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Thieves Of Mercy sb-2

Page 5

by James L. Nelson


  At the moment that Tanner’s chair met Sullivan’s unyielding back, Hieronymus Taylor was standing in the clear space between the boilers and the massive frame of the General Page’s engine. He was listening to the Page’s chief engineer, the short, wiry, nearly bald-save for a fringe of greasy hair around his head-Spence Guthrie. Guthrie was complaining, not an unusual circumstance. This time the subject was shortages in Memphis: coal, boiler plate, machine shops, piping, sheet lead, prostitutes.

  Taylor ’s eyes wandered over the main steam line, caught the little bits of rust lurking against flanges. His ears heard, along with Guthrie’s litany of complaints, a noise from the crosshead that was not quite right. The pssst and thump of steam and piston told him that somewhere an alignment was off, just a bit. But it was not his engine room.

  “Got three spare fire tubes. Three. And when they’s gone, god-damned if I know where we’ll get more,” Guthrie was saying. He turned to the fireman. “Come on now, get that damper open, all the way! She’ll take three more pounds of pressure or I ain’t Spence Guthrie!”

  Taylor ’s eyes flickered over the steam gauge mounted on the face of the scotch boiler. The needle was creeping up toward fifteen pounds per square inch, though Taylor was certain the boilers were not meant to run much more than ten.

  “Three more pounds, Spence? Gonna pop them safety valves, ain’t ya?” Guthrie snickered. “Would, if the safety valves wasn’t tied down! Best part about bein part of this army fleet. No damned inspectors crawlin around the engine room, tellin ya this and that. Man can do what he wants, engine room’s his castle, way it should be. You must get an earful on them navy boats, huh?”

  Taylor shook his head. His eyes moved to the top of the long, narrow locomotive boilers that provided steam to the walking beam engine. He could see the tatty bits of twine tied around the lever arms of the safety valves, preventing them from opening under the pressure of excess steam. He looked back at the steam gauge, the needle creeping up as the furnace sucked air into the fire. “On them big ships, maybe, but I don’t get bothered much. Old man don’t know enough engineering to stick his nose in.” By “old man,” Taylor meant Bowater, who was six years his junior.

  “Well, you know Sullivan, he can’t keep his goddamned nose outta my business. But I just give him a swift kick in the ass and it’s settled.”

  Guthrie and Mississippi Mike Sullivan had been together for the past year, but Taylor had known them both much longer than that. Sailors and black gang moved in and out of the universe of riverboat men on the Mississippi, but at the center of that universe was a core of pilots and engineers and captains who had been drifting around the river for years. They were a small town. They knew one another.

  Taylor nodded absently. “Uh-huh. Sullivan can use a swift kick, now and again.” The needle in the pressure gauge was trembling around fifteen pounds per square inch.

  It was the first time Taylor had been in an engine room since abandoning the crippled Yazoo River below New Orleans. He had started that fight as chief engineer, ended it as a coal passer, the last man standing. An exploding boiler had done in the rest of the black gang at the very moment that Taylor had been crammed in a far corner of the room, fixing a broken fire pump, out of the way of the blast. It fell to Taylor to finish the work the explosion had left incomplete, and with a shotgun he had killed the shrieking, scalded human forms that were all that was left of two of his men. One of them, James Burgess, as close to being a friend as any man Taylor had known.

  Taylor forced his eyes from the gauge. Beads of sweat were standing out on his forehead. It was well over one hundred degrees in the engine room, but the sweat he felt on his face and palms, on his back, was something different. A cold sweat. He could smell himself.

  “Got to get the hell outta Vicksburg, ya see?” Guthrie was still talking. “On account of how we commandeered that coal barge, and thank your skipper for his help. Back off on the steam once we gets up around the bend.”

  Taylor nodded again. Suddenly he was not feeling well. He heard a thump on the deck overhead and it made him start. Then he heard another, and with it a muffled cry and he cocked his head, turned his ear to the fidley, that open space above the engine room that ended with the cabin roof above.

  There was a fight going on, a brawl topsides. Taylor recognized the sounds-he had heard them often enough, on riverboats and in taverns and on waterfront streets. It was easy enough to guess who was doing the fighting and why. As every river man knew, when salt- and freshwater mix, it causes a chaotic, roiling effect.

  “Gotta go, Spence. I’ll stop by later,” Taylor said quickly and headed up the ladder.

  “What the hell’s your hurry?” Spence called to his back. Guthrie had not heard the sounds of the fight over the hiss of steam, the roar of the boiler, and Taylor did not enlighten him.

  He stepped out of the fidley into the night air and breathed deep. He had left his gray uniform frock coat on the workbench below, and his white cotton shirt was wet with perspiration. It was fifty degrees cooler topside than in the engine room, and though the night was not cold by any means, Taylor shivered. He was glad to be on deck.

  He hurried down the side deck, the sounds of the fight loud now. He could hear breaking furniture, cursing, shouting, the thump of bodies hitting structural members of the vessel. He burst through the door into the salon, into a world of chaos.

  The fight was fully under way, with sailors and river men flailing away at one another, men rolling on the deck, swinging roundhouse punches, biting, kicking, clawing. Hard to see who was winning. No one.

  To his right, Taylor saw Angus Littlefield, rated seaman, with arms pinned behind him by the one they called Doc, while another of the riverboat crew was beating him senseless. Taylor had no concern for Littlefield one way or another-it was how he felt about most sailors-but now Littlefield was one of his people getting whipped by two of them.

  He shouted and flung himself at the cluster of men, pushing Littlefield out of the river men’s grasp as he elbowed one and drove a fist into the jaw of the second, the kind of move that takes dozens of brawls to master.

  Littlefield went down, so did the man holding him, but the man punching came up with a boot in the stomach and Taylor was doubled over. But he knew what was coming, stumbled aside, felt the second kick swish by his head and miss. He straightened. The kicker was off balance now, and Taylor ’s fist plowed into his hedgerow of beard. The man went down and Taylor pounced on him.

  Taylor ’s fists fell like hammer blows, too fast for the man to fend off. Over twenty years of wrenching in engine rooms had rendered his hands and arms powerful. He felt his control slipping, slipping. A brawl was supposed to be cathartic, but now every blow he struck just ratcheted his fury up further and further. He was shouting, “Son of a bitch! Son of a bitch!”

  A brogan connected with his left side, knocked him off the bleeding man he had been pummeling and onto the deck. The foot hit him again, in the stomach, but his muscles were clenched and he hardly felt it. The river man kicked again. Taylor caught the foot in his arm, pulled, and the man went down, and Taylor was up and on him, kicking him again and again, shouting incoherently. The room seemed to resolve into shades of red, and his screaming seemed to meld into the shrieks of James Burgess an instant before the silencing blast of the shotgun.

  The man on the deck was curled up, fetal position, and Taylor ’s kicks were landing on shins and arms, so Taylor stopped kicking him, grabbed him by the hair, and pulled him half to his knees. He grabbed the collar of the river man’s filthy checked shirt, held it with the iron grip of his left hand, and began to hammer the man’s face with his right, and there was nothing the man could do to stop him, so powerful and relentless was Hieronymus Taylor.

  Taylor no longer had any sense of what was happening, of the fight around him, of the noise, which had fallen off to nothing, he could only keep hitting and screaming. He felt hands on his arms and his shoulders, pulling him back, and he jerke
d and twisted and flailed out, but the hands had him tight, pulled him away until his grip on the riverboat man’s shirt was broken, his bloody face out of reach.

  The hands pulled him back, and he twisted and saw that it was Ruffin Tanner holding him on one side, blood streaked across his face. On the other side, Dick Merrow, his gray bibbed sailor shirt ripped halfway in two. And still Taylor fought.

  “All right, Chief, all right!” Tanner shouted. “Fight’s over, damn it!”

  Taylor stopped flailing. The room came back into focus. He could hear his own breath, the loudest thing in his ears. The hands were still holding him tight, and he twisted, angry and resentful, and they let him go.

  He looked around the room. The chairs and tables were everywhere, not one still standing. The men had stopped fighting now. Bloody men, hurt men, some nursing limbs or holding handkerchiefs against bleeding wounds.

  They were looking at him. Looking at him like he was some kind of lunatic. In that place of insanity, they were looking at him as if he had done something savage and inhuman. He turned from them all and stormed out of the wrecked salon.

  FIVE

  Captain Lee:… I must begin by saying that we were preparing for evacuation [of Norfolk] 10 or 12 days before it took place. General Johnston… was fearful that the abandonment of the Peninsula would necessitate the evacuation of the navy yard.

  INVESTIGATION OF THE NAVY DEPARTMENT, CONFEDERATE STATES OF AMERICA

  Wendy let Molly lead the way to the train station. More than lead, Molly seemed to tow her along, like a tug with a ship on the hawser. It was not the first time Wendy had felt that way, like an awkward, wind-bound ship to Molly’s nimble, powerful towboat. That was how frenetic Molly could be. Even when her aunt was not physically pulling her by the arm, Wendy felt dragged along by the vortex of her energy.

  They walked to the train depot. It was pointless to try to get transportation. That much was clear once they maneuvered through the smaller side streets in which Molly’s house was hidden and came out on Water Street. Streetcars stood abandoned, their traces lying empty before them as if in surrender. Wagons heavy loaded with furniture and children, entire households, rattled for the roads north to Richmond. The waterfront was crowded with steamboats and sailing vessels, fishing smacks, coasting schooners, all scrambling to get under way. It was the Exodus, minus Moses, minus the hope of a Promised Land.

  “I am not optimistic, dear, about what we will find at the train depot,” Molly said, but her lack of optimism did not slow her down. They walked down the dark street, the river to their east, brick buildings like a wall beside them. Wendy felt the weight and steady thump of the gun on her thigh and she liked the sensation. She remembered Samuel’s hand running over that same spot of skin.

  They were still a block distant from the train station when they were forced to slow down by the wide stream of people all flooding in the same direction. People hustled forward with hands straining to grip bulging bags, packages held under arms. Carts were chockablock in the road, and all the drivers could do was yell and curse at one another because there was no place for any of them to go. On the sidings, which Wendy could occasionally glimpse between the brick and wooden buildings, train cars jerked and stopped, rolled and stopped, to the hiss of steam and the rumble of iron wheels on tracks.

  The crowd grew denser as they approached the station, the center of the universe of flight, and progress slowed until it was near a standstill, a mere shuffling toward the steps of the clapboard-sided building.

  “Molly, this is hopeless,” Wendy said, speaking loudly to be heard over the mass of sound from the crowd, the carts, and the trains.

  “Perhaps,” Molly said. “Let’s get inside and see. I know some people. They might help.”

  “But how will we ever…” It did not seem possible that they could even get into the station, but before she could finish her question, Molly advanced, moving like a fox through the undergrowth, slipping sideways through gaps in the throng, exploiting every tiny opening in the pack of refugees. Her elbows flailed like offensive weapons, her carpetbag a battering ram, opening the way with just enough subtlety that the people she pushed past could dismiss the assault as an accident, if they were feeling charitable. Most of them, of course, were not feeling charitable, but by the time the curse left their lips, Molly was well past them.

  Wendy could do nothing but follow close behind, keeping in Molly’s wake, stepping along before the parted waters closed up again.

  For all of Molly’s aggression, it still took them fifteen minutes to cover the hundred yards from the edge of the crowd to the platform of the station, where the real chaos was taking place. The bedlam in the streets did not compare to the insanity on the platform, with men pushing and shoving for trains, packing aboard until the number of people jammed into each car was laughable, and then a few more shoving in.

  They were soldiers mostly, gray-clad, carrying packs and rifles. Officers in frock coats with swirls of gold on sleeves, sergeants shouting in hoarse voices. If there was some order to it all, Wendy could not see it.

  Why are the soldiers getting on the trains? she wondered. If indeed the Yankees were coming to Norfolk, shouldn’t the soldiers be there to meet them?

  Molly stopped at an office door, a nondescript door that would pass unnoticed if one were not looking for it. She knocked, hard, waited, knocked again. They waited. Molly let out a breath of exasperation.

  “Who are we looking for?” Wendy asked. The night was growing more bizarre, with her slightly eccentric but generally harmless aunt now displaying resources and a determination that Wendy had never seen before.

  “Alvan Reid. The stationmaster. But he seems to be-”

  The door opened and a man in his mid-forties or so, a very haggard-looking man in shirtsleeves and unbuttoned vest, his thick brown hair wild, his moustache slightly askew, peered out uncertainly, like an animal peeking out of its hole to see if it is safe to come out, if the dogs are gone. He saw Molly and his face brightened a bit, or at least for an instant looked less miserable, and he opened the door wider and waved them in.

  It was quieter in the office, the din of the platform muted a bit by the thin walls. “Molly, it is grand to see you, but you can forget it.”

  “Forget it? Alvan, dear, you do not even know why I am here.”

  “Certainly I do. You’re looking for a seat on a train out of here. It has been the same all day. But I fear the army has taken over all the trains. There are only soldiers riding tonight, and those who have managed to associate themselves with the army in some way.”

  Wendy spoke at last. “But why are the soldiers leaving? If the Yankees are coming, shouldn’t the soldiers stay?”

  Alvan looked at Wendy as if he was surprised she could speak. “Soldiers are going to Richmond. The Union Army is on the Peninsula and marching for Richmond, and all the troops around are being sent there to defend it. Leave us to the Yankees, we don’t matter, they need every man to protect the damned politicians in Richmond.”

  “Now, Alvan,” Molly continued, her tone soft and persuasive, “I know these soldiers are taking up a lot of room, but surely there’s-”

  “I said forget it, Molly, I meant forget it. It’s out of my hands. The damn army’s taken over the platform and they’re deciding who goes and who doesn’t. I’m just trying to keep the trains running, and even that’s more than I can handle.”

  He reached out a hand, laid it on Molly’s shoulder, and when he spoke again his tone was different. Kinder. “You know I’d help you if I could, Molly. You before any of the others come see me today, and there’s been a power of ’em. But there’s nothing I can do.”

  Molly nodded, resigned. “Very well. Thank you, Alvan, I know you’d help if you could. Godspeed.” She turned to Wendy. “Let’s go, dear, we’ll have to find some other way out of town.”

  They pushed their way off the platform and out of the station, and the going was a bit easier moving against the crowd th
an pushing through it. They didn’t even try to speak until the station was two blocks behind them and the mob sparse enough for them to walk side by side.

  “Well, that was a lot of effort for nothing,” Molly said. “I’m sorry, dear.” She was still walking with purpose.

  “It’s quite all right, Molly. How do you happen to know the stationmaster?”

  “Oh, you know how it is, one meets people…”

  “I see,” Wendy said, though she didn’t. Wendy had never had that capacity. Too abrasive, too forward, she rejected people before they rejected her. She had somehow always thought her aunt the same way. They were, were they not, the closest in temperament of all the family?

  Perhaps not.

  There seemed to be so many truths that Wendy was now finding were not true at all.

  They walked back the way they had come, past the side road that led to Molly’s house, and continued on. “There are other ways out of town,” Molly was explaining. “But not by road. We can’t very well walk, and I suspect the roads are completely jammed with wagons and such and they’ll all just sit there until the Yankees come and shoo them all home.”

  “Yes,” Wendy said. What else could she say?

  They walked in silence for a while, and soon they were walking by the ten-foot-high brick wall that separated the town of Portsmouth from the shipyard. The shipyard was generally called the Norfolk Navy Yard, though it was not in Norfolk. Its official name was the Gosport Naval Shipyard, though it was not in Gosport either, but rather Portsmouth.

  They came at last to the wide wrought-iron gate that marked the entrance to the shipyard. They were accustomed to seeing guards there, bored-looking teenagers in butternut, leaning on their rifles or on the wall. But not tonight. Now there was a detail of a dozen soldiers and a lieutenant in charge of them, and they looked as if they were taking their duty very seriously.

 

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