Part 102 (1/2)
Charles O'Connor, the greatest lawyer in America, indignant at the outrage, had offered his services to the prisoner. Socola hastened to a conference with O'Connor and placed himself at his command.
The lawyer sent him to Was.h.i.+ngton to find out the master mind at the bottom of these remarkable proceedings.
”Johnson the President,” he warned, ”is only a tool in the hands of a _stronger_ man. Find that man. Stanton, the Secretary of War, is vindictive enough, but he lacks the cunning. Stevens, the leader of the House, is the real ruler of the Nation at this moment. Yet I have the most positive information that Stevens sneers at the attempt to accuse Davis of the a.s.sa.s.sination of Lincoln. Stevens hated Lincoln only a degree less than he hates Davis. He is blunt, outspoken, brutal in his views. There can be no question of the honesty of his position. Sumner, the leader of the Senate, is incapable of such low intrigue. Find the man and report to me.”
Socola found him within six hours after his arrival in Was.h.i.+ngton. He was morally sure of him from the moment he left O'Connor's office.
Immediately on his arrival at the Capital he sought an interview with Joseph Holt, now the Judge Advocate General of the United States Army.
He was therefore in charge of the prosecution of the cases of Clay and Davis.
For five minutes he watched the crooked poisonous mouth of the ex-Secretary of War and knew the truth. This vindictive venomous old man, ambitious, avaricious, implacable in his hatreds, had organized a Board of a.s.sa.s.sination, which he called ”The Bureau of Military Justice.” This remarkable Bureau had already murdered Mrs. Surratt on perjured testimony.
Socola had given his ex-Chief no intimation of his personal feelings and no hint of his a.s.sociation with O'Connor.
”I've a little favor to ask of you, young man,” Holt said suavely.
Socola bowed.
”At your service, Chief--”
”I need a man of intelligence and skill to convey a proposition to Wirz, the keeper of Andersonville prison. He has been sentenced to death by the Bureau of Military Justice. I'm going to offer him his life on one condition--”
”And that is?”
”If he will confess under oath that Davis ordered the starving and torturing of prisoners at Andersonville I'll commute his sentence--”
”I see--”
”I'll give you an order to interview Wirz. He has never seen you. Report to me his answer.”
When Socola explained to Wirz in sympathetic tones the offer of the Government to spare his life for the implication of Davis in direct orders from Richmond commanding cruelties at Andersonville, the condemned man lifted his wounded body and stared at his visitor.
His answer closed the interview.
”Tell the scoundrel who sent you that I am a soldier. I was a soldier in Germany before I cast my fortunes with the South. I bear in my body the wounds of honorable warfare. If I hadn't time to learn the meaning of honor from my friends in the South, my mother taught me in the old world. You ask me to save my life from these a.s.sa.s.sins by swearing away the life of another. Tell my executioner that I never saw the President of the Confederacy. I never received an order of any kind from him. I did the best I could for the men in my charge at Andersonville and tried honestly to improve their conditions. I am not a perjurer, even to save my own life. A soldier's business is to die. I am ready.”
Socola extended his hand through the bars and grasped the prisoner's.
The deeper he dived into the seething ma.s.s of corruption and blind pa.s.sion which had engulfed Was.h.i.+ngton the more desperate he saw the situation of Davis at Fortress Monroe. After two weeks of careful work he hurried to New York and reported the situation to O'Connor.
”The master mind,” he began slowly, ”I found at once. His name is Holt--”
”The Judge Advocate General?”
”Yes.”
”That accounts for my inability to obtain a copy of the charges against Davis. Holt drew those charges. They are in his hands and he has determined to press his prisoner to trial before his Board of a.s.sa.s.sins without allowing me to know the substance of his accusations. It's infamous.”
”There are complications which may increase our dangers or suddenly lift them--”