part 1 chapter
22
i feel reduced, thinned. when i stroll past the hall mirror, the outlines of my body
waver, fly off into the room. if i hold my hands before my face, they are transparent, just the
same as looking through the lunar moth wing. i seize up with shudders of fear, my arms and legs
paralyzed. for so long, i have depended upon my home and the things i own to keep hell at bay.
now the man and woman have whittled these away until the most painful memories are all i
have left. they are like dragonflies under the surface of a frozen pond, not dead but waiting until
they can paddle upward toward the promise of a thaw, which is now upon me.
here it is—the day we were captured in may 1864. it was the first week of combat after the
battle at mine run following five long months in winter camp, and the morning couldn’t have
started off worse. the fields of spotsylvania courthouse were swaddled with cotton fog after
rain so fierce that i could see no farther than beards on one side and zeke on the other. for five
days, we’d done nothing but dig until a four-mile ditch unfolded, throwing up hillocks of clay in
front of our line. now spear-sharp tree trunks bristled outward from the mounds that formed a
great shield. we huddled behind it, waiting for the enemy at first light.
yankee noisemaking no longer frightened us. “that sounds too far away to be an attack cry,”
i told jim blue. he just grunted. no one was stirred up enough to rise to his feet.
“why would they do something so danged stupid? now they’ve wasted any element of
surprise,” zeke said in a slurred voice. none of us had slept the previous night. we’d been on
watch, and anyone who nodded off for even a few minutes risked being shot as punishment.
“never mind. we’ll whip their asses in no time,” he assured me, and perhaps himself.
“they must be as blinded by this fog as we are,” i said. it seemed forever that we’d crouched
there, although it was only a few minutes before a tide of the enemies’ shots roared in our
direction. it was then that we leaped to our feet, raised our rifles, and were ready when a line of
blue-clad boys rose out of the mist and over the edge of the earthworks.
my rifle misfired with a forlorn little pop, and beards hollered, “what in god’s name!” as his
did the same. a sea of yanks charged toward us as we and the other boys nearby futilely loaded
and reloaded rifles. we had shouldered our weapons and pulled the triggers, but nothing
happened. moisture had besotted our gunpowder.
one of our boys, a young fellow no more than seventeen, charged up the earthwork’s steep
incline. he shouted toward an oncoming yankee, “i’ll show you, you yellow-bellied bastard!” a
bullet struck him in the eye. the force spun him around and then toppled him onto beards.
before beards could scream “what the hell?” frye, the dead fellow’s comrade, grabbed the
dropped rifle, drew his arm back, and heaved his bayonet forward into the air. “take that, you
yankee pig,” he cried. the weapon whizzed past me and flew so forcefully into the yank’s
chest that the blade burrowed into him at least six inches up the rifle barrel. you never heard
such an unholy shriek as he fell backward, just beyond where i stood, the rifle poking straight
out of his chest and saluting the sky.
zeke and i followed frye’s example and frantically twisted bayonets onto our rifle muzzles.
the short piece of sharpened steel was handy for digging, cutting meat, and sometimes as a
candlestick, but our troops rarely used it to kill, not since first manassas. now it was all we had.
the barricade we’d built as protection held us and the yanks imprisoned, face to face. there
was no room or time to reload rifles at that close range. we couldn’t run, and neither could the
yanks once they were over the top. we were in a gutter of muddy water, our feet glued in the
mire.
a dark- haired yankee propelled himself toward me, steel flashing. i’ll never forget the
moment—how i felt his iron grip on my collar and saw his arm above with a bayonet pointed
downward. thrusting my shoulder into his chest, i writhed away and finally found enough space
between us to stab upward with my blade. the jab of my bayonet brought the feel of shattering
bone and the slippery slice of flesh right up through my arm muscles, and it crawled into my
soul. for a second, images of this boy’s life, likely similar to mine, flashed by. but after this first
one dropped at my feet, the second wasn’t as hard. you stared a man right in the eyes and
attempted to kill him before he killed you, both of you screeching like maniacs and gnashing
teeth.
in their ghoulish faces, only the desperate eyes of beards and blue appeared human. enemy
blood was splattered there and on their chests. i stayed close to beards. we always fought side
by side, but this time we needed the other’s protection like never before.
when rifles and bayonets weren’t enough, fellows around me dropped them, abandoned their
clubs and knives, and grabbed for hatchets to hammer enemy heads into scarlet pulp. but the
soldiers continued to surge over the barricade in a vast blue wave until there were thousands of
them amongst us. at one point, zeke climbed a little knoll and hollered across the din, “fellas,
look at me . . . look at me! if you doubted my powers of reasoning, think again! i’ve got brains
all over me!” he threw his head back and roared with crazy glee in the midst of all that gore,
teeth ablaze. “only problem is, now i’ll think like a yankee!”
around midday, rain again pounded the scarlet field, flooding sinkholes and the blood-soaked
ground. one enormous depression was surrounded by at least a hundred wounded men, some
groaning piteously. they had dragged themselves there on their bellies to slurp the water,
crimson with blood. other wounded fellows twisted onto their backs, mouths open toward the
sky, attempting to moisten their parched tongues.
in the chaos, i lost sight of beards and my company. strangers screamed and thrust by my
side, and rank made no difference. i searched in vain for a recognizable face but found none. in
a landscape that teemed with bellowing lunatics, exploding bombs, roaring cannons, and tens of
thousands of guns discharging in the distance, i was without a friend or acquaintance. even
worse, my men were without a sergeant.
as i bent over at the edge of a melee, hands on knees and gasping for breath, a yank spotted
me and plunged through the battling soldiers, headed in my direction. his feet flew nimbly over
bodies littering the ground as he gained speed. i couldn’t pull my wits together, and my hands
seemed disconnected from my mind. time slowed, and the yank grew larger and more
murderous looking by the second. so this is how it is, i thought as my heartbeat thrummed in my
ears. it’s finally my time.
without warning, a young confederate burst out of the nearby swarm. he rocketed toward
me and lunged shoulder first into the approaching enemy. as the yankee wobbled with the
impact, my savior plugged him hard in the kidneys with his blade. after an abrupt grunt, the
yank toppled forward, a crimson fountain spouting from above his waistband. had the
confederate seen my plight a second later, i would have been the one gasping my last breath.
for a brief moment, this tall young man locked his brown eyes with mine and then disappeared
into the thick of it. he was gone too quickly for words.
by late afternoon, bodies stacked five-deep hemmed me in, and i still didn’t see anyone i
knew. dead had fallen on the living, and the survivors’ desperate twitches and clawing animated
the macabre piles before me. it was next to impossible to find a foothold, but that didn’t stop me
from swinging my rifle butt at yet another blue-jacketed attacker.
suddenly i felt the hard mouth of a rifle barrel bite into my lower back and a gruff northern
voice rasp, “drop your weapon and raise your goddamned hands in the air.” a chill ran down
my spine, and i jerked my head around to see my captors. two enemy soldiers had surprised me
from behind. this scene was repeated all around with cries of, “you boys better surrender!
throw down your weapons, or we’ll stab bayonets in one side of you and out the other!”
a rebel nearby clung to his musket, either too scared to release it or frozen with mad rage.
one shot through the heart from the bluecoats, and he buckled over, his weapon tumbling from
his fist. i wondered how beards and the rest of my company had fared, whether they were
facing my fate or that of this poor soldier. in this mass of thousands ordered to the rear of the
battlefield away from the shooting, i feared i might not know.
but then i heard someone call my name. it was beards, with jim blue, tayloe, and zeke at
his heels. a cry burst from my throat, startling me with its animal sound. we fell together,
embracing and madly laughing, not with mirth but something i couldn’t name.
never has such a miserable looking group been assembled. faces were begrimed with mud
and gore and besmirched with sooty gunpowder. tears cut white paths through the smut of
some, though i couldn’t know if they were tears of relief or grief at the loss of friends and
brothers. we were clothed head to toe in the elemental materials of being human: feces, mucus,
blood, guts, urine, and earth. injured men leaned upon comrades, and those without wounds lent
an arm or shoulder to those blinded or whose reason had given out. later i met a fellow who had
been deafened for life that day. many boys could only hobble or limp, and the rough terrain of
shattered tree trunks and sundered branches made the going even more treacherous.
the yanks lost patience. three guards moved behind our straggling line and cursed us.
“goddamned rebels. you mince along like girls,” one of them hollered. “we don’t have all day.
double quick, walk, goddamn you.” several fellows in the line cried out as the guards prodded
them in the back with the tips of their bayonets. at that, the five of us kept our eyes forward and
tried to keep up the pace set by the yanks. i prayed not to attract the guards’ attention, but
beards was worn out and stumbled. before he could regain his step, a guard with a filthy shirt
and blood-stained boots poked him close to his lower spine with his steel blade. beards winced
but stifled a cry. then the same fellow turned his attention to jim blue. “what’s the matter with
you? can’t you keep up or are you a girl too?” he jabbed his blade against blue’s shirt, and a
thin trickle of blood seeped through the small cloth tear. blue gritted his teeth.
i’d had enough. i looked the fellow in the eyes and howled at the top of my lungs, “stop that!
stop it now. we surrendered. you have no right!” i was in such a terrible rage that i could feel
my ears burn and twitch. there was a long silence. beards and the others froze on the spot,
staring at me in disbelief. but nothing happened. the guard glared at me and then moved on.
there was no more prodding. the others clapped me on the back, and we marched on. i was still
their sergeant, and they were still my responsibility.
strange as it may sound, capture was a huge relief. only by accident had i survived. after
three long years, i was withdrawn, without disgrace, from the center of death’s aim. a minié
ball had been waiting for me; it just hadn’t been fired yet. my knees trembled, and my hands
quivered as i was overcome with gratitude that cannons, disease, and the surgeon’s knife hadn’t
done me in. you might say it was a miracle. i was now finished with this business, and the
prospect of prison was welcome. my fingers brushed mary’s rubbed-slick rabbit’s foot in my
pants pocket one more time.