Part 5 (2/2)

CHAPTER FOUR

TOM GOES ALONE

The rain had ceased. Dawn, flooding above the heavy clouds, was at last filtering through, and the world rested tranquilly in a bluish, shadowless light. Tom, as he stepped from the shanty, with his arms held by two Union soldiers, glanced about him in wonderment. This unfamiliar scene, which had been an endless blackness the night before, was like a dream country into which he was straying half awake. The events of the previous day became remote and unreal. He paused for a moment, but the apprehensive tightening of fingers upon his arms made him suddenly aware of the fact that he was a prisoner, and he fell into step with the soldiers.

”So you were a-goin' to fight the Yanks, were you!” asked one of them.

”We'll talk about that later,” answered Tom.

”'Pears to me that it ain't anything I'd want to talk about at any time if I was you,” answered the other soldier.

Tom, with his guards, was in the lead; then came Wilson, with Shadrack a few paces behind him. The Sergeant was with Shadrack. Tom glanced back, and his eyes met Wilson's. There was a flash of understanding between them; then Wilson turned to look at Shadrack, as though cautioning silence. No one spoke as they picked their way along through the ooze of mud in the direction of the main road. To their left was another shanty, much like the one in which they had spent the night, and before the door stood a man, with his wife and child, gazing at them dumbly. The man was dressed, but the woman and child had wrapped tattered blankets over them for protection against the cold. Tom, as he watched them, reconstructed the drama of the night before. They, he thought, were ”poor whites,” like the man in whose shanty they had slept-Smith, the soldiers had called him-and their hearts were with the Northern army. Smith, when he had left on the pretext of attending to his chickens, had probably gone to them, routed them out of bed to tell them of the rebels he was harboring. The man had dressed and floundered through the mud until he came to the Union pickets, brought the soldiers back with him to Smith's shanty. That was his service to the Northern cause, and he must feel proud now, thought Tom. There, huddling together on the doorstep of their miserable, rain-soaked hut, they had visible proof of having helped the North, of having rendered their service. And their pride, lifting them for a brief moment from the pitiful squalor of their lives, seemed such a fine thing to Tom that he hoped they would never know of the mistake they had made. He glanced back and saw them still watching, silent and motionless.

When the procession had come to a spot where it was hidden both from the shanties and the road, Wilson spoke:

”Sergeant, I'd like to have a word with you.”

”All right,” answered the Sergeant. ”What is it?”

”Alone, I mean,” answered Wilson. ”It's important. I'm not trying to escape. It's so important that I can't let the rest of your men hear it.”

”You men stand by these two prisoners while I hear what the reb has to say,” ordered the Sergeant. ”Come over here.”

Wilson went to the Sergeant and talked earnestly for several minutes. The Sergeant watched him narrowly, frowning. A few of Wilson's words drifted over to the others; ”...not asking you to take my word ... to some person of authority ... not lose a minute about it....” The Sergeant was visibly impressed. He tilted his cap and scratched his head; s.h.i.+fted his weight from one leg to another; stroked his whiskers. Finally, after a brief discussion, they came to a decision.

”This man and I are going to take the wagon,” announced the Sergeant. ”We have to get to Wartrace as quick as we can. You others 'll have to walk. It'll take too long if we all ride-too much of a pull for the horses.”

There was some grumbling among the guards at the prospect of trudging through the mud when they had expected a comfortable ride in the wagon. However, without understanding what it all was about, they accepted the Sergeant's decision. When they reached the road where the wagon was standing, Wilson said to Tom:

”I'll try and meet you before you get to Wartrace. Take your time.”

”Yep,” added the Sergeant, ”don't hurry.”

They saw the wagon, drawn at a trot, disappear down the road, the mud spurting out from the wheels. Tom and Shadrack exchanged glances and laughed.

”Now I call that extraordinary!” exclaimed one of the guards. Then, as if he liked the word, he repeated, ”Extraordinary!”

”If we give you our words not to try escaping,” asked Tom, ”will you let go our arms? You have the guns, anyhow. It'll make walking easier.”

”All right,” drawled a guard. ”That's a good idea.” He turned to the other soldiers, and asked, ”What do you think? Let 'em walk a couple of paces ahead, eh?” It was agreed.

Tom and Shadrack went ahead, while the guards followed, speculating among themselves on this new turn of affairs.

”Wilson is probably going to the officer in command and have him rush through a message,” said Tom. ”I suppose they have a telegraph line between Wartrace and headquarters.”

”I hope so,” replied Shadrack. ”I wonder how far the others got?”

Tom had been wondering the same thing. ”Probably not much farther than we did,” he answered.

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