Bring the Boys Home

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Authors: Gilbert L. Morris

BOOK: Bring the Boys Home
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B
RING THE
B
OYS
H
OME

G
ILBERT
M
ORRIS

M
OODY
P
UBLISHERS
CHICAGO

© 1997 by
G
ILBERT
L. M
ORRIS

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

Interior and Front Cover Design: Ragont Design
Back Cover Design: Brady Davidson
Cover Illustration: Brian Jekel

ISBN: 978-0-8024-0920-1

We hope you enjoy this book from Moody Publishers. Our goal is to provide high-quality, thought-provoking books and products that connect truth to your real needs and challenges. For more information on other books and products written and produced from a biblical perspective, go to
www.moodypublishers.com
or write to:

Moody Publishers
820 N. LaSalle Boulevard
Chicago, IL 60610

5 7 9 10 8 6 4

Printed in the United States of America

To Jarred McCauley

I hope you become a great writer,
Jarred, and that with every word you write
you will glorify the Lord
.

Contents

  
1. The Net Closes

  
2. Jeff Goes to Richmond

  
3. The Last Battle

  
4. Flight of an Army

  
5. Jeff Stacks His Musket

  
6. Where Can We Go?

  
7. Home

  
8. “Go Home, Rebel!”

  
9. Tom Has a Problem

10. The Courting

11. Another War

12. Made in Heaven

13. Happy Ending

14. A New Generation

15. Just Like in the Storybooks

1
The Net Closes

C
orporal Majors!”

Jeff stopped abruptly as a harsh voice came across the frozen air. He turned slowly, guiltily. As he expected, he saw his father, the colonel, standing outside his tent, glaring at him.

Jeff snapped to attention and brought his right hand up to a salute, touching the forage cap as he had been taught. He had been a drummer boy for two years in the Stonewall Brigade, but now at seventeen had been mustered into the regular service and appointed a corporal.

“Yes, Colonel,” he said. His lips were so cold that he found it difficult to speak. He brought his hand down, knowing he was in big trouble.

Col. Nelson Majors walked up to his soldier son. They looked alike, these two. They had the same coal-black hair and black eyes. Jeff was fully as tall as his father, though much slimmer.

“Where have you been, Corporal?”

After a slight hesitation, Jeff said, “Into Richmond, sir.”

“How many times does that make that you’ve been to Richmond in the last week?”

“Three times, Colonel.”

“Well, that’s about three times too many!”

Nelson Majors was ordinarily a soft-spoken man, but today his face was drawn with tension.

The siege of Petersburg had drained all the energy out of him. He had been wounded at the beginning of the siege and had not gotten his full strength back. He held himself up straight and said sternly, “Corporal, just because you’re the son of the commanding officer doesn’t give you any special privileges! I thought I’d made that clear to both you and your brother!”

“I’m sorry, sir.” Jeff had no excuse. He had gotten permission from his lieutenant to go to town, but he knew that he had taken a shortcut. He was well aware that his father was never one to permit one of his sons to merit special attention, and now he made no defense.

“You can stand guard for an extra watch, Corporal Majors.”

“Yes, sir.”

Jeff returned his father’s angry salute, and when the colonel ducked back inside the tent, he made his way down through the camp to the front lines.

Here were trenches protected by large logs and anything else that would stop a musket ball. They were not quite deep enough for a man to walk upright, so Jeff kept his head down. As he wound through the fortifications, from time to time he heard the explosion of a musket and the screaming of a minié ball as it split the air. Both sides were firing, and their trenches were less than two hundred feet apart in places.

A mortar exploded somewhere behind the lines, and he dropped down flat. When the dirt settled, he got up and continued his journey, finally arriving at the location where his squad was detailed to hold off the Yankees.

“Hello, Jeff. You bring anything good back to eat?”

Sgt. Tom Majors, Jeff’s older brother, was sitting on a cracker box. He’d been talking to Charlie Bowers, the undersized drummer boy who had entered the service the same time as Jeff but was one year younger.

“Well, yes, I did,” Jeff muttered. He flung down the bag. “There! You can have it!”

Charlie stared at him with his wide blue eyes. “What’s the matter, Jeff? You look all put out.”

“Pa—I mean the colonel—just bawled me out for going into Richmond.”

“You had permission, didn’t you?” Tom asked as he picked up the bag.

“Sure, I did. From the lieutenant. But that wasn’t good enough.”

Tom was barely listening. He had opened the bag and was pulling out its contents. “Cookies!” he said. “My, I haven’t seen a cookie in years, it seems like!”

Jeff, however, was not thinking of cookies. “I don’t see why he has to pick on me! What difference does it make whether I’m here or not?” he grumbled. He plopped himself down on a log that formed a part of the fortification and watched as the other two soldiers eagerly went through the rations. He refused the cookies. He had filled up on cookies when in Richmond.

Charlie said, “I think you’re crazy, Jeff—turning down cookies just because you’re upset with your pa.”

Tom was munching happily, making a chocolate cookie last as long as he could. Then he said, “You
know Pa’s pretty tense, Jeff. He’s got a lot of responsibility here.”

“That’s right,” Charlie said. “We’re trying to hold too much of the line. Spread out all thin-like. Why, if the Yankees made a run at us, I don’t know if we could hold ’em or not.”

Jeff knew that both were right, and it was not his father’s fault.

“Well,” he muttered, “I guess it was worth it. Leah and I cooked up all this stuff, and I ate all I could so the rest of you could have what I brought back. But food’s getting so scarce there that they couldn’t give us much.”

“Seems they found a chicken anyhow.” Tom bit down on a fried chicken leg. “It beats anything we’ve had here lately.”

The three soldiers were tired and dirty. A siege was a nasty sort of way to run a war, Jeff thought. There was no glory in it—no flags flying, no bands playing—just day after day risking death every time a man raised his head.

“The net’s closing in,” Tom said, glancing toward the Federal fortifications. “General Grant is getting more reinforcements all the time, and we’re getting thinner. There’s only one end to that.”

Jeff nodded. “I reckon you’re right, Tom. And Pa’s got too much to do. I shouldn’t have gotten sore at him like that.”

Colonel Majors had been fortunate enough to commandeer a horse that would hold his weight. He was in Richmond, on his way home for the first time in days.

“Come on, boy. You can make it just a little farther.” He urged the weary animal down the street.
Richmond was a pitiful sight, he thought. The mortars and the big guns of the Federals had arched over their deadly missiles, blowing large chunks out of the city.

He rode through the heart of town and saw that little was left of the daily life he remembered. When he’d first come here from Kentucky to join the Confederacy, Richmond had been a busy, prosperous city. Now, only a remnant was left of all of that. He saw bombed-out buildings, burned houses, holes in the street big enough to hide a horse. And he saw little hope in the eyes of those who were still trying to keep the Confederate war machine going.

Finally he reached home, a small, white frame house, which so far had been spared the destruction of the inner city. He slid off the bony animal, slapped him with some affection, and said, “You did a good job, boy. I’ll see if I can find you some fodder.” He tied the horse to the hitching post, then opened the door and called out, “Hey, where’s my welcoming committee?”

Instantly he heard a child’s voice, and then a blonde girl, no more than three years of age, came like a whirlwind. She hit him full force, and he laughed, picking her up and holding her high in the air.

“Well, here’s my Esther!” He kissed her rosy cheek. His wife had died bringing Esther into the world, and for most of her life the child had been in the care of Dan and Mary Carter in Kentucky. Now, however, she was here to stay, and she had a new mother.

“Nelson, you’re home!”

Eileen Fremont Majors greeted him with almost as much vigor as the child. At twenty-nine, she had
brilliant red hair, green eyes, and, he knew, a great love for her new husband.

Nelson kissed her and then said, “You smell better than anything I’ve smelled in the last three weeks!”

Eileen ran her hand through his hair. “I’m glad you’re here, dear. Come on. I know you’re hungry. I’ll fix you something to eat.”

He followed her into the kitchen, noted the pleasant warmth of the wood stove, and sat down, saying, “I wish I could carry that stove back to the front lines with me.”

“I’m afraid we don’t have much to cook on it, but the fire’s nice.”

“How’s the firewood holding out?”

“We’ll manage.”

Eileen busied herself making a meal, and soon it was set before him. “Only two eggs,” she said, “but we got a piece of bacon yesterday, and here are some biscuits that I made this morning.”

As her husband ate, Eileen sat beside him. Esther demanded her father’s attention, and he pulled her up onto his lap and began to tell her stories, which she loved. After a time, however, he said, “Now, you let Daddy have a little time with Mommy, all right?”

“Will you tell me more stories after you talk to her?”

“Sure I will, sweetheart.” He kissed her firmly, and she toddled off happily to play. “Where’s Leah?” he asked.

“Oh, she’s out fishing again.”

“In this weather? She’ll freeze to death!”

“She doesn’t seem to mind, and the fish come in handy. Until the water freezes over, she says she’ll keep at it. We’ll have fish for supper.”

Then Eileen plumped herself down in her husband’s lap. “There,” she said. “I’ve missed this lap of yours.”

“I’ve missed having you in it.” He stroked her hair. “I’ve missed you more than I should. I couldn’t keep my mind on my business.”

Eileen hesitated, then said, “I’ve got some more business for you to think about.”

“What’s that?”

“How would you feel if you had to buy another plate for the table?”

For a moment Nelson could not understand what she meant. He saw that she seemed somewhat apprehensive. And then the meaning of her question came to him. His black eyebrows went up with astonishment. “You don’t mean that we’re going to have a baby?”

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