Crossing

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Crossing Page 33

by Gilbert, Morris


  And then the mental torture began. Every day, all day. She is my best friend, I’m sure. But is that all she feels? It must be. All that time, she was warm and friendly and kind and even loving—but like a sister. Was she relieved that I forgot October? That night, she was so unsure; she wasn’t distant but she was so very cautious. Maybe she finally came to realize that she doesn’t love me, can’t love me ….

  But what if … what if … she does have feelings for me? I was so oblivious, so ready to just be friends, she couldn’t possibly have forced herself on me, blind fool that I am. Maybe she thinks that I’m gone forever, that I lost my love for her completely.

  The problem was that Yancy had no idea which scenario was the truth. Was he her best friend, or was he her lost love? He didn’t know, and it gnawed at him constantly. And he simply could not figure out how to find out the truth. He thought it would be foolish to write her and blurt out that, yes, he’d forgotten he loved her but now he remembered. And by the way, had she fallen in love with him yet?

  For the same reason, he didn’t ask for leave to go see her. What would he say? What could he say? Like running in an eternal, endless, maddening circle, Yancy went over and over these thoughts.

  On this day, Yancy had received his Christmas gifts from the Haydens. Dr. Hayden had commissioned Leslie’s tailor to make Yancy two brand-new uniforms for his promotion. As an officer he wore a mid-thigh frock coat, double-breasted, with heavy embroidered gold braid on the cuffs and polished brass buttons. On the trousers, a gold stripe gleamed down the breeches. They also had four fine lawn dress shirts made for him. They had sent him a brand-new pair of leather boots, thigh-high, in the cavalry style. They had even sent him a new kepi cap, with a gold braid.

  But the best gift was from Lorena. Yancy had received three letters from her since he had written her that awkward letter from her “friend,” but she had never sent any self-portrait, nor had she mentioned it. Yancy was not really surprised. She was modest, and he thought that her beauty sometimes made her feel uncomfortable. It would be hard for her, he knew, to honestly present herself as the very lovely woman that he knew she was.

  But for Christmas, for him, she had done it. She had done two drawings of herself. One was full-length. She was standing in front of a window. Yancy knew it well. It was the window in the guest bedroom, where he had spent two months recovering from his wounds. In the picture she held the drapes slightly open, and golden sunlight fell on her face as she looked down at the quiet street. Yancy had seen her like this a hundred times.

  The other picture was three-quarter face. She was looking off to her right, smiling a little. It was an uncanny likeness that captured the warmth in her eyes, the long dark lashes, the mysterious half smile on her full lips when Yancy knew she was secretly amused.

  When he first saw them, his heart leaped; surely these pictures of her were so personal, even intimate—a gift from a woman that could be made only for her love.

  Then his heart sank. Perhaps, in his consuming love for her, he was transferring his feelings to the pictures, giving them a meaning that Lorena had never intended.

  And so Yancy had again spun off into his maddening universe whose center was the riddle that was Lorena, staring again and again at the pictures on the camp desk, prowling around the tent like some caged animal, until Peyton had brought him back to a semblance of his senses.

  Now, as he watched Peyton peacefully blowing smoke rings, he realized that it was true—not only was he driving himself crazy, he was driving his friends crazy. He determined that he would find the strength to control himself and his riotous emotions. And he would find a way, somehow, to find out about Lorena and her feelings for him. He had no choice. He had to, or he thought that he would, quite possibly, truly go mad.

  Chuckins came in, stamping the snow from his boots, shrugging off his overcoat, humming happily. “Hullo,” he greeted them. “Stonewall gave me the afternoon off.” He warmed his hands at the stove for a few moments. Then, looking at Yancy’s strained face curiously, he walked over and innocently looked at the pictures of Lorena on the desk. He whistled with appreciation. “What a pretty lady. Is she your girl?”

  Yancy looked down at the sketches for the hundredth time. “I don’t know,” he said blankly.

  Peyton said with exasperation, “Chuckins, don’t ask anybody any questions. Yancy doesn’t know anything. I don’t know anything. And neither do you. If we don’t leave it at that, I’m going to have to kill Yancy. And we don’t want that, now, do we?”

  “No, Peyton,” Chuckins obediently agreed.

  “No, we don’t. So, Chuckins, whatcha gonna cook us for supper?”

  Never was there such a splendor of Confederate generals and colonels as at the dinner that Lieutenant General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson gave for his favorite tormentor, Major General Jeb Stuart, and his commanding officer, General Robert E. Lee. The dining room at Moss Neck was luxurious. The costly china, crystal, and silverware glowed; and the long, gleaming table was the height of elegance.

  But neither the magnificence of the dining room nor the dashing uniforms of the officers—even Jeb Stuart’s flamboyant swashbuckling garments—outshone General Jackson. Stuart had sent him a dazzling officer’s frock coat, with the traditonal grouping of four sets of three gleaming buttons arrayed down the double-breasted tunic, which was trimmed with gold lace. Even the gilded buttons were ornate, stamped with “C.S.A.” The three stars embroidered on the collar and the complex embroidery on the sleeves were of the finest close-woven work. Admirers had given him a gold sash, a new saber and scabbard, and even gleaming knee-high boots.

  Of course Jeb Stuart couldn’t resist taunting him. Raising his glass, he said, “General Jackson, I must compliment you on your finery. I see that I am outshone, and I resent it extremely. Tomorrow I will endeavor to renew my entire wardrobe.”

  As always when Stuart teased him, Jackson blushed like a girl. “Couldn’t outshine you, General Stuart. You are the biggest and finest peacock of us all.”

  In the ease of the moment, one of Jackson’s colonels added, “At Fredericksburg, when our general first rode through the troops in his new fancy dress, one of the men had said, aghast, ‘Old Jack’s drawed his bounty money and bought new clothes!’ Another grumbled something like, ‘He don’t look right, like some struttin’ lieutenant. I’m afraid he’ll not get down to work.’”

  Jackson’s servant Jim was a wonderful cook, but for this special occasion he had outdone himself. Some of the lesser officers had not seen such bounty since the war began. They feasted on turkeys, hams, a bucket of Rappahannock oysters, fresh-baked white bread and biscuits, pickles, and other sumptuous delicacies. Most of the food was gifts to Jackson from admirers. Ladies from Staunton had even sent him a bottle of wine, which Jackson readily served and which Jeb Stuart badgered him about.

  Even General Lee joined in with gentle teasing of his own, smiling at Jackson. “You people are only playing soldier,” he said. “You must come to my quarters and see how soldiers ought to live.” General Lee’s headquarters were, as always, a plain tent near Hamilton’s Crossing on the Rappahannock.

  There were other—perhaps more modest—dinners that General Jackson gave. Undoubtedly he enjoyed wintering at Moss Neck. Though it was not a time of battles, neither was it strictly a time of leisure for Jackson. One of his main priorities had always been drill. He drilled his men constantly, and often he directed the drills himself, always demanding and exacting and seeking to better the men.

  Another onerous task that he was obligated to do during this relative cessation of hostilities was reports. His last report had been of Kernstown, one of the parts of the Seven Days Campaign back in July of 1862. Since then he had been engaged in fourteen battlesin eight months, and as the commander of first the Army of the Shenandoah Valley and then Commander of Second Corps, he always had much administrative work.

  During this tedious time, he had found Sergeant Charles Satterfield’s hel
p invaluable. Not only was Chuckins a fine clerk, but he also was able to phrase Jackson’s reports professionally, succinctly, and with perfect clarity.

  One definite pleasure that Jackson had during the long winter months was the friendship of Janie Corbin. She was the five-year-old daughter of his hostess at Moss Neck. She was welcome at his office at any time, and she played for hours on the hearth while Jackson droned his dictation on and on to Chuckins and his other clerks. More than once he paused in his work to watch her, his grim warrior’s expression softened to gentleness. Sometimes he would take her on his knee, and then they would do Janie’s favorite pastime—he would cut out paper dolls for her, folding paper to fashion figures holding hands.

  Every time, she would pull the long line of figures apart and ask, “And who are these, Gen’ral Jackson?”

  “Those, ma’am, are the men of the Stonewall Brigade,” was always Jackson’s solemn reply.

  As the winter drew on, Yancy could sense that Jackson grew more and more homesick. Often after work he would take a ride on his favorite mount, Little Sorrel, and wander along the riverbank.

  Once he met Yancy, who, needing the fresh biting air of February to clear his mind, was by the banks of the quiet river. He was walking along, leading Midnight, when Jackson came up on him. Yancy came to attention and saluted, but Jackson made a careless gesture and said, “At ease, at ease, Lieutenant. May I join you?”

  “Of course, sir, it would be my pleasure.”

  They walked along in silence for a while. Jackson stopped and stared across the river. “They’re still over there,” he said grimly. “They’ve got a new commanding officer, did you know?”

  “Yes, sir,” Yancy answered. “My friends in Richmond send me the papers when there is important news in them. General Hooker was appointed just a few weeks ago, was he not?”

  “Mmm,” Jackson assented. “Our intelligence has a lot on him. Acquitted himself admirably during the Seven Days and Second Manassas. Reported to be courageous and a military professional. He floundered at Fredericksburg, as they all did. It’s said, and I believe, that it was probably due to deficiencies in his commanding officer, General Burnside. Hooker replaced him.”

  “ ‘Fighting Joe Hooker’ he’s called,” Yancy said.

  “Yes, and that’s why I think that soon there is going to be a fight,” Jackson said, narrowing his eyes as if he could see Hooker’s thousands arrayed across the river.

  Both of them searched that forbidding west bank for long moments, then by mutual assent they turned and started walking again.

  At length Jackson said, “Did you know, Yancy, that I haven’t seen my home in Lexington for almost two years? And it’s been nearly a year since I’ve seen Anna … and I have yet to see my baby daughter.”

  Yancy was astonished, both that Jackson was confiding in him in this manner and that he had used his given name. It was the first time, he realized, that the formal and reticent man had ever called him ‘Yancy.’ He must be horribly homesick, Yancy thought with great sympathy.

  As he reflected on General Jackson’s plight, he realized that his own troubles were small compared to his commanding officer’s. During the last two years, he had seen his family several times, and he had seen the Haydens and Lorena fairly often. General Jackson’s daughter was almost three months old now, and he had never set eyes on her. Yancy imagined that the longing he felt for Lorena was not to be compared with Jackson’s yearning for his daughter, especially after he had lost two babies, one with his first wife, Elinor; and then he and Anna had lost their daughter in 1858.

  Quietly Yancy said, “Sir, I pray for you all the time, but now I will pray fervently that you may see Mrs. Jackson and your daughter very soon.”

  “Thank you, Lieutenant Tremayne,” he said, returning to his usual cool reserve. They walked on and then he added, “Her name is Julia. Julia Laura. And yes, may the merciful and bountiful Lord grant that I see her soon.”

  As the winter melted into Virginia’s warm and welcoming spring, General Jackson grew restless. At his headquarters at Moss Neck he had too many visitors, both soldiers and civilian admirers. He was entirely too accessible there. Perhaps, too, echoes of General Lee’s gentle teasing at Jackson’s dinner still faintly hung on in his mind; Jackson knew very well that General Lee always headquartered in a plain soldier’s tent, with only his camping equipment, a camp stove, a military desk, and a cot. His only accessory was a hen that stayed under his cot and laid an egg for him every morning.

  The fact that Jackson’s health had deteriorated during the winter—and his physician’s strict orders that he must not camp outdoors—faded from his disciplined mind. He determined to move to a tent headquarters at Hamilton’s Crossing, very near to General Lee, and he set the move for March 15. General Jackson demanded promptness at all times and in all endeavors, and so by the evening of the fifteenth he was well established, his headquarters already organized, and his staff fully bivouacked, too. They began their routine again, that of drill and Jackson’s endless reports and the mountain of administrative tasks of running an army corps.

  On the eighteenth, the weather was particularly inviting. A balmy breeze stirred the air that was filled with spring butterflies and dandelion fluffs. The sun was kind, a pleasant warmth on the shoulders, and a benevolent lemon yellow glow.

  Jackson, in an unusually good mood, dismissed his clerks and determined to go outside and sit in the sun for a while and read the Bible. Jim spread a blanket for him under a little dogwood tree just by his tent. It was in full flower, the simple white blossoms dazzling.

  Around Jackson, soldiers worked gathering firewood, helping Jim arrange the general’s stores, policing the area just around the general’s headquarters. His staff and aides were also outside enjoying the day, some quietly reading; some gathered in groups talking about battles, horses, sabers, rifles, ammunition—all the things that all soldiers were interested in.

  For once Sandy Owens had been able to join Yancy, Peyton, and Chuckins. Peyton had managed to bribe the supply wagon team that was setting up their tents, and they had put up Peyton’s tent in a favored spot, just behind and to the right of General Jackson’s tent. Today they had set up a friendly horseshoe competition. Naturally, with his artilleryman’s eye, Sandy Owens was beating the tar out of the other three.

  They saw Dr. Hunter McGuire, chief medical officer of the First Corps, and also General Jackson’s personal physician, by his request. McGuire was young, with handsome, sensitive features. When the staff and soldiers saw the stricken look on the doctor’s face, they stopped what they were doing and watched him as he slowly walked, shoulders bowed, to Jackson.

  Jackson looked up, and seeing McGuire’s face, scrambled to his feet.

  McGuire came close to him and murmured something to him that no one could hear.

  Jackson reacted with shock, his eyes widening and his jaw convulsively clenching. Then, to everyone’s astonishment and dismay, he walked—almost stumbled—to a tall stump of a sweetgum tree that had been cut to accommodate the campsite. Jackson sank down on it, bowed his head, and began to sob. This, from the man that had stared dry-eyed at thousands of his beloved men lying on the bloody field at Sharpsburg, was the most heart-wrenching sight had ever seen.

  Even before they knew what had happened, tears began to roll down Chuckins’s face.

  The news spread fast among the still, silent men. Little Janie Corbin had died of scarlet fever.

  Jackson mourned for her. His men mourned for their beloved general.

  Soon, however, General Jackson and his men had cause for rejoicing.

  On a dreary Monday, April 20, at noon, Jackson and his escort rode to Guiney Railroad Station. Before the train had come to a complete stop, he jumped up and pushed his way into the coach. There he saw his daughter for the first time.

  She was fat, pink, and sleepy. Anna recalled that he would not take her in his arms because of his dripping coat, but he stared at her and made funny
little baby coos to her. Jackson had arranged for them to stay at the Yerby home, which was near his headquarters. Once they arrived and were in the privacy of their room, Anna wrote:

  He caressed her with the tendierest affection and held her long and lovingly. During the whole of this short visit, when he was with us, he rarely had her out of his arms, walking her, and amusing her in every way he could think of—sometimes holding her up before a mirror and saying, admiringly, “Now, Miss Jackson, look at yourself.”

  Then he would turn to an old lady of the [Yerby] family and say: “Isn’t she a little gem?” He was frequently told that she resembled him, but he would say: “No, she is too pretty to look like me!”

  On April 23, when Julia was five months old, Anna and General Jackson decided to have her baptized at the Yerby home. The ceremony was to be done by Reverend B. Tucker Lacy, a minister who had long been with the valley troops and who Jackson had named the unofficial chaplain general for the Second Corps.

  When the staff and aides heard of the baptism, Yancy went to Reverend Lacy’s tent. “Sir, many of the aides would like to attend the baptism. May we have permission?”

  The chaplain refused, though not in an unkindly manner: “I’m sorry, Lieutenant Tremayne, but it is to be a private service.”

  “Yes, sir,” Yancy said, crestfallen. But then, gathering his courage, he went to General Jackson’s tent.

 

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