Dick was on duty early in the morning when he saw a horseman coming at
a gallop toward the Rapidan. The man was in civilian clothing, but his
figure seemed familiar. The boy raised his glasses, and he saw at once
that it was Shepard. He saw, too, that he was urging his horse to its
utmost speed.
The boy's heart suddenly began to throb, and there was a cold, prickling
sensation at the roots of his hair. Shepard had made an extraordinary
impression upon him and he did not believe that the man would be coming
at such a pace unless he came with great news.
He saw Shepard stop, give the pass word to the pickets, then gallop on,
ford the river and come straight toward the heart of the army. Dick ran
forward and met him.
"What is it?" he cried.
"General Pope's tent! Where it is! I can't wait a minute."
Dick pointed toward a big marquee, standing in an open space, and Shepard
leaping from his horse and abandoning it entirely, ran toward the
marquee. A word or two to the sentinels, and he disappeared inside.
Dick, devoured with curiosity and anxiety, went to Colonel Winchester
with the story of what he had seen.
"I know of Shepard," said the colonel. "He is the best and most daring
spy in the whole service of the North. I think you're right in inferring
that he rides so fast for good cause."
Shepard remained with the commander-in-chief a quarter of an hour.
When he came forth from the tent he regained his horse and rode away
without a word, going in the direction of Clark's Mountain. But his news
was quickly known, because it was of a kind that could not be concealed.
Pennington came running with it to the regiment, his face flushed and his
eyes big.
"Look! Look at the mountain!" he exclaimed.
"I see it," said Warner. "I saw it there yesterday, too, in exactly the
same place."
"So did I, but there's something behind it. Lee and Jackson are there
with sixty or eighty thousand men! The whole Southern army is only six
or seven miles away."
Even Warner's face changed.
"How do you know this?" he asked.
"A spy has seen their army. They say he is a man whose reports are never
false. At any rate orders have already been issued for us to retreat
and I hear that we're going back until we reach the Rappahannock, behind
which we will camp."
Dick knew very well now that it was Shepard who brought the news, and
Pennington's report about the retreat was also soon verified. The whole
army was soon in motion and a feeling of depression replaced the optimism
of the night before. The advance had been turned into a retreat.
Were they to go back and forth in this manner forever? But Colonel
Winchester spoke hopefully to his young aides and said that the retreat
was right.
"We're drawing out of a trap," he said, "and time is always on our side.
The South to win has to hit hard and fast, and in this case the Army of
the Potomac and the Army of Virginia may join before Lee and Jackson can
come up."
The lads tried to reconcile themselves, but nevertheless they did not
like retreat. Dick with his powerful glasses often looked back toward
the dark bulk of Clark's Mountain. He saw nothing there, nor anything in
the low country between, save the rear ranks of the Union army marching
on.
But Shepard had been right. Lee and Jackson, advancing silently and with
every avenue of news guarded, were there behind the mountain with sixty
thousand men, flushed with victories, and putting a supreme faith in
their great commanders who so well deserved their trust. The men of the
valley and the Seven Days, wholly confident, asked only to be led against
Pope and his army, and most of them expected a battle that very day,
while the Northern commander was slipping from the well-laid trap.
Pope's judgment in this case was good and fortune, too, favored him.
Before the last of his men had left the Rapidan Lee himself, with his
staff officers, climbed to the summit of Clark's Mountain. They were
armed with the best of glasses, but drifting fogs coming down from the
north spread along the whole side of the mountain and hung like a curtain
between it and the retreating army. None of their glasses could pierce
the veil, and it was not until nearly night that rising winds caught the
fog and took it away. Then Lee and his generals saw a vast cloud of dust
in the northwest and they knew that under it marched Pope's retreating
army.
The Southern army was at once ordered forward in pursuit and in the
night the vanguard, wading the Rapidan, followed eagerly. Dick and
his comrades did not know then that they were followed so closely, but
they were destined to know it before morning. The regiment of Colonel
Winchester, one of the best and bravest in the whole service, formed a
part of the rearguard, and Dick, Warner and Pennington rode with their
chief.
The country was broken and they crossed small streams. Sometimes they
were in open fields, and again they passed through long stretches of
forest. There was a strong force of cavalry with the regiment, and the
beat of the horses' hoofs made a steady rolling sound which was not
unpleasant.
But Dick found the night full of sinister omens. They had left the
Rapidan in such haste that there was still a certain confusion of
impressions. The gigantic scale of everything took hold of him. One
hundred and fifty thousand men, or near it, were marching northward in
two armies which could not be many miles apart. The darkness and the
feeling of tragedy soon to come oppressed him.
He listened eagerly for the sounds of pursuit, but the long hours passed
and he heard nothing. The rear guard did not talk. The men wasted no
strength that way, but marched stolidly on in the moonlight. Midnight
passed and after a while it grew darker. Colonel Winchester and his
young officers rode at the very rear, and Pennington suddenly held up his
hand.
"What is it?" asked Colonel Winchester.
"Somebody following us, sir. I was trained out on the plains to take
notice of such things. May I get down and put my ear to the ground?
I may look ridiculous, sir, but I can make sure."
"Certainly. Go ahead."
Pennington sprang down and put his ear to the road. He did not listen
long, but when he stood up again he said:
"Horsemen are coming. I can't tell how many, but several hundreds at
least."
"As we're the very last of our own army, they must be Southern cavalry,"
said Colonel Winchester. "If they want to attack, I dare say our boys
are willing."
Very soon they heard clearly the gallop of the cavalry, and the men heard
it also. They looked up and turned their faces toward those who must
be foes. Despite the dimness Dick saw their eyes brighten. Colonel
Winchester had judged rightly. The boys were willing.
The rear guard turned back and waited, and in a few minutes the Southern
horsemen came in sight, opening fire at once. Their infantry, too,
soon appeared in the woods and fields and the dark hours before the dawn
were filled with the crackle of small arms.
Dick kept close to Colonel Winchester who anxiously watched the pursuit,
throwing his own regiment across the road, and keeping up a heavy fire
on the enemy. The Union loss was not great as most of the firing in the
dusk, of necessity, was at random, and Dick heard bullets whistling all
about him. Some times the bark flew from trees and now and then there
was a rain of twigs, shorn from the branches by the showers of missiles.
It was arduous work. The men were worn by the darkness, the uncertainty
and the incessant pursuit. The Northern rear guard presented a strong
front, retreating slowly with its face to the enemy, and always disputing
the road. Dick meanwhile could hear through the crash of the firing the
deep rumble of Pope's great army with its artillery and thousands of
wagons continually marching toward the Rappahannock. His mind became
absorbed in a vital question. Would Lee and Jackson come up before they
could reach the bigger river? Would a battle be forced the next day
while the Union army was in retreat? He confided his anxieties to Warner
who rode by his side.
"I take it that it's only a vanguard that's pursuing us," said the
Vermonter. "If they were in great force they'd have been pushing harder
and harder. We must have got a good start before Lee and Jackson found
us out. We know our Jackson, Dick, and he'd have been right on top of
us without delay."
"That's right, George. It must be their cavalry mostly. I suppose Jeb
Stuart is there leading them. At any rate we'll soon know better what's
doing. Look there toward the east. Don't you see a ray of light behind
that hill?"
"I see it, Dick."
"Is it the first ray of the morning, or is it just a low star?"
"It's the dawn, Dick, and mighty glad I am to see it. Look how fast it
comes!"
The sun shot up, over the hill. The sky turning to silver soon gave way
to gold, and the clear August light poured in a flood over the rolling
country.
Dick saw ahead of him a vast cloud of dust extending miles from east
to west, marking where the army of Pope pushed on its retreat to the
Rappahannock. There was no need to search for the Northern force.
The newest recruit would know that it was here.
The Southern vanguard was behind them and not many hundred yards away.
Dick distinctly saw the cavalry, riding along the road, and hundreds of
skirmishers pushing through the woods and fields. He judged that the
force did not number many thousands and that it could not think of
assailing the whole Union army. But with the coming of day the vigor of
the attack increased. The skirmishers fired from the shelter of every
tree stump, fence or hillock and the bullets pattered about Dick and his
comrades.
The Union rear guard maintained its answering fire, but as it was
retreating it was at a disadvantage. The regiments began to suffer.
Many men were wounded. The fire became most galling. A sudden charge by
the rearguard was ordered and it was made with spirit. The Southern van
was driven back, but when the retreat was resumed the skirmishers and the
cavalry came forward again, always firing at their retreating foe.
"I judge that it's going to be a very hot morning," said Colonel
Winchester, wiping away a few drops of blood, where a bullet had barely
touched his face. "I think the wind of that bullet hurt me more than its
kiss. There will be no great battle to-day. We can see now that they
are not yet in strong enough force, but we'll never know a minute's rest
until we're behind the Rappahannock. Oh, Dick, if McClellan's army
were only here also! This business of retreating is as bitter as death
itself!"
Dick saw the pain on his colonel's face and it was reflected on his own.
"I feel it, sir, in the same way. Our men are just as eager as the
Johnnies to fight and they are as brave and tenacious. What do you think
will happen, sir?"
"We'll reach the Rappahannock and take refuge behind it. We command the
railroad bridge there, and can cross and destroy it afterward. But the
river is broad and deep with high banks and the army of the enemy cannot
possibly force the passage in any way while we defend it."
"And after that, sir?"
"God alone knows. Look out, Dick, those men are aiming at us!"
Colonel Winchester seized the bridle of Dick's horse and pulled him
violently to one side, pulling his own horse in the same direction in the
same manner. The bullets of half a dozen Southern skirmishers, standing
under the boughs of a beech tree less than two hundred yards away,
hissed angrily by them.
"A close call," said the colonel. "There, they've been scattered by our
own riflemen and one of them remains to pay the toll."
The reply of the Northern skirmishers had been quick, and the gray figure
lying prone by the trunk of the tree told Dick that the colonel had been
right. He was shaken by a momentary shudder, but he could not long
remember one among so many. They rode on, leaving the prone figure out
of sight, and the Southern cavalry and skirmishers pressed forward afresh.
Many of the Union men had food in their saddle bags, and supplies were
sent back for those who did not have it. Colonel Winchester who was now
thoroughly cool, advised his officers to eat, even if they felt no hunger.
"I'm hungry enough," said Pennington to Dick. "Out on the plains,
where the air is so fresh and so full of life I was always hungry,
and I suppose I brought my appetite here with me. Dick, I've opened a
can of cove oysters, and that's a great deal for a fellow on horseback to
do. Here, take your share, and they'll help out that dry bread you're
munching."
Dick accepted with thanks. He learned that he, too, could eat with a
good appetite while bullets were knocking up dust only twenty yards away.
Meanwhile there was a steady flash of firing from every wood and
cornfield behind them.
As he ate he watched and he saw an amazing panorama. Miles in front
the great cloud of dust, cutting across from horizon to horizon swelled
slowly on toward the Rappahannock. Behind them rode the Southern cavalry
and masses of infantry were pressing forward, too. Far off on either
flank rolled the pleasant country, its beauty heightened by the loom of
blue mountains.
Colonel Winchester had predicted truly. The fighting between the
Northern rearguard, and the Southern vanguard never ceased. Every moment
the bullets were whistling, and occasionally a cannon lent its deep roar
to the crackling fire of the rifles. Daring detachments of the Southern
cavalry often galloped up and charged lagging regiments. And they were
driven off with equal courage and daring.
The three boys took especial notice of those cavalry bands and began to
believe at last that they could identify the very men in them. Dick
looked for his cousin, Harry Kenton. He was sure that he would be there
in the front--but he did not see him. Instead he saw after a while an
extraordinary figure on a large black horse, a large man in magnificent
uniform, with a great plume in his hat. He was nearer to them than any
other Southern horseman, and he seemed to be indifferent to danger.
"Look! look! There's Jeb Stuart!" exclaimed Dick. He had heard so
much about the famous Stuart and his gorgeous uniform that he knew him
instinctively, and, Warner and Pennington, as their eyes followed his
pointing finger felt the same conviction.
Three of the Northern riflemen fired at once at the conspicuous target,
and Dick breathed a little sigh of relief when all their bullets missed.
Then the brilliant figure turned to one side and was lost in the smoke.
"Well," said Pennington. "We've seen Stonewall Jackson and Jeb Stuart
both in battle against us. I wonder who will come next."
"Lee is due," said Warner, "but I doubt whether his men will let him
expose himself in such a way. We'll have to slip under cover to get a
chance of seeing him."
The hours went on, and the fight between rear guard and vanguard never
ceased. That column of dust miles long was at the same distance in front,
continuing in its slow course for the river, but the foes in contact were
having plenty of dust showers of their own. Dick's throat and mouth
burned with the dust and heat of the pitiless August day, and his bones
ached with the tension and the long hours in the saddle. But his spirit
was high. They were holding off the Southern cavalry and he felt that
they would continue to do so.
About noon he ate more cold food, and then rode on, while the sun blazed
and blazed and the dust whirled in clouds like the "dust devils" of the
desert, continually spitting forth bullets instead of sand. Late in
the afternoon he heard the sound of many trumpets, and saw the Southern
cavalry getting together in a great mass. A warning ran instantly
among the Union troops and the horsemen in blue and one or two infantry
regiments drew closer together.
"They're going to charge in force," said Colonel Winchester to Dick.
"See, our rearguard has lost touch with our main army, leaving a side
opening between. They see this chance and intend to make the most of it."
"But our men are willing and anxious to meet them," said Dick. "You can
see it in their faces."
He had made no mistake, as the fire in their rear deepened, and they
saw the gathering squadrons of gray cavalry, a fierce anger seized the
retreating Union rearguard. Those wasps had been buzzing and stinging
them all day long and they had had enough of it. They could fight,
and they would, if their officers would let them. Now it seemed that the
officers were willing.
A deep and menacing mutter of satisfaction ran along the whole line.
They would show the Southerners what kind of men they were. Colonel
Winchester drew his infantry regiment into a small wood which at that
point skirted the road.
"There is no doubt that we've found it at the right time," said Warner.
Both knew that the forest would protect the infantry from the fierce
charges of the Southern cavalry, while proving no obstacle to the
Northern defense. His own cavalry was gathering in the road ready to
meet Jeb Stuart and his squadrons.
The three boys sat on their horses within the covering of the trees,
and watched eagerly, while the hostile forces massed for battle. The
Southern cavalry was supported by infantry also on its flanks, and once
again Dick caught sight of Jeb Stuart with his floating plume. But that
time he was too far away for any of the Northern riflemen to reach him
with a bullet, and as before he disappeared quickly in the clouds of dust
and smoke which never ceased to float over both forces.
"Look out! The charge!" suddenly exclaimed Colonel Winchester.
They heard the thunder of the galloping horses, and also the flash of
many rifles and carbines. Cavalry met cavalry but the men in gray reeled
back, and as they retreated the Northern infantry in the wood sent a
deadly fire into the flank of the attacking force. The Southern infantry
replied, and a fierce battle raged along the road and through the woods.
Dick heard once more the rattling of bullets on bark, and felt the twigs
falling upon his face as they were shorn off by the missiles.
"We hold the road and we'll hold it for a while," exclaimed Colonel
Winchester, exultation showing in his tone.
"Why can't we hold it all the time?" Dick could not refrain from asking.
"Because we are retreating and the Southerners are continually coming up,
while our army wishes to go away."
Dick glanced through the trees and saw that great clouds of dust still
were rolling toward the northwest. It must be almost at the Rappahannock
now, and he began to appreciate what this desperate combat in the woods
meant. They were holding back the Southern army, while their men could
cross the river and reform behind it.
The battle swayed back and forth, and it was most desperate between the
cavalry. The bugles again and again called the gray horsemen to the
charge, and although the blue infantry supported their own horsemen with
a heavy rifle fire, and held the wood undaunted, the Northern rear guard
was forced to give way at last before the pressure of numbers and attacks
that would not cease.
Their own bugles sounded the retreat and they began to retire slowly.
"Do we run again?" exclaimed Pennington, a tear ploughing its way through
the smoky grime on his cheek.
"No, we don't run," replied Warner calmly, "We're forced back, and the
rebels will claim a victory but we haven't fought for nothing. Lee and
Jackson will never get up in time to attack our army before it's over the
river."
The regiment began its slow retreat. It had not suffered much, owing to
the shelter of the forest, and, full of courage and resolution, it was a
formidable support on the flank of the slowly retreating cavalry.
The evening was now at hand. The sun was setting once more over the
Virginia hills destined to be scarred so deeply by battle, but attack
and defense went on. As night came the thudding of cannon added to the
tumult, and then the three boys saw the Rappahannock, a deep and wide
stream flowing between high banks crested with timber. Ahead of them
Pope's army was crossing on the bridge and in boats, and masses of
infantry supported by heavy batteries had turned to protect the crossing.
The Southern vanguard could not assail such a powerful force, and before
the night was over the whole Union army passed to the Northern side of
the Rappahannock.
Dick felt a mixture of chagrin and satisfaction as he crossed the river,
chagrin that this great army should draw back, as McClellan's had been
forced to draw back at the Seven Days, and satisfaction that they were
safe for the time being and could prepare for a new start.
But the feeling of exultation soon passed and gave way wholly to chagrin.
They were retreating before an army not exceeding their own, in numbers,
perhaps less. They had another great force, the Army of the Potomac,
which should have been there, and then they could have bade defiance to
Lee and Jackson. The North with its great numbers, its fine courage and
its splendid patriotism should never be retreating. He felt once more as
thousands of others felt that the hand on the reins was neither strong
nor sure, and that the great trouble lay there. They ought not to be
hiding behind a river. Lee and Jackson did not do it. Dick remembered
that grim commander in the West, the silent Grant, and he did not believe
he would be retreating.
Long after darkness came the firing continued between skirmishers across
the stream, but finally it, too, waned and Dick was permitted to throw
himself upon the ground and sleep with the sleeping thousands. Warner
and Pennington slept near him and not far away was the brave sergeant.
Even he was overpowered by fatigue and he slept like one dead, never
stirring.
Dick was awakened next morning by the booming of cannon. He had become
so much used to such sounds that he would have slept on had not the
crashes been so irregular. He stood up, rubbed his eyes and then looked
in the direction whence came the cannonade. He saw from the crest of a
hill great numbers of Confederate troops on the other side of the river,
the August sun glittering over thousands of bayonets and rifle barrels,
and along the somber batteries of great guns. The firing, so far as he
could determine, was merely to feel out or annoy the Northern army.
It was a strange sight to Dick, one that is not looked upon often,
two great armies gazing across a river at each other, and, sure to meet,
sooner or later, in mortal combat. It was thrilling, awe-inspiring,
but it made his heart miss a beat or two at the thought of the wounds and
death to come, all the more terrible because those who fought together
were of the same blood, and the same nation.
Warner and Pennington joined him on the height where he stood, and they
saw that in the early hours before dawn the Northern generals had not
been idle. The whole army of Pope was massed along the left bank of the
river and every high point was crowned with heavy batteries of artillery.
There had been a long drought, and at some points the Rappahannock could
be forded, but not in the face of such a defence as the North here
offered.
Colonel Winchester himself came a moment or two later and joined them as
they gazed at the two armies and the river between. Both he and the boys
used their glasses and they distinctly saw the Southern masses.
"Will they try to cross, sir?" asked Dick of the colonel.
"I don't think so, but if they do we ought to beat them back. Meanwhile,
Dick, my boy, every day's delay is a fresh card in our hand. McClellan
is landing his army at Aquia Creek, whence it can march in two days to
a junction with us, when we would become overwhelming and irresistible.
But I wish it didn't take so long to disembark an army!"
The note of anxiety in his voice did not escape Dick. "You wish then to
be sure of the junction between our two armies before Lee and Jackson
strike?"
"Yes, Dick. That is what is on my mind. The retreat of this army,
although it may have caused us chagrin, was most opportune. It gave
us two chances, when we had but one before. But, Dick, I'm afraid. I
wouldn't say this to anybody but you and you must not repeat me. I wish
I could divine what is in the mind of those two men, Lee and Jackson.
They surely have a plan of some kind, but what is it?"
"Have we any definite news from the other side, sir?"
"Shepard came in this morning. But little ever escapes him, and he says
that the whole Southern army is up. All their best leaders are there.
Lee and Jackson and Longstreet and the Hills and Early and Lawton and
the others. He says that they are all flushed with confidence in their
own courage and fighting powers and the ability of their leaders. Oh,
if only the Army of the Potomac would come! If we could only stave off
battle long enough for it to reach us!"
"Don't you think we could do it, sir? Couldn't General Pope retreat on
Washington then, and, as they continued to follow us, we could turn and
spring on them with both armies."
But Colonel Winchester shook his head.
"It would never do," he said. "All Europe, eager to see the Union split,
would then help the Confederacy in every possible manner. The old
monarchies would say that despite our superior numbers we're not able to
maintain ourselves outside the defenses of Washington. And these things
would injure us in ways that we cannot afford. Remember, Dick, my boy,
that this republic is the hope of the world, and that we must save it."
"It will be done, sir," said Dick, almost in the tone of a young prophet.
"I know the spirit of the men. No matter how many defeats are inflicted
upon us by our own brethren we'll triumph in the end."
"It's my own feeling, Dick. It cannot, it must not be any other way!"
Dick remained upborne by a confidence in the future rather than in the
present, and throughout the morning he remained with his comrades,
under arms, but doing little, save to hear the fitful firing which ran
along a front of several miles. But later in the day a heavy crash came
from a ford further up the stream.
Under cover of a great artillery fire Stuart's cavalry dashed into the
ford, and drove off the infantry and a battery posted to defend it.
Then they triumphantly placed heavy lines of pickets about the ford on
the Union side.
It was more than the Union lads could stand. A heavy mass of infantry,
Colonel Winchester's regiment in the very front of it, marched forward
to drive back these impertinent horsemen. They charged with so much
impetuosity that Stuart's cavalry abandoned such dangerous ground.
All the pickets were drawn in and they retreated in haste across the
stream, the water foaming up in spurts about them beneath the pursuing
bullets.
Then came a silence and a great looking back and forth. The threatening
armies stared at each other across the water, but throughout the
afternoon they lay idle. The pitiless August sun burned on and the dust
that had been trodden up by the scores of thousands hung in clouds low,
but almost motionless.
Dick went down into a little creek, emptying into the Rappahannock,
and bathed his face and hands. Hundreds of others were doing the same.
The water brought a great relief. Then he went back to Colonel
Winchester and his comrades, and waited patiently with them until evening.
He remembered Colonel Winchester's words earlier in the day, and, as the
darkness came, he began to wonder what Lee and Jackson were thinking.
He believed that two such redoubtable commanders must have formed a
plan by this time, and, perhaps in the end, it would be worth a hundred
thousand men to know it. But he could only stare into the darkness and
guess and guess. And one guess was as good as another.
The night seemed portentous to him. It was full of sinister omens.
He strove to pierce the darkness on the other shore with his eyes,
and see what was going on there, but he distinguished only a black
background and the dim light of fires.
Dick was not wrong. The Confederate commanders did have a plan and the
omens which seemed sinister to him were sinister in fact. Jackson with
his forces was marching up his side of the Rappahannock and the great
brain under the old slouch hat was working hard.
When Lee and Jackson found that the Union army on the Rapidan had slipped
away from them they felt that they had wasted a great opportunity to
strike the retreating force before it reached the Rappahannock, and that,
as they followed, the situation of the Confederacy would become most
critical. They would leave McClellan and the Army of the Potomac nearer
to Richmond, their own capital, than they were. Nevertheless Lee,
full of daring despite his years, followed, and the dangers were growing
thicker every hour around Pope.
Dick, with his regiment, moved the next morning up the river. The enemy
was in plain view beyond the stream, and Shepard and the other spies
reported that the Southern army showed no signs of retiring. But Shepard
had said also that he would not be able to cross the river again.
The hostile scouts and sharpshooters had become too vigilant. Yet he was
sure that Lee and Jackson would attempt to force a passage higher up,
where the drought had made good fords.
"It's well that we're showing vigilance," said Colonel Winchester to
Dick. He had fallen into the habit of talking much and confidentially to
the boy, because he liked and trusted him, and for another reason which
to Dick was yet in the background.
"Do you feel sure that the rebels will attempt the crossing?" asked Dick.
"Beyond a doubt. They have every reason to strike before the Army of the
Potomac can come. Besides, it is in accord with the character of their
generals. Both Lee and Jackson are always for the swift offensive,
and Early, Longstreet and the Hills are the same way. Hear that booming
ahead! They're attacking one of the fords now!"
At a ford a mile above and also at another a mile or two further on,
the Southern troops had begun a heavy fire, and gathered in strong masses
were threatening every moment to attempt the passage. But the Union
guns posted on hills made a vigorous reply and the time passed in heavy
cannonades. Colonel Winchester, his brows knitted and anxious, watched
the fire of the cannon. He confided at last to his favorite aide his
belief that what lay behind the cannonade was more important than the
cannonade itself.
"It must be a feint or a blind," he said. "They fire a great deal,
but they don't make any dash for the stream. Now, the rebels haven't
ammunition to waste."
"Then what do you think they're up to, sir?"
"They must be sending a heavy force higher up the river to cross where
there is no resistance. And we must meet them there, with my regiment
only, if we can obtain no other men."
The colonel obtained leave to go up the Rappahannock until nightfall,
but only his own regiment, now reduced to less than four hundred men,
was allotted to him. In truth his division commander thought his purpose
useless, but yielded to the insistence of Winchester who was known to be
an officer of great merit. It seemed to the Union generals that they
must defend the fords where the Southern army lay massed before them.
Dick learned that there was a little place called Sulphur Springs some
miles ahead, and that the river there was spanned by a bridge which
the Union cavalry had wrecked the day before. He divined at once that
Colonel Winchester had that ford in mind, and he was glad to be with him
on the march to it.
They left behind them the sound of the cannonade which they learned
afterward was being carried on by Longstreet, and followed the course of
the stream as fast as they could over the hills and through the woods.
But with so many obstacles they made slow progress, and, in the close
heat, the men soon grew breathless. It was also late in the afternoon
and Dick was quite sure that they would not reach Sulphur Springs before
nightfall.
"I've felt exactly this same air on the great plains," said Pennington,
as they stopped on the crest of a hill for the troops to rest a little.
"It's heavy and close as if it were being all crowded together. It makes
your lungs work twice as hard as usual, and it's also a sign."
"Tell your sign, old weather sharp," said Warner.
"It's simple enough. The sign may not be so strong here, but it applies
just as it does on the great plains. It means that a storm is coming.
Anybody could tell that. Look there, in the southwest. See that cloud
edging itself over the horizon. Things will turn loose to-night.
Don't you say the same, sergeant? You've been out in my country."
Sergeant Whitley was standing near them regarding the cloud attentively.
"Yes, Mr. Pennington," he replied. "I was out there a long time and I'd
rather be there now fighting the Indians, instead of fighting our own
people, although no other choice was left me. I've seen some terrible
hurricanes on the plains, winds that would cut the earth as if it was
done with a ploughshare, and these armies are going to be rained on
mighty hard to-night."
Dick smiled a little at the sergeant's solemn tone, and formal words,
but he saw that he was very much in earnest. Nor was he one to underrate
weather effects upon movements in war.
"What will it mean to the two armies, sergeant?" he asked.
"Depends upon what happens before she busts. If a rebel force is then
across it's bad for us, but if it ain't the more water between us an'
them the better. This, I take it, is the end of the drought, and a flood
will come tumbling down from the mountains."
The sun now darkened and the clouds gathered heavily on the Western
horizon. Colonel Winchester's anxiety increased fast. It became evident
that the regiment could not reach Sulphur Springs until far into the
night, and, still full of alarms, he resolved to take a small detachment,
chiefly of his staff, and ride forward at the utmost speed.
He chose about twenty men, including Dick, Warner, Pennington, Sergeant
Whitley, and another veteran who were mounted on the horses of junior
officers left behind, and pressed forward with speed. A West Virginian
named Shattuck knew something of the country, and led them.
"What is this place, Sulphur Springs?" asked Colonel Winchester of
Shattuck.
"Some big sulphur springs spout out of the bank and run down to the
river. They are fine and healthy to drink an' there's a lot of cottages
built up by people who come there to stay a while. But I guess them
people have gone away. It ain't no place for health just at this time."
"That's a certainty," said Colonel Winchester.
"An' then there's the bridge, which, as we know, the cavalry has broke
down."
"Fortunately. But can't we go a little faster, boys?"
There was a well defined road and Shattuck now led them at a gallop.
As they approached the springs they checked their speed, owing to the
increasing darkness. But Dick's good ears soon told him that something
was happening at the springs. He heard faintly the sound of voices,
and the clank and rattle which many men with weapons cannot keep from
making now and then.
"I'm afraid, sir," he said to Colonel Winchester, "that they're already
across."
The little troop stopped at the command of its leader and all listened
intently. It was very dark now and the wood was moaning, but the columns
of air came directly from the wood, bearing clearly upon their crest the
noises made by regiments.
"You're right, Dick," said Colonel Winchester, bitter mortification
showing in his tone. "They're there, and they're on our side of the
river. Oh, we might have known it! They say that Stonewall Jackson
never sleeps, and they make no mistake, when they call his infantry foot
cavalry!"
Dick was silent. He shared his leader's intense disappointment, but he
knew that it was not for him to speak at this moment.
"Mr. Shattuck," said Colonel Winchester, "how near do you think we can
approach without being seen?"
"I know a neck of woods leading within a hundred yards of the cottages.
If we was to leave our horses here with a couple of men we could slip
down among the trees and bushes, and there ain't one chance in ten that
we'd be seen on so dark a night."
"Then you lead us. Pawley, you and Woodfall hold the horses. Now follow
softly, lads! All of you have hunted the 'coon and 'possum at night,
and you should know how to step without making noise."
Shattuck advanced with certainty, and the others, true to their training,
came behind him in single file, and without noise. But as they advanced
the sounds of an army ahead of them increased, and when they reached the
edge of the covert they saw a great Confederate division on their side
of the stream, in full possession of the cottages and occupying all the
ground about them. Many men were at work, restoring the wrecked bridge,
but the others were eating their suppers or were at rest.
"There must be seven or eight thousand men here," said Dick, who did not
miss the full significance of the fact.
"So it seems," said Warner, "and I'm afraid it bodes ill for General
Pope."