Authors: Thomas Keneally
Then Usaph could see Wheat and Gus and Lucius and all the others walking back across the field, coming straight for the Dunker church, and Gus and Ash dodging behind trees to fire off a quick, useless, duty-bound round.
And from across the road a few Georgians were fleeing from that cornfield, their clothes a mess of oily muck; and such a scream arising now from that cornfield that it was like a goddam vent of hell.
Usaph turned back again and got in behind the stone fence by the church. Again a great volley took boys in the back as they were fence-climbing. If you had time and sight enough to look, you could see all the fences of Washington County, Maryland, filling up with lolling corpses.
As Decatur Cate climbed up that stone fence by the Dunker church, finding the big flat stones pretty slippery in spite of his long hands, he got the sting of a ball in his upper leg. It went straight through the meat and, by the time he fell on the far side, not far from where Lucius was now standing, he already knew somehow no bone had been broken. âGet up, Cate,' yelled Lucius. And though Cate could not hear him, lip reading was enough. He rose and faced the immense lines of the blue regiments 300 paces off. Dear Christ, he thought. This is just Cannae all over and there is no chance now, God and history really are going to swallow Decatur Cate. He blinked at the storm of balls hissing and emanating from those regiments. Shells fell and burst behind his back amongst the lines of wounded around the church. And when you bit your cartridge and glanced up, you saw this or that boy look at you all at once in a pleading stunned way and then decide there was no charity left in the world and drop down dead. And only when he'd drop would you see the wound. Oh yes, Cate decided with the workaday despair of the damned, we're going to die right together here. Sublime Ephie can be some sort of double widow and go uncomforted. And so he just stood there and gave himself up to the darkest forces of history.
While matters were thus going to hell at the church, two or three meadows back, maybe somewhere between a quarter and a half a mile, General Hood's Texans had fires lit. In spite of all the noise, they were cooking their breakfasts, a meat ration they hadn't got till about dawn. It was their first meal for three days. When it was just starting to get nice and rare, and whatever juice was in the meat was starting to drip in the fires, Sandie Pendleton rode into their meadow and told General Hood that they were to break their arms-stacks and save the Dunker church.
Hood gave his orders. Adjutants lined the boys up. They were damn angry. They waved their arms and spat a lot. In spite of the noise, they uttered outlandish curses.
When they came over the crest by that church and ran down to the fence where the leftovers of the Stonewall stood, they were screaming with an anger as elemental as that of the cannon. Wounded boys, leaned up against the fence, looked up at them wide-eyed, as if they weren't reinforcements but some final satanic enemy.
It turned out pretty bloody for the Union boys as well. Confederate cannon in the woods and on Nicodemus Heights and from the Dunker churchyard did them harm. And the Texans, just about out of the control of their general, started to climb the fence and rush the close enemy.
Grigsby told Wheat and anyone else that was by that fence to follow on behind them.
Wheat had Rufe by the elbow. âGoddamit, Rufe, you ain't meant to go running like that. Why, your proper place is by me, son. You got your drum there, boy? I see you have!' Then Wheat untied the dirty yellow sash from round his waist and tied one end of it round the belt of Rufe's britches, so that he could lead Rufe along like a pet. âWhere I go, Rufe, you go. Now you sound the advance on that pigskin drum of yours, Rufe.'
Somehow, connected like that, the colonel and Rufe got over the stone fence and so did the sixty or so Volunteers who were left or who found fence-climbing within their powers.
They dragged on across a field and got to the fence by the pike. Here you had to choose gaps to climb the thing, for it was all hung with doubled corpses. So they rushed over the pike and found they were all at once in farmer Miller's bloody cornfield.
Walking just about as easy as ever in spite of the puncture in the meat of his leg, Cate went with them. He would have been too stupid with the noise and the event to know why. To him as to Usaph and Gus and maybe even to Wheat, the morning was now too savage to be thought of as a real morning. To all of them it became a morning in a foul dream. The verges of the cornfield were heaped with mounds of poor flesh, and fences with their crops of dead had been shattered by cannon. And timber and grey cloth and blue cloth and human remnants lay in heaps that must be climbed. Ahead the Texans had chased those Yankees clean out of the corn, but as you stepped into the crop you could hear all these hidden groaning and pleas for mothers and water and for the God whose sky was cut off by the cropped tops of the stooks. Usaph trod on a mat of Christian boys, all of them defaced this way and that by cannister and shell pieces. He was too close to them now to get away from the fact that they were
there
. But after a step or two he did not look, there was no sense in picking a path. He could see Rufe ahead at the end of his leash of silk. And Rufe kept drumming but would turn his head aside to retch and gag.
When he came out of the north end of the corn, the air seemed thicker with balls, yet every one of them seemed meant for someone else and not for Usaph Bumpass. The whole earth of Maryland was sown with the young in blue and butternut, and their seed was dead inside them. And Usaph felt with a despair he could taste on his tongue that there'd never be fatherhood again until boy children, now living in safe towns, grew up.
Poor Ash Judd, with
his
magic seed still living within him, caught up with the Texans and climbed with them yet another snake fence. He saw woods fair ahead. There were such storms of balls emanating from those woods that Ash could just about see them in the air, just like insects. Carrying his musket across his body, Ash took one of them in his arm. He felt all the tendons around the bone up near his shoulder tearing and writhing but, through tears, understood somehow they did so to save that precious bone itself. You'll live on whole, he told himself. The Texans were starting to drop all round him, going down yelling and cursing, as noisy as they'd been all along. Ash was intent to inspect the hole in his jacket. So fast he couldn't tell which came first, a bullet tore his groin and another his upper leg. Still no bones, he told himself. If there hadn't been such noise he might have yelled across the field. âStill no bones!'
Next, one in the face, just beside the corner of the jawbone. Ashabel Judd fell forward, not feeling the impact with the ground. During the fragment of a second in which he toppled down, the phrase
Prince of Lies
repeated itself in his head. His face ended up nose first into the warm crown of his dropped hat. It was a new Union cavalry hat he'd got at Manassas and it had no holes other than the one or two little sweat holes in the side. These his blood clogged too readily. The further flow of blood from his face filled his hat and painlessly drowned him. In this self-same way a lot of boys would drown that morning in landlocked Washington County.
7
There was a pattern, and Usaph and Gus and Wheat and his drummer got caught up in it. They staggered back through the corn yet again and sheltered behind another fragment of fence, and fired yet, oh yet again, at the oncoming sons of the Union.
Usaph noticed in a quiet second that Wheat stood frowning, side-on to the fence and the enemy, a man conferring with himself. He had a handful of Virginians near him â there was Danny and Cate as well as Usaph and Gus â and even as they took aim they kept looking at him as if he was about to provide a magic deliverance.
Wheat couldn't tell where the rest of the Stonewall was. Maybe there wasn't any rest. He stood fingering the wound on his face that the fence splinter had made. Rufe his drummer waited by panting and dull-eyed at the end of Wheat's sash. His sticks were idle in his hand.
It was then the strangest thing of Usaph's whole day happened. It didn't seem at all crazy at the time, in fact it convinced every one of them, Usaph counted in, that Wheat was one of the great men of the time. But those who saw it and lived through the day would remember it later with some horror.
âWhere's your colonel, son?' Wheat asked a Texan lieutenant passing by along the fence.
âThere's no colonel, sir. He got shot in the head jest awhile back.'
Wheat frowned, still fingering the injury to his face. All along the fence the Texans were strung out, firing at their own will, rudderless.
Usaph looked at Wheat. The colonel grinned back at him, as if he was saying: âAnd are you still worried by the small joy I had in Frederick, Reverend Bumpass?' Still grinning away, Wheat dipped a finger into the wound on his face and began ornamenting his features with his own gore, making long scarlet marks on his dirty skin.
âPut on the war paint, boys!' he began to scream. âPut on the war paint!' He began to stride up and down amongst the Virginians, amongst Blalock and Cate and the others and down along the line of Texans who were loading and firing, the loaders cussing the firers and yelling at them to fire faster, and the firers screaming curses about the slowness of the loaders. And as he walked with his painted face he dragged Rufe with him. âPut on the war paint!' he said. And his blood showed up on his powder-blackened face, and so did his broad, fixed grin. âPut on the war paint!'
It seemed to appeal to the Texans. They paused in their loading and yelled, and rubbed the torn edges of the cardboard cartridges over their dirty faces making marks, and began whooping with their mouths open. The whoops spread down the fence.
Usaph walked with Wheat, as he was meant to, striding beside the dragged-along Rufe, and keeping pace with Gus. âGive 'em the whoop!' Wheat screamed and the Texans started whooping even more. They were some tribe, those Texicans! Usaph saw Gus streaking his face. Gus? Gus, the great man of music? Usaph had already broken a cartridge and was decorating his own visage with powder. Then he saw Cate engaged in the same work. Cate? Why?
Cate himself didn't know, but he was laughing to himself and daubing away.
Soon, Usaph knew, they'd all get up over the fence and howl through the cornfield. He could scarce wait for it. For Wheat had turned them all into a vengeance, a force of nature. They would be terrible to face, maybe even Cate, a Union lover â he'd be frightful for the Yankees to face.
âSound the charge there, Rufe!' Wheat yelled at the drummer child.
Rufe did it. Whether they heard him or not, they all raged up over the fence, all painted with blood and powder and all unholy mad. Some Wisconsin boys they sent hurtling back through the corn. Union soldiers they overtook surrendered to them and were shot or sent back towards the church. No one paused to disarm these prisoners.
Beyond the corn, Wheat and his Virginia handful and all those Texicans ran into a New York Irish regiment that advanced in battle order across a bare field. Usaph saw two women there, walking beside their men, looking like laundresses. Sergeants' wives or women. Right there in the lines. There was this harsh swapping of fire. Then Wheat ran charging at them, and some two hundred Irishmen and both their laundresses surrendered and were pointed towards the rear.
Wheat's line went through another little wood and surprised a green U.S. regiment waiting in a lane. The Union boys were dressing their lines there by the edge of a lane, dressing by their right and shuffling busily, when they looked up and saw wild hairy beasts with painted faces roaring out of the trees.
Beyond the lane the ground got rocky, you could see granite poking up out of the earth, and in saner times you might pity the farmer whose field it was. Amongst this rocky earth stood a farmhouse with faded white walls. Those green boys of Lincoln's scuttled back to this farmhouse, some of them, panicked to the limit, trying to hide amongst the black back walls of a burned-out barn, others forming a line by the farmhouse back door, and others around a pump and a small shed in the farmyard.
By now Daniel Blalock and Lucius were out in front with a few screaming Texans. With those few they lived through a volley and scattered the boys near the farmhouse door and ran into the farm kitchen, almost as if the core of the house had to be taken and occupied.
Usaph and Wheat arrived at the side of the house in time to see the Yankees running off, and a man in a good grey suit, no doubt the farmer, stumbling after them, trying to rally them as if he was an officer. A Union fanner, this one. No Dunker. For Wheat's mad Indian rush had brought them beyond the Dunker farms.
Usaph stood round in the farmyard with Wheat and Cate and Rufe and Gus, and everyone was panting away. âDid you see them, boys,' Wheat groaned. âDid you see their poor childish faces?' Usaph decided to try the pump, for his tinplate canteen was empty. He found the handle had been removed from the apparatus. He groaned and even wept for a few seconds, leaning against the
Made in Pittsburgh
metal, railing at the meanness of the farmer.
But before he had time to grieve at length over the loss of the pump handle, a regiment flying a Connecticut flag, tough boys, appeared out of the farmer's lower meadow. They clustered behind a stone wall and fired. Lucius, at the farm window, was shot in the throat. He went to his knees, hawking, and Danny Blalock held his elbow. While he died not knowing he was dying, he thought, all right, this is war enough. Spring semester, I'm going back to Euripides.
Danny Blalock understood all at once that the Yankees were a bottomless barrel. Say you drove off that Union brigade that was coming on now three lines deep, then they would loose on you another. He knew from reading the right journals, all about the industries and populations of Yankeedom, and what he had seen today bore it all out. He took up someone's Springfield from the floor, found it was loaded, fired it, and then decided to leave. While he was considering this idea that had about it an aspect of novelty, the Connecticut people came on another fifty paces. He had noticed a cellar door in the floor of the kitchen. Opening it he went down there into the cool and dark. He wedged himself in by some barrels. Blinking, he saw that there were three Texans there already. One of them, the oldest, a man of maybe forty, put his fingers to his lips in a shooshing motion. All three Texicans were armed and had their muskets pointing up over the barrels at the door of the cellar. âThey kin come in but oncet a time,' said the Texican.