Heaven and Hell (12 page)

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Authors: John Jakes

Tags: #United States, #Historical, #General, #Romance, #Historical fiction, #Fiction, #United States - History - 1865-1898

BOOK: Heaven and Hell
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Even in a stupor, Hazen caught on. He wiped his nose and exclaimed to his friends, "Didn't I tell you? Didn't I spot it?" He stepped away from the bar, in case Charles tried a dash to the entrance.

Charles didn't know how to extricate himself peacefully. More memories came back, including Venable's cadet nickname. It was Handsome, usually spoken sarcastically. No one liked the little bastard.

He was too correct, a fanatic perfectionist.

"You had to lie to get in the cavalry again," Venable said. "West Point graduates are excluded from the amnesty."

"Colonel, I have to earn a living. Soldiering's all I know. I'd be in your debt if you could overlook--"

Lost Causes 69

"Overlook treason? Let me tell you something. It was men from your side--John Hunt Morgan's men--who overran my mother's farm while I was serving on General Sherman's staff. Those men ran off our stock, burned the house and outbuildings, cut my mother down with sabers, and committed--" he reddened and lowered his voice--"sexual atrocities on my twelve-year-old sister, God knows how many times.

Then they killed her with three minie balls."

"Colonel, I'm sorry, but I'm not responsible for every Confederate partisan, any more than y.ou're responsible for all of Sherman's bummers. I am truly sorry about your family, but--"

Venable slammed Charles's shoulder with the palm of his hand.

"Stop saying sorry like some damn parrot. Sorry doesn't begin to pay the bill."

Charles wiped whiskey from his cheek. The tent was very still.

"Don't push me again."

Venable quickly surveyed the crowd, saw Hazen and his friends ready to help. He flexed his fingers at his sides, closing them in a fist.

"I'll push you whenever I please, you fucking traitor." He gut-punched Charles.

Charles wasn't expecting the blow. It doubled him. He grabbed his middle, choking. Venable pounded his jaw, spinning him sideways.

Hazen and the other two noncoms jumped forward to seize Charles as he flailed, off balance.

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Venable signaled toward the tent entrance. The noncoms dragged Charles the length of the bar and threw him outside. Still off balance, he landed in the mud.

Venable by then had removed his dress sword. He unfastened his brightly polished buttons and stripped off his dress coat. To the crowd he said, "Before that lying reb gets a bad-character discharge, he's going to get a little something from me. Come help out if you want."

Most of the soldiers and civilians grinned and clapped, although the burly man in the beaded coat said, " 'Pears to me those odds are kind of unfair, Colonel.''

Venable turned on him. "If you don't want to join in, keep quiet.

Else you'll get what he gets."

The burly man stared and restrained his growling dog as Venable strode out.

In the light rain, Charles struggled to rise from the mud. Hazen darted past Venable, yanked Charles's head up by the hair and smashed his nose with his other hand. Blood spurted. Charles flopped on his

"ack. Hazen stamped on his belly.

"I want him," Venable said, pushing the corporal away. He gazed 70 HEAVEN AND HELL

down at Charles, who was clutching his middle and trying to sit up.

Venable's mouth wrenched as he drew his right boot back. He kicked Charles in the ribs.

Charles cried out and fell on his side. Venable kicked him in the small of the back. Flushed, he said, "A couple of you get him up."

Hazen and a companion grabbed Charles under his arms and pulled.

Charles's head rang. His ribs ached. Usually he could take care of himself, but, taken by surprise, he'd lost the advantage.

On his feet, he wrenched away from the noncoms hanging on him.

He was slimy with mud. It glistened in the lamplight and dripped from his hair and mingled with the blood running from his nose. He swayed in the circle of rain-slicked faces, most of them laughing; few took this with the unsmiling ferocity Venable displayed. Charles knew his second chance in the Army was lost. All he could do now was extract some punishment. Like a bull, he lowered his head.

He charged Venable, who leaped back. Charles pivoted and caught the startled Hazen, as he'd planned. Teeth clenched, he pulled Hazen's
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head down with both hands while raising his knee. Hazen's jawbone cracked like a firecracker going off.

The corporal reeled away, shrieking. One of the other noncoms flung himself at Charles from behind, battering Charles's neck with the side of his hand. Charles staggered. Venable punched his head twice, kicked his groin. Charles flew backward into the crowd. They pushed him forward again, laughing, jeering.

"What happened to that ol fighting spirit,, reb?"

"Got no more rebel yells left, reb?"

"Pass him around the circle, boys. We'll get a yell out of him."

So they began, one man holding him while the man on the right punched him. Then the holder passed him to the next man and became the one who punched. When Charles sagged, they pulled him back up.

They were about to pass him to a fourth man when someone said, "Leave him be."

Venable started to swear. Something hard and cool slipped across his throat and, from nowhere, a hand shot under his left arm and up to his neck. He was caught between a callused palm pushing on the back of his neck and a hand holding the cutting edge of a huge Bowie against his throat.

It was the man in the beaded coat. He smelled of wet buckskin and horses. A civilian snarled, "Another goddamn Southron."

"No. And I don't even know this fella. But you wouldn't treat a four-legged cur that bad. Drop him."

The men holding Charles watched Venable. With the knife at his throat, he blinked rapidly and whispered, "Do it." The men released Lost Causes 71

Charles. He toppled face down, sending up splatters of mud. With a contemptuous shove, the bearded man let go of Venable, who started to swear again. The bearded man stopped him by laying the point of the Bowie against the tip of Venable's nose.

"Anytime, little man. Just anytime, one to one, 'thout a platoon to help you."

Venable shook his finger at Charles sprawled in the mud. "That son of a bitch is through in the U.S. Army. Done!"

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The bearded man twisted .the knife. A little ruby of blood appeared on Venable's nose. "Light outa here, you slime. I mean right now."

Venable blinked and blinked and somehow managed a sneery smile.

He turned and limped into the Egyptian Palace. "Follow me, lads. I'm buying this round."

They gave him three cheers and a tiger, carried Hazen inside, and didn't look back.

The rain fell harder. The man in the beaded coat sheathed his knife and watched Charles struggle to rise, fail, and flop back in the mud face first.

The man, who looked to be fifty or so, walked toward the lee of the tent. The dog, trotting after him, was good-sized, gray with white and black markings. A circle of black ringed its left eye, a piratical touch. It shook itself twice, showering water. Then it whined. Its owner merely said, "Shut up, Fen."

Standing in the shadows by the tent was a large, fat boy of fifteen, pale and beardless. He wore an old wool coat and jeans pants, heavily mended. His limpid dark eyes had a slight slant, and above his eyebrows and ears his head was much larger, round and almost flat on top, resembling a section of fence post.

The youngster looked frightened. The man laid a hand on his shoulder. "You're all right, Boy. The fightin's over. There won't be no more. You don't need to be scairt."

The boy reached out with both hands and clasped the right hand of the older man, a pathetic look of gratitude on his face. The man reached over with his left hand and patted the boy's, reassuringly. "I'm sorry I gave in to my thirst and made you wait out here. But you can stop being' scairt."

The boy watched him, eager to understand. In the lane, Charles groaned and jammed his fists in the mud. He raised his head and chest Wo feet off the ground and blearily looked toward the speaker. The man in the pony-bead coat knew the soldier didn't see him.

"Determined cuss," he said. "Plenty of sand. And he sure can't 8 back in the Army now. Maybe we found our man. If we didn't, we Can at least do the Christian thing and shelter him in our tipi."

H:

72

HEAVEN AND HELL

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He pushed the youngster's hands down and gently took hold of one, squeezing it. "Come on, Boy. Help me pick him up." Hand in hand, they walked forward.

MADELINE

JOURNAL

July, 1865. Three more freedmen hired, bringing the number to six. Palmetto Bank approved $900 for timber operation. Digging of first saw pit began yesterday. Andy S. supervises work till noon, then cuts in the big stand of cypress with two other men until four, then tills his own plot while daylight lasts. Each new worker receives five acres, his wage, and a small share of whatever crop or timber we eventually sell.

Nemo's wife, Cassandra, expected more than five acres.

Weeping, she showed me a bundle of stakes painted red, white, and blue in slapdash fashion. The poor guileless woman gave her last dollar for them. The white peddler who played the trick is long gone. Sad and astonishing, how privation brings out the best in some, the worst in others. . . .

"Painted stakes?" Johnson fumed.

"Yes, Mr. President. Sold to colored men in South Carolina for as much as two dollars."

Andrew Johnson flung the ribbon-tied report on his desk. "Mr.

Hazard, it's disgraceful."

The seventeenth president of the United States was a swarthy man of forty-eight. He was in a choleric mood. His visitor, Stanley Hazard, thought him canaille. What else could one expect of a backwoods tailor barely able to read or write until his wife taught him? Johnson wasn't even a Republican. He'd run with Lincoln in '64 as a National Union Party candidate, to create a bipartisan wartime ticket.

Canaille and a Democrat he might be, but Andrew Johnson still meant to have an explanation. His black eyes simmered as Stanley picked up the report with hands that trembled slightly. Stanley was one of Edwin Stanton's several Assistant Secretaries at the War Department. His particular responsibility was liaison with the Freedmen's Bureau, an administrative branch of the department.

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"Yes, sir, it is disgraceful," he said. "I can assure you the Bureau had no hand in it. Neither Secretary Stanton nor General Howard would tolerate such a cruel hoax."

"What about the rumor that inspired the swindle? Every free nigra Lost Causes 73

down there to be given a mule and forty acres by Christmas? Forty acres--his to stake out in patriotic colors. Who spread that story?"

Sweat shone on Stanley's pale, jowly face. Why did Howard, chief of the Bureau, have to be away from Washington, leaving him to answer the summons to the President's office? Why couldn't he speak forcefully, or at least recall some of Howard's religious platitudes? He wanted a drink.

"Well, Mr. Secretary?"

"Sir--" Stanley's voice quavered--"General Saxton assured me that Bureau agents in South Carolina did nothing to inflame the Negroes, create false hope, or spread the rumor."

"Then where did it come from?"

"So far as we know, sir, from a chance remark by--" He cleared his throat. He hated to criticize an important member of his own party, but he had to think of his job, much as he loathed it. "A remark by Congressman Stevens."

That scored a point. Johnson sniffed as though smelling bad fish.

Stanley went on. "He said something about confiscating and redistributing three hundred million acres of rebel land. Perhaps that is Mr.

Stevens's wish, but there is no such program at the Bureau, nor any intent to begin one."

"Yet the story spread to South Carolina, didn't it? And it enabled unprincipled sharps to sell those painted stakes far and wide, didn't it?

I don't think you understand the extent of the mischief, Hazard. Not only is the rumor of forty acres and a mule a cruel deception of the Negroes, but it also affronts and alienates the very white people we must draw back as working partners. I dislike the planter class as much as you--" More, Stanley thought. Johnson's hatred of aristocrats was legendary. "But the Constitution tells me they were never out of the Union, because the Constitution makes the very act of secession impossible."

He

leaned forward, like a truculent schoolmaster. "That is why my program for the South consists of three simple points only. The
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defeated states must repudiate the Confederate war debt. They must overturn their secession ordinances. And they must abolish slavery by ratifying the Thirteenth Amendment. They are not required to do more because the federal government cannot, constitutionally, ask more. General Sherman failed to understand that when he confiscated coastal and river lands with his illegal Field Order 15, now rescinded, thank the

.Almighty. Your Bureau doesn't understand. You talk widely and blithely 40f the franchise, when qualifying a voter is a matter for the individual

ates. And no one at all seems to understand that if we threaten to give 74

HEAVEN AND HELL

away their land, we will further harden the hearts of the very Southerners we want back in the fold. Do you blame me for being exercised? I am signing pardons at the rate of a hundred a day, and then I receive that report."

"Mr. President, I must respectfully repeat, the Bureau is not in any way responsible for--"

"Who else spread the promise of forty acres? In lieu of any evident culprit, I hold the Bureau responsible. Kindly convey that to Mr.

Stanton and General Howard. Now be so good as to excuse me."

These days Stanley Hazard's life was unremitting misery. To try to make it bearable, he regularly took his first drink before eight o'clock in the morning. He kept various wines and brandies locked in his desk in the old office building temporarily housing the Freedmen's Bureau.

If he drank too much during the day, and so misunderstood a question or stumbled or dropped something, he always muttered the same excuse, that he was feeling faint. But he fooled few.

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