part 2 chapter
34
b y walking beside the scorched wood ties and twisted iron rails west from the city
limits, we found rockfish gap turnpike, the route we sought over afton mountain. having
gobbled the federal handouts of cornbread and swallowed all the water in our federal-issue
canteens on the overnight trip from richmond, we now had nothing to eat or drink. the june
sun was merciless, and we wouldn’t feel relief until early evening when we reached the
mountain’s higher altitude. after several hours of tripping over ruts and ignoring complaining
stomachs and parched throats, blue, who was yards ahead of beards and me, spotted a tree with
a small strip of wood nailed to it. he brushed away a crust of dirt and peered at the faint letters
scrawled across it.
“there’s water through these woods off to the right,” he called. “i can hear it. it must be
lickinghole creek, like the sign says.” he disappeared down a slope through the pines and wild
wineberry bushes. rippling over rocks, the stream had plenty of icy water for rolling up our
pants legs and wading, filling our canteens, and splashing our reeking clothes and sweating
foreheads. beards sank down in a rock depression and let the creek cascade over his body up to
his neck. blue and i found our own rock hollows and joined him. then i lay back in sopping
clothes on the cool ferns and poured water into my mouth until i thought it might seep from my
ears. now, if we just had something to eat. my eyes drifted to the cloudless sky above our heads.
beyond the treetops, smoke threaded faintly off to the west.
“do you see what i see?” i leaped up in my excitement. “maybe that’s a hunter with deer or
bear meat to share.”
“forget it. i want to get home. as long as there’s water, i can go without food for a day or
so,” beards said.
“well, i can’t,” blue responded. “i need something to eat, or i won’t make it much farther.”
“i’m with blue,” i said. “this may be our last chance for a while. that smoke isn’t far away,
and if there’s someone else on this mountain, they’re bound to have more to eat than we do.”
“i guess i wouldn’t mind some food,” beards said. he stood up and brushed twigs and fern
fronds from his wet pants.
we followed along the bank of the stream until a footpath meandered upward through tall
oaks and maples. the smoke came from that direction. after a hike of about a mile, a sunny
clearing opened before us. a one-room wooden house stood in the center and its stone chimney
spouted smoke. “wait here,” blue said as we stopped at the forest edge. “is anyone home?” he
called out, but there was no answer. “maybe they just stepped out.”
“i don’t know. it seems strange someone would go out and leave the door wide open like
that. who knows what critters might take advantage? seems fishy to me,” i said.
beards tilted his head back and sniffed. “i smell something cooking, so i say we should go
in.”
slowly i crossed the clearing, still convinced this was unwise. the smell of food grew
stronger. “who in their right mind would go off and leave vittles cooking?” i said. we crossed
the board porch and peered into the shaded interior.
“look at that,” beards said. strips of meat still smoked over coals in the large stone fireplace.
potatoes boiled in a pot of water suspended by an iron rod over the heat. my warning had no
effect on blue and beards, who stepped through the door and approached the fire. the hairs on
the back of my neck prickled, but i followed.
the house was tidy but sparsely furnished. a table and two chairs were pushed against one
wall, and there was a bed with missing legs against the other. within the frame lay a bear hide
with green pine boughs poking out from beneath. a brightly colored quilt was folded neatly at
the end. through a small window, i saw two graves. one was freshly dug, and both were
marked with crosses of vine- bound branches. that’s when i detected a flash of movement
headed in our direction across the yard.
“watch out!” i yelled as a black boy burst in the door like lightening and threw himself upon
beards. they tumbled to the floor, and in the tussle, i saw that beards’s attacker clasped a large
hunting knife. “help me grab him!” i yelled at blue. when the boy managed to roll on top of
beards, jim blue and i seized him by the upper arms and peeled him off. we set him down in
one of the two chairs and stood over him. but not before i firmly held his wrist and opened
fingers clutching the knife. the antler-handled weapon clattered to the floor.
“goddam it. get your hands off me!” the boy hollered. “i’m not going. no matter what you
say or do! i’ll kill all three of you before you can take me away!” he spat in our direction. his
arms trembled, and he looked to be about twelve years old. beards had gotten to his feet and
stepped forward with his palms raised.
“we mean no harm,” he said. “we’re only trying to get home across the mountain. we saw
your smoke and hoped you might have some vittles to share. we’ve had nothing but cornbread
in the past several days, and prison rations before that.”
“you ain’t going to take me away like you took my cousin ellis. i’m not fighting for anyone,
especially not you people,” the boy said.
beards was silent, trying to understand the meaning of the boy’s words. then he said, “the
war’s over. you’re free. and anyway, we aren’t here for that reason.”
“i’ve always been free, mister,” he spat out. “my granny, and the rest of my family too. but
white soldiers like you found their way up here this past spring and took my cousin ellis off at
gunpoint to fight in the war. it didn’t matter a whit that he was a free man.” he glared at us
again. “you better not be trickin’ me, or you’ll regret it.”
the memory of what i’d seen at gettysburg came roaring back. “i’ve known too much of that
kind of thing,” i said. “it’s despicable. we’d never do that to you, or anyone else, for that
matter.” the tension left his thin shoulders and his hostile expression partially melted. i said,
“tell us more about what happened to your cousin.”
he haltingly explained that ellis had been into town one day in late winter for supplies and
had seen hundreds of slaves lined up on the courthouse steps. confederate soldiers held them
there, threatening them with weapons. he said his cousin then noticed a flyer posted on a tree
that ordered all slaves to gather that day at the albemarle courthouse before 10:00 a.m. owners
not willing to give up their male slaves would have them seized by the army at gunpoint.
instantly, ellis forgot his errand and slipped back up the mountain. “but they found him
anyway,” the boy told us. “people in town knew that freed people live up here. when i heard
someone thrashing up the hill, i hid in the hollow of a big log, just like today. didn’t come out
until the soldiers were gone.” he said ellis’s wife and baby took off the next day for her family
who live near waynesboro. she had tried to talk him into going, but he wouldn’t. “who’d be
here when ellis comes back? i wish i could have saved him from goin’ off, but there were too
many of you people,” he said. “at least i can wait for him. he taught himself to scribe, but i’ve
heard nary a word.”
“where is your granny? are you alone now?” i asked.
“granny passed on in february from consumption. she raised me after momma died birthing
me. ellis and i dug granny’s grave right next to momma’s over by the woods. but from the
time i was little, granny taught me how to trap critters and grow plants. we had some laying
hens, but the soldiers took them too.”
beards looked thoughtful. then he said, “you haven’t told us your name.”
“lewis. lewis hornsby.”
“don’t you get lonely up here in this cabin by yourself?”
lewis glowered at him. “i can take care of myself. anyway, granny’s watchin’ over me.
and i couldn’t leave her alone on the mountain either.”
we were silent for a moment. then the smell of the food and the cramps in my stomach
reminded me why we were there. “we don’t have anything to offer you, lewis. not one thing
except conversation, and you may not have a need for such. but is there any way you could see
fit to share some of these vittles with us?”
lewis looked us up and down one more time. there was still a flicker of fear in his eyes, and
it was clear he suspected we’d simply seize his food if he didn’t agree. or worse, might kill him
for it. finally, he turned toward the fireplace and said over his shoulder, “i expect i have enough
smoked rabbit here to share, and i could split the potatoes four ways, if you care for some.”
it was late afternoon by the time we finished eating and telling him what little we had learned
about the end of the war. lewis had boiled two more potatoes. he knocked dirt from carrots
pulled from his garden and offered them to us. those, with the potatoes, would last until we
reached home.
“you were mighty generous to share your vittles with us. thank you. now we can make it
home.”
lewis wouldn’t meet my eyes but waved his hand in dismissal. we bade him farewell and
returned to the mountain road the way we’d come.
jim blue suggested we walk as far as we could that night. we all wanted to make up the time
lost on the side trip to lewis’s cabin. the moon was full behind us, making the trek easier, and
long moon shadows fell in front of our feet as the road ascended. silently, we climbed, but my
mind was anything but quiet. as the hours had lengthened, i couldn’t shed the image of lewis
with his defiant loneliness. i moved from concern about him to wondering if i, too, might find
myself alone, uncertain where my family was. i puzzled again over why no one was at the
richmond dock to meet us. had my family fled augusta to avoid harm from yankee troops, and
was now too far away? had the house been burned? anything could have happened. in this
disturbed state of mind, i flinched with every screech owl and wild animal cry. each twig
crackle made me jump.
we plodded on in glum silence, ascending more slowly toward the top of afton mountain
until exhaustion forced us to lay our haversacks down out of sight of the road and rest our heads
upon them.