Removed from the battlefield
to the hospital at Chattanooga.
For a short time a silence that
seemed oppressive followed the fierce turmoil of the
last charge of the rebels upon Snodgrass Hill and its
repulse. Both sides had exhausted themselves in
the awful grapple, and had to regain breath and thought.
Then the night was pierced by the agonizing groans
of the innumerable wounded, the stern commands of
officers to their men to re-form, the calls of scattered
men seeking their regiments and companies.
The sadly-shrunken remnant of the
unconquer able 200th Ind. gathered around its regimental
colors, on the front of the crest of Snodgrass Hill,
and grimly, silently prepared for the next event, whatever
it might be. The wounds of those still able to
fight were bound up, and they resumed their places
in line. The worst hurt were helped or carried
back to the busy Surgeon under the shelter of the hill.
The newly-dead were brought up and added to the row
of those who had already fought their last battle.
Cartridge-boxes of both dead and wounded were carefully
searched for remaining cartridges. Si and Shorty
were laid at the end of the long row.
The chill air of the evening began
to revive Si and Shorty. Si’s brain responded
long before any of his muscles. At first it seemed
the vaguest and most shadowy of dreams. There
was a dim consciousness of lying somewhere. Where
it was, how he came there, what was going on around
he had not the slightest idea nor desire to know.
There was just the feeling of being there, without
any sensation of comfort or discomfort, wish or longing.
One by one, and very slowly, other
nerves awoke. He became conscious that there
was a sharp stone or knot under his head, which hurt,
and he tried to move it, but queerly his head would
not move, and then he found that neither would his
hands. This was faintly puzzling, as things are
in dreams. Then his throat became on fire with
thirst, and somehow there came a dream of the deliciously
cool well on the farm at home, the bucket covered
with green moss swinging over it, the splash of cool
water when it was lowered, the trough by the side,
where they used to pour water for the fowls to drink,
the muddy spot around, where water plants grew on
the splashings and drippings. Then were visions
of the eternal, parching thirst of the damned, which
he had often heard preachers describe, and he was
conscious of a faint curiosity as to whether he had
died and waked up in the home of the lost.
Still not a muscle waked up to obey
his will, and he seemed indifferent whether it did
or not. Then he forgot everything again, until
presently his burning throat recalled his consciousness.
He felt the cold, bracing air in his
nostrils, and slowly, very slowly at first, he began
to hear and understand the sounds around him.
The shriek of a wounded comrade carried past, whose
leg had been shattered, first sounded like the hum
of bees, and finally translated itself into something
like its true meaning, but he had no comprehension
or sympathy for its misery.
He tried to make some sound himself,
but his tongue was as hypnotized as his other muscles,
and refused to obey his will. Yet at the moment
he did not seem to care much. His wishes were
as numb as his tendons and sinews. He became
shadowly conscious of his comrades gathering around
him, picking him up, carrying him back up the hill,
and laying him down again. This relieved the
sharp pain from the stone under his head; but when
they laid him down again his head fell too low.
He heard the murmur of their voices, and felt their
hands searching his pockets for cartridges.
Consciousness began returning more
swiftly, though the muscles were yet paralyzed.
He could feel to the tips of his fingers, yet he could
not move them. He began to understand the words
spoken about him, and comprehend their meaning.
The first sentence that filtered its way to his brain
was Lieut. Bowersox’s order to the regiment:
“The orders are to fall back
quietly. We’ll follow the 1st Oshkosh, on
our right. As soon as it is well down the hill
we’ll move by the right flank, and fall in behind
it. Our wagon is right at the bottom of the hill.
Those that are not able to march will start now, and
get in it. It will move right after the regiment.
Don’t anybody say a word of this above his breath.
The rebels are listening sharply for our movements.
We dare not even cheer, for fear they’ll find
out how few are left of us. All of you keep a
lookout, and follow right after me when I start, for
I won’t give any order.”
Then all his consciousness seemed
to wake up at once into an agony of fear of being
left behind to fall into the hands of the rebels.
He made a desperate effort to call out, but his tongue
seemed dry and useless as a cornhusk in his parched
mouth, and his throat too burning hot to perform its
office. Nor could he lift a finger nor move a
toe.
He found room for anger at Shorty
that he did not look him up, and satisfy himself as
to his condition, and Lieut. Bowersox and the
rest seemed selfishly thoughtful of their own safety
and neglectful of his.
He listened in agony to the regiment
on the right marching off, to the cautions and admonitions
given those who were carrying off the badly-wounded,
and then to Lieut. Bowersox starting off with
the right of the 200th Ind.
Then he heard little Abel Waite say:
“I know that Si Klegg has some
things on him that his folks’ d like to have.
I know where they live. I’m goin’
to git ’em, and send ’em to ’em.”
“Make haste, then, young feller,”
he heard Wat Burnham growl. “Don’t
let the rebels ketch yer. We’re movin’
now.”
He heard Abel Waite’s steps
running toward him, and felt his hands thrust into
his blouse pocket over his breast. Then the boy
said with a start of surprise:
“Why, he’s alive yet. Come here,
Wat.”
Wat and the Irishmen hastened to him. He felt
Wat’s hand laid on his breast, and then held
over his mouth.
“’E’s certainly warm yet. Hand
’e breathes.”
Shorty made a violent effort, and
summoned enough strength to reach over and touch the
Englishman’s foot.
“The tall feller’s alive, too,”
said Wat.
“We must take ’em along with us,”
said Abel Waite excitedly.
“Yes, but ’ow?”
growled the Englishman. “Don’t speak
so loud, you young brat. Do you want to hopen
hup that ’ell’s kitchen hagin?”
“The Liftinant’s far down
the hill wid the regiment,” said Barney McGrath.
“There’s no toime to sind for him.
Here, lit’s pick thim up an’ carry thim
down to the wagon.”
He put his hand under Si’s shoulder.
The others did the same, Wat lifting Shorty’s
feet.
“Halt, there, you Yanks, and
surrender,” said a stern voice just behind Wat.
Wat looked back over his shoulder
and saw a single adventurous rebel who, divining what
was going on, had slipped forward in the darkness,
with his gun leveled on the squad bearing Si.
Wat realized instantly that the rebel must be suppressed
with out alarm to others that might be behind him.
He dropped Shorty’s foot, and with a backward
sweep of his mighty right took the rebel in the stomach
with such force as to double him up. The next
instant Wat had his throat in his terrific grip, and
tried to tear the windpipe from him. Then he flung
the rebel forward down the hill, gathered up Shorty’s
feet again, and gave the command:
“Hall right. Go a’ead, boys, quick
has you can.”
With great difficulty they made their
way over the wreckage of battle down the hill toward
where they expected to find the regimental wagon.
But it had received all that it could hold of its ghastly
freight and moved off.
They were is despair for a few minutes,
until Abel Waite discovered an abandoned wagon near
by, with one mule still hitched to it. Next they
found a wounded artillery horse which had been turned
loose from his battery. He was hitched in, and
Si and Shorty were laid on the layer of ammunition-boxes
which still covered the bottom of the bed.
“Who’ll drive the bloody
team?” growled Wat. “Hi never druv
a ’oss hin my life. ’Ere, Barney,
you get hin the saddle.”
“Not Oi,” answered Barney.
“Oi niver could droive ayven a pig, on the brightest
day that shone. Oi’ll not fool wid a couple
av strange horses, a wagon-load av foire
an’ brimstone, an’ a brace av dead
men, in the midst av Aygytian darkness.
Not Oi.”
“Here, I kin drive two horses,
anyway,” said Abel Waite, climbing into the
saddle. “I’ve done that much on the
farm.”
They pushed off into the road marked
by the dark line of troops moving silently toward
McFarland’s Gap, and after some contest with
other drivers secured a place behind one of the regiments
of their brigade.
A couple of miles ahead Forrest’s
cavalry was making a noisy dispute of the army’s
retreat, the woods were on fire, and the fences on
either side of the road were blazing.
The long line was halted in anxious
expectation for a little while, as the storm of battle
rose, and the men looked into each other’s faces
with sickening apprehension, for it seemed much like
defeat and capture. Then loud cheers, taken up
clear down the line’, rose as Turchin’s
Brigade, by a swift bayonet charge, swept away all
opposition, scattered the rebels to the shelter of
the woods, and reopened the way. But the rebels
still continued to fire long distance shots at the
road as outlined by the burn ing fences.
Though one of his team was wounded,
Abel Waite had little difficulty in keeping his place
in column until the burning lane was reached.
The regiment ahead had gone through on the double-quick,
and teams as fast as they could be lashed.
“What’ll we do now?”
he called out to the others in his boyish treble.
“I can’t git these plugs out of a walk.
If we go ahead the fire’ll bust the ammunition,
and send us all sky-huntin’. If we stop
here them rebels ’ll git us, sure.”
“Go a’ead, Habe,”
growled Wat, after a moment’s thought. “We
can’t ’elp you, but we’ll stay wi’
you. Hif she busts, she busts, hand that’s
hall there’ll be hof hit hor hof us. We’ll
stick by the wagon, though, till she busts, hand then
nobuddy but the crows ’ll hever find hany hof
hus. Go a’ead, you bloody brat.”
“Cut me one o’ them young
hickories for a gad,” said Abel, pointing to
the brush by the side of the road, “and I’ll
git as good time out o’ these poor brutes as
they kin make, if I skin ’em alive.”
Abel lashed his animals with all the
strength of his young arm, and succeeded in keeping
them in something like a trot. The men ran alongside,
and fought the fire as well as they were able.
Several times the wagon-cover caught fire from the
intense heat, but it was at once beaten out by hats
and blouses, and blouses were laid over the holes to
protect them against the sparks.
They succeeded at last in getting
through the fire-bordered road without an explosion,
but they were all so exhausted that they could not
move another step until they rested. The poor
horse lay down and refused to get up.
Wat and Abel looked in to see how
Si and Shorty had fared. The jolting of the wagon
and the cold night air had at first revived them so
that they could speak. Then they swooned again
from the effects of the heat and the stifling smoke,
and were speech less and motionless when Wat and Abel
looked in.
“We’ve ’ad hall
hour trouble for nothink,” said Wat disconsolately,
as he felt them over. “The ’eat and
smoke’s killed ’em.”
“Not by a durned sight,”
slowly gasped Shorty. “Seen sicker dogs’n
this git well. Nearly dead for a drink o’
water, though. Then I’ll be all right.”
Abel snatched a canteen, ran to a
branch a little way off, filled it, and returning,
put it to Shorty’s lips.
“Jehosephat, how good that tastes,”
said Shorty, speaking still faintly, but far more
freely than at first, after he had drained the canteen.
“Sonny, run and git some more; and mind you fill
the canteen full this time. I feel as if I could
drink up the Mississippi River. Say, boys, what’s
happened? Appearintly, I got a sock-dologer on
my head from some feller who thought I was too fresh.
I’m afraid I’ll have a spell o’
headache. But we got the flag, didn’t we?”
“Yo’re bloody right we
did,” said Wat; “hand we wolloped them
bloomin’ rebels till they ’unted their
’olés hin the woods.”
“That’s good enough,” said Shorty,
sinking back.
“The column’s movin’
agin,” said Abel Waite, turn ing his attention
to his team.
Shortly after daybreak the team limped
painfully up the slope of Mission Ridge, through Rossville
Gap, on either side of which stood Thomas’s
indomitable army in battle array, sternly defying the
rebel hosts of Bragg and Longstreet, which swarmed
over the hills and valleys in front, but without much
apparent appetite for a renewal of the dreadful fray.
“Where do you men belong?
What have you got in that wagon? Where are you
going?” demanded the Provost officer in the road.
“We belong to the 200th Hinjianny.
We’ve got two badly-wounded men and ha lot o’
hammynition in the wagon. We want to find our
regiment,” an swered Wat Burnham.
“Stop your wagon right there.
We need all the ammunition we can get. Lift your
wounded men into that ambulance, and then go up to
that side of the gap. Your division is up there
somewhere.”
It was late in the afternoon before
the overworked Surgeon in the field hospital at Chattanooga,
in which Si and Shorty were finally deposited, found
time to examine them.
“You got a pretty stiff whack
on your head, my man,” he said to Shorty, as
he finished looking him over; “but so far as
I can tell now it has not fractured your skull.
You Hoosiers have mighty hard heads.”
“Reglar clay-knob whiteoak,”
whispered Shorty; “couldn’t split it with
a maul and wedge. Don’t mind that a mite,
since we got that flag. But how’s my pardner
over there?”
“I think you’ll pull through
all right,” continued the Surgeon, “if
you don’t have concussion of the brain.
You’ll have to be-”
“No danger o’ discussion
of the brains,” whispered Shorty. “Don’t
carry ’em up there, where they’re liable
to get slubbed. Keep ’em in a safer place,
where there’s more around ’em. But
how’s my pardner?”
“You’ll come through all
right,” said the Surgeon smiling. “You’re
the right kind to live. You’ve got grit.
I’ll look at your partner now.”
He went to Si and examined him.
Shorty turned on his side and watched him with eager
eyes. His heart sickened as he saw the Surgeon’s
face grow graver as he proceeded. The Surgeon
probed the bullet’s track with his fingers,
and drew out a piece of folded letter paper stained
with blood. Instinctively he unfolded it, and
read through the ensanguined smears, written in a
cramped school-girl hand:
“Dear Si:
Though I did not have the heart to say it, Ime
yours till death, and
Ime sure you feel the same way.
Annabel.”
“I’m much afraid the end
has come too soon to a brave as well as loving heart,”
said the Surgeon sadly.
“Doctor, he can’t die.
He mustn’t die,” said Shorty in agony.
“The regiment can’t spare him. He’s
the best soldier in it, and he’s my pardner.”
“He may live, but it’s
a very slender chance,” said the Surgeon.
“Men live in this war against all science and
experience, and it is possible that he may.”
“Major,” said Lieut.
Bowersox, coming in, “I understand that two of
my men were brought in here wounded. The report
which was sent North this morning gave them as killed.
If you have them here I want to correct it and save
their people sorrow.”
“One of them,” answered
the Surgeon, “has no thought of dying, and will,
I’m sure, pull through. I am sorry I cannot
say the same for the other. It he lives it will
be a wonder.”
“Neither of us is a-going to
die till we’ve put down this damned rebellion,
and got home and married our girls,” gasped Shorty
with grim effort. “You can jist telegraph
that home, and to olé Abe Lincoln, and to all
whom it may concern.”
And he fell back exhausted on his blanket.