A tall, well-favoured youth, coming
from the farther South, boarded the train for Richmond
one raw, gusty morning. He carried his left arm
stiffly, his face was thin and brown, and his dingy
uniform had holes in it, some made by bullets; but
his air and manner were happy, as if, escaped from
danger and hardships, he rode on his way to pleasure
and ease.
He sat for a time gazing out of the
window at the gray, wintry landscape that fled past,
and then, having a youthful zest for new things, looked
at those who traveled with him in the car. The
company seemed to him, on the whole, to lack novelty
and interest, being composed of farmers going to the
capital of the Confederacy to sell food; wounded soldiers
like himself, bound for the same place in search of
cure; and one woman who sat in a corner alone, neither
speaking nor spoken to, her whole aspect repelling
any rash advance.
Prescott always had a keen eye for
woman and beauty, and owing to his long absence in
armies, where both these desirable objects were scarce,
his vision had become acute; but he judged that this
lone type of her sex had no special charm. Tall
she certainly was, and her figure might be good, but
no one with a fair face and taste would dress as plainly
as she, nor wrap herself so completely in a long,
brown cloak that he could not even tell the colour
of her eyes. Beautiful women, as he knew them,
always had a touch of coquetry, and never hid their
charms wholly.
Prescott’s attention wandered
again to the landscape rushing past, but finding little
of splendour or beauty, it came back, by and by, to
the lone woman. He wondered why she was going
to Richmond and what was her name. She, too,
was now staring out of the window, and the long cloak
hiding her seemed so shapeless that he concluded her
figure must be bad. His interest declined at
once, but rose again with her silence and evident
desire to be left alone.
As they were approaching Richmond
a sudden jar of the train threw a small package from
her lap to the floor. Prescott sprang forward,
picked it up and handed it to her. She received
it with a curt “Thanks,” and the noise
of the train was so great that Prescott could tell
nothing about the quality of her voice. It might
or might not be musical, but in any event she was
not polite and showed no gratitude. If he had
thought to use the incident as an opening for conversation,
he dismissed the idea, as she turned her face back
to the window at once and resumed her study of the
gray fields.
“Probably old and plain,”
was Prescott’s thought, and then he forgot her
in the approach to Richmond, the town where much of
his youth had been spent. The absence of his
mother from the capital was the only regret in this
happy homecoming, but he had received a letter from
her assuring him of her arrival in the city in a day
or two.
When they reached Richmond the woman
in the brown cloak left the car before him, but he
saw her entering the office of the Provost-Marshal,
where all passes were examined with minute care, every
one who came to the capital in those times of war
being considered an enemy until proved a friend.
Prescott saw then that she was not only tall, but very
tall, and that she walked with a strong, graceful
step. “After all, her figure may be good,”
he thought, revising his recent opinion.
Her pass was examined, found to be
correct, and she left the office before his own time
came. He would have asked the name on her pass,
but aware that the officer would probably tell him
to mind his own business, he refrained, and then forgot
her in the great event of his return home after so
long a time of terrible war. He took his way at
once to Franklin Street, where he saw outspread before
him life as it was lived in the capital of the Confederate
States of America. It was to him a spectacle,
striking in its variety and refreshing in its brilliancy,
as he had come, though indirectly, from the Army of
Northern Virginia, where it was the custom to serve
half-rations of food and double rations of gunpowder.
Therefore, being young, sound of heart and amply furnished
with hope, he looked about him and rejoiced.
Richmond was a snug little town, a
capital of no great size even in a region then lacking
in city growth, but for the time more was said about
it and more eyes were turned upon it than upon any
other place in the world. Many thousands of men
were dying in an attempt to reach this small Virginia
city, and many other thousands were dying in an equally
strenuous effort to keep them away.
Such thoughts, however, did not worry
Prescott at this moment. His face was set resolutely
toward the bright side of life, which is really half
the battle, and neither the damp nor the cold was able
to take from him the good spirits that were his greatest
treasure. Coming from the bare life of a camp
and the somber scenes of battlefields, he seemed to
have plunged into a very whirlwind of gaiety, and
his eyes sparkled with appreciation. He did not
notice then that his captain’s uniform was stained
and threadbare enough to make him a most disreputable
figure in a drawing-room, however gallant he might
appear at the head of a forlorn hope.
The street was crowded, the pressure
of the armies having driven much of the life of the
country into the city, and Prescott saw men, women
and children passing, some in rich and some in poor
attire. He saw ladies, both young and old, bearing
in their cheeks a faint, delicate bloom, the mark
of the South, and he heard them as they spoke to each
other in their soft, drawling voices, which reminded
him of the waters of a little brook falling over a
precipice six inches high.
It is said that soldiers, after spending
a year or two in the serious business of slaying each
other, look upon a woman as one would regard a divinity a
being to be approached with awe and respect; and such
emotions sprang into the heart of Prescott when he
glanced into feminine faces, especially youthful ones.
Becoming suddenly conscious of his rusty apparel and
appearance, he looked about him in alarm. Other
soldiers were passing, some fresh and trim, some rusty
as himself, but a great percentage of both had bandaged
limbs or bodies, and he found no consolation in such
company, wishing to appear well, irrespective of others.
He noticed many red flags along the
street and heard men calling upon the people in loud,
strident voices to come and buy. At other places
the grateful glow of coal fires shone from half-opened
doorways, and the faint but positive click of ivory
chips told that games of chance were in progress.
“Half the population is either
buying something or losing something,” he said
to himself.
A shout of laughter came from one
of the open doorways beyond which men were staking
their money, and a voice, somewhat the worse for a
liquid not water, sang:
“Little McClellan sat
eating a melon
The Chickahominy by;
He stuck in his spade,
Then a long while delayed,
And cried: ‘What
a brave general am I!’”
“I’ll wager that you had
nothing to do with driving back McClellan,”
thought Prescott, and then his mind turned to that
worn army by the Rapidan, fighting with such endurance,
while others lived in fat ease here in Richmond.
Half a dozen men, English in face
and manner and rolling in their walk like sailors,
passed him. He recognized them at once as blockade
runners who had probably come up from Wilmington to
sell their goods for a better price at the capital.
While wondering what they had brought, his attention
was distracted by one of the auctioneers, a large man
with a red face and tireless voice.
“Come buy! Come buy!”
he cried. “See this beautiful new uniform
of the finest gray, a sample of a cargo made in England
and brought over five days ago on a blockade runner
to Wilmington.”
Looking around in search of a possible
purchaser, his eye caught Prescott.
“This will just suit you,”
he said. “A change of a strap or two and
it will do for either captain or lieutenant.
What a figure you will be in this uniform!”
Then he leaned over and said persuasively: “Better
buy it, my boy. Take the advice of a man of experience.
Clothes are half the battle. They may not be
so on the firing line, but they are here in Richmond.”
Prescott looked longingly at the uniform
which in colour and texture was all that the auctioneer
claimed, and fingered a small package of gold in his
pocket. At that moment some one bid fifty dollars,
and Prescott surveyed him with interest.
The speaker was a man of his own age,
but shorter and darker, with a hawk-like face softened
by black eyes with a faintly humourous twinkle lurking
in the corner of each. He seemed distinctly good-natured,
but competition stirred Prescott and he offered sixty
dollars. The other man hesitated, and the auctioneer,
who seemed to know him, asked him to bid up.
“This uniform is worth a hundred
dollars if it’s worth a cent, Mr. Talbot,”
he said.
“I’ll give you seventy-five
dollars cash or five hundred on a credit,” said
Talbot; “now which will you take?”
“If I had to take either I’d
take the seventy-five dollars cash, and I’d
be mighty quick about making a choice,” replied
the auctioneer.
Talbot turned to Prescott and regarded
him attentively for a moment or two. Then he
said:
“You look like a good fellow,
and we’re about the same size. Now, I haven’t
a hundred dollars in gold, and I doubt whether you
have. Suppose we buy this uniform together, and
take turns in wearing it.”
Prescott laughed, but he saw that
the proposition was made in entire good faith, and
he liked the face of the man whom the auctioneer had
called Talbot.
“I won’t do that,”
he replied, “because I have more money than you
think. I’ll buy this and I’ll lend
you enough to help you in buying another.”
Friendships are quickly formed in
war time, and the offer was accepted at once.
The uniforms were purchased and the two young men strolled
on together, each carrying a precious burden under
his arm.
“My name is Talbot, Thomas Talbot,”
said the stranger. “I’m a lieutenant
and I’ve had more than two years’ service
in the West. I was in that charge at Chickamauga
when General Cheatham, leading us on, shouted:
’Boys, give ’em hell’; and General
Polk, who had been a bishop and couldn’t swear,
looked at us and said: ’Boys, do as General
Cheatham says!’ Well, I got a bad wound in the
shoulder there, and I’ve been invalided since
in Richmond, but I’m soon going to join the Army
of Northern Virginia.”
Talbot talked on and Prescott found
him entertaining, as he was a man who saw the humourous
side of things, and his speech, being spontaneous,
was interesting.
The day grew darker and colder.
Heavy clouds shut out the sun and the rain began to
fall. The people fled from the streets, and the
two officers shivered in their uniforms. The
wind rose and whipped the rain into their faces.
Its touch was like ice.
“Come in here and wait till
the storm passes,” said Talbot, taking his new
friend by the arm and pulling him through an open door.
Prescott now heard more distinctly than ever the light
click of ivory chips, mingled with the sound of many
voices in a high or low key, and the soft movement
of feet on thick carpets. Without taking much
thought, he followed his new friend down a short and
narrow hall, at the end of which they entered a large,
luxurious room, well lighted and filled with people.
“Yes, it’s a gambling
room The Nonpareil and there
are plenty more like it in Richmond, I can tell you,”
said Talbot. “Those who follow war must
have various kinds of excitement. Besides, nothing
is so bad that it does not have its redeeming point,
and these places, without pay, have cared for hundreds
and hundreds of our wounded.”
Prescott had another errand upon which
his conscience bade him hasten, but casting one glance
through the window he saw the soaking streets and
the increasing rain, swept in wild gusts by the fierce
wind. Then the warmth and light of the place,
the hum of talk and perhaps the spirit of youth infolded
him and he stayed.
There were thirty or forty men in
the room, some civilians and others soldiers, two
bearing upon their shoulders the stripes of a general.
Four carried their arms in slings and three had crutches
beside their chairs. One of the generals was
not over twenty-three years of age, but this war furnished
younger generals than he, men who won their rank by
sheer hard service on great battlefields.
The majority of the men were playing
faro, roulette or keno, and the others sat in softly
upholstered chairs and talked. Liquors were served
from a bar in the corner, where dozens of brightly
polished glasses of all shapes and sizes glittered
on marble and reflected the light of the gas in vivid
colours.
Prescott’s mind traveled back
to long, lonely watches in the dark forest under snow
and rain, in front of the enemy’s outposts, and
he admitted that while the present might be very wicked
it was also very pleasant.
He gave himself up for a little while
to the indulgence of his physical senses, and then
began to examine those in the room, his eyes soon
resting upon the one who was most striking in appearance.
It was a time of young men, and this stranger was
young like most of the others, perhaps under twenty-five.
He was of middle height, very thick and broad, and
his frame gave the impression of great muscular strength
and endurance. A powerful neck supported a great
head surmounted by a crop of hair like a lion’s
mane. His complexion was as delicate as a woman’s,
but his pale blue eyes were bent close to the table
as he wagered his money with an almost painful intentness,
and Prescott saw that the gaming madness was upon
him.
Talbot’s eyes followed Prescott’s and
he smiled.
“I don’t wonder that you
are looking at Raymond,” he said. “He
is sure to attract attention anywhere. You are
beholding one of the most remarkable men the South
has produced.”
Prescott recognized the name as that
of the editor of the Patriot, a little newspaper
published on a press traveling in a wagon with the
Western army until a month since, when it had come
over to the Army of Northern Virginia. The Patriot
was “little” only in size. The wit,
humour, terseness, spontaneous power of expression,
and above all of phrase-making, which its youthful
editor showed in its columns, already had made Raymond
a power in the Confederacy, as they were destined in
his maturity to win him fame in a reunited nation.
“He’s a great gamester
and thinks that he’s a master of chance,”
said Talbot, “but as a matter of fact he always
loses. See how fast his pile of money is diminishing.
It will soon be gone, but he will find another resource.
You watch him.”
Prescott did not need the advice,
as his attention was already concentrated on Raymond’s
broad, massive jaw and the aggressive curve of his
strong face. His movements were quick and nervous;
face and figure alike expressed the most absolute
self-confidence. Prescott wondered if this self-confidence
did not lie at the basis of all success, military,
literary, mercantile or other, enabling one’s
triumphs to cover up his failures and make the people
remember only the former.
Raymond continued to lose, and presently,
all his money being gone, he began to feel in his
pockets in an absent-minded way for more, but the
hand came forth empty from each pocket. He did
not hesitate.
A man only two or three years older
was sitting next to Raymond, and he, too, was intent
on the game. Beside him was a very respectable
little heap of gold and notes, and Raymond, reaching
over, took half of the money and without a word, putting
it in front of himself, went on with his wagers.
The second man looked up in surprise, but seeing who
had robbed him, merely made a wry face and continued
his game. Several who had noticed the action
laughed.
“It’s Raymond’s
way,” said Talbot. “I knew that he
would do it. That’s why I told you to watch
him. The other man is Winthrop. He’s
an editor, too one of our Richmond papers.
He isn’t a genius like Raymond, but he’s
a slashing writer loves to criticize anybody
from the President down, and he often does it.
He belongs to the F. F. V.’s himself, but he
has no mercy on them shows up all their
faults. While you can say that gambling is Raymond’s
amusement, you may say with equal truth that dueling
is Winthrop’s.”
“Dueling!” exclaimed Prescott
in surprise. “Why, I never saw a milder
face!”
“Oh, he doesn’t fight
duels from choice,” replied Talbot. “It’s
because of his newspaper. He’s always criticizing,
and here when a man is criticized in print he challenges
the editor. And the funny thing about it is,
that although Winthrop can’t shoot or fence at
all, he’s never been hurt. Providence protects
him, I suppose.”
“Has he ever hit anybody?” asked Prescott.
“Only once,” replied Talbot,
“and that was his eleventh duel since the war
began. He shot his man in the shoulder and then
jumped up and down in his pride. ‘I hit
him! I hit him!’ he cried. ‘Yes,
Winthrop,’ said his second, ’some one
was bound to get in the way if you kept on shooting
long enough.’”
The place, with its rich colours,
its lights shining from glasses and mirrors, its mellow
odours of liquids and its softened sounds began to
have a soporific effect upon Prescott, used so long
to the open air and untold hardships. His senses
were pleasantly lulled, and the voice of his friend,
whom he seemed now to have known for a long time, came
from far away. He could have closed his eyes
and gone to sleep, but Talbot talked on.
“Here you see the back door
of the Confederacy,” he said. “You
men at the front know nothing. You are merely
fighting to defend the main entrance. But while
you are getting yourselves shot to pieces without
knowing any special reason why, all sorts of people
slip in at this back door. It is true not only
of this government, but also of all others.”
A middle-aged, heavy-faced man in
a general’s uniform entered and began to talk
earnestly to one of the other generals.
“That is General Markham,”
said Talbot, “who is specially interesting not
because of himself, but on account of his wife.
She is years younger than he, and is said to be the
most brilliant woman in Richmond. She has plans
for the General, but is too smart to say what they
are. I doubt whether the General himself knows.”
Raymond and Winthrop presently stopped
playing and Talbot promptly introduced his new friend.
“We should know each other since
we belong to the same army,” said Raymond.
“You fight and I write, and I don’t know
which of us does the more damage; but the truth is,
I’ve but recently joined the Army of Northern
Virginia. I’ve been following the army in
the West, but the news didn’t suit me there
and I’ve come East.”
“I hope that you have many victories
to chronicle,” said Prescott.
“It’s been a long time
since there’s been a big battle,” resumed
the editor, “and so I’ve come up to Richmond
to see a little life.”
He glanced about the room.
“And I see it here,” he
added. “I confess that the fleshpots of
Richmond are pleasant.”
Then he began to talk of the life
in the capital, the condition of the army and the
Confederate States, furnishing a continual surprise
to Prescott, who now saw that beneath the man’s
occasional frivolity and epicurean tastes lay a mind
of wonderful penetration, possessing that precious
quality generally known as insight. He revealed
a minute knowledge of the Confederacy and its chieftains,
both civil and military, but he never risked an opinion
as to its ultimate chances of success, although Prescott
waited with interest to hear what he might say upon
this question, one that often troubled himself.
But however near Raymond might come to the point,
he always turned gracefully away again.
They were sitting now in a cheerful
corner as they talked, but at the table nearest them
was a man of forty, with immense square shoulders,
a heavy red face and an overbearing manner. He
was playing faro and losing steadily, but every time
he lost he marked the moment with an angry exclamation.
The others, players and spectators alike, seemed to
avoid him, and Winthrop, who noticed Prescott’s
inquiring glance, said:
“That’s Redfield, a member
of our Congress,” and he named the Gulf State
from which Redfield came. “He belonged to
the Legislature of his State before the war, which
he advocated with all the might of his lungs no
small power, I assure you and he was leader
in the shouting that one Southern gentleman could
whip five Yankees. I don’t know whether
he means that he’s the Southern gentleman, as
he’s never yet been on the firing line, but
he’s distinguishing himself just now by attacking
General Lee for not driving all the Yankees back to
Washington.”
Redfield at length left the game,
uttering with an oath his opinion that fair play was
impossible in the Nonpareil, and turned to the group
seated near him, regarding the Richmond editor with
a lowering brow.
“I say, Winthrop,” he
cried, “I’ve got a bone to pick with you.
You’ve been hitting me pretty hard in that rag
of yours. Do you know what a public man down
in the Gulf States does with an editor who attacks
him! Why, he goes around to his office and cowhides
the miserable little scamp until he can’t lie
down comfortably for a month.”
A slight pink tint appeared in the cheeks of Winthrop.
“I am not well informed about
the custom in the Gulf States, Mr. Redfield,”
he said, “but here I am always at home to my
enemies, as you ought to know.”
“Oh, nonsense!” exclaimed
Raymond. “You two can’t fight.
We can’t afford to lose Redfield. He’s
going to lead a brigade against the Yankees, and if
he’ll only make one of those fiery speeches of
his it will scare all the blue-backs out of Virginia.”
Redfield’s red face flushed
to a deeper hue, and he regarded the speaker with
aversion, but said nothing in reply, fearing Raymond’s
sharp tongue. Instead, he turned upon Prescott,
who looked like a mild youth fit to stand much hectoring.
“You don’t introduce me
to your new friend,” he said to Talbot.
“Mr. Redfield, Captain Prescott,”
said Talbot. “Mr. Redfield is a Member
of Congress and Captain Prescott comes from the Army
of Northern Virginia, though by way of North Carolina,
where he has been recently on some special duty.”
“Ah, from the Army of Northern
Virginia,” said Redfield in a heavy growl.
“Then can you tell me, Mr. Prescott, why General
Lee does not drive the Yankees out of Virginia?”
A dark flush appeared on Prescott’s
face. Usually mild, he was not always so, and
he worshiped General Lee.
“I think it is because he does
not have the help of men like yourself,” he
replied.
A faint ray of a smile crossed the
face of Raymond, but the older man was not pleased.
“Do you know, sir, that I belong
to the Confederate Congress?” he exclaimed angrily;
“and moreover, I am a member of the Military
Committee. I have a right to ask these questions.”
“Then,” replied Prescott,
“you should know that it is your duty to ask
them of General Lee and not of me, a mere subaltern.”
“Now, Mr. Redfield,” intervened
Raymond, “don’t pick a quarrel with Captain
Prescott. If there’s to be a duel, Winthrop
has first claim on you, and I insist for the honour
of my profession that he have it. Moreover, since
he is slender and you are far from it, I demand that
he have two shots to your one, as he will have at
least twice as much to kill.”
Redfield growled out other angry words,
which stopped under the cover of his heavy mustache,
and then turned abruptly away, leaving Prescott in
some doubt as to his personal courage but none at all
as to his ill will.
“It is the misfortune of the
South,” said Raymond, “to have such men
as that, who think to settle public questions by personal
violence. They give us a bad name which is not
wholly undeserved. In fact, personal violence
is our great sin.”
“And the man has a lot of power.
That’s the worst of it,” added Talbot.
“The boys at the front are hauled around so much
by the politicians that they are losing confidence
in everybody here in Richmond. Why, when President
Davis himself came down and reviewed us with a great
crowd of staff officers before Missionary Ridge, the
boys all along the line set up the cry: ‘Give
us somethin’ to eat, Mr. Jeff; give us somethin’
to eat! We’re hungry! We’re
hungry!’ And that may be the reason why we were
thrashed so badly by Grant not long after.”
Prescott saw that the rain had almost
ceased, and as he suggested that he must hurry on,
the others rose to go with him from the house.
He left them at the next corner, glad to have made
such friends, and quickened his footsteps as he continued
alone.