Books: The Red Acorn
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John McElroy >> The Red Acorn
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Chapter X. The Mountaineer's Revenge.
And if we do but watch the hour,
There never yet was human power
Which could evade, if unforgiven,
The patient search and vigil long
Of him who treasures up a wrong.
--Byron.
Harry Glen's first feeling when he found the battle was really over,
was that of elation that the crisis to which he had looked forward
with so much apprehension, had passed without his receiving any
bodily harm. This was soon replaced by regret that the long-coveted
opportunity had been suffered to pass unimproved, and still another
strong sentiment--that keen sense of disappointment which comes
when we have braced ourselves up to encounter an emergency, and it
vanishes. There is the feeling of waste of valuable accumulated
energy, which is as painful as that of energy misapplied.
Still farther, he felt sadly that the day of his vindication had
been again postponed over another weary period of probation.
All around was intense enthusiasm, growing stronger every instant.
It was the first battle tha the victors had been engaged in, and
they felt the tumultuous joy that the first triumph brings to young
soldiers. It was the first encounter upon the soil of Kentucky;
it was the first victory between the Cumberland Mountains and the
Mississippi River, and the loss of the victors was insignificant,
compared with that of the vanquished.
The cold drench from the skies, the dreary mud--even the dead and
wounded--were forgotten in the jubilation at the sight of the lately
insolent foe flying in confusion down the mountain side, recking
for nothing so much as for personal safety.
The band continued to play patriotic airs, and the cannon to thunder
long after the last Rebel had disappeared in the thick woods at
the bottom of the gloomy gorge.
A detail of men and some wagons were sent back after the regiment's
baggage, and the rest of the boys, after a few minutes survey of
the battle-field, were set to work building fires, cooking rations
and preparing from the branches and brush such shelter as could be
made to do substitute duty for the tents left behind.
Little as was Harry's normal inclination to manual labor, it was
less than ever now, with these emotions struggling in his mind,
and leaving his comrades hard at work, he wandered off to where
Hoosier Knob, a commanding eminence on the left of the battle-field
seemed to offer the best view of the retreat of the forces of
Zollicoffer. Arriving there, he pushed on down the slope to where
the enemy's line had stood, and where now were groups of men in
blue uniforms, searching for trophies of the fight. In one place
a musket would be found; in another a cap with a silver star, or a
canteen quaintly fashioned from alternate staves of red and white
cedar. Each "find" was proclaimed by the discoverer, and he was
immediately surrounded by a group to earnestly inspect and discuss
it. It was still the first year of the war; the next year "trophies"
were left to rot unnoticed on the battle-fields they covered.
Harry took no interest in relic-hunting, but walked onward toward
another prominence that gave hopes of a good view of the Rebels.
The glimpses he gained from this of the surging mass of fugitives
inflamed him with the excitement of the chase--of the most exciting
of chases, a man-hunt. He forgot his fears--forgot how far behind
he was leaving all the others, and became eager only to see more
of this fascinating sight. Before he was aware of it, he was three
or four miles from the Gap.
Here a point ran boldly down from the mountain into the valley,
and ended in a bare knob that overlooked the narrow creek bottom,
along which the beaten host was forging its way. Harry unhesitatingly
descended to this, and stood gazing at the swarming horde below.
It was a sight to rivet the attention. The narrow level space
through which the creek meandered between the two parrallel ranges
of heights was crowded as far as he could see with an army which
defeat had degraded to a demoralized mob. All semblance of military
organization had well-nigh disappeared. Horsemen and footmen,
infantry, cavalry and artillery, officers and privates, ambulances
creaking under their load of wounded and dying, ponderous artillery
forges, wagons loaded with food, wagons loaded with ammunition,
and wagons loaded with luxuries for the delectation of the higher
officers,--all huddled and crowded together, and struggled forward
with feverish haste over the logs, rocks, gullies and the deep
waters of the swollen stream, and up its slippery banks, through
the quicksands and quagmires which every passing foot and wheel
beat into a still more grievous obstacle for those that followed.
Hopelessly fagged horses fell for the last time under the merciless
blows of their frightened masters, and added their great bulks to
the impediments of the road.
The men were sullen and depressed--cast down by the wretchedness
of earth and sky, and embittered against their officers and each
other for the blood uselessly shed--oppressed with hunger and
weariness, and momentarily fearful that new misfortunes were about to
descend upon them. In brief, it was one of the saddest spectacles
that human history can present: that of a beaten and disorganized army
in full retreat, and an army so new to soldiership and discipline
as to be able to make nothing but the worst out of so great a
calamity--it was a rout after a repulse.
Nearly all of the passing thousands were too much engrossed in
the miseries of their toilsome progress to notice the blue-coated
figure on the bare knob above the road. But the rear of the fugitives
was brought up by a squad of men moving much more leisurely, and
with some show of order. They did not plunge into the mass of
men and animals and vehicles, and struggle with them in the morass
which the road had now become, but deliberately picked their way
along the sides of the valley where the walking was easier. They
saw Harry, and understood as soon as they saw, who he was. Two or
three responded to their first impulse, and raising their guns to
their shoulders, fired at him. A bullet slapped against the rock
upon which he was partially leaning, and fell at his feet. Another
spattered mud in his face, and flew away, singing viciously.
At the reports the fear-harrassed mob shuddered and surged forward
through its entire length.
The companions of those who fired seemed to reproach them with angry
gestures, pointing to the effect upon the panicky mass. Then the
whole squad rushed forward toward the hill.
Deadly fear clutched Harry Glen's heart as the angry notes of the
bullets jarred on his senses. Then pride and the animal instinct
of fighting for life flamed upward. So swiftly that he was scarcely
conscious of what he was doing he snatched a cartridge from the box,
tore its end between his teeth, and rammed it home. He replaced
the ramrod in its thimbles with one quick thrust, and as he raised
his eyes from the nipple upon which he had placed the cap, he saw
that the Rebel squad had gained the foot of the knoll and started
up its side. He raised teh gun to fire, but as he did so he heard
a voice call out from behind him:
"Skeet outen thar! Skeet outen thar! Come up heah, quick!"
Harry looked in the direction of the voice. He saw a tall,
slender, black-haired man standing in the woods at the upper edge
of the cleared space. He was dressed in butternut jeans, and looked
so much like the Rebels in front that Harry thought he was one of
them. The stranger noticed his indecision, and called out again
still more peremptorily:
"Skeet outen thar, I tell ye! Skeet outen thar! Come up heah.
I'm a friend--I'm Union."
His rifle came to his face at the same instant, and Harry saw
the flame and white smoke puff from it, and the sickening thought
flashed into his mind that the shot was fired at him, and that he
would feel the deadly ball pierce his body! Before he could more
than formulate this he heard the bullet pass him with a screech,
and strike somewhere with a plainly sharp slap. Turning his head
he saw the leading Rebel stagger and fall. Harry thre his gun up,
with the readiness acquired in old hunting days, and fired at the
next of his foes, who also fell! The other Rebels, as they came
up, gathered around their fallen comrades.
Harry ran back to where the stranger was, as rapidly as the clinging
mud and the steep hillside would permit him.
"Purty fa'r shot that," said the stranger, setting down the heavy
rifle he was carefully reloading, and extending his hand cordially
as Harry came panting up. "That's what I call mouty neat shooting--knock
yer man over at 150 yards, down hill, with that ole smooth-bore,
and without no rest. The oldest han' at the business couldn't've
done no better."
Harry was too much agitated to heed the compliment to his markmanship.
He looked back anxiously and asked:
"Are they coming on yet?"
"Skacely they hain't," said the stranger, with a very obvious sneer.
"Skacely they hain't comin' on no more. They've hed enuff, they
hev. Two of their best men dropt inter blue blazes on the first
jump will take all the aidge off ther appetite for larks. I know
'em."
"But they will come on. They'll pursue us. They'll never let us
go now," said Harry, reloading his gun with hands trembling from
the exertion and excitement.
He was yet too young a soldier to understand that his enemy's fright
might be greater than his own.
"Nary a time they won't," said the stranger, derisively. "Them
fellers are jest like Injuns; they're red-hot till one or two gits
knocked over, an' then they cool down mouty suddent. Why, me an'
two others stopt the whole of Zollicoffer's army for two days by
shootin' the officer in command of the advance-guard jest ez they
war a-comin' up the hill this side of Barboursville. Fact! They'd
a' been at Wildcat last Friday ef we hedn't skeered 'em so. They
stopt an' hunted the whole country round for bushwhackers afore
they'd move ary other step."
"But who are you?" asked Harry, looking again at his companion's
butternut garb.
"I'm called Long Jim Forner, an' I've the name o' bein' the pizenest
Union man in the Rockassel Mountains. Thar's a good s'tifkit o'
my p'litical principles" (pointing with his thumb to where lay the
men who had felln under their bullets). Harry looked again in that
direction. Part of the squad were looking apprehensively toward
hiim, as if they feared a volley from bushwhackers concealed near
him, and others were taking from the bodies of the dead the weapons,
belts, and other articles which it was not best to leave for the
pursuers, and still others were pointing to the rapidly growing
distance between them and main body, apparently adjuring haste in
following.
The great mental and bodily strain Harry had undergone since he
had first heard the sound of cannon in the morning at the foot of
Wildcat should have made him desperately weary. But the sight of
the man falling before his gun had fermented in his blood a fierce
intoxication, as unknown, as unsuspected before as the passion of
love had been before its first keen transports thrilled his heart.
Like that ecstacy, this fever now consumed him. All fear of harm
to himself vanished in its flame. He had actually slain one enemy.
Why not another? He raised his musket. The mountaineer laid his
hand upon it.
"No," he said, "that's not the game to hunt. They'll do when thar's
nothin' better to be had, but now powder an' lead kin be used to
more advantage. Besides they're outen range o' your smooth-bore
now. Come."
As Fortner threw his rifle across his shoulder Harry looked at it
curiously. It had a long, heavy, six sided barrel, with a large
bore, double triggers, and a gaily striped hickory ramrod in its
thimbles. The stock, of fine, curly rock-maple, was ornamented with
silver stars and crescents, and in the breech were cunning little
receptacles for tow and patches, and other rifle necessaries, each
closed by a polished silver cover that shut with a snap. It was
evidently the triumph of some renowned kentucky gunsmith's skill.
The mountaineer's foot was on the soil he had trodden since childhood,
and Harry found it quite difficult to keep pace with his strong,
quick stride. His step landed firm and sure on the sloping surfaces,
where Harry slipped or shambled. Clinging vines and sharp briers
were avoided without an apparent effort, where every one grasped
Harry, or tore his face and hands.
The instinct of the wolf or the panther seemed to lead Fortner by
the shortest courses through the pathless woods to where he came
unperceived close upon the flank of the mass of harassed fugitives.
Then creeping behind a convenient tree with the supple lightness
of the leopard crouching for a spring, he scanned with eager eyes
the mounted officers within range. Selecting his prey he muttered:
"'Tain't HIM, but he'll hev to do, THIS time."
The weapon rang out sharply. The stricken officer threw up his
sword arm, his bridle arm clutched his saddle-pommel, as if resisting
the attempt of Death to unhorse him. Then the muscles all relaxed,
and he fell into he arms of those who had hurried to him.
Harry fired into the mass the next instant; a few random shots
replied, and another impetus of fear spurred the mob onward.
Fortner and Harry sped away to another point of interception, where
the same scene was repeated, and then to another, and then to a
third, Fortner muttering after each shot his disappointment at not
finding the one whom he anxiously sought.
When they hurried away the third time they were compelled to make
a wide circuit, for the little valley suddenly broadened out into
a considerable plain. Upon this the long-drawn-out line of fugitives
gathered in a compact, turmoiling mass.
"That's Little Rockassel Ford," said Fortner, pointing with his
left hand to the base of the mountain that rose steeply above the
farther side of the commotion. "That's Rockassel Mountain runnin'
up thar inter the clouds. The Little Rockassel River runs round
hits foot. That's what's a-stoppin' 'em. They'll hev a turrible
time gittin' acrost hit. Hit's mouty hard crossin' at enny time,
but hit's awful now, fur the Rockassel's boomin'. The big rains
hev sent her up kitin', an' hit's now breast-deep thar in the Ford.
We'll git round whar we kin see hit all."
Another wide detour to keep themselves in the concealment of the
woods brough Fortner and Harry out upon an acclivity that almost
overhung the ford, and those gathered around it. The two Unionists
crawled cautiously through the cedars and laurel to the very edge
of the cliff and looked down upon their enemies. They were so near
that everything was plainly visible, and the hum of conversation
reached their ears. They could even hear the commands of the officers
vainly trying to restore order, the curses of the teamsters upon
their jaded animals, the ribald songs of the few whose canteens
furnished them with forgetfulness of defeat, and contempt for the
surrounding misery.
All the flooding showers which had been falling upon hundreds of
square miles of precipitous mountin sides were now gorging through
the crooked, narrow throat of the Little Rockcastle. The torrent
filled the ragged banks to the brim, and in their greedy swirl
undermined and tore from there logs, great trees, and even rocks.
This wasthe barrier that stayed the flight of the fugitive throng,
and it was this that they strove to put between thm and the presumed
revengeful victors.
On the bank, field and line officers labored to calm their men and
restore organization. It was in vain that they pointed out that
there had been no pursuit thus far, and the unlikelihood of there
being one. When did Panic yield to Reason? In those demoralized
ears the thunder of the cannon at Wildcat, the crash of the bursting
shells, and the deadly whistle of bullets still rang louder than
any words officers could speak.
The worst frightened crowded into the stream in a frenzy, and
struggled wildly with the current that swept their feet off the
slimy limestone bottom, with the logs and trees dashing along like
so many catapult-bolts, and with the horses and teams urged on
by men more fear-stricken still. On the steep slope on the other
side glimmered numbers of little fires where those who were lucky
enough to get across were warming and drying themselves.
"Heavens!" said Harry with an anticipatory shudder, "if our men
should come up, the first cannon shot would make half these men
drown themselves in trying to get away."
Fortner heeded him not. The mountaineer's eyes were fixed upon a
tall, imperious looking man, whose collar bore the silver stars of
a Colonel.
"He has found his man at last," said Harry, noticing his companion's
attitude, and picking up his own gun in readiness for what might
come.
Fortner half-cocked his rifle, took from its nipple the cap that
had been tehre an hour and flung it away. He picked the powder
out if the tube, replaced it with fresh from his horn, selected
another cap carefully, fitted it on the nipple, and let the hammer
down with the faintest snap to force it to its place.
His eyes had the look of a rattlesnake's when it coils for a
spring, and his breast swelled out as if he was summoning all his
strength. He stepped forward to a tree so lightly that there came
no rustle from the dead leaves he trod upon. Harry took his place
on the other side of the tree, and cocked his musket.
So close were they to hundreds of Rebels with arms in their hands,
that it seemed simply an invitation to death to call their attention.
Fortner turned and waved Harry back as he heard him approach, but
Glen had apparently exhausted all his capacity for fearing, in the
march upon Wildcat, and he was now calmly desperate.
The Colonel rode out from the throng toward the level spot at the
base of the ledge upon which the two were concealed. The horse he
bestrode was a magnificent thoroughbred, whose fine action could
not be concealed, even by his great fatigue.
"Go and find Mars," said the Colonel to an orderly, "and tell him
to build a fire against that rock there, and make us some coffee.
We will not be able to get across the ford before midnight." The
orderly rode off, and the Colonel dismounted and walked forward
with the cramped gait of a man who had been long in the saddle.
Still louder yells arose from the ford. A powerful horse, ridden
by an officer who was trying to force his way across, had slipped
on the river's glassy bedstones, in the midst of a compact throng,
and carried many with it down into the deep water below the crossing.
The Colonel's lip curled with contempt as he continued his walk.
A sharp little click sounded from Fortner's rifle. He had set the
hair trigger.
He stepped out clear of the tree, and gave a peculiar whistle. The
Colonel started as he heard the sound, looked up, saw who uttered
it, and instinctly reached his hand back to the holster for a
revolver.
Down would scarcely have been ruffled by Fortner's light touch upon
the trigger.
Fire flamed from the rifle's muzzle.
The Colonel's haughty eyes became sterner than ever. The holster
was torn as he wrenched the revolver out. A clutch at the mane,
and he fell forward on the wet brown leaves--dead!
Dumb amazement fille dthe horse's great eyes; he stretched out his
neck and smelled his lifeless master inquiringly.
A shot from Harry's musket, fifty from the astounded Rebels, and the
two Unionists sped away unhurt into the cover of the dark cedars.
Chapter XI. Through the Mountains and the Night.
God sits upon the Throne of Kings,
And Judges unto judgement brings:
Why then so long
Maintain your wrong,
And favor lawlesss things?
Defend the poor, the fatherless;
Their crying injuries redress:
And vindicate
The desolate,
Whom wicked men oppress.
--George Sandy's Paraphrase of Psalm XXXII.
Fortner and Glen were soon so far away from the Ford that the
only reminder of its neighborhood were occasional glimpses, caught
through rifts in he forest, of the lofty slope of Rockcastle Mountain,
now outlined in the gathering darkness by twinkling fires, which
increased in number, and climbed higher towards the clouds as fast
as the fugitives succeeded in struggling across the river.
"That's a wonderful sight," said Harry, as they paused on a summit
to rest and catch breath. "It reminds me of some of the war scenes
in Scott, or the Illiad."
"Hit looks ter me like a gineral coon-hunt," said Fortner, "on'y
over thar hit's the coons, an' not the hunters, that hev the torches.
I wish I could put a bum-shell inter every fire."
"You are merciless."
"No more'n they are. They've ez little marcy ez a pack o' wolves
in a sheep-pen."
"Well," continued Fortner, meditatively, "Ole Rockassel's gittin'
a glut to-night. She'd orten't ter need no more now fur a hundred
yeahs."
"I don't understand you," said Harry.
"Why, they say thet the Rockassel hez ter hev a man every Spring
an' Fall. The Injuns believed hit, an' hit's bin so ever sence the
white folks come inter the country. Last Spring hit war the turn
o' the Fortner kin to gi'n her a man, an' she levied on a fust
cousin o' mine--a son o' Aunt Debby Brill. But less jog on; we've
got a good piece fur ter go."
It was now night--black and starless, and the dense woods through
which they were traveling made the darkness thick and impenetrable.
But no check in Fortner's speed hinted at any ignorance of the course
or encountering of obstacles. He continued to stride forward with
the same swift, certain step as in the day time. But for Harry,
who could see nothing but his leader's head and shoulders, and,
whose every effort was required to keep these in sight, the journey
was full of painful toil. The relaxation from the intense strain
manifested itself in proportion as they seemed to recede from the
presence of the enemy, and his spirits flagged continually.
In the daylight the brush and briers had been annoying and hurtful,
and the roughness of the way very trying. Now the one was wounding
and cruel; the other made every step with his jaded limbs a torture.
With the low spirits engendered by the great fatigue, came a return
of the old fears and tremors. The continual wails of the wildcats
roundabout filled him with gloomy forebodings. Every hair of
his head stood stiffly up in mortal terror when a huge catamount,
screaming like a fiend, leaped down from a tree, and confronted
them for an instant with hideously-gleaming yellow eyes.
"Cuss-an'-burn the nasty varmint!" said Fortner angrily, snatching
up a pine knot from his feet and flinging it at the beast, which
vanished into the darkness with another curdling scream.
"Don't that man know what fear is?" wondered Harry, ignorant that
the true mountaineer feels toward these vociferous felidae about
the same contempt with which a plainsman regards a coyote.
At length Fortner slackened his pace, and began to move with caution.
"Are we coming upon the enemy again?" asked Harry, in a loud whisper,
which had yet a perceptible quaver in it.
"No," answered Fortner, "but we're a-comin' ter what is every bit
an' grain ez dangersome. Heah's whar the path winds round Blacksnake
Clift, an' ye'll hev ter be ez keeful o' your footin' ez ef ye war
treadin' the slippery ways o' sin. The path's no wider 'n a hoss's
back, an' no better ter walk on. On the right hand side hit's
several rods down ter whar the creek's tearin' 'long like a mad
dog. Heah hit now, can't ye?"
For some time the roar of the torrent sweeping the gorge had filled
Harry's ears.
"Ye want ter walk slow," continued Fortner, "an' feel keefully with
yer foot every time afore ye sot hit squar'ly down. Keep yer left
hand a-feelin' the rocks above yer, so's ter make shore all the
time thet ye're close ter 'em. 'Bout half way, thar's a big break
in the path. Hit's jess a long step acrost hit. Take one step
arter I say thet I'm acrost; the feel keerfully with yer left foot
fur the aidge o' the break, an' then step out ez long ez ye kin
with yer right. That'll bring ye over. Be shore o' yer feet, an
ye'll be all right."
Harry trembled more than at any time before. They were already on
the path around the steep cliff. The darkness was inky. The roar
of the waters below rose loudly--angrily. The wails of the wildcats
behind, overhead and in front of them, made it seem as if the
sighing pines and cedars were inhabited with lost spirits shrieking
warnings of impending disaster.
Harry's foot came down upon a boulder which turned under his weight.
He regained his balance with a start, but the stone toppled over.
He listened. There were scores of heart-beats before it splashed
in the water below.
"Not so much as a twig between here and eternity," he said to
himself, with a shudder. Then aloud: "Can't we stay here, some
place, and not go along there to-night?"
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