Two long lines of earthworks faced
each other across a sodden field; overhead a chilly
sky let fall a chilly rain; behind the low ridges of
earth two armies faced each other, and whether in rain
or in sunshine, no head rose above either wall without
becoming an instant mark for a rifle that never missed.
Here the remorseless sharpshooters lay. Human
life had become a little thing, and after a difficult
shot they exchanged remarks as hunters do when they
kill a bird on the wing.
If ever there was a “No Man’s
Land,” it was the space between the two armies
which had aptly been called the “Plain of Death.”
Any one who ventured upon it thought very little of
this life, and it was well that he should, as he had
little of it left to think about. The armies had
lain there for weeks and weeks, facing each other in
a deadlock, and a fierce winter, making the country
an alternation of slush and snow, had settled down
on both. The North could not go forward; the South
could not thrust the North back; but the North could
wait and the South could not. Lee’s army,
crouching behind the earthen walls, grew thinner and
hungrier and colder as the weeks passed. Uniforms
fell away in rags, supplies from the South became
smaller and smaller, but the lean and ragged army
still lay there, grim and defiant, while Grant, with
the memory of Cold Harbour before him, dared not attack.
He bided his time, having shown all the qualities
that were hoped of him and more. Tenacious, fertile
in ideas, he had been from the beginning the one to
attack and his foe the one to defend. The whole
character of the war had changed since he came upon
the field. He and Sherman were now the two arms
of a vise that held the Confederacy in its grip and
would never let go.
Prescott crouched behind the low wall,
reading a letter from his mother, while his comrades
looked enviously at him. A letter from home had
long since become an event. Mrs. Prescott said
she was well, and, so far as concerned her physical
comfort, was not feeling any excessive stress of war.
They were hearing many reports in Richmond from the
armies. Grant, it was said, would make a great
flanking movement as soon as the warmer weather came,
and the newspapers in the capital gave accounts of
vast reinforcements in men and supplies he was receiving
from the North.
“If we know our Grant, and we
think we do, he will certainly move,” said Prescott
grimly to himself, looking across the “Plain
of Death” toward the long Northern line.
Then his mother continued with personal
news of his friends and acquaintances.
“The popularity of Lucia Catherwood
lasts,” she wrote. “She would avoid
publicity, but she can scarcely do it without offending
the good people who like her. She seems gay and
is often brilliant, but I do not think she is happy.
She receives great attention from Mr. Sefton, whose
power in the Government, disguised as it is in a subordinate
position, seems to increase. Whether or not she
likes him I do not know. Sometimes I think she
does, and sometimes I think she has the greatest aversion
to him. But it is a courtship that interests
all Richmond. People mostly say that the Secretary
will win, but as an old woman a mere looker-on I
have my doubts. Helen Harley still holds her place
in the Secretary’s office, but Mr. Sefton no
longer takes great interest in her. Her selfish
old father does not like it at all, and I hear that
he speaks slightingly of the Secretary’s low
origin; but he continues to spend the money that his
daughter earns.
“It is common gossip that the
Secretary knows all about Lucia’s life before
she came to Richmond; that he has penetrated the mystery
and in some way has a hold over her which he is using.
I do not know how this report originated, but I think
it began in some foolish talk of Vincent Harley’s.
As for myself, I do not believe there is any mystery
at all. She is simply a girl who in these troublous
times came, as was natural, to her nearest relative,
Miss Grayson.”
“No bad news, Bob, I hope,”
said Talbot, looking at his gloomy face.
“None at all,” said Prescott
cheerily, and with pardonable evasion.
“There go the skirmishers again.”
A rapid crackle arose from a point
far to their left, but the men around Talbot and Prescott
paid no attention to it, merely huddling closer in
the effort to keep warm. They had ceased long
since to be interested in such trivialities.
“Grant’s going to move
right away; I feel it in my bones,” repeated
Talbot.
Talbot was right. That night
the cold suddenly fled, the chilly clouds left the
heavens and the great Northern General issued a command.
A year before another command of his produced that
terrific campaign through the Wilderness, where a
hundred thousand men fell, and he meant this second
one to be as significant.
Now the fighting, mostly the work
of sharpshooters through the winter, began in regular
form, and extended in a long line over the torn and
trampled fields of Virginia, where all the soil was
watered with blood. The numerous horsemen of
Sheridan, fresh from triumphs in the Valley of Virginia,
were the wings of the Northern force, and they hung
on the flanks of the Southern army, incessantly harrying
it, cutting off companies and regiments, giving the
worn and wounded men no respite.
Along a vast, curving line that steadily
bent in toward Richmond the Southern army
inside, the Northern army outside the sound
of the cannon scarcely ever ceased, night or day.
Lee fought with undiminished skill, always massing
his thin ranks at the point of contact and handling
them with the old fire and vigour; but his opponent
never ceased the terrible hammering that he had begun
more than a year ago. Grant intended to break
through the shell of the Southern Confederacy, and
it was now cracking and threatening to shatter before
his ceaseless strokes.
The defenders of a lost cause, if
cause it was, scarcely ever knew what it was to draw
a free breath. When they were not fighting, they
were marching, often on bare feet, and of the two
they did not know which they preferred. They
were always hungry; they went into battles on empty
stomachs, came out with the same if they came out at
all, and they had no time to think of the future.
They had become mere battered machines, animated,
it is true, by a spirit, but by a spirit that could
take no thought of softness. They had respected
Grant from the first; now, despite their loss by his
grim tactics, they looked in wonder and admiration
at them, and sought to measure the strength of mind
that could pay a heavy present price in flesh and
blood in order to avoid a greater price hereafter.
Prescott and Talbot were with the
last legion. The bullets, after wounding them
so often, seemed now to give them the right of way.
They came from every battle and skirmish unhurt, only
to go into a new one the next day.
“If I get out of all this alive,”
said Talbot, with grim humour, “I intend to
eat for a month and then sleep for a year; maybe then
I’ll feel rested.”
Wood, too, was always there with his
cavalry, now a thin band, seeking to hold back the
horsemen of the North, and Vincent Harley, ever a good
soldier, was his able second.
In these desperate days Prescott began
to feel respect for Harley; he admired the soldier,
if not the man. There was no danger too great
for Harley, no service too arduous. He slept
in the saddle, if he slept at all, and his spirit
never flinched. There was no time for, him to
renew his quarrel with Prescott, and Prescott was
resolved that it should never be renewed if there
were any decent way of avoiding it.
The close of a day of incessant battle
and skirmish was at hand, and clouds of smoke darkened
the twilight. From the east and from the west
came the low mutter and thunder of the guns. The
red sun was going down in a sea of ominous fire.
There were strange reports of the deeds of Sheridan,
but the soldiers themselves knew nothing definite.
They had lost touch with other bodies of their comrades,
and they could only hope to meet them again.
Meanwhile they gave scarcely a glance at the lone
and trampled land, but threw themselves down under
the trees and fell asleep.
A messenger came for Prescott.
“The General-in-Chief wishes you,” he
said.
Prescott walked to a small fire where
Lee sat alone for the present and within the shelter
of the tent. He was grave and thoughtful, but
that was habitual with him. Prescott could not
see that the victor of Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville
had changed in bearing or manner. He was as neat
as ever; the gray uniform was spotless; the splendid
sword, a gift from admirers, hung by his side.
His face expressed nothing to the keen gaze of Prescott,
who was now no novice in the art of reading the faces
of men.
Prescott saluted and stood silent.
Lee looked at him thoughtfully.
“Captain Prescott,” he
said, “I have heard good reports of you, and
I have had the pleasure also to see you bear yourself
well.”
Prescott’s heart beat fast at
this praise from the first man of the South.
“Do you know the way to Richmond?” asked
the General.
“I could find it in a night as black as my hat.”
“That is good. Here is
a letter that I wish you to take there and deliver
as soon as you can to Mr. Davis. It is important,
and be sure you do not fall into the hands of any
of the Northern raiders.”
He held out a small sealed envelope, and Prescott
took it.
“Take care of yourself,”
he said, “because you will have a dangerous
ride.”
Prescott saluted and turned away.
He looked back once, and the General was still sitting
alone by the fire, his face grave and thoughtful.
Prescott had a good horse, and when
he rode away was full of faith that he would reach
Richmond. He was glad to go because of the confidence
Lee showed in him, and because he might see in the
capital those for whom he cared most.
As he rode on the lights behind him
died and the darkness came up and covered Lee’s
camp. But he had truly told the General that he
could find his way to Richmond in black darkness,
and to-night he had need of both knowledge and instinct.
There was a shadowed moon, flurries of rain, and a
wind moaning through the pine woods. From far
away, like the swell of the sea on the rocks, came
the low mutter of the guns. Scarcely ever did
it cease, and its note rose above the wailing of the
wind like a kind of solemn chorus that got upon Prescott’s
nerves.
“Is it a funeral song?” he asked.
On he went and the way opened before
him in the darkness; no Northern horsemen crossed
his path; the cry of “Halt!” never came.
It seemed to Prescott that fate was making his way
easy. For what purpose? He did not like
it. He wished to be interrupted to
feel that he must struggle to achieve his journey.
This, too, got upon his nerves. He grew lonely
and afraid not afraid of physical danger,
but of the omens and presages that the night seemed
to bear. He wondered again about the message that
he bore. Why had not General Lee given some hint
of its contents? Then he blamed himself for questioning.
He rode slowly and thus many hours
passed. Mile after mile fell behind him and the
night went with them. The sun sprang up, the golden
day enfolded the earth, and at last from the top of
a hill he saw afar the spires of Richmond. It
was a city that he loved his home, the scene
of the greatest events in his life, including his
manhood’s love; and as he looked down upon it
now his eyes grew misty. What would be its fate?
He rode on, giving the countersign
as he passed the defenses. With the pure day,
the omens and presages of the night seemed to have
passed. Richmond breathed a Sabbath calm; the
Northern armies might have been a thousand miles away
for all the sign it gave. There was no fear, no
apprehension on the faces he saw. Richmond still
had absolute faith in Lee; whatever his lack of resources,
he would meet the need.
From lofty church spires bells began
to ring. The air was pervaded with a holy calm,
and Prescott, with the same feeling upon him, rode
on. He longed to turn aside to see his mother
and to call at the Grayson cottage, but “as
soon as possible,” the General had said, and
he must deliver his message. He knocked at the
door of the White House of the Confederacy. “Gone
to church,” the servant said when he asked for
Mr. Davis.
Prescott took his way to Doctor Hoge’s
church, well knowing where the President of the Confederacy
habitually sat, and stiff with his night’s riding,
walked and led his mount. At the church door he
gave the horse to a little negro boy to hold and went
quietly inside.
The President and his family were
in their pew and the minister was speaking. Prescott
paused a few moments at the entrance to the aisle.
No one paid any attention to him; soldiers were too
common a sight to be noticed. He felt in the
inside pocket of his waistcoat and drew forth the
sealed envelope. Then he slipped softly down the
aisle, leaned over the President’s pew and handed
him the note with the whispered words, “A message
from General Lee.”
Prescott, receiving no orders, quietly
withdrew to a neighbouring vacant pew and watched
Mr. Davis as he opened the envelope and read the letter.
He saw a sudden gray pallor sweep over his face, a
quick twitching of the lips and then a return of the
wonted calm.
The President of the Confederacy refolded
the note and put it in his pocket. Presently
he rose and left the church and Prescott followed him.
An hour later Richmond was stricken into a momentary
dumbness, soon followed by the chattering of many
voices. The city, the capital, was to be given
up. General Lee had written that the Southern
army could no longer defend it, and advised the immediate
departure of the Government, which was now packing
up, ready to take flight by the Danville railroad.
Richmond, so long the inviolate, was
to be abandoned. No one questioned the wisdom
of Lee, but they were struck down by the necessity.
Panic ran like fire in dry grass. The Yankees
were coming at once, and they would burn and slay!
Their cavalry had already been seen on the outskirts
of the city. There was no time to lose if they
were to escape to the farther South.
The streets were filled with the confused
crowd. The rumours grew; they said everything,
but of one thing the people were sure. The Government
was packing its papers and treasures in all haste,
and the train was waiting to take it southward.
That they beheld with their own eyes. Great numbers
of the inhabitants, too, made ready for flight as best
they could, but they yet preserved most of their courage.
They said they would come back. General Lee,
when he gathered new forces, would return to the rescue
of the city and they would come with him. The
women and the children often wept, but the men, though
with gloomy faces, bade them be of good cheer.
Prescott, still with no orders and
knowing that none would come, walked slowly through
the crowd, his heart full of grief and pity. This
was his world about him that was falling to pieces.
He knew why the night had been so full of omens; why
the distant cannon had escorted him like funeral guns.
His first thought was now of his mother,
and his second was of Lucia Catherwood, knowing well
that in such a moment the passions of all the wild
and lawless would rise. He hurried to his home,
and on his way he met the Secretary, calm, composed,
a quiet, cynical smile on his face.
“Well, Mr. Sefton,” said Prescott, “it
has come.”
“Yes,” replied the Secretary, “and
not sooner than I have expected.”
“You are leaving?” said Prescott.
“Yes,” replied Mr. Sefton,
“I go with the Government. I am part of
it, you know, but I travel light. I have little
baggage. I tell you, too, since you wish to know
it, that I asked Miss Catherwood to go with us as
my wife we could be married in an hour or,
if not that, as a refugee under the escort of Miss
Grayson.”
“Well?” said Prescott. His heart
beat violently.
“She declined both propositions,”
replied the Secretary quietly. “She will
stay here and await the coming of the conquerors.
After all, why shouldn’t she? She is a
Northern sympathizer herself, and a great change in
her position and ours has occurred suddenly.”
Their eyes met and Prescott saw his
fall a little and for the first time. The sudden
change in positions was, indeed, great and in many
respects.
The Secretary held out his hand.
“Good-by, Captain Prescott,”
he said. “We have been rivals, but not
altogether enemies. I have always wished you well
where your success was not at the cost of mine.
Let us part in friendship, as we may not meet again.”
Prescott took the extended hand.
“I am sorry that chance or fate
ever made us rivals,” the Secretary went on.
“Maybe we shall not be so any longer, and since
I retire from the scene I tell you I have known all
the while that Miss Catherwood was not a spy.
She was there in the President’s office that
day, and she might have been one had she yielded to
her impulse, but she put the temptation aside.
She has told you this and she told you the full truth.
The one who really took the papers was discovered
and punished by me long ago.”
“Then why ” began Prescott.
The Secretary made a gesture.
“You ask why I kept this secret?”
he said. “It was because it gave me power
over both you and her; over her through you. I
knew your part in it, too. Then I helped Miss
Grayson and her when she came back to Richmond; she
could not turn me away. I played upon your foolish
jealousy I fancy I did that cleverly.
I brought her back here to draw you away from Helen
Harley and she drew me, too. She did not intend
it, nor did she wish it; but perhaps she felt her
power ever since that meeting in the Wilderness and
knew that she was safe from any disclosures of mine.
But she loved you from the first, Captain Prescott,
and never anybody else. You see, I am frank with
myself as I have tried always to be in all respects.
I have lost the field and I retire in favour of the
winner, yourself!”
The Secretary, bowing, walked away.
Prescott watched him a minute or two, but he could
see no signs of haste or excitement in the compact,
erect figure. Then he hastened to his mother.
He found her in her parlour, prepared
as if for the coming of some one. There was fervent
feeling in her look, but her manner was calm as she
embraced her son. Prescott knew her thoughts,
and as he had never yet found fault with them he could
not now at such a time.
“I know everything, Robert,”
she said. “The Government is about to flee
from Richmond.”
“Yes, mother,” he replied,
“and I brought the order for it to go. Is
it not singular that such a message should have been
delivered by your son? Your side wins, mother.”
“I never doubted that it would,
not even after that terrible day at Bull Run and the
greater defeats that came later. A cause is lost
from the beginning when it is against the progress
of the human race.”
There was mingled joy and sadness
in her manner joy that the cause which
she thought right had won; sadness that her friends,
none the less dear because for so many months they
had taken another view, should suffer misfortune.
“Mother,” Prescott said
presently, “I do not wish to leave you, but I
must go to the cottage of Miss Grayson and Miss Catherwood.
There are likely to be wild scenes in Richmond before
the day is over, and they should not be left alone.”
The look that she bent upon her son
then was singularly soft and tender smiling,
too, as if something pleased her.
“They will be here, Robert,”
she said. “I expect them any minute.”
“Here! in this house!” he exclaimed, starting.
“Yes, here in this house,”
she said triumphantly “It will not be the first
time that Lucia Catherwood has been sheltered behind
these walls. Do you not remember when they wished
to arrest her, and Lieutenant Talbot searched the
cottage for her? She was at that very moment here,
in this house, hidden in your own room, though she
did not know that it was yours. I saved her then.
Oh, I have known her longer than you think.”
Stirred by a sudden emotion Prescott
stooped down and kissed his mother.
“I have always known that you
were a wonderful woman,” he said, “but
I gave you credit for less courage and daring than
you really have.”
Some one knocked.
“There they are now,”
exclaimed Mrs. Prescott, and hurrying forward she
opened the door. Lucia Catherwood and Charlotte
Grayson entered. At first they did not see Prescott,
who stood near the window, but when his tall form
met their eyes Miss Grayson uttered a little cry and
the colour rose high in Lucia’s face.
“We are surprised to see you,
Captain Prescott,” she said.
“But glad, too, I hope,” he replied.
“Yes, glad, too,” she said frankly.
She seemed to have changed. Some
of her reserve was gone. This was a great event
in her life and she was coming into a new world without
losing the old.
“Miss Catherwood,” Prescott
said, “I am glad that my mother’s house
is to be the shelter of Miss Grayson and yourself
at such a time. We have one or two faithful and
strong-armed servants who will see that you suffer
no harm.”
The two women hesitated and were embarrassed.
Prescott saw it.
“You will not be bothered much
by me,” he said. “I have no instructions,
but it is obvious that I should go forth and help maintain
order.” Then he added: “I saw
Mr. Sefton departing. He bade me good-by as if
he did not expect ever to be in Richmond again.”
Again Lucia Catherwood flushed.
“He said a like farewell to me,” she said.
Prescott’s gaze met hers, and
she flushed deeper than ever as her eyes dropped for
a moment.
“I hope that he has gone forever,”
said Prescott. “He is an able man and I
admire him in many ways. But I think him a dangerous
man, too.”
“Amen,” said Miss Charlotte
Grayson with emphasis. Lucia was silent, but
she did not seem to be offended.
He went presently into the street,
where, indeed, his duty called him. When a capital,
after years of war, is about to fall, the forces of
evil are always unchained, and now it was so with
Richmond. Out from all the slums came the men
and women of the lower world, and down by the navy
storehouses the wharf-rats were swarming. They
were drunk already, and with foul words on their lips
they gathered before the stores, looking for plunder.
Then they broke in the barrels of whisky at the wharf
and became drunker and madder than ever. The
liquor ran about them in great streams. Standing
ankle deep in the gutters, they waded in it and splashed
it over each other. Hilarious shouts and cries
arose and they began to fight among themselves.
Everywhere the thieves came from their holes and were
already plundering the houses.
Steadily the skies darkened over Richmond
and a terrified multitude kept pressing toward the
railroad station, seeking to flee into the farther
South. Behind them the mad crowd still drank and
fought in the gutters and the thieves passed from
house to house. Again and again the cry was raised
that the Yankees were here, but still they did not
come. Many fancied that they heard far away the
thunder of the guns, and even Prescott was not sure.
He went once to the Harley house and found Helen there,
unafraid, quieting the apprehensions of her father,
who should have been quieting hers. She, too,
would stay. Mrs. Markham, she told him, was already
on the train and would follow the Government.
Prescott was very glad that she had gone. He
felt a mighty relief to know that this woman was passing
southward and, he hoped, out of his life.
Twilight came on and then the night,
settling down black and heavy over the lost capital.
The President and his Cabinet were ready and would
soon start; the small garrison was withdrawing; an
officer at the head of men with torches went about
the city, setting fire to all the property of the
Government armouries, machine shops, storehouses,
wharves. The flames shot up at many points and
hung like lurid clouds, shedding a ghastly light over
Richmond.
The gunboats in the river, abandoned
by their crews, were set on fire, and by and by they
blew up with tremendous explosions. The reports
added to the terror of the fleeing crowd and cries
of fright arose from the women and children.
The rumours which had flown so fast in the day thickened
and grew blacker in the night. “All the
city was to be burned! The Yankees were going
to massacre everybody!” It was in vain for the
soldiers, who knew better, to protest. The Government
property, burning so vividly, gave colour to their
fears.
It seemed as if all Richmond were
on fire. The city lay lurid and ghastly under
the light of these giant torches. Wandering winds
picked up the ashes and sifted them down like a fine
gray snow. Wagons loaded with children and household
goods passed out on every road. When the President
and his Cabinet were gone, and the whistling of the
train was heard for the last time, the soldiers disappeared
up the river, but the streets and roads were still
crowded with the refugees, and the fires, burning
more fiercely than ever, spread now to private houses.
Richmond was a vast core of light.
Prescott will never forget that night,
the sad story of a fallen city, the passing of the
old South, the weepings, the farewells, the people
going from their homes out upon the bare country roads
in the darkness, the drunken mob that still danced
and fought behind them, and the burning city making
its own funeral pyre.
Midnight passed, but there was still
no sign of the Yankees. Prescott wished that
they would come, for he had no fear of them: they
would save the city from the destruction that was
threatening it and restore order. Richmond was
without rulers. The old had gone, but the new
had not come.
The wheels of some belated guns rattled
dully in the street, passing up the river to join
in the retreat. The horsemen supporting it filed
by like phantoms, and many of them, weatherbeaten
men, shed tears in the darkness. From the river
came a dazzling flash followed by a tremendous roar
as another boat blew up, and then General Breckinridge,
the Secretary of War, and his staff rode over the
last bridge, already set on fire, its burning timbers
giving them a final salute as they passed. It
was now half way between midnight and morning, and
blazing Richmond passively awaited its fate.