The retreating brigade, the river
behind it and the pursuit seemingly lost on the farther
shore, passed on in the golden sunshine of the morning
through, a country of gentle hills, green fields and
scattered forest.
It was joined three hours after sunrise
by no less a person than Mr. Sefton himself, fresh,
immaculate and with no trace of discomposure on his
face. He was on horseback, and told them he had
just come across the fields from another division
of the army not more than three miles away. He
gave the news in a quiet tone, without any special
emphasis upon the more important passages. The
South had been compelled to give ground; Grant had
lost more than fifty thousand men, but he was coming
through the Wilderness and would not be denied.
He was still fighting as if he had just begun, and
reinforcements were constantly pouring forward to
take the places of the fallen in his ranks.
Prompted by a motive which even his
own analytical mind could not define, the Secretary
sought Lucia Catherwood. He admired her height,
her strength and resolved beauty knew that
she was of a type as admirable as it was rare, and
wondered once or twice why he did not love her instead
of Helen Harley. Here was a woman with a mind
akin to his own bold, keen and penetrating.
And that face and figure! He wished he could
see her in a drawing-room, dressed as she should be,
and with the lights burning softly overhead.
Then she would be indeed a princess, if there were
any such beings, in the true meaning of the word, on
this earth. She would be a fit wife for a great
man the greater half of himself.
But he did not love her; he loved
Helen Harley the Secretary confessed it
to himself with a smothered half-sigh. At times
he was pleased with this sole and recently discovered
weak spot in his nature, because it brought to him
some fresh and pleasing emotions, not at all akin to
any that he had ever felt before; but again it troubled
him, as a flaw in his armour. His love for Helen
Harley might interfere with his progress in
fact, was doing so already, but he said to himself
he could not help it. Now he was moved to talk
to Lucia Catherwood. Dismounting from his horse,
he took a place by her side.
She was walking near the rear of the
column and there were others not many feet away, but
she was alone in the truest sense, having a feeling
of personal detachment and aloofness. These people
were kind to her, and yet there was a slight difference
in their manner toward her and toward one another a
difference almost imperceptible and perhaps not intended,
but sufficient to show her that she was not of them.
Just now it gave her such a sense of loneliness and
exclusion that she almost welcomed the smile of the
Secretary when he spoke to her. As ready to recognize
the power in him as he was to note her own strong and
keen mind, she waited guardedly to hear what he had
to say.
“Miss Catherwood,” he
said, “I was glad to assist you in your plan
of returning to Richmond, but I have wondered why
you should wish to return. If I may use a simile,
Richmond is the heart of the storm, and having escaped
from such a place, it seems strange that you should
go back to it.”
“There are many other women
in Richmond,” she replied, “and as they
will not be in any greater danger than I, should I
be less brave than they?”
“But they have no other choice.”
“Perhaps I have none either.
Moreover, a time is coming when it is not physical
courage alone that will be needed. Look back,
Mr. Sefton.”
She pointed to the Wilderness behind
them, where they saw the crimson glow of flames against
the blue sky, and long, trailing clouds of black smoke.
The low mutter of guns, a continuous sound since sunrise,
still came to their ears.
“The flames and the smoke,”
she said, “are nearer to Richmond than they
were yesterday, just as they were nearer yesterday
than they were the day before.”
“It is yet a long road to Richmond.”
“But it is being shortened.
I shall be there at the end. The nearest and
dearest of all my relatives is in Richmond and I wish
to be with her. There are other reasons, too,
but the end of which I spoke is surely coming and
you know it as well as I. Perhaps you have long known
it. As for myself, I have never doubted, despite
great defeats.”
“It is not given to men to have the faith of
women.”
“Perhaps not; but in this case
it does not require faith: reason alone is sufficient.
What chance did the South ever have? The North,
after all these years, is just beginning to be aroused.
Until the present you have been fighting only her
vanguard. Sometimes it seems to me that men argue
only from passion and sentiment, not from reason.
If reason alone had been applied this war would never
have been begun.”
“Nor any other. It is a
true saying that neither men nor women are ever guided
wholly for any long period by reason. That is
where philosophers, idealogists, Napoleon
called them make their mistake, and it
is why the science of government is so uncertain in
fact, it is not a question of science at all, but
of tact.”
The Secretary was silent for awhile,
but he still walked beside Miss Catherwood, leading
his horse by the bridle. Prescott presently glancing
back, beheld the two together and set his teeth.
He did not like to see Lucia with that man and he
wondered what had put them side by side. He knew
that she had a pass from Mr. Sefton, and this fresh
fact added to his uneasiness. Was it possible
those two had a secret in common?
The Secretary saw the frown on Prescott’s
face and was pleased, though he spoke of him and his
great services. “He has more than courage he
has sense allied with it. Sometimes I think that
courage is one of the commonest of qualities, but
it is not often that it is supported by coolness,
discrimination and the ability to endure. A fine
young man, Robert Prescott, and one destined to high
honours. If he survive the war, I should say
that he will become the Governor of his State or rise
high in Congress.”
He watched the girl closely out of
the corner of his eye as he spoke, for he was forming
various plans and, as Lucia Catherwood was included
in his comprehensive schemes, he wished to see the
effect upon her of what he said, but she betrayed
nothing. So far as her expression was concerned
Prescott might have been no more to her than any other
chance acquaintance. She walked on, the free,
easy stride of her long limbs carrying her over the
ground swiftly. Every movement showed physical
and mental strength. Under the tight sleeve of
her dress the muscle rippled slightly, but the arm
was none the less rounded and feminine. Her chin,
though the skin upon it was white and smooth like silk,
was set firmly and marked an indomitable will.
Curious thoughts again flowed through
the frank mind of the Secretary. Much of his
success in life was due to his ability to recognize
facts when he saw them. If he made failures he
never sought to persuade himself that they were successes
or even partial successes; thus he always went upon
the battlefield with exact knowledge of his resources.
He wondered again why he did not fall in love with
Lucia Catherwood. Here was the exact complement
of himself, a woman with a mind a fit mate to his
own. He had come far already, but with her to
aid him there were no heights to which he no,
they might not climb. And she was
beautiful beautiful, with a grace, a stateliness
and dignity beyond compare.
Mr. Sefton glanced down the column
and saw there a head upon which the brown hair curled
slightly. The eyes were turned away, but the Secretary
knew they were blue and that there was something in
the face which appealed to strong men for protection.
He shook his head slowly. The tricky little god
was making sport of him, James Sefton, the invincible,
and he did not like it.
A sense of irritation against Lucia
Catherwood rose in Mr. Sefton’s mind. As
he could not stir her in any obvious manner by speaking
of Prescott, he felt a desire to move her in some
way, to show his power over her, to compel from her
an appeal for mercy. It would be a triumph to
bring a woman at once so strong and so proud to her
knees. He would not proceed to extreme measures,
and would halt at the delicate moment, but she must
be made to feel that he was master of the situation.
So he spoke again of her return to
Richmond, suggesting plans for her pleasant stay while
there, mentioning acquaintances of his whom he would
like her to know, and making suggestions to which he
thought she would be compelled to return answers that
would betray more or less her position in Richmond.
She listened at first with a flush
on her face, giving way soon to paleness as her jaw
hardened and her lips closed firmly. The perception
of Lucia Catherwood was not inferior to that of the
Secretary, and she took her resolve.
“Mr. Sefton,” she said
at length, “I am firmly convinced of one thing.”
“And what is that?”
“That you know I am the alleged
spy for whom you were so long looking in Richmond.”
The Secretary hesitated for an answer.
Her sudden frankness surprised him. It was so
different from his own methods in dealing with others
that he had not taken it into account.
“Yes, you know it,” she
continued, “and it may be used against me, not
to inflict on me a punishment that I do
not dread but to injure the character and
reputation that a woman loves things that
are to her the breath of life. But I say that
if you choose to use your power you can do so.”
The Secretary glanced at her in admiration,
the old wonder concerning himself returning to him.
“Miss Catherwood,” he
said, “I cannot speak in too high praise of your
courage. I have never before seen a woman show
so much. Your surmise is correct. You were
the spy or alleged spy, as you prefer to say, for whom
I was looking. As for the morality of your act,
I do not consider that; it never entered into my calculations;
but in going back to Richmond you realize that you
will be wholly in the power of the Confederate Government.
Whenever it wants you you will have to come, and in
very truth you will have to walk in the straight and
narrow path.”
“I am not afraid,” she
said, with a proud lifting of her head. “I
will take the risks, and if you, Mr. Sefton, for some
reason unknown to me, force me to match my wits with
yours, I shall do the best I can.”
The haughty uplift of her neck and
the flash of her eye showed that she thought her “best”
would be no mean effort, but this attitude appealed
to the Secretary more than a humble submission ever
would have done. Here was one with whom it would
be a pleasure to make a test of skill and force.
Certainly steel would be striking sparks from steel.
“I am not making any threats,
Miss Catherwood,” he said. “That would
be unworthy, I merely wish you to understand the situation.
I am a frank man, I trust, and, like most other men,
I seek my own advancement; it would further no interest
of mine for me to denounce you at present, and I trust
that you will not at any time make it otherwise.”
“That is, I am to serve you if you call upon
me.”
“Let us not put it so bluntly.”
“I shall not do anything that
I do not wish to do,” she said, with the old
proud uplift of her head. “And listen! there
is something which may soon shatter all your plans,
Mr. Sefton.”
She pointed backward, where the purplish
clouds hung over the Wilderness, whence came the low,
sullen mutter, almost as faint as the distant beat
of waves on a coast.
The Secretary smiled deprecatingly.
“After all, you are like other
women, Miss Catherwood. You suppose, of course,
that I stake my whole fortune upon a single issue,
but it is not so. I wish to live on after the
war, whatever its result may be, and the tide of fortune
in that forest may shift and change, but mine may
not shift and change with it.”
“You are at least frank.”
“The South may lose, but if
she loses the world will not end on that account.
I shall still wish to play my part. Ah, here comes
Captain Prescott.”
Prescott liked little this long talk
between Lucia and the Secretary and the deep interest
each seemed to show in what the other said. He
bore it with patience for a time, but it seemed to
him, though the thought was not so framed in his mind,
that he had a certain proprietary interest in her
because he had saved her at great risk.
The Secretary received him with a
pleasant smile, made some slight remark about duty
elsewhere and dropped easily away. Prescott waited
until he was out of hearing before he said:
“Do you like that man, Miss Catherwood?”
“I do not know. Why?”
“You were in such close and
long conversation that you seemed to be old friends.”
“There were reasons for what we said.”
She looked at him so frankly that
he was ashamed, but she, recognizing his tone and
the sharpness of it, was not displeased. On the
contrary, she felt a warm glow, and the woman in her
urged her to go further. She spoke well of the
Secretary, his penetrating foresight and his knowledge
of the world and its people men, women and
children. Prescott listened in a somewhat sulky
mood, and she, regarding him with covert glances,
was roused to a singular lightness that she had not
known for many days. Then she changed, showing
him her softer side, for she could be as feminine
as any other woman, not less so than Helen Harley,
and she would prove it to him. Becoming all sunshine
with just enough shadow to deepen the colours, she
spoke of a time when the war should have passed when
the glory of this world with the green of spring and
the pink of summer should return. Her moods were
so many and so variable, but all so gay, that Prescott
began to share her spirits, and although they were
retreating from a lost field and the cannon still muttered
behind them, he forgot the war and remembered only
this girl beside him, who walked with such easy grace
and saw so bright an outlook.
Thus the retreat continued. The
able-bodied soldiers of the brigade were drafted away,
but the women and wounded men went on. Grant never
ceased his hammer strokes, and it was necessary for
the Southern leaders to get rid of all superfluous
baggage. Prescott, singularly enough, found himself
in command of this little column that marched southward,
taking the place of his friend Talbot, lost in a mysterious
way to the regret of all.
Mr. Sefton left them the day after
his talk with Lucia, and Prescott was not sorry to
see him go, for some of his uneasiness departed with
him. Harley, vain, fretful and complaining, gave
much trouble, yielding only to the influence of Mrs.
Markham, with whom Prescott did not like to see him,
but was helpless in the matter. Helen and Lucia
were the most obedient of soldiers and gave no trouble
at all. Helen, a warm partisan, seemed to think
little of the great campaign that was going on behind
her, and to concern herself more about something else.
Yet she was not unhappy even Prescott could
see it and the bond between her and Lucia
was growing strong daily. Usually they were together,
and once when Mrs. Markham spoke slightingly of the
“Northern woman,” as she called Lucia,
Helen replied with a sharpness very remarkable for
her a sharpness that contributed to the
growing coldness between them, which had begun with
the power Mrs. Markham exercised over Helen’s
brother.
Prescott noticed these things more
or less and sometimes they pained him; but clearly
they were outside his province, and in order to give
them no room in his mind he applied himself more diligently
than ever to his duties, his wound now permitting
him to do almost a man’s work.
They marched slowly and it gave promise
of being a long journey. The days grew very hot;
the sun burned the grass, and over them hung clouds
of steamy vapour. For the sake of the badly wounded
who had fever they traveled often by night and rested
by day in the shade. But that cloud of war never
left them.
The days passed and distant battles
still hung on their skirts. The mutter of the
guns was seldom absent, and they yet saw, now and then,
on the horizon, flashes like heat-lightning.
One morning there was a rapid beat of hoofs, a glitter
of sabers issuing from a wood, and in a moment the
little convoy was surrounded by a troop of cavalry
in blue.
“Only wounded men and women,”
said their leader, a young colonel with a fine, open
face. “Bah, we have no time to waste with
them!”
He bowed contritely, touching his
hat to the ladies and saying that he did not mean
to be ungallant. Then in a moment he and his men
were gone at gallop in a cloud of dust, disappearing
in a whirlwind across the plain, leaving the little
convoy to proceed at its leisure.
Prescott gazed after them, shading
his eyes with his hands. “There must be
some great movement at hand,” he said, “or
they would have asked us questions, at least.”
The day grew close and sultry.
Columns of steamy vapour moved back and forth and
enclosed them, and the sun set in a red mist.
At night it rained, but early the next morning the
mutter of the cannon grew to a rumble and then a storm.
The hot day came and all the east was filled with
flashes of fire. The crash of the cannon was incessant,
and in fancy every one in that little convoy heard
the tramping of brigades and the clatter of hoofs
as the horsemen rushed on the guns.
“They have met again!” said Lucia.
“Yes,” replied Prescott.
“It’s Grant and Lee. How many great
battles is this since they met first in the Wilderness?”
Nobody could tell; they had lost count.
The tumult lasted about an hour and
then died away, to be succeeded by a stillness intense
and painful. The sun shone with a white glare.
No wind stirred. The leaves and the grass drooped.
The fields were deserted; there was not a sign of
life in them, either human or animal. The road
lay before them, a dusty streak.
None came to tell of the battle, and,
oppressed by anxiety, Prescott moved on. Some
horsemen appeared on the hills the next morning, and
as they approached, Prescott, with indescribable joy,
recognized in the lead the figure of Talbot, whose
unknown fate they had mourned. Talbot delightedly
shook hands with them all, not neglecting Lucia Catherwood.
His honest face glowed with emotion.
“I am on a scout around our
army now,” he said, “and I thought I should
find you near here somewhere. I wanted to tell
you what had become of me. I was captured that
night we were crossing the river some of
my blundering but I escaped the next night.
It was easy enough to do it. There was so much
fighting and so much of everything going on that I
just rose up and walked out of the Yankee camp.
Nobody had time to pay any attention to me. I
got back to Lee somehow I knew I must do
it, as he could never win the war without me and
here I am.”
“There was a battle yesterday
morning; we heard it,” said Prescott.
Talbot’s face clouded and the
corners of his mouth drooped.
“We have won a great victory,”
he said, “but it doesn’t pay us. The
Yankees lost twelve or fifteen thousand men, but we
haven’t gained anything. That firing you
heard was at Cold Harbour. It was a great battle,
an awful one. I hope to God I shall never see
its like again. I saw fifteen thousand men stretched
out on the bloody ground in rows. I don’t
believe that so many men ever before fell in so short
a time. I have heard of a whirlwind of death,
but I never saw one till then.
“We had gone into intrenchments
and Grant moved against us with his whole army.
They came on; you could hear ’em, the tramp of
regiments and brigades, scores of thousands, and the
sun rising up and turning to gold over their heads.
Our cannon began. What a crash! It was like
twenty thunderbolts all at once. We swept that
field with tons and tons of metal. Then our rifles
opened and the whistling of the bullets was like the
screaming of a wind on a plain. You could see
the men of that army shoot up into the air before
such a sheet of metal, and you heard the cracking
of bones like the breaking up of ice. After awhile
those that lived had to turn back; human beings could
not stand more, and we were glad when it was all over.”
Talbot stayed a little while with
them. Then he and his men, like the Northern
cavalry, whirled off in a cloud of dust, and the little
convoy resumed its solemn march southward, reaching
Richmond in safety.