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"Have you seen d.i.c.k Taylor's beauties--his Creoles and Tigers and Harry Hayes, 7th Louisiana? The Maryland Line, too, and Trimble and Elzey?
d.a.m.ned fine army! How about yours over there?" He indicated the Blue Ridge with a bird-like jerk, and helped himself again to frumenty.
"Your description applies there, too, sir. It's a little rough and ready, but--it's a d.a.m.ned fine army!"
"Kernstown didn't shake it?"
"Kernstown was as much a victory as a defeat, sir. No, it didn't shake it."
"_Morale_ good?"
"Extraordinarily so. That army is all right, sir."
"I wish," said Ewell plaintively, "that I knew what to make of General Jackson. What do you make of him, major?"
"I make a genius, sir."
Ewell raised his shoulder and ducked his head, his bright round eyes much like a robin's. "And he isn't crazy?"
"Not in the very least."
"Well, I've had my doubts. I am glad to hear you say that. I want to think mighty well of the man who leads me. That Romney trip now?--of course, I only heard Loring's side. He doesn't just wind in and out of mountains for the fun of doing it?"
"I think that, generally speaking, he has some other object in view, sir. I think that acquaintance with General Jackson will show you what I mean. It develops confidence in a very marked fas.h.i.+on."
Ewell listened bright-eyed. "I am glad to hear you say that, for d.a.m.n me, confidence is what I want! I want, sir, to be world-without-end-sure that my commanding officer is forever and eternally right, and then I want to be let go ahead!--I want to be let feel just as though I were a captain of fifty dragoons, and nothing to do but to get back to post by the sunset gun and report the work done!--And so you think that when my force and old Jackson's force get together we'll do big things?"
"Fairly big, sir. It is fortunate to expect them. They will arrive the sooner."
Ewell bobbed his head. "Yes, yes, that's true! Now, major, I'm going to review the troops this morning, and then I'll write an answer for General Jackson, and you'll take it to him and tell him I'm coming on by Stanardsville, just as he says, and that I'll rest on Sunday. Maybe even we'll find a church--Presbyterian." He rose. "You'd better come with me.--I've got some more questions to ask. Better see my troops, too. Old Jackson might as well know what beautiful children I've got. Have you any idea yourself what I'm expected to do at Stanardsville?"
"I don't know what General Jackson expects, sir. But my own idea is that you'll not be long at Stanardsville."
"He'll whistle again, will he?"
"I think so. But I speak without authority."
"There's an idea abroad that he means to leave the Valley--come east--cross the mountains himself instead of my crossing them. What do you think of that?"
"I am not in his council, sir. The Valley people would hate to see him go."
"Well, all that I can say is that I hope Banks is puzzled, too!--Jim, Jim! d.a.m.n you, where's my sword and sash?"
As they went Ewell talked on in his piping voice. "General Jackson mustn't fling my brigades against windmills or lose them in the mountains! I'm fair to confess I feel anxious. Out on the plains when we chase Apaches we chase 'em! We don't go deviating like a love vine all over creation.--That's Harry Hayes's band--playing some Frenchy thing or other! Cavalry's over there--I know you've got Ashby, but Flournoy and Munford are right wicked, too!"
"The--Virginia is with you, sir?"
"Yes. Fine regiment. You know it?"
"I know one of its officers--Major Stafford."
"Oh, we all know Maury Stafford! Fine fellow, but d.a.m.ned restless.
General Taylor says he is in love. I was in love once myself, but I don't remember that I was restless. He is. He was with Loring but transferred.--You went to Romney together?"
"Yes, we went together."
"Fine fellow, but unhappy. Canker somewhere, I should say. Here we are, and if General Jackson don't treat my army well, I'll--I'll--I'll know he's crazy!"
The review was at last over. Back under the wine sap Ewell wrote his answer to Jackson, then, curled in a remarkable att.i.tude on the bench beneath the tree ("I'm a nervous major-general, sir. Can't help it.
Didn't sleep. Can't sleep."), put Cleave through a catechism searching and shrewd. His piping, treble voice, his varied oaths and quaintly petulant talk, his roughness of rind and inner sweetness made him, crumpled under the apple tree, in his grey garb and cavalry boots, with his bright sash and bright eyes, a figure mellow and olden out of an ancient story. Cleave also, more largely built, more muscular, a little taller, with a dark, thin, keen face, the face of a thinking man-at-arms, clad in grey, clean but worn, seated on a low stool beneath the tinted boughs, his sword between his knees, his hands clasped over the hilt, his chin on his hands--Cleave, too, speaking of skirmishes, of guns and hors.e.m.e.n, of the ma.s.sed enemy, of mountain pa.s.ses and fordable rivers, had the value of a figure from a Flemish or Venetian canvas. The form of the moment was of old time, old as the smell of apple blossoms or the buzzing of the bees; old as these and yet persistently, too, of the present as were these. The day wore on to afternoon, and at last the messenger from Jackson was released.
The--Virginia had its encampment upon the edge of a thick and venerable wood, beech and oak, walnut and hickory. Regimental headquarters was indeed within the forest, half a dozen tents pitched in a glade sylvan enough for Robin Hood. Here Cleave found Stafford sitting, writing, before the adjutant's tent. He looked up, laid down his pen and rose.
"Ah! Where did you come from? I thought you in the Valley, in training for a brigadier!" He came forward, holding out his hand. "I am glad to see you. Welcome to Camp Ewell!"
Cleave's hand made no motion from his side. "Thank you," he said. "It is good when a man can feel that he is truly welcome."
The other was not dull, nor did he usually travel by indirection. "You will not shake hands," he said. "I think we have not been thrown together since that wretched evening at Bloomery Gap. Do you bear malice for that?"
"Do you think that I do?"
The other shrugged. "Why, I should not have thought so. What is it, then?"
"Let us go where we can speak without interruption. The woods down there?"
They moved down one of the forest aisles. The earth was carpeted with dead leaves from beneath which rose the wild flowers. The oak was putting forth tufts of rose velvet, the beech a veil of pale and satiny green. The sky above was blue, but, the sun being low, the s.p.a.ce beneath the lacing boughs was shadowy enough. The two men stopped beside the bole of a giant beech, silver-grey, splashed with lichens. "Quiet enough here," said Stafford. "Well, what is it, Richard Cleave?"
"I have not much to say," said Cleave. "I will not keep you many moments. I will ask you to recall to mind the evening of the seventeenth of last April."
"Well, I have done so. It is not difficult."
"No. It would, I imagine, come readily. Upon that evening, Maury Stafford, you lied to me."
"I--"
"Don't!" said Cleave. "Why should you make it worse? The impression which, that evening, you deliberately gave me, you on every after occasion as deliberately strengthened. Your action, then and since, brands you, sir, for what you are!"
"And where," demanded Stafford hoa.r.s.ely, "where did you get this precious information--or misinformation? Who was at the pains to persuade you--no hard matter, I warrant!--that I was dealing falsely?
Your informant, sir, was mistaken, and I--"
A shaft of suns.h.i.+ne, striking between the boughs, flooded the s.p.a.ce in which they stood. It lit Cleave's head and face as by a candle closely held. The other uttered a sound, a hard and painful gasp. "You have seen her!"
"Yes."
"Did she tell you that?"
"No. She does not know why I misunderstood. Nor shall I tell her."
"You have seen her--You are happy?"
"Yes, I am happy."