part 1 chapter
20
m ary’s letter about sukie and her question about how those who owned slaves
could consider themselves christians tormented me with self-doubt. what about those of us who
were killing men to preserve slavery? i wasn’t the kind of christian that my parents were, and
maybe wasn’t one at all. but i did believe in the same principles. six months after her letter, the
issue rose to such a boil that i could no longer escape it. it was just a few days before
gettysburg.
at the end of june 1863, general lee had led so many of us across the maryland line into
pennsylvania that it took three days for troops to pass through a single small town. those of us
in the infantry were the last to file through, and by that time, fearful locals were wearied of the
sight and no longer stood in their yards to gawk.
after setting up camp, our company and several others were ordered to capture every edible
farm critter from miles around. hundreds of us chased about in fields, pursuing panicked
turkeys, ducks, and chickens in all directions. the promise of regular food put everyone in high
spirits. squawks, gobbles, quacks, and hisses filled the air. as i was grabbing for an elusive hen
trembling under a wild rose hedge, i saw zeke approach with a duck under each arm. their
orange feet frantically paddled the air. with a tight grip, he was trying to steer clear of their
snapping bills, but one pinched his forearm. he dropped the duck like a hot coal, and it ran off
until another fellow caught it. feathers clung to our hair, made us sneeze, and carpeted the field
like snow. the creatures’ final destination was an acre so packed with fowl that you couldn’t see
an inch of ground. there they were quickly slaughtered, plucked, and cooked on spits laid over
fires. another field was crowded with wagons piled high with loaves of bread, cheeses, chunks
of corned beef, sides of bacon, crocks of apple butter, barrels of dairy butter, and other edibles
seized from surrounding houses. my stomach was in a state of continuous rumble, anticipating a
real meal for a change.
a few days earlier, general lee had issued a command that was read down through the ranks
until it reached us. during this foray into pennsylvania, we were forbidden to destroy property
as union troops had in the south and were to wage war only against armed men. the last night
of encampment before we reached chambersburg, thanks to beards’ wandering ways, we
learned that very few soldiers intended to obey. men were aching to retaliate for union barbarity
in the south. beards had seen a copy of the richmond times handed around that called for
troops to light a sea of flame in every pennsylvania town. the newspaper claimed even that
punishment wasn’t enough for the theft of over 500,000 slaves, or fifty million dollars’ worth of
investment, since the beginning of the war.
“it’s not just the officers,” beards said. “i heard a lot of angry talk around the campfires.”
he’d rejoined us as we loafed around our fire, enjoying the last bit of goose grease on our
fingers and sucking marrow from leftover bones. “it’s not easy to forgive burning virginia farms
and to forget the danger to our families.”
signs of disobedience became obvious the next day. while the fellows and i were on a hill
chopping fence rails for firewood, i caught sight of a distant cloud of brown dust that seemed to
swirl closer. propping my axe against a tree, i walked toward the road to see who approached.
“where are you going?” beards yelled.
“i’ll be back in a minute.” i waved my hat at him and kept walking. the crack of splitting
wood told me he’d returned to work.
as i waited by the road, the outlines of cavalry soldiers became clearer, and behind them
streamed a line of blacks on foot. most of them were women and children, hands bound loosely
with rope. soldiers with rifles trotted alongside, enforcing order in the lines by screaming curses
and pointing their rifles menacingly. the distant tide of sound now became a buzz of voices.
cries of “mama” and despairing wails assaulted my ears. women with exhausted children
clinging to their backs stirred up the dry road. soldiers clasped toddlers on the front of their
saddles, while sobbing mothers who couldn’t keep pace with the army horses trailed behind.
one black woman passed close where i stood. she carried herself straight-backed as ma and
looked to be about the same age. she was dressed in a crisp calico dress, a white kerchief neatly
knotted around her head. “please, officer, i’m free,” she cried out to a cavalry officer who rode
nearby. his face was like carved stone, and he kept his eyes straight forward as though he was
deaf. “i was born and raised right here in the north, in franklin county!” she cried more loudly.
“oh, lord, this ain’t right! we’re all freed or weren’t never slaves to start with! why are you
taking us?” again, her captive ignored her. she lifted her eyes to the sky and called out, “lord
jesus, how have i failed you, to be punished this way?” her head fell to her chest, and she
moaned inconsolably as she trudged forward.
a soldier mounted on a black horse noticed me standing by the road and waved. “look what
we’ve got here” he called. “as fine a bunch of contraband as you’ll see anywhere.”
“where are you headed?” i hollered back.
“taking ’em to auction across the mason-dixon line. we’ll sell every one of ’em to make up
for what was stole from us. too bad there ain’t so many men amongst them so we’d get a better
price. guess they run off to join the yankees.” he raised his hat in farewell as he rode by. i
forced myself to nod in response.
when he was out of sight, i sank down on the red earth by the side of the road. a powerful
despair blackened my vision on the edges and made me weak. how could this be happening?
how many others would suffer in this way? now that we were no longer fighting to defend
home ground, the evil underbelly of the war’s purpose was inescapable. saliva surged in my
throat, and then i was on my hands and knees disgorging the contents of my gut. i puked until
nothing but bile filled my mouth. through my misery, i could hear the sounds of agony
lingering in the air for what seemed an eternity as the dust cloud disappeared over the next hill.
emptied out, i sat with my head in my hands until i heard footsteps crunch in the dirt behind me.
i looked up and found beards by my side.
“what’s the matter? you’ve been gone for a long time.”
“did you see that?” i asked him.
“just the end of the line. it’s pretty awful, isn’t it?”
i nodded. there were no words for what was going through my head. i guess because i
looked so out of sorts, beards decided to wait with me. he squatted on the ground and joined
my silence. eventually, he picked up a twig and drew lines in the dirt. but i knew that
something momentous had changed for me that afternoon. like the other boys, i’d disliked the
business of soldiering, slogging through rain and bone-numbing cold, the fear that loosened your
gut, and bloody chores on the battlefield when fighting was over. now a biting sense of
revulsion toward the entire confederacy and my own role took hold, stronger even than when
sam died. i choked back another surge of bile. i would disown anything to do with the
confederacy.
but what were my choices? as a deserter, i couldn’t go home, and i’d be executed if i were
caught. i was trapped. i had to stay where i was, but from this day forward, my goals would be
pared down to only one thing, protecting my friends and saving myself. nothing more. i had to
return to my family at war’s end. given the valley’s wreckage, they would need me more than
ever.
“we ought to be heading back now,” beards said. he threw his stick aside and stood up.
i silently got to my feet, brushed the clay from my pants, and slowly followed him to the
fence post where i’d abandoned my axe, never imagining how, in just a few days, my resolve to
return home alive would be sorely tested in the farm fields to the southeast near gettysburg.