Harry did not know how the woods had
been set on fire, and he never knew. He did not
credit it to the intent of Michael and his comrades,
but he thought it likely that some of these men, ignorant
of the forest, had built a campfire. His first
thought was of himself, and his second was regret
that so fine a stretch of timber should be burned over
for nothing.
But he knew that he must hurry.
Nor could he choose his way. He must get out
of that forest even if he ran directly into the middle
of a Union brigade. The wind was bringing the
fire fast. It leaped from one tree to another,
despite the recent rains, gathering volume and power
as it came. Sparks flew in showers, and fragments
of burned twigs rained down. Twice Harry’s
face was scorched lightly and he had a fear that one
of the blazing twigs would set his hair on fire.
He made another effort, and ran a little faster,
knowing full well that his life was at stake.
The fire was like a huge beast, and
it reached out threatening red claws to catch him.
He was like primeval man, fleeing from one of the
vast monsters, now happily gone from the earth.
He was conscious soon that another not far from him
was running in the same way, a man in a faded blue
uniform who had dropped his rifle in the rapidity of
his flight.
Harry kept one eye on him but the
stranger did not see him until they were nearly out
of the wood. Then Harry, with a clear purpose
in view, veered toward him. He saw that they
would escape from the fire. Open fields showed
not far ahead, and while the sparks were numerous and
sometimes scorched, the roaring red monster behind
them would soon be at the end of his race. He
could not follow them into the open fields.
When the two emerged from the forest
Harry was not more than fifteen feet from the stranger,
who evidently took him for a friend and who was glad
to have a comrade at such a time. They raced
across fields in which the wheat had been cut, and
then sank down four or five hundred yards from the
fire, which was crackling and roaring in the woods
with great violence, and sending up leaping flames.
“I was glad enough to get out
of that. Do you think the rebels set it on fire?”
“I don’t think so, but
I was as pleased as you to escape from it, Mr. Haskell.”
“Why, how did you know my name?”
exclaimed the man in wonder.
“Why should I forget you?
I’ve seen you often enough. Your name
is John Haskell and you belong to the Fifth Pennsylvania.”
“That’s right, but I don’t seem
to recall you.”
“It takes a lot of us some time
to clear up our minds wholly after such a battle as
Gettysburg. In some ways I’ve been in a
sort of confused state myself. I dare say you’ve
seen me often enough.”
“That’s likely.”
“Pity you had your horse shot
under you, Mr. Haskell. A man who is carrying
important messages at a time like this can’t
do very well without his horse.”
“How did you know I’d lost my horse?”
“Oh, I’m a mind reader.
I can tell you a lot now. You carry your dispatch
in the left-hand pocket of your waistcoat, just over
your heart. And it hasn’t been long, either,
since you lost your horse, perhaps not more than an
hour.”
Haskell stared at him, but Harry’s
face was innocent. Nevertheless he had read
Haskell’s name and regiment on his canteen, cut
there with his own knife. It was a mere guess
that he was a dispatch bearer, but he had located
the dispatch, because at the mention of the word “message”
the man’s hand had involuntarily gone to his
left breast to see if the dispatch were still there.
Boots with little dirt on them indicated that he
had been riding.
“A mind reader!” said
Haskell, with suspicion. “What business
has a mind reader in this war?”
“He could be of enormous value.
If he were a real mind reader he could tell his general
exactly what the opposing general intended to do.
I’m employed at a gigantic salary for that particular
purpose.”
“I guess you’re trying
to be funny. Why do you carry both a rifle and
a shotgun?”
“In order to hit the target
with one, if the other misses. I always use
the rifle first, because if the bullet doesn’t
get home the shotgun, spreading its charge over a
much wider area, is likely to do something.”
“Now I know you’re trying
to be funny. As I’m going about my business
as fast as I can, I’ll leave you here.”
“I like you so well that I can’t
bear to see you go. Don’t move. My
rifle covers your heart exactly and you are not more
than ten feet away. I shall have no possible
need of the shotgun. Keep your hands away from
your belt. You’re in a dangerous position,
Mr. Haskell.”
“I believe you’re an infernal rebel.”
“Take out the objectionable
adjective ‘infernal’ and you’re right.
Keep those hands still, I tell you.”
“What do you want?”
“Your dispatches! Oh,
I must have ’em. Unbutton your coat and
waistcoat and hand ’em to me at once.
I hate to take human life, but war demands a terrible
service, and I mean what I say!”
His voice rang with determination.
The man slowly unbuttoned his waistcoat and took
out a folded dispatch.
“Put it on the ground in front
of you. That’s right, and don’t you
reach for it again. Now, lay your canteen beside
it!”
“What in thunder do you want
with my canteen? It’s empty!”
“I can fill it again.
This is a well watered country. That’s
right; put it beside the dispatch. Now you walk
about one hundred yards to the right with your back
to me. If you look around at all I fire, and
I’m a good marksman. Stand there ten minutes,
and then you can move on! That’s right!
Now march!”
The man walked away slowly and when
he had gone about half the distance Harry, picking
up the dispatch, took flight again across the fields.
Climbing a fence, he looked back and saw the figure
of John Haskell, standing motionless on a hill.
He knew that the man was not likely to remain in
that position more than half the allotted time.
It was certain that he would soon turn, despite the
risk, but Harry was already beyond his reach.
He leaped from the fence, crossed
another field and entered a wood. There he paused
among the trees and saw Haskell returning. But
when he had come a little distance, he shook his head
doubtfully, and then walked toward the north.
“A counsel of wisdom,”
chuckled Harry, who was going in quite another direction.
“I think I’ll read my dispatch now.”
He opened it and blessed his luck.
It was from Meade to Pleasanton, directing him to
cut in with all the cavalry he could gather on the
enemy’s flank. The Potomac was in great
flood and the Army of Northern Virginia could not
possibly cross. If it were harried to the utmost
by the Union cavalry the task of destroying it would
be much easier.
“So it would,” said Harry
to himself. “But Pleasanton won’t
get this dispatch. Providence has not deserted
me yet; and it’s true that fortune favors the
brave. I’m John Haskell of the Fifth Pennsylvania
and I can prove it.”
He had put the canteen over his shoulder
and the name upon it was a powerful witness in his
favor. The dispatch itself was another, and his
faded uniform told nothing.
Harry had passed through so much that
a reckless spirit was growing upon him, and he had
succeeded in so much that he believed he would continue
to succeed. Regretfully he threw the shotgun
away, as it would not appear natural for a messenger
to carry it and a rifle too.
He went forward boldly now, and, when
an hour later he saw a detachment of Union cavalry
in a road, he took no measures to avoid them.
Instead he went directly toward the horsemen and
hailed them in a loud voice. They stopped and
their leader, a captain, looked inquiringly at Harry,
who was approaching rapidly.
Harry held up both hands as a sign
that he was a friend, and called in a loud voice:
“I want a horse! And at once, if you please,
sir!”
He had noticed that three led horses
with empty saddles, probably the result of a brush
with the enemy, and he meant to be astride one of them
within a few minutes.
“You’re a cool one,”
said the captain. “You come walking across
the field, and without a word of explanation you say
you want a horse. Don’t you want a carriage
too?”
“I don’t need it.
But I must have a horse, Captain. I ride with
a message and it must be of great importance because
I was told to go with it at all speed and risk my
life for it. I’ve risked my life already.
My horse was shot by a band of rebels, but luckily
it was in the woods and I escaped on foot.”
As he spoke he craftily moved the
canteen around until the inscription showed clearly
in the bright sunlight. The quick eyes of the
captain caught it at once.
“You do belong to the Fifth
Pennsylvania,” he said. “Well, you’re
a long way from your regiment. It’s back
of that low mountain over there, a full forty miles
from here, I should say.”
Harry felt a throb of relief.
It was his only fear that these men themselves should
belong to the Fifth Pennsylvania, a long chance, but
if it should happen to go against him, fatal to all
his plans.
“I don’t want to join
my regiment,” he said. “I’m
looking for General Pleasanton.”
“General Pleasanton! What
can you happen to want with him?”
Harry gave the officer a wary and
suspicious look, and then his eyes brightened as if
he were satisfied.
“I told you I was riding with
a message,” he said, “and that message
is for General Pleasanton. It’s from General
Meade himself and it’s no harm for me to show
it to so good a patriot as you.”
“No, I think not,” said
the captain, flattered by the proof of respect and
confidence.
Harry took the letter from his pocket.
It had been sealed at first, but the warmth of the
original bearer’s body with a little help from
Harry later had caused it to come open.
“Look at that,” said Harry
proudly as he took out the paper.
The captain read it, and was mightily
impressed. He was, as Harry had surmised, a
thoroughly staunch supporter of the Union. He
would not only furnish this valiant messenger with
a good horse, but he would help him otherwise on his
way.
“Dexter,” he called to
an orderly, “bring the sorrel mare. She
was ridden by a good man, Mr. Haskell, but he met
a sharpshooter’s bullet. Jump up.”
Harry sprang into the saddle, and,
astride such a fine piece of horseflesh, he foresaw
a speedy arrival in the camp of General Lee.
“I’ll not only mount you,”
said the captain, “but we’ll see you on
the way. General Pleasanton is on Lee’s
left flank and, as our course is in that direction,
we’ll ride with you, and protect you from stray
rebel sharpshooters.”
Harry could have shouted aloud in
anger and disappointment. While the captain
trusted him fully, he would not be much more than a
prisoner, nevertheless.
“Thank you very much, Captain,”
he said, “but you needn’t trouble yourself
about me. Perhaps I’d better go on ahead.
One rides faster alone.”
“Don’t be afraid that
we’ll hold you back,” said the captain,
smiling. “We’re one of the hardest
riding detachments in General Pleasanton’s whole
cavalry corps, and we won’t delay you a second.
On the contrary, we know the road so well that we’ll
save you wandering about and losing time.”
Harry did not dare to say more.
And so Providence, which had been watching over him
so well, had decided now to leave him and watch over
the other fellow. But he had at least one consolation.
Pleasanton was on Lee’s flank and their ride
did not turn him from the line of his true objective.
Every beat of his horse’s hoofs would bring
him nearer to Lee. Invincible youth was invincibly
in the saddle again, and he said confidently to the
captain:
“Let’s start.”
“All right. You keep by
my side, Haskell. You appear to be brave and
intelligent and I want to ask you questions.”
The tone, though well meant, was patronizing,
but Harry did not resent it.
“This troop is made up of Massachusetts
men, and I’m from Massachusetts too,”
continued the captain. “My name is Lester,
and I had just graduated from Harvard when the war
began.”
“Good stock up there in Massachusetts,”
said Harry boldly, “but I’ve one objection
to you.”
“What’s that?”
“Everything wonderful in our
history was done by you. No chance was left
for anybody else.”
“Well, not everything, but almost
everything. Good old Massachusetts! As
Webster said, ‘There she stands!’”
“It was mostly New York and
Pennsylvania that stood at Gettysburg.”
“Yes, you did very well there.”
“Don’t you think, Captain,
that a nation or a state is often lucky in its possession
of writers?”
“I don’t catch your drift exactly.”
“I’ll make an illustration.
I’ve often wondered what were the Persian accounts
of Marathon and Thermopylae, of Salamis and Plataea.
Now most of our history has been written by Massachusetts
men.”
“And you insinuate that they
have glorified my state unduly?”
“The expression is a trifle
severe. Let’s say that they have dwelled
rather long upon the achievements of Massachusetts
and not so long upon those of New York and Pennsylvania.”
“Then let New York and Pennsylvania
go get great writers. No state can be truly
great without them. There’s another detachment
of ours just ahead, but we’ll talk to them only
a minute or two.”
The second detachment reported that
Pleasanton, with a heavy cavalry force, was about
six miles farther west and that there was a fair road
all the way. They should overtake him in an hour.
Harry’s heart beat hard.
Unless something happened within that hour he would
never reach Lee, and his brain began to work with extraordinary
activity. Plans passed in review before it as
rapidly as pictures on a film, but all were rejected.
He was in despair. They were trotting rapidly
down a smooth road. A quarter of an hour passed
and then a half-hour. A low bare hill appeared
immediately on their right, and Harry saw beyond it
the tops of trees.
“Captain Lester,” he said,
“suppose that you and I ride to the crest of
the hill. You have strong glasses, so have I,
and we may see something worth while. The men
will ride on, but we can easily overtake them.”
“Not a bad idea, Haskell,”
said the captain, still in that slightly patronizing
tone. “I judge by your speech that you’re
a well educated man, and you appear to think.”
They rode quickly to the summit, and
Lester, putting his glasses to his eyes, gazed westward
over a vast expanse of cultivated country. But
Harry looking immediately down the slope, saw the forest
that he wished.
Lester swept the glasses in a wide
circle, looking for Union troops. His own troop
was about a hundred yards ahead and the hoofbeats were
growing fainter. Then Harry’s courage almost
failed him, but necessity was instant and cruel.
Still he modified the blow, nor did he use any weapon,
save one that nature had given him.
“Look out!” he cried,
and as Lester turned in astonishment he struck him
on the point of the jaw. Even as his fist flashed
forward he held back a little and his full strength
was not in the blow.
Nevertheless it was sufficient to
strike Lester senseless, and he slid from his horse.
Harry caught him by the shoulder and eased him in
his fall. Then he lay stretched on his back
in the grass like one asleep, with his horse staring
at him. Harry knew that he would revive in a
minute or two, and with a “Farewell, Captain
Lester,” he galloped down the slope and into
the covering woods.
He knew that Lester’s men, finding
that they did not follow, would quickly come back,
and he raced his horse among the trees as fast as he
dared. A couple of miles between him and the
hill and he felt safe, at least so far as the troop
of Captain Lester was concerned. Fortune seemed
to have made him a favorite again, but he knew that
dangers were still as thick around him as leaves in
Vallombrosa.
He tied his horse, climbed a tree,
and used his glasses. Two miles to the west
the bright sun flashed on long lines of mounted men,
obviously the horsemen of Pleasanton. How was
he to get through that cavalry screen and reach Lee?
He did not see a way, but he knew that to find, one
must seek. His desire to get through, intense
as it always had been, was now doubled. He not
only carried the news to Lee about the possible ford,
but he also bore Meade’s dispatch to Pleasanton,
directing a movement which, if successful, must be
most dangerous to the Army of Northern Virginia.
He descended the tree and waited a
while in the forest. He found a spring at which
he drank, and he filled the canteen. It was a
precious canteen with the name of John Haskell engraved
upon it, and he meant that it should carry him through
all dangers into his camp. But he did not mean
to use it yet. If he rode into Pleasanton’s
ranks they would merely take his letter to the general,
and that would be the failure of his real mission.
Night was now not far distant, and,
concluding that he had a much better chance to run
the gantlet under its cover, he still waited in the
wood until the twilight came.
Wrapped in a coil of dangers he was
ready to risk anything. Quickness, resource
and boldness, of which the last had been most valuable,
had brought him so far, and, encouraged by success,
he rode forward full of confidence.
On his right was a small house standing
among the usual shade trees, and, approaching it without
hesitation, he spoke to a man who stood in the yard.
“Which way is General Pleasanton?” he
asked.
The man hesitated.
“I belong to the Fifth Pennsylvania,”
said Harry, pointing to the name on the canteen, still
visible in the twilight. The man’s eyes
brightened and he replied:
“Down there,” pointing toward the southwest.
“I’ve a message for him
and I don’t want to run into any of the rebel
raiders.”
“Then you keep away from there,” he said,
pointing due west.
“What’s the trouble in that direction?”
“Jim Hurley was here about an
hour ago. The whole country is terribly excited
about these big armies marching over it, and he said
that our cavalry was riding on fast. A lot of
it was ahead of the rebel army, but straight there
in the west some of the rebel horsemen had spread out
on their own flank. If you went that way in the
night you’d be sure to run right into a nest
of ’em.”
“So the Johnnies are west of
us, your friend Hurley said. Tell me again what
particular point I have to watch in order to keep away
from them.”
“Almost as straight west as
you can make it. A valley running east and west
cuts in there and it’s full of the rebels.
It’s the only place all along here where they
are.”
“And consequently the only place
for me to avoid. Thanks. Your information
may save me from capture. Good night.”
“Good night and good luck.”
Harry rode toward the southwest until
a dip in the valley hid him from possible view of
the man at the house. Then he turned and rode
due west, determined to reach as soon as possible
those “rebel raiders” in the valley, but
fully aware that he must yet use every resource of
skill, courage and patience.
The twilight turned into night, clear,
dry and bright. Unless it was raining in the
mountains the flood in the Potomac could not be increasing.
Here, at last, the conditions were all that he wished.
The captured haversack still contained plenty of food,
and, as he rode, he ate. He had learned long
ago that food was as necessary as weapons to a soldier,
and that one should eat when one could. Moreover,
he was always hungry.
He kept among trees wherever possible,
and, as the night grew, and the stars came out in
the dusky blue, he enjoyed the peace. Even though
he searched with his glasses he could not see soldiers
anywhere, although he knew they were in the hollows
and the forests. A pleasant breeze blew, and
an owl, reckless of armies, sent forth its lonesome
hoot.
But he kept his horse’s head
straight for the narrow valley where the “rebel
raiders” rode. He met presently a small
detachment of Connecticut men, but the sight of his
canteen and letter was sufficient for them. Again
he rode southwest, merely to turn due west once more,
after he had passed from their sight, and near the
head of the valley he encountered two men in blue
on horseback watching. They were alert, well-built
fellows and examined Harry closely, a process to which
long usage had reconciled him.
“I hear that the rebels are
down in that valley, comrade,” he said.
“So they are,” replied
the elder and larger of the men. “We’ve
got to ask you who you are and which way you’re
going.”
“John Haskell, Fifth Pennsylvania,
with dispatches from General Meade to General Pleasanton.
They’re tremendously important, too, and I’ve
got to be in a hurry.”
“More haste less speed.
You know the old saying. In a time like this
it’s sometimes better for a man to know where
he’s going than it is to get there, ’cause
he may arrive at the wrong place.”
“Good logic, comrade, but I
must hurry just the same. Which is my best way
to find General Pleasanton?”
“Southwest. But I’m
bound to tell you a few things first.”
“All right. What are they?”
“You and I must be kinsfolk.”
“How do you make that out?”
“Because my name is William
Haskell, and I belong to the Fifth Pennsylvania, the
same regiment that you do.”
“Is that so? It’s
strange that we haven’t met before. But
funny things happen in war.”
“So they do. Awfully funny.
Now my brother’s name is John Haskell, and
you happen to be carrying his canteen, but you’ve
changed looks a lot in the last few days, Brother
John.”
Haskell’s voice had been growing
more menacing, and Harry, with native quickness, was
ready to act. When he saw the man’s pistol
flash from his belt he went over the side of his horse
and the bullet whistled where his body had been.
His own rifle cracked in reply, but Haskell’s
horse, not he, took the bullet, and, screaming with
pain and fright, ran into the woods as the rider slipped
from his back.
Harry, realizing that his peril was
imminent and deadly, fired one of his pistols at the
second man, who fell from his horse, too badly wounded
in the shoulder to take any further part in the fight.
But Harry found in Haskell an opponent
worthy of all his skill and courage. The Union
soldier threw himself upon the ground and fired at
Harry’s horse, which instantly jerked the bridle
from his hand and fled as the other had done.
Harry dropped flat in the grass and leaves and listened,
his heart thumping.
But luck had favored him again.
He lay in a slight depression and any bullet fired
at him would be sure to go over him unless he raised
his head. He could not see his enemies, but
he could depend upon his wonderful power of hearing,
inherited and cultivated, which gave him an advantage
over his opponents.
He heard the wounded man groan ever
so lightly, and then the other whisper to him, “Are
you much hurt, Bill?” The reply came in a moment:
“My right shoulder is put out for the time, and
I can’t help you now.” Presently
he heard the slight sound of the other crawling toward
him. Evidently this Haskell was a fearless fellow,
bound to get him, and he called from the shadow in
which he lay.
“You’d better stop, Haskell!
I’ve got the best pair of ears in all this
region, and I hear you coming! Crawl another
step and you meet a bullet! But I want to tell
you first that your interesting brother John is all
right. I didn’t kill him. I merely
robbed him.”
“Robbed him of what?”
“Oh, of several things.”
“What things?”
“They don’t concern you, Haskell.
These are matters somewhat above you.”
“They are, are they? Well,
maybe they are, but I’m going to see that you
don’t get away with the proceeds of your robbery.”
Harry didn’t like his tone.
It was fierce and resolute, and he realized once
more that he had a man of quality before him.
If Haskell had behaved properly he would have withdrawn
with his wounded comrade. But then he was an
obstinate Yankee.
He raised up ever so little and glanced
across the intervening space, seeing the muzzle of
a rifle not many yards away. There could be no
doubt that Haskell was watchful and would continue
watching. He drew his head back again and said:
“Let’s call it a draw.
You go back to your army, Mr. Haskell, and I’ll
go back to mine.”
“Couldn’t think of it.
As a matter of fact, I’m with my army now;
that is, I’m in its lines, while you can’t
reach yours. All I’ve got to do is to
hold you here, and in the course of time some of our
people will come along and take you.”
“Do you think I’m worth so much trouble?”
“In a way it’s a sort
of personal affair with me. You admit having
robbed my brother, and I feel that I must avenge him.
He has been acting as a dispatch rider, and I can
make a pretty shrewd guess about what you took from
him. So I think I’ll stay here.”
Harry blamed himself bitterly for
his careless and unfortunate expressions. He
did not fear the result of a duel with this man, being
the master of woodcraft that he was, but he was losing
time, valuable time, time more precious than gold
and diamonds, time heavy with the fate of armies and
a nation. He grew furiously angry at everything,
and angriest at Haskell.
“Mr. Haskell,” he called,
“I’m getting tired of your society, and
I make you a polite request to go away.”
“Oh, no, you’re not tired.
You merely think you are, and I couldn’t consider
conceding to your request. It’s for your
good more than mine. My society is elevating
to any Johnny Reb.”
“Then I warn you that I may have to hurt you.”
“How about getting hurt yourself?”
Harry was silent. His acute
ears brought him the sound of Haskell moving a little
in his own particular hollow. The lonesome owl
hooted twice more, but there was no sound to betoken
the approach of Union troops in the forest.
The duel of weapons and wits would have to be fought
out alone by Haskell and himself.
He went over everything again and
again and he concluded that he must rely upon his
superior keenness of ear. He could hear Haskell,
but Haskell could not hear him, and there was Providence
once more taking him into favor. Summer clouds
began to drift before the moon, and many of the stars
were veiled. It was possible that Haskell’s
eyes also were not as keen as his own.
When the darkness increased, he began
to crawl from the little shallow. Despite extreme
precautions he made a slight noise. A pistol
flashed and a bullet passed over him. It made
his muscles quiver, but he called in a calm voice:
“Why did you do such a foolish
thing as that? You wasted a perfectly good bullet.”
“Weren’t you trying to
escape? I thought I heard a movement in the
grass.”
“Wasn’t thinking of such
a thing. I’m just waiting here to see what
you’ll do. Why don’t you come on
and attack?”
“I’m satisfied with things
as they are. I’ll hold you until morning
and then our men will be sure to come and pick you
up.”
“Maybe it will be our men who will come and
pick you up.”
“Oh, no; they’re too busy leaving Gettysburg
behind ’em.”
Harry nevertheless had succeeded in
leaving the shallow and was now lying on its farther
bank. Then he resumed the task of crawling forward
on his face, and without making any noise, one of
the most difficult feats that a human being is ever
called upon to do.
At the end of a dozen feet, he paused
both to rest and to listen. His acute ears told
him that Haskell had not moved from his own place,
and his eyes showed him that the darkness was increasing.
Those wonderful, kindly clouds were thickening before
the moon, and the stars in troops were going out of
sight.
But he did not relax his caution.
He knew that he could not afford to make any sound
that would arouse the suspicions of Haskell, and it
was a quarter of an hour before he felt himself absolutely
safe. Then he passed around a big tree and arose
behind its trunk, appreciating what a tremendous luxury
it was to be a man and to stand upon one’s own
feet.
He had triumphed again! The
stars surely were with him. They might play
little tricks upon him now and then to tantalize him,
but in the more important matters they were on his
side. He stretched himself again and again to
relieve the terrible stiffness caused by such long
and painful crawling, and then, unable to resist an
exultant impulse, he called loudly:
“Good-by, Haskell!”
There was a startled exclamation and
a bullet fired at random cut the leaves twenty yards
away. Harry, making no reply, fled swiftly through
the forest toward the valley where the rebel raiders
rode.