Rodney Gray had promised himself no end of pleasurable excitement when his sailor cousin returned to take command of a trading boat on the river, for he had made up his mind that he would accompany Jack wherever he went. He was as well satisfied as Ned Griffin was that the fall of Vicksburg and Port Hudson would be the signal for instant and increased activity among the guerillas who infested the country as far up as New Madrid, and that picking up cotton along the river with an unarmed boat would be a hazardous undertaking. The Mississippi is the most tortuous of rivers, and there is none in the world better adapted to guerilla warfare. Frequently the distance a steamer has to traverse in going around a bend is from twelve to thirty times greater than it is in a direct line across the The majority of the men who carried on this style of fighting were worthless fellows, like Lambert and Moseley, who had everything to make and nothing to lose by it; and we may anticipate events a little by saying that they came to look upon trading boats as their legitimate prey. If there was a fortune for the man who was lucky enough to get a permit to trade in cotton, there was also plenty of danger for him. Rodney would have entered upon this adventurous life with the same enthusiasm he exhibited when he set out for the North to aid in “driving the Yankees out of Missouri,” but there was little prospect that he would ever see any of it now that Jack had decided to remain at home with his mother. To do him justice he did not mourn over his disappointment, or the possible loss of his father’s cotton, as he did over the dire misfortune that had befallen his cousin Marcy. “I wish I stood in his shoes this minute, and that he stood in mine,” Rodney said to Remembering that Jack had promised to send “fuller particulars” when he felt more in the humor for writing, Rodney spent more time in riding to and from the provost marshal’s office than he did in managing his plantation, but that official had received no letters for him. In the meantime the situation at Vicksburg grew more encouraging every day. Severe battles had been fought and the soldiers of the Union, always victorious, had gained a footing below Vicksburg where there was no water to interfere with their movements, as there was in the inundated Yazoo country, and Colonel Grierson, at the head of seventeen hundred cavalry, was raiding through the State in the direction of Baton Rouge, stealing nothing but fresh horses and food for his men, but thrashing the rebels whenever he met them (except on one occasion when he lost seven hundred men in a single engagement), cutting railroads and telegraph lines in every direction, and destroying commissary trains “They say he’s coming sure enough,” remarked Ned Griffin one day, “although in some places he has had to ride over wide stretches of country where the water stood six feet deep on a level. That’s pluck. What are you going to do with our exemption bacon?” “And our horses,” added Rodney. “If the Yanks are hungry when they reach this plantation, they can take the exemption bacon and welcome. I’d much rather they should have it than it should go to feed rebels. But our horses they can’t have; or at least they’ll have to hunt for them before they get them. Where is Grierson now?” “They’ve got the report in Mooreville that he was last heard from up about Port Hudson,” replied Ned. “Then we’ve no time to lose,” said Rodney. “His scouts, of course, are a long way ahead The boys were none too soon in looking out for their riding nags, for the expected scouts arrived the next morning about breakfast time, and although Rodney had seen some dusty, dirty, and ragged soldiers in his day, he told himself that these rough-riding Yankees, who threw down his bars and rode into the yard as though they had a perfect right there, would bear off the palm. They were a jovial, good-natured lot, however, and well they might be; for their long raid from La Grange, Tenn., was nearly finished. Another night would see them safely quartered among their friends in Baton Rouge. “Hallo, Johnny,” was the way in which the foremost soldier greeted Rodney, who advanced to meet the raiders. “Where’s your well or spring or whatever it is you get drinking water from? Any graybacks around here? Trot out your guns and things of that sort, and save us the trouble of looking for them.” This invitation was quite superfluous, for some of the raiders, who had ridden around to the well and dismounted, were in the house almost before Rodney ceased speaking. He heard their heavy footsteps in the hall in which his black housekeeper had just finished laying the breakfast, and when he turned about they had cleared the table of the victuals they found on it, and one was in the act of draining the coffee-pot. “Where are all your horses, Johnny?” asked the latter, as he put down his empty cup. “Mine’s played out, and I must have another.” “You’ll not find him on this plantation,” was the reply. “General Breckenridge’s men passed through here not long ago, and that means that there are few horses in the country. If yours has given out you will have to take a mule or walk.” “I’ve been there, but you Yanks whipped me so bad I was glad to get home.” By this time the lieutenant in command of the troopers had made himself known, and to him Rodney presented his papers, which included his discharge, standing pass from the provost marshal, and his permit to trade within the Union lines. As he handed the papers to the officer his attention was drawn to two persons near him, who were by far the most dilapidated specimens of humanity Rodney had ever seen. Every line of their faces was indicative of exposure and suffering, and their clothing, what little they wore, looked as though it might fall in pieces at any moment. They were plainly fit candidates for the hospital, and it was a mystery to Rodney how they managed to keep the heavy infantry muskets which rested across their saddles from slipping out of their grasp. By the time he made these observations the lieutenant had read the first line of the pass, which happened “If you have been telling a straight story, Johnny, how does it come that you don’t recognize your cousin when you see him standing before your face and eyes?” Rodney Gray was utterly confounded. He looked at the officer and then at the person to whom the words were addressed, but he could not speak until he heard the reply given in a familiar voice: “I have told you nothing but the truth, sir, and if that is Rodney Gray he will bear me out in everything I have said.” The sick and exhausted stranger reeled about on his mule for an instant, his musket fell to the ground, and he would have followed headlong if Rodney had not sprung forward and received him in his arms. He eased him tenderly to the ground, supported his head on one knee, and looked up at the lieutenant. “Who is it?” he asked in a husky voice. Rodney took one more glance at the white face on his knee, and then raised the limp, almost lifeless form in his arms, carried it into the house, and laid it on his own bed. “I said you could never stand the hard knocks that would be given to a conscript, and I reckon you’ve found it out, haven’t you?” were the first words he spoke. But Marcy—Rodney began to believe now that it was really his cousin Marcy who had come to him in this strange way, though he never would have suspected it if the officer had not told him so—did not even whisper a reply. He never moved a finger, but lay motionless where Rodney had placed him. He was so still, his face was so white, and his faint breath came at so long intervals that Rodney feared he was already past such help as he could give him; and it was not until half a bucket of “O Rodney, I am so tired,” he said, in a scarcely audible whisper. “It’s a wonder you are not dead,” replied his cousin in a choking voice. “I never thought to see you again, but you are all right now. Every Yank in this country is my friend.” “Then look out for Charley, and don’t let them hurt him,” whispered Marcy, for he was too weak to talk. “They haven’t been very civil to us, for they think we are spies sent out to draw them into ambush.” “You look like it, I must say,” exclaimed Rodney. “But who is Charley?” “Charley Bowen, my partner; the man who escaped when I did, and who has stuck to me like a brother through it all. He knows the country, and if it hadn’t been for him I wouldn’t have got ten miles from the stockade. After Marcy had drained the cup that was held to his lips Rodney hastened out to see what he could do for Charley, and to secure his papers, which were worth more than their weight in gold to him. He found them on the gallery where the lieutenant had left them, and the lieutenant himself was in the back yard looking on while one of the soldiers shifted his saddle from his broken-down beast to the back of one of Rodney’s plough-mules, all of which had been brought in from the field. “A fair exchange is no robbery, Johnny,” said the officer, as Rodney approached him. “And besides, you get the butt end of this trade. My mule is bigger than yours, and will be better and stronger after he has had a rest and a chance to fill out.” “What are you going to do with those conscripts?” inquired Rodney. “I haven’t orders to do anything with them,” answered the lieutenant. “But of course I am expected to take them to Baton “Why can’t you leave them here with me? I will look out for them.” “And you a discharged rebel? You’re a cool one, Johnny.” “But that boy in the house is my cousin, and as strong for the Union as you or any man in your squad. Besides, he is ill and can’t go any farther, and he wants his partner to stay with him. If the provost marshal doesn’t tell you that I am all right with the authorities in Baton Rouge, you can come back here and get him.” “You are very kind; but we are not making any excursions into the country just for the fun of the thing. We have ridden far enough already. What’s the matter out there, Allen?” “Big dust up the road, sir,” replied the soldier who had been left at the bars. “Coming fast too, sir.” “Boots and saddles!” exclaimed the lieutenant, throwing himself on the back of Rodney’s plough-mule. “Sergeant, form skirmish-line “You’re taking trouble for nothing,” said Rodney. “There are no rebs about here. That’s a Yankee scouting party from Baton Rouge.” The lieutenant didn’t know whether it was or not, and so, like a good soldier, he made ready to fight, and to send word to his superior in the rear if he found himself confronted by a force of the enemy too strong for him to withstand. He kept his eye on the sentry, who had faced his horse toward the bars in readiness to dash through them and join his comrades if the rapidly approaching squad proved to be rebels, but he did not retreat, nor did he discharge his carbine, which he held at “arms port.” He stuck to his post until the foremost of the squad rode into view around a turn in the road and then called out: “Who comes there?” Rodney did not hear the reply, and the challenged parties were concealed from his sight by trees and bushes; but he knew they were “Halt! Dismount! Advance one friend and give an account of yourself.” Then he waved his hand toward the house as a signal for some officer to come out and receive the report. The lieutenant answered the signal and Rodney went with him; and when he reached the bars whom should he see standing in the road talking to the sentry but the corporal of the —th Michigan cavalry, who seemed to have a way of turning up most opportunely. He shook hands with Rodney, and told the lieutenant that he had been sent out with a few men to see if he could learn anything about Colonel Grierson, who ought to have been safe in Baton Rouge two or three days ago. “Judging by their looks, and the way they eat and trade mules, these are some of Grierson’s men,” said Rodney. The lieutenant corroborated the statement, and said that the reason they had been so long delayed was because they were obliged to pass “Now, corporal, be kind enough to tell the lieutenant how I stand with the provost marshal.” “All right in every spot and place,” replied the soldier quickly. “What’s the matter? Have these raiders been stealing something?” “Oh, I don’t mind the little grub they ate, or the mules they took in exchange for their crow-baits,” answered Rodney. “They’re welcome to everything on the place if they will only leave my cousin with me. Is my word good when I say that I will be responsible for his safe keeping?” “Your word is always good,” said the corporal, who was much astonished. “But how “But this is another one—his brother Marcy, who came here with these Yanks. They’ll kill him if they try to take him any farther, and I want him left here with me. His partner, too.” “Well, if this isn’t a little ahead of anything I ever heard of I wouldn’t say so,” exclaimed the corporal. “Where did you pick him up, lieutenant?” The latter explained briefly, as we shall do presently, adding that he didn’t think he had any right to grant Rodney’s request. “I didn’t really suppose you had, sir,” said the corporal. “But I was going to make a suggestion. I will ride on until I meet the colonel—that is what my orders oblige me to do—and when I see a chance I’ll say—have you got any grub in the house?” “Plenty of it, such as it is,” answered Rodney. “It’s good enough for a hungry soldier, I’ll be bound. Tell your housekeeper to dish up The lieutenant laughed heartily as he listened to this programme. “It’s a very ingenious arrangement, corporal,” said he, as the non-commissioned officer beckoned to his men, who were still waiting at the place where they had been halted by the sentry. “And I think it ought to succeed. But as I can’t wait for the colonel without disobeying my orders, which are to scout on ahead, what shall I do with the conscripts?” “Leave a guard with them,” suggested Rodney. “I suppose I might do that, and since the colonel is a volunteer like myself, I’ll risk it. If he were a regular I wouldn’t think of it for a moment.” “And you’ll never hear the like again,” answered Rodney. “But I do not look for any more. Two cousins are all I have.” The corporal laughed and rode on up the road to meet the expected raiders, and the lieutenant told his sergeant to call in the men who were still holding their positions on the skirmish-line which had been formed when that warning dust was seen rising above the tree-tops. He told Charley Bowen that he could remain behind to receive orders from Colonel Grierson when he arrived, and detailed two troopers to keep watch on him and Marcy Gray. “This isn’t at all regular; I ought to take those conscripts to Baton Rouge, and I am soldier enough to know it,” said the lieutenant, addressing himself to Rodney. “But you seem to be all right with that corporal, and if you and he can make it all right with “It confirms one’s faith in human nature to meet a kind-hearted soldier now and then,” said Rodney, who knew that the lieutenant could have compelled the conscripts to go on with him if he had been so disposed. “I am very grateful to you, and will do you a good turn if I get half a chance. Whenever you scout through this country drop in and have a bowl of milk. I can’t offer you any to-day, for your men have made away with all I had. Good-by. This is what I get by befriending escaped prisoners,” he added mentally, as he started on a run for the house. “If I hadn’t taken so much trouble to help that corporal where would Marcy be now?” As it was, he was lying at his ease on Rodney’s bed instead of riding along the dusty road toward Baton Rouge, reeling in his seat from very weakness. Charley Bowen sat close by holding his hand, and the two troopers who had been detailed to guard them “What’s the matter?” he inquired. “How did you get hurt?” “He was triced up by the thumbs till he fainted,” replied Bowen, speaking for his comrade. Rodney’s face turned all sorts of colors. “General Lee himself couldn’t make me believe that the punishment was deserved,” said he through his teeth. “That boy drilled alongside of me for almost four years at the Barrington Military Academy, and a better soldier never shouldered a musket. He knows more than the man who triced him up. What was it done for?” “Because Marcy didn’t shoot a Yankee prisoner whose hand was inside the deadline,” replied Bowen. “And his hand wasn’t inside the deadline,” said Marcy in a faint voice. “It was under the rail which marked the line, and the Rodney sat down on the edge of the bed and looked at the two troopers who were leaning half-way through the window, listening. His face showed that he could hardly believe the story even if his cousin did tell it. “There’s a man in our company who escaped from Andersonville, and he declares that such things really happened,” said one of the soldiers. “Besides being starved to death our fellows are shot without any provocation at all.” “And because you wouldn’t murder that Yankee somebody triced you up by the thumbs,” said Rodney in a voice that was choked with anger. “Who reported you?” “The sentry in the next box, who saw it all,” replied Marcy. “He tried to get a shot at the man himself, but the prisoner’s friends closed around him and hustled him out of “How can the rebels hope to win in this war when they torture their own men for not committing murder?” exclaimed Rodney hotly. “Why, I thought you were a rebel,” said one of the soldiers at the window. “So I was,” answered Rodney honestly. “But, as I have said a hundred times before, I know when I have had enough. When I was whipped I quit.” Both the troopers extended their hands, and after Rodney had shaken them cordially he walked over and shook hands with Charley Bowen, and tried to thank him for what he had done for Marcy; but his voice grew husky and finally broke, and so he gave it up as a task beyond his powers. “I am a Georgia cracker,” said Bowen, “and the boys used to call me ‘goober-grabbler’; but I know a good fellow when I see him, and I don’t want any thanks for doing for your cousin what I am sure he would have “I know I should never have seen Marcy again if it hadn’t been for you, because he told me so, and you are more than welcome to a share in everything the war has left us. Now I must tear myself away for a few minutes, for I have work to do. Don’t let Marcy talk; he is too weak.” So saying Rodney hastened from the room to order Colonel Grierson’s breakfast, and to write a short note to his mother, requesting that the only doctor in the country for miles around who had been able to keep out of the army might be sent to his plantation as soon as he could be found, to prescribe for Marcy Gray, who had come to him in a most remarkable manner. He didn’t stop to explain how, for he hadn’t time; but he made his mother understand that Marcy was in need of prompt medical attention. Rodney knew that his father would at once answer the note in person, The note was sent off by one of the negroes, who was quickly summoned from the field to take it; and after Rodney had satisfied himself that the colonel’s breakfast was coming on as well as he could desire, and had given instructions regarding a second meal that was to be made ready for the conscripts and their guards, he went back to Marcy. |