The two women clasped hands again
and looked at each other as Harley disappeared amid
the smoke.
“He has left us,” said Mrs. Markham.
“Yes, but he has gone to his country’s
need,” said his sister proudly.
Then they were silent again.
Night, smoky, cloudy and dark, thick with vapours
and mists, and ashes and odours that repelled, was
coming down upon the Wilderness. Afar in the
east the fire in the forest still burned, sending
up tongues of scarlet and crimson over which sparks
flew in myriads. Nearer by, the combat went on,
its fury undimmed by the darkness, its thunder as
steady, as persistent and terrible as before.
Helen was struck with horror.
The battle, weird enough in the day, was yet more
so in the darkness, and she could not understand why
it did not close with the light. It partook of
an inhuman quality, and that scene out there was more
than ever to her an inferno because the flaming pit
was now enclosed by outer blackness, completely cut
off from all else a world to itself in
which all the passions strove, and none could tell
to which would fall the mastery.
She felt for the moment horror of
both sides, North and South alike, and she wished
only that the unnatural combat would cease; she did
not care then a brief emotion, though which
should prove the victor.
It was a dark and solemn night that
came down over the Wilderness and the two hundred
thousand who had fought all day and still fought amid
its thickets. Never before had that thin, red
soil redder now borne such a
crop, and many were glad that the darkness hid the
sight from their enemies. The two Generals, the
master minds who had propelled their mighty human
machines against each other, were trying to reckon
their losses with the battle still in progress and
say to themselves whether they had won or lost.
But this battlefield was no smooth and easy chessboard
where the pawns might be moved as one wills and be
counted as they fell, but a wilderness of thickets
and forests and hills and swamps and valleys where
the vast lines bent or twisted or interlaced and were
lost in the shades and the darkness. Count and
reckon as they would, the two Generals, equal in battle,
face to face for the first time could not
give the total of the day. It was still an unadded
sum, and the guns, despite the night, were steadily
contributing new figures. This was the flaw in
their arithmetic; nothing was complete, and they saw
that they would have to begin again to-morrow.
So, with this day’s work yet unfinished, they
began to prepare, sending for new regiments and brigades,
massing more cannon, and planning afresh.
But all these things were unknown
to Helen as she sat there at the window with Mrs.
Markham. Her thoughts wandered again to Wood,
that splendid figure on horseback, and she sought
to identify him there among the black marionettes
that gyrated against the red background. But with
the advance of night the stage was becoming more indistinct,
the light shed over it more pallid and shifting, and
nothing certain could be traced there. All the
black figures were mixed in a confused whirl, and
where stood the South and where the North neither Helen
nor Mrs. Markham could tell.
The night was thick and hot, rank
with vapours and mists and odours that oppressed throat
and nostrils. The wind seemed to have died, but
the fine dust of ashes still fell and the banks of
nauseous smoke floated about aimlessly.
New fear assailed the two women for
the first time not so much fear of the
shells and the bullets, but of the night and its mysteries
and the weird combat that was still going on there
where the light was so pallid and uncertain.
Once again those who fought had become for them unreal not
human beings, but imps in an inferno of their own creation.
They wished now that Harley was still with them.
Whatever else he might be, he was brave and he would
defend them. They looked around fearfully at
the shadows that were encroaching upon the house.
The rain of ashes and dust began to annoy them, and
they moved a little closer to each other.
Helen glanced back once. The
inside of the house was now in total darkness, and
out of it came the monotonous wailing of the black
woman. It occurred suddenly to Helen that the
servant had crouched there crying the whole day long.
But she said nothing to her and turned her back to
the window.
“It is dying now,” said Mrs. Markham.
The dull red light suddenly contracted
and then broke into intermittent flashes. The
sound of the cannon and the rifles sank into the low
muttering of distant thunder. The two women felt
the house under them cease to tremble. Then the
intermittent flashes, too, disappeared, the low rumbling
died away like the echo of a distant wind, and a sudden
and complete silence, mystic and oppressive in its
solemnity, fell over the Wilderness. Only afar
the burning forest glowed like a torch.
The silence was for awhile more terrifying
than the battle to which they had grown used.
It hung over the forest and them like something visible
that enfolded them. They breathed a hot, damp
air heavy with ashes and smoke and dust, and their
pulses throbbed painfully in their temples. Around
them all the time was that horrible deathlike pall
of silence.
They spoke, and their voices, attuned
before to the roar of the battle, sounded loud, shrill
and threatening. Both started, then laughed weakly.
“Is it really over?” exclaimed
Mrs. Markham, hysterically.
“Until to-morrow,” replied Helen, with
solemn prevision.
She turned to the inner blackness
of the house and lighted a candle, which she placed
on the table, where it burned with an unsteady yellow
light, illuminating the centre of the room with a fitful
glow, but leaving the corners still in darkness.
Everything lay under its veil of ashes the
table, the floor, and the bed on which Harley had slept.
Helen felt a strange sort of strength,
the strength of excitement and resolve. She shook
the black woman by the arm and bade her bring food.
“We must eat, for we shall have
work to do,” she said to Mrs. Markham, and nodded
her head toward the outside.
It was the task of but a few minutes,
and then the two women prepared to go forth.
They knew they would be needed on this night, and they
listened to hear the ominous sounds that would be a
call to them. But they heard nothing. There
was the same dead, oppressive stillness. Not a
leaf, not a blade of grass seemed to stir. Helen
looked once more from the window. Afar in the
east the forest still burned, but the light there
was pallid, grayish, more of the quality of moonlight
than of fire, and looked dim. Directly before
her in the forest where the battle had been all was
black, silent and impenetrable. It was true there
were faint lights here and there as of torches that
had burned badly, but they were pin-points, serving
only to deepen the surrounding blackness. Once
or twice she thought she saw figures moving slowly,
but she was not sure. She heard nothing.
Helen was in an unreal world.
An atmosphere new, fiery and surcharged surrounded
her, and in its heat little things melted away.
Only the greater remained. That life in Richmond,
bright and gay in many of its aspects, lived but a
few days since, was ages and ages ago; it belonged
to another world. Now she was in the forest with
the battle and the dead, and other things did not
count.
The door stood wide open, and as Helen
prepared to go another woman entered there, a woman
young like herself, tall, wrapped in a long brown
cloak, but bareheaded. Two or three stray locks,
dark but edged with red gold, strayed down. Her
face, clear and feminine though it was, seemed to
Helen stronger than any other woman’s face that
she had ever seen.
Helen knew instinctively that this
was a woman of the North, or at least one with the
North, and her first feeling was of hostility.
So, as the two stood looking at each other, her gaze
at first was marked by aversion and defiance.
Who was she who had come with the other army, and
why should she be there?
But Lucia Catherwood knew both the
women in the old house. She remembered a day
in Richmond when this girl, in lilac and rose, so fair
a representative of her South, welcomed a gallant general;
and she remembered another, a girl of the same years,
lonely, an outcast in the farthest fringe of the crowd herself.
Her first emotion, too, was hostility, mingled with
another feeling closely akin to it. She had seen
her with Prescott, and unwillingly had confessed them
well matched. She, too, asked what this woman
was doing here in the forest beside the battle; but
these feelings had only a short life with her.
There were certain masculine qualities in Lucia Catherwood
that tended to openness and frankness. She advanced
and offered her hand like a man to Helen.
“We come under different flags,”
she said, “but we cannot be enemies here; we
must be friends at least to-night, and I could wish
that it should always be so.”
Her smile was so frank, so open, so
engaging that Helen, whose nature was the same, could
resist her no longer. Despite herself she liked
this girl, so tall, so strong, with that clear, pure
face showing a self-reliance such as she had never
before seen on the face of a woman. Mrs. Markham
yet hung back a little, cool, critical and suspicious,
but presently she cast this manner from her and spoke
as if Lucia Catherwood was her friend, one of long
and approved standing.
“I think that our work is to
be the same,” said Helen simply, and the other
bowed in silent assent. Then the three went forth.
The field of battle, or rather the
portion of it which came nearest to them it
wound for miles through the thickets lay
a half-mile from the house under the solid black veil
of a cloudy night, the forest, and the smoke that
yet drifted about aimlessly. Outside the house
the strange, repellent odours grew stronger, as if
it were the reek of some infernal pit.
They advanced over open ground, and
the field of conflict was still black and soundless,
though there was a little increase in the lights that
moved dimly there. The smoke assailed them again,
and fine ashes from the distant fire in the east now
and then fell upon them. But they noticed none
of these things, still advancing with steady step and
unshrinking faces toward the forest.
The twinkling lights increased and
sounds came at last. Helen would not say to herself
what they were. She hoped that her fancy deceived
her; but the three women did not stop. Helen
looked at the tall, straight young figure beside her,
so strong, so self-reliant, and she drew strength
from her companion now she was such.
They walked side by side, and Mrs. Markham came behind.
Helen began to feel the influence of a personality,
a will stronger than her own, and she yielded to it
without further question and without reluctance, having
the feeling that she had known this girl a long time.
The trembling lights of the forest
increased, moving about like so many fireflies in
the night; the nauseous odours grew heavier, more
persistent, and for a moment Helen felt ill; her head
began to spin around at the thought of what she was
going to see, but quickly she recovered herself and
went on by the side of the girl who never faltered.
Helen wondered at such courage, and wondering, she
admired.
The ground grew rougher, set with
tiny hillocks and stones and patch after patch of
scrub bushes. Once Helen stumbled against something
that felt cold even through the leather of her shoe,
and she shuddered. But it was only a spent cannon
ball lying peacefully among the bushes, its mission
ended.
They reached burnt ground spots
where the scanty grass or the bushes had been set
on fire by the cannon or the rifles. Many places
still burned slowly and sent up languid sparks and
dull smoke. In other places the ground was torn
as if many ploughs had been run roughly over it, and
Helen knew that the shells and the cannon balls had
passed in showers. There were other objects,
too, lying very quiet, but she would not look at them,
though they increased fast as they went on, lying like
seed sown above ground.
They were at the edge of the forest
now, and here the air was thicker and darker.
The mists and vapours floated among the trees and lay
like warm, wet blankets upon their faces. They
saw now many moving figures, some bending down as
if they would lift something from the earth, and others
who held lights. Occasionally they passed women
like themselves, but not often. Some of the men
were in gray uniform and some in blue, but they passed
and repassed each other without question, doing the
work they had come there to do.
Here in the forest the area of burnt
ground was larger, and many coils of smoke rose languidly
to join the banks of it that towered overhead.
The still objects, too, were lying as far as one could
see, in groups here, somewhat scattered there, but
the continuity never broken, many with their faces
upturned to the sky as if they awaited placidly the
last call. Helen was struck by this peace, this
seeming confidence in what was to come. The passage,
then, had not been so hard! Here, when she stood
in the centre of it all, the old feelings of awe returned,
and the real world, the world that she had known before
this day, swung farther and farther away.
There was still but little noise,
for those who yet lived were silent, waiting patiently,
and the vast peace was more powerful in its impression
upon the mind than any tumult could have been.
Helen looked up once at the skies. They were
black and overcast. But few stars twinkled there.
It was a fit canopy for the Wilderness, the gloomy
forest that bore such a burden. From a far point
in the southwest came the low rumble of thunder, and
lightning, like the heat-lightning of a summer night,
glimmered fitfully. Then there was a faint, sullen
sound, the report of a distant cannon shot. Helen
started, more in anger than terror. Would they
fight again at such a time? She felt blame for
both, but the shot was not repeated then. A signal
gun, she thought, and went on, unconsciously going
where the strong young figure of Lucia Catherwood
led the way. She heard presently another distant
cannon shot, its solemn echoes rolling all around
the horizon, but she paid no heed to it. Her
mind was now for other things.
An inky sky overhung the battlefield
and all it held. Those nights in the Wilderness
were among the blackest in both ways this country has
ever known. Brigades and batteries moving in the
dense scrub, seeking better places for the fresh battle
on the morrow, wandered sometimes through each other’s
lines. Soldiers, not knowing whether they were
among friends or enemies, and not caring, drank in
the darkness from the same streams, and, overpowered
by fatigue, North and South alike often slept a soundless
sleep under trees not fifty yards from one another;
but the two Generals, who were the supreme expression
of the genius of either side, never slept. They
had met for the first time; each nearly always a victor
before, neither had now won. The result yet to
come lay hidden in the black Wilderness, and by smoking
camp-fires they planned for the next day, knowing
well that they would meet again in a combat fiercer,
longer and deadlier than ever, the one always seeking
to drive on, the other always seeking to hold him
back.
The Wilderness enclosed many secrets
that night, hiding dead and living alike. Many
of the fallen lay unseen amid the ravines and hollows,
and the burning forest was their funeral pyre.
Never did the Wilderness more deserve its name; gloomy
at any time, it had new attributes of solemn majesty.
Everything seemed to be in unison with those who lay
there the pitchy blackness, the low muttering
of distant thunder, the fitful glimmer of the lightning,
the stems of trees twisted and contorted by the gleam
of the uncertain flashes, the white faces of the slain
upturned to the sky seen dimly by the same light, the
banks of smoke and vapour yet floating through the
forest, the strange, repellent odours, and the heavy,
melancholy silence.
Those who had come upon the field
after the night began worked without talk, the men
from either side passing and repassing each other,
but showing no hostility. The three women, too,
began to help them, doing the errand upon which they
had come, and their service was received without question
and without comment. No one asked another why
he was there; his duty lay plain before him.
It was Lucia Catherwood who took the
lead, neither Helen nor Mrs. Markham disputing her
fitness for the place, too apparent to all to be denied;
it was she who never flinched, who, if she spoke at
all, spoke words of cheer, whose strength and courage
seemed never to fail.
Thus the hours passed, and the character
of the night in the Wilderness did not change.
There was yet compared with the tumult of the day a
heavy, oppressive silence; the smoke and the vapours
did not go away, the heavy atmosphere did not thin,
and at intervals the distant thunder rumbled and the
fitful lightning glared over a distorted forest.
The three worked in silence, like
those around them, faithful, undaunted. Mrs.
Markham, the cynical and worldly, was strangely changed,
perhaps the most changed of the three; all her affectations
were gone, and she was now only an earnest woman.
And while the three worked they always watched for
one man. And this man was not the same with any
one of the three.
It was past midnight and Helen did
not know how long she had been upon the battlefield,
working as she did in a kind of a dream, or rather
mist, in which everything was fanciful and unreal,
with her head full of strange sights and unheard sounds,
when she saw two men ride side by side and silently
out of the black forest two figures, one
upright, powerful, the other drooping, with head that
swayed slightly from side to side.
She knew them at once despite the
shadows of the trees and the faint moonlight and
it was what her thoughts had told her would come true.
It had never occurred to her that the one who sat in
the saddle so erect and so powerful could fall; nor
had he.
She and Mrs. Markham advanced to meet
them. Harley’s head swayed slightly from
side to side, and his clothing showed red in the dim
moonlight. Wood held him in the saddle with one
hand and guided the two horses with the other.
Both women were white to the lips, but it was Helen
who spoke first.
“I expected you,” she said to Wood.
Wood replied that Harley was not hurt
save by exhaustion from his previous wounds.
He had come, too, at a critical moment, and his coming
had been worth much to the South. But now he was
half unconscious; he must rest or die. The General
spoke in simple words, language that one would have
called dialect, but Helen did not think of those things;
his figure was grander than ever before to her, because,
despite the battle, he had remembered to bring back
her brother.
Mrs. Markham was quiet, saying no
word, but she went with them to the house, where Harley
was placed on the very bed on which he had slept the
night before. Lucia Catherwood did not turn back,
and was left alone on the field, but she was neither
afraid nor lonely. She, too, was looking for
some one one whom she was in dread lest
she find and whom she wished to find nevertheless.
But she had a feeling how or whence it
came she did not know that she would find
him there. Always while she helped the others,
hour after hour, she looked for him, glancing into
every ravine and hollow, and neglecting no thicket
or clump of bushes that she passed. She believed
that she would know him if she saw but the edge of
his coat or his hand.
At last she reached the fringe of
the battlefield. The fallen forms were fewer
and the ground less torn by the tramplings of men and
horses and the wheels of guns, though the storm had
passed, leaving its track of ruin. Here, too,
were burned spots, the grass still smouldering and
sending up tiny sparks, a tree or two twisted out of
shape and half-consumed by flames; a broken cannon,
emblem of destruction, lying wheelless on the ground.
Lucia looked back toward the more populous field of
the fallen and saw there the dim lights still moving,
but decreasing now as the night waned. Low, blurred
sounds came to her ears. As for herself, she
stood in the darkness, silvered dimly by a faint moonlight,
a tall, lithe young figure, self-reliant, unafraid.
She began now to search every hollow,
to look among the bushes and the ravines. She
had heard from men of his own company that he was missing,
and she would not turn back while he was unfound.
It was for this that she had come, and he would need
her.
She was on the farthest rim of the
battlefield, where the lights when she looked back
were almost lost, and it seemed to be enclosed wholly
by the darkness and the vapours. No voice came
from it, but in the forest before her were new sounds a
curious tread as of many men together stepping lightly,
the clanging of metal, and now and then a neigh coming
faintly. This, she knew, were the brigades and
the batteries seeking position in the darkness for
a new battle; but she was not afraid.
Lucia Catherwood was not thinking
then of the Wilderness nor of the vast tragedy that
it held, but of a flight one snowy night from a hostile
capital, a flight that was not unhappy because of true
companionship. Formed amid hard circumstances,
hers was not a character that yielded quickly to sentiment,
but when the barriers were broken down she gave much.
She heard a tread in the brushwood.
Some horses, saddles on and bridles hanging their
riders lost, she well knew how galloped
near her, looked at her a moment or two with wide
eyes, and then passed on. Far to the right she
heard a faint cannon shot. If they were going
to fight again, why not wait until the next day?
It could not be done in all this darkness. A
blacker night she had never seen.
She came to a tiny valley, a mere
cup in the bleak, red ridges, well set with rich green
grass as if more fertile soil had gathered there, but
all torn and trampled, showing that one of the fiercest
eddies of the battle had centred in this spot.
At the very edge lay two horses with their outstretched
necks crossed united in death. In the trampled
grass lay other dark figures which she could not pass
without a shudder.
She paused here a moment because it
seemed to be growing darker. The low rumble of
thunder from the far western horizon came again, all
the more threatening because of its faintness and
distance. The lightning gleamed a moment and
by its quick flash she saw the one she was seeking.
He lay at the far edge of the little
valley where the grass had grown richest and tallest,
and he was almost hidden by the long stems. It
was his face that she saw first, white and still in
the lightning’s glare, but she did not believe
that he was dead. Ah! that could not happen.
Raising his head in her arms, she
rested it upon her knee, moistening his lips with
water that she carried in a flask. She was a strong
woman, both physically and mentally, far beyond the
average of her sex, and now she would not yield to
any emotion. No; she would do what it was necessary
to do, and not until then would she even put her finger
upon his wrist to find if the pulse were still beating.
The wound was on the side of the head,
under the hair, and she remembered afterward how glad
she was that the scar would always be hidden by the
hair. Strong enough to examine the nature of the
injury, she judged that it had been done by a fragment
of shell, and she believed that the concussion and
loss of blood, rather than any fatal wound, had caused
Prescott’s fall.
As she drew away the hair, washed
the wound and bound it up with a strip from her own
dress, she was filled with a divine gladness.
Not only was she doing that which she wished most
to do, but she was making repayment. He would
have died there had she not found him, and no one
else would have found him in that lone spot.
Not yet did she seek to move him or
to bring help. She would have him to herself
for awhile would watch over him like a mother,
and she could do as much as any surgeon. She
was glad Helen and the other woman had turned aside,
for she alone had found him. No one else could
claim a share in saving him. He was for the time
hers and hers alone, and in this she rejoiced.
As his pulse was growing stronger
she knew that he would live. No doubt of it now
occurred to her mind, and she was still happy.
The battle of the day that was gone and of the day
that was to come, and all the thousands, the living
and the fallen, were alike forgotten. She remembered
only him.
Again came the tramp of riderless
horses, and for a moment she was in dread not
for herself, but for him but again they
turned and passed her by. When the low, threatening
note of the cannon shot came once more she trembled
lest the battle be renewed in the darkness and surge
over this spot; but silence only followed the report.
Misty forms filed past in the thicket. They were
in blue, a regiment of her own people passing in the
darkness. She crouched low in the grass, holding
his head upon her knees, hiding again, not for herself,
but for him. She would not have him a prisoner,
but preferred to become one herself, and cared nothing
for it. This was repayment. His pulse was
growing stronger and stronger and he uttered half-spoken
words while his head moved slightly upon her knees.
She did not know how long she had
been there, and she looked back again toward the field.
It was now wholly in darkness, then lighted dimly by
a fitful flash of lightning. She must carry him
to shelter, and without taking thought, she tried
to lift him in her arms. He was heavy, lying
like lead, and she put him down again, but very softly.
She must go for help. Then she heard once more
the tread of those riderless horses and feared for
him. She could not leave him there alone.
She made a mighty effort, lifted him in her arms,
and staggered toward the battlefield.