It was in the early summer of 1864
that the family at Swan Manor was thrown off its balance
by the calling out of “The Junior Reserves.”
That unfledged boys, and among them their own little
smooth-cheeked Billy, should be called upon to fill
up the thinned and broken ranks of the Southern army
filled their hearts with dismay. The old Squire,
with bushy brows beetling over his eyes, sat in grief
too deep for words, a prey to the darkest forebodings.
Miss Jemima had wept until her eyes were mere nothings,
while her nose, coming gallantly to the front, had
assumed an undue prominence. Kate, with her pretty
lips drawn to keep down the rising sobs, tried all
in vain to bestow upon her twin brother bright looks
and smiles, ever before so ready and spontaneous.
In the early secession days it had seemed such fun
to ride to dress parade and toss bouquets to the laughing
“boys in gray,” while all the world played
Dixie!
“Away down South in
Dixie.”
How she and Billy had whispered and
plotted, and how great the triumph when together they
climbed the gate-post and, after much toil, successfully
planted their little red and white flag! But now,
alas! all was changed, they were fast getting
to be grown-up people, and now her own dear Billy
must go to help drive the Yankees out of Dixie.
As for Billy himself, a suppressed
but exultant grin shone upon his face, a trifle deprecating
when in the presence of his grandfather or his tearful
Aunt Jemima, but very jubilant despite these drawbacks.
In truth this junior reserve was only too pleased
to exchange the Latin grammar for the musket, and
little cared he for prospective hardships, provided
school were not among them.
In the few busy days before the departure,
Kate followed Billy’s footsteps, trying in vain
to share his elation. “Good gracious, Kate,”
he would exclaim, when he discovered her furtively
wiping her eyes with her little damp ball of a pocket
handkerchief, “don’t be such a little
goose; why, what would you have a fellow do? I
had no idea that you were that sort of a girl.”
Then, as between laughing and crying her face contorted
itself into a sort of spasmodic grin, he would say:
“Now that’s right, that’s the way
to do, if you’ll just cheer up, I’ll be
all right; the Yankees’ll not bother me much,
you bet.”
At the request of Serena (Billy’s
former nurse) her boy Cy was chosen to accompany his
young master as body servant, one of his chief recommendations
being that, naturally “skeary,” he would
be a safe companion; also, as his mother proudly averred,
he was the fastest runner upon the plantation.
It was upon a golden evening in June
that little Billy bade farewell to his home, Miss
Jemima and Kate going with him to the little wayside
station. Cy, gotten up in great style, followed,
while the rear was brought up by a motley procession, all
eager for the honor of carrying some of the belongings.
The Squire, with Don the old Irish setter, stood in
the doorway until Billy passed out of sight; then the
two together, the old man and the old dog, went back
into the silent house.
The path to the station wound its
way through a field of ripening wheat, from whence
the clear whistle of a partridge smote sharply though
the fervid air. Billy paused, and, pointing to
a tangle of blackberry, exclaimed: “There’s
a nest there as sure as shooting, and I’ll go
there to-mor ” A quick catching of
the breath cut short the unfinished words, and the
boy, with lips slightly drawn, quickened his pace.
Kate, choking down her sobs, held his hand in her tight
clasp, as she kept pace with his hurried step.
Miss Jemima, steadying her voice, remarked with a
sprightly air that there would be fine shooting when
he should come back in the autumn. Then the little
station came into view, looking very empty and deserted;
two men loading a flat car were the only living objects
to be seen. They paused in their work to greet
Billy, and ask where he was off to. It seemed
so strange a thing to Kate that all the world did
not know.
The train was not on time, and the
waiting became so painful that it was almost with
gladness that they heard the warning whistle far down
the track. A small crowd had gradually collected,
and some one remarked: “She’s blowin’
for the bridge. It’ll be ten minutes before
she’s here.” To the tumultuously throbbing
hearts of the little party it was a positive relief
when a puff of smoke was seen and the engine came
rushing around the bend. Then there were hurried
kisses; the bell clanged, a voice called out, “All
aboard,” and the train was off. “Gone,
gone, gone,” Kate repeated over and over to herself,
as she gazed with tearless eyes into the dim distance
of the now silent track.
As the party retraced their steps
homeward the partridge was still calling his cheerful
“Bob White” from amid the wheat, while
from the shadowy depth of a laurel thicket came the
sweet gurgle of the wood-thrush.
In the late summer, news glorious
news came that the foe had been driven
back, and their boy was unhurt.
Later, a man from the front at home
on furlough was heard to say that “Billy Swan
was a regular trump, and had borne himself like a
veteran.” Kate walked elate, saying the
words over and over, with a proud smile, “A
hero, a regular trump,” he, her own
dear Billy. The old Squire, too, with ill-concealed
pride in his boy, was once more like his former self.
Happy days brief, hopeful
days! Alas, alas! Many Junes have come and
gone since little Billy was laid to rest in the old
burying-ground, close to the wheat-field where the
partridge calls, calls, the long day through.
June roses scatter their leaves above him, and when
the sun drops low, with long golden shafts upon the
green mound which covers him, from far down in the
laurel thicket comes the liquid gurgle of the wood-thrush.
Kate looks into faces, once frank and bright, and
full of youth and hope, now grown old and seamed with
care, and she tells herself that “whom the gods
love, die young.”