Harry left the valley with the keenest
feeling of regret, realizing at the parting how strong
a friendship he had formed with this family.
But he felt that he could not delay any longer.
Affairs must be moving now in the great world in
the east, and he wished to be at the heart of them.
He had a strong, sure-footed horse, and he had supplies
and an extra suit of clothes in his saddle bags.
The rifle across his back would attract no attention,
as all the men in the mountains carried rifles.
Jarvis had instructed Harry carefully
about the road or path, and as the boy was already
an experienced traveler with an excellent sense of
direction, there was no danger of his getting lost
in the wilderness.
Jarvis, Ike, and Mrs. Simmons gave
him farewells which were full of feeling. Aunt
Suse had come down the brick walk, tap-tapping with
her cane, as Harry stood at the gate ready to mount
his horse.
“Good-bye, Aunt Susan,”
he said. “I came a stranger, but this house
has been made a home to me.”
She peered up at him, and Harry saw
that once more her old eyes were flaming with the
light he had seen there when he arrived.
“Good-bye, governor,”
she said, holding out a wrinkled and trembling hand.
“I am proud that our house has sheltered you,
but it is not for the last time. You will come
again, and you will be thin and pale and in rags,
and you will fall at the door. I see you coming
with these two eyes of mine.”
“Hush, Aunt Suse,” exclaimed
Mrs. Simmons. “It is not Governor Ware,
it is his great-grandson, and you mustn’t send
him away tellin’ of terrible things that will
happen to him.”
“I’m not afraid,”
said Harry, “and I hope that I’ll see Aunt
Susan and all of you again.”
He lifted her hand and kissed it in
the old-fashioned manner.
She smiled and he heard her murmur:
“It is the great governor’s
way. He kissed my hand like that once before,
when I went to Frankfort on the lumber raft.”
“Good-bye, Harry,” repeated
Jarvis. “If you’re bound to fight
I reckon that’s jest what you’re bound
to do, an’ it ain’t no good for me to say
anythin’. Be shore you follow the trail
jest as I laid it out to you an’ in two days
you’ll strike the Wilderness Road. After
that it’s easy.”
When Harry rode away something rose
in his throat and choked him for a moment. He
knew that he would never again find more kindly people
than these simple mountaineers. Then in vivid
phrases he heard once more the old woman’s prophecy:
“You will come again, and you will be thin and
pale and in rags, and you will fall at the door.”
For a moment it shadowed the sunlight. Then
he laughed at himself. No one could see into
the future.
He was now across the valley and his
path led along the base of the mountain. He
looked back and saw the four standing on the porch,
Jarvis, Ike, Mrs. Simmons, and old Aunt Suse.
He waved his hand to them and all four waved back.
A singular thrill ran through him. Could it
be possible that he would come again, and in the manner
that the old woman had predicted?
The path, in another minute, curved
around the mountain, and the valley was shut from
view. Nor, as he rode on, did he catch another
glimpse of it. One might roam the mountains
for months and never see the home of Samuel Jarvis.
The two days passed without event.
The weather remained fair, and no one interfered
with him. He slept the first night at a log cabin
that Jarvis had named, having reached it in due time,
and the second day he reached, also in due time, the
old Wilderness Road.
Thence the boy advanced by easy stages
into Virginia until he reached a railroad, where he
sold his horse and took a train for Richmond, having
come in a few days out of the cool, peaceful atmosphere
of the mountains into another, which was surcharged
everywhere with the fiery breath of war.
Harry realized as he approached the
capital the deep intensity of feeling in everybody.
The Virginians were less volatile than the South
Carolinians, and they had long refused to go out, but
now that they were out they were pouring into the
Southern army, and they were animated by an extraordinary
zeal. He began to hear new or unfamiliar names,
Early, and Ewell, and Jackson, and Lee, and Johnston,
and Hill, and Stuart, and Ashby, names that he would
never forget, but names that as yet meant little to
him.
He had letters from his father and
he expected to find his friends of Charleston in Richmond
or at the front. General Beauregard, whom he
knew, would be in command of the army threatening Washington,
and he would not go into a camp of strangers.
It was now early in June, and the
country was at its best. On both sides of the
railway spread the fair Virginia fields, and the earth,
save where the ploughed lands stretched, was in its
deepest tints of green. Harry, thrusting his
head from the window, looked eagerly ahead at the
city rising on its hills. Then a shade smaller
than Charleston, it, too, was a famous place in the
South, and it was full of great associations.
Harry, like all the educated boys of the South, honored
and admired its public men. They were mighty
names to him. He was about to tread streets
that had been trod by the famous Jefferson, by Madison,
Monroe, Randolph of Roanoke, and many others.
The shades of the great Virginians rose in a host
before him.
He arrived about noon, and, as he
carried no baggage except his saddle bags and weapons,
he was quickly within the city, his papers being in
perfect order. He ate dinner, as the noonday
meal was then called, and decided to seek General
Beauregard at once, having learned from an officer
on the train that he was in the city. It was
said that he was at the residence of President Davis,
called the White House, after that other and more
famous one at Washington, in which the lank, awkward
man, Abraham Lincoln, now lived.
But Harry paused frequently on the
way, as there was nothing to hurry him, and there
was much to be seen. If Charleston had been crowded,
Richmond was more so. Like all capitals on the
verge of a great war, but as yet untouched by its
destructive breath, it throbbed with life. The
streets swarmed with people, young officers and soldiers
in their uniforms, civilians of all kinds, and many
pretty girls in white or light dresses, often with
flowers in their hair or on their breasts. Light-heartedness
and gaiety seemed predominant.
Harry stopped a while to look at the
ancient and noble state house, now the home also of
the Confederate Congress, standing in Capitol Square,
and the spire of the Bell Tower, on Shockoe Hill.
He saw important looking men coming in or going out
of the square, but he did not linger long, intending
to see the sights another time.
He was informed at the “White
House” that General Beauregard was there, and
sending in his card he was admitted promptly.
Beauregard was sitting with President Davis and Secretary
Benjamin in a room furnished plainly, and the general
in his quick, nervous manner rose and greeted him
warmly.
“You did good service with us
at Charleston,” he said, “and we welcome
you here. We have already heard from your father,
who was a comrade in war of both President Davis and
myself.”
“He wrote us that you were coming
across the mountains from Frankfort,” said Mr.
Davis.
Harry thought that the President already
looked worn and anxious.
“Yes, sir,” replied the
boy, “I came chiefly by the river and the Wilderness
Road.”
“Your father writes that they
worked hard at Frankfort, but that they failed to
take Kentucky out,” continued the head of the
Confederacy.
“The Southern leaders did their
best, but they could not move the state.”
“And you wish, then, to serve
at the front?” continued the President.
“If I may,” returned Harry.
“In South Carolina I was with Colonel Leonidas
Talbot. I have had a letter from him here, and,
if it is your pleasure and that of General Beauregard,
I shall be glad to join his command.”
General Beauregard laughed a little.
“You do well,” he said.
“I have known Colonel Talbot a long time, and,
although he may be slow in choosing he is bound to
be in the very thick of events when he does choose.
Colonel Talbot is at the front, and you’ll
probably find him closer than any other officer to
the Yankee army. We need everybody whom we can
get, especially lads of spirit and fire like you.
You shall be a second lieutenant in his command.
A train will leave here in four hours. Be ready.
It will take you part of the way and you will march
on for the rest.”
Mr. Benjamin did not speak throughout
the interview, but he watched Harry closely.
Neither did he speak when he left, but he offered
him a limp hand. The boy’s view of Richmond
was in truth brief, as before night he saw its spires
and roofs fading behind him. The train was wholly
military. There were four coaches filled with
officers and troops, and two more coaches behind them
loaded with ammunition.
Harry heard from some of the officers
that the army was gathered at a place called Manassas
Junction, where Beauregard had taken command on June
1st, and to which he would quickly return. But
Harry did not know any of these officers and he felt
a little lonely. He slept after a while in the
car seat, awakened at times by the jolting or stopping
of the train, and arrived some time the next day in
a country of green hills and red clay roads, muddy
from heavy rains.
They left the train, marched over
the hills along one of the muddy roads, and presently
saw a vast array of tents, fires, and earthworks,
stretching to the horizon. Harry’s heart
leaped again. This was the great army of the
South. Here were regiments and regiments, thousands
and thousands of men and here he would find his friends,
Colonel Talbot and Major St. Hilaire, and St. Clair
and Langdon.
The whole scene was inspiring in the
extreme to the heart of youth. Far to the right
he saw cavalry galloping back and forth, and to the
left he saw infantry drilling. From somewhere
in front came the strains of a regimental band playing:
“The hour was sad, I
left the maid,
A lingering farewell
taking,
Her sighs and tears
my steps delayed,
I thought her heart
was breaking.
In hurried words her
name I blessed,
I breathed the vows
that bind me
And to my heart in anguish
pressed
The girl I left behind
me.”
It was a favorite air of the Southern
bands, and, much as it stirred Harry now, he was destined
to hear it again in moments far more thrilling.
He presented his order from General Beauregard to
a sentinel, who passed him to an officer, who in turn
told him to go about a quarter of a mile westward,
where he would find the regiment of Colonel Talbot
quartered.
“It’s a mixed regiment,”
he said, “made up of Virginians, South Carolinians,
North Carolinians, and a few Kentuckians and Tennesseeans,
but it’s already one of the best in the service.
Colonel Talbot and his second in command, Lieutenant-Colonel
St. Hilaire, have been thrashing it into shape in
great fashion. They’re mostly boys and
already they call themselves ‘The Invincibles.’
You can see the tents of their commanding officers
over there by that little creek.”
Harry’s eyes followed the pointing
finger, and again his heart leaped. His friends
were there, the two colonels for whom he had such a
strong affection, and the two lads of his own age.
Theirs looked like a good camp, too. It was
arranged neatly, and by its side flowed the clear,
cool waters of Young’s Branch, a tributary of
the little Manassas River. He walked briskly,
crossed the brook, stepping from stone to stone, and
entered the grounds of the Invincibles.
A tall youth rushed forward, seized his hand and shook
it violently, meanwhile uttering cries of welcome
in an unbroken stream.
“By all the powers, it’s
our own Harry!” he exclaimed, “the new
Harry of the West, whom we were afraid we should never
see again. Everything is for the best, but we
hardly hoped for this! How did you get here,
Harry? And you didn’t bring Kentucky rushing
to our side, after all! Well, I knew it wasn’t
your fault, old horse! Ho, St. Clair, come and
see who’s here!”
St. Clair, who had been lying in the
grass behind a tent, appeared and greeted Harry joyfully.
But while Langdon was just the same he had changed
in appearance. He was thinner and graver, and
his intellectual face bore the stamp of rapid maturity.
“It’s like greeting one
of our very own, Harry,” he said. “You
were with us in Charleston at the great beginning.
We were afraid you would have to stay in the west.”
“The big things will begin here,” said
Harry.
“There can be no doubt of it.
Do you know, Harry, that we are less than thirty
miles from Washington! If there were any hill
high enough around here we could see the white dome
of the Capitol which we hope to take before the summer
is over. But we’ll take you to the Colonel
and Major Hector St. Hilaire, that was, but Lieutenant-Colonel
Hector St. Hilaire that is.”
Colonel Talbot was sitting at a small
table in a tent, the sides of which had been raised
all around, leaving only a canvas roof. Lieutenant-Colonel
St. Hilaire sat opposite him across the table, and
they were studying intently a small map of a region
that was soon to be sown deep with history.
They looked up when Harry came with his two friends,
and gave him the welcome that he knew he would always
receive from them.
“I’ve had a letter from
your father,” said Colonel Leonidas Talbot,
“and I’ve been expecting you. You
are to be a lieutenant on my staff, and the quartermaster
will sell you a new uniform as glossy and fine as
those of which St. Clair and Langdon are so proud.”
He asked him a few more questions
about Kentucky and his journey over the mountains,
and then, telling St. Clair and Langdon to take care
of him, he and Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire went
back to the study of their map. Harry noted
that both were tanned deeply and that their faces
were very serious.
“Come along, Harry,” said
Langdon. “Let the colonel and the major
bear all the troubles. For us everything is
for the best. We’ve got you on our hands
and we’re going to treat you right. See
that deep pool in the brook, where the big oak throws
its shade over the water? It’s partly
natural and it’s partly dammed, but it’s
our swimming hole. You are covered with dust
and dirt. Pull off your clothes and jump in there.
We’ll protect you from ribald attention.
There are other swimming holes along here, but this
swimming hole belongs to the Invincibles, and
we always make good our rights.”
Harry was more than willing.
In three minutes he jumped into the deep, cool water,
swimming, diving, and shaking himself like a big dog.
He had enjoyed no such luxury in many days, and he
felt as if he were being re-created. Langdon
and St. Clair sat on the bank and gave him instructions.
“Now jump out,” Langdon
said at the end of five minutes. “You needn’t
think because you’ve just come and are in a way
a guest, that you can keep this swimming hole all
to yourself. A lot more of the Invincibles
need bathing and here come some for their chance.”
Harry came out reluctantly, and in
a few minutes they were on the way to the quartermaster,
where the needed uniform, one that appealed gloriously
to his eye, was bought. St. Clair was quiet,
but Langdon talked enough for all three.
“The Yankee vanguard is only
a few miles away,” he said. “You
don’t have to go far before you see their tents,
though I ought to say that each side has another army
westward in the mountains. There’s been
a lot of fighting already, though not much of it here.
The first shots on Virginia soil were fired on our
front the day General Beauregard arrived to take command
of our forces.”
“How about those troops in the hills?”
asked Harry.
“They’ve been up and doing.
A young Yankee general named McClellan has shown
a lot of activity. He has beat us in some skirmishes
and he has organized troops as far west as the Ohio.
Then he and his generals met our general, Garnett,
at Rich Mountain. It was the biggest affair of
the war so far, and Garnett was killed. Then
a curious fellow of ours named Jackson, and Stuart,
a cavalry officer, lost a little battle at a place
called Falling Waters.”
“Has the luck been against us all along the
line?”
“Not at all! A cock-eyed
Massachusetts politician, one Ben Butler, a fellow
of energy though, broke into the Yorktown country,
but Magruder thrashed him at Big Bethel. All
those things, though, Harry, are just whiffs of rain
before the big storm. We’re threatening
Washington here with our main army, and here is where
they will have to meet us. Lincoln has put General
Scott, a Virginian, too, in command of the Northern
armies, but as he’s so old, somebody else will
be the real commander.”
Harry felt himself a genuine soldier
in his new uniform, and he soon learned his new duties,
which, for the present, would not be many. The
two armies, although practically face to face, refused
to move. On either side the officers of the old
regular force were seeking to beat the raw recruits
into shape, and the rival commanders also waited,
each for the other to make the first movement.
Harry and St. Clair were sent that
night far toward the front with a small detachment
to patrol some hill country. They marched in
the moonlight, keeping among the trees, and listening
for any sounds that might be hostile.
“It’s not likely though
that we’ll be molested,” said St. Clair.
“The men on both sides don’t yet realize
fully that they are here to shoot at one another.
This is our place, along a little brook, another
tributary of the Manassas.”
They stopped in a grove and disposed
the men, twenty in number, along a line of several
hundred yards, with instructions not to fire unless
they knew positively what they were shooting at.
Harry and St. Clair remained near the middle of the
line, at the edge of the brook, where they sat down
on the bank. The country was open in front of
them, and Harry saw a distant light.
“What’s that?” he asked.
“The campfire of a Yankee outpost. I told
you they were very near.”
“And that, I suppose, is one of their bugles.”
A faint but musical note was brought
to them by the light wind blowing in their faces.
“That’s what it is.
It may be the signal of some movement, but they can’t
attempt anything serious without showing themselves.
Our sentinels are posted along here for miles.”
The sound of the bugle continued faint
and far away. It had a certain weird effect
in the night and the loneliness. Harry wished
to know who they were at that far campfire.
His own cousin, Dick Mason, might be there.
“Although we’re arrayed
for war,” said St. Clair, “the sentinels
are often friendly. They even exchange plugs
of tobacco and news. The officers have not been
able to stop it wholly. Our sentinels tell theirs
that we’ll be in Washington in a month, and theirs
tell ours that they’ve already engaged rooms
in the Richmond hotels for July.”
“When two prophets disagree
both can’t be right,” said Harry.
“How far away would you say that light is,
Arthur?”
“About a mile and a half.
Let’s scout a little in that direction.
There are no commands against it. Enterprise
is encouraged.”
“Just what I’d like,”
said Harry, who was eager for action.
Leaving their own men under the command
of a reliable sergeant named Carrick, the two youths
crossed the brook and advanced over a fairly level
stretch of country toward the fire. Small clusters
of trees were scattered here and there, and beyond
them was a field of young corn. The two paused
in one of the little groves about a hundred yards from
their own outposts and looked back. They saw
only the dark line of the trees, and behind them,
wavering lights which they knew were the campfires
of their own army. But the lights at the distance
were very small, mere pin points.
“They look more like lanterns
carried by ’coon and ’possum hunters than
the campfires of an army,” said Harry.
“Yes, you’d hardly think
they mark the presence of twenty or thirty thousand
men,” said St. Clair. “Here we are
at the cornfield. The plants are not high, but
they throw enough shadow to hide us.”
They climbed a rail fence, and advanced
down the corn rows. The moon was good and there
was a plentiful supply of stars, enabling them to see
some distance. To their right on a hill was a
white Colonial house, with all its windows dark.
“That house would be in a bad
place if a battle comes off here, as seems likely,”
said St. Clair.
“And those who own it are wise
in having gone away,” said Harry.
“I’m not so sure that
they’ve gone. People hate to give up their
homes even in the face of death. Around here
they generally stay and put out the lights at dark.”
“Well, here we are at the end
of the cornfield, and the light is not more than four
or five hundred yards away. I think I can see
the shadows of human figures against the flames.
Come, let’s climb the fence and go down through
this skirt of bushes.”
The suggestion appealed to the daring
and curiosity of both, and in a few minutes they were
within two hundred yards of the Northern camp.
But they lay very close in the undergrowth. They
saw a big fire and Harry judged that four or five
hundred men were scattered about. Many were asleep
on the grass, but others sat up talking. The
appearance of all was so extraordinary that Harry gazed
in astonishment.
It was not the faces or forms of the
men, but their dress that was so peculiar. They
were arrayed in huge blouses and vast baggy trousers
of a blazing red, fastened at the knee and revealing
stockings of a brilliant hue below. Little tasselled
caps were perched on the sides of their heads.
Harry remembering his geography and the descriptions
of nations would have taken them for a gathering of
Turkish women, if their masculine faces had been hidden.
“What under the moon are those?”
he whispered. “They do look curious,”
replied St. Clair. “They call them Zouaves,
and I think they’re from New York. It’s
a copy of a French military costume which, unless I’m
mistaken, France uses in Algeria.”
“They’d certainly make
a magnificent target on the battlefield. A Kentucky
or Tennessee rifleman who’d miss such a target
would die of shame.”
“Maybe. But listen, they’re
singing! What do you think of that for a military
tune?”
Harry heard for the first time in
his life an extraordinary, choppy air, a rapid beat
that rose and fell abruptly, sending a powerful thrill
through his heart as he lay there in the bushes.
The words were nothing, almost without meaning, but
the tune itself was full of compelling power.
It set the feet marching toward triumphant battle.
“In Dixie’s land
I’ll take my stand,
Cinnamon seed and sandy
bottom,
Look away! Look
away!
Down South in Dixie!”
Three or four hundred voices took
up the famous battle song, as thrilling and martial
as the Marseillaise, then fresh and unhackneyed, and
they sang it with enthusiasm and fire, officers joining
with the men. It was a singular fact that Harry
should first hear Northern troops singing the song
which was destined to become the great battle tune
of the South.
“What is it?” whispered Harry.
“It’s called Dixie.
They say it was written by a man in New York for a
negro minstrel show. I suppose they sing it in
anticipation, meaning that they will soon be in the
heart of Dixie, which is the South, our South.”
“I don’t think those baggy
red legs will ever march far into our South,”
whispered Harry defiantly.
“It is to be seen. Between
you and me, Harry, I’m convinced there is no
triumphant progress ahead for either North or South.
Ah, another force is coming and it’s cavalry!
Don’t you hear the hoof-beats, Harry?”
Harry heard them distinctly and he
and his comrade lay more closely than ever in the
bushes, because the horsemen, a numerous body, as the
heavy tread indicated, were passing very near.
The two lads presently saw them riding four abreast
toward the campfire, and Harry surmised that they
had been scouting in strong force toward the Southern
front. They were large men, deep with tan and
riding easily. Harry judged their number at
two hundred, and the tail of the company would pass
alarmingly near the bushes in which his comrade and
he lay.
“Don’t you think we’d
better creep back?” he whispered to St. Clair.
“Some of them taking a short cut may ride right
upon us.”
“Yes, it’s time to make ourselves scarce.”
They turned back, going as rapidly
as they dared, but that which Harry had feared came
to pass. The rear files of the horsemen, evidently
intending to go to the other side of the camp, rode
through the low bushes. Four of them passed
so near the boys that they caught in the moonlight
a glimpse of the two stooping figures.
“Who is there? Halt!”
sharply cried one of them, an officer. But St.
Clair cried also:
“Run, Harry! Run for your life, and keep
to the bushes!”
The two dashed at utmost speed down
the strip of bushes and they heard the thunder of
horses’ hoofs in the open on either flank.
A half dozen shots were fired and the bullets cut
leaves and twigs about them. They heard the Northern
men shouting: “Spies! Spies!
After them! Seize them!”
Harry in the moment of extreme danger
retained his presence of mind: “To the
cornfield, Arthur!” he cried to his comrade.
“The fence is staked and ridered, and their
horses can’t jump it. If they stop to pull
it down they will give us time to get away!”
“Good plan!” returned
St. Clair. “But we’d better bend
down as we run. Those bullets make my flesh creep!”
A fresh volley was sent into the bushes,
but owing to the wise precaution of bending low, the
bullets went over their heads, although Harry felt
his hair rising up to meet them. In two or three
minutes they were at the fence, and they went over
it almost like birds. Harry heard two bullets
hit the rails as they leaped they were in
view then for a moment but they merely increased
his speed, as he and St. Clair darted side by side
through the corn, bending low again.
They heard the horsemen talking and
swearing at the barrier, and then they heard the beat
of hoofs again.
“They’ll divide and send
a force around the field each way!” said St.
Clair.
“And some of them will dismount
and pursue us through it on foot!”
“We can distance anybody on
foot. Harry, when I heard those bullets whistling
about me I felt as if I could outrun a horse, or a
giraffe, or an antelope, or anything on earth!
And thunder, Harry, I feel the same way now!”
Bullets fired from the fence made
the ploughed land fly not far from them, and they
lengthened their stride. Harry afterward said
that he did not remember stepping on that cornfield
more than twice. Fortunately for them the field,
while not very wide, extended far to right and left,
and the pursuing horsemen were compelled to make a
great circuit.
Before the thudding hoofs came near
they were over the fence again, and, still with wonderful
powers of flight, were scudding across the country
toward their own lines. They came to one of the
clusters of trees and dashing into it lay close, their
hearts pounding. Looking back they dimly saw
the horsemen, riding at random, evidently at a loss.
“That was certainly close,”
gasped St. Clair. “I’m not going
on any more scouts unless I’m ordered to do
so.”
“Nor I,” said Harry.
“I’ve got enough for one night at least.
I suppose I’ll never forget those men with
the red bags in place of breeches, and that tune,
‘Dixie.’ As soon as I get my breath
back I’m going to make a bee line for our own
army.”
“And when you make your bee
line another just as fast and straight will run beside
it.”
They rested five minutes and then
fled for the brook and their own little detachment
behind it.