The red eye of the lighthouse on Corregidor
Island blazed out through the darkness as a Pacific
steamer felt her way cautiously into Manila harbour.
Although it was nearly midnight, a
woman one of the passengers on the steamer was
still on deck, and standing well up toward the bow
of the boat was peering into the darkness before her
as if she could not wait to see the strange new land
to which she was coming. Surely it would be a
strange land to her, who, until a few weeks before
had scarcely in all her life been outside of the New
England town in which she had been born.
People who had seen her on the steamer
had wondered sometimes that a woman of her age for
she was not young should have chosen to
go to the Philippine Islands as a nurse, as she told
them she was going. Sometimes, at first, they
smiled at some of her questions, but any who happened
to be ill on the voyage, or in trouble, forgot to
do that, for in the touch of her hand and in her words
there was shown a skill and a nobleness of nature
which won respect.
The colonel of a regiment stationed
near Manila was sitting in his headquarters.
An orderly came to the door and saluted.
“A woman to see you, sir,” he said.
“A woman? What kind of a woman?”
“A white woman, sir. Looks
about fifty years old. Talks American. Says
she has only just come here. Says her name is
Smith.”
“Show her in.”
The man went out. In a few minutes
he came back again, and with him the woman that had
stayed out on the deck of the Pacific steamer when
the boat came past the light of Corregidor.
The Colonel gave his visitor a seat. “What
can I do for you?” he said.
“Can I speak to you alone?”
“We are alone now.”
“Can’t that man out there
hear?” motioning toward a soldier pacing back
and forth before the door.
“No,” said the officer. “We
are quite alone.”
The woman unfolded a sheet of paper
which she had been holding, and looked at it a moment.
Then she looked at the officer. “I want
to see Heber Smith, of Company F, of your regiment,”
she said. “Can you tell me where he is?”
In spite of himself in
spite of the self possession which he would have said
his campaigning experience had given him, the Colonel
started.
“Are you his ?”
he began to say. But he changed the question to,
“Was he a relative of yours?”
“I am his mother,” the
woman said, as if she had completed the officer’s
first question in her mind and answered it.
“I have a letter from him, here,”
she went on. “The last one I have had.
It is dated three months ago. It is not very long.”
She held up a half sheet of paper, written over on
one side with a lead pencil; but she did not offer
to let the officer read what was written.
“He tells me in this letter,”
the woman said, “that he has disgraced himself,
been a coward, run away from some danger which he ought
to have faced; and that he can’t stand the shame
of it.” “He says,” the woman’s
voice faltered for the first time, and instead of looking
the Colonel in the face, as she had been doing, her
eyes were fixed on the floor “he
says that he isn’t going to try to stay here
any longer, and that he is going over to the enemy.
Is this true? Did he do that?”
“Yes,” said the officer slowly. “It
is true.”
“He says here,” the woman
went on, holding up the letter again, “that
I shall never hear from him again, or see him.
I want you to help me to find him.”
“I would be glad to help you
if I could,” the man said, “but I cannot.
No one knows where the man went to, except that he
disappeared from the camp and from the city.
Besides I have not the right. He was a coward,
and now he is a deserter. If he came back now
he would have to stand trial, and he might be shot.”
“He is not a coward.”
The woman’s cheeks flamed red. “Some
men shut their eyes and cringe when there comes a
flash of lightning. But that don’t make
them cowards. He might have been frightened at
the time, and not known what he was doing, but he
is not a coward. I guess I know that as well
as anybody can tell me. He is my boy my
only child. I’ve come out here to find
him, and I’m going to do it. I don’t
expect I’ll find him quick or easy, perhaps.
I’ve let out our farm for a year, with the privilege
of renewing the trade when the year is up; and I’m
going to stay as long as need be. I’m not
going to sit still and hold my hands while I’m
waiting, either. I’m going to be a nurse.
I know how to take care of the sick and maimed all
right, and I guess from what I hear since I’ve
been here you need all the help of that kind you can
get. All I want of you is to get me a chance
to work nursing just as close to the front as I can
go, and then do all you can to help me find out where
Heber is, and then let me have as many as you can
of these heathen prisoners the men bring in here to
take care of, so I can ask them if they have seen
Heber. My boy isn’t a coward, and if he
has got scared and run away, he’s got to come
back and face the music. Thank goodness none of
the folks at home know anything about it, and they
won’t if I can help it.”
The woman folded the letter, and putting
it back into its envelope sat waiting. It was
evident that she did not conceive of the possibility
even of her request not being granted.
The officer hesitated.
“You will have to see the General,
Mrs. Smith,” he said at last, glad that it need
not be his duty to tell her how hopeless her errand
was. “I will arrange for you to see him.
I will take you to him myself. I wish I could
do more to help you.”
“How soon can I see him?”
“Tomorrow, I think. I will find out and
let you know.”
“Thank you,” said the
woman, as she rose to go. “I don’t
want to lose any time. I want to get right to
work.”
The next day the young soldier’s
mother saw the General and told her story to him.
In the mean time, apprised by the Colonel of the regiment
of the woman’s errand, the General had had a
report of the case brought to him. Heber Smith
had been sent out with a small scouting party.
They had been ambushed, and instead of trying to fight,
he had left the men and had run back to cover.
“But that don’t necessarily
make him a coward,” the young man’s mother
pleaded with the General. “A coward is a
man who plans to run away. He lost his head that
time. Wasn’t that the first time he had
been put in such a place?”
The officer admitted that it was.
“Well, then he can live it down.
He has got to, for the sake of his father’s
reputation as well as his own. His father was
a soldier, too,” she said proudly. “He
was in the Union army four years, and had a medal
given to him for bravery, and every spring since he
died the members of his Grand Army Post have decorated
his grave. When Heber comes to think of that,
I know he will come back.”
The General was not an old man; that
is he was not so old but that, back in her prairie
home in a western state, there was a mother to whom
he wrote letters, a mother whom he knew to value above
his life itself his reputation. The thought of
her came to him now.
“I will do what I can, Mrs.
Smith” he said, “to help you find your
boy. I fear I cannot give you any hope, though,
and if he should be found I cannot promise you anything
as to his future.”
“Thank you,” said the woman. “That
is all I can ask.”
And so it came about that Mrs. Hannah
Smith was enrolled as a nurse, and assigned to duty
as near the front in the island of Luzon as any nurse
could go.
Six months passed, and then another
six came near to their end. Mrs. Smith renewed
the lease of the farm back among the New England hills
for another year, and wrote to a neighbor’s wife
to see that her woolen clothes and furs were aired
and then packed away with a fresh supply of camphor
to keep the moths out of them.
In this year’s time Mrs. Smith
had picked up a wonderful smattering of the Spanish
and Tagalog languages for a woman who had lived the
life she had before she came to the East. The
reason for this, so her companions said, was her being
“just possessed to talk with those native prisoners
who are brought wounded to the hospital.”
The other nurses liked her. She not only was
willing to take the cases they liked least the
natives but asked for them.
And sometime in the course of their
hospital experience, all Mrs. Smith’s native
patients if they did not die before they
got able to talk coherently had to go through
the same catechism:
Was there a white man among the people
from whom they had come; a white man who had come
there from the American army?
Was he a tall young man with light
hair and a smooth face?
Did he have a three-cornered white
scar on one side of his chin, where a steer had hooked
him when he was a boy?
Did he look like this picture? (A
photograph was shown the patient)
From no one, though, did she get the
answer that her heart craved. Some of the prisoners
knew white men that had come among the Tagalog natives,
but no one knew a man who answered to this description.
One day a native prisoner who had
been brought in more than a week before, terribly
wounded, opened his eyes to consciousness for the
first time, after days and nights of stupor. He
was one of these who naturally fell, now, to “Mrs.
Smith’s lot,” as the surgeons called them.
As soon as the nurse’s watchful eyes saw the
change in the man she came to him and bent over his
cot.
“Water, please,” he murmured
The woman brought the water, her two
natures struggling to decide what she should do after
she had given it to him. As nurse, she knew the
man ought not to be allowed to talk then. As mother,
she was impatient to ask him where he had learned
to speak English, and to inquire if he knew her boy.
The nurse conquered. The patient
drank the water and was allowed to go to sleep again
undisturbed.
In time, though, he was stronger,
and then, one day, the mother’s questions were
asked for the hundredth time; and the last.
Yes, the prisoner patient knew just
such a man. He had come among the people of the
tribe many months ago. He was a tall, fair young
man, and he had such a scar as the “senora,”
described. He was a fine young man. Once,
when this man’s father had been sick, the white
man had doctored him and made him well. It was
this white man, the patient said, who had taught him
the little English that he knew.
“Yes,” when he saw the
photograph of Heber Smith, “that is the man.
He has a picture, too,” the patient said, “two
pictures, little ones, set in a little gold box which
hangs on his watch chain.”
The hospital nurse unclasped a big
cameo breast pin from the throat of her gown and held
it down so that the man in bed could see a daguerreotype
set in the back of the pin.
“Was one of the pictures like that?” she
asked.
The Tagalog looked at the picture,
a likeness of a middle-aged man wearing the coat and
hat of the Grand Army of the Republic. In the
picture a medal pinned on to the breast of the man’s
coat showed.
“Yes,” said he, “one of the pictures
is like that.”
Then he looked up curiously at the
woman sitting beside his bed. “The other
picture is that of a woman,” he went on, “and yes ”
still studying her face, “I think it must be
you. Only,” he added, “it doesn’t
look very much like you.”
“No,” said the woman,
with a grim smile, “it doesn’t. It
was taken a good many years ago, when I was younger
than I am now, and when I hadn’t been baked
for a year in this heathen climate. It’s
me, though.”
In time, Juan, that was the man’s
name, was so far recovered of his wound that he was
to be discharged from the hospital and placed with
the other able-bodied prisoners. The hospital
at that time occupied an old convent. The day
before Juan was to be discharged, Mrs. Smith managed
her cases so that for a time no one else was left in
one of the rooms with her but this man.
“Juan,” she said, when
she was sure they were alone, and that no one was
anywhere within hearing, “do you feel that I
have done anything to help you to get well?”
The man reached down, and taking one
of the nurse’s hands in his own bent over and
kissed it.
“Senora,” he said, “I owe my life
to you.”
“Will you do something for me,
then? Something which I want done more than anything
else in the world?”
“My life is the senora’s.
I would that I had ten lives to give her.”
The woman pulled a letter from out
the folds of her nurse’s dress. The envelope
was not sealed, and before she fastened it she took
the letter which was in it out and read it over for
one last time. Then, pulling from her waist a
little red, white and blue badge pin one
of those patriotic emblems which so many people wear
at times she dropped this into the letter,
sealed the envelope, and handed it to the Tagalog.
The envelope bore no address.
“I hav’n’t put the
name of the place on it you said you came from,”
she told the man, “because goodness only knows
how it is spelled; I don’t. Besides that,
it isn’t necessary. You know the place,
and you know the man; the man who has got my picture
and his father’s in a gold locket on his watch
chain. I want you to give this letter into his
own hands. I expect it will be rather a ticklish
job for you to get away from here and get through
the lines, but I guess you can do it if you try.
Other men have. Don’t start until you are
well enough so you will have strength to make the
whole trip.”
A week or so after that, one of the
surgeons making his daily visit reported that Juan
had made his escape the previous night, and up to
that time had not been brought back.
“What a shame!” said one
of the other nurses. “After all the care
you gave that man, Mrs. Smith. It does seem as
if he might have had a little more gratitude.”
Mrs. Smith said nothing aloud.
But to herself, when she was alone, she said:
“Well, I suppose some folks would say that I
wasn’t acting right, but I guess I’ve
saved the lives of enough of those men since I’ve
been here so that I’m entitled to one of them
if I want him.”
Then she went on with her work, and
waited; and the waiting was harder than the work.
An American expedition was slowly
toiling across the island of Luzon to locate and occupy
a post in the north. Four companies of men marched
in advance, with a guard in the rear. Between
them were the mule teams with the camp luggage and
the ever present hospital corps. No trace of
the enemy had been seen in that part of the island
for weeks. Scouts who had gone on in advance had
reported the way to be clear, and the force was being
hurried up to get through a ravine which it was approaching,
so it could go into camp for the night on high, level
ground just beyond the valley.
Suddenly a man’s voice rang
out upon the hot air; an English, speaking voice,
strong and clear, and coming, so it seemed at first
to the troops when they heard it, from the air above
them:
“Halt! Halt!” the voice cried.
“Go back! There is an ambush on both sides!
Save yourselves! Be ”
The warning was unfinished. Those
of the Americans who had located the sound of the
words and had looked in the direction from which they
came, had seen a white man standing on the rocky side
of the ravine above them and in front of them.
They had seen him throw up his arms and fall backward
out of sight, leaving his last sentence unfinished.
Then there had come the report of a gun, and then an
attack, with scores of shouting Tagalogs swarming down
the sides of the ravine.
The skirmish was over, though, almost
as soon as it had begun, and with little harm to any
of the Americans except to such of the scouts as had
been cut off in advance. The warning had come
in time had come before the advancing column
had marched between the forces hidden on both sides
of the ravine. The Tagalogs could not face the
fire with which the Americans met them. They
fled up the ravine, and up both sides of the gorge,
into the shelter of the forest, and were gone.
The Americans, satisfied at length that the way was
clear, moved forward and went into camp on the ground
which had previously been chosen, throwing out advance
lines of pickets, and taking extra precautions to
be prepared against a night attack.
Early in the evening shots were heard
on the outer picket line, and a little later two men
came to the commanding officers tent bringing with
them a native.
“He was trying to come through
our lines and get into the camp, sir,” they
reported. “Two men fired at him, but missed
him.”
“Think he’s a spy?”
the commander asked of another officer who was with
him.
“No, Senor, I am not a spy,”
the prisoner said, surprising all the men by speaking
in English. “I have left my people, I want
to be sent to Manila, to the American camp there.”
“He’s a deserter,”
said one of the officers. Then to the men who
held the prisoner, “Better search him.”
From out the prisoner’s blouse
one of the soldiers brought a paper, a sheet torn
from a note book, folded, and fastened only by a red,
white and blue badge pin stuck through the paper.
The officer to whom the soldier had
handed the paper pulled out the pin which had kept
it folded, and started to open it, when he saw there
was something written on the side through which the
pin had been thrust. Bending down to where the
camp light fell upon the writing, he saw that it was
an address, scrawled in lead pencil:
“Mrs. Hannah Smith; Nurse.”
“Do you know the woman to whom
this letter is sent? he asked in amazement of the
Tagalog from whom it had been taken.
“Yes Senor.”
“Do you know where she is now?”
“Yes, Senor. She is in
a hospital not far from Manila. She is a good
woman. My life is hers. I was there once
for many, many days, shot through here,” he
placed his hand on his side, “and she made me
well again.”
“Do you know who sent this letter to her?”
“Yes, Senor.”
“Who was it?”
The man hesitated.
“Who was it? Answer. It is for her
good I want to know.”
“It was her son, Senor.”
“Was he the man who gave us warning of the ambush
today?”
“Yes, Senor.”
The officer folded the paper, unread,
and thrust the pin back through the folds. The
enamel on the badge glistened in the camp light.
“Keep the Tagalog here,”
he said to the men, “until I come back;”
and walked across the camp to where the hospital tents
had been set up.
“Where is Mrs. Smith?” he asked of the
surgeon in charge.
“Taking care of the men who were wounded this
afternoon.”
“Will you tell her that I want
to see her alone in your tent, here, and then see
that no one else comes in?”
“Mrs. Smith,” he said,
when the nurse came in, “I have something here
for you a letter. It has just been
brought into camp, by a native who did not know that
you were here and who wanted to be sent to Manila
to find you. It is not very strongly sealed, but
no one has read it since it was brought into camp.”
He gave the bit of paper to the nurse,
and then turned away to stand in the door of the tent,
that he might not look at her while she read it.
Enough of the nurse’s story was known in the
army now so that the officer could guess something
of what this message might mean to her.
A sound in the tent behind the officer
made him turn. The woman had sunk down on the
ground beneath the surgeon’s light, and resting
her arms upon a camp stool had hid her face.
A moment later she raised her head,
her face wet with tears and wearing an expression
of mingled grief and joy, and held out the letter
to the officer.
“Read it!” she said.
“Thank God!” and then, “My boy!
My boy!” and hid her face again.
“Dear mother,” the scrawled note read.
“I got your letter. I’m
glad you wrote it. It made things plain I hadn’t
seen before. My chance has come quicker
than I had expected. I wish I might have seen
you again, but I shan’t. A column of our
men are coming up the valley just below here, marching
straight into an ambush. I have tried to get
word to them, but I can’t, because the Tagalogs
watch me so close. They never have trusted me.
The only way for me is to rush out when the men get
near enough, and shout to them, and that will be the
end of it all for me. I don’t care, only
that I wish I could see you again. Juan will
take this letter to you. When you get it, and
the men come back, if I save them, I think perhaps
they will clear my name. Then you can go home.
“The men are almost here.
Mother, dear, good by. Your Boy.”
“I wish I might have seen him,”
the woman said, a little later. “But I
won’t complain. What I most prayed God for
has been granted me.”
“They’ll let the charge
against him drop, now, won’t they? Don’t
you think he has earned it?”
“I think he surely has.
No braver deed has been done in all this war.”
“Don’t try to come, now,
Mrs Smith,” as the nurse rose to her feet.
“Stay here, and I will send one of the women
to you.”
When he had done this the officer
went back to where the men were still holding Juan
between them.
“Your journey is shorter than
you thought,” the officer said to the Tagalog.
“Mrs. Smith is in this camp, and I have given
the letter to her.”
“May I see her?” exclaimed the man.
“Not now. In the morning
you may. Have you seen this man, her son, since
he was shot?”
“No, Senor. He gave me
the note and told me to slip into the forest as soon
as the fight began, so as to get away without any one
seeing me. Then I was to stay out of the way
until I could get into this camp.”
“Do you know where he stood when he was shot?”
“Yes, Senor.”
“Can you take a party of men there tonight?”
“Yes, Senor; most gladly.”
Afterward, when it came to be known
that Heber Smith would live, in spite of his wounds
and the hours that he had lain there in the bushes
unconscious and uncared for, there was the greatest
diversity of opinion as to what had really saved his
life.
The surgeons said it was partly their
skill, and partly the superb constitution that years
of work on a New England farm had given to the young
man. His mother believed that he had been spared
for her sake. Heber Smith himself always said
it was his mother’s care that saved his life,
while Juan never had the least doubt that the young
soldier had been protected solely by a marvellous “anting-anting”
which he himself had slipped unsuspected into the American
soldier’s blouse that day, before he had left
him. As soon as she knew that her son would live,
Mrs. Smith started for Washington, carrying with her
papers which made it possible for her to be allowed
to plead her case there as she had pleaded it in Manila.
A pardon was sent back, as fast as wire and steamer
and wire again could convey it. Heber Smith wears
the uniform of a second lieutenant, now, won for bravery
in action since he went back into the service; and
every one who knew her in the Philippines, cherishes
the memory of Mrs. Hannah Smith; Nurse.