CHAPTER XVIII
The ragged line had respite for some minutes, but
during its pause the struggle in the forest became magnified until
the trees seemed to quiver from the firing and the ground to shake
from the rushing of the men. The voices of the cannon were mingled
in a long and interminable row. It seemed difficult to live in such
an atmosphere. The chests of the men strained for a bit of
freshness, and their throats craved water.
There was one shot through the body, who raised a
cry of bitter lamentation when came this lull. Perhaps he had been
calling out during the fighting also, but at that time no one had
heard him. But now the men turned at the woeful complaints of him
upon the ground.
“Who is it? Who is it?”
“It’s Jimmie Rogers. Jimmie Rogers.”
When their eyes first encountered him there was a
sudden halt, as if they feared to go near. He was thrashing about
in the grass, twisting his shuddering body into many strange
postures. He was screaming loudly. This instant’s hesitation seemed
to fill him with a tremendous, fantastic contempt, and he damned
them in shrieked sentences.
The youth’s friend had a geographical illusion
concerning a stream, and he obtained permission to go for some
water. Immediately canteens were showered upon him. “Fill mine,
will yeh?” “Bring me some, too.” “And me, too.” He departed,
ladened.The youth went with his friend, feeling a desire to throw
his heated body onto the stream and, soaking there, drink
quarts.
They made a hurried search for the supposed stream,
but did not find it. “No water here,” said the youth. They turned
without delay and began to retrace their steps.
From their position as they again faced toward the
place of the fighting, they could of course comprehend a greater
amount of the battle than when their visions had been blurred by
the hurling smoke of the line. They could see dark stretches
winding along the land, and on one cleared space there was a row of
guns making gray clouds, which were filled with large flashes of
orange-colored flame. Over some foliage they could see the roof of
a house. One window, glowing a deep murder red, shone squarely
through the leaves. From the edifice a tall leaning tower of smoke
went far into the sky.
Looking over their own troops, they saw mixed
masses slowly getting into regular form. The sunlight made
twinkling points of the bright steel. To the rear there was a
glimpse of a distant roadway as it curved over a slope. It was
crowded with retreating infantry. From all the interwoven forest
arose the smoke and bluster of the battle. The air was always
occupied by a blaring.
Near where they stood shells were flip-flapping and
hooting. Occasional bullets buzzed in the air and spanged into tree
trunks. Wounded men and other stragglers were slinking through the
woods.
Looking down an aisle of the grove, the youth and
his companion saw a jangling general and his staff almost ride upon
a wounded man, who was crawling on his hands and knees. The general
reined strongly at his charger’s opened and foamy mouth and guided
it with dexterous horse manship past the man. The latter scrambled
in wild and torturing haste. His strength evidently failed him as
he reached a place of safety One of his arms suddenly weakened, and
he fell, sliding over upon his back. He lay stretched out,
breathing gently.
A moment later the small, creaking cavalcade was
directly in front of the two soldiers. Another officer, riding with
the skillful abandon of a cowboy, galloped his horse to a position
directly before the general. The two unnoticed foot soldiers made a
little show of going on, but they lingered near in the desire to
overhear the conversation. Perhaps, they thought, some great inner
historical things would be said.
The general, whom the boys knew as the commander of
their division, looked at the other officer and spoke coolly, as if
he were criticising his clothes. “Th’ enemy’s formin’ over there
for another charge,” he said. “It’ll be directed against
Whiterside, an’ I fear they’ll break through there unless we work
like thunder t’ stop them.”
The other swore at his restive horse, and then
cleared his throat. He made a gesture toward his cap. “It’ll be
hell t’ pay stoppin’ them,” he said shortly.
“I presume so,” remarked the general. Then he began
to talk rapidly and in a lower tone. He frequently illustrated his
words with a pointing finger. The two infantrymen could hear
nothing until finally he asked: “What troops can you spare?”
The officer who rode like a cowboy reflected for an
instant. “Well,” he said, “I had to order in th’ 12th to help th’
76th, an’ I haven’t really got any. But there’s th’ 304th.42 They
fight like a lot ‘a mule drivers.af I can
spare them best of any.”
The youth and his friend exchanged glances of
astonishment.
The general spoke sharply. “Get ‘em ready, then.
I’ll watch developments from here, an’ send you word when t’ start
them. It’ll happen in five minutes.”
As the other officer tossed his fingers toward his
cap and wheeling his horse, started away, the general called out to
him in a sober voice: “I don’t believe many of your mule drivers
will get back.”
The other shouted something in reply. He
smiled.
With scared faces, the youth and his companion
hurried back to the line.
These happenings had occupied an incredibly short
time, yet the youth felt that in them he had been made aged. New
eyes were given to him. And the most startling thing was to learn
suddenly that he was very insignificant.The officer spoke of the
regiment as if he referred to a broom. Some part of the woods
needed sweeping, perhaps, and he merely indicated a broom in a tone
properly indifferent to its fate. It was war, no doubt, but it
appeared strange.
As the two boys approached the line, the lieutenant
perceived them and swelled with wrath. “Fleming—Wilson—how long
does it take yeh to git water, anyhow—where yeh been to.”
But his oration ceased as he saw their eyes, which
were large with great tales. “We’re goin’ t’ charge-we’re goin’ t’
charge!” cried the youth’s friend, hastening with his news.
“Charge?” said the lieutenant. “Charge? Well,
b‘Gawd! Now, this is real fightin’.” Over his soiled countenance
there went a boastful smile. “Charge? Well, b‘Gawd!”
A little group of soldiers surrounded the two
youths. “Are we, sure ‘nough? Well, I’ll be derned! Charge? What
fer? What at? Wilson, you’re lyin’.”
“I hope to die,” said the youth, pitching his tones
to the key of angry remonstrance. “Sure as shooting, I tell
you.”
And his friend spoke in re-enforcement. “Not by a
blame sight, he ain’t lyin’ . We heard ‘em talkin’.”
They caught sight of two mounted figures a short
distance from them. One was the colonel of the regiment and the
other was the officer who had received orders from the commander of
the division. They were gesticulating at each other. The soldier,
pointing at them, interpreted the scene.
One man had a final objection: “How could yeh hear
‘em talkin’?” But the men, for a large part, nodded, admitting that
previously the two friends had spoken truth.
They settled back into reposeful attitudes with
airs of having accepted the matter. And they mused upon it, with a
hundred varieties of expression. It was an engrossing thing to
think about. Many tightened their belts carefully and hitched at
their trousers.
A moment later the officers began to bustle among
the men, pushing them into a more compact mass and into a better
alignment. They chased those that straggled and fumed at a few men
who seemed to show by their attitudes that they had decided to
remain at that spot. They were like critical shepherds struggling
with sheep.
Presently, the regiment seemed to draw itself up
and heave a deep breath. None of the men’s faces were mirrors of
large thoughts. The soldiers were bended and stooped like sprinters
before a signal. Many pairs of glinting eyes peered from the grimy
faces toward the curtains of the deeper woods.They seemed to be
engaged in deep calculations of time and distance.
They were surrounded by the noises of the monstrous
altercation between the two armies. The world was fully interested
in other matters. Apparently, the regiment had its small affair to
itself
The youth, turning, shot a quick, inquiring glance
at his friend. The latter returned to him the same manner of look.
They were the only ones who possessed an inner knowledge. “Mule
drivers—hell t’ pay—don’t believe many will get back.” It was an
ironical secret. Still, they saw no hesitation in each other’s
faces, and they nodded a mute and unprotesting assent when a shaggy
man near them said in a meek voice: “We’ll git swallowed.”