Harry and Dalton were aroused before
daylight by Colonel Peyton of Lee’s staff, with
instructions to mount at once, and join a strong detachment,
ready to go ahead and clear a way. Sherburne’s
troop would lead. The Invincibles, for whom mounts
had been obtained, would follow. There were fragments
of other regiments, the whole force amounting to about
fifteen hundred men, under the command of Sherburne,
who had been raised the preceding afternoon to the
rank of Colonel, and whose skill and valor were so
well known that such veterans as Colonel Talbot and
Lieutenant Colonel St. Hilaire were glad to serve under
him. Harry and Dalton would represent the commander-in-chief,
and would return whenever Colonel Sherburne thought
fit to report to him.
Harry was glad to go. While
he had his periods of intense thought, and his character
was serious, he was like his great ancestor, essentially
a creature of action. His blood flowed more swiftly
with the beat of his horse’s hoofs, and his
spirits rose as the free air of the fields and forests
rushed past him. Moreover he was extremely anxious
to see what lay ahead. If barriers were there
he wanted to look upon them. If the Union cavalry
were trying to keep them from laying bridges across
the Potomac he wanted to help drive them away.
Harry and Dalton had a right as aides
and messengers of Lee to ride with Sherburne, but
before they joined him they rode among the Invincibles,
who were in great feather, because they too, for the
time being, rode, and toiled in neither dust nor mud.
“Colonel Sherburne may think
a good deal of his own immediate troop,” said
St. Clair to Harry, “but if the men of the Invincibles
could achieve so much on foot they’ll truly
deserve their name on horseback. Where is this
enemy of ours? Lead us to him.”
“You’ll find him soon
enough,” said Harry. “You South Carolina
talkers have learned many times that the Yankees will
fight.”
“Yes, Harry, I admit it freely.
But you must admit on your part that the South Carolinians
will fight as well as talk, although at present most
of the South Carolinians in this regiment are Virginians.”
“But not our colonel and lieutenant-colonel,”
said Happy Tom. “Real old South Carolina
still leads.”
“May they always lead!”
said Harry heartily, looking at the two gray figures.
“Tell Colonel Sherburne,”
said Happy Tom, who was in splendid spirits, “that
we congratulate him on his promotion and are ready
to obey him without question.”
“All right. He’ll
be glad to know that he has your approval.”
“He might have the approval
of worse men. I feel surging within me the talents
of a great general, but I’m too young to get
’em recognized.”
“You’ll have to wait until
the sections are not fighting each other, but are
united against a common foe. But meanwhile I’ll
tell Colonel Sherburne that if he gets into a tight
pinch not to lose heart as you are here.”
Saluting Colonel Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel
St. Hilaire, Harry and Dalton rode to the head of
the column, where Sherburne led. They ate their
breakfast on horseback, and went swiftly down a valley
in the general direction of the Potomac. The
dawn had broadened into full morning, clear and bright,
save for a small cloud that hung low in the southwest,
which Sherburne noticed with a frown.
“That’s a little cloud
and it looks innocent,” he said to Harry, “but
I don’t like it.”
“Why not?”
“Because in the ten minutes
that I’ve been watching it I’ve been able
to notice growth. I’m weather-wise and
we may have more rain. More rain means a higher
Potomac. A higher Potomac means more difficulty
in crossing it. More difficulty in crossing
it means more danger of our destruction, and our destruction
would mean the end of the Confederacy.”
He spoke with deadly earnestness as
he continued to look at the tiny dusky spot on the
western sky. Harry had a feeling of awe.
Again he realized that such mighty issues could turn
upon a single hair. The increase or decrease
of that black splotch might mean the death or life
of the Confederacy. As he rode he watched it.
His heart sank slowly. The little
baby cloud, looking so harmless, was growing.
He said to himself in anger that it was not, but he
knew that it was. Black at the center, it radiated
in every direction until it became pale gray at the
edges, and by and by, as it still spread, it gave
to the southwest an aspect that was distinctly sinister.
Sherburne shook his head and the gravity
of his face increased. As the cloud grew alarm
grew with it in his mind.
“Maybe it will pass,” said Harry hopefully.
“I don’t think so.
It’s not moving away. It just hangs there
and grows and grows. You’re a woodsman,
Harry, and you ought to feel it. Don’t
you think the atmosphere has changed?”
“I didn’t have the courage
to say so until you asked me, but it’s damper.
If I were posing as a prophet I should say that we’re
going to have rain.”
“And so should I. Usually at
this period of the year in our country we want rain,
but now we dread it like a pestilence. At any
other time the Potomac could rise or fall, whenever
it pleased, for all I cared, but now it’s life
and death.”
“Our doubts are decided and
we’ve lost. Look, sir the whole southwest
is dark now!”
“And here come the first drops!”
Sherburne sent hurried orders among
the men to keep their ammunition and weapons dry,
and then they bent their heads to the storm which would
beat almost directly in their faces. Soon it
came without much preliminary thunder and lightning.
The morning that had been warm turned cold and the
rain poured hard upon them. Most of the horsemen
were wet through in a short time, and they shivered
in their sodden uniforms, but it was a condition to
which they were used, and they thought little of themselves
but nearly all the while of the Potomac.
Few words were spoken. The only
sounds were the driving of the rain and the thud of
many hoofs in the mud. Harry often saw misty
figures among the trees on the hills, and he knew
that they were watched by hostile eyes as the Northern
armies in Virginia, were always watched with the same
hostility. It was impossible for Lee’s
men to make any secret march. The population,
intensely loyal to the Union, promptly carried news
of it to Meade or his generals.
Twice he pointed out the watchers
to Sherburne who merely shrugged his shoulders.
“I might send out men and cut
off a few of them,” he said, “but for what
good? Hundreds more would be left and we’d
merely be burdened with useless prisoners. Here’s
a creek ahead, Harry, and look how muddy and foamy
it is! It’s probably raining harder higher
up in the hills than it is here, and all these creeks
and brooks go to swell the Potomac.”
The swift water rose beyond their
stirrups and there was a vast splashing as fifteen
hundred men rode through the creek. It was a
land of many streams, and a few miles farther on they
crossed another, equally swollen and swift.
They had hoped that the rain, like
the sudden violence of a summer shower, would pass
soon, but the skies remained a solid gray and it settled
into a steady solemn pour, cold and threatening, and
promising to continue all day long. They could
see that every stream they crossed was far above its
normal mark, and the last hope that they might find
the Potomac low enough for fording disappeared.
The watchers on the hills were still
there, despite the rain, but they did no sharpshooting.
Nor did the Southern force do damage to anybody or
anything, as it passed. Near noon Sherburne resolved
to build a fire in a cove protected by cliffs and
heavy timber, and give his men warm food lest they
become dispirited.
It was a task to set the wet wood,
but the men of his command, used to forest life, soon
mastered it. Then they threw on boughs and whole
tree trunks, until a great bonfire blazed and roared
merrily, thrusting out innumerable tongues of red
and friendly flame.
“Is there anything more beautiful
than a fine fire at such a time?” said St. Clair
to Harry. “As it blazes and eats into the
wood it crackles and those crackling sounds are words.”
“What do the words say?”
“They say, ’Come here
and stand before me. So long as you respect me
and don’t come too close I’ll do you nothing
but good. I’ll warm you and I’ll
dry you. I’ll drive the wet from your skin
and your clothes, and I’ll chase the cold out
of your body and bones. I’ll take hold
of your depressed and sunken heart and lift it up
again. Where you saw only gray and black I’ll
make you see gold and red. I’ll warm and
cook your food for you, giving you fresh life and
strength. With my crackling coals and my leaping
flames I’ll change your world of despair into
a world of hope.’”
“Hear! Hear!” said
Happy Tom. “Arthur has turned from a sodden
soldier into a giddy poet! Is any more poetry
left in the barrel, Arthur?”
“Plenty, but I won’t turn
on the tap again to-day. I’ve translated
for you. I’ve shown you where beauty and
happiness lie, and you must do the rest for yourself.”
They crowded about the huge fire which
ran the entire length of the cove, and watched the
cooks who had brought their supplies on horseback.
Great quantities of coffee were made, and they had
bacon and hard biscuits.
Although the rain still reached them
in the cove they forgot it as they ate the good food any
food was good to them and drank cup after
cup of hot coffee. Youthful spirits rose once
more. It wasn’t such a bad day after all!
It had rained many times before and people still lived.
Also, the Potomac had risen many times before, but
it always fell again. They were riding to clear
the way for Lee’s invincible army which could
go wherever it wanted to go.
“Men on horseback looking at
us!” hailed Happy Tom. “About fifty
on a low hill on our right. Look like Yankee
cavalrymen. Wonder what they take us for anyway!”
Harry, St. Clair, Langdon and Dalton
walked to the edge of the cove, every one holding
a cup of hot coffee in his hand. Sherburne was
already there and with his glasses was examining the
strange group, as well as he could through the sweeping
rain.
“A scouting party undoubtedly,”
he said, “but weather has made their uniforms
and ours look just about alike. It’s equally
certain though that they’re Yankees. No
troop of ours so small would be found here.”
Harry was also watching them through
glasses, and he took particular note of one stalwart
figure mounted upon a powerful horse. The distance
was too great to recognize the face, but he knew the
swing of the broad shoulders. It was Shepard
and once more he had the uneasy feeling winch the
man always inspired in him. He appeared and reappeared
with such facility, and he was so absolutely trackless
that he had begun to appear to him as omniscient.
Of course the man knew all about Sherburne’s
advance and could readily surmise its purpose.
“They’re an impudent lot
to sit there staring at us in that supercilious manner,”
said Colonel Talbot. “Shall I take the
Invincibles, sir, and teach them a lesson?”
Sherburne smiled and shook his head.
“No, Colonel,” he said,
“although I thank you for the offer. They’d
melt away before you and we’d merely waste our
energies. Let them look as much as they please,
and now that the boys have eaten their bread and bacon
and drunk their coffee, and are giants again, we’ll
ride on toward the Potomac.”
“Do we reach it to-day, sir?” asked Colonel
Talbot.
“Not before to-morrow afternoon,
even if we should not be interrupted. This is
the enemy’s country and we may run at any time
into a force as large as our own if not larger.”
“Thank you for the information,
Colonel Sherburne. My ignorance of geography
may appear astonishing to you, although we had to study
it very hard at West Point. But I admit my weakness
and I add, as perhaps some excuse, that I have lately
devoted very little attention to the Northern states.
It did not seem worth my time to spend much study
on the rivers, and creeks and mountains of what is
to be a foreign country although I may
never be able to think of John Carrington and many
other of my old friends in the army as the foreigners
they’re sure to become. Has the thought
ever occurred to you, Colonel, that by our victories
we’re making a tremendous lot of foreigners
in America?”
“It has, Colonel Talbot, but
I can’t say that the thought has ever been a
particularly happy one.”
“It’s the Yankees who
are being made into foreigners,” said Lieutenant-Colonel
St. Hilaire. “The gallant Southern people,
of course, remain what they are.”
“They’re going,”
said Harry. “They’ve seen enough
of us.”
The distant troop disappeared over
the crest of the hill. Harry had noticed that
Shepard led the way as if he were the ruling spirit,
but he did not consider it necessary to say anything
to the others about him. The trumpet blew and
Sherburne’s force, mounting, rode away from the
cove. Harry cast one regretful glance back at
the splendid fire which still glowed there, and then
resigned himself to the cold and rain.
They did not stop again until far
in the night. The rain ceased, but the whole
earth was sodden and the trees on the low ridge, on
which Sherburne camped, dripped with water.
Spies might be all around them, but for the sake of
physical comfort and the courage that he knew would
come with it, he ordered another big fire built.
Vigilant riflemen took turns in beating up the forests
and fields for possible enemies, but the young officers
once more enjoyed the luxury of the fire. Their
clothing was dried thoroughly, and their tough and
sinewy frames recovered all their strength and elasticity.
“To enjoy being dry it is well
to have been wet,” said Dalton sententiously.
“That’s just like you,
you old Presbyterian,” said Happy Tom.
“I suppose you’ll argue next that you
can’t enjoy Heaven unless you’ve first
burned in the other place for a thousand years.”
“There may be something in that,”
said Dalton gravely, “although the test, of
course, would be an extremely severe one.”
“I know which way you’re headed, George.”
“Then tell me, because I don’t know myself.”
“As soon as this war is over
you’ll enter the ministry, and no sin will get
by you, not even those nice little ones that all of
us like to forgive.”
“Maybe you’re right, Happy,
and if I do go into the ministry I shall at once begin
long and earnest preparation for the task which would
necessarily be the most difficult of my life.”
“And may I make so bold as to
inquire what it is, George?”
“Your conversion, Happy.”
Langdon grinned.
“But why do you want to convert me, George?
I’m perfectly happy as I am.”
“For your own well being, Tom.
Your happiness is nothing to me, but I want to make
you good.”
Both laughed the easy laugh of youth,
but Harry looked long at Dalton. He thought that
he detected in him much of the spirit of Stonewall
Jackson, and that here was one who had in him the makings
of a great minister. The thought lingered with
him.
St. Clair was carefully smoothing
out his uniform and brushing from it the least particle
of mud. His first preoccupation always asserted
itself at the earliest opportunity, and in a very short
time he was the neatest looking man in the entire
force. Harry, although he often jested with
him about it, secretly admired this characteristic
of St. Clair’s.
“You boys sleep while you can,”
said Sherburne, “because we can’t afford
to linger in this region. Our safety lies in
rapid marching, giving the enemy no chance to gather
a large force and trap us. Make the best of
your time because we’re up and away an hour after
midnight.”
The young officers were asleep within
ten minutes, but the vigilant riflemen patrolled the
country in a wide circuit about them. Sherburne
himself, although worn by hard riding, slept but little.
Anxiety kept his eyes open. He knew that his
task to find a passage for the army across the swollen
Potomac was of the utmost importance and he meant to
achieve it. He understood to the full the dangerous
position in which the chief army of the Confederacy
stood. His own force might be attacked at any
moment by overwhelming numbers and be cut off and destroyed
or captured, but he also knew the quality of the men
he led, and he believed they were equal to any task.
As he sat by the fire thinking somberly,
a figure in the brush no great distance away was watching
him. Shepard, the spy, in the darkness had passed
with ease between the sentinels, using the skill of
an Indian in stalking or approaching, and now, lying
well hidden, almost flat upon his stomach, he surveyed
the camp. He looked at Sherburne, sitting on
a log and brooding, and he made out Harry’s
figure wrapped in a blanket and lying with his feet
to the fire.
Shepard’s mind was powerfully
affected. An intense patriot, something remote
and solitary in his nature had caused him to undertake
this most dangerous of all trades, to which he brought
an intellectual power and comprehension that few spies
possess. As Harry had discovered long since,
he was a most uncommon man.
Now Shepard as he gazed at this little
group felt no hatred for them or their men.
He had devoted his life to the task of keeping the
Union intact. His work must be carried out in
obscure ways. He could never hope for material
reward, and if he perished it would be in some out-of-the-way
corner, perhaps at the end of a rope, a man known to
so few that there would be none to forget him.
And yet his patriotism was so great and of such a
fine quality that he viewed his enemies around the
fire as his brethren. He felt confident that
the armies of the North would bring them back into
the Union, and when that occurred they must come as
Americans on an equal footing with other Americans.
They could not be in the Union and not of it.
But Shepard’s feeling for his
official enemies would not keep him from acting against
them with all the skill, courage and daring that he
possessed in such supreme measure. He knew that
it was Sherburne’s task to open a way for the
Army of Northern Virginia to the Potomac and to find
a ford, or, in cooperation with some other force, to
build a bridge. It was for him to defeat the
plan if he could.
While the rain all the day before
had brought gloom to the hearts of Sherburne and his
men it had filled his with joy, as he thought of the
innumerable brooks and creeks that were pouring their
swollen waters into the Potomac, already swollen too.
He meant now to follow Sherburne’s force, see
what plan it would attempt, what point, perhaps, it
would select for the bridge, and then bring the Union
brigades in haste to defeat it.
It is said that men often feel when
they are watched, although the watcher is invisible,
but it was not so in Sherburne’s case.
He did not in the least suspect the presence of Shepard
or of any foe, and the spy, after he had seen all
he wished, withdrew, with the same stealth that had
marked his coming.
An hour after midnight all were awakened
and they rode away. The next day they reached
the Potomac near Williamsport, where their pontoon
bridge had been destroyed, and looked upon the wide
stream of the Potomac, far too deep for fording.
“If General Lee is attacked
on the banks of this river by greatly superior forces,”
said Sherburne, “he’ll have no time to
build bridges. If we didn’t happen to be
victorious our forces would have to scatter into the
mountains, where they could be hunted down, man by
man.”
“But such a thing as that is
unthinkable, sir,” said Harry. “We
may not win always, but here in the East we never
lose. Remember Antietam and the river at our
back.”
“Right you are, Harry,”
said Sherburne more cheerfully. “The general
will get us out of this, and here is where we must
cross. The river may run down enough in two
or three days to permit of fording. God grant
that it will!”
“And so say I!” repeated Harry with emphasis.
“I mean to hold this place for our army,”
continued Sherburne.
“A reserved seat, so to speak.”
“Yes, that’s it.
We must keep the country cleared until our main force
comes up. It shouldn’t be difficult.
I haven’t heard of any considerable body of
Union troops between us and the river.”
They made camp rapidly in a strong
position, built their fires for cooking, set their
horses to grazing and awaited what would come.
It was a dry, clear night, and Harry, who had no duties,
save to ride with a message at the vital moment, looked
at once for his friends, the Invincibles.
St. Clair met him and held up a warning
hand, while Happy touched his lip with his finger.
Before the double injunction of silence and caution,
Harry whispered:
“What’s happened?”
“A tragedy,” replied St. Clair.
“And a victory, too,” said Happy Tom.
“I don’t understand,” said Harry.
“Then look and you will,” said St. Clair.
He pointed to a small clear space
in which Colonel Leonidas Talbot and Lieutenant-Colonel
Hector St. Hilaire sat on their blankets facing each
other with an empty cracker box between them, upon
which their chess men were spread. The firelight
plainly revealed a look of dismay upon the face of
Colonel Talbot, and with equal plainness a triumphant
expression upon that of Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire.
“Colonel Talbot has lost his
remaining knight,” whispered St. Clair.
“I don’t know how it came about, but when
the event occurred we heard them both utter a cry.
Listen!”
“I fail even yet, Hector, to
see just how it occurred.” said Colonel Talbot.
“But it has occurred, Leonidas,
and that’s the main thing. A general in
battle does not always know how he is whipped, but
the whipping hurts just as much.”
“You should not show too much
elation over your triumph, Hector. Remember that
he laughs best who laughs last.”
“I take my laugh whenever I
can, Leonidas, because no one knows who is going to
laugh last. It may be that he who laughs in the
present will also laugh at the end. What do
you mean by that move, Leonidas?”
“That to you is a mystery, Hector.
It’s like one of Stonewall Jackson’s
flanking marches, and in due time the secret will be
revealed with terrible results.”
“Pshaw, Leonidas, you can’t
frighten a veteran like me. That for your move,
and here’s mine in reply.”
The two gray heads bent lower over
the board as the colonels made move after move.
The youths standing in the shadow of the trees watched
until the second time that night the two uttered a
simultaneous cry. But they were very different
in quality. Now Colonel Talbot’s expressed
victory and Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire’s
consternation.
“Your bishop, Hector!”
exclaimed Colonel Talbot. “Pious and able
gentleman as he is, an honor to his cloth, he is nevertheless
my captive.”
“I admit that it was most unexpected,
Leonidas. You have matched my victory with one
of yours. It was indeed most skillful and I don’t
yet see what led to it.”
“Did I not warn you a little
while ago that you couldn’t frighten me?
I prepared a trap for you, and thus I rise from defeat
to victory.”
“At any rate we are about even
on the evening’s work, Leonidas, and we have
made more progress than for the whole six months preceding.
It seems likely now that we can finish our game soon.”
A sudden crash of rifle fire toward
the east and from a point not distant told them no.
They rose to their feet, but they put the chessmen
away very deliberately, while the young officers hastened
to their posts. The fire continued and spread
about them in a half circle, accompanied now and then
by the deeper note of a light field gun. Sherburne
made his dispositions rapidly. All the men remained
on foot, but a certain number were told off to hold
the horses in the center of the camp.
“We’re attacked by a large
force,” said Sherburne, “Our scouts gave
us warning in time. Evidently they wish to drive
us away from here because this will be the ford in
case the river falls in time.”
“Then you look for a sharp fight?”
“Without question. And
remember that you’re to avoid all risk if you
can. It’s not your business to get shot
here, but it is your business, and your highly important
business, to ride back to General Lee with the news
of what’s happening. In order to do that
it’s necessary for you to remain alive.”
“I obey orders,” said Harry reluctantly.
“Of course you do. Keep
back with the men who are holding the horses.
That fire is growing fast! I’m glad we
were able to find a camp so defensible as this hill.”
He hurried away to watch his lines
and Harry remained at his station near the horses,
where Dalton was compelled by the same responsibility
to stay with him. It was the first time that
Harry had been forced to remain a mere spectator of
a battle raging around him, and while not one who
sought danger for danger’s sake, it was hard
work to control himself and remain quiet and unmoved.
“I suspect they’re trying
to cut us off completely from our own army,”
he said to Dalton.
“Seems likely to me, too,”
said Dalton. “Wipe us out here, and hold
the river for themselves. Our scouts assured
us that there was no large force of the enemy in this
region. It must have been gathered in great
haste.”
“In whatever way it was gathered,
it’s here, that’s sure.”
There was a good moon now, and, using
his glasses, Harry saw many details of the battle.
The attack was being pressed with great vigor and
courage. He saw in a valley numerous bodies of
cavalry, firing their carbines, and he saw two batteries,
of eight light guns each, move forward for a better
range. Soon their shells were exploding near
the hill on which Harry stood, and the fire of the
rifles, unbroken now, grew rapidly in volume.
But the men under Sherburne, youthful
though most of them might be, were veterans.
They knew every trick of war, and columns of infantry
swept forward to meet the attack, preceded by the skirmishers,
who took heavy toll of the foe.
“If they’d been able to
make it a surprise they might have rushed us,”
said Harry.
“Nobody catches Sherburne sleeping,” said
Dalton.
“That’s true, and because
they can’t they won’t be able to overcome
him here. Now there go our rifles! Listen
to that crash. I fancy that about a thousand
were fired together, and they weren’t fired for
nothing.”
“No,” said Dalton, “but
the Yankees don’t give way. You can see
by their line of fire that they’re still coming.
Look there! A powerful body of horse is charging!”
It was unusual to see cavalry attack
at night, and the spectacle was remarkable, as the
moonlight fell on the raised sabers. But the
defiant rebel yell, long and fierce, rose from the
thicket, and, as the rifles crashed, the entire front
of the charging column was burned away, as if by a
stroke of lightning. But after a moment of hesitation
they came on, only to ride deeper into a rifle fire
which emptied saddles so fast that they were at last
compelled to turn and gallop away.
“Brave men,” said Harry.
“A gallant charge, but it had to meet too many
Southern rifles, aimed by men who know how to shoot.”
“But their infantry are advancing
through that wood,” said Dalton. “Hear
them cheering above the rifle fire!”
The Northern shout rang through the
forest, and the rebel yell, again full of defiance,
replied. The cavalry had been driven off, but
the infantry and artillery were far from beaten.
The sixteen guns of the two batteries were massed
on a hill and they began to sweep the Southern lines
with a storm of shells and shrapnel. The forest
and the dark were no protection, because the guns
searched every point of the Southern line with their
fire. Sherburne’s men were forced to give
ground, before cannon served with such deadly effect.
“What will the colonel do?”
asked Dalton. “The big guns give the Yankees
the advantage.”
“He’ll go straight to
the heart of the trouble,” said Harry.
“He’ll attack the guns themselves.”
He did not know actually in what manner
Sherburne would proceed, but he was quite sure that
such would be his course. The wary Southern leader
instantly detailed a swarm of his best riflemen to
creep through the woods toward the cannon. In
a few minutes the gunners themselves were under the
fire of hidden marksmen who shot surpassingly well.
The gunners, the cannoneers, the spongers, the rammers
and the ammunition passers were cut down with deadly
certainty.
The captain of the guns, knowing that
the terrible rifle fire was coming from the thickets,
deluged the woods and bushes with shells and shrapnel,
but the riflemen lay close, hugging the ground, and
although a few were killed and more wounded, the vast
majority crept closer and closer, shooting straight
and true in the moonlight. The fire from the
batteries became scattered and wild. Their crews
were cut down so fast that not enough men were left
to work the guns, and their commander reluctantly
gave the order to withdraw to a less exposed position.
“Rifles triumphant over artillery,”
said Harry, who studied everything through his glasses;
“but of course the dusk helped the riflemen.”
“That’s true,” said
Dalton, “but it takes good men like Sherburne
to use the favoring chances. Now our boys are
charging!”
The tremendous rebel yell swelled
through the forest, and the Southern infantry rushed
to the attack. Harry saw that the charge was
successful, and his ears told him so too. The
firing moved further and further away, and soon declined
in volume.
“They’ve been beaten off,” said
Harry.
“At least for the time,”
said Dalton, “but I’ve an idea they’ll
hang on our front and may attack again in a day or
so.”
“How then are you and I to get
through and tell General Lee that this is the place
to bridge the Potomac, if it’s to be bridged
at all?”
Dalton shook his head.
“I don’t know,”
he replied, “and I won’t think about it
until Colonel Sherburne gives his orders.”
The sounds of battle died in the distant
woods. The last shot, whether from cannon or
rifle, was fired, and the Southern troops returned
to their positions, which they began to fortify strongly.
Sherburne appeared presently, his uniform cut by
bullets in two or three places, but his body untouched.
He drew Harry and Dalton aside, where their words
could not be heard by anybody else.
“You two,” he said, “were
to report to General Lee when I thought fit.
Well, the time has come; Harry, you go first, and,
at a suitable moment, George will follow. We
have news of surpassing importance. We took
a number of prisoners in that battle and we were also
lucky enough to rescue several of our men who had
been held as captives. We’ve learned from
them that General Meade, after making up his mind to
pursue, followed straight behind us for a while, but
he has now turned and gone southward in the direction
of Frederick. He will cross South Mountain,
advance toward Sharpsburg, and attempt to smash us
here, with our backs to this swollen river.
Why, some of the Federal leaders consider the Army
of Northern Virginia as good as destroyed already!”
He spoke with angry emphasis.
“But it isn’t,” said Harry.
“No, it isn’t. Doubtless
General Lee will learn from scouts of his own of General
Meade’s flanking movement, but we mustn’t
take the chance. Moreover, we must tell him that
this is the place for our army to cross. If the
river runs down in two or three days we’ll have
a ford here.”
“I’m ready to go at any
moment,” said Harry. “Night helping
me, I may be able to ride through the lines of our
enemies out there.”
“No, Harry, you must not go
that way. They’re so vigilant that you
would not have any possible chance. Nor can
you ride. You must leave your horse behind.”
“What way then must I go, sir?”
“By the river. We have
gathered up a few small boats, used at the crossing
here. You can row, can’t you?”
“Fairly well, sir.”
“’Twill do, because you’re
not to stay in the boat long. I want you to
drop down the stream until you’re well beyond
the Federal lines. Then leave the boat and strike
out across the country for General Lee. You know
the way. You can buy or seize a horse, and you
must not fail.”
“I will not fail,” said Harry confidently.
“You’ll succeed if anybody
will, and now you must be off. Your pistols
are loaded, Harry? You may have to use them.”
They did not delay a minute, going
down the shelving shore to the Potomac, where a man
held a small boat against the bank.
“Get in, Harry,” said
Sherburne. “You’d better drop down
three or four miles, at least. Good-by and good
luck.”
He shook hands with his colonel and
Dalton, took the oars and pulled far out into the
stream.