Part 19 (1/2)
”I was taught that dancing was wicked,” said Dalton, ”but it doesn't look wicked to me, and I notice that the general doesn't forbid it.”
”Wicked!” said St. Clair, ”why, after we take Was.h.i.+ngton, you ought to come down to Charleston and see us dance then. It's good instead of wicked. It's more than that. It's a thing of beauty, a grace, a joy, almost a rite.”
”All that Arthur says is true,” said Happy Tom. ”I'm a Sea Islander myself, but we go over to Charleston in the winter. Still, I think you'll have to do without me at those dances, Arthur. I shall probably be kept for some time in the North, acting as proconsul for Pennsylvania or Ma.s.sachusetts.”
”Which way do you think we are going from here, Harry?” asked St. Clair. ”I don't think it's possible for General Jackson to stay longer than twenty-four hours in one place, and I know that he always goes to you for instructions before he makes any movement.”
”That's so. He spoke to me this morning asking what he ought to do, but I told him the troops needed a rest of one day, but that he mustn't make it more than one day or he'd spoil 'em.”
Happy Tom, who was lying on the ground, sat up abruptly.
”If ever you hear of Old Stonewall spoiling anybody or anything,” he said, ”just you report it to me and I'll tell you that it's not so.”
”I believe,” said Dalton, ”that we're going to leave the valley. Both s.h.i.+elds and Fremont are still retreating. Our cavalry scouts brought in that word this morning. We've heard also that Johnston and McClellan fought a big battle at a place called Seven Pines, and that after it McClellan hung back, waiting for McDowell, whom Old Jack has kept busy. General Johnston was wounded at Seven Pines and General Robert Edward Lee is now in command of our main army.”
”That's news! It's more! It's history!” exclaimed St. Clair. ”I think you're right, Harry. Two to one that we go to Richmond. And for one I'll be glad. Then we'll be right in the middle of the biggest doings!”
”I'm feeling that way, too,” said Happy Tom. ”But I know one thing.”
”What's that?”
”Not a soul in all this army, except Old Jack himself, will know a thing about it, until it's done, and maybe we won't know very much then. I pa.s.sed Old Jack about an hour ago and he saw me as clearly and plainly as I see you, but he did not tell me a thing about his plans. He did not even say a word. Did not speak. Just cut me dead.”
Not one of the four was destined for some days to learn what Jackson intended. His highest officers even were kept in the same ignorance. While the bulk of the army did little, the cavalry under Munford, who had succeeded Ashby, were exceedingly active. The hors.e.m.e.n were like a swarm of hornets in front of Jackson, and so great was their activity that the Northern leaders were unable to gauge their numbers. Fremont, exposed to these raids, retreated farther down the valley, leaving two hundred of his wounded and many stores in the hands of Munford.
Then Jackson crossed South River and marched into extensive woods by the Shenandoah, where his army lay for five full days. It was almost incredible to Harry and his friends that they should have so long a rest, but they had it. They luxuriated there among the trees in the beautiful June weather, listening to the music of the Acadians, eating and drinking and sleeping as men have seldom slept before.
But while the infantry was resting the activity of the cavalry never ceased. These men, riding over the country in which most of them were born, missed no movement of the enemy, and maintained the illusion that their numbers were four or five times the fact. Harry, trying to fathom Jackson's purpose, gave it up after that comparatively long stay beside the Shenandoah. He did not know that it was a part of a complicated plan, that Lee and Jackson, although yet apart, were now beginning their celebrated work together. Near Richmond, Northern prisoners saw long lines of trains moving north and apparently crowded with soldiers. For Jackson, of course! And intended to help him in his great march on Was.h.i.+ngton! But Jackson hung a complete veil about his own movements. His highest officers told one another in confidence things that they believed to be true, but which were not. It was the general opinion among them that Jackson would soon leave in pursuit of Fremont.
The pleasant camp by the Shenandoah was broken up suddenly, and the men began to march-they knew not where. Officers rode among them with stern orders, carried out sternly. In front, and on either flank, rode lines of cavalry who allowed not a soul to pa.s.s either in or out. An equally strong line of cavalry in the rear drove in front of it every straggler or camp follower. There was not a single person inside the whole army of Jackson who could get outside it except Jackson himself.
An extraordinary ban of ignorance was also placed upon them, and it was enforced to the letter. No soldier should give the name of a village or a farm through which he pa.s.sed, although the farm might be his father's, or the village might be the one in which he was born. If a man were asked a question, no matter what, he must answer, ”I don't know.”
The young Southern soldiers, indignant at first, enjoyed it as their natural humor rose to the surface.
”Young fellow,” said Happy Tom to St. Clair, ”what's your name?”
”I don't know.”
”Don't know your own name. Why, you must be feeble minded! Are you?”
”I don't know.”
”Well, you may not know, but you look it. Do you think Old Jack is a good general?”
”I don't know.”
”Do you think he's feeble-minded like yourself?”
”I don't know.”
”What! You dare to intimate that Stonewall Jackson, the greatest general the world has ever known, is feeble-minded! You have insulted him, and in his name I challenge you to fight me, sir. Do you accept?”
”I don't know.”
The two looked at each other and grinned. The ignorance of the army grew dense beyond all computation. Long afterward, ”I don't know,” became a favorite and convenient reply, even when the knowledge was present.
It was nearly two weeks after Port Republic before the troops had any idea where they were going. They came to a little place called Hanover Junction and they thought they were going to turn there and meet McDowell, but they pa.s.sed on, and one evening they encamped in a wood. As they were eating supper they heard the muttering thunder of guns toward the south, and throughout the brigades the conviction spread that they were on the way to Richmond.
The next night, Harry, who was asleep, was touched by a light hand. He awoke instantly, and when he saw General Jackson standing over him, he sprang up.
”I am going on a long ride,” said the general briefly, ”and I want only one man to go with me. I've chosen you. Get your horse. We start in five minutes.”
Harry, a little dazed yet from sleep and the great honor that had been thrust upon him, ran, nevertheless, for his horse, and was ready with a minute to spare.
”Keep by my side,” said Jackson curtly, and the two rode in silence from the camp, watched in wonder by the sentinels, who saw their general and his lone attendant disappear in the forest to the south.
It was then one o'clock in the morning of a moonlight night, and the errand of Jackson was an absolute secret. Three or four miles from the camp a sentinel slipped from the woods and stopped them. He was one of their own pickets, on a far out-lying post, but to the amazement of Harry, Jackson did not tell who he was.
”I'm an officer on Stonewall Jackson's staff, carrying dispatches,” he said. ”You must let me pa.s.s.”
”It's not enough. Show me an order from him.”
”I have no order,” replied the equable voice, ”but my dispatches are of the greatest importance. Kindly let me pa.s.s immediately.”
The sentinel shook his head.
”Draw back your horses,” he said. ”Without an order from the general you don't go a step further.”
Harry had not spoken a word. He had ceased to wonder why Jackson refused to reveal his ident.i.ty. If he did not do so it must be for some excellent reason, and, meanwhile, the boy waited placidly.
”So you won't let us pa.s.s,” said Jackson. ”Is the commander of the picket near by?”
”I can whistle so he'll hear me.”
”Then will you kindly whistle?”
The sentinel looked again at the quiet man on the horse, put his fingers to his lips and blew loudly. An officer emerged from the woods and said: ”What is it, Felton?”
Then he glanced at the man on the horse and started violently.
”General Jackson!” he exclaimed.
The sentinel turned pale, but said nothing.
”Yes, I'm General Jackson,” said the general, ”and I ride with this lieutenant of my staff on an errand. But both of you must swear to me that you have not seen me.”
Then he turned to the sentinel.
”You did right to stop us,” he said. ”I wish that all our sentinels were as faithful as you.”