I
The County had been settled as a “frontier”
in early colonial days, and when it ceased to be frontier,
settlement had taken a jump beyond it, and in a certain
sense over it, to the richer lands of the Piedmont.
When, later on, steam came, the railway simply cut
across it at its narrowest part, and then skirted
along just inside its border on the bank of the little
river which bounded it on the north, as if it intentionally
left it to one side. Thus, modern progress had
not greatly interfered with it either for good or
bad, and its development was entirely natural.
It was divided into “neighborhoods”,
a name in itself implying something both of its age
and origin; for the population was old, and the customs
of life and speech were old likewise.
This chronicle, however, is not of
the “neighborhoods”, for they were known,
or may be known by any who will take the trouble to
plunge boldly in and throw themselves on the hospitality
of any of the dwellers therein. It is rather
of the unknown tract, which lay vague and undefined
in between the several neighborhoods of the upper end.
The history of the former is known both in peace and
in war: in the pleasant homesteads which lie
on the hills above the little rivers which make down
through the county to join the great river below, and
in the long list of those who fell in battle, and
whose names are recorded on the slabs set up by their
comrades on the walls of the old Court House.
The history of the latter, however, is unrecorded.
The lands were in the main very poor and grown up
in pine, or else, where the head-waters of a little
stream made down in a number of “branches”,
were swampy and malarial. Possibly it was this
poverty of the soil or unwholesomeness of their location,
which more than anything else kept the people of this
district somewhat distinct from others around them,
however poor they might be. They dwelt in their
little cabins among their pines, or down on the edges
of the swampy district, distinct both from the gentlemen
on their old plantations and from the sturdy farmer-folk
who owned the smaller places. What title they
had to their lands originally, or how they traced
it back, or where they had come from, no one knew.
They had been there from time immemorial, as long
or longer, if anything, than the owners of the plantations
about them; and insignificant as they were, they were
not the kind to attempt to question, even had anyone
been inclined to do so, which no one was.
They had the names of the old English
gentry, and were a clean-limbed, blond, blue-eyed
people.
When they were growing to middle age,
their life told on them and made them weather-beaten,
and not infrequently hard-visaged; but when they were
young there were often among them straight, supple
young fellows with clear-cut features, and lithe,
willowy-looking girls, with pink faces and blue, or
brown, or hazel eyes, and a mien which one might have
expected to find in a hall rather than in a cabin.
Darby Stanley and Cove Mills (short
for Coverley) were the leaders of the rival factions
of the district. They lived as their fathers had
lived before them, on opposite sides of the little
stream, the branches of which crept through the alder
and gum thickets between them, and contributed to
make the district almost as impenetrable to the uninitiated
as a mountain fastness. The long log-cabin of
the Cove-Millses, where room had been added to room
in a straight line, until it looked like the side
of a log fort, peeped from its pines across at the
clearing where the hardly more pretentious home of
Darby Stanley was set back amid a little orchard of
ragged peach-trees, and half hidden under a great
wistaria vine. But though the two places lay
within rifle shot of each other, they were almost as
completely divided as if the big river below had rolled
between them. Since the great fight between old
Darby and Cove Mills over Henry Clay, there had rarely
been an election in which some members of the two
families had not had a “clinch”.
They had to be thrown together sometimes “at
meeting”, and their children now and then met
down on the river fishing, or at “the washing
hole”, as the deep place in the little stream
below where the branches ran together was called;
but they held themselves as much aloof from each other
as their higher neighbors, the Hampdens and the Douwills,
did on their plantations. The children, of course,
would “run together”, nor did the parents
take steps to prevent them, sure that they would,
as they grew up, take their own sides as naturally
as they themselves had done in their day. Meantime
“children were children”, and they need
not be worried with things like grown-up folk.
When Aaron Hall died and left his
little farm and all his small belongings to educate
free the children of his poor neighbors, the farmers
about availed themselves of his benefaction, and the
children for six miles around used to attend the little
school which was started in the large hewn-log school-house
on the roadside known as “Hall’s Free
School”. Few people knew the plain, homely,
hard-working man, or wholly understood him. Some
thought him stingy, some weak-minded, some only queer,
and at first his benefaction was hardly comprehended;
but in time quite a little oasis began about the little
fountain, which the poor farmer’s bequest had
opened under the big oaks by the wayside, and gradually
its borders extended, until finally it penetrated as
far as the district, and Cove Mills’s children
appeared one morning at the door of the little school-house,
and, with sheepish faces and timid voices, informed
the teacher that their father had sent them to school.
At first there was some debate over
at Darby Stanley’s place, whether they should
show their contempt for the new departure of the Millses,
by standing out against them, or should follow their
example. It was hard for a Stanley to have to
follow a Mills in anything. So they stood out
for a year. As it seemed, however, that the Millses
were getting something to which the Stanleys were
as much entitled as they, one morning little Darby
Stanley walked in at the door, and without taking
his hat off, announced that he had come to go to school.
He was about fifteen at the time, but he must have
been nearly six feet (his sobriquet being wholly due
to the fact that Big Darby was older, not taller),
and though he was spare, there was something about
his face as he stood in the open door, or his eye
as it rested defiantly on the teacher’s face,
which prevented more than a general buzz of surprise.
“Take off your hat,” said
the teacher, and he took it off slowly. “I
suppose you can read?” was the first question.
“No.”
A snicker ran round the room, and little Darby’s
brow clouded.
As he not only could not read, but
could not even spell, and in fact did not know his
letters, he was put into the alphabet class, the class
of the smallest children in the school.
Little Darby walked over to the corner
indicated with his head up, his hands in his pockets,
and a roll in his gait full of defiance, and took
his seat on the end of the bench and looked straight
before him. He could hear the titter around him,
and a lowering look came into his blue eyes.
He glanced sideways down the bench opposite. It
happened that the next seat to his was that of Vashti
Mills, who was at that time just nine. She was
not laughing, but was looking at Darby earnestly, and
as he caught her eye she nodded to him, “Good-mornin’.”
It was the first greeting the boy had received, and
though he returned it sullenly, it warmed him, and
the cloud passed from his brow and presently he looked
at her again. She handed him a book. He took
it and looked at it as if it were something that might
explode.
He was not an apt scholar; perhaps
he had begun too late; perhaps there was some other
cause; but though he could swim better, climb better,
and run faster than any boy in the school, or, for
that matter, in the county, and knew the habits of
every bird that flitted through the woods and of every
animal that lived in the district, he was not good
at his books. His mind was on other things.
When he had spent a week over the alphabet, he did
know a letter as such, but only by the places on the
page they were on, and gave up when “big A”
was shown him on another page, only asking how in
the dickens “big A” got over there.
He pulled off his coat silently whenever ordered and
took his whippings like a lamb, without a murmur and
almost without flinching, but every boy in the school
learned that it was dangerous to laugh at him; and
though he could not learn to read fluently or to train
his fingers to guide a pen, he could climb the tallest
pine in the district to get a young crow for Vashti,
and could fashion all sorts of curious whistles, snares,
and other contrivances with his long fingers.
He did not court popularity, was rather
cold and unapproachable, and Vashti Mills was about
the only other scholar with whom he seemed to be on
warm terms. Many a time when the tall boy stood
up before the thin teacher, helpless and dumb over
some question which almost anyone in the school could
answer, the little girl, twisting her fingers in an
ecstacy of anxiety, whispered to him the answer in
the face of almost certain detection and of absolutely
certain punishment. In return, he worshipped
the ground she walked on, and whichever side Vashti
was on, Darby was sure to be on it too. He climbed
the tallest trees to get her nuts; waded into the
miriest swamps to find her more brilliant nosegays
of flowers than the other girls had; spent hours to
gather rarer birds’ eggs than they had, and
was everywhere and always her silent worshipper and
faithful champion. They soon learned that the
way to secure his help in anything was to get Vashti
Mills to ask it, and the little girl quickly discovered
her power and used it as remorselessly over her tall
slave as any other despot ever did. They were
to be seen any day trailing along the plantation paths
which the school-children took from the district,
the others in a clump, and the tall boy and little
calico-clad girl, who seemed in summer mainly sun-bonnet
and bare legs, either following or going before the
others at some distance.
The death of Darby of old
Darby, as he had begun to be called cut
off Little Darby from his “schoolin’”,
in the middle of his third year, and before he had
learned more than to read and cipher a little and to
write in a scrawly fashion; for he had been rather
irregular in his attendance at all times. He
now stopped altogether, giving the teacher as his
reason, with characteristic brevity: “Got
to work.”
Perhaps no one at the school mourned
the long-legged boy’s departure except his little
friend Vashti, now a well-grown girl of twelve, very
straight and slim and with big dark eyes. She
gave him when he went away the little Testament she
had gotten as a prize, and which was one of her most
cherished possessions. Other boys found the first
honor as climber, runner, rock-flinger, wrestler,
swimmer, and fighter open once more to them, and were
free from the silent and somewhat contemptuous gaze
of him who, however they looked down on him, was a
sort of silent power among them. Vashti alone
felt a void and found by its sudden absence how great
a force was the steady backing of one who could always
be counted on to take one’s side without question.
She had to bear the gibes of the school as “Miss
Darby”, and though her two brothers were ready
enough to fight for her if boys pushed her too hardly,
they could do nothing against girls, and the girls
were her worst tormentors.
The name was fastened on her, and
it clung to her until, as time went on, she came to
almost hate the poor innocent cause of it.
Meantime Darby, beginning to fill
out and take on the shoulders and form of a man, began
to fill also the place of the man in his little home.
This among other things meant opposition, if not hostility,
to everything on Cove Mills’s side. When
old Darby died the Millses all went to the funeral,
of course; but that did not prevent their having the
same feeling toward Little Darby afterward, and the
breach continued.
At first he used to go over occasionally
to see Vashti and carry her little presents, as he
had done at school; but he soon found that it was
not the same thing. He was always received coolly,
and shortly he was given to understand that he was
not wanted there, and in time Vashti herself showed
that she was not the same she had been to him before.
Thus the young fellow was thrown back on himself, and
the hostility between the two cabins was as great
as ever.
He spent much of his time in the woods,
for the Stanley place was small at best, only a score
or so of acres, and mostly covered with pines, and
Little Darby was but a poor hand at working with a
hoe their only farm implement. He
was, however, an unerring shot, with an eye like a
hawk to find a squirrel flat on top of the grayest
limb of the tallest hickory in the woods, or a hare
in her bed among the brownest broomsedge in the county,
and he knew the habits of fish and bird and animal
as if he had created them; and though he could not
or would not handle a hoe, he was the best hand at
an axe “in the stump”, in the district,
and Mrs. Stanley was kept in game if not in meal.
The Millses dilated on his worthlessness,
and Vashti, grown to be a slender slip of a girl with
very bright eyes and a little nose, was loudest against
him in public; though rumor said she had fallen afoul
of her youngest brother and boxed his jaws for seconding
something she had said of him.
The Mills’s enmity was well
understood, and there were not wanting those to take
Darby’s side. He had grown to be the likeliest
young man in the district, tall, and straight as a
sapling, and though Vashti flaunted her hate of him
and turned up her little nose more than it was already
turned up at his name, there were many other girls
in the pines who looked at him languishingly from
under their long sun-bonnets, and thought he was worth
both the Mills boys and Vashti to boot. So when
at a fish-fry the two Mills boys attacked him and he
whipped them both together, some said it served them
right, while others declared they did just what they
ought to have done, and intimated that Darby was less
anxious to meet their father than he was them, who
were nothing more than boys to him. These asked
in proof of their view, why he had declined to fight
when Old Cove had abused him so to his face. This
was met by the fact that he “could not have
been so mighty afeared,” for he had jumped in
and saved Chris Mills’s life ten minutes afterward,
when he got beyond his depth in the pond and had already
sunk twice. But, then, to be sure, it had to
be admitted that he was the best swimmer on the ground,
and that any man there would have gone in to save his
worst enemy if he had been drowning. This must
have been the view that Vashti Mills took of the case;
for one day not long afterward, having met Darby at
the cross-roads store where she was looking at some
pink calico, and where he had come to get some duck-shot
and waterproof caps, she turned on him publicly, and
with flashing eyes and mantling cheeks, gave him to
understand that if she were a man he “would not
have had to fight two boys,” and he would not
have come off so well either. If anything, this
attack brought Darby friends, for he not only had whipped
the Mills boys fairly, and had fought only when they
had pressed him, but had, as has been said, declined
to fight old man Mills under gross provocation; and
besides, though they were younger than he, the Mills
boys were seventeen and eighteen, and “not such
babies either; if they insisted on fighting they had
to take what they got and not send their sister to
talk and abuse a man about it afterward.”
And the weight of opinion was that, “that Vashti
Mills was gettin’ too airified and set up anyways.”
All this reached Mrs. Stanley, and
was no doubt sweet to her ears. She related it
in her drawling voice to Darby as he sat in the door
one evening, but it did not seem to have much effect
on him; he never stirred or showed by word or sign
that he even heard her, and finally, without speaking,
he rose and lounged away into the woods. The old
woman gazed after him silently until he disappeared,
and then gave a look across to where the Mills cabin
peeped from among the pines, which was full of hate.
The fish-fry at which Darby Stanley
had first fought the Mills boys and then pulled one
of them out of the river, had been given by one of
the county candidates for election as delegate to
a convention which was to be held at the capital,
and possibly the division of sentiment in the district
between the Millses and Little Darby was as much due
to political as to personal feeling; for the sides
were growing more and more tightly drawn, and the
Millses, as usual, were on one side and Little Darby
on the other; and both sides had strong adherents.
The question was on one side, Secession, with probable
war; and on the other, the Union as it was. The
Millses were for the candidate who advocated the latter,
and Little Darby was for him who wanted secession.
Both candidates were men of position and popularity,
the one a young man and the other older, and both
were neighbors.
The older man was elected, and shortly
the question became imminent, and all the talk about
the Cross-roads was of war. As time had worn on,
Little Darby, always silent, had become more and more
so, and seemed to be growing morose. He spent
more and more of his time in the woods or about the
Cross-roads, the only store and post-office near the
district where the little tides of the quiet life
around used to meet. At length Mrs. Stanley considered
it so serious that she took it upon herself to go
over and talk to her neighbor, Mrs. Douwill, as she
generally did on matters too intricate and grave for
the experience of the district. She found Mrs.
Douwill, as always, sympathetic and kind, and though
she took back with her not much enlightenment as to
the cause of her son’s trouble or its cure,
she went home in a measure comforted with the assurance
of the sympathy of one stronger than she. She
had found out that her neighbor, powerful and rich
as she seemed to her to be, had her own troubles and
sorrows; she heard from her of the danger of war breaking
out at any time, and her husband would enlist among
the first.
Little Darby did not say much when
his mother told of her visit; but his usually downcast
eyes had a new light in them, and he began to visit
the Cross-roads oftener.
At last one day the news that came
to the Cross-roads was that there was to be war.
It had been in the air for some time, but now it was
undoubted. It came in the presence of Mr. Douwill
himself, who had come the night before and was commissioned
by the Governor to raise a company. There were
a number of people there quite a crowd for
the little Cross-roads for the stir had
been growing day by day, and excitement and anxiety
were on the increase. The papers had been full
of secession, firing on flags, raising troops, and
everything; but that was far off. When Mr. Douwill
appeared in person it came nearer, though still few,
if any, quite took it in that it could be actual and
immediate. Among those at the Cross-roads that
day were the Millses, father and sons, who looked
a little critically at the speaker as one who had
always been on the other side. Little Darby was
also there, silent as usual, but with a light burning
in his blue eyes.
That evening, when Little Darby reached
home, which he did somewhat earlier than usual, he
announced to his mother that he had enlisted as a
soldier. The old woman was standing before her
big fireplace when he told her, and she leaned against
it quite still for a moment; then she sat down, stumbling
a little on the rough hearth as she made her way to
her little broken chair. Darby got up and found
her a better one, which she took without a word.
Whatever entered into her soul in
the little cabin that night, when Mrs. Stanley went
among her neighbors she was a soldier’s mother.
She even went over to Cove Mills’s on some pretext
connected with Darby’s going. Vashti was
not at home, but Mrs. Mills was, and she felt a sudden
loss, as if somehow the Millses had fallen below the
Stanleys. She talked of it for several days;
she could not make out entirely what it was.
Vashti’s black eyes flashed.
The next day Darby went to the Cross-roads
to drill; there was, besides the recruits, who were
of every class, quite a little crowd there to look
at the drill. Among them were two women of the
poorest class, one old and faded, rather than gray,
the other hardly better dressed, though a slim figure,
straight and trim, gave her a certain distinction,
even had not a few ribbons and a little ornament or
two on her pink calico, with a certain air, showed
that she was accustomed to being admired.
The two women found themselves together
once during the day, and their eyes met. It was
just as the line of soldiers passed. Those of
the elder lighted with a sudden spark of mingled triumph
and hate, those of the younger flashed back for a
moment and then fell beneath the elder’s gaze.
There was much enthusiasm about the war, and among
others, both of the Mills boys enlisted before the
day was ended, their sister going in with them to
the room where their names were entered on the roll,
and coming out with flashing eyes and mantling cheeks.
She left the place earlier than most of the crowd,
but not until after the drill was over and some of
the young soldiers had gone home. The Mills boys’
enlistment was set down in the district to Vashti,
and some said it was because she was jealous of Little
Darby being at the end of the company, with a new
gun and such a fine uniform; for her hatred of Little
Darby was well known; anyhow, their example was followed,
and in a short time nearly all the young men in the
district had enlisted.
At last one night a summons came for
the company to assemble at the Cross-roads next day
with arms and equipment. Orders had come for them
to report at once at the capital of the State for drill,
before being sent into the field to repel a force
which, report said, was already on the way to invade
the State. There was the greatest excitement and
enthusiasm. This was war! And everyone was
ready to meet it. The day was given to taking
an inventory of arms and equipment, and then there
was a drill, and then the company was dismissed for
the night, as many of them had families of whom they
had not taken leave, and as they had not come that
day prepared to leave, and were ordered to join the
commander next day, prepared to march.
Little Darby escorted his mother home,
taciturn as ever. At first there was quite a
company; but as they went their several ways to their
home, at last Little Darby and his mother were left
alone in the piney path, and made the last part of
their way alone. Now and then the old woman’s
eyes were on him, and often his eyes were on her, but
they did not speak; they just walked on in silence
till they reached home.
It was but a poor, little house even
when the wistaria vine covered it, wall and roof,
and the bees hummed among its clusters of violet blossoms;
but now the wistaria bush was only a tangle of twisted
wires hung upon it, and the little weather-stained
cabin looked bare and poor enough. As the young
fellow stood in the door looking out with the evening
light upon him, his tall, straight figure filled it
as if it had been a frame. He stood perfectly
motionless for some minutes, gazing across the gum
thickets before him.
The sun had set only about a half-hour
and the light was still lingering on the under edges
of the clouds in the west and made a sort of glow in
the little yard before him, as it did in front of the
cabin on the other hill. His eye first swept
the well-known horizon, taking in the thickets below
him and the heavy pines on either side where it was
already dusk, and then rested on the little cabin
opposite. Whether he saw it or not, one could
hardly have told, for his face wore a reminiscent look.
Figures moved backward and forward over there, came
out and went in, without his look changing. Even
Vashti, faintly distinguishable in her gay dress,
came out and passed down the hill alone, without his
expression changing. It was, perhaps, fifteen
minutes later that he seemed to awake, and after a
look over his shoulder stepped from the door into
the yard. His mother was cooking, and he strolled
down the path across the little clearing and entered
the pines. Insensibly his pace quickened he
strode along the dusky path with as firm a step as
if it were broad daylight. A quarter of a mile
below the path crossed the little stream and joined
the path from Cove Mills’s place, which he used
to take when he went to school. He crossed at
the old log and turned down the path through the little
clearing there. The next moment he stood face
to face with Vashti Mills. Whether he was surprised
or not no one could have told, for he said not a word,
and his face was in the shadow, though Vashti’s
was toward the clearing and the light from the sky
was on it. Her hat was in her hand. He stood
still, but did not stand aside to let her pass, until
she made an imperious little gesture and stepped as
if she would have passed around him. Then he stood
aside. But she did not appear in a hurry to avail
herself of the freedom offered, she simply looked
at him. He took off his cap sheepishly enough,
and said, “Good-evenin’.”
“Good-evenin’,”
she said, and then, as the pause became embarrassing,
she said, “Hear you’re agoin’ away
to-morrer?”
“Yes to-morrer mornin’.”
“When you’re acomin’
back?” she asked, after a pause in which she
had been twisting the pink string of her hat.
“Don’t know may
be never.” Had he been looking at her he
might have seen the change which his words brought
to her face; she lifted her eyes to his face for the
first time since the half defiant glance she had given
him when they met, and they had a strange light in
them, but at the moment he was looking at a bow on
her dress which had been pulled loose. He put
out his hand and touched it and said:
“You’re a-losin’
yer bow,” and as she found a pin and fastened
it again, he added, “An’ I don’
know as anybody keers.”
An overpowering impulse changed her
and forced her to say: “I don’t know
as anybody does either; I know as I don’t.”
The look on his face smote her, and
the spark died out of her eyes as he said, slowly:
“No, I knowed you didn’! I don’t
know as anybody does, exceptin’ my old woman.
Maybe she will a little. I jist wanted to tell
you that I wouldn’t a’ fit them boys if
they hadn’t a’ pushed me so hard, and
I wan’t afeared to fight your old man, I jist
wouldn’t that’s all.”
What answer she might have made to
this was prevented by him; for he suddenly held out
his hand with something in it, saying, “Here.”
She instinctively reached out to take
whatever it was, and he placed in her hand a book
which she recognized as the little Testament which
she had won as a prize at school and had given him
when they went to school together. It was the
only book she had ever possessed as her very own.
“I brought this thinking as
how maybe you might ’a’-wanted me
to keep it,” he was going to say; but he checked
himself and said: “might ’a’-wanted
it back.”
Before she could recover from the
surprise of finding the book in her hand her own,
he was gone. The words only came to her clearly
as his retreating footsteps grew fainter and his tall
figure faded in the darkening light. She made
a hasty step or two after him, then checked herself
and listened intently to see if he were not returning,
and then, as only the katydids answered, threw herself
flat on the ground and grovelled in the darkness.
There were few houses in the district
or in the county where lights did not burn all that
night. The gleam of the fire in Mrs. Stanley’s
little house could be seen all night from the door
of the Mills cabin, as the candle by which Mrs. Mills
complained while she and Vashti sewed, could be faintly
seen from Little Darby’s house. The two
Mills boys slept stretched out on the one bed in the
little centre-room.
While the women sewed and talked fitfully
by the single tallow candle, and old Cove dozed in
a chair with his long legs stretched out toward the
fire and the two shining barrels of his sons’
muskets resting against his knees, where they had
slipped from his hands when he had finished rubbing
them.
The younger woman did most of the
sewing. Her fingers were suppler than her mother’s,
and she scarcely spoke except to answer the latter’s
querulous questions. Presently a rooster crowed
somewhere in the distance, and almost immediately
another crowed in answer closer at hand.
“Thar’s the second rooster-crow,
it’s gittin’ erlong toward the mornin’,”
said the elder woman.
The young girl made no answer, but
a moment later rose and, laying aside the thing she
was sewing, walked to the low door and stepped out
into the night. When she returned and picked
up her sewing again, her mother said:
“I de-clar, Vashti, you drinks
mo’ water than anybody I ever see.”
To which she made no answer.
“Air they a-stirrin’ over at Mis’s
Stanley’s?” asked the mother.
“They ain’t a-been to
bed,” said the girl, quietly; and then, as if
a sudden thought had struck her, she hitched her chair
nearer the door which she had left open, and sat facing
it as she sewed on the brown thing she was working
on a small bow which she took from her dress.
“I de-clar, I don’t see
what old Mis’s Stanley is actually a-gwine to
do,” broke out Mrs. Mills, suddenly, and when
Vashti did not feel called on to try to enlighten
her she added, “Do you?”
“Same as other folks, I s’pose,”
said the girl, quietly.
“Other folks has somebody somebody
to take keer on ’em. I’ve got your
pappy now; but she ain’t got nobody but little
Darby and when he’s gone what will
she do?”
For answer Vashti only hitched her
chair a little nearer the door and sewed on almost
in darkness. “Not that he was much account
to her, ner to anybody else, except for goin’
aroun’ a-fightin’ and a-fussin’.”
“He was account to her,”
flamed up the girl, suddenly; “he was account
to her, to her and to everybody else. He was the
fust soldier that ’listed, and he’s account
to everybody.”
The old woman had raised her head
in astonishment at her daughter’s first outbreak,
and was evidently about to reply sharply; but the girl’s
flushed face and flashing eyes awed and silenced her.
“Well, well, I ain’t sayin’
nothin’ against him,” she said, presently.
“Yes, you air you’re
always sayin’ somethin’ against him and
so is everybody else and they ain’t
fitten to tie his shoes. Why don’t they
say it to his face! There ain’t one of ’em
as dares it, and he’s the best soldier in the
comp’ny, an’ I’m jest as proud of
it as if he was my own.”
The old woman was evidently bound
to defend herself. She said:
“It don’t lay in your
mouth to take up for him, Vashti Mills; for you’re
the one as has gone up and down and abused him scandalous.”
“Yes, and I know I did,”
said the girl, springing up excitedly and tossing
her arms and tearing at her ribbons. “An’
I told him to his face too, and that’s the only
good thing about it. I knowed it was a lie when
I told him, and he knowed it was a lie too, and he
knowed I knowed it was a lie what’s
more and I’m glad he did fo’
God I’m glad he did. He could ‘a’
whipped the whole company an’ he jest wouldn’t an’
that’s God’s truth God’s
fatal truth.”
The next instant she was on her knees
hunting for something on the floor, in an agony of
tears; and as her father, aroused by the noise, rose
and asked a question, she sprang up and rushed out
of the door.
The sound of an axe was already coming
through the darkness across the gum thickets from
Mrs. Stanley’s, telling that preparation was
being made for Darby’s last breakfast.
It might have told more, however, by its long continuance;
for it meant that Little Darby was cutting his mother
a supply of wood to last till his return. Inside,
the old woman, thin and faded, was rubbing his musket.
The sun was just rising above the
pines, filling the little bottom between the cabins
with a sort of rosy light, and making the dewy bushes
and weeds sparkle with jewel-strung gossamer webs,
when Little Darby, with his musket in his hand, stepped
for the last time out of the low door. He had
been the first soldier in the district to enlist, he
must be on time. He paused just long enough to
give one swift glance around the little clearing,
and then set out along the path at his old swinging
pace. At the edge of the pines he turned and glanced
back. His mother was standing in the door, but
whether she saw him or not he could not tell.
He waved his hand to her, but she did not wave back,
her eyes were failing somewhat. The next instant
he disappeared in the pines.
He had crossed the little stream on
the old log and passed the point where he had met
Vashti the evening before, when he thought he heard
something fall a little ahead of him. It could
not have been a squirrel, for it did not move after
it fell. His old hunter’s instinct caused
him to look keenly down the path as he turned the clump
of bushes which stopped his view; but he saw no squirrel
or other moving thing. The only thing he saw
was a little brown something with a curious spot on
it lying in the path some little way ahead. As
he came nearer it, he saw that it was a small parcel
not as big as a man’s fist. Someone had
evidently dropped it the evening before. He picked
it up and examined it as he strode along. It
was a little case or wallet made of some brown stuff,
such as women carry needles and thread in, and it was
tied up with a bit of red, white and blue string,
the Confederate colors, on the end of which was sewed
a small bow of pink ribbon. He untied it.
It was what it looked to be: a roughly made little
needle-case such as women use, tolerably well stocked
with sewing materials, and it had something hard and
almost square in a separate pocket. Darby opened
this, and his gun almost slipped from his hand.
Inside was the Testament he had given back to Vashti
the evening before. He stopped stock-still, and
gazed at it in amazement, turning it over in his hand.
He recognized the bow of pink ribbon as one like that
which she had had on her dress the evening before.
She must have dropped it. Then it came to him
that she must have given it to one of her brothers,
and a pang shot through his heart. But how did
it get where he found it? He was too keen a woodsman
not to know that no footstep had gone before his on
that path that morning. It was a mystery too
deep for him, and after puzzling over it a while he
tied the parcel up again as nearly like what it had
been before as he could, and determined to give it
to one of the Mills boys when he reached the Cross-roads.
He unbuttoned his jacket and put it into the little
inner pocket, and then rebuttoning it carefully, stepped
out again more briskly than before.
It was perhaps an hour later that
the Mills boys set out for the Cross-roads. Their
father and mother went with them; but Vashti did not
go. She had “been out to look for the cow,”
and got in only just before they left, still clad
in her yesterday’s finery; but it was wet and
bedraggled with the soaking dew. When they were
gone she sat down in the door, limp and dejected.
More than once during the morning
the girl rose and started down the path as if she
would follow them and see the company set out on its
march, but each time she came back and sat down again
in the door, remaining there for a good while as if
in thought.
Once she went over almost to Mrs.
Stanley’s, then turned back and sat down again.
So the morning passed, and the first
thing she knew, her father and mother had returned.
The company had started. They were to march to
the bridge that night. She heard them talking
over the appearance that they had made; the speech
of the captain; the cheers that went up as they marched
off the enthusiasm of the crowd. Her
father was in much excitement. Suddenly she seized
her sun-bonnet and slipped out of the house and across
the clearing, and the next instant she was flying down
the path through the pines. She knew the road
they had taken, and a path that would strike it several
miles lower down. She ran like a deer, up hill
and down, availing herself of every short cut, until,
about an hour after she started, she came out on the
road. Fortunately for her, the delays incident
to getting any body of new troops on the march had
detained the company, and a moment’s inspection
of the road showed her that they had not yet passed.
Clambering up a bank, she concealed herself and lay
down. In a few moments she heard the noise they
made in the distance, and she was still panting from
her haste when they came along, the soldiers marching
in order, as if still on parade, and a considerable
company of friends attending them. Not a man,
however, dreamed that, flat on her face in the bushes,
lay a girl peering down at them with her breath held,
but with a heart which beat so loud to her own ears
that she felt they must hear it. Least of all
did Darby Stanley, marching erect and tall in front,
for all the sore heart in his bosom, know that her
eyes were on him as long as she could see him.
When Vashti brought up the cow that
night it was later than usual. It perhaps was
fortunate for her that the change made by the absence
of the boys prevented any questioning. After
all the excitement her mother was in a fit of despondency.
Her father sat in the door looking straight before
him, as silent as the pine on which his vacant gaze
was fixed. Even when the little cooking they
had was through with and his supper was offered him,
he never spoke. He ate in silence and then took
his seat again. Even Mrs. Mills’s complaining
about the cow straying so far brought no word from
him any more than from Vashti. He sat silent as
before, his long legs stretched out toward the fire.
The glow of the embers fell on the rough, thin face
and lit it up, bringing out the features and making
them suddenly clear-cut and strong. It might have
been only the fire, but there seemed the glow of something
more, and the eyes burnt back under the shaggy brows.
The two women likewise were silent, the elder now
and then casting a glance at her husband. She
offered him his pipe, but he said nothing, and silence
fell as before.
Presently she could stand it no longer.
“I de-clar, Vashti,” she said, “I
believe your pappy takes it most harder than I does.”
The girl made some answer about the
boys. It was hardly intended for him to hear,
but he rose suddenly, and walking to the door, took
down from the two dogwood forks above it his old,
long, single-barrelled gun, and turning to his wife
said, “Git me my coat, old woman; by Gawd, I’m
a-gwine.” The two women were both on their
feet in a second. Their faces were white and
their hands were clenched under the sudden stress,
their breath came fast. The older woman was the
first to speak.
“What in the worl’ ken
you do, Cove Mills, olé an’ puny as you
is, an’ got the rheumatiz all the time, too?”
“I ken pint a gun,” said
the old man, doggedly, “an’ I’m a-gwine.”
“An’ what in the worl’
is a-goin’ to become of us, an’ that cow
got to runnin’ away so, I’m afeared all
the time she’ll git in the mash?” Her
tone was querulous, but it was not positive, and when
her husband said again, “I’m a-gwine,”
she said no more, and all the time she was getting
together the few things which Cove would take.
As for Vashti, she seemed suddenly
revivified; she moved about with a new step, swift,
supple, silent, her head up, a new light in her face,
and her eyes, as they turned now and then on her father,
filled with a new fire. She did not talk much.
“I’ll a-teck care o’ us all,”
she said once; and once again, when her mother gave
something like a moan, she supported her with a word
about “the only ones as gives three from one
family.” It was a word in season, for the
mother caught the spirit, and a moment later declared,
with a new tone in her voice, that that was better
than Mrs. Stanley, and still they were better off than
she, for they still had two left to help each other,
while she had not a soul.
“I’ll teck care o’ us all,”
repeated the girl once more.
It was only a few things that Cove
Mills took with him that morning, when he set out
in the darkness to overtake the company before they
should break camp hardly his old game-bag
half full; for the equipment of the boys had stripped
the little cabin of everything that could be of use.
He might only have seemed to be going hunting, as he
slung down the path with his old long-barrelled gun
in his hand and his game-bag over his shoulder, and
disappeared in the darkness from the eyes of the two
women standing in the cabin door.
The next morning Mrs. Mills paid Mrs.
Stanley the first visit she had paid on that side
the branch since the day, three years before, when
Cove and the boys had the row with Little Darby.
It might have seemed accidental, but Mrs. Stanley
was the first person in the district to know that
all the Mills men were gone to the army. She went
over again, from time to time, for it was not a period
to keep up open hostilities, and she was younger than
Mrs. Stanley and better off; but Vashti never went,
and Mrs. Stanley never asked after her or came.
II
The company in which Little Darby
and the Millses had enlisted was one of the many hundred
infantry companies which joined and were merged in
the Confederate army. It was in no way particularly
signalized by anything that it did. It was commanded
by the gentleman who did most toward getting it up;
and the officers were gentlemen. The seventy odd
men who made the rank and file were of all classes,
from the sons of the oldest and wealthiest planters
in the neighborhood to Little Darby and the dwellers
in the district. The war was very different from
what those who went into it expected it to be.
Until it had gone on some time it seemed mainly marching
and camping and staying in camp, quite uselessly as
seemed to many, and drilling and doing nothing.
Much of the time especially later on was
given to marching and getting food; but drilling and
camp duties at first took up most of it. This
was especially hard on the poorer men, no one knew
what it was to them. Some moped, some fell sick.
Of the former class was Little Darby. He was too
strong to be sickly as one of the Mills boys was, who
died of fever in hospital only three months after
they went in, and too silent to be as the other, who
was jolly and could dance and sing a good song and
was soon very popular in the company; more popular
even than Old Cove, who was popular in several rights,
as being about the oldest man in the company and as
having a sort of dry wit when he was in a good humor,
which he generally was. Little Darby was hardly
distinguished at all, unless by the fact that he was
somewhat taller than most of his comrades and somewhat
more taciturn. He was only a common soldier of
a common class in an ordinary infantry company, such
a company as was common in the army. He still
had the little wallet which he had picked up in the
path that morning he left home. He had asked both
of the Mills boys vaguely if they ever had owned such
a piece of property, but they had not, and when old
Cove told him that he had not either, he had contented
himself and carried it about with him somewhat elaborately
wrapped up and tied in an old piece of oilcloth and
in his inside jacket pocket for safety, with a vague
feeling that some day he might find the owner or return
it. He was never on specially good terms with
the Millses. Indeed, there was always a trace
of coolness between them and him. He could not
give it to them. Now and then he untied and unwrapped
it in a secret place and read a little in the Testament,
but that was all. He never touched a needle or
so much as a pin, and when he untied the parcel he
generally counted them to see that they were all there.
So the war went on, with battles coming
a little oftener and food growing ever a little scarcer;
but the company was about as before, nothing particular what
with killing and fever a little thinned, a good deal
faded; and Little Darby just one in a crowd, marching
with the rest, sleeping with the rest, fighting with
the rest, starving with the rest. He was hardly
known for a long time, except for his silence, outside
of his mess. Men were fighting and getting killed
or wounded constantly; as for him, he was never touched;
and as he did what he was ordered silently and was
silent when he got through, there was no one to sing
his praise. Even when he was sent out on the skirmish
line as a sharp-shooter, if he did anything no one
knew it. He would disappear over a crest, or
in a wood, and reappear as silent as if he were hunting
in the swamps of the district; clean his gun; cut up
wood; eat what he could get, and sit by the fire and
listen to the talk, as silent awake as asleep.
One other thing distinguished him,
he could handle an axe better than any man in the
company; but no one thought much of that least
of all, Little Darby; it only brought him a little
more work occasionally.
One day, in the heat of a battle which
the men knew was being won, if shooting and cheering
and rapid advancing could tell anything, the advance
which had been going on with spirit was suddenly checked
by a murderous artillery fire which swept the top
of a slope, along the crest of which ran a road a
little raised between two deep ditches topped by the
remains of heavy fences. The infantry, after a
gallant and hopeless charge, were ordered to lie down
in the ditch behind the pike, and were sheltered from
the leaden sleet which swept the crest. Artillery
was needed to clear the field beyond, by silencing
the batteries which swept it, but no artillery could
get into position for the ditches, and the day seemed
about to be lost. The only way was up the pike,
and the only break was a gate opening into the field
right on top of the hill. The gate was gone,
but two huge wooden gate-posts, each a tree-trunk,
still stood and barred the way. No cannon had
room to turn in between them; a battery had tried
and a pile of dead men, horses, and debris marked its
failure. A general officer galloped up with two
or three of his staff to try to start the advance
again. He saw the impossibility.
“If we could get a couple of
batteries into that field for three minutes,”
he said, “it would do the work, but in ten minutes
it will be too late.”
The company from the old county was
lying behind the bank almost exactly opposite the
gate, and every word could be heard.
Where the axe came from no one knew;
but a minute later a man slung himself across the
road, and the next second the sharp, steady blows of
an axe were ringing on the pike. The axeman had
cut a wide cleft in the brown wood, and the big chips
were flying before his act was quite taken in, and
then a cheer went up from the line. It was no
time to cheer, however; other chips were flying than
those from the cutter’s axe, and the bullets
hissed by him like bees, splintering the hard post
and knocking the dust from the road about his feet;
but he took no notice of them, his axe plied as steadily
as if he had been cutting a tree in the woods of the
district, and when he had cut one side, he turned as
deliberately and cut the other; then placing his hand
high up, he flung his weight against the post and
it went down. A great cheer went up and the axeman
swung back across the road just as two batteries of
artillery tore through the opening he had made.
Few men outside of his company knew
who the man was, and few had time to ask; for the
battle was on again and the infantry pushed forward.
As for Little Darby himself, the only thing he said
was, “I knowed I could cut it down in ten minutes.”
He had nine bullet holes through his clothes that
night, but Little Darby thought nothing of it, and
neither did others; many others had bullet holes through
their bodies that night. It happened not long
afterward that the general was talking of the battle
to an English gentleman who had come over to see something
of the war and was visiting him in his camp, and he
mentioned the incident of a battle won by an axeman’s
coolness, but did not know the name of the man who
cut the post away; the captain of the company, however,
was the general’s cousin and was dining with
his guest that day, and he said with pride that he
knew the man, that he was in his company, and he gave
the name.
“It is a fine old name,” said the visitor.
“And he is a fine man,”
said the captain; but none of this was ever known
by Darby. He was not mentioned in the gazette,
because there was no gazette. The confederate
soldiery had no honors save the approval of their
own consciences and the love of their own people.
It was not even mentioned in the district; or, if
it was, it was only that he had cut down a post; other
men were being shot to pieces all the time and the
district had other things to think of.
Poor at all times, the people of the
district were now absolutely without means of subsistence.
Fortunately for them, they were inured to hardship;
and their men being all gone to the war, the women
made such shift as they could and lived as they might.
They hoed their little patches, fished the streams,
and trapped in the woods. But it was poor enough
at best, and the weak went down and only the strong
survived. Mrs. Mills was better off than most,
she had a cow at first, and she had Vashti.
Vashti turned out to be a tower of strength. She
trapped more game than anyone in the district; caught
more fish with lines and traps she went
miles to fish below the forks where the fish were bigger
than above; she learned to shoot with her father’s
old gun, which had been sent back when he got a musket,
shot like a man and better than most men; she hoed
the patch, she tended the cow till it was lost, and
then she did many other things. Her mother declared
that, when Chris died (Chris was the boy who died
of fever), but for Vashti she could not have got along
at all, and there were many other women in the pines
who felt the same thing.
When the news came that Bob Askew
was killed, Vashti was one of the first who got to
Bob’s wife; and when Billy Luck disappeared in
a battle, Vashti gave the best reasons for thinking
he had been taken prisoner; and many a string of fish
and many a squirrel and hare found their way into
the empty cabins because Vashti “happened to
pass by.”
From having been rather stigmatized
as “that Vashti Mills”, she came to be
relied on, and “Vashti” was consulted and
quoted as an authority.
One cabin alone she never visited.
The house of old Mrs. Stanley, now almost completely
buried under its unpruned wistaria vine, she never
entered. Her mother, as has been said, sometimes
went across the bottom, and now and then took with
her a hare or a bird or a string of fish on
condition from Vashti that it should not be known she
had caught them; but Vashti never went, and Mrs. Mills
found herself sometimes put to it to explain to others
her unneighborliness. The best she could make
of it to say that “Vashti, she always do
do her own way.”
How Mrs. Stanley’s wood-pile
was kept up nobody knew, if, indeed, it could be called
a wood-pile, when it was only a recurring supply of
dry-wood thrown as if accidentally just at the edge
of the clearing. Mrs. Stanley was not of an imaginative
turn, even of enough to explain how it came that so
much dry-wood came to be there broken up just the
right length; and Mrs. Mills knew no more than that
“that cow was always a-goin’ off and a-keepin’
Vashti a-huntin’ everywheres in the worl’.”
All said, however, the women of the
district had a hungry time, and the war bore on them
heavily as on everyone else, and as it went on they
suffered more and more. Many a woman went day
after day and week after week without even the small
portion of coarse corn-bread which was ordinarily
her common fare. They called oftener and oftener
at the house of their neighbors who owned the plantations
near them, and always received something; but as time
went on the plantations themselves were stripped;
the little things they could take with them when they
went, such as eggs, honey, etc., were wanting,
and to go too often without anything to give might
make them seem like beggars, and that they were not.
Their husbands and sons were in the army fighting for
the South, as well as those from the plantations,
and they stood by this fact on the same level.
The arrogant looks of the negroes
were unpleasant, and in marked contrast to the universal
graciousness of their owners, but they were slaves
and they could afford to despise them. Only they
must uphold their independence. Thus no one outside
knew what the women of the district went through.
When they wrote to their husbands or sons that they
were in straits, it meant that they were starving.
Such a letter meant all the more because they were
used to hunger, but not to writing, and a letter meant
perhaps days of thought and enterprise and hours of
labor.
As the war went on the hardships everywhere
grew heavier and heavier; the letters from home came
oftener and oftener. Many of the men got furloughs
when they were in winter quarters, and sometimes in
summer, too, from wounds, and went home to see their
families. Little Darby never went; he sent his
mother his pay, and wrote to her, but he did not even
apply for a furlough, and he had never been touched
except for a couple of flesh wounds which were barely
skin-deep. When he heard from his mother she
was always cheerful; and as he knew Vashti had never
even visited her, there was no other reason for his
going home. It was in the late part of the third
campaign of the war that he began to think of going.
When Cove Mills got a letter from
his wife and told Little Darby how “ailin’”
and “puny” his mother was getting, Darby
knew that the letter was written by Vashti, and he
felt that it meant a great deal. He applied for
a furlough, but was told that no furloughs would be
granted then which then meant that work
was expected. It came shortly afterward, and
Little Darby and the company were in it. Battle
followed battle. A good many men in the company
were killed, but, as it happened, not one of the men
from the district was among them, until one day when
the company after a fierce charge found itself hugging
the ground in a wide field, on the far side of which
the enemy infantry and artillery was
posted in force. Lying down they were pretty well
protected by the conformation of the ground from the
artillery; and lying down, the infantry generally,
even with their better guns, could not hurt them to
a great extent; but a line of sharp-shooters, well
placed behind cover of scattered rocks on the far side
of the field, could reach them with their long-range
rifles, and galled them with their dropping fire,
picking off man after man. A line of sharp-shooters
was thrown forward to drive them in; but their guns
were not as good and the cover was inferior, and it
was only after numerous losses that they succeeded
in silencing most of them. They still left several
men up among the rocks, who from time to time sent
a bullet into the line with deadly effect. One
man, in particular, ensconced behind a rock on the
hill-side, picked off the men with unerring accuracy.
Shot after shot was sent at him. At last he was
quiet for so long that it seemed he must have been
silenced, and they began to hope; Ad Mills rose to
his knees and in sheer bravado waved his hat in triumph.
Just as he did so a puff of white came from the rock,
and Ad Mills threw up his hands and fell on his back,
like a log, stone dead. A groan of mingled rage
and dismay went along the line. Poor old Cove
crept over and fell on the boy’s body with a
flesh wound in his own arm. Fifty shots were sent
at the rock, but a puff of smoke from it afterward
and a hissing bullet showed that the marksman was
untouched. It was apparent that he was secure
behind his rock bulwark and had some opening through
which he could fire at his leisure. It was also
apparent that he must be dislodged if possible; but
how to do it was the question; no one could reach him.
The slope down and the slope up to the group of rocks
behind which he lay were both in plain view, and any
man would be riddled who attempted to cross it.
A bit of woods reached some distance up on one side,
but not far enough to give a shot at one behind the
rock; and though the ground in that direction dipped
a little, there was one little ridge in full view
of both lines and perfectly bare, except for a number
of bodies of skirmishers who had fallen earlier in
the day. It was discussed in the line; but everyone
knew that no man could get across the ridge alive.
While they were talking of it Little Darby, who, with
a white face, had helped old Cove to get his boy’s
body back out of fire, slipped off to one side, rifle
in hand, and disappeared in the wood.
They were still talking of the impossibility
of dislodging the sharp-shooter when a man appeared
on the edge of the wood. He moved swiftly across
the sheltered ground, stooping low until he reached
the edge of the exposed place, where he straightened
up and made a dash across it. He was recognized
instantly by some of the men of his company as Little
Darby, and a buzz of astonishment went along the line.
What could he mean, it was sheer madness; the line
of white smoke along the wood and the puffs of dust
about his feet showed that bullets were raining around
him. The next second he stopped dead-still, threw
up his arms, and fell prone on his face in full view
of both lines. A groan went up from his comrades;
the whole company knew he was dead, and on the instant
a puff of white from the rock and a hissing bullet
told that the sharp-shooter there was still intrenched
in his covert. The men were discussing Little
Darby, when someone cried out and pointed to him.
He was still alive, and not only alive, but was moving moving
slowly but steadily up the ridge and nearer on a line
with the sharp-shooter, as flat on the ground as any
of the motionless bodies about him. A strange
thrill of excitement went through the company as the
dark object dragged itself nearer to the rock, and
it was not allayed when the whack of a bullet and
the well-known white puff of smoke recalled them to
the sharp-shooter’s dangerous aim; for the next
second the creeping figure sprang erect and made a
dash for the spot. He had almost reached it when
the sharp-shooter discovered him, and the men knew
that Little Darby had underestimated the quickness
of his hand and aim; for at the same moment the figure
of the man behind the rock appeared for a second as
he sprang erect; there was a puff of white and Little
Darby stopped and staggered and sank to his knees.
The next second, however, there was a puff from where
he knelt, and then he sank flat once more, and a moment
later rolled over on his face on the near side of
the rock and just at its foot. There were no
more bullets sent from that rock that day at
least, against the Confederates and that
night Little Darby walked into his company’s
bivouac, dusty from head to foot and with a bullet-hole
in his clothes not far from his heart; but he said
it was only a spent bullet and had just knocked the
breath out of him. He was pretty sore from it
for a time, but was able to help old Cove to get his
boy’s body off and to see him start; for the
old man’s wound, though not dangerous, was enough
to disable him and get him a furlough, and he determined
to take his son’s body home, which the captain’s
influence enabled him to do. Between his wound
and his grief the old man was nearly helpless, and
accepted Darby’s silent assistance with mute
gratitude. Darby asked him to tell his mother
that he was getting on well, and sent her what money
he had his last two months’ pay not
enough to have bought her a pair of stockings or a
pound of sugar. The only other message he sent
was given at the station just as Cove set out.
He said:
“Tell Vashti as I got him as done it.”
Old Cove grasped his hand tremulously
and faltered his promise to do so, and the next moment
the train crawled away and left Darby to plod back
to camp in the rain, vague and lonely in the remnant
of what had once been a gray uniform. If there
was one thing that troubled him it was that he could
not return Vashti the needle-case until he replaced
the broken needles and there were so many
of them broken.
After this Darby was in some sort
known, and was put pretty constantly on sharp-shooter
service.
The men went into winter quarters
before Darby heard anything from home. It came
one day in the shape of a letter in the only hand in
the world he knew Vashti’s.
What it could mean he could not divine was
his mother dead? This was the principal thing
that occurred to him. He studied the outside.
It had been on the way a month by the postmark, for
letters travelled slowly in those days, and a private
soldier in an infantry company was hard to find unless
the address was pretty clear, which this was not.
He did not open it immediately. His mother must
be dead, and this he could not face. Nothing
else would have made Vashti write. At last he
went off alone and opened it, and read it, spelling
it out with some pains. It began without an address,
with the simple statement that her father had arrived
with Ad’s body and that it had been buried,
and that his wound was right bad and her mother was
mightily cut up with her trouble. Then it mentioned
his mother and said she had come to Ad’s funeral,
though she could not walk much now and had never been
over to their side since the day after he Darby had
enlisted; but her father had told her as how he had
killed the man as shot Ad, and so she made out to
come that far. Then the letter broke off from
giving news, and as if under stress of feelings long
pent up, suddenly broke loose: she declared that
she loved him; that she had always loved him always ever
since he had been so good to her a great
big boy to a little bit of a girl at school,
and that she did not know why she had been so mean
to him; for when she had treated him worst she had
loved him most; that she had gone down the path that
night when they had met, for the purpose of meeting
him and of letting him know she loved him; but something
had made her treat him as she did, and all the time
she could have let him kill her for love of him.
She said she had told her mother and father she loved
him and she had tried to tell his mother, but she
could not, for she was afraid of her; but she wanted
him to tell her when he came; and she had tried to
help her and keep her in wood ever since he went away,
for his sake. Then the letter told how poorly
his mother was and how she had failed of late, and
she said she thought he ought to get a furlough and
come home, and when he did she would marry him.
It was not very well written, nor wholly coherent;
at least it took some time to sink fully into Darby’s
somewhat dazed intellect; but in time he took it in,
and when he did he sat like a man overwhelmed.
At the end of the letter, as if possibly she thought,
in the greatness of her relief at her confession,
that the temptation she held out might prove too great
even for him, or possibly only because she was a woman,
there was a postscript scrawled across the coarse,
blue Confederate paper: “Don’t come
without a furlough; for if you don’t come honorable
I won’t marry you.” This, however,
Darby scarcely read. His being was in the letter.
It was only later that the picture of his mother ill
and failing came to him, and it smote him in the midst
of his happiness and clung to him afterward like a
nightmare. It haunted him. She was dying.
He applied for a furlough; but furloughs
were hard to get then and he could not hear from it;
and when a letter came in his mother’s name in
a lady’s hand which he did not know, telling
him of his mother’s poverty and sickness and
asking him if he could get off to come and see her,
it seemed to him that she was dying, and he did not
wait for the furlough. He was only a few days’
march from home and he felt that he could see her
and get back before he was wanted. So one day
he set out in the rain. It was a scene of desolation
that he passed through, for the country was the seat
of war; fences were gone, woods burnt, and fields
cut up and bare; and it rained all the time. A
little before morning, on the night of the third day,
he reached the edge of the district and plunged into
its well-known pines, and just as day broke he entered
the old path which led up the little hill to his mother’s
cabin. All during his journey he had been picturing
the meeting with some one else besides his mother,
and if Vashti had stood before him as he crossed the
old log he would hardly have been surprised.
Now, however, he had other thoughts; as he reached
the old clearing he was surprised to find it grown
up in small pines already almost as high as his head,
and tall weeds filled the rows among the old peach-trees
and grew up to the very door. He had been struck
by the desolation all the way as he came along; but
it had not occurred to him that there must be a change
at his own home; he had always pictured it as he left
it, as he had always thought of Vashti in her pink
calico, with her hat in her hand and her heavy hair
almost falling down over her neck. Now a great
horror seized him. The door was wet and black.
His mother must be dead. He stopped and peered
through the darkness at the dim little structure.
There was a little smoke coming out of the chimney,
and the next instant he strode up to the door.
It was shut, but the string was hanging out and he
pulled it and pushed the door open. A thin figure
seated in the small split-bottomed chair on the hearth,
hovering as close as possible over the fire, straightened
up and turned slowly as he stepped into the room,
and he recognized his mother but how changed!
She was quite white and little more than a skeleton.
At sight of the figure behind her she pulled herself
to her feet, and peered at him through the gloom.
“Mother!” he said.
“Darby!” She reached her
arms toward him, but tottered so that she would have
fallen, had he not caught her and eased her down into
her chair.
As she became a little stronger she
made him tell her about the battles he was in.
Mr. Mills had come to tell her that he had killed the
man who killed Ad. Darby was not a good narrator,
however, and what he had to tell was told in a few
words. The old woman revived under it, however,
and her eyes had a brighter light in them.
Darby was too much engrossed in taking
care of his mother that day to have any thought of
any one else. He was used to a soldier’s
scant fare, but had never quite taken in the fact
that his mother and the women at home had less even
than they in the field. He had never seen, even
in their poorest days after his father’s death,
not only the house absolutely empty, but without any
means of getting anything outside. It gave him
a thrill to think what she must have endured without
letting him know. As soon as he could leave her,
he went into the woods with his old gun, and shortly
returned with a few squirrels which he cooked for
her; the first meat, she told him, that she had tasted
for weeks. On hearing it his heart grew hot.
Why had not Vashti come and seen about her? She
explained it partly, however, when she told him that
every one had been sick at Cove Mills’s, and
old Cove himself had come near dying. No doctor
could be got to see them, as there was none left in
the neighborhood, and but for Mrs. Douwill she did
not know what they would have done. But Mrs.
Douwill was down herself now.
The young man wanted to know about
Vashti, but all he could manage to make his tongue
ask was,
“Vashti?”
She could not tell him, she did not
know anything about Vashti. Mrs. Mills used to
bring her things sometimes, till she was taken down,
but Vashti had never come to see her; all she knew
was that she had been sick with the others.
That she had been sick awoke in the
young man a new tenderness, the deeper because he
had done her an injustice; and he was seized with a
great longing to see her. All his old love seemed
suddenly accumulated in his heart, and he determined
to go and see her at once, as he had not long to stay.
He set about his little preparations forthwith, putting
on his old clothes which his mother had kept ever since
he went away, as being more presentable than the old
worn and muddy, threadbare uniform, and brushing his
long yellow hair and beard into something like order.
He changed from one coat to the other the little package
which he always carried, thinking that he would show
it to her with the hole in it, which the sharp-shooter’s
bullet had made that day, and he put her letter into
the same pocket; his heart beating at the sight of
her hand and the memory of the words she had written,
and then he set out. It was already late in the
evening, and after the rain the air was soft and balmy,
though the western sky was becoming overcast again
by a cloud, which low down on the horizon was piling
up mountain on mountain of vapor, as if it might rain
again by night. Darby, however, having dressed,
crossed the flat without much trouble, only getting
a little wet in some places where the logs were gone.
As he turned into the path up the hill, he stood face
to face with Vashti. She was standing by a little
spring which came from under an old oak, the only one
on the hill-side of pines, and was in a faded black
calico. He scarcely took in at first that it
was Vashti, she was so changed. He had always
thought of her as he last saw her that evening in
pink, with her white throat and her scornful eyes.
She was older now than she was then; looked more a
woman and taller; and her throat if anything was whiter
than ever against her black dress; her face was whiter
too, and her eyes darker and larger. At least,
they opened wide when Darby appeared in the path.
Her hands went up to her throat as if she suddenly
wanted breath. All of the young man’s heart
went out to her, and the next moment he was within
arm’s length of her. Her one word was in
his ears:
“Darby!” He was about
to catch her in his arms when a gesture restrained
him, and her look turned him to stone.
“Yer uniform?” she gasped,
stepping back. Darby was not quick always, and
he looked down at his clothes and then at her again,
his dazed brain wondering.
“Whar’s yer uniform?” she asked.
“At home,” he said, quietly,
still wondering. She seemed to catch some hope.
“Yer got a furlough?”
she said, more quietly, coming a little nearer to
him, and her eyes growing softer.
“Got a furlough?” he repeated
to gain time for thought. “I I ”
He had never thought of it before; the words in her
letter flashed into his mind, and he felt his face
flush. He would not tell her a lie. “No,
I ain’t got no furlough,” he said, and
paused whilst he tried to get his words together to
explain. But she did not give him time.
“What you doin’ with them clo’se
on?” she asked again.
“I I ” he
began, stammering as her suspicion dawned on him.
“You’re a deserter!”
she said, coldly, leaning forward, her hands clenched,
her face white, her eyes contracted.
“A what!” he asked aghast, his brain not
wholly taking in her words.
“You’re a deserter!” she said again “and a
coward!”
All the blood in him seemed to surge
to his head and leave his heart like ice. He
seized her arm with a grip like steel.
“Vashti Mills,” he said,
with his face white, “don’t you say that
to me if yer were a man I’d kill
yer right here where yer stan’!” He tossed
her hand from him, and turned on his heel.
The next instant she was standing
alone, and when she reached the point in the path
where she could see the crossing, Darby was already
on the other side of the swamp, striding knee-deep
through the water as if he were on dry land.
She could not have made him hear if she had wished
it; for on a sudden a great rushing wind swept through
the pines, bending them down like grass and blowing
the water in the bottom into white waves, and the
thunder which had been rumbling in the distance suddenly
broke with a great peal just overhead.
In a few minutes the rain came; but
the girl did not mind it. She stood looking across
the bottom until it came in sheets, wetting her to
the skin and shutting out everything a few yards away.
The thunder-storm passed, but all
that night the rain came down, and all the next day,
and when it held up a little in the evening the bottom
was a sea.
The rain had not prevented Darby from
going out he was used to it; and he spent
most of the day away from home. When he returned
he brought his mother a few provisions, as much meal
perhaps as a child might carry, and spent the rest
of the evening sitting before the fire, silent and
motionless, a flame burning back deep in his eyes and
a cloud fixed on his brow. He was in his uniform,
which he had put on again the night before as soon
as he got home, and the steam rose from it as he sat.
The other clothes were in a bundle on the floor where
he had tossed them the evening before. He never
moved except when his mother now and then spoke, and
then sat down again as before. Presently he rose
and said he must be going; but as he rose to his feet,
a pain shot through him like a knife; everything turned
black before him and he staggered and fell full length
on the floor.
He was still on the floor next morning,
for his mother had not been able to get him to the
bed, or to leave to get any help; but she had made
him a pallet, and he was as comfortable as a man might
be with a raging fever. Feeble as she was, the
sudden demand on her had awakened the old woman’s
faculties and she was stronger than might have seemed
possible. One thing puzzled her: in his
incoherent mutterings, Darby constantly referred to
a furlough and a deserter. She knew that he had
a furlough, of course; but it puzzled her to hear
him constantly repeating the words. So the day
passed and then, Darby’s delirium still continuing,
she made out to get to a neighbor’s to ask help.
The neighbor had to go to Mrs. Douwill’s as
the only place where there was a chance of getting
any medicine, and it happened that on the way back
she fell in with a couple of soldiers, on horseback,
who asked her a few questions. They were members
of a home and conscript guard just formed, and when
she left them they had learned her errand.
Fortunately, Darby’s illness
took a better turn next day, and by sunset he was
free from delirium.
Things had not fared well over at
Cove Mills’s during these days any more than
at Mrs. Stanley’s. Vashti was in a state
of mind which made her mother wonder if she were not
going crazy. She set it down to the storm she
had been out in that evening, for Vashti had not mentioned
Darby’s name. She kept his presence to herself,
thinking that thinking so many things that
she could not speak or eat. Her heart was like
lead within her; but she could not rid herself of
the thought of Darby. She could have torn it
out for hate of herself; and to all her mother’s
questioning glances she turned the face of a sphinx.
For two days she neither ate nor spoke. She watched
the opposite hill through the rain which still kept
up something was going on over there, but
what it was she could not tell. At last, on the
evening of the third day, she could stand it no longer,
and she set out from home to learn something; she
could not have gone to Mrs. Stanley’s, even if
she had wished to do so; for the bottom was still
a sea extending from side to side, and it was over
her head in the current. She set off, therefore,
up the stream on her own side, thinking to learn something
up that way. She met the woman who had taken
the medicine to Darby that evening, and she told her
all she knew, mentioning among other things the men
of the conscript guard she had seen. Vashti’s
heart gave a sudden bound up into her throat.
As she was so near she went on up to the Cross-roads;
but just as she stepped out into the road before she
reached there, she came on a small squad of horsemen
riding slowly along. She stood aside to let them
pass; but they drew in and began to question her as
to the roads about them. They were in long cloaks
and overcoats, and she thought they were the conscript
guard, especially as there was a negro with them who
seemed to know the roads and to be showing them the
way. Her one thought was of Darby; he would be
arrested and shot. When they questioned her,
therefore, she told them of the roads leading to the
big river around the fork and quite away from the
district. Whilst they were still talking, more
riders came around the curve, and the next instant
Vashti was in the midst of a column of cavalry, and
she knew that they were the Federals. She had
one moment of terror for herself as the restive horses
trampled around her, and the calls and noises of a
body of cavalry moving dinned in her ears; but the
next moment, when the others gave way and a man whom
she knew to be the commander pressed forward and began
to question her, she forgot her own terror in fear
for her cause. She had all her wits about her
instantly; and under a pretence of repeating what
she had already told the first men, she gave them such
a mixture of descriptions that the negro was called
up to unravel it. She made out that they were
trying to reach the big river by a certain road, and
marched in the night as well as in the day. She
admitted that she had never been on that road but
once. And when she was taken along with them
a mile or two to the place where they went into bivouac
until the moon should rise, she soon gave such an
impression of her denseness and ignorance that, after
a little more questioning, she was told that she might
go home if she could find her way, and was sent by
the commander out of the camp. She was no sooner
out of hearing of her captors than she began to run
with all her speed. Her chief thought was of Darby.
Deserter as he was, and dead to her, he was a man,
and could advise her, help her. She tore through
the woods the nearest way, unheeding the branches
which caught and tore her clothes; the stream, even
where she struck it, was out of its banks; but she
did not heed it she waded through, it reaching
about to her waist, and struck out again at the top
of her speed.
It must have been a little before
midnight when she emerged from the pines in front
of the Stanley cabin. The latch-string was out,
and she knocked and pushed open the door almost simultaneously.
All she could make out to say was, “Darby.”
The old woman was on her feet, and the young man was
sitting up in the bed, by the time she entered.
Darby was the first to speak.
“What do you want here?” he asked, sternly.
“Darby the Yankees all
around,” she gasped “out on
the road yonder.”
“What!”
A minute later the young man, white
as a ghost, was getting on his jacket while she told
her story, beginning with what the woman she had met
had told her of the two men she had seen. The
presence of a soldier had given her confidence, and
having delivered her message both women left everything
else to him. His experience or his soldier’s
instinct told him what they were doing and also how
to act. They were a raid which had gotten around
the body of the army and were striking for the capital;
and from their position, unless they could be delayed
they might surprise it. In the face of the emergency
a sudden genius seemed to illuminate the young man’s
mind. By the time he was dressed he was ready
with his plan Did Vashti know where any
of the conscript guard stayed?
Yes, down the road at a certain place.
Good; it was on the way. Then he gave her his
orders. She was to go to this place and rouse
any one she might find there and tell them to send
a messenger to the city with all speed to warn them,
and were to be themselves if possible at a certain
point on the road by which the raiders were travelling,
where a little stream crossed it in a low place in
a heavy piece of swampy woods. They would find
a barricade there and a small force might possibly
keep them back. Then she was to go on down and
have the bridge, ten or twelve miles below on the
road between the forks burned, and if necessary was
to burn it herself; and it must be done by sunrise.
But they were on the other road, outside of the forks,
the girl explained, to which Darby only said, he knew
that, but they would come back and try the bridge
road.
“And you burn the bridge if
you have to do it with your own hand, you hear and
now go,” he said.
“Yes I’ll do
it,” said the girl obediently and turned to the
door. The next instant she turned back to him:
he had his gun and was getting his axe.
“And, Darby ?”
she began falteringly, her heart in her eyes.
“Go,” said the young soldier,
pointing to the door, and she went just as he took
up his old rifle and stepped over to where his mother
sat white and dumb. As she turned at the edge
of the clearing and looked back up the path over the
pine-bushes she saw him step out of the door with his
gun in one hand and his axe in the other.
An hour later Darby, with the fever
still hot on him, was cutting down trees in the darkness
on the bank of a marshy little stream, and throwing
them into the water on top of one another across the
road, in a way to block it beyond a dozen axemen’s
work for several hours, and Vashti was trudging through
the darkness miles away to give the warning.
Every now and then the axeman stopped cutting and listened,
and then went on again. He had cut down a half-dozen
trees and formed a barricade which it would take hours
to clear away before cavalry could pass, when, stopping
to listen, he heard a sound that caused him to put
down his axe: the sound of horses splashing along
through the mud. His practised ear told him that
there were only three or four of them, and he took
up his gun and climbed up on the barricade and waited.
Presently the little squad of horsemen came in sight,
a mere black group in the road. They saw the
dark mass lying across the road and reined in; then
after a colloquy came on down slowly. Darby waited
until they were within fifty yards of his barricade,
and then fired at the nearest one. A horse wheeled,
plunged, and then galloped away in the darkness, and
several rounds from pistols were fired toward him,
whilst something went on on the ground. Before
he could finish reloading, however, the men had turned
around and were out of sight. In a minute Darby
climbed over the barricade and strode up the road
after them. He paused where the man he had shot
had fallen. The place in the mud was plain; but
his comrades had taken him up and carried him off.
Darby hurried along after them. Day was just
breaking, and the body of cavalry were preparing to
leave their bivouac when a man emerged from the darkness
on the opposite side of the camp from that where Little
Darby had been felling trees, and walked up to the
picket. He was halted and brought up where the
fire-light could shine on him, and was roughly questioned a
tall young countryman, very pale and thin, with an
old ragged slouched hat pulled over his eyes, and
an old patched uniform on his gaunt frame. He
did not seem at all disturbed by the pistols displayed
around him, but seated himself at the fire and looked
about in a dull kind of way.
“What do you want?” they
asked him, seeing how cool he was.
“Don’t you want a guide?” he asked,
drawlingly.
“Who are you?” inquired the corporal in
charge. He paused.
“Some calls me a d’serter,” he said,
slowly.
The men all looked at him curiously.
“Well, what do you want?”
“I thought maybe as you wanted a guide,”
he said, quietly.
“We don’t want you.
We’ve got all the guide we want,” answered
the corporal, roughly, “and we don’t want
any spies around here either, you understand?”
“Does he know the way?
All the creeks is up now, an’ it’s sort
o’ hard to git erlong through down yonder way
if you don’t know the way toller’ble well?”
“Yes, he knows the way too every
foot of it and a good deal more than you’ll
see of it if you don’t look out.”
“Oh! That road down that
way is sort o’ stopped up,” said the man,
as if he were carrying on a connected narrative and
had not heard him. “They’s soldiers
on it too a little fur’er down, and they’s
done got word you’re a-comin’ that a-way.”
“What’s that?” they asked, sharply.
“Leastways it’s stopped
up, and I knows a way down this a-way in and about
as nigh as that,” went on the speaker, in the
same level voice.
“Where do you live?” they asked him.
“I lives back in the pines here a piece.”
“How long have you lived here?”
“About twenty-three years, I b’leeves;
’ats what my mother says.”
“You know all the country about here?”
“Ought to.”
“Been in the army?”
“Ahn hahn.”
“What did you desert for?”
Darby looked at him leisurely.
“’D you ever know a man
as ’lowed he’d deserted? I never did.”
A faint smile flickered on his pale face.
He was taken to the camp before the
commander, a dark, self-contained looking man with
a piercing eye and a close mouth, and there closely
questioned as to the roads, and he gave the same account
he had already given. The negro guide was brought
up and his information tallied with the new comer’s
as far as he knew it, though he knew well only the
road which they were on and which Darby said was stopped
up. He knew, too, that a road such as Darby offered
to take them by ran somewhere down that way and joined
the road they were on a good distance below; but he
thought it was a good deal longer way and they had
to cross a fork of the river.
There was a short consultation between
the commander and one or two other officers, and then
the commander turned to Darby, and said:
“What you say about the road’s
being obstructed this way is partly true; do you guarantee
that the other road is clear?”
Darby paused and reflected.
“I’ll guide you,” he said, slowly.
“Do you guarantee that the bridge
on the river is standing and that we can get across?”
“Hit’s standing now, fur as I know.”
“Do you understand that you are taking your
life in your hand?”
Darby looked at him coolly.
“And that if you take us that
way and for any cause for any cause whatsoever
we fail to get through safe, we will hang you to the
nearest tree?”
Darby waited as if in deep reflection.
“I understand,” he said. “I’ll
guide you.”
The silence that followed seemed to
extend all over the camp. The commander was reflecting
and the others had their eyes fastened on Darby.
As for him, he sat as unmoved as if he had been alone
in the woods.
“All right,” said the
leader, suddenly, “it’s a bargain:
we’ll take your road. What do you want?”
“Could you gi’me a cup
o’ coffee? It’s been some little time
since I had anything to eat, an’ I been sort
o’ sick.”
“You shall have ’em,”
said the officer, “and good pay besides, if you
lead us straight; if not, a limb and a halter rein;
you understand?”
A quarter of an hour later they were
on the march, Darby trudging in front down the middle
of the muddy road between two of the advance guard,
whose carbines were conveniently carried to insure
his fidelity. What he thought of, who might know? plain;
poor; ignorant; unknown; marching every step voluntarily
nearer to certain and ignominious death for the sake
of his cause.
As day broke they saw a few people
who lived near the road, and some of them recognized
Darby and looked their astonishment to see him guiding
them. One or two of the women broke out at him
for a traitor and a dog, to which he said nothing;
but only looked a little defiant with two red spots
burning in his thin cheeks, and trudged on as before;
now and then answering a question; but for the most
part silent.
He must have thought of his mother,
old and by herself in her cabin; but she would not
live long; and of Vashti some. She had called
him a deserter, as the other women had done.
A verse from the Testament she gave him may have come
into his mind; he had never quite understood it:
“Blessed are ye when men shall revile ye.”
Was this what it meant? This and another one
seemed to come together. It was something about
“enduring hardship like a good soldier”,
he could not remember it exactly. Yes, he could
do that. But Vashti had called him a deserter.
Maybe now though she would not; and the words in the
letter she had written him came to him, and the little
package in his old jacket pocket made a warm place
there; and he felt a little fresher than before.
The sun came up and warmed him as he trudged along,
and the country grew flatter and flatter, and the
road deeper and deeper. They were passing down
into the bottom. On either side of them were white-oak
swamps, so that they could not see a hundred yards
ahead; but for several miles Darby had been watching
for the smoke of the burning bridge, and as they neared
the river his heart began to sink. There was one
point on the brow of a hill before descending to the
bottom, where a sudden bend of the road and curve
of the river two or three miles below gave a sight
of the bridge. Darby waited for this, and when
he reached it and saw the bridge still standing his
heart sank like lead. Other eyes saw it too,
and a score of glasses were levelled at it, and a cheer
went up.
“Why don’t you cheer too?”
asked an officer. “You have more to make
or lose than anyone else.”
“We ain’t there yit,” said Darby.
Once he thought he had seen a little
smoke, but it had passed away, and now they were within
three miles of the bridge and there was nothing.
What if, after all, Vashti had failed and the bridge
was still standing! He would really have brought
the raiders by the best way and have helped them.
His heart at the thought came up into his throat.
He stopped and began to look about as if he doubted
the road. When the main body came up, however,
the commander was in no doubt, and a pistol stuck against
his head gave him to understand that no fooling would
be stood. So he had to go on.
As to Vashti, she had covered the
fifteen miles which lay between the district and the
fork-road; and had found and sent a messenger to give
warning in the city; but not finding any of the homeguard
where she thought they were, she had borrowed some
matches and had trudged on herself to execute the
rest of Darby’s commands.
The branches were high from the backwater
of the fork, and she often had to wade up to her waist,
but she kept on, and a little after daylight she came
to the river. Ordinarily, it was not a large stream;
a boy could chuck a stone across it, and there was
a ford above the bridge not very deep in dry weather,
which people sometimes took to water their horses,
or because they preferred to ride through the water
to crossing the steep and somewhat rickety old bridge.
Now, however, the water was far out in the woods,
and long before the girl got in sight of the bridge
she was wading up to her knees. When she reached
the point where she could see it, her heart for a
moment failed her; the whole flat was under water.
She remembered Darby’s command, however, and
her courage came back to her. She knew that it
could not be as deep as it looked between her and
the bridge, for the messenger had gone before her that
way, and a moment later she had gone back and collected
a bundle of “dry-wood”, and with a long
pole to feel her way she waded carefully in.
As it grew deeper and deeper until it reached her breast,
she took the matches out and held them in her teeth,
holding her bundle above her head. It was hard
work to keep her footing this way, however, and once
she stepped into a hole and went under to her chin,
having a narrow escape from falling into a place which
her pole could not fathom; but she recovered herself
and at last was on the bridge. When she tried
to light a fire, however, her matches would not strike.
They as well as the wood had gotten wet when she slipped,
and not one would light. She might as well have
been at her home in the district. When every match
had been tried and tried again on a dry stone, only
to leave a white streak of smoking sulphur on it,
she sat down and cried. For the first time she
felt cold and weary. The rays of the sun fell
on her and warmed her a little, and she wiped her
eyes on her sleeve and looked up. The sun had
just come up over the hill. It gave her courage.
She turned and looked the other way from which she
had come nothing but a waste of water and
woods. Suddenly, from a point up over the nearer
woods a little sparkle caught her eye; there must
be a house there, she thought; they might have matches,
and she would go back and get some. But there
it was again it moved. There was another another and
something black moving. She sprang to her feet
and strained her eyes. Good God! they were coming!
In a second she had turned the other way, rushed across
the bridge, and was dashing through the water to her
waist. The water was not wide that way.
The hill rose almost abruptly on that side, and up
it she dashed, and along the road. A faint curl
of smoke caught her eye and she made for it through
the field.
It was a small cabin, and the woman
in it had just gotten her fire well started for the
morning, when a girl bare-headed and bare-footed,
dripping wet to the skin, her damp hair hanging down
her back, her face white and her eyes like coals,
rushed in almost without knocking and asked for a
chunk of fire. The woman had no time to refuse
(she told of it afterward when she described the burning
of the bridge); for without waiting for answer and
before she really took in that it was not a ghost,
the girl had seized the biggest chunk on the hearth
and was running with it across the field. In
fact, the woman rather thought she was an evil spirit;
for she saw her seize a whole panel of fence more
rails than she could have carried to save her life,
she said, and dashed with them over the hill.
In Vashti’s mind, indeed, it
was no time to waste words, she was back on the bridge
with the chunk of fire and an armful of rails before
the woman recovered from her astonishment, and was
down on her knees blowing her chunk to rekindle it.
The rails, however, like everything else, were wet
and would not light, and she was in despair. At
last she got a little blaze started, but it would
not burn fast; it simply smoked. She expected
the soldiers to come out of the woods every minute,
and every second she was looking up to see if they
were in sight. What would Darby think? What
would happen if she failed? She sprang up to look
around: the old rail of the bridge caught her
eye; it was rotted, but what remained was heart and
would burn like light-wood. She tore a piece
of it down and stuck one end in the fire: it caught
and sputtered and suddenly flamed up; the next second
she was tearing the rail down all along and piling
it on the blaze, and as it caught she dashed back
through the water and up the hill, and brought another
armful of rails. Back and forth she waded several
times and piled on rails until she got a stack of
them two stacks, and the bridge floor dried
and caught and began to blaze; and when she brought
her last armful it was burning all across. She
had been so busy bringing wood that she had forgotten
to look across to the other side for some time, and
was only reminded of it as she was wading back with
her last armful of rails by something buzzing by her
ear, and the second after the crack of a half-dozen
guns followed from the edge of the wood the other
side. She could not see them well for the burden
in her arms, but she made out a number of horses dashing
into the water on the little flat, and saw some puffs
of smoke about their heads. She was bound to
put her wood on, however, so she pushed ahead, went
up on the bridge through the smoke as far as she could
go, and flung her rails on the now devouring fire.
A sudden veer of the wind blew the smoke behind her
and bent the flames aside, and she could see clear
across the fire to the other bank. She saw a great
number of men on horses at the edge of the woods, in
a sort of mass; and a half-dozen or so in the water
riding up to their saddle-skirts half-way to the bridge,
and between the first two, wading in water to his
waist, Darby. He was bare-headed and he waved
his hat to her, and she heard a single cheer.
She waved her hand to him, and there was a little
puff of smoke and something occurred in the water among
the horses. The smoke from the fire suddenly
closed around her and shut out everything from her
eyes, and when it blew away again one of the horses
had thrown his rider in the water. There was a
lot of firing both from the edge of the wood and from
the horsemen in the water, and Darby had disappeared.
She made her way back to the bank
and plunged into a clump of bushes, where she was
hidden and watched the raiders. She saw several
of them try to ford the river, one got across but
swam back, the others were swept down by the current,
and the horse of one got out below without his rider.
The other she did not see again.
Soon after their comrade had rejoined
them, the men on the edge of the wood turned around
and disappeared, and a half-hour later she saw the
glint of the sun on their arms and accoutrements as
they crossed over the top of the hill returning two
miles above.
This is the story of the frustration
of the raid upon which so much hope was built by some
in high position at Washington. A day was lost,
and warning was given to the Confederate Government,
and the bold plan of the commander of the raiding
party was defeated.
As to Little Darby, the furlough he
had applied for came, but came too late and was returned.
For a time some said he was a deserter; but two women
knew differently.
A Federal soldier who was taken prisoner
gave an account of the raid. He said that a contraband
had come from Washington and undertaken to lead them
across the country, and that he had brought them around
the head of the streams, when one night a rebel deserter
came into camp and undertook to show them a better
way by a road which ran between the rivers, but crossed
lower down by a bridge; that they had told him that,
if for any reason they failed to get through by his
road they would hang him, a bargain which he had accepted.
That he had led them straight, but when they had got
to the bridge it had been set on fire and was burning
at that moment; that a half-dozen men, of whom he,
the narrator, was one, rode in, taking the guide along
with them, to see if they could not put the fire out,
or, failing that, find the ford; and when they were
about half-way across the little flat they saw the
person on the bridge in the very act of burning it,
and waving his hand in triumph; and the man who was
riding abreast of him in front fired his carbine at
him. As he did so the deserter wheeled on him,
and said, “God d n you don’t
you know that’s a woman,” and springing
on him like a tiger tore him from his horse; and,
before they took in what he was doing, had, before
their very eyes, flung both of them into a place where
the current was running, and they had disappeared.
They had seen the deserter’s head once in the
stream lower down, and had fired at him, and he thought
had hit him, as he went down immediately and they
did not see him again.
This is all that was known of Little
Darby, except that a year or more afterward, and nearly
a year after Mrs. Stanley’s death, a package
with an old needle-case in it and a stained little
Testament with a bullet hole through it, was left
at the Cross-roads, with a message that a man who
had died at the house of the person who left it as
he was trying to make his way back to his command,
asked to have that sent to Vashti Mills.