’t have t’ have
no leave from nobody down here t’ git married.
Hit’s nobody’s business but the man’s
an’ the gal’s, an’ they’uns’s
famblies. Some times other folkses tries t’
stick their noses in, but they’uns git sot down
upon.”
“What’d he pay the preacher?” asked
Shorty.
“Why, mam gin his wife a hank
o’ fine stockin’ yarn, an’ dad gin
him a couple sides o’ bacon.”
“At present prices o’
pork in Injianny,” remarked Si, after a little
mental figuring, “that wasn’t such a bad
fee.”
“If you speak to the Captain,”
suggested Si, “he’ll let you go back home
to your wife. I don’t believe there’s
goin’ to be anything special to-night.
The cavalry don’t seem to be stirrin’ up
nothin out there.”
“I don’t keer t’,”
said Nate, in his sweet, girlish drawl. “Ruther
stay with yo’all. Moût somethin’
happen. Biff Perkins an’ his gang o’
gorillers is out thar somewhar, not fur off, huntin’
a chance fur deviltry. I’d like mouty t’
git a whack at they’uns. Nance’ll
keep. She’s mine now, fast an’ good,
for ever, an’ll wait fur me. Afore we wuz
spliced I wuz afeered Zach Barnstable moût work
some contrivance t’ git her, but now she belongs
t’ me.”
The boys took him to their hearts more than ever.
At the coming of the early dawn the
regiment was aroused and marched back to camp, there
to meet orders to move forward at once, as soon as
breakfast was prepared and eaten. Away it marched
for the Tennessee River, behind which Bragg was supposed
to be gathering his forces for the defense of Chattanooga.
As Co. Q went by the cabin, Grandfather
Onslow was seated in a rocking-chair on the porch,
smoking a cob pipe, while Mrs. Nancy Onslow Hartburn,
with her finger bashfully in her mouth, peeped around
the corner. Co. Q gave her a cheer, at which
she turned and fled out of sight, as if it was some
raillery on her newly-married state, and Nate hung
down his head, as if he, too, felt the boys were poking
fun at him.
“Good-by, boys. Lick the
life outen Olé Bragg,” quavered Grandfather
Onslow, waving his hand after them.
“That’s what we’re
goin’ to do,” shouted the boys in reply.
“Well,” said Si, “I
bet if ever I’m married I’ll kiss my wife
before I go away.”
“Me, too,” echoed Shorty, very soulfully.
Shorty and Si considered Nate Hartburn
their special protege, and were deeply anxious to
transform him into a complete soldier in the shortest
possible time. He was so young, alert, and seemingly
pliable, that it appeared there would be no difficulty
in quickly making him a model soldier. But they
found that while he at once responded to any suggestion
of a raid or a fight, drill, discipline and camp routine
were bores that he could be induced to take only a
languid interest in. Neither Si nor Shorty were
any too punctilious in these matters, but they were
careful to keep all the time within easy conversational
distance of the regulations and tactics. Naturally,
also, they wanted their pupil to do better than they
did. But no lecturing would prevent young Hartburn
from slouching around camp with his hands in his pockets
and his head bent. He would not or could not keep
step in the ranks, nor mark time. While Si was
teaching him he would make a listless attempt to go
through the manual of arms, but he would make no attempt
to handle his gun the prescribed way after the lesson
was ended. Si was duly mindful of the sore time
he himself had in learning the drill, and tried to
be very considerate with him, but his patience was
sorely tried at times.
“For goodness’ sake, Nate,”
Si would say irritably, “try to keep step.
You’re throwin’ everybody out.”
“’Tain’t my fault,
Si,” Nate would reply with a soft drawl.
“Hit’s theirs. I’m walkin’
all right, but they’uns hain’t. Jaw
them. What’s the sense o’ walkin’
so’ close together, anyway? Yo’ don’t
git thar no sooner.”
Then again:
“Great jumpin’ Jehosephat,
Nate, will you never learn the right way to hold your
gun when you present arms? You must turn the trigger
outside, not the hammer.”
“O, Jeminy, what difference
does hit make? I never kin recollect hit, an’
what’s the use o’ tryin’? Can’t
see no sense in holdin’ a gun straight up an’
down that-a-way, anyway, an’ if yo’
do, hain’t one side jest as good as t’other?”
He was so obdurate that the boys would
some times be provoked to sharp words to him, but
his gentle speech would quickly disarm them again,
and make them feel penitent.
At last the 200th Ind. came out upon
the crest of Waldron’s Ridge, overlooking the
Tennessee River, which wound and turned amid the towering
mountains like a band of bright silver traversing the
giant billows of green. Everyone caught his breath
at the sight, for beyond the stream were rebel camps,
and moving trains and long, lines of marching men.
Was all of Bragg’s army gathered over there to
dispute the passage or was a part still this side
of the river, ready to pounce on our heads of columns
as they meandered down the mountain?
The brigade was closed up, information
sent to the Division Commander, and the 200th Ind.
pushed to the front to develop whatever might be there.
Si with Shorty and some others were sent ahead to feel
for the enemy.
“Take him along?” asked
Si of Shorty in a low tone, with a nod toward Nate,
as they were making up the squad.
“Don’t know,” answered
Shorty. “If ever in the world, we want men
with us to-day who don’t git rattled, and make
a holy show o’ theirselves before the regiment,
but’ll keep cool, watch their chances, and obey
orders. Guess we’d better leave him behind.”
“Seems to me,” said Si,
trying vaguely to recall his Scriptual readings, “that
the Bible says some thing agin takin’ a newly-married
man right into battle just after he’s married.”
He looked around again, saw Nate taking
his place along with the other men selected, and called
out:
“Here, Nate, fall back to the
company. You can’t go along.”
“Please, Mister Si, lé’
me go along,” begged Nate, in the soft tones
of a girl asking for a flower. “I’ll
be good. I’ll hold my gun straight, an’
try t’ keep step.”
“No, you can’t go., This
’s partickler business, and we want only experienced
men with us. Better fall back to the company.”
“Go ahead, there, Corporal,”
commanded the Adjutant. “Time’s passing.
We must move.”
Si deployed his men and entered the
dense woods which curtained the view and shrouded
the enemy. It was one of those deeply anxious
moments in war, when the enemy is in ambush, and the
next instant, the next step may develop him in deadly
activity.
Si was on the right of his line and
Shorty on the left, and they were pushing forward
slowly, cautiously, and with every sense strained to
the extremity of alertness.
So dense was the foliage overhead
that it was almost a twilight in the forest depths
they were penetrating, and Si’s eyes were strained
to keep track of the men moving on his left, and at
the same time watch the developments in front.
He had noticed that he was approaching a little opening
some distance ahead, and that beyond it was a dense
thicket of tall laurels. Then he thought he heard
a low whistle from Shorty, and looked far to the left,
while continuing to walk forward.
Suddenly he was startled by a shot
a little to his rear and left. Then a shot answered
from the laurel thicket, he saw the bushes over there
stir violently, and he heard Nate’s voice say:
“He wuz layin’ for yo’,
Si, an’ come nigh a-gittin’ yo’,
but I think I must’ve at least creased him,
from the wild way he shot back. Le’s go
forrard an’ see.”
“I thought I told you to stay
back,” said Si, more intent on military discipline
than his escape.
“I know yo’ did done
hit, but I couldn’t mind, an’ tagged ’long
arter yo’.”
“How’d you know he wuz there?”
“I done seed the bushes move
over his head. I knowed jest how he wuz a-layin’
for yo’. Le’s go forrard an’
git him.”
Si and Nate ran across the open space
to the laurels, and found a little ways in a bushwhacker
staggering from pain and loss of blood from a wound
in his hip, and making labored efforts to escape.
“I done hit him; I done fetched
him; I done knowed jist whar he wuz,” exclaimed
Nate with boyish exultation.
At the sound of his voice the bushwhacker
turned around upon him an ugly, brutal face, full
of savage hatred.
“Why, hit’s bad olé
Wash Barnstable, what burnt daddy’s stable with
two horses, an’ shot brother Wils through the
arm. I’ll jist job him in the heart with
my bayonet,” screamed the boy as he recognized
the face. His own features became transfigured
with rage, and he began fixing his bayonet. Si
pushed forward and caught the bushwhacker by the shoulder
and tore the gun from his hand. Nate came springing
up, with his bayonet pointed directly at the man’s
heart. Si saw it in time to thrust it aside,
saying in wrathful astonishment:
“Nate, you little scoundrel,
what do you mean? Would you kill a wounded man?”
“Suttenly I’ll done kill
him,” screamed the boy in a a frenzy of rage.
“Why not? He desarves hit, the hell-hound.
All of us Hartburns ’ve said we’d
done kill him the minnit we laid eyes on him.
Now that I’ve got him I’m gwine t’
finish him.”
He made another vicious lunge at the
man with his bayonet.
“Indeed you’re not,”
said Si, releasing his hold on the prisoner and catching
Nate’s gun. “You mustn’t kill
a wounded man, you young wildcat.”
“Why not?” shouted the
boy, beside himself with rage. “He’s
done killed lots o’ men. He’ll kill
more if yo’ let him go. He wuz layin’
t’ kill yo’. Air yo’
gwine t’ gin him another chance to down yo’?”
Si wrested the gun from him.
Two or three other boys who had been attracted by
the shot came up at this moment. Si gave the prisoner
into the charge of one of them, with instructions
to take him to the rear. Nate released his hold
on his gun and made a jump for the one which the other
boy had stood against a tree when he started to take
hold of the prisoner. Again Si was too quick
for him. He was by this time so angry that he
was in the mood to give Nate a severe lesson, but the
Adjutant, had ridden forward, called out:
“Go ahead, there, Corporal. We’re
just behind you.”
“Pick up your gun, there, Nate,
and come along with me, if you kin behave yourself.
There’s work much more important than killin’
wounded bushwhackers. Come along, this minute.”
Nate hesitated a moment, then picked
up his gun with a vengeful look at the prisoner.
“I’ll kill him yit.
Mebbe I’ll git a chance this evenin’ yit,”
said he, and followed Si.