11
i n mid- february, six weeks after we’d left romney, jim blue’s father waited for an
opening in the weather and then, driving his weatherworn wagon, braved the frozen valley road
to haul bundles of food and clothing from our families. he also toted letters from home and
newspapers. beards settled down on a log with the staunton spectator spread on his knees and a
salty ham biscuit in one hand. contentment played across his features until he read the
headlines. “look at this! it says the confederate government plans to draft men for two more
years, or until the end of the war. that can’t be.”
“what’s a draft? i never heard of a draft,” mccorkle said. he spat toward the campfire and
scratched his ankle. all of us were peppered with red lice bites.
“i think it means they’re going after every man fit to fight and won’t let him go until they’re
finished with him. it’s something new. it’s got nothing to do with volunteering or free choice, as
i understand it,” said jim blue.
“let me see that,” zeke said. frowning, he held the grease-stained paper before his nose for a
few minutes. “well, i’ll be damned. if that’s not a poke in the eye. what about that noble
speechifying on people’s rights we heard from the new government? they must have forgotten
about all that.” he then read aloud that we could re-enlist now with our current company—that
being company d—or we could go home, lay about for a few weeks, and then for absolute
certain, be called back to fight.
pa also saw the news and sent me a letter outlining what he viewed to be my options. first,
he recommended that i re-enlist where i was. that way i’d remain with long-time augusta
comrades on whom i could depend and the leaders whom i knew. strangers wouldn’t value my
fate as highly, and new leaders would have unpredictable flaws. jackson’s brigade was
guaranteed to stay in virginia. if drafted, i might be sent to kentucky, mississippi, texas, or
who knows where, too far to furlough home and out of reach of home provisions. he also
speculated that anyone who deserted now would be in serious trouble. pa was safe from the
draft. besides being too old, he was a miller, and like blacksmiths, worked at a profession vital
for supplying the army.
zeke was deluded to think we’d ever had much of a choice. sure, we’d enlisted voluntarily,
but quickly our three-month term had been extended to a year. now the government had us by
the scruff of the neck until the end of the war, and who could say when that would be. by the
time of this latest news, most boys couldn’t tolerate their officers and didn’t much fancy being
shot at or killing others. i was one of those, but in addition, the agonized screams of men and
horses in battle now haunted me. nightly i heard them as i trudged, shivering and teeth
chattering, through icy dreamscapes with towering peaks of snow.
in a shrinking realm of choices, another was to just plain quit soldiering. during the first
year, boys wandered off because they couldn’t stand erect—much less fight—while sick with
chronic dysentery, measles, mumps, and typhoid. afterward, they just stayed home. they
sauntered off to visit friends engaged in battles elsewhere, journeyed down the valley to visit an
ailing wife or child, or chose to linger awhile in areas unaffected by the war. drifting back into
camp, they paid for their sins with a night or two in the guardhouse or sloshing the officers’
laundry in a nearby creek. but that all changed after the draft and the first full winter of the war.
i had a passing late acquaintance with a deserter—dallas bunn from wake county, a plug-
short, straw-headed fellow whose superior skills on the mouth harp drew our notice. everyone
called him jug, as his protruding ears resembled handles. he was only eighteen when he was
drafted with his cousin wesley bunn, ten years older. a year must have seemed aplenty,
because the bunn cousins then ran off with eight other north carolina boys in may ’62, just
after our second battle of the year, first winchester. in camp we were used to hearing the north
carolinians grouse even louder than virginians about being forced to fight. they had less at
stake; their homes weren’t being invaded. as an older man when i studied books analyzing the
war, i learned another reason they were less enthusiastic. seventy-five percent of folks in the
entire south owned not one slave and got no benefit from the practice. but with the draft, they
were all forced to defend it.
when we got wind that jug had been among the captured, beards and i trudged over to the
log brig to visit. the number of armed guards patrolling the perimeter was a bad sign. “hey,
jug! are you somewhere in there?” beards hollered toward the window. a mournful- eyed
dallas bunn appeared behind the bars, his pale face scratched red from his time in the brush.
“yep. can’t go no place else.” a sigh so deep it sounded like it was dug from the ground
came out of his chest.
“you’re in a fine kettle of fish, boy. what the hell happened?” beards had met jug during his
campground tours in the evenings. dallas drew closer to the opening. he looked both ways
before speaking in a low voice.
“someone must have snitched on us. that’s the only way i figure we ended up here. i never
fathomed this outcome yesterday when we lit off for the foothills. we’re mountain folk and
figured we’d be out of catching’s way in that tough terrain before word got out,” he said.
“someone snitched for sure.” his knuckles whitened on the cell bars. “i’ll make him pay if i
ever find out.”
“how’d you get caught?” i asked.
“all in all, it was rougher going than we reckoned. on foot we couldn’t get much ahead of
the mounted scouts if they knew where we was headed.” he sighed again and shifted his weight.
“goddamned snitch. otherwise, i’d be gone by now.”
“i know how hard going that country is,” i said. i’d once gone bear hunting with pa in the
blue ridge mountains. it was a custom for all thirteen-year-old males. i was amazed to see how,
up and down the valley, barn-sized boulders braced one another—tumbled eons ago from their
perch at the top. they littered the forest. rocky terrain and serpentine tree roots ensnared boots
and made climbing difficult work. dense growths of blueberry bushes, laurel, and rhododendron
crowded the slopes and at times made them impassable. under their branches laden with pink
and white blossoms in late may, toxic poison ivy sprang up and twisted its hairy tendrils into
nearby trees. poison ivy is everywhere in virginia, but it’s even worse in the mountains. an
unwary passerby was guaranteed days of itchy welts and seeping blisters after contact with its
leaves— unless he knew about the antidote of a smear of jewelweed. we soldiers rejoiced
whenever we saw poison ivy’s watery pimples speckling the faces of yankee corpses—boys
who a day or so earlier had flopped down in the midst of the unfamiliar weed to take aim at us.
jug told us how, when the ten of them finally reached the summit, they found a toothless
crone, wrinkled as a cabbage, squatted in front of a poor shanty. she had a wounded rabbit laid
across her lap that she was cutting loose from a crude leather and stick trap. it appeared to be
near dead with fear.
“my word, where’d y’all come from?” she cried, dropping the creature. one look told her the
boys were runaways. “lightening should be about here, yet there was nary a sound. it’s a
mystery why he didn’t warn me of you fellows.” she looked to and fro, and then keened out his
name.
jug told us how her wolf-like dog scared them to death when he bounded into the clearing,
but the dog wasn’t interested in them. he hurled himself toward the rocky ledge, baying his
heart out. the old woman said the dog’s barking must mean that more folks were coming their
way, and she suspected this time they were trackers. she hurried the boys to a dilapidated pigsty
behind her shack and instructed them to lie low. grabbing the rigid rabbit by its hind legs, she
ran into her shanty and slammed shut the rickety slab door. a heavy crossbar thunked into place
inside.
beards was aggravating a pebble back and forth with his shoe while jug talked. “unh-oh, that
spells trouble,” he said.
“it sure as hell was,” jug said. “a heap more trouble than we needed. pretty soon two
confederate scouts rode over the ridge, that dog yammering at their heels. the soldiers foraged
around for sturdy tree branches and then rammed the door through and drove the old woman
into the yard, butcher knife in hand. my mouth waters now just thinking what a fine stew that
rabbit would have made.” he said the old woman dropped her knife like a hot stone and cried
out when the soldiers threatened her with drawn pistols. she was quivering and shaking so, he
felt bad about bringing trouble upon her.
“did you recognize either of the soldiers?” i asked.
“no, but the tall blonde one threatened to burn down her shanty if the old woman didn’t
confess where the runaways were hiding,” he said. she jabbed a scrawny finger to where jug
and the others were bunched up peering through the pigsty’s knotholes. the soldiers hollered,
“we know you cowards are in there. show your faces, and we might go easy on you.” the boys
were frozen in place, speechless. “you get one more invitation to join me and my friend out
here, or we’ll set you afire,” they hollered.
“that last threat must have scared you aplenty,” i said.
“you bet it did, but we were quiet as church mice except for my cousin wes. his piss made a
noise splashing the ground.” he said the light-haired soldier lit a branch from a match struck on
his boot heel and approached the back of the hovel. eyes bulging, wes set the tip of his rifle
against a large knothole. jug said he poked him and made motions not to shoot, but wes fired
anyway. they couldn’t tell if he meant to, or if his trigger finger was trembling so hard that
terror made it happen. his bullet struck the short one with the beard, an officer named malleck.
an oath flew out of his mouth as well as a shower of teeth, blood, and mess before he tumbled
over.
“son of a bitch!” beards stopped fiddling with the pebble. my mouth had dropped open at
that piece of news.
“my god, you’re really in for it now,” i said.
a sob choked jug’s voice. “none of us wanted that man to die. wes just intended to stop him
from setting us afire. we never meant to hurt nobody.”
“what’d you do next? you had no place to run to,” beards said.
jug said he and the boys had kicked open the door and fallen out in a frightened pile, tripping
over themselves with their hands raised. they believed that surely the remaining soldier would
see it was an accident and give them clemency for turning themselves in. “they’d promised it,”
he said.
he took a long pause. “but that’s not what they have in mind now. oh lord, i’d like to see
ma and sis one more time.” his voice trailed off at the end, and sobs welled up. he sobbed until
he couldn’t get his breath.
beards passed his hand through the bars and squeezed jug’s shoulder. “oh, man, i’m sorry,”
he said.
i shook my head in sympathy. “me too,” i said bleakly. but there was nothing we could do to
help. he gave a hopeless shrug and disappeared into the cell’s darkness.
i saw them all die. jackson detailed an equal number of shooters from each company, and
they were divided into ten squads, one for each deserter. an additional ten reserve shooters were
also chosen. in all, one hundred and ten men were selected. imagine that—being ordered by
your commanding general to mow down the very boys who’d covered you in battle and with
whom you’d enlisted. these boys were not our enemies, but our brothers. i’d rather have been
shot myself than to be a shooter.
at the bugle call after breakfast, tayloe, beards, mccorkle, and the rest of us gathered into
winding double lines that snaked along three sides of a broad wheat field. thousands of men
gathered there in formation—jackson’s entire brigade. not a sound was uttered as we waited.
across from us on the fourth side of the field were ten upright logs dug in the ground earlier that
morning. each was a little taller than a man’s head. i couldn’t look at that scene but wondered at
the peacefulness of the moment. breezes ruffled the wheat and hinted at the advancing warmth
of summer. a red- tail hawk caught the uprising drafts and circled overhead, wings tipped
toward the sun.
finally, guards paraded the ten deserters around the division to wooden posts. i tried to catch
dallas bunn’s eye, but each condemned man bore his head high and eyes straight ahead like he
was proud to be singled out. beards repeatedly cleared his throat next to me, and nervous
coughs disturbed the silence.
a guard bound the boys’ hands behind the stakes, bandaged their eyes with white strips of
cloth, and then gave a hand signal to the firing party. ready, aim, shoot and a hundred muskets
belched forth. all spat bullets at the same moment, but not all found their mark. the ten reserves
were then called out to stand before their squads. they were ordered to fire again. their reduced
number and prominence on the field made it impossible to intentionally aim a bullet too low or
too high. when all was done—when death finally quelled the last twitching and hushed the last
moan—the division paraded past those boys, now sliced almost in half by the volley of bullets.
most of them, like dallas, were only nineteen years of age.
zeke, famous for his precision aim, had been chosen from our company to join the execution
squads. i could see zeke clearly from where i stood. he tried to conceal his weeping and the
tremor in his hands, but i knew. many of us feigned protecting our eyes from the sun’s glare to
hide the disgracing tears. it’s one thing for a man to take aim at pillagers, but it is quite another
to witness fellows shot dead for yielding to feelings familiar to the rest of us. as we trudged past
the bodies, i heard a boy behind me pray, “may you all rest in peace with the angels of god
around his throne on high.” camp was somber that night, with packed attendance at prayer
meeting.