When night settled down over the Wilderness
the two armies lay almost face to face on a long line.
The preliminary battle, on the whole, had favored
the Confederacy. Hill had held his ground and
Ewell had gained, but Grant had immense forces, and,
though naturally kind of heart, he had made up his
mind to strike and keep on striking, no matter what
the loss. He could afford to lose two men where
the Confederacy lost one.
Harry, like many others, felt that
this would be the great Northern general’s plan.
To-morrow’s battle might end in Southern success,
but Grant would be there to fight the following day
with undiminished resolution. He was as sure
of this as he was sure that the day would come.
The night itself was somber and sinister,
the heavens dusky and a raw chill in the air.
Heavy vapors rose from the marshes, and clouds of
smoke from the afternoon’s battle floated about
over the thickets, poisoning the air as if with gas,
and making the men cough as they breathed it.
It made Harry’s heart beat harder than usual,
and his head felt as if it were swollen. Everything
seemed clothed in a black mist with a slightly reddish
tint.
A small fire had been built in a sheltered
place for the commander-in-chief and his staff, and
the cooks were preparing the supper, which was of
the simplest kind. While they ate the food and
drank their coffee, the darkness increased, with the
faint lights of other fires showing here and there
through it. Around the muddy places frogs croaked
in defiance of armies, and, from distant points, came
the crackling fire of skirmishers prowling in the
dusk.
Harry’s horse, saddled and bridled,
was tied to a bush not far away. He knew that
it was to be no night of rest for him, or any other
member of the staff. Lee would be sending messages
continually. Longstreet, although he had been
marching hard, was not yet up on the right, and he
and his veterans must be present when the shock of
Grant’s mighty attack came in the morning.
Hill, thin and pale, yet suffering
from the effects of his wounds, but burning as usual
with the fire of battle, rode up and consulted long
and earnestly with Lee. Presently he went back
to his own place nearer the center, and then Lee began
to send away his staff one by one with messages.
Harry was among the last to go, but he bore a dispatch
to Longstreet.
He had heard that Longstreet had criticized
Lee for ordering Pickett’s famous charge at
Gettysburg, but if so, Lee had taken no notice of it,
and Longstreet had proved himself the same stalwart
fighter as of old. He and the prompt arrival
of his veterans had enabled Bragg to win Chickamauga,
and it was not Longstreet’s fault that the advantage
gained there was lost afterward. Now Harry knew
that he would be up in time with his seasoned veterans.
As the young lieutenant rode away
he saw General Lee walking back and forth before the
low fire, his hands clasped behind him, and his eyes
as serious as those of any human being could be.
Harry appreciated the immensity of his task, and
in his heart was a sincere pity for the man who bore
so great a burden. He was familiar with the statement
that to Lee had been offered the command of the Northern
armies at the beginning of the war, but believing
his first duty was to his State he had gone with Virginia
when Virginia reluctantly went out of the Union.
Truly no one could regret the war more than he, and
yet he had struck giant blows for its success.
A moment more and the tall figure
standing beside the low fire was lost to sight.
Then Harry rode among the thickets in the rear of
the Confederate line and it was a weird and ghastly
ride. Now and then his horse’s feet sank
in mud, and the frogs still dared to croak around the
pools, making on such a night the most ominous of all
sounds. It seemed a sort of funeral dirge for
both North and South, a croak telling of the ruin
and death that were to come on the morrow.
Damp boughs swept across his face,
and the vapors, rising from the earth and mingled
with the battle smoke, were still bitter to the tongue
and poisonous to the breath. Rotten logs crushed
beneath his horse’s feet and Harry felt a shiver
as if the hoofs had cut through a body of the dead.
Riflemen rose out of the thickets, but he always gave
them the password, and rode on without stopping.
Then came a space where he met no
human being, the gap between Hill and Longstreet,
and now the Wilderness became incredibly lonely and
dreary. Harry felt that if ever a region was
haunted by ghosts it was this. The dead of last
year’s battle might be lying everywhere, and
as the breeze sprang up the melancholy thickets waved
over them.
He was two-thirds of the way toward
the point where he expected to find Longstreet when
he heard the sough of a hoof in the mud behind him.
Harry listened and hearing the hoof
again he was instantly on his guard. He did not
know it, but the character of the night and the wild
aspect of the Wilderness were bringing out all the
primeval and elemental qualities in his nature.
He was the great borderer, Henry Ware, in the Indian-haunted
forest, feeling with a sixth sense, even a seventh
sense, the presence of danger.
He was following a path, scarcely
traceable, used by charcoal burners and wood-cutters,
but when he heard the hoof a second time he turned
aside into the deepest of the thickets and halted
there. The hoofbeat came a third time, a little
nearer, and then no more. Evidently the horseman
behind him knew that he had turned aside, and was waiting
and watching. He was surely an enemy of great
skill and boldness, and it was equally sure that he
was Shepard. Harry never felt a doubt that he
was pursued by the formidable Union spy, and he felt
too that he had never been in greater danger, as Shepard
at such a moment would not spare his best friend.
But he was not afraid. Danger
had become so common that one looked upon it merely
as a risk. Moreover, he was never cooler or more
ample of resource. He dismounted softly, standing
beside his horse’s head, holding the reins with
one hand and a heavy pistol with the other. He
suspected that Shepard would do the same, but he believed
that his eyes and ears were the keener. The
man must have been inside the Confederate lines all
the afternoon. Probably he had seen Harry riding
away, and, deftly appropriating a horse, had followed
him. There was no end to Shepard’s ingenuity
and daring.
Harry’s horse was trained to
stand still indefinitely, and the young man, with
the heavy pistol, who held the reins was also immovable.
The silence about him was so deep that Harry could
hear the frogs croaking at a distant pool.
He waited a full five minutes, and
now, like the wild animals, he relied more upon ear
than eye. He had learned the faculty of concentration
and he bent all his powers upon his hearing.
Not the slightest sound could escape the tightly
drawn drums of his ears.
He was motionless a full ten minutes.
Nor did the horse beside him stir. It was a
test of human endurance, the capacity to keep himself
absolutely silent, but with every nerve attuned, while
he waited for an invisible danger. And those
minutes were precious, too. The value of not
a single one of them could have been measured or weighed.
It was his duty to reach Longstreet at speed, because
the general and his veterans must be in line in the
morning, when the battle was joined. Yet the
incessant duel between Shepard and himself was at
its height again, and he did not yet see how he could
end it.
Harry felt that it must be essentially
a struggle of patience, but when he waited a few minutes
longer, the idea to wait with ears close to the earth,
one of the oldest devices of primitive man, occurred
to him. It was fairly dry in the bushes, and
he lay down, pressing his ear to the soil. Then
he heard a faint sound, as if some one crawling through
the grass, like a wild animal stalking its prey.
It was Shepard, of course, and then Harry planned
his campaign. Shepard had left his horse, and
was endeavoring to reach him by stealth.
Leaving his own horse, he crept a
little to the right, and then rising carefully in
another thicket he picked out every dark spot in the
gloom. He made out presently the figure of a
riderless horse, standing partly behind the trunk
of an oak, larger than most of those that grew in the
Wilderness.
Harry knew that it was Shepard’s
mount and that Shepard himself was some distance in
front of it creeping toward the thicket which he supposed
sheltered his foe. There was barely enough light
for Harry to see the horse’s head and regretfully
he raised his heavy pistol. But it had to be
done, and when his aim was true he pulled the trigger.
The report of the pistol was almost
like the roar of a cannon in the desolate Wilderness
and made Harry himself jump. Then he promptly
threw himself flat upon his face. Shepard’s
answering fire came from a point about thirty yards
in front of the horse, and the bullet passed very
close over Harry’s head. It was a marvelous
shot to be made merely at the place from which a sound
had come. It all passed in a flash, and the
next moment Harry heard the sound of a horse falling
and kicking a little. Then it too was still.
He remained only a half minute in
the grass. Then he began to creep back, curving
a little in his course, toward his own horse.
He did not believe that Shepard’s faculty of
hearing was as keen as his own, and he moved with
the greatest deftness. He relied upon the fact
that Shepard had not yet located the horse, and if
Harry could reach it quickly it would not be hard
for him, a mounted man, to leave behind Shepard, dismounted.
It might be possible, too, that Shepard had gone back
to see about his own horse, not knowing that it was
slain.
He saw the dusky outline of his horse,
and, rising, made two or three jumps. Then he
snatched the rein loose, sprang upon his back, and
lying down upon his neck to avoid bullets, crashed
away, reckless of bushes and briars. He heard
one bullet flying near him, but he laughed in delight
and relief as his horse sped on toward Longstreet.
He did not diminish his speed until
he had gone two or three miles, and then, knowing
that Shepard had been left hopelessly behind, even
if he had attempted pursuit, he brought his horse down
to a walk, and laughed. There was a bit of nervous
excitement in the laugh. He had outwitted Shepard
again. He had never seen the man, but it did
not enter his mind that it was not he. Each
had scored largely over the other from time to time,
but Harry believed that he was at least even.
He steadied his nerves now and rode
calmly toward Longstreet, coming soon upon his scouts,
who informed him that the heavy columns were not far
behind, marching with stalwart step to their appointed
place in the line. But it was Harry’s business
to see Longstreet himself, and he continued his way
toward the center of the division, where they told
him the general could be found.
He rode forward and in the moonlight
recognized Longstreet at once, a heavy-set, bearded
man, mounted on a strong bay horse. He had a
very small staff, and he was first to notice the young
lieutenant advancing. He knew Harry well, having
seen him with Lee at Gettysburg and with Jackson before.
He stopped and said abruptly:
“You come from the commander-in-chief, do you
not?”
“Yes, sir,” replied Harry, “and
I’ve been coming as fast as I could.”
He did not deem it necessary to say
anything about his encounter with Shepard.
“There has been heavy fighting. What are
his orders?”
Harry told him, also giving him a
written message, which the general read by the light
of a torch an aide held.
“You can tell General Lee that
all my men will be in position for battle before dawn,”
said the Georgian crisply.
Even as he spoke, Harry heard the
heavy, regular tread of the brigades marching forward
through the Wilderness. He saluted General Longstreet.
“I shall return at once with your message,”
he said.
But Harry, having had one such experience,
was resolved not to risk another. He would make
a wider circuit in the rear of the army. Shepard,
on foot, and anxious to avenge his defeat, might be
waiting for him, but he would go around him.
So when he started back he made a wide curve, and
soon was in the darkness and silence again.
He had a good horse and his idea of
direction being very clear he rode swiftly in the
direction he had chosen. But his curve was so
great that when he reached the center of it he was
so far in the rear of the army that no sound came
from it. If the skirmishers were still firing
the reports of their rifles were lost in the distance.
Where he rode the only noises were those made by
the wild animals that inhabited the Wilderness, creatures
that had settled back into their usual haunts after
the armies had passed beyond.
Once a startled deer sprang from a
clump of bushes and crashed away through the thickets.
Rabbits darted from his path, and an owl, wondering
what all the disturbance was about, hooted mournfully
from a bough.
Long before dawn Harry reached the
Southern sentinels in the center and was then passed
to General Lee, who remained at the same camp, sitting
on a log by some smothered coals. Several other
members of his staff had returned already, and the
general, looking up when Harry came forward, merely
said:
“Well!”
“I have seen General Longstreet,
sir,” said Harry, “and he bids me tell
you that he and his men will be in position before
dawn. He was nearly up when I left, and he has
also sent you this note.”
He handed the note to General Lee,
who, bending low over the coals, read it.
“Everything goes well,”
he said with satisfaction. “We shall be
ready for them. What time is it, Peyton?”
“Five minutes past four o’clock, sir.”
“Then I think the attack should come within
an hour.”
“Perhaps before daybreak, sir.”
“Perhaps. And even after
the sun begins to rise it will be like twilight in
this gloomy place.”
Grant, in truth, prompt and ready
as always, had ordered the advance to be begun at
half-past four, but Meade, asking more time for arrangements
and requesting that it be delayed until six, he had
consented to a postponement until five o’clock
and no more.
Harry had one more message to carry,
a short distance only, and on his return he found
the Invincibles posted on the commander-in-chief’s
right, and not more than two hundred yards away.
“You must be a body guard for
the general,” he said to Colonel Leonidas Talbot.
“There could be no greater honor
for the Invincibles, nor could General Lee have a
better guard.”
“I’m sure of that, sir.”
“What’s happening, Harry? Tell us
what’s been going on in the night!”
“Our line of battle has been
formed. General Longstreet and his men on the
right are soon to be in touch with General Hill.
I returned from him a little while ago. I can’t
yet smell the dawn, but I think the battle will come
before then.”
Harry rode back and resumed his place
beside Dalton. The troops everywhere were on
their feet, cannon and rifles ready, because it was
a certainty that the two armies would meet very early.
In fact, the Army of Northern Virginia
began to slide slowly forward. It was not the
habit of these troops to await attack. Lee nearly
always had taken the offensive, and the motion of
his men was involuntary. They felt that the enemy
was there and they must go to meet him.
“What time is it now?” whispered Dalton.
Harry was barely able to discern the face of his watch.
“Ten minutes to five,” he replied.
“And the dawn comes early.
It won’t be long before Grant comes poking
his nose through the Wilderness.”
Harry was silent. A few minutes
more, and there was a sudden crackle of rifles in
front of them.
“The dawn isn’t here, but Grant is,”
said Harry.
The crackling fire doubled and tripled,
and then the fire of the Southern rifles replied in
heavy volume. The lighter field guns opened with
a crash, and the heavier batteries followed with rolling
thunder. Leaves and twigs fell in showers, and
men fell with them. The deep Northern cheer
swelled through the Wilderness and the fierce rebel
yell replied.
Gray dawn, rising as if with effort,
over the sodden Wilderness found two hundred thousand
men locked fast in battle. It might have been
a bright sun elsewhere, but not here among the gloomy
shades and the pine barrens. The firing was already
so tremendous that the smoke hung low and thick, directly
over the tops of the bushes, and the men, as they fought,
breathed mixed and frightful vapors.
Both sides fought for a long time
in a heavy, smoky dusk, that was practically night.
Officers coming from far points, led, compass in hand,
having no other guide save the roar of battle.
As the Southern leaders had foreseen, Grant was throwing
in the full strength of his powerful army, hoping
with superior numbers and better equipment to crush
Lee utterly that day.
The great Northern artillery was raking
the whole Southern front. Hancock, the superb,
was hurling the heavy Northern masses directly upon
the main position of the South. He had half the
Army of the Potomac, and at other points Warren, Wadsworth,
Sedgwick and Burnside were advancing with equal energy
and contempt of death. Fiercer and fiercer grew
the conflict. Hancock, remembering how he had
held the fatal hill at Gettysburg, and resolved to
win a complete victory now, poured in regiment after
regiment. But in all the fire and smoke and excitement
and danger he did not neglect to keep a cool head.
Hearing that a portion of Longstreet’s corps
was near, he sent a division and numerous heavy artillery
to attack it, driving it back after a sanguinary struggle
of more than an hour.
Then he redoubled his attack upon
the Southern center, compelling it to give ground,
though slowly. Harry felt that gliding movement
backward and a chill ran through his blood.
The heavy masses of Grant and his powerful artillery
were prevailing. The strongest portion of the
Southern army was being forced back, and a gap was
cut between Hill and Longstreet. Had Hancock
perceived the gap that he had made he might have severed
the Southern army, inflicting irretrievable retreat,
but the smoke and the dusk of the Wilderness hid it,
and the moment passed into one of the great “Ifs”
of history.
Harry, on horseback, witnessed this
conflict, all the more terrible because of the theater
in which it was fought. The batteries and the
riflemen alike were frequently hidden by the thickets.
The great banks of smoke hung low, only to be split
apart incessantly by the flashes of fire from the
big guns. But the bullets were more dangerous
than the cannon balls and shells. They whistled
and shrieked in thousands and countless thousands.
Lee sat on his horse impassive, watching
as well as he could the tide of battle. Messengers
covered with smoke and sweat had informed him of the
gap between Hill and Longstreet, and he was dispatching
fresh troops to close it up. Harry saw the Invincibles
march by. The two colonels at their head beheld
Lee on his white horse, and their swords flew from
their scabbards as they made a salute in perfect unison.
Close behind them rode St. Clair and Happy Tom, and
they too saluted in like manner. Lee took off
his hat in reply and Harry choked. “About
to die, we salute thee,” he murmured under his
breath.
Then with a shout the Invincibles,
their officers at their head, plunged into the fire
and smoke, and were lost from Harry’s view.
But he could not stay there long and wonder at their
fate. In a few minutes he was riding to Longstreet
with a message for him to bear steadily toward Hill,
that the gap might be closed entirely, and as soon
as possible.
He galloped behind the lines, but
bullets fell all around him, and often a shell tore
the earth. The air had become more bitter and
poisonous. Fumes from swamps seemed to mingle
with the smoke and odors of burned gunpowder.
His lips and his tongue were scorched. But he
kept on, without exhaustion or mishap, and reached
Longstreet, who had divined his message.
“The line will be solid in a
few minutes,” he said, and while the battle
was still at its height on the long front he touched
hands with Hill. Then both drove forward with
all their might against Hancock, rushing to the charge,
with the Southern fire and recklessness of death that
had proved irresistible on so many fields. The
advance, despite the most desperate efforts of Hancock
and his generals, was stopped. Then he was driven
back. All the ground gained at so much cost was
lost and the Southern troops, shouting in exultation,
pushed on, pouring in a terrible rifle fire.
Longstreet, in his eagerness, rode a little ahead
of his troops to see the result. Turning back,
he was mistaken in the smoke by his own men for a
Northern cavalryman, and they fired upon him, just
as Jackson had been shot down by his own troops in
the dusk at Chancellorsville.
The leader fell from his horse, wounded
severely, and the troops advancing to victory became
confused. The rumor spread that Longstreet had
been killed. There was no one to give orders,
and the charge stopped. Harry and a half-dozen
others who had seen the accident or heard of it, galloped
to Lee, who at once rode into the very thick of the
command, giving personal orders and sending his aides
right and left with others. The whole division
was reformed under his eye, and he sent it anew to
the attack.
The battle now closed in with the
full strength of both armies. Hancock strove
to keep his place. The valiant Wadsworth had
been killed already. The dense thickets largely
nullified Grant’s superior numbers. Lee
poured everything on Hancock, who was driven from every
position. Fighting furiously behind a breastwork
built the night before, he was driven from that too.
Often in the dense shades the soldiers
met one another face to face and furious struggles
hand-to-hand ensued. Bushes and trees, set on
fire by the shells, burned slowly like torches put
there to light up the ghastly scene of man’s
bravery and folly. Jenkins, a Confederate general,
was killed and colonels and majors fell by the dozen.
But neither side would yield, and Grant hurried help
to his hard-pressed troops.
Harry had been grazed on the shoulder
by a bullet, but his horse was unharmed, and he kept
close to Lee, who continued to direct the battle personally.
He knew that they were advancing. Once more
the genius of the great Confederate leader was triumphing.
Grant, the redoubtable and tenacious, despite his
numbers, could set no trap for him! Instead he
had been drawn into battle on a field of Lee’s
own choosing.
The conflict had now continued for
a long time, and was terrible in all its aspects.
It was far past noon, and for miles a dense cloud
of smoke hung over the Wilderness, which was filled
with the roar of cannon, the crash of rifles and the
shouts of two hundred thousand men in deadly conflict.
The first meeting of the two great protagonists of
the war, Lee and Grant, was sanguinary and terrible,
beyond all expectation.
Hundreds fell dead, their bodies lying
hidden under the thickets. The forest burned
fiercely here and there, casting circles of lurid light
over the combatants, while the wind rained down charred
leaves and twigs. The fires spread and joined,
and at points swept wide areas of the forest, yet
the fury of the battle was not diminished, the two
armies forgetting everything else in their desire
to crush each other.
Harry’s horse was killed, as
he sat near Lee, but he quickly obtained another,
and not long afterward he was sent with a second message
to Ewell. He rode on a long battle front, not
far behind the lines, and he shuddered with awe as
he looked upon the titanic struggle. The smoke
was often so heavy and the bushes so thick that he
could not see the combatants, except when the flame
of the firing or the burning trees lighted up a segment
of the circle.
Halfway to Ewell and he stopped when
he saw two familiar figures, sitting on a log.
They were elderly men in uniforms riddled by bullets.
The right arm of one and the left leg of the other
were tightly bandaged. Their faces were very
white and it was obvious that they were sitting there,
because they were not strong enough to stand.
Harry stopped. No message, no
matter how important, could have kept him from stopping.
“Colonel Talbot! Colonel St. Hilaire!”
he cried.
“Yes, here we are, Harry,”
replied Colonel Leonidas Talbot in a voice, thin but
full of courage. “Hector has been shot
through the leg and has lost much blood, but I have
bound up his wound, and he has done as much for my
arm, which has been bored through from side to side
by a bullet, which must have been as large as my fist.”
“And so for a few minutes,”
said Lieutenant-Colonel St. Hilaire, valiantly, “we
must let General Lee conduct the victory alone.”
“And the Invincibles!”
exclaimed Harry, horrified. “Are they all
gone but you?”
“Not at all,” replied
Colonel Talbot. “There is so much smoke
about that you can’t see much, but if it clears
a little you will behold Lieutenant St. Clair and
the youth rightly called Happy Tom and some three score
others, lying among the bushes, not far ahead of you,
giving thorough attention to the enemy.”
“And is that all that’s left of the Invincibles?”
“It’s a wonder that they’re
so many. You were right about this man, Grant,
Harry. He’s a fighter, and their artillery
is numerous and wonderful. John Carrington himself
must be in front of us. We have not seen him,
but the circumstantial evidence is conclusive.
Nobody else in the world could have swept this portion
of the Wilderness with shell and shrapnel in such
a manner. Why, he has mowed down the bushes in
long swathes as the scythe takes the grass and he
has cut down our men with them. How does the
battle go elsewhere?”
“We’re succeeding.
We’re driving ’em back. I can stop
only a moment now. I’m on my way to General
Ewell.”
“Then hurry. Don’t
be worried about us. I’ll help Hector and
Hector will help me. And do you curve further
to the rear, Harry. The worst thing that a dispatch
bearer can do is to get himself shot.”
Waving his hand in farewell Harry
galloped away. He knew that Colonel Talbot had
given him sound advice, and he bore back from the front,
coming once more into lonely thickets, although the
flash of the battle was plainly visible in front of
him, and its roar filled his ears. Yet when he
rode alone he almost expected to see Shepard rise up
before him, and bid him halt. His encounters
with this man had been under such startling circumstances
that it now seemed the rule, and not the exception,
for him to appear at any moment.
But Shepard did not come. Instead
Harry began to see the badly wounded of his own side
drifting to the rear, helping one another as hurt
soldiers learn to do. Two of them he allowed
to hang on his stirrups a little while.
“They’re fighting hard,”
said one, a long, gaunt Texan, “an’ they’re
so many they might lap roun’ us. This
man of theirs, Grant, ain’t much of a fellow
to get scared, but I guess Marse Bob will take care
of him just ez he has took care of the others who
came into Virginia.”
“They’re led in the main
attack by Hancock,” said the other, a Virginian.
“I caught a glimpse of him through the smoke,
just as I had a view of him for a minute back there
by the clump of trees on the ridge at Gettysburg.”
“Are you one of Pickett’s men?”
asked Harry.
“I am, sir, one of the few that’s
left. I went clear to the clump of trees and
how I got back I’ve never known. It was
a sort of red dream, in which I couldn’t pick
out anything in particular, but I was back with the
army, carrying three bullets that the doctors took
away from me, and here I’ve gathered up two
more they’ll rob me of in just the same way.”
He spoke quite cheerfully, and when
Harry, curving again, was compelled to release them,
both, although badly wounded, wished him good luck.
He found General Ewell in front, stamping
back and forth on his crutches, watching the battle
with excitement.
“And so you’re here again,
Harry. Well it’s good news at present!”
he cried. “It seems that their man, Grant,
is going to school to Lee just like the others.”
“But some pupils learn too fast, sir!”
“That’s so, but, Harry,
I wish I could see more of the field. An invisible
battle like this shakes my nerves. Batteries
that we can’t see send tornadoes of shot and
shell among us. Riflemen, by the thousands,
hidden in the thickets rain bullets into our ranks.
It’s inhuman, wicked, and our only salvation
lies in the fact that it’s as bad for them as
it is for us. If we can’t see them they
can’t see us.”
“You can hold your ground here?”
“Against anything and everything.
Tell General Lee that we intend to eat our suppers
on the enemy’s ground.”
“That’s all he wants to know.”
As Harry rode back he saw that the
first fires were spreading, passing over new portions
of the battlefield. Sparks flew in myriads and
fine, thin ashes were mingled with the powder smoke.
The small trees, burnt through, fell with a crash,
and the flames ran as if they were alive up boughs.
Other trees fell too, cut through by cannon balls,
and some were actually mown down by sheets of bullets,
as if they had been grass.
His way now led through human wreckage,
made all the more appalling by an approaching twilight,
heavy with fumes and smoke, and reddened with the
cannon and rifle blaze. His frightened horse
pulled wildly at the bit, and tried to run away, but
Harry held him to the path, although he stepped more
than once in hot ashes and sprang wildly. The
dead were thick too and Harry was in horror lest the
hoof of his horse be planted upon some unheeding face.
He knew that the day was waning fast
and that the dark was due in some degree to the setting
sun, and not wholly to the smoke and ashes. Yet
the fury of the battle was sustained. The southern
left maintained the ground that it had gained, and
in the center and right it could not be driven back.
It became obvious to Grant that Lee was not to be
beaten in the Wilderness. His advance suffered
from all kinds of disadvantages. In the swamps
and thickets he could mass neither his guns nor his
cannon. Communications were broken, the telegraph
wires could be used but little and as the twilight
darkened to night he let the attack die.
Harry was back with the commander-in-chief,
when the great battle of the Wilderness, one of the
fiercest ever fought, sank under cover of the night.
It was not open and spectacular like Gettysburg, but
it had a gloomy and savage grandeur all its own.
Grant had learned, like the others before him, that
he could not drive headlong over Lee, but sitting
in silence by his campfire, chewing his cigar, he had
no thought, unlike the others, of turning back.
Nearly twenty thousand of his men had fallen, but
huge resources and a President who supported him absolutely
were behind him and he was merely planning a new method
of attack.
In the Southern camp there was exultation,
but it was qualified and rather grim. These
men, veterans of many battles and able to judge for
themselves, believed that they had won the victory,
but they knew that it was by no means decisive.
The numerous foe with his powerful artillery was
still before them. They could see his campfires
shining through the thickets, and their spies told
them that, despite his great losses, there was no
sign of retreat in Grant’s camp.
An appalling night settled down on
the Wilderness. The North American Continent
never saw one more savage and terrible. Twenty
thousand wounded were scattered through the thickets
and dense shades, and spreading fires soon brought
death to many whom the bullets had not killed at once.
The smoke, the mists and vapors gathered into one
dense cloud, that hung low and made everything clammy
to the touch.
Lee stood under the boughs of an oak,
and ate food that had been prepared for him hastily.
But, as Harry saw, the act was purely mechanical.
He was watching as well as he could what was going
on in front, and he was giving orders in turns to
his aides. Harry’s time had not yet come,
and he kept his eyes on his chief.
There was no exultation in the face
of Lee. He had drawn Grant into the Wilderness
and then he had held him fast in a battle of uncommon
size and fierceness. But nothing was decided.
He had studied the career of Grant, and he knew that
he had a foe of great qualities with whom to deal.
He would have to fight him again, and fight very soon.
He heard too with a sorrow, hard to conceal, the
reports of his own losses. They were heavy enough
and the gaps now made could never be refilled.
The Army of Northern Virginia, which had been such
a powerful instrument in his hands, must fight with
ever diminishing numbers.
Harry was sent to inquire into the
condition of Longstreet, whom he found weak physically
and suffering much pain. But the veteran was
upborne by the success of the day and his belief in
ultimate victory. He bade Harry tell the commander-in-chief
that his men were fit to fight again and better than
ever, at the first shoot of dawn.
Harry rode back in the night, the
burning trees serving him for torches. Nearly
all the soldiers were busy. Some were gathering
up the wounded and others were building breastworks.
His eyes were reddened by the powder-smoke, and often
the heavy black masses of vapor were impenetrable,
save where the forest burned. Now he came to
a region where the dead and wounded were so thick
that he dismounted and led his horse, lest a hoof
be planted upon any one of them. But he noticed
that here as in other battles the wounded made but
little complaint. They suffered in silence,
waiting for their comrades to take them away.
Then he passed around a section of
forest that was burning fiercely. Here Southern
and Union soldiers had met on terms of peace and were
making desperate efforts to save their helpless comrades.
Harry would have been glad to give aid himself, but
he was too well trained now to turn aside when he
rode for Lee.
He saw many dark figures passing before
the flaming background, and as he walked more slowly
than he thought, he saw one that looked remarkably
familiar to him. It was impossible to see the
face, but he knew the walk and the lift of the shoulders.
Discipline gave way to impulse now, and he ran forward
crying:
“Dick! Dick!”
Dick Mason, who had just dragged a
wounded man beyond the range of the flames, turned
at the sound of the voice. Even had Harry seen
his face at first he would not have known him nor
would Dick have known Harry. Both were black
with ashes, smoke and burned gunpowder. But Dick
knew the voice in an instant. Once more were
the two cousins to meet in peace on an unfinished
battlefield.
Each driven by the same impulse stepped
forward, and their hands met in the strong grasp of
blood kindred and friendship, which war itself could
not sever.
“You’re alive, Harry!”
said Dick. “It seems almost impossible
after what has happened to-day.”
“And you too are all right.
Not harmed, I see, though your face is an African
black.”
“I should call your own color dark and smoky.”
“I wasn’t sure that you were in the East.
When did you come?”
“With General Grant, and I knew
that you were on General Lee’s staff. I’ve
a message to give him by you. Oh! you needn’t
laugh. It’s a good straight talk.”
“Go ahead then and say it to me.”
“You say to General Lee that
it’s all over. Tell him to quit and send
his soldiers home. If he doesn’t he’ll
be crushed.”
Harry laughed again and waved his
finger at the somber battlefield, upon which he stood.
“Does this look like it?”
he asked. “We’re farther forward
to-night than we were this morning. Wouldn’t
General Grant be glad if he could say as much?”
“It makes no difference.
I know you don’t believe me, but it’s
so. The North is prepared as it never was before.
And Grant will hammer and hammer forever. We
know what a man Lee is. The whole North admits
it, but I tell you the sun of the South is setting.”
“You’re growing poetical and poetry is
no argument.”
“But unlimited men, unlimited
cannon and rifles, unlimited ammunition and supplies
and a general who is willing to use them, are.
Of course I know that you can’t carry any such
message to General Lee, but I feel it to be the truth.”
“We’ve a great general and a great army
that say, no.”
Nobody paid any attention to the two.
It was merely another one of those occasions when
men of the opposing sides stood together amid the dead
and wounded, and talked in friendly fashion.
But Harry knew that he could not delay long.
“I’ve got to go, Dick,”
he said. “And I’ve a message too,
one that I want you to deliver to General Grant.”
“What is it?”
“Tell him that we’ve more
than held our own to-day, and that we’ll thrash
him like thunder to-morrow, and whenever and wherever
he may choose, no matter what the odds are against
us.”
Dick laughed.
“I see that you won’t
believe even a little bit of what I tell you,”
he said “and maybe if I were in your place I
wouldn’t either. But it’s true all
the same. Good-by, Harry.”
The two hands, covered with battle
grime, met again in the strong grasp of blood kindred
and friendship.
“Take care of yourself, old man!”
The words, exactly alike, were uttered by the two
simultaneously.
Both were stirred deeply. Harry
sprang on his horse, looked back once, waving his
hand, and rode rapidly to General Lee. Later
in the night, he received permission to hunt up the
Invincibles, his heart full of fear that they had
perished utterly in the gloomy pit called the Wilderness,
lit now only by the fire of death.
He left his horse with an orderly
and walked toward the point where he had last seen
them. He passed thousands of soldiers, many wounded,
but silent as usual, while the unhurt were sleeping
where they had dropped. The Invincibles were
not at the point where he had seen them last, and
the colonels of several scattered regiments could not
tell him what had become of them. But he continued
to seek them although the fear was growing in his
heart that the last man of the Invincibles had died
under the Northern cannon.
His search led toward the enemy’s
lines. Almost unconsciously he went in that
direction, however, his knowledge of the two colonels
telling him that they would take the same course.
He turned into a little cove, partly sheltered by
the dwarfed trees and he heard a thin voice saying:
“Nonsense, Leonidas. I
scarcely felt it, but yours, old friend, is pretty
bad. You must let me attend to it. Keep
still! I’ll adjust the bandage.”
“Hector, why do you make a fuss
over me, when I’m only slightly hurt, and sacrifice
yourself, a severely injured man!”
“With all due respect you’d
better let me attend to you both,” said a voice
that Harry recognized as St. Clair’s.
“And maybe I could help a little,”
said another that he knew to be Happy Tom’s.
But their voices, like those of the colonels, were
weak. Still he had positive proof that they
were alive, and, as his heart gave a joyful throb
or two, he stepped into the glade. There was
enough light for him to see Colonel Leonidas Talbot,
and Lieutenant-Colonel Hector St. Hilaire, sitting
side by side on the grass with their backs against
the earthly wall, very pale from loss of blood, but
with heads erect and eyes shining with a certain pride.
St. Clair and Langdon lay on the grass, one with
an old handkerchief, blood-soaked, bound about his
head and the other with a bandage tightly fastened
over his left shoulder. Beyond them lay a group
of soldiers.
“Good evening, heroes!”
said Harry lightly as he stepped forward.
He was welcomed with an exclamation of joy from them
all.
“We meet again, Harry,”
said Colonel Talbot, “and it is the second time
since morning. I fancy that second meetings to-day
have not been common. We have the taste of success
in our mouths, but you’ll excuse us for not
rising to greet you. We are all more or less
affected by the missiles of the enemy and for some
hours at least neither walking nor standing will be
good for us.”
“Mohammed must come to all the
mountains,” said St. Clair, weakly holding out
a hand.
Harry greeted them all in turn, and
sat down with them. He was overflowing with
sympathy, but it was not needed.
“A glorious day,” said Colonel Leonidas
Talbot.
“Truly,” said Harry.
“A most glorious day,” said Lieutenant-Colonel
Hector St. Hilaire.
“Most truly,” said Harry.
“An especially glorious day for the Invincibles,”
said Colonel Talbot.
“The most glorious of all possible
days for the Invincibles,” said Lieutenant-Colonel
Hector St. Hilaire.
There was an especial emphasis to
their words that aroused Harry’s attention.
“The Invincibles have had many
glorious days,” he said. “Why should
this be the most glorious of them all?”
“We went into battle one hundred
and forty-seven strong,” replied Colonel Talbot
quietly, “and we came out with one hundred and
forty-seven casualties, thirty-nine killed and one
hundred and eight wounded. We lay no claim to
valor, exceeding that of many other regiments in General
Lee’s glorious army, but we do think we’ve
made a fairly excellent record. Do you see those
men?”
He pointed to a silent group stretched
upon the turf, and Harry nodded.
“Not one of them has escaped
unhurt, but most of us will muster up strength enough
to meet the enemy again to-morrow, when our great general
calls.”
Harry’s throat contracted for a moment.
“I know it, Colonel Talbot,”
he said. “The Invincibles have proved
themselves truly worthy of their name. General
Lee shall hear of this.”
“But in no boastful vein, Harry,”
said Colonel Talbot. “We would not have
you to speak thus of your friends.”
“I do not have to boast for
you. The simple truth is enough. I shall
see that a surgeon comes here at once to attend to
your wounded. Good night, gentlemen.”
“Good night,” said the
four together. Harry walked back toward General
Lee’s headquarters, full of pride in his old
comrades.