It had been a night of labour and
anxiety for Prescott. In the turmoil of the flight
he had been forgotten by the President and all others
who had the power to give him orders, and he scarcely
knew what to do. It was always his intention,
an intention shared by his comrades, to resist to
the last, and at times he felt like joining the soldiers
in their retreat up the river, whence by a circuitous
journey he would rejoin General Lee; but Richmond
held him. He was not willing to go while his
mother and Lucia, who might need him at any moment,
were there, and the pathos of the scenes around him
troubled his heart. Many a woman and child did
he assist in flight, and he resolved that he would
stay until he saw the Northern troops coming.
Then he would slip quietly away and find Lee.
He paid occasional visits to his home
and always the three women were at the windows wide
awake it was not a night when one could
sleep. The same awe was on their faces as they
gazed at the burning buildings, the towers of fire
twisted and coiled by the wind. Overhead was a
sullen sky, a roof of smoke shutting out the stars,
and clouds of fine ashes shifting with the wind.
“Will all the city burn, Robert?”
asked his mother far toward morning.
“I do not know, mother,”
he replied, “but there is danger of it.
I am a loyal Southerner, but I pray that the Yankees
will come quickly. It seems a singular thing
to say, but Richmond now needs their aid.”
Lucia said little. Once, as Prescott
stood outside, he saw her face framed in the window
like a face in a picture, a face as pure and as earnest
as that of Ruth amid the corn. He wondered why
he had ever thought it possible that she could love
or marry James Sefton. Alike in will and strength
of mind, they were so unlike in everything else.
He came nearer. The other two were at another
window, intent on the fire.
“Lucia,” he whispered,
“if I stay here it is partly for love of you.
Tell me, if you still hold anything against me, that
you forgive me. I have been weak and foolish,
but if so it was because I had lost something that
I valued most in all the world. Again I say I
was weak and foolish, but that was all; I have done
nothing wrong. Oh, I was mad, but it was a momentary
madness, and I love you and you alone.”
She put down her hand from the window
and shyly touched his hair. He seized the hand
and kissed it. She hastily withdrew it, and the
red arose in her cheeks, but her eyes were not unkind.
His world, the world of the old South,
was still falling about him. Piece by piece it
fell. The hour was far toward morning. The
rumble of wagons in the streets died. All the
refugees who could go were gone, but the thieves and
the drunkards were still abroad. In some places
men had begun to make efforts to check the fire and
to save the city from total ruin, and Prescott helped
them, working amid the smoke and the ashes.
The long night of terror come to an
end and the broad sun flushed the heavens. Then
rose again the cry: “The Yankees!”
and now report and rumour were true. Northern
troops were approaching, gazing curiously at this
burning city which for four years had defied efforts,
costing nearly a million lives, and the Mayor went
forth ready to receive them and make the surrender.
Prescott and the three women followed
to see. He was stained and blackened now, and
he could watch in safety, slipping out afterward to
join his own army. The fires still roared, and
overhead the clouds of smoke still drifted. Afar
sounded the low, steady beat of a drum. The vanguard
of the North was entering the Southern capital, and
even those fighting the fires deserted their work
for awhile to look on.
Slowly the conquerors came down the
street, gazing at the burning city and those of its
people who remained. They themselves bore all
the marks of war, their uniforms torn and muddy, their
faces thin and brown, their ranks uneven. They
marched mostly in silence, the people looking on and
saying little. Presently they entered the Capitol
grounds. A boy among the cavalry sprang from
his horse and ran into the building, holding a small
tightly wrapped package in his hand.
Prescott, looking up, saw the Stars
and Bars come down from the dome of the Capitol; then
a moment later something shot up in its place, and
unfolding, spread its full length in the wind until
all the stripes and stars were shining. The flag
of the Union once more waved over Richmond. A
cheer, not loud, broke from the Northern troops and
its echo again came from the crowd.
Prescott felt something stir within
him and a single tear ran down his cheek. He
was not a sentimental man, but he had fought four years
for the flag that was now gone forever. And yet
the sight of the new flag that was the old one, too,
was not wholly painful. He was aware of the feeling
that it was like an old and loved friend come back
again.
Then the march went on, solemn and
somber. The victors showed no elation; there
were no shouts, no cheers. The lean, brown men
in the faded blue uniforms rarely spoke, and the watchful,
anxious eyes of the officers searched everywhere.
The crowd around them sank into silence, but above
them and around them the flames of the burning city
roared and crackled as they bit deep into the wood.
Now and then there was a rumble and then a crash as
a house, its supports eaten away, fell in; and at
rare intervals a tremendous explosion as some magazine
blew up, to be followed by a minute of intense, vivid
silence, for which the roaring flames seemed only
a background.
The drunken mob of the under-world
shrank away at the sight of the troops, and presently
relapsed, too, into a sullen silence of fear or awe.
The immense cloud of smoke which had been gathering
for so many hours over Richmond thickened and darkened
and was cut through here and there by the towers of
flame which were leaping higher and higher. Then
a strong breeze sprang up, blowing off the river, and
the fire reached the warehouses filled with cotton,
which burned almost like gunpowder, and the conflagration
gathered more volume and vigour. The wind whirled
it about in vast surges and eddies. Ashes and
sparks flew in showers. The light of the sun
was obscured by the wide roof of smoke, but beneath
there was the lurid light of the fire. The men
saw the faces of each other in a crimson glow, and
in such a light the mind, too, magnified and distorted
the objects that the eye beheld. The victorious
soldiers themselves looked with awe upon the burning
city. They had felt, in no event, any desire
to plunder or destroy; and now it was alike their
instinct and wish to save. Regiment after regiment
stacked arms on Shockoe Hill, divided into companies
under the command of officers, and disappeared down
the smoking street not now fighters of battles,
but fighters of fire. The Yankees had, indeed,
come in time, for to them the saving of the city from
entire ruin was due. All day they worked with
the people who were left, among the torrents of flame
and smoke, suppressing the fire in places, and in
others, where they could not, taking out the household
goods and heaping them in the squares. They worked,
too, to an uncommon chorus. Cartridges and shells
were exploding in the burning magazines, the cartridges
with a steady crackle and the shells with a hiss and
a scream and then a stream of light. All the time
the smoke grew thicker and stung the eyes of those
who toiled in its eddies.
Man gradually conquered, and night
came upon a city containing acres and acres of smoking
ruins, but with the fires out and a part left fit for
human habitation. Then Prescott turned to go.
The Harley house was swept away, and the Grayson cottage
had suffered the same fate; but the inmates of both
were gathered at his mother’s home and he knew
they were safe. The stern, military discipline
of the conquerors would soon cover every corner of
the city, and there would be no more drinking, no
more rioting, no more fires.
His mother embraced him and wept for the first time.
“I would have you stay now,”
she said, “but if you will go I say nothing
against it.”
Lucia Catherwood gave him her hand
and a look which said, “I, too, await your return.”
Prescott’s horse was gone, he
knew not where; so he went into the country on foot
in search of Lee’s army, looking back now and
then at the lost city under the black pall of smoke.
While there, he had retained a hope that Lee would
come and retake it, but he had none now. When
the Stars and Bars went down on the dome of the Capitol
it seemed to him that the sun of the Confederacy set
with it. But still he had a vague idea of rejoining
Lee and fighting to the last; just why he did not
understand; but the blind instinct was in him.
He did not know where Lee had gone
and he learned that the task of finding him was far
easier in theory than in practice. The Northern
armies seemed to be on all sides of Richmond as well
as in it, to encircle it with a ring of steel; and
Prescott passed night after night in the woods, hiding
from the horsemen in blue who rode everywhere.
He found now and then food at some lone farmhouse,
and heard many reports, particularly of Sheridan,
who, they said, never slept, but passed his days and
nights clipping down the Southern army. Lee, they
would say, was just ahead; but when Prescott reached
“just ahead” the General was not there.
Lee always seemed to be fleeing away before him.
Spring rushed on with soft, warm winds
and an April day broke up in rain. The night
was black, and Prescott, lost in the woods, seeking
somewhere a shelter, heard a sound which he knew to
be the rumble of a train. Hope sprang up; where
there was a train there was a railroad, and a railroad
meant life. He pushed on in the direction whence
the sound came, cowering before the wind and the rain,
and at last saw a light. It might be Yankees
or it might not be Yankees, but Prescott now did not
care which, intent as he was upon food and shelter.
The light led him at last to an unpainted,
one-room shanty in the woods by the railroad track,
a telegraph station. Prescott stared in at the
window and at the lone operator, a lank youth of twenty,
who started back when he saw the unshorn and ghastly
face at the window. But he recovered his coolness
in a moment and said:
“Come in, stranger; I guess you’re a hungry
Reb.”
Prescott entered, and the lank youth,
without a word, took down some crackers and hard cheese
from a shelf.
“Eat it all,” he said; “you’re
welcome.”
Prescott ate voraciously and dried
his clothing before the fire in a little stove.
The telegraph instrument on a table
in a corner kept up a monotonous ticking, to which
the operator paid no attention. But it was a soothing
sound to Prescott, and with the food and the heat and
the restful atmosphere he began to feel sleepy.
The lank youth said nothing, but watched his guest
languidly and apparently without curiosity.
Presently the clicking of the telegraph
instrument increased in rapidity and emphasis and
the operator went to the table. The rapid tick
aroused Prescott from the sleep into which he was
falling.
“Tick-tack, tick-tack, tick-tack,”
went the instrument. A look of interest appeared
on the face of the lank youth.
“That instrument seems to be
talking to you,” said Prescott.
“Yes, it’s saying a few words,”
replied the operator.
“Tick-tack, tick-tack, tick-tack!” went
the instrument.
“It’s a friend of mine
farther up the line,” said the boy. “Would
you like to hear what he’s saying?”
“If you don’t mind,” replied Prescott.
It was very warm in the room and he
was still drowsy. The boy began in a mechanical
voice as of one who reads:
“General Lee surrendered to General Grant to-day ”
“What’s that?” exclaimed
Prescott, springing to his feet. But the boy
went on:
“General Lee surrendered to
General Grant to-day at Appomattox Court House.
The Army of Northern Virginia has laid down its arms
and the war is over.”
Prescott stood for a moment like one
dazed, then staggered and fell back in his chair.
“I guess you’re one of
that army, mister,” said the boy, hastily bringing
a cup of water.
“I was,” replied Prescott as he recovered
himself.
He stayed all night in the hut there
was nothing now to hurry for and the next
morning the lank youth, with the same taciturn generosity,
shared with him his breakfast.
Prescott turned back toward Richmond,
his heart swelling with the desire for home.
The sun came out bright and strong, the rain dried
up, and the world was again young and beautiful; but
the country remained lone and desolate, and not till
nearly noon did he come in contact with human life.
Then he saw a half-dozen horsemen approaching whether
Northern or Southern he did not care it
did not matter now, and he went on straight toward
them.
But the foremost rider leaped down
with a cry of joy and wrung his hand.
“Bob, Bob, old boy!” he
said. “We did not know what had become of
you and we had given you up for dead!”
It was Talbot, and Prescott returned
his grasp with interest.
“Is it true true
that Lee has surrendered?” he asked, though knowing
well that it was true.
Talbot’s eyes became misty.
“Yes, it is all so,” he
replied. “I was there and I saw it.
We went down to Appomattox and the Yankees came right
after us I don’t know how many strong,
but too strong for us. Grant would never let us
alone. He was there at our heels all the time,
and Sheridan kept galloping around us, lopping off
every straggling regiment and making our lives miserable.
When we got to Appomattox we found the Yankees were
so thick that we stayed there. We couldn’t
move. There weren’t more than fifteen thousand
of us left, and we were starved and barefoot.
The firing around us never stopped. Grant kept
pressing and pressing. Bob, I felt then that
something was going to happen.”
Talbot stopped and choked, but in a moment he went
on:
“Our generals had a big talk I
don’t know what they said, but I know what they
did. A messenger went over to Grant’s army,
and by and by General Grant and a lot of officers
came and met General Lee and his staff, and they went
into a house and talked a long time. When they
came out it was all over. The Army of Northern
Virginia, the victor of so many great battles, was
no more. We couldn’t believe it for awhile,
though we knew that it must come. We hung around
Marse Bob, and asked him if it was true, and he said
it was. He said when a war was over it was over.
He said we were beaten and we must now stop fighting.
He told us all to go home and go to work. It
was an undivided Union; the war had settled that and
we must stick to it. General Grant had promised
him that we shouldn’t be harmed, and he told
us to think no more of war now, but to rebuild our
homes and our country. We loved Marse Bob in victory,
but we love him just as much now in defeat. We
crowded around him and we shook his hand and we would
hardly let him go.”
Talbot choked again, and it was a
long time until he continued:
“General Grant did everything
that he promised General Lee. He’s the
right sort all through so is the Yankee
army. I’ve got nothing against it.
They never insulted us with a single word. We
had our own camp and they sent us over part of their
rations. We needed them badly enough; and then
General Grant said that every man among us who had
a horse was to take it and we did.
Here I am on mine, and I reckon you might call it
a gift from the Yankee General.”
The little group was silent.
They had fought four years, and all had ended in defeat.
Tears were wiped from more than one brown face.
“We’re going to Richmond,
Bob,” said Talbot at last, “and I guess
you are bound that way, too. You haven’t
any horse. Here, get up behind me.”
Prescott accepted the offer, and the
silent little group rode on toward Richmond.
On the way there Talbot said:
“Vincent Harley is dead.
He was killed at Sailor’s Creek. He led
a last charge and was shot through the heart.
He must have died instantly, but he did not even fall
from the saddle. When the charge spent its force,
the reins had dropped from his hands, but he was sitting
erect stone dead. It’s a coincidence,
but General Markham was killed on the same day.”
Prescott said nothing, but Thomas
Talbot, who never remained long in the depths, soon
began to show signs of returning cheerfulness.
They stopped for a noon rest in a clearing, and after
they ate their scanty dinner Talbot leaped upon a
stump.
“Oyez! Oyez!” he
cried. “Attention all! I, Thomas Talbot,
do offer for sale one job lot of articles. Never
before was there such an opportunity to obtain the
rare and valuable at such low prices.”
“What are you selling, Tom?” asked Prescott.
“Listen and learn,” replied
Talbot, in sonorous and solemn tones. “Gentlemen,
I offer to the highest bidder and without reserve one
Confederacy, somewhat soiled, battered and damaged,
but surrounded by glorious associations. The
former owners having no further use for it, this valuable
piece of property is put upon the market. Who’ll
buy? Who’ll buy? Come, gentlemen,
bid up. You’ll never have another such
chance. What do I hear? What do I hear?”
“Thirty cents!” called some one.
“Thirty cents! I am bid thirty cents!”
cried Talbot.
“Confederate money,” added the bidder.
A laugh arose.
“Do you want me to give you this property?”
asked Talbot.
But he could get no higher bid, and
he descended from the stump amid laughter that bordered
closely on something else.
Then they resumed their journey.