Part Three
CHAPTER XVII
MAY OF 1864CAME—a hot dry May that
wilted the flowers in the buds—and the Yankees under General
Sherman were in Georgia again, above Dalton, one hundred miles
northwest of Atlanta. Rumor had it that there would be heavy fighting
up there near the boundary between Georgia and Tennessee. The Yankees
were massing for an attack on the Western and Atlantic Railroad, the
line which connected Atlanta with Tennessee and the West, the same
line over which the Southern troops had been rushed last fall to win
the victory at Chickamauga.
But, for the most part, Atlanta was not
disturbed by the prospect of fighting near Dalton. The place where
the Yankees were concentrating was only a few miles southeast of the
battle field of Chickamauga. They had been driven back once when they
had tried to break through the mountain passes of that region, and
they would be driven back again.
Atlanta—and all of Georgia—knew
that the state was far too important to the Confederacy for General
Joe Johnston to let the Yankees remain inside the state’s borders
for long. Old Joe and his army would not let even one Yankee get
south of Dalton, for too much depended on the undisturbed functioning
of Georgia. The unravaged state was a vast granary, machine shop and
storehouse for the Confederacy. It manufactured much of the powder
and arms used by the army and most of the cotton and woolen goods.
Lying between Atlanta and Dalton was the city of Rome with its cannon
foundry and its other industries, and Etowah and Allatoona with the
largest ironworks south of Richmond. And, in Atlanta, were not only
the factories for making pistols and saddles, tents and ammunition,
but also the most extensive rolling mills in the South, the shops of
the principal railroads and the enormous hospitals. And in Atlanta
was the junction of the four railroads on which the very life of the
Confederacy depended.
So no one worried particularly. After
all, Dalton was a long way off, up near the Tennessee line. There had
been fighting in Tennessee for three years and people were accustomed
to the thought of that state as a far-away battle field, almost as
far away as Virginia or the Mississippi River. Moreover, Old Joe and
his men were between the Yankees and Atlanta, and everyone knew that,
next to General Lee himself, there was no greater general than
Johnston, now that Stonewall Jackson was dead.
Dr. Meade summed up the civilian point
of view on the matter, one warm May evening on the veranda of Aunt
Pitty’s house, when he said that Atlanta had nothing to fear, for
General Johnston was standing in the mountains like an iron rampart.
His audience heard him with varying emotions, for all who sat there
rocking quietly in the fading twilight, watching the first fireflies
of the season moving magically through the dusk, had weighty matters
on their minds. Mrs. Meade, her hand upon Phil’s arm, was hoping
the doctor was right. If the war came closer, she knew that Phil
would have to go. He was sixteen now and in the Home Guard. Fanny
Elsing, pale and hollow eyed since Gettysburg, was trying to keep her
mind from the torturing picture which had worn a groove in her tired
mind these past several months—Lieutenant Dallas McLure dying in a
jolting ox cart in the rain on the long, terrible retreat into
Maryland.
Captain Carey Ashburn’s useless arm
was hurting him again and moreover he was depressed by the thought
that his courtship of Scarlett was at a standstill. That had been the
situation ever since the news of Ashley Wilkes’ capture, though the
connection between the two events did not occur to him. Scarlett and
Melanie both were thinking of Ashley, as they always did when urgent
tasks or the necessity of carrying on a conversation did not divert
them. Scarlett was thinking bitterly, sorrowfully: He must be dead or
else we would have heard. Melanie, stemming the tide of fear again
and again, through endless hours, was telling herself: “He can’t
be dead. I’d know it—I’d feel it if he were dead.” Rhett
Butler lounged in the shadows, his long legs in their elegant boots
crossed negligently, his dark face an unreadable blank. In his arms
Wade slept contentedly, a cleanly picked wishbone in his small hand.
Scarlett always permitted Wade to sit up late when Rhett called
because the shy child was fond of him, and Rhett oddly enough seemed
to be fond of Wade. Generally Scarlett was annoyed by the child’s
presence, but he always behaved nicely in Rhett’s arms. As for Aunt
Pitty, she was nervously trying to stifle a belch, for the rooster
they had had for supper was a tough old bird.
That morning Aunt Pitty had reached the
regretful decision that she had better kill the patriarch before he
died of old age and pining for his harem which had long since been
eaten. For days he had drooped about the empty chicken run, too
dispirited to crow. After Uncle Peter had wrung his neck, Aunt Pitty
had been beset by conscience at the thought of enjoying him, en
famille, when so many of her friends had not tasted chicken for
weeks, so she suggested company for dinner. Melanie, who was now in
her fifth month, had not been out in public or received guests for
weeks, and she was appalled at the idea. But Aunt Pitty, for once,
was firm. It would be selfish to eat the rooster alone, and if
Melanie would only move her top hoop a little higher no one would
notice anything and she was so flat in the bust anyway.
“Oh, but Auntie I don’t want to see
people when Ashley—”
“It isn’t as if Ashley were—had
passed away,” said Aunt Pitty, her voice quavering, for in her
heart she was certain Ashley was dead. “He’s just as much alive
as you are and it will do you good to have company. And I’m going
to ask Fanny Elsing, too. Mrs. Elsing begged me to try to do
something to arouse her and make her see people—”
“Oh, but Auntie, it’s cruel to
force her when poor Dallas has only been dead—”
“Now, Melly, I shall cry with
vexation if you argue with me. I guess I’m your auntie and I know
what’s what. And I want a party.”
So Aunt Pitty had her party, and, at
the last minute, a guest she did not expect, or desire, arrived. Just
when the smell of roast rooster was filling the house, Rhett Butler,
back from one of his mysterious trips, knocked at the door, with a
large box of bonbons packed in paper lace under his arm and a
mouthful of two-edged compliments for her. There was nothing to do
but invite him to stay, although Aunt Pitty knew how the doctor and
Mrs. Meade felt about him and how bitter Fanny was against any man
not in uniform. Neither the Meades nor the Elsings would have spoken
to him on the street, but in a friend’s home they would, of course,
have to be polite to him. Besides, he was now more firmly than ever
under the protection of the fragile Melanie. After he had intervened
for her to get the news about Ashley, she had announced publicly that
her home was open to him as long as he lived and no matter what other
people might say about him.
Aunt Pitty’s apprehensions quieted
when she saw that Rhett was on his best behavior. He devoted himself
to Fanny with such sympathetic deference she even smiled at him, and
the meal went well. It was a princely feast Carey Ashburn had brought
a little tea, which he had found in the tobacco pouch of a captured
Yankee en route to Andersonville, and everyone had a cup, faintly
flavored with tobacco. There was a nibble of the tough old bird for
each, an adequate amount of dressing made of corn meal and seasoned
with onions, a bowl of dried peas, and plenty of rice and gravy, the
latter somewhat watery, for there was no flour with which to thicken
it For dessert, there was a sweet potato pie followed by Rhett’s
bonbons, and when Rhett produced real Havana cigars for the gentlemen
to enjoy over their glass of blackberry wine, everyone agreed it was
indeed a Lucullan banquet
When the gentlemen joined the ladies on
the front porch, the talk turned to war. Talk always turned to war
now, all conversations on any topic led from war or back to
war—sometimes sad, often gay, but always war. War romances, war
weddings, deaths in hospitals and on the field, incidents of camp and
battle and march, gallantry, cowardice, humor, sadness, deprivation
and hope. Always, always hope. Hope firm, unshaken despite the
defeats of the summer before.
When Captain Ashburn announced he had
applied for and been granted transfer from Atlanta to the army at
Dalton, the ladies kissed his stiffened arm with their eyes and
covered their emotions of pride by declaring he couldn’t go, for
then who would beau them about?
Young Carey looked confused and pleased
at hearing such statements from settled matrons and spinsters like
Mrs. Meade and Melanie and Aunt Pitty and Fanny, and tried to hope
that Scarlett really meant it.
“Why, he’ll be back in no time,”
said the doctor, throwing an arm over Carey’s shoulder. There’ll
be just one brief skirmish and the Yankees will skedaddle back into
Tennessee. And when they get there, General Forrest will take care of
them. You ladies need have no alarm about the proximity of the
Yankees, for General Johnston and his army stands there in the
mountains like an iron rampart. Yes, an iron rampart,” he repeated,
relishing his phrase. “Sherman will never pass. He’ll never
dislodge Old Joe.”
The ladies smiled approvingly, for his
lightest utterance was regarded as incontrovertible truth. After all,
men understood these matters much better than women, and if he said
General Johnston was an iron rampart, he must be one. Only Rhett
spoke. He had been silent since supper and had sat in the twilight
listening to the war talk with a down-twisted mouth, holding the
sleeping child against his shoulder.
“I believe that rumor has it that
Sherman has over one hundred thousand men, now that his
reinforcements have come up?”
The doctor answered him shortly. He had
been under considerable strain ever since he first arrived and found
that one of his fellow diners was this man whom he disliked so
heartily. Only the respect due Miss Pittypat and his presence under
her roof as a guest had restrained him from showing his feelings more
obviously.
“Well, sir?” the doctor barked in
reply.
“I believe Captain Ashburn said just
a while ago that General Johnston had only about forty thousand,
counting the deserters who were encouraged to come back to the colors
by the last victory.”
“Sir,” said Mrs. Meade indignantly.
“There are no deserters in the Confederate army.”
“I beg your pardon,” said Rhett
with mock humility. “I meant those thousands on furlough who forgot
to rejoin their regiments and those who have been over their wounds
for six months but who remain at home, going about their usual
business or doing the spring plowing.”
His eyes gleamed and Mrs. Meade bit her
lip in a huff. Scarlett wanted to giggle at her discomfiture, for
Rhett had caught her fairly. There were hundreds of men skulking in
the swamps and the mountains, defying the provost guard to drag them
back to the army. They were the ones who declared it was a “rich
man’s war and a poor man’s fight” and they had had enough of
it. But outnumbering these by far were men who, though carried on
company rolls as deserters, had no intention of deserting
permanently. They were the ones who had waited three years in vain
for furloughs and while they waited received ill-spelled letters from
home: “We air hungry.” “There won’t be no crop this
year—there ain’t nobody to plow.” “We air hungry.” “The
commissary took the shoats, and we ain’t had no money from you in
months. We air livin’ on dried peas.”
Always the rising chorus swelled: “We
are hungry, your wife, your babies, your parents. When will it be
over? When will you come home? We are hungry, hungry.” When
furloughs from the rapidly thinning army were denied, these soldiers
went home without them, to plow their land and plant their crops,
repair their houses and build up their fences. When regimental
officers, understanding the situation, saw a hard fight ahead, they
wrote these men, telling them to rejoin their companies and no
questions would be asked. Usually the men returned when they saw that
hunger at home would be held at bay for a few months longer. “Plow
furloughs” were not looked upon in the same light as desertion in
the face of the enemy, but they weakened the army just the same.
Dr. Meade hastily bridged over the
uncomfortable pause, his voice cold: “Captain Butler, the numerical
difference between our troops and those of the Yankees has never
mattered. One Confederate is worth a dozen Yankees.”
The ladies nodded. Everyone knew that.
“That was true at the first of the
war,” said Rhett. “Perhaps it’s still true, provided the
Confederate soldier has bullets for his gun and shoes on his feet and
food in his stomach. Eh, Captain Ashburn?”
His voice was still soft and filled
with specious humility. Carey Ashburn looked unhappy, for it was
obvious that he, too, disliked Rhett intensely. He gladly would have
sided with the doctor but he could not lie. The reason he had applied
for transfer to the front, despite his useless arm, was that he
realized, as the civilian population did not, the seriousness of the
situation. There were many other men, stumping on wooden pegs, blind
in one eye, fingers blown away, one arm gone, who were quietly
transferring from, the commissariat, hospital duties, mail and
railroad service back to their old fighting units. They knew Old Joe
needed every man.
He did not speak and Dr. Meade
thundered, losing his temper: “Our men have fought without shoes
before and without food and won victories. And they will fight again
and win! I tell you General Johnston cannot be dislodged! The
mountain fastnesses have always been the refuge and the strong forts
of invaded peoples from ancient times. Think of—think of
Thermopylae!”
Scarlett thought hard but Thermopylae
meant nothing to her.
“They died to the last man at
Thermopylae, didn’t they, Doctor?” Rhett asked, and his lips
twitched with suppressed laughter.
“Are you being insulting, young man?”
“Doctor! I beg of you! You
misunderstood me! I merely asked for information. My memory of
ancient history is poor.”
“If need be, our army will die to the
last man before they permit the Yankees to advance farther into
Georgia,” snapped the doctor. “But it will not be. They will
drive them out of Georgia in one skirmish.”
Aunt Pittypat rose hastily and asked
Scarlett to favor them with a piano selection and a song. She saw
that the conversation was rapidly getting into deep and stormy water.
She had known very well there would be trouble if she invited Rhett
to supper. There was always trouble when he was present. Just how he
started it, she never exactly understood. Dear! Dear! What did
Scarlett see in the man? And how could dear Melly defend him?
As Scarlett went obediently into the
parlor, a silence fell on the porch, a silence that pulsed with
resentment toward Rhett How could anyone not believe with heart and
soul in the invincibility of General Johnston and his men? Believing
was a sacred duty. And those who were so traitorous as not to believe
should, at least, have the decency to keep their mouths shut.
Scarlett struck a few chords and her
voice floated out to them from the parlor, sweetly, sadly, in the
words of a popular song:
“Into a ward of whitewashed
walls
Where the dead and dying lay—
Wounded with bayonets, shells
and balls—
Somebody’s darling was borne
one day.
“Somebody’s darling! so
young and so brave!
Wearing still on his pale,
sweet face—
Soon to be hid by the dust of
the grave—
The lingering light of his
boyhood’s grace.”
“Matted and damp are the curls of
gold,” mourned Scarlett’s faulty soprano, and Fanny half rose and
said in a faint, strangled voice: “Sing something else!”
The piano was suddenly silent as
Scarlett was overtaken with surprise and embarrassment. Then she
hastily blundered into the opening bars of “Jacket of Gray” and
stopped with a discord as she remembered how heartrending that
selection was too. The piano was silent again for she was utterly at
a loss. All the songs had to do with death and parting and sorrow.
Rhett rose swiftly, deposited Wade in
Fanny’s lap, and went into the parlor.
“Play ‘My Old Kentucky Home,’ ”
he suggested smoothly, and Scarlett gratefully plunged into it. Her
voice was joined by Rhett’s excellent bass, and as they went into
the second verse those on the porch breathed more easily, though
Heaven knew it was none too cheery a song, either.
“Just a few more days for to
tote the weary load!
No matter, ‘twill never be
light!
Just a few more days, till we
totter in the road!
Then, my old Kentucky home,
good night!”
¯
Dr. Meade’s prediction was right—as
far as it went Johnston did stand like an iron rampart in the
mountains above Dalton, one hundred miles away. So firmly did he
stand and so bitterly did he contest Sherman’s desire to pass down
the valley toward Atlanta that finally the Yankees drew back and took
counsel with themselves. They could not break the gray lines by
direct assault and so, under cover of night they marched through the
mountain passes in a semicircle, hoping to come upon Johnston’s
rear and cut the railroad behind him at Resaca, fifteen miles below
Dalton.
With those precious twin lines of iron
in danger, the Confederates left their desperately defended rifle
pits and, under the starlight, made a forced march to Resaca by the
short, direct road. When the Yankees, swarming out of the hills, came
upon them, the Southern troops were waiting for them, entrenched
behind breastworks, batteries planted, bayonets gleaming, even as
they had been at Dalton.
When the wounded from Dalton brought in
garbled accounts of Old Joe’s retreat to Resaca, Atlanta was
surprised and a little disturbed. It was as though a small, dark
cloud had appeared in the northwest, the first cloud of a summer
storm. What was the General thinking about, letting the Yankees
penetrate eighteen miles farther into Georgia? The mountains were
natural fortresses, even as Dr. Meade had said. Why hadn’t Old Joe
held the Yankees there?
Johnston fought desperately at Resaca
and repulsed the Yankees again, but Sherman, employing the same
flanking movement, swung his vast army in another semicircle, crossed
the Oostanaula River and again struck at the railroad in the
Confederate rear. Again the gray lines were summoned swiftly from
their red ditches to defend the railroad, and, weary for sleep,
exhausted from marching and fighting, and hungry, always hungry, they
made another rapid march down the valley. They reached the little
town of Calhoun, six miles below Resaca, ahead of the Yankees,
entrenched and were again ready for the attack when the Yankees came
up. The attack came, there was fierce skirmishing and the Yankees
were beaten back. Wearily the Confederates lay on their arms and
prayed for respite and rest. But there was no rest. Sherman
inexorably advanced, step by step, swinging his army about them in a
wide curve, forcing another retreat to defend the railroad at their
back.
The Confederates marched in their
sleep, too tired to think for the most part But when they did think,
they trusted Old Joe. They knew they were retreating but they knew
they had not been beaten. They just didn’t have enough men to hold
their entrenchments and defeat Sherman’s flanking movements, too.
They could and did lick the Yankees every time the Yankees would
stand and fight What would be the end of this retreat, they did not
know. But Old Joe knew what he was doing and that was enough for
them. He had conducted the retreat in masterly fashion, for they had
lost few men and the Yankees killed and captured ran high. They
hadn’t lost a single wagon and only four guns. And they hadn’t
lost the railroad at their back, either. Sherman hadn’t laid a
finger on it for all his frontal attacks, cavalry dashes and flank
movements.
The railroad. It was still theirs, that
slender iron line winding through the sunny valley toward Atlanta.
Men lay down to sleep where they could see the rails gleaming faintly
in the starlight. Men lay down to die, and the last sight that met
their puzzled eyes was the rails shining in the merciless sun, heat
shimmering along them.
As they fell back down the valley, an
army of refugees fell back before them. Planters and Crackers, rich
and poor, black and white, women and children, the old, the dying,
the crippled, the wounded, the women far gone in pregnancy, crowded
the road to Atlanta on trains, afoot, on horseback, in carriages and
wagons piled high with trunks and household goods. Five miles ahead
of the retreating army went the refugees, halting at Resaca, at
Calhoun, at Kingston, hoping at each stop to hear that the Yankees
had been driven back so they could return to their homes. But there
was no retracing that sunny road. The gray troops passed by empty
mansions, deserted farms, lonely cabins with doors ajar. Here and
there some lone woman remained with a few frightened slaves, and they
came to the road to cheer the soldiers, to bring buckets of well
water for the thirsty men, to bind up the wounds and bury the dead in
their own family burying grounds. But for the most part the sunny
valley was abandoned and desolate and the untended crops stood in
parching fields.
Flanked again at Calhoun, Johnston fell
back to Adairsville, where there was sharp skirmishing, then to
Cassville, then south of Cartersville. And the enemy had now advanced
fifty-five miles from Dalton. At New Hope Church, fifteen miles
farther along the hotly fought way, the gray ranks dug in for a
determined stand. On came the blue lines, relentlessly, like a
monster serpent coiling, striking venomously, drawing its injured
lengths back, but always striking again. There was desperate fighting
at New Hope Church, eleven days of continuous fighting, with every
Yankee assault bloodily repulsed. Then Johnston, flanked again,
withdrew his thinning lines a few miles farther.
The Confederate dead and wounded at New
Hope Church ran high. The wounded flooded Atlanta in train-loads and
the town was appalled. Never, even after the battle of Chickamauga,
had the town seen so many wounded. The hospitals overflowed and
wounded lay on the floors of empty stores and upon cotton bales in
the warehouses. Every hotel, boarding house and private residence was
crowded with sufferers. Aunt Pitty had her share, although she
protested that it was most unbecoming to have strange men in the
house when Melanie was in a delicate condition and when gruesome
sights might bring on premature birth. But Melanie reefed up her top
hoop a little higher to hide her thickening figure and the wounded
invaded the brick house. There was endless cooking and lifting and
turning and fanning, endless hours of washing and rerolling bandages
and picking lint, and endless warm nights made sleepless by the
babbling delirium of men in the next room. Finally the choked town
could take care of no more and the overflow of wounded was sent on to
the hospitals at Macon and Augusta.
With this backwash of wounded bearing
conflicting reports and the increase of frightened refugees crowding
into the already crowded town, Atlanta was in an uproar. The small
cloud on the horizon had blown up swiftly into a large, sullen storm
cloud and it was as though a faint, chilling wind blew from it.
No one had lost faith in the
invincibility of the troops but everyone, the civilians at least, had
lost faith in the General. New Hope Church was only thirty-five miles
from Atlanta! The General had let the Yankees push him back
sixty-five miles in three weeks! Why didn’t he hold the Yankees
instead of everlastingly retreating? He was a fool and worse than a
fool. Graybeards in the Home Guard and members of the state militia,
safe in Atlanta, insisted they could have managed the campaign better
and drew maps on tablecloths to prove their contentions. As his lines
grew thinner and he was forced back farther, the General called
desperately on Governor Brown for these very men, but the state
troops felt reasonably safe. After all, the Governor had defied Jeff
Davis’ demand for them. Why should he accede to General Johnston?
Fight and fall back! Fight and fall
back! For seventy miles and twenty-five days the Confederates had
fought almost daily. New Hope Church was behind the gray troops now,
a memory in a mad haze of like memories, heat, dust, hunger,
weariness, tramp-tramp on the red rutted roads, slop-slop through the
red mud, retreat, entrench, fight—retreat, entrench, fight. New
Hope Church was a nightmare of another life and so was Big Shanty,
where they turned and fought the Yankees like demons. But, fight the
Yankees till the fields were blue with dead, there were always more
Yankees, fresh Yankees; there was always that sinister southeast
curving of the blue lines toward the Confederate rear, toward the
railroad—and toward Atlanta!
From Big Shanty, the weary sleepless
lines retreated down the road to Kennesaw Mountain, near the little
town of Marietta, and here they spread their lines in a ten-mile
curve. On the steep sides of the mountain they dug their rifle pits
and on the towering heights they planted their batteries. Swearing,
sweating men hauled the heavy guns up the precipitous slopes, for
mules could not climb the hillsides. Couriers and wounded coming into
Atlanta gave reassuring reports to the frightened townspeople. The
heights of Kennesaw were impregnable. So were Pine Mountain and Lost
Mountain near by which were also fortified. The Yankees couldn’t
dislodge Old Joe’s men and they could hardly flank them now for the
batteries on the mountain tops commanded all the roads for miles.
Atlanta breathed more easily, but—
But Kennesaw Mountain was only
twenty-two miles away!
On the day when the first wounded from
Kennesaw Mountain were coming in, Mrs. Merriwether’s carriage was
at Aunt Pitty’s house at the unheard-of hour of seven in the
morning, and black Uncle Levi sent up word that Scarlett must dress
immediately and come to the hospital. Fanny Rising and the Bonnell
girls, roused early from slumber, were yawning on the back seat and
the Risings’ mammy sat grumpily on the box, a basket of freshly
laundered bandages on her lap. Off Scarlett went, unwillingly for she
had danced till dawn the night before at the Home Guard’s party and
her feet were tired. She silently cursed the efficient and
indefatigable Mrs. Merriwether, the wounded and the whole Southern
Confederacy, as Prissy buttoned her in her oldest and raggedest
calico frock which she used for hospital work. Gulping down the
bitter brew of parched corn and dried sweet potatoes that passed for
coffee, she went out to join the girls.
She was sick of all this nursing. This
very day she would tell Mrs. Merriwether that Ellen had written her
to come home for a visit. Much good this did her, for that worthy
matron, her sleeves rolled up, her stout figure swathed in a large
apron, gave her one sharp look and said: “Don’t let me hear any
more such foolishness, Scarlett Hamilton. I’ll write your mother
today and tell her how much we need you, and I’m sure she’ll
understand and let you stay. Now, put on your apron and trot over to
Dr. Meade. He needs someone to help with the dressings.”
“Oh, God,” thought Scarlett
drearily, “that’s just the trouble. Mother will make me stay here
and I shall die if I have to smell these stinks any longer! I wish I
was an old lady so I could bully the young ones, instead of getting
bullied—and tell old cats like Mrs. Merriwether to go to Halifax!”
Yes, she was sick of the hospital, the
foul smells, the lice, the aching, unwashed bodies. If there had ever
been any novelty and romance about nursing, that had worn off a year
ago. Besides, these men wounded in the retreat were not so attractive
as the earlier ones had been. They didn’t show the slightest
interest in her and they had very little to say beyond: “How’s
the fightin’ goin’? What’s Old Joe doin’ now? Mighty clever
fellow. Old Joe.” She didn’t think Old Joe a mighty clever
fellow. All he had done was let the Yankees penetrate eighty-eight
miles into Georgia. No, they were not an attractive lot. Moreover,
many of them were dying, dying swiftly, silently, having little
strength left to combat the blood poisoning, gangrene, typhoid and
pneumonia which had set in before they could reach Atlanta and a
doctor.
The day was hot and the flies came in
the open windows in swarms, fat lazy flies that broke the spirits of
the men as pain could not. The tide of smells and pain rose and rose
about her. Perspiration soaked through her freshly starched dress as
she followed Dr. Meade about, a basin in her hand.
Oh, the nausea of standing by the
doctor, trying not to vomit when his bright knife cut into mortifying
flesh! And oh, the horror of hearing the screams from the operating
ward where amputations were going on! And the sick, helpless sense of
pity at the sight of tense, white faces of mangled men waiting for
the doctor to get to them, men whose ears were filled with screams,
men waiting for the dreadful words: “I’m sorry, my boy, but that
hand will have to come off. Yes, yes, I know; but look, see those red
streaks? It’ll have to come off.”
Chloroform was so scarce now it was
used only for the worst amputations and opium was a precious thing,
used only to ease the dying out of life, not the living out of pain.
There was no quinine and no iodine at all. Yes, Scarlett was sick of
it all, and that morning she wished that she, like Melanie, had the
excuse of pregnancy to offer. That was about the only excuse that was
socially acceptable for not nursing these days.
When noon came, she put off her apron
and sneaked away from the hospital while Mrs. Merriwether was busy
writing a letter for a gangling, illiterate mountaineer. Scarlett
felt that she could stand it no longer. It was an imposition on her
and she knew that when the wounded came in on the noon train there
would be enough work to keep her busy until night-fall—and probably
without anything to eat
She went hastily up the two short
blocks to Peachtree Street breathing the unfouled air in as deep
gulps as her tightly laced corset would permit. She was standing on
the corner, uncertain as to what she would do next, ashamed to go
home to Aunt Pitty’s but determined not to go back to the hospital,
when Rhett Butler drove by.
“You look like the ragpicker’s
child,” he observed, his eyes taking in the mended lavender calico,
streaked with perspiration and splotched here and there with water
which had slopped from the basin. Scarlett was furious with
embarrassment and indignation. Why did he always notice women’s
clothing and why was he so rude as to remark upon her present
untidiness?
“I don’t want to hear a word out of
you. You get out and help me in and drive me somewhere where nobody
will see me. I won’t go back to the hospital if they hang me! My
goodness, I didn’t start this war and I don’t see any reason why
I should be worked to death and—”
“A traitor to Our Glorious Cause!”
The pot’s calling the kettle black.
You help me in. I don’t care where you were going. You’re going
to take me riding now.”
He swung himself out of the carriage to
the ground and she suddenly thought how nice it was to see a man who
was whole, who was not minus eyes or limbs, or white with pain or
yellow with malaria, and who looked well fed and healthy. He was so
well dressed too. His coat and trousers were actually of the same
material and they fitted him, instead of hanging in folds or being
almost too tight for movement. And they were new, not ragged, with
dirty bare flesh and hairy legs showing through. He looked as if he
had not a care in the world and that in itself was startling these
days, when other men wore such worried, preoccupied, grim looks. His
brown face was Bland and his mouth, red lipped, clear cut as a
woman’s, frankly sensual, smiled carelessly as he lifted her into
the carriage.
The muscles of his big body rippled
against his well-tailored clothes, as he got in beside her, and, as
always, the sense of his great physical power struck her like a blow.
She watched the swell of his powerful shoulders against the cloth
with a fascination that was disturbing, a little frightening. His
body seemed so tough and hard, as tough and hard as his keen mind.
His was such an easy, graceful strength, lazy as a panther stretching
in the sun, alert as a panther to spring and strike.
“You little fraud,” he said,
clucking to the horse. “You dance all night with the soldiers and
give them roses and ribbons and tell them how you’d die for the
Cause, and when it comes to bandaging a few wounds and picking off a
few lice, you decamp hastily.”
“Can’t you talk about something
else and drive faster? It would be just my luck for Grandpa
Merriwether to come out of his store and see me and tell old lady—I
mean, Mrs. Merriwether.”
He touched up the mare with the whip
and she trotted briskly across Five Points and across the railroad
tracks that cut the town in two. The train bearing the wounded had
already come in and the litter bearers were working swiftly in the
hot sun, transferring wounded into ambulances and covered ordnance
wagons. Scarlett had no qualm of conscience as she watched them but
only a feeling of vast relief that she had made her escape.
“I’m just sick and tired of that
old hospital,” she said, settling her billowing skirts and tying
her bonnet bow more firmly under her chin. “And every day more and
more wounded come in. It’s all General Johnston’s fault. If he’d
just stood up to the Yankees at Dalton, they’d have—”
“But he did stand up to the Yankees,
you ignorant child. And if he’d kept on standing there, Sherman
would have flanked him and crushed him between the two wings of his
army. And he’d have lost the railroad and the railroad is what
Johnston is fighting for.”
“Oh, well,” said Scarlett, on whom
military strategy was utterly lost. “It’s his fault anyway. He
ought to have done something about it and I think he ought to be
removed. Why doesn’t he stand and fight instead of retreating?”
“You are like everyone else,
screaming ‘Off with his head’ because he can’t do the
impossible. He was Jesus the Savior at Dalton, and now he’s Judas
the Betrayer at Kennesaw Mountain, all in six weeks. Yet, just let
him drive the Yankees back twenty miles and he’ll be Jesus again.
My child, Sherman has twice as many men as Johnston, and he can
afford to lose two men for every one of our gallant laddies. And
Johnston can’t afford to lose a single man. He needs reinforcements
badly and what is he getting? ‘Joe Brown’s Pets.’ What a help
they’ll be!”
“Is the militia really going to be
called out? The Home Guard, too? I hadn’t heard. How do you know?”
There’s a rumor floating about to
that effect The rumor arrived on the train from Milledgeville this
morning. Both the militia and the Home Guards are going to be sent in
to reinforce General Johnston. Yes, Governor Brown’s darlings are
likely to smell powder at last, and I imagine most of them will be
much surprised. Certainly they never expected to see action. The
Governor as good as promised them they wouldn’t. Well, that’s a
good joke on them. They thought they had bomb proofs because the
Governor stood up to even Jeff Davis and refused to send them to
Virginia. Said they were needed for the defense of their state. Who’d
have ever thought the war would come to their own back yard and
they’d really have to defend their state?”
“Oh, how can you laugh, you cruel
thing! Think of the old gentlemen and the little boys in the Home
Guard! Why, little Phil Meade will have to go and Grandpa Merriwether
and Uncle Henry Hamilton.”
“I’m not talking about the little
boys and the Mexican War veterans. I’m talking about brave young
men like Willie Guinan who like to wear pretty uniforms and wave
swords—”
“And yourself!”
“My dear, that didn’t hurt a bit! I
wear no uniform and wave no sword and the fortunes of the Confederacy
mean nothing at all to me. Moreover, I wouldn’t be caught dead in
the Home Guard or in any army, for that matter. I had enough of
things military at West Point to do me the rest of my life. … Well,
I wish Old Joe luck. General Lee can’t send him any help because
the Yankees are keeping him busy in Virginia. So the Georgia state
troops are the only reinforcements Johnston can get. He deserves
better, for he’s a great strategist He always manages to get places
before the Yankees do. But he’ll have to keep falling back if he
wants to protect the railroad; and mark my words, when they push him
out of the mountains and onto the flatter land around here, he’s
going to be butchered.”
“Around here?” cried Scarlett. “You
know mighty well the Yankees will never get this far!”
“Kennesaw is only twenty-two miles
away and I’ll wager you—”
“Rhett, look, down the street! That
crowd of men! They aren’t soldiers. What on earth… ? Why, they’re
darkies!”
There was a great cloud of red dust
coming up the street and from the cloud came the sound of the
tramping of many feet and a hundred or more negro voices, deep
throated, careless, singing a hymn. Rhett pulled the carriage over to
the curb, and Scarlett looked curiously at the sweating black men,
picks and shovels over their shoulders, shepherded along by an
officer and a squad of men wearing the insignia of the engineering
corps.
“What on earth … ?” she began
again.
Then her eyes lighted on a singing
black buck in the front rank. He stood nearly six and a half feet
tall, a giant of a man, ebony black, stepping along with the lithe
grace of a powerful animal, his white teeth flashing as he led the
gang in “Go Down, Moses.” Surely there wasn’t a negro on earth
as tall and loud voiced as this one except Big Sam, the foreman of
Tara. But what was Big Sam doing here, so far away from home,
especially now that there was no overseer on the plantation and he
was Gerald’s right-hand man?
As she half rose from her seat to look
closer, the giant caught sight of her and his black face split in a
grin of delighted recognition. He halted, dropped his shovel and
started toward her, calling to the negroes nearest him: “Gawdlmighty!
It’s Miss Scarlett! You, ‘Lige! ‘Postle! Prophet! Dar’s Miss
Scarlett!”
There was confusion in the ranks. The
crowd halted uncertainly, grinning, and Big Sam, followed by three
other large negroes, ran across the road to the carriage, closely
followed by the harried, shouting officer.
“Get back in line, you fellows! Get
back, I tell you or I’ll—- Why it’s Mrs. Hamilton. Good
morning, Ma’m, and you, too, sir. What are you up to inciting
mutiny and insubordination? God knows, I’ve had trouble enough with
these boys this morning.”
“Oh, Captain Randall, don’t scold
them! They are our people. This is Big Sam our foreman, and Elijah
and Apostle and Prophet from Tara. Of course, they had to speak to
me. How are you, boys?”
She shook hands all around, her small
white hand disappearing into their huge black paws and the four
capered with delight at the meeting and with pride at displaying
before their comrades what a pretty Young Miss they had.
“What are you boys doing so far from
Tara? You’ve run away, I’ll be bound. Don’t you know the
patterollers will get you sure?”
They bellowed pleasedly at the
badinage.
“Runned away?” answered Big Sam.
“No’m, us ain’ runned away. Dey done sont an’ tuck us, kase
us wuz de fo’ bigges’ an’ stronges’ han’s at Tara.” His
white teeth showed proudly. “Dey specially sont fer me, kase Ah
could sing so good. Yas’m, Mist’ Frank Kennedy, he come by an’
tuck us.”
“But why, Big Sam?”
“Lawd, Miss Scarlett! Ain’ you
heerd? Us is ter dig de ditches fer de wite gempmums ter hide in w’en
de Yankees comes.”
Captain Randall and the occupants of
the carriage smothered smiles at this naive explanation of rifle
pits.
“Cose, Mis’ Gerald might’ nigh
had a fit w’en dey tuck me, an’ he say he kain run de place
widout me. But Miss Ellen she say; Tek him, Mist’ Kennedy. De
Confedrutsy need Big Sam mo’ dan us do.’ An’ she gib me a
dollar an’ tell me ter do jes’ whut de w’ite gempmums tell me.
So hyah us is.”
“What does it all mean, Captain
Randall?”
“Oh, it’s quite simple. We have to
strengthen the fortifications of Atlanta with more miles of rifle
pits, and the General can’t spare any men from the front to do it.
So we’ve been impressing the strongest bucks in the countryside for
the work.”
“But—”
A cold little fear was beginning to
throb in Scarlett’s breast. More miles of rifle pits! Why should
they need more? Within the last year, a series of huge earth redoubts
with battery emplacements had been built all around Atlanta, one mile
from the center of town. These great earthworks were connected with
rifle pits and they ran, mile after mile, completely encircling the
city. More rifle pits!
“But—why should we be fortified any
more than we are already fortified? We won’t need what we’ve got.
Surely, the General won’t let—”
“Our present fortifications are only
a mile from town,” said Captain Randall shortly. “And that’s
too close for comfort—or safety. These new ones are going to be
farther away. You see, another retreat may bring our men into
Atlanta.”
Immediately he regretted his last
remark, as her eyes widened with fear.
“But, of course there won’t be
another retreat,” he added hastily. “The lines around Kennesaw
Mountain are impregnable. The batteries are planted all up the
mountain sides and they command the roads, and the Yankees can’t
possibly get by.”
But Scarlett saw him drop his eyes
before the lazy, penetrating look Rhett gave him, and she was
frightened. She remembered Rhett’s remark: “When the Yankees push
him out of the mountains and onto the flatter land, he’ll be
butchered.”
“Oh, Captain, do you think—”
“Why, of course not! Don’t fret
your mind one minute. Old Joe just believes in taking precautions.
That’s the only reason we’re digging more entrenchments. … But
I must be going now. It’s been pleasant, talking to you. … Say
good-by to your mistress, boys, and let’s get going.”
“Good-by, boys. Now, if you get sick
or hurt or in trouble, let me know. I live right down Peachtree
Street, down there in almost the last house at the end of town. Wait
a minute—” She fumbled in her reticule. “Oh, dear, I haven’t
a cent. Rhett, give me a few shinplasters. Here, Big Sam, buy some
tobacco for yourself and the boys. And be good and do what Captain
Randall tells you.”
The straggling line re-formed, the dust
arose again in a red cloud as they moved off and Big Sam started up
the singing again.
“Go do-ow, Mos-es! Waaa-ay, do-own,
in Eeejup laa-an!
An’ te-el O-le Faa-ro-o
Ter let mah—peee-pul go!”
“Rhett, Captain Randall was lying to
me, just like all the men do—trying to keep the truth from us women
for fear well faint. Or was he lying? Oh, Rhett, if there’s no
danger, why are they digging these new breastworks? Is the army so
short of men they’ve got to use darkies?”
Rhett clucked to the mare.
“The army is damned short of men. Why
else would the Home Guard be called out? And as for the
entrenchments, well, fortifications are supposed to be of some value
in case of a siege. The General is preparing to make his final stand
here.”
“A siege! Oh, turn the horse around.
I’m going home, back home to Tara, right away.”
“What ails you?”
“A siege! Name of God, a siege! I’ve
heard about sieges! Pa was in one or maybe it was his Pa, and Pa told
me—”
“What siege?”
“The siege at Drogheda when Cromwell
had the Irish, and they didn’t have anything to eat and Pa said
they starved and died in the streets and finally they ate all the
cats and rats and even things like cockroaches. And he said they ate
each other too, before they surrendered, though I never did know
whether to believe that or not. And when Cromwell took the town all
the women were— A siege! Mother of God!”
“You are the most barbarously
ignorant young person I ever saw. Drogheda was in sixteen hundred and
something and Mr. O’Hara couldn’t possibly have been alive then.
Besides, Sherman isn’t Cromwell.”
“No, but he’s worse! They say—”
“And as for the exotic viands the
Irish ate at the siege—personally I’d as soon eat a nice juicy
rat as some of the victuals they’ve been serving me recently at the
hotel. I think I shall have to go back to Richmond. They have good
food there, if you have the money to pay for it.” His eyes mocked
the fear in her face.
Annoyed that she had shown her
trepidation, she cried: “I don’t see why you’ve stayed here
this long! All you think about is being comfortable and eating
and—and things like that.”
“I know no more pleasant way to pass
the time than in eating and er—things like that,” he said. “And
as for why I stay here—well, I’ve read a good deal about sieges,
beleaguered cities and the like, but I’ve never seen one. So I
think I’ll stay here and watch. I won’t get hurt because I’m a
noncombatant and besides I want the experience. Never pass up new
experiences, Scarlett. They enrich the mind.”
“My mind’s rich enough.”
“Perhaps you know best about that,
but I should say— But that would be ungallant. And perhaps, I’m
staying here to rescue you when the siege does come. I’ve never
rescued a maiden in distress. That would be a new experience, too.”
She knew he was teasing her but she
sensed a seriousness behind his words. She tossed her head.
“I won’t need you to rescue me. I
can take care of myself, thank you.”
“Don’t say that, Scarlett! Think of
it, if you like, but never, never say it to a man. That’s the
trouble with Yankee girls. They’d be most charming if they weren’t
always telling you that they can take care of themselves, thank you.
Generally they are telling the truth, God help them. And so men let
them take care of themselves.”
“How you do run on,” she said
coldly, for there was no insult worse than being likened to a Yankee
girl. “I believe you’re lying about a siege. You know the Yankees
will never get to Atlanta.”
“I’ll bet you they will be here
within the month. I’ll bet you a box of bonbons against—” His
dark eyes wandered to her lips. “Against a kiss.”
For a last brief moment, fear of a
Yankee invasion clutched her heart but at the word “kiss,” she
forgot about it. This was familiar ground and far more interesting
than military operations. With difficulty she restrained a smile of
glee. Since the day when he gave her the green bonnet, Rhett had made
no advances which could in any way be construed as those of a lover.
He could never be inveigled into personal conversations, try though
she might, but now with no angling on her part, he was talking about
kissing.
“I don’t care for such personal
conversation,” she said coolly and managed a frown. “Besides, I’d
just as soon kiss a pig.”
“There’s no accounting for tastes
and I’ve always heard the Irish were partial to pigs—kept them
under their beds, in fact. But, Scarlett, you need kissing badly.
That’s what’s wrong with you. All your beaux have respected you
too much, though God knows why, or they have been too afraid of you
to really do right by you. The result is that you are unendurably
uppity. You should be kissed and by someone who knows how.”
The conversation was not going the way
she wanted it. It never did when she was with him. Always, it was a
duel in which she was worsted.
“And I suppose you think you are the
proper person?” she asked with sarcasm, holding her temper in check
with difficulty.
“Oh, yes, if I cared to take the
trouble,” he said carelessly. “They say I kiss very well.”
“Oh,” she began, indignant at the
slight to her charms. “Why, you …” But her eyes fell in sudden
confusion. He was smiling, but in the dark depths of his eyes a tiny
light flickered for a brief moment, like a small raw flame.
“Of course, you’ve probably
wondered why I never tried to follow up that chaste peck I gave you,
the day I brought you that bonnet—”
“I have never—”
“Then you aren’t a nice girl,
Scarlett, and I’m sorry to hear it. All really nice girls wonder
when men don’t try to kiss them. They know they shouldn’t want
them to and they know they must act insulted if they do, but just the
same, they wish the men would try. … Well, my dear, take heart Some
day, I will kiss you and you will like it. But not now, so I beg you
not to be too impatient.”
She knew he was teasing but, as always,
his teasing maddened her. There was always too much truth in the
things he said. Well, this finished him. If ever, ever he should be
so ill bred as to try to take any liberties with her, she would show
him.
“Will you kindly turn the horse
around, Captain Butler? I wish to go back to the hospital.”
“Do you indeed, my ministering angel?
Then lice and slops are preferable to my conversation? Well, far be
it from me to keep a pair of willing hands from laboring for Our
Glorious Cause.” He turned the horse’s head and they started back
toward Five Points.
“As to why I have made no further
advances,” he pursued blandly, as though she had not signified that
the conversation was at an end, “I’m waiting for you to grow up a
little more. You see, it wouldn’t be much fun for me to kiss you
now and I’m quite selfish about my pleasures. I never fancied
kissing children.”
He smothered a grin, as from the corner
of his eye he saw her bosom heave with silent wrath.
“And then, too,” he continued
softly, “I was waiting for the memory of the estimable Ashley
Wilkes to fade.”
At the mention of Ashley’s name,
sudden pain went through her, sudden hot tears stung her lids. Fade?
The memory of Ashley would never fade, not if he were dead a thousand
years. She thought of Ashley wounded, dying in a far-off Yankee
prison, with no blankets over him, with no one who loved him to hold
his hand, and she was filled with hate for the well-fed man who sat
beside her, jeers just beneath the surface of his drawling voice.
She was too angry to speak and they
rode along in silence for some while.
“I understand practically everything
about you and Ashley, now,” Rhett resumed. “I began with your
inelegant scene at Twelve Oaks and, since then, I’ve picked up many
things by keeping my eyes open. What things? Oh, that you still
cherish a romantic schoolgirl passion for him which he reciprocates
as well as his honorable nature will permit him. And that Mrs. Wilkes
knows nothing and that, between the two of you, you’ve done her a
pretty trick. I understand practically everything, except one thing
that piques my curiosity. Did the honorable Ashley ever jeopardize
his immortal soul by kissing you?”
A stony silence and an averted head
were his answers.
“Ah, well, so he did kiss you. I
suppose it was when he was here on furlough. And now that he’s
probably dead you are cherishing it to your heart. But I’m sure
you’ll get over it and when you’ve forgotten his kiss, I’ll—”
She turned in fury.
“You go to—Halifax,” she said
tensely, her green eyes slits of rage. “And let me out of this
carriage before I jump over the wheels. And I don’t ever want to
speak to you again.”
He stopped the carriage, but before he
could alight and assist her she sprang down. Her hoop caught on the
wheel and for a moment the crowd at Five Points had a flashing view
of petticoats and pantalets. Then Rhett leaned over and swiftly
released it She flounced off without a word, without even a backward
look, and he laughed softly and clicked to the horse.
CHAPTER XVIII
FOR THE FIRST TIME since the war began,
Atlanta could hear the sound of battle. In the early morning hours
before the noises of the town awoke, the cannon at Kennesaw Mountain
could be heard faintly, far away, a low dim booming that might have
passed for summer thunder. Occasionally it was loud enough to be
heard even above the rattle of traffic at noon. People tried not to
listen to it, tried to talk, to laugh, to carry on their business,
just as though the Yankees were not there, twenty-two miles away, but
always ears were strained for the sound. The town wore a preoccupied
look, for no matter what occupied their hands, all were listening,
listening, their hearts leaping suddenly a hundred times a day. Was
the booming louder? Or did they only think it was louder? Would
General Johnston hold them this time? Would he?
Panic lay just beneath the surface.
Nerves which had been stretched tighter and tighter each day of the
retreat began to reach the breaking point. No one spoke of fears.
That subject was taboo, but strained nerves found expression in loud
criticism of the General. Public feeling was at fever heat. Sherman
was at the very doors of Atlanta. Another retreat might bring the
Confederates into the town.
Give us a general who won’t retreat!
Give us a man who will stand and fight!
With the far-off rumbling of cannon in
their ears, the state militia, “Joe Brown’s Pets,” and the Home
Guard marched out of Atlanta, to defend the bridges and ferries of
the Chattahoochee River at Johnston’s back. It was a gray, overcast
day and, as they marched through Five Points and out the Marietta
road, a fine rain began to fall. The whole town had turned out to see
them off and they stood, close packed, under the wooden awnings of
the stores on Peachtree Street and tried to cheer.
Scarlett and Maybelle Merriwether
Picard had been given permission to leave the hospital and watch the
men go out, because Uncle Henry Hamilton and Grandpa Merriwether were
in the Home Guard, and they stood with Mrs. Meade, pressed in the
crowd, tiptoeing to get a better view. Scarlett, though filled with
the universal Southern desire to believe only the pleasantest and
most reassuring things about the progress of the fighting, felt cold
as she watched the motley ranks go by. Surely, things must be in a
desperate pass if this rabble of bombproofers, old men and little
boys were being called out! To be sure there were young and
able-bodied men in the passing lines, tricked out in the bright
uniforms of socially select militia units, plumes waving, sashes
dancing. But there were so many old men and young boys, and the sight
of them made her heart contract with pity and with fear. There were
graybeards older than her father trying to step jauntily along in the
needle-fine rain to the rhythm of the fife and dram corps. Grandpa
Merriwether, with Mrs. Merriwether’s best plaid shawl laid across
his shoulders to keep out the rain, was in the first rank and he
saluted the girls with a grin. They waved their handkerchiefs and
cried gay good-bys to him; but Maybelle, gripping Scarlett’s arm,
whispered: “Oh, the poor old darling! A real good rainstorm will
just about finish him! His lumbago—”
Uncle Henry Hamilton marched in the
rank behind Grandpa Merriwether, the collar of his long black coat
turned up about his ears, two Mexican War pistols in his belt and a
small carpetbag in his hand. Beside him marched his black valet who
was nearly as old as Uncle Henry, with an open umbrella held over
them both. Shoulder to shoulder with their elders came the young
boys, none of them looking over sixteen. Many of them had run away
from school to join the army, and here and there were clumps of them
in the cadet uniforms of military academies, the black cock feathers
on their tight gray caps wet with rain, the clean white canvas straps
crossing their chests sodden. Phil Meade was among them, proudly
wearing his dead brother’s saber and horse pistols, his hat bravely
pinned up on one side. Mrs. Meade managed to smile and wave until he
had passed and then she leaned her head on the back of Scarlett’s
shoulder for a moment as though her strength had suddenly left her.
Many of the men were totally unarmed,
for the Confederacy had neither rifles nor ammunition to issue to
them. These men hoped to equip themselves from killed and captured
Yankees. Many carried bowie knives in their boots and bore in their
hands long thick poles with iron-pointed tips known as “Joe Brown
pikes.” The lucky ones had old flintlock muskets slung over their
shoulders and powder-horns at their belts.
Johnston had lost around ten thousand
men in his retreat. He needed ten thousand more fresh troops. And
this, thought Scarlett frightened, is what he is getting!
As the artillery rumbled by, splashing
mud into the watching crowds, a negro on a mule, riding close to a
cannon caught her eye. He was a young, saddle-colored negro with a
serious face, and when Scarlett saw him she cried: “It’s Mose!
Ashley’s Mose! Whatever is he doing here?” She fought her way
through the crowd to the curb and called: “Mose! Stop!”
The boy seeing her, drew rein, smiled
delightedly and started to dismount. A soaking sergeant, riding
behind him, called: “Stay on that mule, boy, or I’ll light a fire
under you! We got to git to the mountain some time.”
Uncertainly, Mose looked from the
sergeant to Scarlett and she, splashing through the mud, close to the
passing wheels, caught at Moses’ stirrup strap.
“Oh, just a minute, Sergeant! Don’t
get down, Mose. What on earth are you doing here?”
“Ah’s off ter de war, agin, Miss
Scarlett. Dis time wid Ole Mist’ John ‘stead ob Mist’ Ashley.”
“Mr. Wilkes!” Scarlett was stunned;
Mr. Wilkes was nearly seventy. “Where is he?”
“Back wid de las’ cannon, Miss
Scarlett. Back dar!”
“Sorry, lady. Move on, boy!”
Scarlett stood for a moment, ankle deep
in mud as the guns lurched by. Oh, no! She thought. It can’t be.
He’s too old. And he doesn’t like war any more than Ashley did!
She retreated back a few paces toward the curb and scanned each face
that passed. Then, as the last cannon and limber chest came groaning
and splashing up, she saw him, slender, erect, his long silver hair
wet upon his neck, riding easily upon a little strawberry mare that
picked her way as daintily through the mud holes as a lady in a satin
dress. Why—that mare was Nellie! Mrs. Tarleton’s Nellie! Beatrice
Tarleton’s treasured darling!
When he saw her standing in the mud,
Mr. Wilkes drew rein with a smile of pleasure and, dismounting, came
toward her.
“I had hoped to see you, Scarlett. I
was charged with so many messages from your people. But there was no
time. We just got in this morning and they are rushing us out
immediately, as you see.”
“Oh, Mr. Wilkes,” she cried
desperately, holding his hand. “Don’t go! Why must you go?”
“Ah, so you think I’m too old!”
he smiled, and it was Ashley’s smile in an older face. “Perhaps I
am too old to march but not to ride and shoot. And Mrs. Tarleton so
kindly lent me Nellie, so I am well mounted. I hope nothing happens
to Nellie, for if something should happen to her, I could never go
home and face Mrs. Tarleton. Nellie was the last horse she had left.”
He was laughing now, turning away her fears. “Your mother and
father and the girls are well and they sent you their love. Your
father nearly came up with us today!”
“Oh, not Pa!” cried Scarlett in
terror. “Not Pa! He isn’t going to the war, is he?”
“No, but he was. Of course, he can’t
walk far with his stiff knee, but he was all for riding away with us.
Your mother agreed, providing he was able to jump the pasture fence,
for, she said, there would be a lot of rough riding to be done in the
army. Your father thought that easy, but—would you believe it? When
his horse came to the fence, he stopped dead and over his head went
your father! It’s a wonder it didn’t break his neck! You know how
obstinate he is. He got right up and tried it again. Well, Scarlett,
he came off three times before Mrs. O’Hara and Pork assisted him to
bed. He was in a taking about it, swearing that your mother had
‘spoken a wee word in the beast’s ear.’ He just isn’t up to
active service, Scarlett. You need have no shame about it. After all,
someone must stay home and raise crops for the army.”
Scarlett had no shame at all, only an
active feeling of relief.
“I’ve sent India and Honey to Macon
to stay with the Burrs and Mr. O’Hara is looking after Twelve Oaks
as well as Tara. … I must go, my dear. Let me kiss your pretty
face.”
Scarlett turned up her lips and there
was a choking pain in her throat. She was so fond of Mr. Wilkes.
Once, long ago, she had hoped to be his daughter-in-law.
“And you must deliver this kiss to
Pittypat and this to Melanie,” he said, kissing her lightly two
more times. “And how is Melanie?”
“She is well.”
“Ah!” His eyes looked at her but
through her, past her as Ashley’s had done, remote gray eyes
looking on another world. “I should have liked to see my first
grandchild. Good-by, my dear.”
He swung onto Nellie and cantered off,
his hat in his hand, his silver hair bare to the rain. Scarlett had
rejoined Maybelle and Mrs. Meade before the import of his last words
broke upon her. Then in superstitious terror she crossed herself and
tried to say a prayer. He had spoken of death, just as Ashley had
done, and now Ashley— No one should ever speak of death! It was
tempting Providence to mention death. As the three women started
silently back to the hospital in the rain, Scarlett was praying: “Not
him, too, God. Not him and Ashley, too!”
The retreat from Dalton to Kennesaw
Mountain had taken from early May to mid-June and as the hot rainy
days of June passed and Sherman failed to dislodge the Confederates
from the steep slippery slopes, hope again raised its head. Everyone
grew more cheerful and spoke more kindly of General Johnston. As wet
June days passed into a wetter July and the Confederates, fighting
desperately around the entrenched heights, still held Sherman at bay,
a wild gaiety took hold of Atlanta. Hope went to their heads like
champagne. Hurrah! Hurrah! We’re holding them! An epidemic of
parties and dances broke out. Whenever groups of men from the
fighting were in town for the night, dinners were given for them and
afterwards there was dancing and the girls, outnumbering the men ten
to one, made much of them and fought to dance with them.
Atlanta was crowded with visitors,
refugees, families of wounded men in the hospitals, wives and mothers
of soldiers fighting at the mountain who wished to be near them in
case of wounds. In addition, bevies of belles from the country
districts, where all remaining men were under sixteen or over sixty,
descended upon the town. Aunt Pitty disapproved highly of these last,
for she felt they had come to Atlanta for no reason at all except to
catch husbands, and the shamelessness of it made her wonder what the
world was coming to. Scarlett disapproved, too. She did not care for
the eager competition furnished by the sixteen-year-olds whose fresh
cheeks and bright smiles made one forget their twice-turned frocks
and patched shoes. Her own clothes were prettier and newer than most,
thanks to the material Rhett Butler had brought her on the last boat
he ran in, but, after all, she was nineteen and getting along and men
had a way of chasing silly young things.
A widow with a child was at a
disadvantage with these pretty minxes, she thought But in these
exciting days her widowhood and her motherhood weighed less heavily
upon her than ever before. Between hospital duties in the day time
and parties at night, she hardly ever saw Wade. Sometimes she
actually forgot, for long stretches, that she had a child.
In the warm wet summer nights,
Atlanta’s homes stood open to the soldiers, the town’s defenders.
The big houses from Washington Street to Peachtree Street blazed with
lights, as the muddy fighters in from the rifle pits were
entertained, and the sound of banjo and fiddle and the scrape of
dancing feet and light laughter carried far on the night air. Groups
hung over pianos and voices sang lustily the sad words of “Your
Letter Came but Came Too Late” while ragged gallants looked
meaningly at girls who laughed from behind turkey-tail fans, begging
them not to wait until it was too late. None of the girls waited, if
they could help it. With the tide of hysterical gaiety and excitement
flooding the city, they rushed into matrimony. There were so many
marriages that month while Johnston was holding the enemy at Kennesaw
Mountain, marriages with the bride turned out in blushing happiness
and the hastily borrowed finery of a dozen friends and the groom with
saber banging at patched knees. So much excitement, so many parties,
so many thrills! Hurrah! Johnston is holding the Yanks twenty-two
miles away!
Yes, the lines around Kennesaw Mountain
were impregnable. After twenty-five days of fighting, even General
Sherman was convinced of this, for his losses were enormous. Instead
of continuing the direct assault, he swung his army in a wide circle
again and tried to come between the Confederates and Atlanta. Again,
the strategy worked. Johnston was forced to abandon the heights he
had held so well, in order to protect his rear. He had lost a third
of his men in that fight and the remainder slogged tiredly through
the rain across the country toward the Chattahoochee River. The
Confederates could expect no more reinforcements, whereas the
railroad, which the Yankees now held from Tennessee south to the
battle line, brought Sherman fresh troops and supplies daily. So the
gray lines went back through the muddy fields, back toward Atlanta.
With the loss of the supposedly
unconquerable position, a fresh wave of terror swept the town. For
twenty-five wild, happy days, everyone had assured everyone else that
this could not possibly happen. And now it had happened! But surely
the General would hold the Yankees on the opposite bank of the river.
Though God knows the river was close enough, only seven miles away!
But Sherman flanked them again,
crossing the stream above them, and the weary gray files were forced
to hurry across the yellow water and throw themselves again between
the invaders and Atlanta. They dug in hastily in shallow pits to the
north of the town in the valley of Peachtree Creek. Atlanta was in
agony and panic.
Fight and fall back! Fight and fall
back! And every retreat was bringing the Yankees closer to the town.
Peachtree Creek was only five miles away! What was the General
thinking about?
The cries of “Give us a man who will
stand and fight!” penetrated even to Richmond. Richmond knew that
if Atlanta was lost, the war was lost, and after the army had crossed
the Chattahoochee, General Johnston was removed from command. General
Hood, one of his corps commanders, took over the army, and the town
breathed a little easier. Hood wouldn’t retreat. Not that tall
Kentuckian, with his flowing beard and flashing eye! He had the
reputation of a bulldog. He’d drive the Yankees back from the
creek, yes, back across the river and on up the road every step of
the way back to Dalton. But the army cried: “Give us back Old Joe!”
for they had been with Old Joe all the weary miles from Dalton and
they knew, as the civilians could not know, the odds that had opposed
them.
Sherman did not wait for Hood to get
himself in readiness to attack. On the day after the change in
command, the Yankee general struck swiftly at the little town of
Decatur, six miles beyond Atlanta, captured it and cut the railroad
there. This was the railroad connecting Atlanta with Augusta, with
Charleston, and Wilmington and with Virginia. Sherman had dealt the
Confederacy a crippling blow. The time had come for action! Atlanta
screamed for action!
Then, on a July afternoon of steaming
heat, Atlanta had its wish. General Hood did more than stand and
fight. He assaulted the Yankees fiercely at Peachtree Creek, hurling
his men from their rifle pits against the blue lines where Sherman’s
men outnumbered him more than two to one.
Frightened, praying that Hood’s
attack would drive the Yankees back, everyone listened to the sound
of booming cannon and the crackling of thousands of rifles which,
though five miles away from the center of town, were so loud as to
seem almost in the next block. They could hear the rumblings of the
batteries, see the smoke which rolled like low-hanging clouds above
the trees, but for hours no one knew how the battle was going.
By late afternoon the first news came,
but it was uncertain, contradictory, frightening, brought as it was
by men wounded in the early hours of the battle. These men began
straggling in, singly and in groups, the less seriously wounded
supporting those who limped and staggered. Soon a steady stream of
them was established, making their painful way into town toward the
hospitals, their faces black as negroes’ from powder stains, dust
and sweat, their wounds unbandaged, blood drying, flies swarming
about them.
Aunt Pitty’s was one of the first
houses which the wounded reached as they struggled in from the north
of the town, and one after another, they tottered to the gate, sank
down on the green lawn and croaked:
“Water!”
All that burning afternoon, Aunt Pitty
and her family, black and white, stood in the sun with buckets of
water and bandages, ladling drinks, binding wounds until the bandages
gave out and even the torn sheets and towels were exhausted. Aunt
Pitty completely forgot that the sight of blood always made her faint
and she worked until her little feet in their too small shoes swelled
and would no longer support her. Even Melanie, now great with child,
forgot her modesty and worked feverishly side by side with Prissy,
Cookie and Scarlett, her face as tense as any of the wounded. When at
last she fainted, there was no place to lay her except on the kitchen
table, as every bed, chair and sofa in the house was filled with
wounded.
Forgotten in the tumult, little Wade
crouched behind the banisters on the front porch, peering out onto
the lawn like a caged, frightened rabbit, his eyes wide with terror,
sucking his thumb and hiccoughing. Once Scarlett saw him and cried
sharply: “Go play in the back yard, Wade Hampton!” but he was too
terrified, too fascinated by the mad scene before him to obey.
The lawn was covered with prostrate
men, too tired to walk farther, too weak from wounds to move. These
Uncle Peter loaded into the carriage and drove to the hospital,
making trip after trip until the old horse was lathered. Mrs. Meade
and Mrs. Merriwether sent their carriages and they, too, drove off,
springs sagging beneath the weight of the wounded.
Later, in the long, hot summer
twilight, the ambulances came rumbling down the road from the battle
field and commissary wagons, covered with muddy canvas. Then farm
wagons, ox carts and even private carriages commandeered by the
medical corps. They passed Aunt Pitty’s house, jolting over the
bumpy road, packed with wounded and dying men, dripping blood into
the red dust. At the sight of the women with buckets and dippers, the
conveyances halted and the chorus went up in cries, in whispers:
“Water!”
Scarlett held wobbling heads that
parched lips might drink, poured buckets of water over dusty,
feverish bodies and into open wounds that the men might enjoy a brief
moment’s relief. She tiptoed to hand dippers to ambulance drivers
and of each she questioned, her heart in her throat: “What news?
What news?”
From all came back the answer: “Don’t
know fer sartin, lady. It’s too soon to tell.”
Night came and it was sultry. No air
moved and the flaring pine knots the negroes held made the air
hotter. Dust clogged Scarlett’s nostrils and dried her lips. Her
lavender calico dress, so freshly clean and starched that morning,
was streaked with blood, dirt and sweat. This, then, was what Ashley
had meant when he wrote that war was not glory but dirt and misery.
Fatigue gave an unreal, nightmarish
cast to the whole scene. It couldn’t be real—or it was real, then
the world had gone mad. If not, why should she be standing here in
Aunt Pitty’s peaceful front yard, amid wavering lights, pouring
water over dying beaux? For so many of them were her beaux and they
tried to smile when they saw her. There were so many men jolting down
this dark, dusty road whom she knew so well, so many men dying here
before her eyes, mosquitoes and gnats swarming their bloody faces,
men with whom she had danced and laughed, for whom she had played
music and sung songs, teased, comforted and loved—a little.
She found Carey Ashburn on the bottom
layer of wounded in an ox cart; barely alive from a bullet wound in
his head. But she could not extricate him without disturbing six
other wounded men, so she let him go on to the hospital. Later she
heard he had died before a doctor ever saw him and was buried
somewhere, no one knew exactly. So many men had been buried that
month, in shallow, hastily dug graves at Oakland Cemetery. Melanie
felt it keenly that they had not been able to get a lock of Carey’s
hair to send to his mother in Alabama.
As the hot night wore on and their
backs were aching and their knees buckling from weariness, Scarlett
and Pitty cried to man after man: “What news? What news?”
And as the long hours dragged past,
they had their answer, an answer that made them look whitely into
each other’s eyes.
“We’re falling back.” “We’ve
got to fall back.” “They outnumber us by thousands.” “The
Yankees have got Wheeler’s cavalry cut off near Decatur. We got to
reinforce them.” “Our boys will all be in town soon.”
Scarlett and Pitty clutched each
other’s arms for support.
“Are—are the Yankees coming?”
“Yes’m, they’re comin’ all
right but they ain’t goin’ ter git fer, lady.” “Don’t fret,
Miss, they can’t take Atlanta.” “No, Ma’m, we got a million
miles of breastworks ‘round this town.” “I heard Old Joe say it
myself: ‘I can hold Atlanta forever.’ ” “But we ain’t got
Old Joe. We got—” “Shut up, you fool! Do you want to scare the
ladies?” “The Yankees will never take this place, Ma’m.”
“Whyn’t you ladies go ter Macon or somewheres that’s safer?
Ain’t you got no kinfolks there?” “The Yankees ain’t goin’
ter take Atlanta but still it ain’t goin’ ter be so healthy for
ladies whilst they’re tryin’ it.” “There’s goin’ ter be a
powerful lot of shellin’.”
In a warm steaming rain the next day,
the defeated army poured through Atlanta by thousands, exhausted by
hunger and weariness, depleted by seventy-six days of bat-tie and
retreat, their horses starved scarecrows, their cannon and caissons
harnessed with odds and ends of rope and strips of rawhide. But they
did not come in as disorderly rabble, in full rout. They marched in
good order, jaunty for all their rags, their torn red battle flags
flying in the rain. They had learned retreating under Old Joe, who
had made it as great a feat of strategy as advancing. The bearded,
shabby files swung down Peachtree Street to the tune of “Maryland!
My Maryland!” and all the town turned out to cheer them. In victory
or defeat, they were their boys.
The state militia who had gone out so
short a time before, resplendent in new uniforms, could hardly be
distinguished from the seasoned troops, so dirty and unkempt were
they. There was a new look in their eyes. Three years of apologizing,
of explaining why they were not at the front was behind them now.
They had traded security behind the lines for the hardships of
battle. Many of their number had traded easy living for hard death.
They were veterans now, veterans of brief service, but veterans just
the same, and they had acquitted themselves well. They searched out
the faces of friends in the crowd and stared at them proudly,
defiantly. They could hold up their heads now.
The old men and boys of the Home Guard
marched by, the graybeards almost too weary to lift their feet, the
boys wearing the faces of tired children, confronted too early with
adult problems. Scarlett caught sight of Phil Meade and hardly
recognized him, so black was his face with powder and grime, so taut
with strain and weariness. Uncle Henry went limping by, hatless in
the rain, his head stuck through a hole in a piece of old oilcloth.
Grandpa Merriwether rode in on a gun carriage, his bare feet tied in
quilt scraps. But search though she might, she saw no sign of John
Wilkes.
Johnston’s veterans, however, went by
with the tireless, careless step which had carried them for three
years, and they still had the energy to grin and wave at pretty girls
and to call rude gibes to men not in uniform. They were on their way
to the entrenchments that ringed the town—no shallow, hastily dug
trenches, these, but earthworks, breast high, reinforced with
sandbags and tipped with sharpened staves of wood. For mile after
mile the trenches encircled the town, red gashes surmounted by red
mounds, waiting for the men who would fill them.
The crowd cheered the troops as they
would have cheered them in victory. There was fear in every heart
but, now that they knew the truth, now that the worst had happened,
now that the war was in their front yard, a change came over the
town. There was no panic now, no hysteria. Whatever lay in hearts did
not show on faces. Everyone looked cheerful even if the cheer was
strained. Everyone tried to show brave, confident faces to the
troops. Everyone repeated what Old Joe had said, just before he was
relieved of command: “I can hold Atlanta forever.”
Now that Hood had had to retreat, quite
a number wished, with the soldiers, that they had Old Joe back, but
they forbore saying it and took courage from Old Joe’s remark:
“I can hold Atlanta forever!”
Not for Hood the cautious tactics of
General Johnston. He assaulted the Yankees on the east, he assaulted
them on the west. Sherman was circling the town like a wrestler
seeking a fresh hold on an opponent’s body, and Hood did not remain
behind his rifle pits waiting for the Yankees to attack. He went out
boldly to meet them and savagely fell upon them. Within the space of
a few days the battles of Atlanta and of Ezra Church were fought, and
both of them were major engagements which made Peachtree Creek seem
like a skirmish.
But the Yankees kept coming back for
more. They had suffered heavy losses but they could afford to lose.
And all the while their batteries poured shells into Atlanta, killing
people in their homes, ripping roofs off buildings, tearing huge
craters in the streets. The townsfolk sheltered as best they could in
cellars, in holes in the ground and in shallow tunnels dug in
railroad cuts. Atlanta was under siege.
Within eleven days after he had taken
command, General Hood had lost almost as many men as Johnston had
lost in seventy-four days of battle and retreat, and Atlanta was
hemmed in on three sides.
The railroad from Atlanta to Tennessee
was now in Sherman’s hands for its full length. His army was across
the railroad to the east and he had cut the railroad running
southwest to Alabama. Only the one railroad to the south, to Macon
and Savannah, was still open. The town was crowded with soldiers,
swamped with wounded, jammed with refugees, and this one line was
inadequate for the crying needs of the stricken city. But as long as
this railroad could be held, Atlanta could still stand.
Scarlett was terrified when she
realized how important this line had become, how fiercely Sherman
would fight to take it, how desperately Hood would fight to defend
it. For this was the railroad which ran through the County, through
Jonesboro. And Tara was only five miles from Jonesboro! Tara seemed
like a haven of refuge by comparison with the screaming hell of
Atlanta, but Tara was only five miles from Jonesboro!
Scarlett and many other ladies sat on
the flat roofs of stores, shaded by their tiny parasols, and watched
the fighting on the day of the battle of Atlanta. But when shells
began falling in the streets for the first time, they fled to the
cellars, and that night the exodus of women, children and old people
from the city began. Macon was their destination and many of those
who took the train that night had already refugeed five and six times
before, as Johnston fell back from Dalton. They were traveling
lighter now than when they arrived in Atlanta. Most of them carried
only a carpetbag and a scanty lunch done up in a bandana
handkerchief. Here and there, frightened servants carried silver
pitchers, knives and forks and a family portrait or two which had
been salvaged in the first fight.
Mrs. Merriwether and Mrs. Elsing
refused to leave. They were needed at the hospital and furthermore,
they said proudly, they weren’t afraid and no Yankees were going to
run them out of their homes. But Maybelle and her baby and Fanny
Elsing went to Macon. Mrs. Meade was disobedient for the first time
in her married life and flatly refused to yield to the doctor’s
command that she take the train to safety. The doctor needed her, she
said. Moreover, Phil was somewhere in the trenches and she wanted to
be near by in case …
But Mrs. Whiting went and many other
ladies of Scarlett’s circle. Aunt Pitty, who had been the first to
denounce Old Joe for his policy of retreat, was among the first to
pack her trunks. Her nerves, she said, were delicate and she could
not endure noises. She feared she might faint at an explosion and not
be able to reach the cellar. No, she was not afraid. Her baby mouth
tried to set in martial lines but failed. She’d go to Macon and
stay with her cousin, old Mrs. Burr, and the girls should come with
her.
Scarlett did not want to go to Macon.
Frightened as she was of the shells, she’d rather stay in Atlanta
than go to Macon, for she hated old Mrs. Burr cordially. Years ago,
Mrs. Burr had said she was “fast” after catching her kissing her
son Willie at one of the Wilkes’ house parties. No, she told Aunt
Pitty, I’ll go home to Tara and Melly can go to Macon with you.
At this Melanie began to cry in a
frightened, heartbroken way. When Aunt Pitty fled to get Dr. Meade,
Melanie caught Scarlett’s hand in hers, pleading:
“Dear, don’t go to Tara and leave
me! I’ll be so lonely without you. Oh, Scarlett, I’d just die if
you weren’t with me when the baby came! Yes— Yes, I know I’ve
got Aunt Pitty and she is sweet But after all, she’s never had a
baby, and sometimes she makes me so nervous I could scream. Don’t
desert me, darling. You’ve been just like a sister to me, and
besides,” she smiled wanly, “you promised Ashley you’d take
care of me. He told me he was going to ask you.”
Scarlett stared down at her in
wonderment. With her own dislike of this woman so strong she could
barely conceal it, how could Melly love her so? How could Melly be so
stupid as not to guess the secret of her love of Ashley? She had
given herself away a hundred times during these months of torment,
waiting for news of him. But Melanie saw nothing, Melanie who could
see nothing but good in anyone she loved. … Yes, she had promised
Ashley she would look out for Melanie. Oh, Ashley! Ashley! you must
be dead, dead these many months! And now your promise reaches out and
clutches me!
“Well,” she said shortly, “I did
promise him that and I don’t go back on my promises. But I won’t
go to Macon and stay with that old Burr cat. I’d claw her eyes out
in five minutes. I’m going home to Tara and you can come with me.
Mother would love to have you.”
“Oh, I’d like that! Your mother is
so sweet. But you know Auntie would just die if she wasn’t with me
when the baby came, and I know she won’t go to Tara. It’s too
close to the fighting, and Auntie wants to be safe.”
Dr. Meade, who had arrived out of
breath, expecting to find Melanie in premature labor at least,
judging by Aunt Pitty’s alarmed summoning, was indignant and said
as much. And upon learning the cause of the upset, he settled the
matter with words that left no room for argument.
“It’s out of the question for you
to go to Macon, Miss Melly. I won’t answer for you if you move. The
trains are crowded and uncertain and the passengers are liable to be
put off in the woods at any time, if the trains are needed for the
wounded or troops and supplies. In your condition—”
“But if I went to Tara with
Scarlett—”
“I tell you I won’t have you moved.
The train to Tara is the train to Macon and the same conditions
prevail. Moreover, no one knows just where the Yankees are now, but
they are all over everywhere. Your train might even be captured. And
even if you reached Jonesboro safely, there’d be a five-mile ride
over a rough road before you ever reached Tara. It’s no trip for a
woman in a delicate condition. Besides, there’s not a doctor in the
County since old Dr. Fontaine joined the army.”
“But there are midwives—”
“I said a doctor,” he answered
brusquely and his eyes unconsciously went over her tiny frame. “I
won’t have you moved. It might be dangerous. You don’t want to
have the baby on the train or in a buggy, do you?”
This medical frankness reduced the
ladies to embarrassed blushes and silence.
“You’ve got to stay right here
where I can watch you, and you must stay in bed. No running up and
down stairs to cellars. No, not even if shells come right in the
window. After all, there’s not so much danger here. We’ll have
the Yankees beaten back in no time. … Now, Miss Pitty, you go right
on to Macon and leave the young ladies here.”
“Unchaperoned?” she cried, aghast.
“They are matrons,” said the doctor
testily. “And Mrs. Meade is just two houses away. They won’t be
receiving any male company anyway with Miss Melly in her condition.
Good Heavens, Miss Pitty! This is war time. We can’t think of the
proprieties now. We must think of Miss Melly.”
He stamped out of the room and waited
on the front porch until Scarlett joined him.
“I shall talk frankly to you, Miss
Scarlett,” he began, jerking at his gray beard. “You seem to be a
young woman of common sense, so spare me your blushes. I do not want
to hear any further talk about Miss Melly being moved. I doubt if she
could stand the trip. She is going to have a difficult time, even in
the best of circumstances—very narrow in the hips, as you know, and
probably will need forceps for her delivery, so I don’t want any
ignorant darky midwife meddling with her. Women like her should never
have children, but— Anyway, you pack Miss Pitty’s trunk and send
her to Macon. She’s so scared she’ll upset Miss Melly and that
won’t do any good. And now, Miss,” he fixed her with a piercing
glance, “I don’t want to hear about you going home, either. You
stay with Miss Melly till the baby comes. Not afraid, are you?”
“Oh, no!” lied Scarlett, stoutly.
“That’s a brave girl. Mrs. Meade
will give you whatever chaperonage you need and I’ll send over old
Betsy to cook for you, if Miss Pitty wants to take her servants with
her. It won’t be for long. The baby ought to be here in another
five weeks, but you never can tell with first babies and all this
shelling going on. It may come any day.”
So Aunt Pittypat went to Macon, in
floods of tears, taking Uncle Peter and Cookie with her. The carriage
and horse she donated to the hospital in a burst of patriotism which
she immediately regretted and that brought on more tears. And
Scarlett and Melanie were left alone with Wade and Prissy in a house
that was much quieter, even though the cannonading continued.
CHAPTER XIX
IN THOSE FIRST DAYS of the siege, when
the Yankees crashed here and there against the defenses of the city,
Scarlett was so frightened by the bursting shells she could only
cower helplessly, her hands over her ears, expecting every moment to
be blown into eternity. When she heard the whistling screams that
heralded their approach, she rushed to Melanie’s room and flung
herself on the bed beside her, and the two clutched each other,
screaming “Oh! Oh!” as they buried their heads in the pillows.
Prissy and Wade scurried for the cellar and crouched in the
cob-webbed darkness, Prissy squalling at the top of her voice and
Wade sobbing and hiccoughing.
Suffocating under feather pillows while
death screamed overhead, Scarlett silently cursed Melanie for keeping
her from the safer regions below stairs. But the doctor had forbidden
Melanie to walk and Scarlett had to stay with her. Added to her
terror of being blown to pieces was her equally active terror that
Melanie’s baby might arrive at any moment. Sweat broke out on
Scarlett with clammy dampness, whenever this thought entered her
mind. What would she do if the baby started coming? She knew she’d
rather let Melanie die than go out on the streets to hunt for the
doctor when the shells were falling like April rain. And she knew
Prissy could be beaten to death before she would venture forth. What
would she do if the baby came?
These matters she discussed with Prissy
in whispers one evening, as they prepared Melanie’s supper tray,
and Prissy, surprisingly enough, calmed her fears.
“Miss Scarlett, effen we kain git de
doctah w’en Miss Melly’s time come, doan you bodder. Ah kin
manage. Ah knows all ‘bout birthin’. Ain’ mah ma a midwife?
Ain’ she raise me ter be a midwife, too? Jes’ you leave it ter
me.”
Scarlett breathed more easily knowing
that experienced hands were near, but she nevertheless yearned to
have the ordeal over and done with. Mad to be away from exploding
shells, desperate to get home to the quiet of Tara, she prayed every
night that the baby would arrive the next day, so she would be
released from her promise and could leave Atlanta. Tara seemed so
safe, so far away from all this misery.
Scarlett longed for home and her mother
as she had never longed for anything in all her life. If she were
just near Ellen she wouldn’t be afraid, no matter what happened.
Every night after a day of screeching ear-splitting shells, she went
to bed determined to tell Melanie the next morning that she could not
stand Atlanta another day, that she would have to go home and Melanie
would have to go to Mrs. Meade’s. But, as she lay on her pillow,
there always rose the memory of Ashley’s face as it had looked when
she last saw him, drawn as with an inner pain but with a little smile
on his lips: “You’ll take care of Melanie, won’t you? You’re
so strong. … Promise me.” And she had promised. Somewhere, Ashley
lay dead. Wherever he was, he was watching her, holding her to that
promise. Living or dead, she could not fail him, no matter what the
cost. So she remained day after day.
In response to Ellen’s letters,
pleading with her to come home, she wrote minimizing the dangers of
the siege, explaining Melanie’s predicament and promising to come
as soon as the baby was born. Ellen, sensitive to the bonds of kin,
be they blood or marriage, wrote back reluctantly agreeing that she
must stay but demanding Wade and Prissy be sent home immediately.
This suggestion met with the complete approval of Prissy, who was now
reduced to teeth-chattering idiocy at every unexpected sound. She
spent so much time crouching in the cellar that the girls would have
fared badly but for Mrs. Meade’s stolid old Betsy.
Scarlett was as anxious as her mother
to have Wade out of Atlanta, not only for the child’s safety, but
because his constant fear irritated her. Wade was terrified to
speechlessness by the shelling, and even when lulls came he clung to
Scarlett’s skirts, too terrified to cry. He was afraid to go to bed
at night, afraid of the dark, afraid to sleep lest the Yankees should
come and get him, and the sound of his soft nervous whimpering in the
night grated unendurably on her nerves. Secretly she was just as
frightened as he was, but it angered her to be reminded of it every
minute by his tense, drawn face. Yes, Tara was the place for Wade.
Prissy should take him there and return immediately to be present
when the baby came.
But before Scarlett could start the two
on their homeward journey, news came that the Yankees had swung to
the south and were skirmishing along the railroad between Atlanta and
Jonesboro. Suppose the Yankees should capture the train on which Wade
and Prissy were riding—Scarlett and Melanie turned pale at the
thought, for everyone knew that Yankee atrocities on helpless
children were even more dreadful than on women. So she feared to send
him home and he remained in Atlanta, a frightened, silent little
ghost, pattering about desperately after his mother, fearing to have
her skirt out of his hand for even a minute.
The siege went on through the hot days
of July, thundering days following nights of sullen, ominous
stillness, and the town began to adjust itself. It was as though, the
worst having happened, they had nothing more to fear. They had feared
a siege and now they had a siege and, after all, it wasn’t so bad.
Life could and did go on almost as usual. They knew they were sitting
on a volcano, but until that volcano erupted there was nothing they
could do. So why worry now? And probably it wouldn’t erupt anyway.
Just look how General Hood is holding the Yankees out of the city!
And see how the cavalry is holding the railroad to Macon! Sherman
will never take it!
But for all their apparent insouciance
in the face of falling shells and shorter rations, for all their
ignoring the Yankees, barely half a mile away, and for all their
boundless confidence in the ragged line of gray men in the rifle
pits, there pulsed, just below the skin of Atlanta, a wild
uncertainty over what the next day would bring. Suspense, worry,
sorrow, hunger and the torment of rising, falling, rising hope was
wearing that skin thin.
Gradually, Scarlett drew courage from
the brave faces of her friends and from the merciful adjustment which
nature makes when what cannot be cured must be endured. To be sure,
she still jumped at the sound of explosions but she did not run
screaming to burrow her head under Melanie’s pillow. She could now
gulp and say weakly: “That was close, wasn’t it?”
She was less frightened also because
life had taken on the quality of a dream, a dream too terrible to be
real. It wasn’t possible that she, Scarlett O’Hara, should be in
such a predicament, with the danger of death about her every hour,
every minute. It wasn’t possible that the quiet tenor of life could
have changed so completely in so short a time.
It was unreal, grotesquely unreal, that
morning skies which dawned so tenderly blue could be profaned with
cannon smoke that hung over the town like low thunder clouds, that
warm noontides filled with the piercing sweetness of massed
honeysuckle and climbing roses could be so fearful, as shells
screamed into the streets, bursting like the crack of doom, throwing
iron splinters hundreds of yards, blowing people and animals to bits.
Quiet, drowsy afternoon siestas had
ceased to be, for though the clamor of battle might lull from time to
time, Peachtree Street was alive, and noisy at all hours, cannon and
ambulances rumbling by, wounded stumbling in from the rifle pits,
regiments hurrying past at double-quick, ordered from the ditches on
one side of town to the defense of some hard-pressed earthworks on
the other, and couriers dashing headlong down the street toward
headquarters as though the fate of the Confederacy hung on them.
The hot nights brought a measure of
quiet but it was a sinister quiet. When the night was still, it was
too still—as though the tree frogs, katydids and sleepy
mockingbirds were too frightened to raise their voices in the usual
summer-night chorus. Now and again, the quiet was broken sharply by
the crack-cracking of musket fire in the last line of defenses.
Often in the late night hours, when the
lamps were out and Melanie asleep and deathly silence pressed over
the town, Scarlett, lying awake, heard the latch of the front gate
click and soft urgent tappings on the front door.
Always, faceless soldiers stood on the
dark porch and from the darkness many different voices spoke to her.
Sometimes a cultured voice came from the shadows: “Madam, my abject
apologies for disturbing you, but could I have water for myself and
my horse?” Sometimes it was the hard burring of a mountain voice,
sometimes the odd nasals of the flat Wiregrass country to the far
south, occasionally the lulling drawl of the Coast that caught at her
heart, reminding her of Ellen’s voice.
“Missy, I got a pardner here who I
wuz aimin’ ter git ter the horsepittle but looks like he ain’t
goin’ ter last that fer. Kin you take him in?”
“Lady, I shore could do with some
vittles. I’d shore relish a corn pone if it didn’t deprive you
none.”
“Madam, forgive my intrusion
but—could I spend the night on your porch? I saw the roses and
smelled the honeysuckle and it was so much like home that I was
emboldened—”
No, these nights were not real! They
were a nightmare and the men were part of that nightmare, men without
bodies or faces, only tired voices speaking to her from the warm
dark. Draw water, serve food, lay pillows on the front porch, bind
wounds, hold the dirty heads of the dying. No, this could not be
happening to her!
Once, late in July, it was Uncle Henry
Hamilton who came tapping in the night. Uncle Henry was minus his
umbrella and carpetbag now, and his fat stomach as well. The skin of
his pink fat face hung down in loose folds like the dewlaps of a
bulldog and his long white hair was indescribably dirty. He was
almost barefoot, crawling with lice, and he was hungry, but his
irascible spirit was unimpaired.
Despite his remark: “It’s a foolish
war when old fools like me are out toting guns,” the girls received
the impression that Uncle Henry was enjoying himself. He was needed,
like the young men, and he was doing a young man’s work. Moreover,
he could keep up with the young men, which was more than Grandpa
Merriwether could do, he told them gleefully. Grandpa’s lumbago was
troubling him greatly and the Captain wanted to discharge him. But
Grandpa wouldn’t go home. He said frankly that he preferred the
Captain’s swearing and bullying to his daughter-in-law’s
coddling, and her incessant demands that he give up chewing tobacco
and launder his beard every day.
Uncle Henry’s visit was brief, for he
had only a four-hour furlough and he needed half of it for the long
walk in from the breastworks and back.
“Girls, I’m not going to see you
all for a while,” he announced as he sat in Melanie’s bedroom,
luxuriously wriggling his blistered feet in the tub of cold water
Scarlett had set before him. “Our company is going out in the
morning.”
“Where?” questioned Melanie
frightened, clutching his arm.
“Don’t put your hand on me,” said
Uncle Henry irritably. “I’m crawling with lice. War would be a
picnic if it wasn’t for lice and dysentery. Where’m I going?
Well, I haven’t been told but I’ve got a good idea. We’re
marching south, toward Jonesboro, in the morning, unless I’m
greatly in error.”
“Oh, why toward Jonesboro?”
“Because there’s going to be big
fighting there, Missy. The Yankees are going to take the railroad if
they possibly can. And if they do take it, it’s good-by Atlanta!”
“Oh, Uncle Henry, do you think they
will?”
“Shucks, girls! No! How can they when
I’m there?” Uncle Henry grinned at their frightened faces and
then, becoming serious again: “It’s going to be a hard fight,
girls. We’ve got to win it. You know, of course, that the Yankees
have got all the railroads except the one to Macon, but that isn’t
all they’ve got. Maybe you girls didn’t know it, but they’ve
got every road, too, every wagon lane and bridle path, except the
McDonough road, Atlanta’s in a bag and the strings of the bag are
at Jonesboro. And if the Yankees can take the railroad there, they
can pull up the strings and have us, just like a possum in a poke.
So, we don’t aim to let them get that railroad. … I may be gone a
while, girls. I just came in to tell you all good-by and to make sure
Scarlett was still with you, Melly.”
“Of course, she’s with me,” said
Melanie fondly. “Don’t you worry about us, Uncle Henry, and do
take care of yourself.”
Uncle Henry wiped his wet feet on the
rag rug and groaned as he drew on his tattered shoes.
“I got to be going,” he said. “I’ve
got five miles to walk. Scarlett, you fix me up some kind of lunch to
take. Anything you’ve got.”
After he had kissed Melanie good-by, he
went down to the kitchen where Scarlett was wrapping a corn pone and
some apples in a napkin.
“Uncle Henry—is it—is it really
so serious?”
“Serious? God’lmighty, yes! Don’t
be a goose. We’re in the last ditch.”
“Do you think they’ll get to Tara?”
“Why—” began Uncle Henry,
irritated at the feminine mind which thought only of personal things
when broad issues were involved. Then, seeing her frightened,
woebegone face, he softened.
“Of course they won’t. Tara’s
five miles from the railroad and it’s the railroad the Yankees
want. You’ve got no more sense than a June bug, Missy.” He broke
off abruptly. “I didn’t walk all this way here tonight just to
tell you all good-by. I came to bring Melly some bad news, but when I
got up to it I just couldn’t tell her. So I’m going to leave it
to you to do.”
“Ashley isn’t—you haven’t heard
anything—that he’s— dead?”
“Now, how would I be hearing about
Ashley when I’ve been standing in rifle pits up to the seat of my
pants in mud?” the old gentleman asked testily. “No. It’s about
his father. John Wilkes is dead.”
Scarlett sat down suddenly, the
half-wrapped lunch in her hand.
“I came to tell Melly—but I
couldn’t. You must do it And give her these.”
He hauled from his pockets a heavy gold
watch with dangling seals, a small miniature of the long dead Mrs.
Wilkes and a pair of massive cuff buttons. At the sight of the watch
which she had seen in John Wilkes’ hands a thousand times, the full
realization came over Scarlett that Ashley’s father was really
dead. And she was too stunned to cry or to speak. Uncle Henry
fidgeted, coughed and did not look at her, lest he catch sight of a
tear that would upset him.
“He was a brave man, Scarlett. Tell
Melly that. Tell her to write it to his girls. And a good soldier for
all his years. A shell got him. Came right down on him and his horse.
Tore the horse’s— I shot the horse myself, poor creature. A fine
little mare she was. You’d better write Mrs. Tarleton about that,
too. She set a store on that mare. Wrap up my lunch, child. I must be
going. There, dear, don’t take it so hard. What better way can an
old man die than doing a young man’s work?”
“Oh, he shouldn’t have died! He
shouldn’t have ever gone to the war. He should have lived and seen
his grandchild grow up and died peacefully in bed. Oh, why did he go?
He didn’t believe in secession and he hated the war and—”
“Plenty of us think that way, but
what of it?” Uncle Henry blew his nose grumpily. “Do you think I
enjoy letting Yankee riflemen use me for a target at my age? But
there’s no other choice for a gentleman these days. Kiss me
good-by, child, and don’t worry about me. I’ll come through this
war safely.”
Scarlett kissed him and heard him go
down the steps into the dark, heard the latch click on the front
gate. She stood for a minute looking at the keepsakes in her hand.
And then she went up the stairs to tell Melanie.
At the end of July came the unwelcome
news, predicted by Uncle Henry, that the Yankees had swung around
again toward Jonesboro. They had cut the railroad four miles below
the town, but they had been beaten off by the Confederate cavalry;
and the engineering corps, sweating in the broiling sun, had repaired
the line.
Scarlett was frantic with anxiety. For
three days she waited, fear growing in her heart. Then a reassuring
letter came from Gerald. The enemy had not reached Tara. They had
heard the sound of the fight but they had seen no Yankees.
Gerald’s letter was so full of brag
and bluster as to how the Yankees had been driven from the railroad
that one would have thought he personally had accomplished the feat,
single handed. He wrote for three pages about the gallantry of the
troops and then, at the end of his letter, mentioned briefly that
Carreen was ill. The typhoid, Mrs. O’Hara said it was. She was not
very ill and Scarlett was not to worry about her, but on no condition
must she come home now, even if the railroad should become safe. Mrs.
O’Hara was very glad now that Scarlett and Wade had not come home
when the siege began. Mrs. O’Hara said Scarlett must go to church
and say some Rosaries for Carreen’s recovery.
Scarlett’s conscience smote her at
this last, for it had been months since she had been to church. Once
she would have thought this omission a mortal sin but, somehow,
staying away from church did not seem so sinful now as it formerly
had. But she obeyed her mother and going to her room gabbled a hasty
Rosary. When she rose from her knees she did not feel as comforted as
she had formerly felt after prayer. For some time she had felt that
God was not watching out for her, the Confederates or the South, in
spite of the millions of prayers ascending to Him daily.
That night she sat on the front porch
with Gerald’s letter in her bosom where she could touch it
occasionally and bring Tara and Ellen closer to her. The lamp in the
parlor window threw odd golden shadows onto the dark vine-shrouded
porch, and the matted tangle of yellow climbing roses and honeysuckle
made a wall of mingled fragrance about her. The night was utterly
still. Not even the crack of a rifle had sounded since sunset and the
world seemed far away. Scarlett rocked back and forth, lonely,
miserable since reading the news from Tara, wishing that someone,
anyone, even Mrs. Merriwether, were with her. But Mrs. Merriwether
was on night duty at the hospital, Mrs. Meade was at home making a
feast for Phil, who was in from the front lines, and Melanie was
asleep. There was not even the hope of a chance caller. Visitors had
fallen off to nothing this last week, for every man who could walk
was in the rifle pits or chasing the Yankees about the countryside
near Jonesboro.
It was not often that she was alone
like this and she did not like it. When she was alone she had to
think and, these days, thoughts were not so pleasant. Like everyone
else, she had fallen into the habit of thinking of the past, the
dead.
Tonight when Atlanta was so quiet, she
could close her eyes and imagine she was back in the rural stillness
of Tara and that life was unchanged, unchanging. But she knew that
life in the County would never be the same again. She thought of the
four Tarletons, the red-haired twins and Tom and Boyd, and a
passionate sadness caught at her throat. Why, either Stu or Brent
might have been her husband. But now, when the war was over and she
went back to Tara to live, she would never again hear their wild
halloos as they dashed up the avenue of cedars. And Raiford Calvert,
who danced so divinely, would never again choose her to be his
partner. And the Munroe boys and little Joe Fontaine and—
“Oh, Ashley!” she sobbed, dropping
her head into her hands. “I’ll never get used to you being gone!”
She heard the front gate click and she
hastily raised her head and dashed her hand across her wet eyes. She
rose and saw it was Rhett Butler coming up the walk, carrying his
wide Panama hat in his hand. She had not seen him since the day when
she had alighted from his carriage so precipitously at Five Points.
On that occasion, she had expressed the desire never to lay eyes on
him again. But she was so glad now to have someone to talk to,
someone to divert her thoughts from Ashley, that she hastily put the
memory from her mind. Evidently he had forgotten the contretemps, or
pretended to have forgotten it, for he settled himself on the top
step at her feet without mention of their late difference.
“So you didn’t refugee to Macon! I
heard that Miss Pitty had retreated and, of course, I thought you had
gone too. So, when I saw your light I came here to investigate. Why
did you stay?”
“To keep Melanie company. You see,
she—well, she can’t refugee just now.”
“Thunderation,” he said, and in the
lamplight she saw that he was frowning. “You don’t mean to tell
me Mrs. Wilkes is still here? I never heard of such idiocy. It’s
quite dangerous for her in her condition.”
Scarlett was silent, embarrassed, for
Melanie’s condition was not a subject she could discuss with a man.
She was embarrassed, too, that Rhett should know it was dangerous for
Melanie. Such knowledge sat ill upon a bachelor.
“It’s quite ungallant of you not to
think that I might get hurt too,” she said tartly.
His eyes flickered with amusement.
“I’d back you against the Yankees
any day.”
“I’m not sure that that’s a
compliment,” she said uncertainly.
“It isn’t,” he answered. “When
will you stop looking for compliments in men’s lightest
utterances?”
“When I’m on my deathbed,” she
replied and smiled, thinking that there would always be men to
compliment her, even if Rhett never did.
“Vanity, vanity,” he said. “At
least, you are frank about it.”
He opened his cigar case, extracted a
black cigar and held it to his nose for a moment. A match flared, he
leaned back against a post and, clasping his hands about his knees,
smoked a while in silence. Scarlett resumed her rocking and the still
darkness of the warm night closed about them. The mockingbird, which
nested in the tangle of roses and honeysuckle, roused from slumber
and gave one timid, liquid note. Then, as if thinking better of the
matter, it was silent again.
From the shadow of the porch, Rhett
suddenly laughed, a low, soft laugh.
“So you stayed with Mrs. Wilkes! This
is the strangest situation I ever encountered!”
“I see nothing strange about it,”
she answered uncomfortably, immediately on the alert.
“No? But then you lack the impersonal
viewpoint My impression has been for some time past that you could
hardly endure Mrs. Wilkes. You think her silly and stupid and her
patriotic notions bore you. You seldom pass by the opportunity to
slip in some belittling remark about her, so naturally it seems
strange to me that you should elect to do the unselfish thing and
stay here with her during this shelling. Now, just why did you do
it?”
“Because she’s Charlie’s
sister—and like a sister to me,” answered Scarlett with as much
dignity as possible though her cheeks were growing hot.
“You mean because she’s Ashley’s
Wilkes’ widow.”
Scarlett rose quickly, struggling with
her anger.
“I was almost on the point of
forgiving you for your former boorish conduct but now I shan’t do
it. I wouldn’t have ever let you come upon this porch at all, if I
hadn’t been feeling so blue and—”
“Sit down and smooth your ruffled
fur,” he said, and his voice changed. He reached up and taking her
hand pulled her back into her chair. “Why are you blue?”
“Oh, I had a letter from Tara today.
The Yankees are close to home and my little sister is ill with
typhoid and—and—so now, even if I could go home, like I want to,
Mother wouldn’t let me for fear I’d catch it too. Oh, dear, and I
do so want to go home!”
“Well, don’t cry about it,” he
said, but his voice was kinder. “You are much safer here in Atlanta
even if the Yankees do come than you’d be at Tara. The Yankees
won’t hurt you and typhoid would.”
“The Yankees wouldn’t hurt me! How
can you say such a lie?”
“My dear girl, the Yankees aren’t
fiends. They haven’t horns and hoofs, as you seem to think. They
are pretty much like Southerners—except with worse manners, of
course, and terrible accents.”
“Why, the Yankees would—”
“Rape you? I think not. Though, of
course, they’d want to.”
“If you are going to talk vilely I
shall go into the house,” she cried, grateful that the shadows hid
her crimson face.
“Be frank. Wasn’t that what you
were thinking?”
“Oh, certainly not!”
“Oh, but it was! No use getting mad
at me for reading your thoughts. That’s what all our delicately
nurtured and pure-minded Southern ladies think. They have it on their
minds constantly. I’ll wager even dowagers like Mrs. Merriwether …”
Scarlett gulped in silence, remembering
that wherever two or more matrons were gathered together, in these
trying days, they whispered of such happenings, always in Virginia or
Tennessee or Louisiana, never close to home. The Yankees raped women
and ran bayonets through children’s stomachs and burned houses over
the heads of old people. Everyone knew these things were true even if
they didn’t shout them on the street corners. And if Rhett had any
decency he would realize they were true. And not talk about them. And
it wasn’t any laughing matter either.
She could hear him chuckling softly.
Sometimes he was odious. In fact, most of the time he was odious. It
was awful for a man to know what women really thought about and
talked about. It made a girl feel positively undressed. And no man
ever learned such things from good women either. She was indignant
that he had read her mind. She liked to believe herself a thing of
mystery to men, but she knew Rhett thought her as transparent as
glass.
“Speaking of such matters,” he
continued, “have you a protector or chaperon in the house? The
admirable Mrs. Merriwether or Mrs. Meade? They always look at me as
if they knew I was here for no good purpose.”
“Mrs. Meade usually comes over at
night,” answered Scarlett, glad to change the subject “But she
couldn’t tonight Phil, her boy, is home.”
“What luck,” he said softly, “to
find you alone.”
Something in his voice made her heart
beat pleasantly faster and she felt her face flush. She had heard
that note in men’s voices often enough to know that it presaged a
declaration of love. Oh, what fun! If he would just say he loved her,
how she would torment him and get even with him for all the sarcastic
remarks he had flung at her these past three years. She would lead
him a chase that would make up for even that awful humiliation of the
day he witnessed her slapping Ashley. And then she’d tell him
sweetly she could only be a sister to him and retire with the full
honors of war. She laughed nervously in pleasant anticipation.
“Don’t giggle,” he said, and
taking her hand, he turned it over and pressed his lips into the
palm. Something vital, electric, leaped from him to her at the touch
of his warm mouth, something that caressed her whole body
thrillingly. His lips traveled to her wrist and she knew he must feel
the leap of her pulse as her heart quickened and she tried to draw
back her hand. She had not bargained on this—this treacherous warm
tide of feeling that made her want to run her hands through his hair,
to feel his lips upon her mouth.
She wasn’t in love with him, she told
herself confusedly. She was in love with Ashley. But how to explain
this feeling that made her hands shake and the pit of her stomach
grow cold?
He laughed softly.
“Don’t pull away! I won’t hurt
you!”
“Hurt me? I’m not afraid of you,
Rhett Butler, or of any man in shoe leather!” she cried, furious
that her voice shook as well as her hands.
“An admirable sentiment, but do lower
your voice. Mrs. Wilkes might hear you. And pray compose yourself.”
He sounded as though delighted at her flurry.
“Scarlett, you do like me, don’t
you?”
That was more like, what she was
expecting.
“Well, sometimes,” she answered
cautiously. “When you aren’t acting like a varmint.”
He laughed again and held the palm of
her hand against his hard cheek.
“I think you like me because I am a
varmint. You’ve known so few dyed-in-the-wool varmints in your
sheltered life that my very difference holds a quaint charm for you.”
This was not the turn she had
anticipated and she tried again without success to pull her hand
free.
“That’s not true! I like nice
men—men you can depend on to always be gentlemanly.”
“You mean men you can always bully.
It’s merely a matter of definition. But no matter.”
He kissed her palm again, and again the
skin on the back of her neck crawled excitingly.
“But you do like me. Could you ever
love me, Scarlett?”
“Ah!” she thought, triumphantly.
“Now I’ve got him!” And she answered with studied coolness:
“Indeed, no. That is—not unless you mended your manners
considerably.”
“And I have no intention of mending
them. So you could not love me? That is as I hoped. For while I like
you immensely, I do not love you and it would be tragic indeed for
you to suffer twice from unrequited love, wouldn’t it, dear? May I
call you ‘dear,’ Mrs. Hamilton? I shall call you ‘dear’
whether you like it or not, so no matter, but the proprieties must be
observed.”
“You don’t love me?”
“No, indeed. Did you hope that I
did?”
“Don’t be so presumptuous!”
“You hoped! Alas, to blight your
hopes! I should love you, for you are charming and talented at many
useless accomplishments. But many ladies have charm and
accomplishments and are just as useless as you are. No, I don’t
love you. But I do like you tremendously—for the elasticity of your
conscience, for the selfishness which you seldom trouble to hide, and
for the shrewd practicality in you which, I fear, you get from some
not too remote Irish-peasant ancestor.”
Peasant! Why, he was insulting her! She
began to splutter wordlessly.
“Don’t interrupt,” he begged,
squeezing her hand. “I like you because I have those same qualities
in me and like begets liking. I realize you still cherish the memory
of the godlike and wooden-headed Mr. Wilkes, who’s probably been in
his grave these six months. But there must be room in your heart for
me too. Scarlett, do stop wriggling! I am making you a declaration. I
have wanted you since the first time I laid eyes on you, in the hall
of Twelve Oaks, when you were bewitching poor Charlie Hamilton. I
want you more than I have ever wanted any woman—and I’ve waited
longer for you than I’ve ever waited for any woman.”
She was breathless with surprise at his
last words. In spite of all his insults, he did love her and he was
just so contrary he didn’t want to come out frankly and put it into
words, for fear she’d laugh. Well, she’d show him and right
quickly.
“Are you asking me to marry you?”
He dropped her hand and laughed so
loudly she shrank back in her chair.
“Good Lord, no! Didn’t I tell you I
wasn’t a marrying man?”
“But—but—what—”
He rose to his feet and, hand on heart,
made her a burlesque bow.
“Dear,” he said quietly, “I am
complimenting your intelligence by asking you to be my mistress
without having first seduced you.”
Mistress!
Her mind shouted the word, shouted that
she had been vilely insulted. But in that first startled moment she
did not feel insulted. She only felt a furious surge of indignation
that he should think her such a fool. He must think her a fool if he
offered her a proposition like that, instead of the proposal of
matrimony she had been expecting. Rage, punctured vanity and
disappointment threw her mind into a turmoil and, before she even
thought of the high moral grounds on which she should upbraid him,
she blurted out the first words which came to her lips—
“Mistress! What would I get out of
that except a passel of brats?”
And then her jaw dropped in horror as
she realized what she had said. He laughed until he choked, peering
at her in the shadows as she sat, stricken dumb, pressing her
handkerchief to her mouth.
“That’s why I like you! You are the
only frank woman I know, the only woman who looks on the practical
side of matters without beclouding the issue with mouthings about sin
and morality. Any other woman would have swooned first and then shown
me the door.”
Scarlett leaped to her feet, her face
red with shame. How could she have said such a thing! How could she,
Ellen’s daughter, with her upbringing, have sat there and listened
to such debasing words and then made such a shameless reply? She
should have screamed. She should have fainted. She should have turned
coldly away in silence and swept from the porch. Too late now!
“I will show you the door,” she
shouted, not caring if Melanie or the Meades, down the street, did
hear her. “Get out! How dare you say such things to me! What have I
ever done to encourage you—to make you suppose … Get out and
don’t ever come back here. I mean it this time. Don’t you ever
come back here with any of your piddling papers of pins and ribbons,
thinking I’ll forgive you. I’ll—I’ll tell my father and he’ll
kill you!”
He picked up his hat and bowed and she
saw in the light of the lamp that his teeth were showing in a smile
beneath his mustache. He was not ashamed, he was amused at what she
had said, and he was watching her with alert interest.
Oh, he was detestable! She swung round
on her heel and marched into the house. She grabbed hold of the door
to shut it with a bang, but the hook which held it open was too heavy
for her. She struggled with it, panting.
“May I help you?” he asked.
Feeling that she would burst a blood
vessel if she stayed another minute, she stormed up the stairs. And
as she reached the upper floor, she heard him obligingly slam the
door for her.
CHAPTER XX
AS THE HOT noisy days of August were
drawing to a close the bombardment abruptly ceased. The quiet that
fell on the town was startling. Neighbors met on the streets and
stared at one another, uncertain, uneasy, as to what might be
impending. The stillness, after the screaming days, brought no
surcease to strained nerves but, if possible, made the strain even
worse. No one knew why the Yankee batteries were silent; there was no
news of the troops except that they had been withdrawn in large
numbers from the breastworks about the town and had marched off
toward the south to defend the railroad. No one knew where the
fighting was, if indeed there was any fighting, or how the battle was
going if there was a battle.
Nowadays the only news was that which
passed from mouth to mouth. Short of paper, short of ink, short of
men, the newspapers had suspended publication after the siege began,
and the wildest rumors appeared from nowhere and swept through the
town. Now, in the anxious quiet, crowds stormed General Hood’s
headquarters demanding information, crowds massed about the telegraph
office and the depot hoping for tidings, good tidings, for everyone
hoped that the silence of Sherman’s cannon meant that the Yankees
were in full retreat and the Confederates chasing them back up the
road to Dalton, But no news came. The telegraph wires were still, no
trains came in on the one remaining railroad from the south and the
mail service was broken.
Autumn with its dusty, breathless heat
was slipping in to choke the suddenly quiet town, adding its dry,
panting weight to tired, anxious hearts. To Scarlett, mad to hear
from Tara, yet trying to keep up a brave face, it seemed an eternity
since the siege began, seemed as though she had always lived with the
sound of cannon in her ears until this sinister quiet had fallen. And
yet, it was only thirty days since the siege began. Thirty days of
siege! The city ringed with red-clay rifle pits, the monotonous
booming of cannon that never rested, the long lines of ambulances and
ox carts dripping blood down the dusty streets toward the hospitals,
the overworked burial squads dragging out men when they were hardly
cold and dumping them like so many logs in endless rows of shallow
ditches. Only thirty days!
And it was only four months since the
Yankees moved south from Dalton! Only four months! Scarlett thought,
looking back on that far day, that it had occurred in another life.
Oh, no! Surely not just four months. It had been a lifetime.
Four months ago! Why, four months ago
Dalton, Resaca, Kennesaw Mountain had been to her only names of
places on the railroad. Now they were battles, battles desperately,
vainly fought as Johnston fell back toward Atlanta. And now,
Peachtree Creek, Decatur, Ezra Church and Utoy Creek were no longer
pleasant names of pleasant places. Never again could she think of
them as quiet villages full of welcoming friends, as green places
where she picnicked with handsome officers on the soft banks of
slow-moving streams. These names meant battles too, and the soft
green grasses where she had sat were cut to bits by heavy cannon
wheels, trampled by desperate feet when bayonet met bayonet and
flattened where bodies threshed in agonies. … And the lazy streams
were redder now than ever Georgia clay could make them. Peachtree
Creek was crimson, so they said, after the Yankees crossed it.
Peachtree Creek, Decatur, Ezra Church, Utoy Creek. Never names of
places any more. Names of graves where friends lay buried, names of
tangled underbrush and thick woods where bodies rotted unburied,
names of the four sides of Atlanta where Sherman had tried to force
his army in and Hood’s men had doggedly beaten him back.
At last, news came from the south to
the strained town and it was alarming news, especially to Scarlett.
General Sherman was trying the fourth side of the town again,
striking again at the railroad at Jonesboro. Yankees in large numbers
were on that fourth side of the town now, no skirmishing units or
cavalry detachments but the massed Yankee forces. And thousands of
Confederate troops had been withdrawn from the lines close about the
city to hurl themselves against them. And that explained the sudden
silence.
“Why Jonesboro?” thought Scarlett,
terror striking at her heart at the thought of Tara’s nearness.
“Why must they always hit Jonesboro? Why can’t they find some
other place to attack the railroad?”
For a week she had not heard from Tara
and the last brief note from Gerald had added to her fears. Carreen
had taken a turn for the worse and was very, very sick. Now it might
be days before the mails came through, days before she heard whether
Carreen was alive or dead. Oh, if she had only gone home at the
beginning of the siege, Melanie or no Melanie!
There was fighting at Jonesboro—that
much Atlanta knew, but how the battle went no one could tell and the
most insane rumors tortured the town. Finally a courier came up from
Jonesboro with the reassuring news that the Yankees had been beaten
back. But they had made a sortie into Jonesboro, burned the depot,
cut the telegraph wires and torn up three miles of track before they
retreated. The engineering corps was working like mad, repairing the
line, but it would take some time because the Yankees had torn up the
crossties, made bonfires of them, laid the wrenched-up rails across
them until they were red hot and then twisted them around telegraph
poles until they looked like giant corkscrews. These days it was so
hard to replace iron rails, to replace anything made of iron.
No, the Yankees hadn’t gotten to
Tara. The same courier who brought the dispatches to General Hood
assured Scarlett of that He had met Gerald in Jonesboro after the
battle, just as he was starting to Atlanta, and Gerald had begged him
to bring a letter to her.
But what was Pa doing in Jonesboro? The
young courier looked ill at ease as he made answer. Gerald was
hunting for an army doctor to go to Tara with him.
As she stood in the sunshine on the
front porch, thanking the young man for his trouble, Scarlett felt
her knees go weak. Carreen must be dying if she was so far beyond
Ellen’s medical skill that Gerald was hunting a doctor! As the
courier went off in a small whirlwind of red dust, Scarlett tore open
Gerald’s letter with fingers that trembled. So great was the
shortage of paper in the Confederacy now that Gerald’s note was
written between the lines of her last letter to him and reading it
was difficult.
“Dear Daughter, Your Mother and both
girls have the typhoid. They are very ill but we must hope for the
best. When your mother took to her bed she bade me write you that
under no condition were you to come home and expose yourself and Wade
to the disease. She sends her love and bids you pray for her.”
“Pray for her!” Scarlett flew up
the stairs to her room and, dropping on her knees by the bed, prayed
as she had never prayed before. No formal Rosaries now but the same
words over and over: “Mother of God, don’t let her die! I’ll be
so good if you don’t let her die! Please, don’t let her die!”
For the next week Scarlett crept about
the house like a stricken animal, waiting for news, starting at every
sound of horses’ hooves, rushing down the dark stair at night when
soldiers came tapping at the door, but no news came from Tara. The
width of the continent might have spread between her and home instead
of twenty-five miles of dusty road.
The mails were still disrupted, no one
knew where the Confederates were or what the Yankees were up to. No
one knew anything except that thousands; of soldiers, gray and blue,
were somewhere between Atlanta and Jonesboro. Not a word from Tara in
a week.
Scarlett had seen enough typhoid in the
Atlanta hospital to know what a week meant in that dread disease.
Ellen was ill, perhaps dying, and here was Scarlett helpless in
Atlanta with a pregnant woman on her hands and two armies between her
and home. Ellen was ill—perhaps dying. But Ellen couldn’t be ill!
She had never been ill. The very thought was incredible and it struck
at the very foundations of the security of Scarlett’s life.
Everyone else got sick, but never Ellen. Ellen looked after sick
people and made them well again. She couldn’t be sick. Scarlett
wanted to be home. She wanted Tara with the desperate desire of a
frightened child frantic for the only haven it had ever known.
Home! The sprawling white house with
fluttering white curtains at the windows, the thick clover on the
lawn with the bees busy in it, the little black boy on the front
steps shooing the ducks and turkeys from the flower beds, the serene
red fields and the miles and miles of cotton turning white in the
sun! Home!
If she had only gone home at the
beginning of the siege, when everyone else was refugeeing! She could
have taken Melanie with her in safety with weeks to spare.
“Oh, damn Melanie!” she thought a
thousand times. “Why couldn’t she have gone to Macon with Aunt
Pitty? That’s where she belongs, with her own kinfolks, not with
me. I’m none of her blood. Why does she hang onto me so hard? If
she’d only gone to Macon, then I could have gone home to Mother.
Even now—even now, I’d take a chance on getting home in spite of
the Yankees, if it wasn’t for this baby. Maybe General Hood would
give me an escort. He’s a nice man, General Hood, and I know I
could make him give me an escort and a flag of truce to get me
through the lines. But I have to wait for this baby! … Oh, Mother!
Mother! Don’t die! … Why don’t this baby ever come? I’ll see
Dr. Meade today and ask him if there’s any way to hurry babies up
so I can go home—if I can get an escort. Dr. Meade said she’d
have a bad time. Dear God! Suppose she should die! Melanie dead.
Melanie dead. And Ashley— No, I mustn’t think about that, it
isn’t nice. But Ashley— No, I mustn’t think about that because
he’s probably dead, anyway. But he made me promise I’d take care
of her. But—if I didn’t take care of her and she died and Ashley
is still alive— No, I mustn’t think about ‘that It’s sinful.
And I promised God I’d be good if He would just not let Mother die.
Oh, if the baby would only come. If I could only get away from
here—get home—get anywhere but here.”
Scarlett hated the sight of the
ominously still town now and once she had loved it. Atlanta was no
longer the gay, the desperately gay place she had loved. It was a
hideous place like a plague-stricken city so quiet, so dreadfully
quiet after the din of the siege. There had been stimulation in the
noise and the danger of the shelling. There was only horror in the
quiet that followed. The town seemed haunted, haunted with fear and
uncertainty and memories. People’s faces looked pinched and the few
soldiers Scarlett saw wore the exhausted look of racers forcing
themselves on through the last lap of a race already lost.
The last day of August came and with it
convincing rumors that the fiercest fighting since the battle of
Atlanta was taking place. Somewhere to the south. Atlanta, waiting
for news of the turn of battle, stopped even trying to laugh and
joke. Everyone knew now what the soldiers had known two weeks
before—that Atlanta was in the last ditch, that if the Macon
railroad fell, Atlanta would fall too.
On the morning of the first of
September, Scarlett awoke with a suffocating sense of dread upon her,
a dread she had taken to her pillow the night before. She thought,
dulled with sleep: “What was it I was worrying about when I went to
bed last night? Oh, yes, the fighting. There was a battle, somewhere,
yesterday! Oh, who won?” She sat up hastily, rubbing her eyes, and
her worried heart took up yesterday’s load again.
The air was oppressive even in the
early morning hour, hot with the scorching promise of a noon of
glaring blue sky and pitiless bronze sun. The road outside lay silent
No wagons creaked by. No troops raised the red dust with their
tramping feet. There were no sounds of negroes’ lazy voices in
neighboring kitchens, no pleasant sounds of breakfasts being
prepared, for all the near neighbors except Mrs. Meade and Mrs.
Merriwether had refugeed to Macon. And she could hear nothing from
their houses either. Farther down the street the business section was
quiet and many of the stores and offices were locked and boarded up,
while their occupants were somewhere about the countryside with
rifles in their hands.
The stillness that greeted her seemed
even more sinister this morning than on any of the mornings of the
queer quiet week preceding it. She rose hastily, without her usual
preliminary burrowings and stretchings, and went to the window,
hoping to see some neighbor’s face, some heartening sight. But the
road was empty. She noted how the leaves on the trees were still dark
green but dry and heavily coated with red dust, and how withered and
sad the untended flowers in the front yard looked.
As she stood, looking out of the
window, there came to her ears a far-off sound, faint and sullen as
the first distant thunder of an approaching storm.
“Rain,” she thought in the first
moment, and her country-bred mind added, “we certainly need it.”
But, in a split instant: “Rain? No! Not rain! Cannon!”
Her heart racing, she leaned from the
window, her ear cocked to the far-off roaring, trying to discover
from which direction it came. But the dim thundering was so distant
that, for a moment, she could not tell. “Make it from Marietta,
Lord!” she prayed. “Or Decatur. Or Peachtree Creek. But not from
the south! Not from the south!” She gripped the window still
tighter and strained her ears and the far-away booming seemed louder.
And it was coming from the south.
Cannon to the south! And to the south
lay Jonesboro and Tara—and Ellen.
Yankees perhaps at Tara, now, this
minute! She listened again but the blood thudding in her ears all but
blurred out the sound of far-off firing. No, they couldn’t be at
Jonesboro yet. If they were that far away, the sound would be
fainter, more indistinct. But they must be at least ten miles down
the road toward Jonesboro, probably near the little settlement of
Rough and Ready. But Jonesboro was scarcely more than ten miles below
Rough and Ready.
Cannon to the south, and they might be
tolling the knell of Atlanta’s fall. But to Scarlett, sick for her
mother’s safety, fighting to the south only meant fighting near
Tara. She walked the floor and wrung her hands and for the first time
the thought in all its implications came to her that the gray army
might be defeated. It was the thought of Sherman’s thousands so
close to Tara that brought it all home to her, brought the full
horror of the war to her as no sound of siege guns shattering
windowpanes, no privations of food and clothing and no endless rows
of dying men had done. Sherman’s army within a few miles of Tara!
And even if the Yankees should be defeated, they might fall back down
the road to Tara. And Gerald couldn’t possibly refugee out of their
way with three sick women.
Oh, if she were only there now, Yankees
or not She paced the floor in her bare feet, her nightgown clinging
to her legs and the more she walked the stronger became her
foreboding. She wanted to be at home. She wanted to be near Ellen.
From the kitchen below, she heard the
rattle of china as Prissy prepared breakfast, but no sound of Mrs.
Meade’s Betsy. The shrill, melancholy minor of Prissy was raised,
“Jes’ a few mo’ days, ter tote de wee-ry load …” The song
grated on Scarlett, its sad implications frightening her, and
slipping on a wrapper she pattered out into the hall and to the back
stairs and shouted: “Shut up that singing, Prissy!”
A sullen “Yas’m” drifted up to
her and she drew a deep breath, feeling suddenly ashamed of herself.
“Where’s Betsy?”
“Ah doan know. She ain’ came.”
Scarlett walked to Melanie’s door and
opened it a crack, peering into the sunny room. Melanie lay in bed in
her nightgown, her eyes closed and circled with black, her
heart-shaped face bloated, her slender body hideous and distorted.
Scarlett wished viciously that Ashley could see her now. She looked
worse than any pregnant woman she had ever seen. As she looked,
Melanie’s eyes opened and a soft warm smile lit her face.
“Come in,” she invited, turning
awkwardly on her side. “I’ve been awake since sun-up thinking,
and, Scarlett, there’s something I want to ask you.”
She entered the room and sat down on
the bed that was glaring with harsh sunshine.
Melanie reached out and took Scarlett’s
hand in a gentle confiding clasp.
“Dear,” she said, “I’m sorry
about the cannon. It’s toward Jonesboro, isn’t it?”
Scarlett said “Um,” her heart
beginning to beat faster as the thought recurred.
“I know how worried you are. I know
you’d have gone home last week when you heard about your mother, if
it hadn’t been for me. Wouldn’t you?”
“Yes,” said Scarlett ungraciously.
“Scarlett, darling. You’ve been so
good to me. No sister could have been sweeter or braver. And I love
you for it. I’m so sorry I’m in the way.”
Scarlett stared. Loved her, did she?
The fool!
“And Scarlett, I’ve been lying here
thinking and I want to ask a very great favor of you.” Her clasp
tightened. “If I should die, will you take my baby?”
Melanie’s eyes were wide and bright
with soft urgency.
“Will you?”
Scarlett jerked away her hand as fear
swamped her. Fear roughened her voice as she spoke.
“Oh, don’t be a goose, Melly. You
aren’t going to die. Every woman thinks she’s going to die with
her first baby. I know I did.”
“No, you didn’t You’ve never been
afraid of anything. You are just saying that to try to cheer me up.
I’m not afraid to die but I’m so afraid to leave the baby, if
Ashley is— Scarlett, promise me that you’ll take my baby if I
should die. Then I won’t be afraid. Aunt Pittypat is too old to
raise a child and Honey and India are sweet but—I want you to have
my baby. Promise me, Scarlett And if it’s a boy, bring him up like
Ashley, and if it’s a girl—dear, I’d like her to be like you.”
“God’s nightgown!” cried
Scarlett, leaping from the bed. “Aren’t things bad enough without
you talking about dying?”
“I’m sorry, dear. But promise me. I
think it’ll be today. I’m sure it’ll be today. Please promise
me.”
“Oh, all right, I promise,” said
Scarlett, looking down at her in bewilderment.
Was Melanie such a fool she really
didn’t know how she cared for Ashley? Or did she know everything
and feel that because of that love, Scarlett would take good care of
Ashley’s child? Scarlett had a wild impulse to cry out questions,
but they died on her lips as Melanie took her hand and held it for an
instant against her cheek. Tranquility had come back into her eyes.
“Why do you think it will be today,
Melly?”
“I’ve been having pains since
dawn—but not very bad ones.”
“You have? Well, why didn’t you
call me? I’ll send Prissy for Dr. Meade.”
“No, don’t do that yet, Scarlett.
You know how busy he is, how busy they all are. Just send word to him
that we’ll need him some time today. Send over to Mrs. Meade’s
and tell her and ask her to come over and sit with me. She’ll know
when to really send for him.”
“Oh, stop being so unselfish. You
know you need a doctor as much as anybody in the hospital. I’ll
send for him right away.”
“No, please don’t. Sometimes it
takes all day having a baby and I just couldn’t let the doctor sit
here for hours when all those poor boys need him so much. Just send
for Mrs. Meade. She’ll know.”
“Oh, all right,” said Scarlett.
CHAPTER XXI
AFTER SENDING UP Melanie’s breakfast
tray, Scarlett dispatched Prissy for Mrs. Meade and sat down with
Wade to eat her own breakfast. But for once she had no appetite.
Between her nervous apprehension over the thought that Melanie’s
time was approaching and her unconscious straining to hear the sound
of the cannon, she could hardly eat. Her heart acted very queerly,
beating regularly for several minutes and then thumping so loudly and
swiftly it almost made her sick at her stomach. The heavy hominy
stuck in her throat like glue and never before had the mixture of
parched corn and ground-up yams that passed for coffee been so
repulsive. Without sugar or cream it was bitter as gall, for the
sorghum used for “long sweetening” did little to improve the
taste. After one swallow she pushed her cup away. If for no other
reason she hated the Yankees because they kept her from having real
coffee with sugar and thick cream in it.
Wade was quieter than usual and did not
set up his every morning complaint against the hominy that he so
disliked. He ate silently the spoonfuls she pushed into his mouth and
washed them down with noisily gulped water. His soft brown eyes
followed her every movement, large, round as dollars, a childish
bewilderment in them as though her own scarce-hidden fears had been
communicated to him. When he had finished she sent him off to the
back yard to play and watched him toddle across the straggling grass
to his playhouse with great relief.
She arose and stood irresolutely at the
foot of the stairs. She should go up and sit with Melanie and
distract her mind from her coming ordeal but she did not feel equal
to it. Of all days in the world, Melanie had to pick this day to have
the baby! And of all days to talk about dying!
She sat down on the bottom step of the
stairs and tried to compose herself, wondering again how yesterday’s
battle had gone, wondering how today’s fighting was going. How
strange to have a big battle going on just a few miles away and to
know nothing of it! How strange the quiet of this deserted end of
town in contrast with the day of the fighting at Peachtree Creek!
Aunt Pitty’s house was one of the last on the north side of Atlanta
and with the fighting somewhere to the far south, there were no
reinforcements going by at double-quick, no ambulances and staggering
lines of walking wounded coming back. She wondered if such scenes
were being enacted on the south side of town and thanked God she was
not there. If only everyone except the Meades and the Merriwethers
had not refugeed from this north end of Peachtree! It made her feel
forsaken and alone. She wished fervently that Uncle Peter were with
her so he could go down to headquarters and learn the news. If it
wasn’t for Melanie she’d go to town this very minute and learn
for herself, but she couldn’t leave until Mrs. Meade arrived. Mrs.
Meade. Why didn’t she come on? And where was Prissy?
She rose and went out onto the front
porch and looked for them impatiently, but the Meade house was around
a shady bend in the street and she could see no one. After a long
while Prissy came into view, alone, switching her skirts from side to
side and looking over her shoulder to observe the effect.
“You’re as slow as molasses in
January,” snapped Scarlett as Prissy opened the gate. “What did
Mrs. Meade say? How soon will she be over here?”
“She warn’t dar,” said Prissy.
“Where is she? When will she be
home?”
“Wel’m,” answered Prissy,
dragging out her words pleasurably to give more weight to her
message. “Dey Cookie say Miss Meade done got wud early dis mawnin’
dat young Mist’ Phil done been shot an’ Miss Meade she tuck de
cah’ige an’ Ole Talbot an’ Betsy an’ dey done gone ter fotch
him home. Cookie say he bad hurt an’ Miss Meade ain’ gwine ter be
studyin’ ‘bout comin’ up hyah.”
Scarlett stared at her and had an
impulse to shake her. Negroes were always so proud of being the
bearers of evil tidings.
“Well, don’t stand there like a
ninny. Go down to Mrs. Merriwether’s and ask her to come up or send
her mammy. Now, hurry.”
“Dey ain’ dar, Miss Scarlett. Ah
drapped in ter pass time of de day wid Mammy on mah way home. Dey’s
done gone. House all locked up. Spec dey’s at de horsepittle.”
“So that’s where you were so long!
Whenever I send you somewhere you go where I tell you and don’t
stop to “pass any time’ with anybody. Go—”
She stopped and racked her brain. Who
was left in town among their friends who would be helpful? There was
Mrs. Elsing. Of course, Mrs. Elsing didn’t like her at all these
days but she had always been fond of Melanie.
“Go to Mrs. Elsing’s, and explain
everything very carefully and ten her to please come up here. And,
Prissy, listen to me. Miss Melly’s baby is due and she may need you
any minute now. Now you hurry right straight back.”
“Yas’m,” said Prissy and,
turning, sauntered down the walk at snail’s gait.
“Hurry, you slow poke!”
“Yas’m.”
Prissy quickened her gait
infinitesimally and Scarlett went back into the house. She hesitated
again before going upstairs to Melanie. She would have to explain to
her just why Mrs. Meade couldn’t come and the knowledge that Phil
Meade was badly wounded might upset her. Well, she’d tell a lie
about it.
She entered Melanie’s room and saw
that the breakfast tray was untouched. Melanie lay on her side, her
face white.
“Mrs. Meade’s over at the
hospital,” said Scarlett “But Mrs. Rising is coming. Do you feel
bad?”
“Not very,” lied Melanie.
“Scarlett, how long did it take Wade to get born?”
“Less than no time,” answered
Scarlett with a cheerfulness she was far from feeling. “I was out
in the yard and I didn’t hardly have time to get into the house.
Mammy said it was scandalous—just like one of the darkies.”
“I hope I’ll be like one of the
darkies too,” said Melanie, mustering a smile which suddenly
disappeared as pain contorted her face.
Scarlett looked down at Melanie’s
tiny hips with none too sanguine hopes but said reassuringly: “Oh,
it’s not really so bad.”
“Oh, I know it isn’t. I’m afraid
I’m a little coward. Is—is Mrs. Elsing coming right away?”
“Yes, right away,” said Scarlett.
“I’ll go down and get some fresh water and sponge you off. It’s
so hot today.”
She took as long a time as possible in
getting the water, running to the front door every two minutes to see
if Prissy were coming. There was no sign of Prissy so she went back
upstairs, sponged Melanie’s perspiring body and combed out her long
dark hair.
When an hour had passed she heard
scuffing negro feet coming down the street, and looking out of the
window, saw Prissy returning slowly, switching herself as before and
tossing her head with as many airy affectations as if she had a large
and interested audience.
“Some day, I’m going to take a
strap to that little wench,” thought Scarlett savagely, hurrying
down the stairs to meet her.
“Miss Elsing ober at de horsepittle.
Dey Cookie ‘lows a whole lot of wounded sojers come in on de early
train. Cookie fixin’ soup ter tek over dar. She say—”
“Never mind what she said,”
interrupted Scarlett, her heart sinking. “Put on a clean apron
because I want you to go over to the hospital. I’m going to give
you a note to Dr. Meade, and if he isn’t there, give it to Dr.
Jones or any of the other doctors. And if you don’t hurry back this
time, I’ll skin you alive.”
“Yas’m.”
“And ask any of the gentlemen for
news of the fighting. If they don’t know, go by the depot and ask
the engineers who brought the wounded in. Ask if they are fighting at
Jonesboro or near there.”
“Gawdlmighty, Miss Scarlett!” and
sudden fright was in Prissy’s black face. “De Yankees ain’ at
Tara, is dey?”
“I don’t know. I’m telling you to
ask for news.”
“Gawdlmighty, Miss Scarlett! Whut’ll
dey do ter Maw?”
Prissy began to bawl suddenly, loudly,
the sound adding to Scarlett’s own uneasiness.
“Stop bawling! Miss Melanie will hear
you. Now go change your apron, quick.”
Spurred to speed, Prissy hurried toward
the back of the house while Scarlett scratched a hasty note on the
margin of Gerald’s last letter to her—the only bit of paper in
the house. As she folded it, so that her note was uppermost, she
caught Gerald’s words, “Your mother—typhoid—under no
condition—to come home—” She almost sobbed. If it wasn’t for
Melanie, she’d start home, right this minute, if she had to walk
every step of the way.
Prissy went off at a trot, the letter
gripped in her hand, and Scarlett went back upstairs, trying to think
of some plausible lie to explain Mrs. Elsing’s failure to appear.
But Melanie asked no questions. She lay upon her back, her face
tranquil and sweet, and the sight of her quieted Scarlett for a
while.
She sat down and tried to talk of
inconsequential things, but the thoughts of Tara and a possible
defeat by the Yankees, prodded cruelly. She thought of Ellen dying
and of the Yankees coming into Atlanta, burning everything, killing
everybody. Through it all, the dull far-off thundering persisted,
rolling into her ears in waves of fear. Finally, she could not talk
at all and only stared out of the window at the hot still street and
the dusty leaves hanging motionless on the trees. Melanie was silent
too, but at intervals her quiet face was wrenched with pain.
She said, after each pain: “It wasn’t
very bad, really,” and Scarlett knew she was lying. She would have
preferred a loud scream to silent endurance. She knew she should feel
sorry for Melanie, but somehow she could not muster a spark of
sympathy. Her mind was too torn with her own anguish. Once she looked
sharply at the pain-twisted face and wondered why it should be that
she, of all people in the world, should be here with Melanie at this
particular time—she who had nothing in common with her, who hated
her, who would gladly have seen her dead. Well, maybe she’d have
her wish, and before the day was over too. A cold superstitious fear
swept her at this thought. It was bad luck to wish that someone were
dead, almost as bad luck as to curse someone. Curses came home to
roost, Mammy said. She hastily prayed that Melanie wouldn’t die and
broke into feverish small talk, hardly aware of what she said. At
last, Melanie put a hot hand on her wrist.
“Don’t bother about talking, dear.
I know how worried you are. I’m so sorry I’m so much trouble.”
Scarlett relapsed into silence but she
could not sit still. What would she do if neither the doctor nor
Prissy got there in time? She walked to the window and looked down
the street and came back and sat down again. Then she rose and looked
out of the window on the other side of the room.
An hour went by and then another. Noon
came and the sun was high and hot and not a breath of air stirred the
dusty leaves. Melanie’s pains were harder now. Her long hair was
drenched in sweat and her gown stuck in wet spots to her body.
Scarlett sponged her face in silence but fear was gnawing at her. God
in Heaven, suppose the baby came before the doctor arrived! What
would she do? She knew less than nothing of midwifery. This was
exactly the emergency she had been dreading for weeks. She had been
counting on Prissy to handle the situation if no doctor should be
available. Prissy knew all about midwifery. She’d said so time and
again. But where was Prissy? Why didn’t she come? Why didn’t the
doctor come? She went to the window and looked again. She listened
hard and suddenly she wondered if it were only her imagination or if
the sound of cannon in the distance had died away. If it were farther
away it would mean that the fighting was nearer Jonesboro and that
would mean—
At last she saw Prissy coming down the
street at a quick trot and she leaned out of the window. Prissy,
looking up, saw her and her mouth opened to yell. Seeing the panic
written on the little black face and fearing she might alarm Melanie
by crying out evil tidings, Scarlett hastily put her finger to her
lips and left the window.
“I’ll get some cooler water,” she
said, looking down into Melanie’s dark, deep-circled eyes and
trying to smile. Then she hastily left the room, closing the door
carefully behind her.
Prissy was sitting on the bottom step
in the hall, panting.
“Dey’s fightin’ at Jonesboro,
Miss Scarlett! Dey say our gempmums is gittin’ beat. Oh, Gawd, Miss
Scarlett! Whut’ll happen ter Maw an’ Poke? Oh, Gawd, Miss
Scarlett! Whut’ll happen ter us effen de Yankees gits hyah? Oh,
Gawd—”
Scarlett clapped a hand over the
blubbery mouth.
“For God’s sake, hush!”
Yes, what would happen to them if the
Yankees came—what would happen to Tara? She pushed the thought
firmly back into her mind and grappled with the more pressing
emergency. If she thought of these things, she’d begin to scream
and bawl like Prissy.
“Where’s Dr. Meade? When’s he
coming?”
“Ah ain’ nebber seed him, Miss
Scarlett.”
“What!”
“No’m, he ain’ at de horsepittle.
Miss Merriwether an’ Miss Elsing ain’ dar needer. A man he tole
me de doctah down by de car shed wid the wounded sojers jes’ come
in frum Jonesboro, but Miss Scarlett, Ah wuz sceered ter go down dar
ter de shed—dey’s folkses dyin’ down dar. Ah’s sceered of
daid folkses—”
“What about the other doctors?”
“Miss Scarlett, fo’ Gawd, Ah
couldn’ sceercely git one of dem ter read yo’ note. Dey wukin’
in de horsepittle lak dey all done gone crazy. One doctah he say ter
me, ‘Damn yo’ hide! Doan you come roun’ hyah bodderin’ me
‘bout babies w’en we got a mess of men dyin’ hyah. Git some
woman ter he’p you.’ An’ den Ah went aroun’ an’ about an’
ask fer news lak you done tole me an’ dey all say ‘fightin’ at
Jonesboro’ an’ Ah—”
“You say Dr. Meade’s at the depot?”
“Yas’m. He—”
“Now, listen sharp to me. I’m going
to get Dr. Meade and I want you to sit by Miss Melanie and do
anything she says. And if you so much as breathe to her where the
fighting is, I’ll sell you South as sure as gun’s iron. And don’t
you tell her that the other doctors wouldn’t come either. Do you
hear?”
“Yas’m.”
“Wipe your eyes and get a fresh
pitcher of water and go on up. Sponge her off. Tell her I’ve gone
for Dr. Meade.”
“Is her time nigh, Miss Scarlett?”
“I don’t know. I’m afraid it is
but I don’t know. You should know. Go on up.”
Scarlett caught up her wide straw
bonnet from the console table and jammed it on her head. She looked
in the mirror and automatically pushed up loose strands of hair but
she did not see her own reflection. Cold little ripples of fear that
started in the pit of her stomach were radiating outward until the
fingers that touched her cheeks were cold, though the rest of her
body streamed perspiration. She hurried out of the house and into the
heat of the sun. It was blindingly, glaring hot and as she hurried
down Peachtree Street her temples began to throb from the heat. From
far down the street she could hear the rise and fall and roar of many
voices. By the time she caught sight of the Leyden house, she was
beginning to pant, for her stays were tightly laced, but she did not
slow her gait. The roar of noise grew louder.
From the Leyden house down to Five
Points, the street seethed with activity, the activity of an anthill
just destroyed. Negroes were running up and down the street, panic in
their faces; and on porches, white children sat crying untended. The
street was crowded with army wagons and ambulances filled with
wounded and carriages piled high with valises and pieces of
furniture. Men on horseback dashed out of side streets pell-mell down
Peachtree toward Hood’s headquarters. In front of the Bonnell
house, old Amos stood holding the head of the carriage horse and he
greeted Scarlett with rolling eyes.
“Ain’t you gone yit, Miss Scarlett?
We is goin’ now. Ole Miss packin’ her bag.”
“Going? Where?”
“Gawd knows, Miss. Somewheres. De
Yankees is comin’!”
She hurried on, not even saying
good-by. The Yankees were coming! At Wesley Chapel, she paused to
catch her breath and wait for her hammering heart to subside. If she
did not quiet herself she would certainly faint As she stood
clutching a lamp post for support, she saw an officer on horseback
come charging up the street from Five Points and, on an impulse, she
ran out into the street and waved at him.
“Oh, stop! Please, stop!”
He reined in so suddenly the horse went
back on its haunches, pawing the air. There were harsh lines of
fatigue and urgency in his face but his tattered gray hat was off
with a sweep.
“Madam?”
“Tell me, is it true? Are the Yankees
coming?”
“I’m afraid so.”
“Do you know so?”
“Yes, Ma’m. I know so. A dispatch
came in to headquarters half an hour ago from the fighting at
Jonesboro.”
“At Jonesboro? Are you sure?”
“I’m sure. There’s no use telling
pretty lies, Madam. The message was from General Hardee and it said:
‘I have lost the battle and am in full retreat.’ ”
“Oh, my God!”
The dark face of the tired man looked
down without emotion. He gathered the reins again and put on his hat.
“Oh, sir, please, just a minute. What
shall we do?”
“Madam, I can’t say. The army is
evacuating Atlanta soon.”
“Going off and leaving us to the
Yankees?”
“I’m afraid so.”
The spurred horse went off as though on
springs and Scarlett was left standing in the middle of the street
with the red dust thick upon her ankles.
The Yankees were coming. The army was
leaving. The Yankees were coming. What should she do? Where should
she run? No, she couldn’t run. There was Melanie back there in the
bed expecting that baby. Oh, why did women have babies? If it wasn’t
for Melanie she could take Wade and Prissy and hide in the woods
where the Yankees could never find them. But she couldn’t take
Melanie to the woods. No, not now. Oh, if she’d only had the baby
sooner, yesterday even, perhaps they could get an ambulance and take
her away and hide her somewhere. But now—she must find Dr. Meade
and make him come home with her. Perhaps he could hurry the baby.
She gathered up her skirts and ran down
the street, and the rhythm of her feet was “The Yankees are coming!
The Yankees are coming!” Five Points was crowded with people who
rushed here and there with unseeing eyes, jammed with wagons,
ambulances, ox carts, carriages loaded with wounded. A roaring sound
like the breaking of surf rose from the crowd.
Then a strangely incongruous sight
struck her eyes. Throngs of women were coming up from the direction
of the railroad tracks carrying hams across their shoulders. Little
children hurried by their sides, staggering under buckets of steaming
molasses. Young boys dragged sacks of corn and potatoes. One old man
struggled along with a small barrel of flour on a wheelbarrow. Men,
women and children, black and white, hurried, hurried with straining
faces, lugging packages and sacks and boxes of food—more food than
she had seen in a year. The crowd suddenly gave a lane for a
careening carriage and through the lane came the frail and elegant
Mrs. Elsing, standing up in the front of her victoria, reins in one
hand, whip in the other. She was hatless and white faced and her long
gray hair streamed down her back as she lashed the horse like a Fury.
Jouncing on the back seat of the carriage was her black mammy,
Melissy, clutching a greasy side of bacon to her with one hand, while
with the other and both feet she attempted to hold the boxes and bags
piled all about her. One bag of dried peas had burst and the peas
strewed themselves into the street Scarlett screamed to her, but the
tumult of the crowd drowned her voice and the carriage rocked madly
by.
For a moment she could not understand
what it all meant and then, remembering that the commissary
warehouses were down by the railroad tracks, she realized that the
army had thrown them open to the people to salvage what they could
before the Yankees came.
She pushed her way swiftly through the
crowds, past the packed, hysterical mob surging in the open space of
Five Points, and hurried as fast as she could down the short block
toward the depot. Through the tangle of ambulances and the clouds of
dust, she could see doctors and stretcher bearers bending, lifting,
hurrying. Thank God, she’d find Dr. Meade soon. As she rounded the
corner of the Atlanta Hotel and came in full view of the depot and
the tracks, she halted appalled.
Lying in the pitiless sun, shoulder to
shoulder, head to feet, were hundreds of wounded men, lining the
tracks, the sidewalks, stretched out in endless rows under the car
shed. Some lay stiff and still but many writhed under the hot sun,
moaning. Everywhere, swarms of flies hovered over the men, crawling
and buzzing in their faces, everywhere was blood, dirty bandages,
groans, screamed curses of pain as stretcher bearers lifted men. The
smell of sweat, of blood, of unwashed bodies, of excrement rose up in
waves of blistering heat until the fetid stench almost nauseated her.
The ambulance men hurrying here and there among the prostrate forms
frequently stepped on wounded men, so thickly packed were the rows,
and those trodden upon stared stolidly up, waiting their turn.
She shrank back, clapping her hand to
her mouth feeling that she was going to vomit. She couldn’t go on.
She had seen wounded men in the hospitals, wounded men on Aunt
Pitty’s lawn after the fighting at the creek, but never anything
like this. Never anything like these stinking, bleeding bodies
broiling under the glaring sun. This was an inferno of pain and smell
and noise and hurry—hurry—hurry! The Yankees are coming! The
Yankees are coming! She braced her shoulders and went down among
them, straining her eyes among the upright figures to distinguish Dr.
Meade. But she discovered she could not look for him, for if she did
not step carefully she would tread on some poor soldier. She raised
her skirts and tried to pick her way among them toward a knot of men
who were directing the stretcher bearers.
As she walked, feverish hands plucked
at her skirt and voices croaked: “Lady—water! Please, lady,
water! For Christ’s sake, water!”
Perspiration came down her face in
streams as she pulled her skirts from clutching hands. If she stepped
on one of these men, she’d scream and faint. She stepped over dead
men, over men who lay dull eyed with hands clutched to bellies where
dried blood had glued torn uniforms to wounds, over men whose beards
were stiff with blood and from whose broken jaws came sounds which
must mean:
“Water! Water!”
If she did not find Dr. Meade soon, she
would begin screaming with hysteria. She looked toward the group of
men under the car shed and cried as loudly as she could: “Dr.
Meade! Is Dr. Meade there?”
From the group one man detached himself
and looked toward her. It was the doctor. He was coatless and his
sleeves were rolled up to his shoulders. His shirt and trousers were
as red as a butcher’s and even the end of his iron-gray beard was
matted with blood. His face was the face of a man drunk with fatigue
and impotent rage and burning pity. It was gray and dusty, and sweat
had streaked long rivulets across his cheeks. But his voice was calm
and decisive as he called to her.
“Thank God, you are here. I can use
every pair of hands.”
For a moment she stared at him
bewildered, dropping her skirts in dismay. They fell over the dirty
face of a wounded man who feebly tried to turn his head to escape
from their smothering folds. What did the doctor mean? The dust from
the ambulances came into her face with choking dryness, and the
rotten smells were like a foul liquid in her nostrils.
“Hurry, child! Come here.”
She picked up her skirts and went to
him as fast as she could go across the rows of bodies. She put her
hand on his arm and felt that it was trembling with weariness but
there was no weakness in his face.
“Oh, Doctor!” she cried. “You
must come. Melanie is having her baby.”
He looked at her as if her words did
not register on his mind. A man who lay upon the ground at her feet,
his head pillowed on his canteen, grinned up companionably at her
words.
“They will do it,” he said
cheerfully.
She did not even look down but shook
the doctor’s arm.
“It’s Melanie. The baby. Doctor,
you must come. She— the—” This was no time for delicacy but it
was hard to bring out the words with the ears of hundreds of strange
men listening.
“The pains are getting hard. Please,
Doctor!”
“A baby? Great God!” thundered the
doctor and his face was suddenly contorted with hate and rage, a rage
not directed at her or at anyone except a world wherein such things
could happen. “Are you crazy? I can’t leave these men. They are
dying, hundreds of them. I can’t leave them for a damned baby. Get
some woman to help you. Get my wife.”
She opened her mouth to ten him why
Mrs. Meade could not come and then shut it abruptly. He did not know
his own son was wounded! She wondered if he would still be here if he
did know, and something told her that even if Phil were dying he
would still be standing on this spot, giving aid to the many instead
of the one.
“No, you must come, Doctor. You know
you said she’d have a hard time—” Was it really she, Scarlett,
standing here saying these dreadful indelicate things at the top of
her voice in this hell of heat and groans? “She’ll die if you
don’t come!”
He shook off her hand roughly and spoke
as though he hardly heard her, hardly knew what she said.
“Die? Yes, they’ll all die—all
these men. No bandages, no salves, no quinine, no chloroform. Oh,
God, for some morphia! Just a little morphia for the worst ones. Just
a little chloroform. God damn the Yankees! God damn the Yankees!”
“Give um hell, Doctor!” said the
man on the ground, his teeth showing in his beard.
Scarlett began to shake and her eyes
burned with tears of fright. The doctor wasn’t coming with her.
Melanie would die and she had wished that she would die. The doctor
wasn’t coming.
“Name of God, Doctor! Please!”
Dr. Meade bit his lip and his jaw
hardened as his face went cool again.
“Child, I’ll try. I can’t promise
you. But I’ll try. When we get these men tended to. The Yankees are
coming and the troops are moving out of town. I don’t know what
they’ll do with the wounded. There aren’t any trains. The Macon
line has been captured. … But I’ll try. Run along now. Don’t
bother me. There’s nothing much to bringing a baby. Just tie up the
cord. …”
He turned as an orderly touched his arm
and began firing directions and pointing to this and that wounded
man. The man at her feet looked up at Scarlett compassionately. She
turned away, for the doctor had forgotten her.
She picked her way rapidly through the
wounded and back to Peachtree Street. The doctor wasn’t coming. She
would have to see it through herself. Thank God, Prissy knew all
about midwifery. Her head ached from the heat and she could feel her
basque, soaking wet from perspiration, sticking to her. Her mind felt
numb and so did her legs, numb as in a nightmare when she tried to
run and could not move them. She thought of the long walk back to the
house and it seemed interminable.
Then, “The Yankees are coming!”
began to beat its refrain in her mind again. Her heart began to pound
and new life came into her limbs. She hurried into the crowd at Five
Points, now so thick there was no room on the narrow sidewalks and
she was forced to walk in the street. Long lines of soldiers were
passing, dust covered, sodden with weariness. There seemed thousands
of them, bearded, dirty, their guns slung over their shoulders,
swiftly passing at route step. Cannon rolled past, the drivers
flaying the thin mules with lengths of rawhide. Commissary wagons
with torn canvas covers rocked through the ruts. Cavalry raising
clouds of choking dust went past endlessly. She had never seen so
many soldiers together before. Retreat! Retreat! The army was moving
out.
The hurrying lines pushed her back onto
the packed sidewalk and she smelled the reek of cheap corn whisky.
There were women in the mob near Decatur Street, garishly dressed
women whose bright finery and painted faces gave a discordant note of
holiday. Most of them were drunk and the soldiers on whose arms they
hung were drunker. She caught a fleeting glimpse of a head of red
curls and saw that creature, Belle Watling, heard her shrill drunken
laughter as she clung for support to a one-armed soldier who reeled
and staggered.
When she had shoved and pushed her way
through the mob for a block beyond Five Points the crowd thinned a
little and, gathering up her skirts, she began to run again. When she
reached Wesley Chapel, she was breathless and dizzy and sick at her
stomach. Her stays were cutting her ribs in two. She sank down on the
steps of the church and buried her head in her hands until she could
breathe more easily. If she could only get one deep breath, way down
in her abdomen. If her heart would only stop bumping and drumming and
cavorting. If there were only someone in this mad place to whom she
could turn.
Why, she had never had to do a thing
for herself in all her life. There had always been someone to do
things for her, to look after her, shelter and protect her and spoil
her. It was incredible that she could be in such a fix. Not a friend,
not a neighbor to help her. There had always been friends, neighbors,
the competent hands of willing slaves. And now in this hour of
greatest need, there was no one. It was incredible that she could be
so completely alone, and frightened, and far from home.
Home! If she were only home, Yankees or
no Yankees. Home, even if Ellen was sick. She longed for the sight of
Ellen’s sweet face, for Mammy’s strong arms around her.
She rose dizzily to her feet and
started walking again. When she came in sight of the house, she saw
Wade swinging on the front gate. When he saw her, his face puckered
and he began to cry, holding up a grubby bruised finger.
“Hurt!” he sobbed. “Hurt!”
“Hush! Hush! Hush! Or I’ll spank
you. Go out in the back yard and make mud pies and don’t move from
there.”
“Wade hungwy,” he sobbed and put
tin hurt finger in his mouth.
“I don’t care. Go in the back yard
and—” She looked up and saw Prissy leaning out of the upstairs
window, fright and worry written on her face; but in an instant they
were wiped away in relief as she saw her mistress. Scarlett beckoned
to her to come down and went into the house. How cool it was in the
hall. She untied her bonnet and flung it on the table, drawing her
forearms across her wet forehead. She heard the upstairs door open
and a low wailing moan, wrenched from the depths of agony, came to
her ears. Prissy came down the stairs three at a time.
“Is de doctah come?”
“No. He can’t come.”
“Gawd, Miss Scarlett! Miss Melly bad
off!”
“The doctor can’t come. Nobody can
come. You’ve got to bring the baby and I’ll help you.”
Prissy’s mouth fell open and her
tongue wagged wordlessly. She looked at Scarlett sideways and scuffed
her feet and twisted her thin body.
“Don’t look so simple minded!”
cried Scarlett, infuriated at her silly expression. “What’s the
matter?”
Prissy edged back up the stairs.
“Fo’ Gawd, Miss Scarlett—”
Fright and shame were in her rolling eyes.
“Well?”
“Fo’ Gawd, Miss Scarlett! We’s
got ter have a doctah. Ah—Ah—Miss Scarlett, Ah doan know nuthin’
‘bout bringin’ babies. Maw wouldn’ nebber lemme be ‘round
folkses whut wuz havin’ dem.”
All the breath went out of Scarlett’s
lungs in one gasp of horror before rage swept her. Prissy made a
lunge past her, bent on flight, but Scarlett grabbed her.
“You black liar—what do you mean?
You’ve been saying you knew everything about birthing babies. What
is the truth? Tell me!” She shook her until the kinky head rocked
drunkenly.
“Ah’s lyin’, Miss Scarlett! Ah
doan know huccome Ah tell sech a lie. Ah jes’ see one baby birthed,
an’ Maw she lak ter wo’ me out fer watchin’.”
Scarlett glared at her and Prissy
shrank back, trying to pull loose. For a moment her mind refused to
accept the truth, but when realization finally came to her that
Prissy knew no more about midwifery than she did, anger went over her
like a flame. She had never struck a slave in all her life, but now
she slapped the black cheek with all the force in her tired arm.
Prissy screamed at the top of her voice, more from fright than pain,
and began to dance up and down, writhing to break Scarlett’s grip.
As she screamed, the moaning from the
second floor ceased and a moment later Melanie’s voice, weak and
trembling, called: “Scarlett? Is it you? Please come! Please!”
Scarlett dropped Prissy’s arm and the
wench sank whimpering to the steps. For a moment Scarlett stood
still, looking up, listening to the low moaning which had begun
again. As she stood there, it seemed as though a yoke descended
heavily upon her neck, felt as though a heavy load were harnessed to
it, a load she would feel as soon as she took a step.
She tried to think of all the things
Mammy and Ellen had done for her when Wade was born but the merciful
blurring of the childbirth pains obscured almost everything in mist.
She did recall a few things and she spoke to Prissy rapidly,
authority in her voice.
“Build a fire in the stove and keep
hot water boiling in the kettle. And bring up all the towels you can
find and that ball of twine. And get me the scissors. Don’t come
telling me you can’t find them. Get them and get them quick. Now
hurry.”
She jerked Prissy to her feet and sent
her kitchenwards with a shove. Then she squared her shoulders and
started up the stairs. It was going to be difficult, telling Melanie
that she and Prissy were to deliver her baby.
CHAPTER XXII
THERE WOULD NEVER AGAIN BE an afternoon
as long as this one. Or as hot. Or as full of lazy insolent flies.
They swarmed on Melanie despite the fan Scarlett kept in constant
motion. Her arms ached from swinging the wide palmetto leaf. All her
efforts seemed futile, for while she brushed them from Melanie’s
moist face, they crawled on her clammy feet and legs and made her
jerk them weakly and cry: “Please! On my feet!”
The room was in semigloom, for Scarlett
had pulled down the shades to shut out the heat and brightness. Pin
points of sunlight came in through minute holes in the shades and
about the edges. The room was an oven and Scarlett’s sweat-drenched
clothes never dried but became wetter and stickier as the hours went
by. Prissy was crouched in a corner, sweating too, and smelled so
abominably Scarlett would have sent her from the room had she not
feared the girl would take to her heels if once out of sight Melanie
lay on the bed on a sheet dark with perspiration and splotched with
dampness where Scarlett had spilled water. She twisted endlessly, to
one side, to the other, to left, to right and back again.
Sometimes she tried to sit up and fell
back and began twisting again. At first, she had tried to keep from
crying out, biting her lips until they were raw, and Scarlett, whose
nerves were as raw as the lips, said huskily: “Melly, for God’s
sake, don’t try to be brave. Yell if you want to. There’s nobody
to hear you but us.”
As the afternoon wore on, Melanie
moaned whether she wanted to be brave or not, and sometimes she
screamed. When she did, Scarlett dropped her head into her hands and
covered her ears and twisted her body and wished that she herself
were dead. Anything was preferable to being a helpless witness to
such pain. Anything was better than being tied here waiting for a
baby that took such a long time coming. Waiting, when for all she
knew the Yankees were actually at Five Points.
She fervently wished she had paid more
attention to the whispered conversations of matrons on the subject of
childbirth. If only she had! If only she had been more interested in
such matters she’d know whether Melanie was taking a long time or
not. She had a vague memory of one of Aunt Pitty’s stories of a
friend who was in labor for two days and died without ever having the
baby. Suppose Melanie should go on like this for two days! But
Melanie was so delicate. She couldn’t stand two days of this pain.
She’d die soon if the baby didn’t hurry. And how could she ever
face Ashley, if he were still alive, and tell him that Melanie had
died—after she had promised to take care of her?
At first, Melanie wanted to hold
Scarlett’s hand when the pain was bad but she clamped down on it so
hard she nearly broke the bones. After an hour of this, Scarlett’s
hands were so swollen and bruised she could hardly flex them. She
knotted two long towels together and tied them to the foot of the bed
and put the knotted end in Melanie’s hands. Melanie hung onto it as
though it were a life line, straining, pulling it taut, slackening
it, tearing it. Throughout the afternoon, her voice went on like an
animal dying in a trap. Occasionally she dropped the towel and rubbed
her hands feebly and looked up at Scarlett with eyes enormous with
pain.
“Talk to me. Please talk to me,”
she whispered and Scarlett would gabble something until Melanie again
gripped the knot and again began writhing.
The dim room swam with heat and pain
and droning flies, and time went by on such dragging feet Scarlett
could scarcely remember the morning. She felt as if she had been in
this steaming, dark, sweating place all her life. She wanted very
much to scream every time Melanie did, and only by biting her lips so
hard it infuriated her could she restrain herself and drive off
hysteria.
Once Wade came tiptoeing up the stairs
and stood outside the door, wailing.
“Wade hungwy!” Scarlett started to
go to him, but Melanie whispered: “Don’t leave me. Please. I can
stand it when you’re here.”
So Scarlett sent Prissy down to warm up
the breakfast hominy and feed him. For herself, she felt that she
could never eat again after this afternoon.
The clock on the mantel had stopped and
she had no way of telling the time but as the heat in the room
lessened and the bright pin points of light grew duller, she pulled
the shade aside. She saw to her surprise that it was late afternoon
and the sun, a ball of crimson, was far down the sky. Somehow, she
had imagined it would remain broiling hot noon forever.
She wondered passionately what was
going on downtown. Had all the troops moved out yet? Had the Yankees
come? Would the Confederates march away without even a fight? Then
she remembered with a sick dropping in her stomach how few
Confederates there were and how many men Sherman had and how well fed
they were. Sherman! The name of Satan himself did not frightened her
half so much. But there was no time for thinking now, as Melanie
called for water, for a cold towel on her head, to be fanned, to have
the flies brushed away from her face.
When twilight came on and Prissy,
scurrying like a black wraith, lit a lamp, Melanie became weaker. She
began calling for Ashley, over and over, as if in a delirium until
the hideous monotony gave Scarlett a fierce desire to smother her
voice with a pillow. Perhaps the doctor would come after all. If he
would only come quickly! Hope raising its head, she turned to Prissy,
and ordered her to run quickly to the Meades’ house and see if he
were there or Mrs. Meade.
“And if he’s not there, ask Mrs.
Meade or Cookie what to do. Beg them to come!”
Prissy was off with a clatter and
Scarlett watched her hurrying down the street, going faster than she
had ever dreamed the worthless child could move. After a prolonged
time she was back, alone.
“De doctah ain’ been home all day.
Sont wud he mout go off wid de sojers. Miss Scarlett, Mist’ Phil’s
‘ceased.”
“Dead?”
“Yas’m,” said Prissy, expanding
with importance. Talbot, dey coachman, tole me. He wuz shot—”
“Never mind that.”
“Ah din’ see Miss Meade. Cookie say
Miss Meade she washin’ him an’ fixin ter buhy him fo’ de
Yankees gits hyah. Cookie say effen de pain get too bad, jes’ you
put a knife unner Miss Melly’s bed an’ it cut de pain in two.”
Scarlett wanted to slap her again for
this helpful information but Melanie opened wide, dilated eyes and
whispered: “Dear—are the Yankees coming?”
“No,” said Scarlett stoutly.
“Prissy’s a liar.”
“Yas’m, Ah sho is,” Prissy agreed
fervently.
“They’re coming,” whispered
Melanie undeceived and buried her face in the pillow. Her voice came
out muffled.
“My poor baby. My poor baby.” And,
after a long interval: “Oh, Scarlett, you mustn’t stay here. You
must go and take Wade.”
What Melanie said was no more than
Scarlett had been thinking but hearing it put into words infuriated
her, shamed her as if her secret cowardice was written plainly in her
face.
“Don’t be a goose. I’m not
afraid. You know I won’t leave you.”
“You might as well. I’m going to
die.” And she began moaning again.
Scarlett came down the dark stairs
slowly, like an old woman, feeling her way, clinging to the banisters
lest she fall. Her legs were leaden, trembling with fatigue and
strain, and she shivered with cold from the clammy sweat that soaked
her body. Feebly she made her way onto the front porch and sank down
on the top step. She sprawled back against a pillar of the porch and
with a shaking hand unbuttoned her basque halfway down her bosom. The
night was drenched in warm soft darkness and she lay staring into it,
dull as an ox.
It was all over. Melanie was not dead
and the small baby boy who made noises like a young kitten was
receiving his first bath at Prissy’s hands. Melanie was asleep. How
could she sleep after that nightmare of screaming pain and ignorant
midwifery that hurt more than it helped? Why wasn’t she dead?
Scarlett knew that she herself would have died under such handling.
But when it was over, Melanie had even whispered, so weakly she had
to bend over her to hear: “Thank you.” And then she had gone to
sleep. How could she go to sleep? Scarlett forgot that she too had
gone to sleep after Wade was born. She forgot everything. Her mind
was a vacuum; the world was a vacuum; there had been no life before
this endless day and there would be none hereafter—only a heavily
hot night, only the sound of her hoarse tired breathing, only the
sweat trickling coldly from armpit to waist, from hip to knee,
clammy, sticky, chilling.
She heard her own breath pass from loud
evenness to spasmodic sobbing but her eyes were dry and burning as
though there would never be tears in them again. Slowly, laboriously,
she heaved herself over and pulled her heavy skirts up to her thighs.
She was warm and cold and sticky all at the same time and the feel of
the night air on her limbs was refreshing. She thought dully what
Aunt Pitty would say, if she could see her sprawled here on the front
porch with her skirts up and her drawers showing, but she did not
care. She did not care about anything. Time had stood still. It might
be just after twilight and it might be midnight. She didn’t know or
care.
She heard sounds of moving feet
upstairs and thought “May the Lord damn Prissy,” before her eyes
closed and something like sleep descended upon her. Then after an
indeterminate dark interval, Prissy was beside her, chattering on in
a pleased way.
“We done right good, Miss Scarlett.
Ah specs Maw couldn’ a did no better.”
From the shadows, Scarlett glared at
her, too tired to rail, too tired to upbraid, too tired to enumerate
Prissy’s offenses—her boastful assumption of experience she
didn’t possess, her fright, her blundering awkwardness, her utter
inefficiency when the emergency was hot, the misplacing of the
scissors, the spilling of the basin of water on the bed, the dropping
of the new born baby. And now she bragged about how good she had
been.
And the Yankees wanted to free the
negroes! Well, the Yankees were welcome to them.
She lay back against the pillar in
silence and Prissy, aware of her mood, tiptoed away into the darkness
of the porch. After a long interval in which her breathing finally
quieted and her mind steadied, Scarlett heard the sound of faint
voices from up the road, the tramping of many feet coming from the
north. Soldiers! She sat up slowly, pulling down her skirts, although
she knew no one could see her in the darkness. As they came abreast
the house, an indeterminate number, passing like shadows, she called
to them.
“Oh, please!”
A shadow disengaged itself from the
mass and came to the gate.
“Are you going? Are you leaving us?”
The shadow seemed to take off a hat and
a quiet voice came from the darkness.
“Yes, Ma’m. That’s what we’re
doing. We’re the last of the men from the breastworks, ‘bout a
mile north from here.”
“Are you—is the army really
retreating?”
“Yes, Ma’m. You see, the Yankees
are coming.”
The Yankees are coming! She had
forgotten that. Her throat suddenly contracted and she could say
nothing more. The shadow moved away, merged itself with the other
shadows and the feet tramped off into the darkness. “The Yankees
are coming! The Yankees are coming!” That was what the rhythm of
their feet said, that was what her suddenly bumping heart thudded out
with each beat The Yankees are coming!
“De Yankees is comin’!” bawled
Prissy, shrinking close to her. “Oh, Miss Scarlett, dey’ll kill
us all! Dey’ll run dey baynits in our stummicks! Dey’ll—”
“Oh, hush!” It was terrifying
enough to think these things without hearing them put into trembling
words. Renewed fear swept her. What could she do? How could she
escape? Where could she turn for help? Every friend had failed her.
Suddenly she thought of Rhett Butler
and calm dispelled her fears. Why hadn’t she thought of him this
morning when she had been tearing about like a chicken with its head
off? She hated him, but he was strong and smart and he wasn’t
afraid of the Yankees. And he was still in town. Of course, she was
mad at him. But she could overlook such things at a time like this.
And he had a horse and carriage, too. Oh, why hadn’t she thought of
him before! He could take them all away from this doomed place, away
from the Yankees, somewhere, anywhere.
She turned to Prissy and spoke with
feverish urgency.
“You know where Captain Butler
lives—at the Atlanta Hotel?”
“Yas’m, but—”
“Well, go there, now, as quick as you
can run and tell him I want him. I want him to come quickly and bring
his horse and carriage or an ambulance if he can get one. Tell him
about the baby. Tell him I want him to take us out of here. Go, now.
Hurry!”
She sat upright and gave Prissy a push
to speed her feet.
“Gawdlmighty, Miss Scarlett! Ah’s
sceered ter go runnin’ roun’ in de dahk by mahseff! Spose de
Yankees gits me?”
“If you run fast you can catch up
with those soldiers and they won’t let the Yankees get you. Hurry!”
“Ah’s sceered! Sposin’ Cap’n
Butler ain’ at de hotel?”
“Then ask where he is. Haven’t you
any gumption? If he isn’t at the hotel, go to the barrooms on
Decatur Street and ask for him. Go to Belle Watling’s house. Hunt
for him. You fool, don’t you see that if you don’t hurry and find
him the Yankees will surely get us all?”
“Miss Scarlett, Maw would weah me out
wid a cotton stalk, did Ah go in a bahroom or a ho’ house.”
Scarlett pulled herself to her feet.
“Well, I’ll wear you out if you
don’t. You can stand outside in the street and yell for him, can’t
you? Or ask somebody if he’s inside. Get going.”
When Prissy still lingered, shuffling
her feet and mouthing, Scarlett gave her another push which nearly
sent her headlong down the front steps.
“You’ll go or I’ll sell you down
the river. You’ll never see your mother again or anybody you know
and I’ll sell you for a field hand too. Hurry!”
“Gawdlmighty, Miss Scarlett—”
But under the determined pressure of
her mistress’ hand she started down the steps. The front gate
clicked and Scarlett cried: “Run, you goose!”
She heard the patter of Prissy’s feet
as she broke into a trot, and then the sound died away on the soft
earth.
CHAPTER XXIII
AFTER PRISSY HAD GONE, Scarlett went
wearily into the downstairs hall and lit a lamp. The house felt
steamingly hot, as though it held in its walls all the heat of the
noontide. Some of her dullness was passing now and her stomach was
clamoring for food. She remembered she had had nothing to eat since
the night before except a spoonful of hominy, and picking up the lamp
she went into the kitchen. The fire in the oven had died but the room
was stifling hot. She found half a pone of hard corn bread in the
skillet and gnawed hungrily on it while she looked about for other
food. There was some hominy left in the pot and she ate it with a big
cooking spoon, not waiting to put it on a plate. It needed salt badly
but she was too hungry to hunt for it. After four spoonfuls of it,
the heat of the room was too much and, taking the lamp in one hand
and a fragment of pone in the other, she went out into the hall.
She knew she should go upstairs and sit
beside Melanie. If anything went wrong, Melanie would be too weak to
call. But the idea of returning to that room where she had spent so
many nightmare hours was repulsive to her. Even if Melanie were
dying, she couldn’t go back up there. She never wanted to see that
room again. She set the lamp on the candle stand by the window and
returned to the front porch. It was so much cooler here, and even the
night was drowned in soft warmth. She sat down on the steps in the
circle of faint light thrown by the lamp and continued gnawing on the
corn bread.
When she had finished it, a measure of
strength came back to her and with the strength came again the
pricking of fear. She could hear a humming of noise far down the
street, but what it portended she did not know. She could distinguish
nothing but a volume of sound that rose and fell. She strained
forward trying to hear and soon she found her muscles aching from the
tension. More than anything in the world she yearned to hear the
sound of hooves and to see Rhett’s careless, self-confident eyes
laughing at her fears. Rhett would take them away, somewhere. She
didn’t know where. She didn’t care.
As she sat straining her ears toward
town, a faint glow appeared above the trees. It puzzled her. She
watched it and saw it grow brighter. The dark sky became pink and
then dull red, and suddenly above the trees, she saw a huge tongue of
flame leap high to the heavens. She jumped to her feet, her heart
beginning again its sickening thudding and bumping.
The Yankees had come! She knew they had
come and they were burning the town. The flames seemed to be off to
the east of the center of town. They shot higher and higher and
widened rapidly into a broad expanse of red before her terrified
eyes. A whole block must be burning. A faint hot breeze that had
sprung up bore the smell of smoke to her.
She fled up the stairs to her own room
and hung out the window for a better view. The sky was a hideous
lurid color and great swirls of black smoke went twisting up to hand
in billowy clouds above the flames. The smell of smoke was stronger
now. Her mind rushed incoherently here and there, thinking how soon
the flames would spread up Peachtree Street and burn this house, how
soon the Yankees would be rushing in upon her, where she would run,
what she would do. All the fiends of hell seemed screaming in her
ears and her brain swirled with confusion and panic so overpowering
she clung to the window sill for support.
“I must think,” she told herself
over and over. “I must think.”
But thoughts eluded her, darting in and
out of her mind like frightened humming birds. As she stood hanging
to the sill, a deafening explosion burst on her ears, louder than any
cannon she had ever heard. The sky was rent with gigantic flame. Then
other explosions. The earth shook and the glass in the panes above
her head shivered and came down around her.
The world became an inferno of noise
and flame and trembling earth as one explosion followed another in
ear-splitting succession. Torrents of sparks shot to the sky and
descended slowly, lazily, through blood-colored clouds of smoke. She
thought she heard a feeble call from the next room but she paid it no
heed. She had no time for Melanie now. No time for anything except a
fear that licked through her veins as swiftly as the flames she saw.
She was a child and mad with fright and she wanted to bury her head
in her mother’s lap and shut out this sight. If she were only home!
Home with Mother.
Through the nerve-shivering sounds, she
heard another sound, that of fear-sped feet coming up the stairs
three at a time, heard a voice yelping like a lost hound. Prissy
broke into the room and, flying to Scarlett, clutched her arm in a
grip that seemed to pinch out pieces of flesh.
“The Yankees—” cried Scarlett.
“No’m, its our gempmums!” yelled
Prissy between breaths, digging her nails deeper into Scarlett’s
arm. “Dey’s buhnin’ de foun’ry an’ de ahmy supply depots
an’ de wa’houses an’, fo’ Gawd, Miss Scarlett, dey done set
off dem sebenty freight cahs of cannon balls an’ gunpowder an’,
Jesus, we’s all gwine ter buhn up!”
She began yelping again shrilly and
pinched Scarlett so hard she cried out in pain and fury and shook off
her hand.
The Yankees hadn’t come yet! There
was still time to get away! She rallied her frightened forces
together.
“If I don’t get a hold on myself,”
she thought, “I’ll be squalling like a scalded cat!” and the
sight of Prissy’s abject terror helped steady her. She took her by
the shoulders and shook her.
“Shut up that racket and talk sense.
The Yankees haven’t come, you fool! Did you see Captain Butler?
What did he say? Is he coming?”
Prissy ceased her yelling but her teeth
chattered.
“Yas’m, Ah finely foun’ him. In a
bahroom, lak you told me. He—”
“Never mind where you found him. Is
he coming? Did you tell him to bring his horse?”
“Lawd, Miss Scarlett, he say our
gempmums done tuck his hawse an’ cah’ige fer a amberlance.”
“Dear God in Heaven!”
“But he comin’—”
“What did he say?”
Prissy had recovered her breath and a
small measure of control but her eyes still rolled.
“Well’m, lak you tole me, Ah foun’
him in a bahroom. Ah stood outside an’ yell fer him an’ he come
out. An’ ter-reckly he see me an’ Ah starts tell him, de sojers
tech off a sto’ house down Decatur Street an’ it flame up an’
he say Come on an’ he grab me an’ we runs ter Fibe Points an’
he say den: What now? Talk fas’. An’ Ah say you say, Cap’n
Butler, come quick an’ bring yo’ hawse an’ cah’ige. Miss
Melly done had a chile an’ you is bustin’ ter get outer town. An’
he say: Where all she studyin’ ‘bout goin’? An’ Ah say: Ah
doan know, suh, but you is boun’ ter go fo’ de Yankees gits hyah
an’ wants him ter go wid you. An’ he laugh an’ say dey done
tuck his hawse.”
Scarlett’s heart went leaden as the
last hope left her. Fool that she was, why hadn’t she thought that
the retreating army would naturally take every vehicle and animal
left in the city? For a moment she was too stunned to hear what
Prissy was saying but she pulled herself together to hear the rest of
the story.
“An’ den he say, Tell Miss Scarlett
ter res’ easy. Ah’ll steal her a hawse outer de ahmy crall effen
dey’s ary one lef. An’ he say, Ah done stole hawses befo’ dis
night. Tell her Ah git her a hawse effen Ah gits shot fer it. Den ‘he
laugh agin an’ say, Cut an’ run home. An’ befo’ Ah gits
started Ker-bloom! Off goes a noise an’ Ah lak ter drap in mah
tracks an’ he tell me twarnt nuthin’ but de ammernition our
gempmums blowin’ up so’s de Yankees don’t git it an’—”
“He is coming? He’s going to bring
a horse?”
“So he say.”
She drew a long breath of relief. If
there was any way of getting a horse, Rhett Butler would get one. A
smart man, Rhett. She would forgive him anything if he got them out
of this mess. Escape! And with Rhett she would have no fear. Rhett
would protect them. Thank God for Rhett! With safety in view she
turned practical.
“Wake Wade up and dress him and pack
some clothes for an of us. Put them in the small trunk. And don’t
tell Miss Mellie we’re going. Not yet. But wrap the baby in a
couple of thick towels and be sure and pack his clothes.”
Prissy still dang to her skirts and
hardly anything showed in her eyes except the whites. Scarlett gave
her a shove and loosened her grip.
“Hurry,” she cried, and Prissy went
off like a rabbit.
Scarlett knew she should go in and
quiet Melanie’s fear, knew Melanie must be frightened out of her
senses by the thunderous noises that continued unabated and the glare
that lighted the sky. It looked and sounded like the end of the
world.
But she could not bring herself to go
back into that room just yet. She ran down the stairs with some idea
of packing up Miss Pittypat’s china and the little silver she had
left when she refugeed to Macon. But when she reached the dining
room, her hands were shaking so badly she dropped three plates and
shattered them. She ran out onto the porch to listen and back again
to the dining room and dropped the silver clattering to the floor.
Everything she touched she dropped. In her hurry she slipped on the
rag rug and fell to the floor with a jolt but leaped up so quickly
she was not even aware of the pain. Upstairs she could hear Prissy
galloping about like a wild animal and the sound maddened her, for
she was galloping just as aimlessly.
For the dozenth time, she ran out onto
the porch but this time she did not go back to her futile packing.
She sat down. It was just impossible to pack anything. Impossible to
do anything but sit with hammering heart and wait for Rhett. It
seemed hours before he came. At last, far up the road, she heard the
protesting screech of unoiled axles and the slow uncertain plodding
of hooves. Why didn’t he hurry? Why didn’t he make the horse
trot?
The sounds came nearer and she leaped
to her feet and called Rhett’s name. Then, she saw him dimly as he
climbed down from the seat of a small wagon, heard the clicking of
the gate as he came toward her. He came into view and the light of
the lamp showed him plainly. His dress was as debonair as if he were
going to a ball, well-tailored white linen coat and trousers,
embroidered gray watered-silk waistcoat and a hint of ruffle on his
shirt bosom. His wide Panama hat was set dashingly on one side of his
head and in the belt of his trousers were thrust two ivory-handled,
long-barreled dueling pistols. The pockets of his coat sagged heavily
with ammunition.
He came up the walk with the springy
stride of a savage and his fine head was carried like a pagan prince.
The dangers of the night which had driven Scarlett into panic had
affected him like an intoxicant. There was a carefully restrained
ferocity in his dark face, a ruthlessness which would have frightened
her had she the wits to see it.
His black eyes danced as though amused
by the whole affair, as though the earth-splitting sounds and the
horrid glare were merely things to frighten children. She swayed
toward him as he came up the steps, her face white, her green eyes
burning.
“Good evening,” he said, in his
drawling voice, as he removed his hat with a sweeping gesture. “Fine
weather we’re having. I hear you’re going to take a trip.”
“If you make any jokes, I shall never
speak to you again,” she said with quivering voice.
“Don’t tell me you are frightened!”
He pretended to be surprised and smiled in a way that made her long
to push him backwards down the steep steps.
“Yes, I am! I’m frightened to death
and if you had the sense God gave a goat, you’d be frightened too.
But we haven’t got time to talk. We must get out of here.”
“At your service, Madam. But just
where were you figuring on going? I made the trip out here for
curiosity, just to see where you were intending to go. You can’t go
north or east or south or west The Yankees are all around. There’s
just one road out of town which the Yankees haven’t got yet and the
army is retreating by that road. And that road won’t be open long.
General Steve Lee’s cavalry is fighting a rear-guard action at
Rough and Ready to hold it open long enough for the army to get away.
If you follow the army down the McDonough road, they’ll take the
horse away from you and, while it’s not much of a horse, I did go
to a lot of trouble stealing it. Just where are you going?”
She stood shaking, listening to his
words, hardly hearing them. But at his question she suddenly knew
where she was going, knew that all this miserable day she had known
where she was going. The only place.
“I’m going home,” she said.
“Home? You mean to Tara?”
“Yes, yes! To Tara! Oh, Rhett, we
must hurry!”
He looked at her as if she had lost her
mind.
“Tara? God Almighty, Scarlett! Don’t
you know they fought all day at Jonesboro? Fought for ten miles up
and down the road from Rough and Ready even into the streets of
Jonesboro? The Yankees may be all over Tara by now, all over the
County. Nobody knows where they are but they’re in that
neighborhood. You can’t go home! You can’t go right through the
Yankee army!”
“I will go home!” she cried. “I
will! I will!”
“You little fool,” and his voice
was swift and rough. “You can’t go that way. Even if you didn’t
run into the Yankees, the woods are full of stragglers and deserters
from both armies. And lots of our troops are still retreating from
Jonesboro. They’d take the horse away from you as quickly as the
Yankees would. Your only chance is to follow the troops down the
McDonough road and pray that they won’t see you in the dark. “You
can’t go to Tara. Even if you got there, you’d probably find it
burned down. I won’t let you go home. It’s insanity.”
“I will go home!” she cried and her
voice broke and rose to a scream. “I will go home! You can’t stop
me! I will go home! I want my mother! I’ll kill you if you try to
stop me! I will go home!”
Tears of fright and hysteria streamed
down her face as she finally gave way under the long strain. She beat
on his chest with her fists and screamed again: “I will! I will! If
I have to walk every step of the way!”
Suddenly she was in his arms, her wet
cheek against the starched ruffle of his shirt, her beating hands
stilled against him. His hands caressed her tumbled hair gently,
soothingly, and his voice was gentle too. So gentle, so quiet, so
devoid of mockery, it did not seem Rhett Butler’s voice at all but
the voice of some kind strong stranger who smelled of brandy and
tobacco and horses, comforting smells because they reminded her of
Gerald.
“There, there, darling,” he said
softly. “Don’t cry. You shall go home, my brave little girl. You
shall go home. Don’t cry.”
She felt something brush her hair and
wondered vaguely through her tumult if it were his lips. He was so
tender, so infinitely soothing, she longed to stay in his arms
forever. With such strong arms about her, surely nothing could harm
her.
He fumbled in his pocket and produced a
handkerchief and wiped her eyes.
“Now, blow your nose like a good
child,” he ordered, a glint of a smile in his eyes, “and tell me
what to do. We must work fast.”
She blew her nose obediently, still
trembling, but she could not think what to tell him to do. Seeing how
her lip quivered and her eyes looked up at him helplessly, he took
command.
“Mrs. Wilkes has had her child? It
will be dangerous to move her—dangerous to drive her twenty-five
miles in that rickety wagon. We’d better leave her with Mrs.
Meade.”
“The Meades aren’t home. I can’t
leave her.”
“Very well. Into the wagon she goes.
Where is that simple-minded little wench?”
“Upstairs packing the trunk.”
“Trunk? You can’t take any trunk in
that wagon. It’s almost too small to hold all of you and the wheels
are ready to come off with no encouragement. Call her and tell her to
get the smallest feather bed in the house and put it in the wagon.”
Still Scarlett could not move. He took
her arm in a strong grasp and some of the vitality which animated him
seemed to flow into her body. If only she could be as cool and casual
as he was! He propelled her into the hall but she still stood
helplessly looking at him. His lip went down mockingly: “Can this
be the heroic young woman who assured me she feared neither God nor
man?”
He suddenly burst into laughter and
dropped her arm. Stung, she glared at him, hating him.
“I’m not afraid,” she said.
“Yes, you are. In another moment
you’ll be in a swoon and I have no smelling salts about me.”
She stamped her foot impotently because
she could not think of anything else to do—and without a word
picked up the lamp and started up the stairs. He was close behind her
and she could hear him laughing softly to himself. That sound
stiffened her spine. She went into Wade’s nursery and found him
sitting clutched in Prissy’s arms, half dressed, hiccoughing
quietly. Prissy was whimpering. The feather tick on Wade’s bed was
small and she ordered Prissy to drag it down the stairs and into the
wagon. Prissy put down the child and obeyed. Wade followed her down
the stairs, his hiccoughs stilled by his interest in the proceedings.
“Come,” said Scarlett, turning to
Melanie’s door and Rhett followed her, hat in hand.
Melanie lay quietly with the sheet up
to her chin. Her face was deathly white but her eyes, sunken and
black circled, were serene. She showed no surprise at the sight of
Rhett in her bedroom but seemed to take it as a matter of course. She
tried to smile weakly but the smile died before it reached the
corners of her mouth.
“We are going home, to Tara,”
Scarlett explained rapidly. “The Yankees are coming. Rhett is going
to take us. It’s the only way, Melly.”
Melanie tried to nod her head feebly
and gestured toward the baby. Scarlett picked up the small baby and
wrapped him hastily in a thick towel. Rhett stepped to the bed.
“I’ll try not to hurt you,” he
said quietly, tucking the sheet about her. “See if you can put your
arms around my neck.”
Melanie tried but they fell back
weakly. He bent, slipped an arm under her shoulders and another
across her knees and lifted her gently. She did not cry out but
Scarlett saw her bite her lip and go even whiter. Scarlett held the
lamp high for Rhett to see and started toward the door when Melanie
made a feeble gesture toward the wall.
“What is it?” Rhett asked softly.
“Please,” Melanie whispered, trying
to point. “Charles.”
Rhett looked down at her as if he
thought her delirious but Scarlett understood and was irritated. She
knew Melanie wanted the daguerreotype of Charles which hung on the
wall below his sword and pistol.
“Please,” Melanie whispered again,
“the sword.”
“Oh, all right,” said Scarlett and,
after she had lighted Rhett’s careful way down the steps, she went
back and unhooked the sword and pistol belts. It would be awkward,
carrying them as well as the baby and the lamp. That was just like
Melanie, not to be at all bothered over nearly dying and having the
Yankees at her heels but to worry about Charles’ things.
As she took down the daguerreotype, she
caught a glimpse of Charles’ face. His large brown eyes met hers
and she stopped for a moment to look at the picture curiously. This
man had been her husband, had lain beside her for a few nights, had
given her a child with eyes as soft and brown as his. And she could
hardly remember him.
The child in her arms waved small fists
and mewed softly and she looked down at him. For the first time, she
realized that this was Ashley’s baby and suddenly wished with all
the strength left in her that he were her baby, hers and Ashley’s.
Prissy came bounding up the stairs and
Scarlett handed the child to her. They went hastily down, the lamp
throwing uncertain shadows on the wall. In the hall, Scarlett saw a
bonnet and put it on hurriedly, tying the ribbons under her chin. It
was Melanie’s black mourning bonnet and it did not fit Scarlett’s
head but she could not recall where she had put her own bonnet.
She went out of the house and down the
front steps, carrying the lamp and trying to keep the saber from
banging against her legs. Melanie lay full length in the back of the
wagon, and, beside her, were Wade and the towel-swathed baby. Prissy
climbed in and took the baby in her arms.
The wagon was very small and the boards
about the sides very low. The wheels leaned inward as if their first
revolution would make them come off. She took one look at the horse
and her heart sank. He was a small emaciated animal and he stood with
his head dispiritedly low, almost between his forelegs. His back was
raw with sores and harness galls and he breathed as no sound horse
should.
“Not much of an animal, is it?”
grinned Rhett. “Looks like he’ll die in the shafts. But he’s
the best I could do. Some day I’ll tell you with embellishments
just where and how I stole him and how narrowly I missed getting
shot. Nothing but my devotion to you would make me, at this stage of
my career, turn horse thief—and thief of such a horse. Let me help
you in.”
He took the lamp from her and set it on
the ground. The front seat was only a narrow plank across the sides
of the wagon. Rhett picked Scarlett up bodily and swung her to it.
How wonderful to be a man and as strong as Rhett, she thought,
tucking her wide skirts about her. With Rhett beside her, she did not
fear anything, neither the fire nor the noise nor the Yankees.
He climbed onto the seat beside her and
picked up the reins.
“Oh, wait!” she cried. “I forgot
to lock the front door.”
He burst into a roar of laughter and
slapped the reins upon the horse’s back.
“What are you laughing at?”
“At you—locking the Yankees out,”
he said and the horse started off, slowly, reluctantly. The lamp on
the sidewalk burned on, making a tiny yellow circle of light which
grew smaller and smaller as they moved away.
Rhett turned the horse’s slow feet
westward from Peachtree and the wobbling wagon jounced into the rutty
lane with a violence that wrenched an abruptly stilled moan from
Melanie. Dark trees interlaced above their heads, dark silent houses
loomed up on either side and the white palings of fences gleamed
faintly like a row of tombstones. The narrow street was a dim tunnel,
but faintly through the thick leafy ceiling the hideous red glow of
the sky penetrated and shadows chased one another down the dark way
like mad ghosts. The smell of smoke came stronger and stronger, and
on the wings of the hot breeze came a pandemonium of sound from the
center of town, yells, the dull rumbling of heavy army wagons and the
steady tramp of marching feet. As Rhett jerked the horse’s head and
turned him into another street, another deafening explosion tore the
air and a monstrous skyrocket of flame and smoke shot up in the west.
That must be the last of the ammunition
trains,” Rhett said calmly. “Why didn’t they get them out this
morning, the fools! There was plenty of time. Well, too bad for us. I
thought by circling around the center of town, we might avoid the
fire and that drunken mob on Decatur Street and get through to the
southwest part of town without any danger. But we’ve got to cross
Marietta Street somewhere and that explosion was near Marietta Street
or I miss my guess.”
“Must—must we go through the fire?”
Scarlett quavered.
“Not if we hurry,” said Rhett and,
springing from the wagon, he disappeared into the darkness of a yard.
When he returned he had a small limb of a tree in his hand and he
laid it mercilessly across the horse’s galled back. The animal
broke into a shambling trot, his breath panting and labored, and the
wagon swayed forward with a jolt that threw them about like popcorn
in a popper. The baby wailed, and Prissy and Wade cried out as they
bruised themselves against the sides of the wagon. But from Melanie
there was no sound.
As they neared Marietta Street, the
trees thinned out and the tall flames roaring up above the buildings
threw street and houses into a glare of light brighter than day,
casting monstrous shadows that twisted as wildly as torn sails
flapping in a gale on a sinking ship.
Scarlett’s teeth chattered but so
great was her terror she was not even aware of it. She was cold and
she shivered, even though the heat of the flames was already hot
against their faces. This was hell and she was in it and, if she
could only have conquered her shaking knees, she would have leaped
from the wagon and run screaming back the dark road they had come,
back to the refuge of Miss Pittypat’s house. She shrank closer to
Rhett, took his arm in fingers that trembled and looked up at him for
words, for comfort, for something reassuring. In the unholy crimson
glow that bathed them, his dark profile stood out as clearly as the
head on an ancient coin, beautiful, cruel and decadent. At her touch
he turned to her, his eyes gleaming with a light as frightening as
the fire. To Scarlett, he seemed as exhilarated and contemptuous as
if he got strong pleasure from the situation, as if he welcomed the
inferno they were approaching.
“Here,” he said, laying a hand on
one of the long-barreled pistols in his belt. “If anyone, black or
white, comes up on your side of the wagon and tries to lay hand on
the horse, shoot him and we’ll ask questions later. But for God’s
sake, don’t shoot the nag in your excitement.”
“I—I have a pistol,” she
whispered, clutching the weapon in her lap, perfectly certain that if
death stared her in the face, she would be too frightened to pull the
trigger.
“You have? Where did you get it?”
“It’s Charles’.”
“Charles?”
“Yes, Charles—my husband.”
“Did you ever really have a husband,
my dear?” he whispered and laughed softly.
If he would only be serious! If he
would only hurry!
“How do you suppose I got my boy?”
she cried fiercely.
“Oh, there are other ways than
husbands—”
“Will you hush and hurry?”
But he drew rein abruptly, almost at
Marietta Street, in the shadow of a warehouse not yet touched by the
flames.
“Hurry!” It was the only word in
her mind. Hurry! Hurry!
“Soldiers,” he said.
The detachment came down Marietta
Street, between the burning buildings, walking at route step,
tiredly, rifles held any way, heads down, too weary to hurry, too
weary to care if timbers were crashing to right and left and smoke
billowing about them. They were all ragged, so ragged that between
officers and men there were no distinguishing insignia except here
and there a torn hat brim pinned up with a wreathed “C.S.A.” Many
were barefooted and here and there a dirty bandage wrapped a head or
arm. They went past, looking neither to left nor right, so silent
that had it not been for the steady tramp of feet they might all have
been ghosts.
“Take a good look at them,” came
Rhett’s gibing voice, “so you can tell your grandchildren you saw
the rear guard of the Glorious Cause in retreat.”
Suddenly she hated him, hated him with
a strength that momentarily overpowered her fear, made it seem petty
and small. She knew her safety and that of the others in the back of
the wagon depended on him and him alone, but she hated him for his
sneering at those ragged ranks. She thought of Charles who was dead
and Ashley who might be dead and all the gay and gallant young men
who were rotting in shallow graves and she forgot that she, too, had
once thought them fools. She could not speak, but hatred and disgust
burned in her eyes as she stared at him fiercely.
As the last of the soldiers were
passing, a small figure in the rear rank, his rifle butt dragging the
ground, wavered, stopped and stared after the others with a dirty
face so dulled by fatigue he looked like a sleepwalker. He was as
small as Scarlett, so small his rifle was almost as tall as he was,
and his grime-smeared face was unbearded. Sixteen at the most,
thought Scarlett irrelevantly, must be one of the Home Guard or a
runaway schoolboy.
As she watched, the boy’s knees
buckled slowly and he went down in the dust. Without a word, two men
fell out of the last rank and walked back to him. One, a tall spare
man with a black beard that hung to his belt, silently handed his own
rifle and that of the boy to the other. Then, stooping, he jerked the
boy to his shoulders with an ease that looked like sleight of hand.
He started off slowly after the retreating column, his shoulders
bowed under the weight, while the boy, weak, infuriated like a child
teased by its elders, screamed out: Put me down, damn you! Put me
down! I can walk!”
The bearded man said nothing and
plodded on out of sight around the bend of the road.
Rhett sat still, the reins lax in his
hands, looking after them, a curious moody look on his swarthy face.
Then, there was a crash of falling timbers near by and Scarlett saw a
thin tongue of flame lick up over the roof of the warehouse in whose
sheltering shadow they sat. Then pennons and battle flags of flame
flared triumphantly to the sky above them. Smoke burnt her nostrils
and Wade and Prissy began coughing. The baby made soft sneezing
sounds.
“Oh, name of God, Rhett! Are you
crazy? Hurry! Hurry!”
Rhett made no reply but brought the
tree limb down on the horse’s back with a cruel force that made the
animal leap forward. With all the speed the horse could summon, they
jolted and bounced across Marietta Street. Ahead of them was a tunnel
of fire where buildings were blaring on either side of the short,
narrow street that led down to the railroad tracks. They plunged into
it. A glare brighter than a dozen suns dazzled their eyes, scorching
heat seared their skins and the roaring, crackling and crashing beat
upon their ears in painful waves. For an eternity, it seemed, they
were in the midst of flaming torment and then abruptly they were in
semidarkness again.
As they dashed down the street and
bumped over the railroad tracks, Rhett applied the whip
automatically. His face looked set and absent, as though he had
forgotten where he was. His broad shoulders were hunched forward and
his chin jutted out as though the thoughts in his mind were not
pleasant. The heat of the fire made sweat stream down his forehead
and cheeks but he did not wipe it off.
They pulled into a side street, then
another, then turned and twisted from one narrow street to another
until Scarlett completely lost her bearings and the roaring of the
flames died behind them. Still Rhett did not speak. He only laid on
the whip with regularity. The red glow in the sky was fading now and
the road became so dark, so frightening, Scarlett would have welcomed
words, any words from him, even jeering, insulting words, words that
cut. But he did not speak.
Silent or not, she thanked Heaven for
the comfort of his presence. It was so good to have a man beside her,
to lean close to him and feel the hard swell of his arm and know that
he stood between her and unnamable terrors, even though he merely sat
there and stared.
“Oh, Rhett,” she whispered clasping
his arm, “What would we ever have done without you? I’m so glad
you aren’t in the army!”
He turned his head and gave her one
look, a look that made her drop his arm and shrink back. There was no
mockery in his eyes now. They were naked and there was anger and
something like bewilderment in them. His lip curled down and he
turned his head away. For a long time they jounced along in a silence
unbroken except for the faint wails of the baby and sniffles from
Prissy. When she was able to bear the sniffling noise no longer,
Scarlett turned and pinched her viciously, causing Prissy to scream
in good earnest before she relapsed into frightened silence.
Finally Rhett turned the horse at right
angles and after a while they were on a wider, smoother road. The dim
shapes of houses grew farther and farther apart and unbroken woods
loomed wall-like on either side.
“We’re out of town now,” said
Rhett briefly, drawing rein, “and on the main road to Rough and
Ready.”
“Hurry. Don’t stop!”
“Let the animal breathe a bit.”
Then turning to her, he asked slowly: “Scarlett, are you still
determined to do this crazy thing?”
“Do what?’
“Do you still want to try to get
through to Tara? It’s suicidal. Steve Lee’s cavalry and the
Yankee Army are between you and Tara.”
Oh, Dear God! Was he going to refuse to
take her home, after all she’d gone through this terrible day?
“Oh, yes! Yes! Please, Rhett, let’s
hurry. The horse isn’t tired.”
“Just a minute. You can’t go down
to Jonesboro on this road. You can’t follow the train tracks.
They’ve been fighting up and down mere all day from Rough and Ready
on south. Do you know any other roads, small wagon roads or lanes
that don’t go through Rough and Ready or Jonesboro?”
“Oh, yes,” cried Scarlett in
relief. “If we can just get near to Rough and Ready, I know a wagon
trace that winds off from the main Jonesboro road and wanders around
for miles. Pa and I used to ride it. It comes out right near the
Macintosh place and that’s only a mile from Tara.”
“Good. Maybe you can get past Rough
and Ready all right. General Steve Lee was there during the afternoon
covering the retreat Maybe the Yankees aren’t there yet. Maybe you
can get through there, if Steve Lee’s men don’t pick up your
horse.”
“I can get through?”
“Yes, you.” His voice was rough.
“But Rhett— You—Aren’t going to
take us?”
“No. I’m leaving you here.”
She looked around wildly, at the livid
sky behind them, at the dark trees on either hand hemming them in
like a prison wall, at the frightened figures in the back of the
wagon—and finally at him. Had she gone crazy? Was she not hearing
right?
He was grinning now. She could just see
his white teeth in the faint light and the old mockery was back in
his eyes.
“Leaving us? Where—where are you
going?”
“I am going, dear girl, with the
army.”
She sighed with relief and irritation.
Why did he joke at this time of all times? Rhett in the army! After
all he’d said about stupid fools who were enticed into losing their
lives by a roll of drums and brave words from orators—fools who
killed themselves that wise men might make money!
“Oh, I could choke you for scaring me
so! Let’s get on.”
I’m not joking, my dear. And I am
hurt, Scarlett that you do not take my gallant sacrifice with better
spirit. Where is your patriotism, your love for Our Glorious Cause?
Now is your chance to tell me to return with my shield or on it. But,
talk fast, for I want time to make a brave speech before departing
for the wars.”
His drawling voice gibed in her ears.
He was jeering at her and, somehow, she knew he was jeering at
himself too. What was he talking about? Patriotism, shields, brave
speeches? It wasn’t possible that he meant what he was saying. It
just wasn’t believable that he could talk so blithely of leaving
her here on this dark road with a woman who might be dying, a
new-born infant, a foolish black wench and a frightened child,
leaving her to pilot them through miles of battle fields and
stragglers and Yankees and fire and God knows what.
Once, when she was six years old, she
had fallen from a tree, flat on her stomach. She could still recall
that sickening interval before breath came back into her body. Now,
as she looked at Rhett, she felt the same way she had felt then,
breathless, stunned, nauseated.
“Rhett, you are joking!”
She grabbed his arm and felt her tears
of fright splash down her wrist. He raised her hand and kissed it
arily.
“Selfish to the end, aren’t you, my
dear? Thinking only of your own precious hide and not of the gallant
Confederacy. Think how our troops will be heartened by my
eleventh-hour appearance.” There was a malicious tenderness in his
voice.
“Oh, Rhett,” she wailed, “how can
you do this to me? Why are you leaving me?”
“Why?” he laughed jauntily.
“Because, perhaps, of the betraying sentimentality that lurks in
all of us Southerners. Perhaps—perhaps because I am ashamed. Who
knows?”
“Ashamed? You should die of shame. To
desert us here, alone, helpless—”
“Dear Scarlett! You aren’t
helpless. Anyone as selfish and determined as you are is never
helpless. God help the Yankees if they should get you.”
He stepped abruptly down from the wagon
and, as she watched him, stunned with bewilderment, he came around to
her side of the wagon.
“Get out,” he ordered.
She stared at him. He reached up
roughly, caught her under the arms and swung her to the ground beside
him. With a tight grip on her he dragged her several paces away from
the wagon. She felt the dust and gravel in her slippers hurting her
feet. The still hot darkness wrapped her like a dream.
“I’m not asking you to understand
or forgive. I don’t give a damn whether you do either, for I shall
never understand or forgive myself for this idiocy. I am annoyed at
myself to find that so much quixoticism still lingers in me. But our
fair Southland needs every man. Didn’t our brave Governor Brown say
just that? Not matter. I’m off to the wars.” He laughed suddenly,
a ringing, free laugh that startled the echoes in the dark woods.
“ ‘I could not love thee, Dear, so
much, loved I not Honour more.’ That’s a pat speech, isn’t it?
Certainly better than anything I can think up myself, at the present
moment. For I do love you, Scarlett, in spite of what I said that
night on the porch last month.”
His drawl was caressing and his hands
slid tip her bare arms, warm strong hands. I love you, Scarlett,
because we are so much alike, renegades, both of us, dear, and
selfish rascals. Neither of us cares a rap if the whole world goes to
pot so long as we are safe and comfortable.”
His voice went on in the darkness and
she heard words, but they made no sense to her. Her mind was tiredly
trying to take in the harsh truth that he was leaving her here to
face the Yankees alone. Her mind said: “He’s leaving me. He’s
leaving me.” But no emotion stirred.
Then his arms went around her waist and
shoulders and she felt the hard muscles of his thighs against her
body and the buttons of his coat pressing into her breast A warm tide
of feeling, bewildering, frightening, swept over her, carrying out of
her mind the time and place and circumstances. She felt as limp as a
rag doll, warm, weak and helpless, and his supporting arms were so
pleasant.
“You don’t want to change your mind
about what I said last month? There’s nothing like danger and death
to give an added fillip. Be patriotic, Scarlett Think how you would
be sending a soldier to his death with beautiful memories.”
He was kissing her now and his mustache
tickled her mouth, kissing her with slow, hot lips that were so
leisurely as though he had the whole night before him. Charles had
never kissed her like this. Never had the kisses of the Tarleton and
Calvert boys made her go hot and cold and shaky like this. He bent
her body backward and his lips traveled down her throat to where the
cameo fastened her basque.
“Sweet,” he whispered. “Sweet.”
She saw the wagon dimly in the dark and
heard the treble piping of Wade’s voice.
“Muvver! Wade fwightened!”
Into her swaying, darkened mind, cold
sanity came back with a rush and she remembered what she had
forgotten for the moment—that she was frightened too, and Rhett was
leaving her, leaving her, the damned cad. And on top of it all, he
had the consummate gall to stand here in the road and insult her with
his infamous proposals. Rage and hate flowed into her and stiffened
her spine and with one wrench she tore herself loose from his arms.
“Oh, you cad!” she cried and her
mind leaped about, trying to think of worse things to call him,
things she had heard Gerald call Mr. Lincoln, the Macintoshes and
balky mules, but the words would not come. “You low-down, cowardly,
nasty, stinking thing!” And because she could not think of anything
crushing enough, she drew back her arm and slapped him across the
mouth with all the force she had left. He took a step backward, his
hand going to his face.
“Ah,” he said quietly and for a
moment they stood facing each other in the darkness. Scarlett could
hear his heavy breathing, and her own breath came in gasps as if she
had been running hard.
“They were right! Everybody was
right! You aren’t a gentleman!”
“My dear girl,” he said, “how
inadequate.”
She knew he was laughing and the
thought goaded her.
“Go on! Go on now! I want you to
hurry. I don’t want to ever see you again. I hope a cannon ball
lands right on you. I hope it blows you to a million pieces. I—”
“Never mind the rest. I follow your
general idea. When I’m dead on the altar of my country, I hope your
conscience hurts you.”
She heard him laugh as he turned away
and walked back toward the wagon. She saw him stand beside it, heard
him speak and his voice was changed, courteous and respectful as it
always was when he spoke to Melanie.
“Mrs. Wilkes?”
Prissy’s frightened voice made answer
from the wagon.
“Gawdlmighty. Cap’n Butler! Miss
Melly done fainted away back yonder.”
“She’s not dead? Is she breathing?”
“Yassuh, she breathin’.”
“Then she’s probably better off as
she is. If she were conscious, I doubt if she could live through all
the pain. Take good care of her, Prissy. Here’s a shinplaster for
you. Try not to be a bigger fool than you are.”
“Yassuh. Thankee suh.”
“Good-by, Scarlett.”
She knew he had turned and was facing
her but she did not speak. Hate choked all utterance. His feet ground
on the pebbles of the road and for a moment she saw his big shoulders
looming up in the dark. Then he was gone. She could hear the sound of
his feet for a while and then they died away. She came slowly back to
the wagon, her knees shaking.
Why had he gone, stepping off into the
dark, into the war, into a Cause that was lost, into a world that was
mad? Why had he gone, Rhett who loved the pleasures of women and
liquor, the comfort of good food and soft beds, the feel of fine
linen and good leather, who hated the South and jeered at the fools
who fought for it? Now he had set his varnished boots upon a bitter
road where hunger tramped with tireless stride and wounds and
weariness and heartbreak ran like yelping wolves. And the end of the
road was death. He need not have gone. He was safe, rich,
comfortable. But he had gone, leaving her alone in a night as black
as blindness, with the Yankee Army between her and home.
Now she remembered all the bad names
she had wanted to call him but it was too late. She leaned her head
against the bowed neck of the horse and cried.
CHAPTER XXIV
THE BRIGHT GLARE of morning sunlight
streaming through the trees overhead awakened Scarlett. For a moment,
stiffened by the cramped position in which she had slept, she could
not remember where she was. The sun blinded her, the hard boards of
the wagon under her were harsh against her body, and a heavy weight
lay across her legs. She tried to sit up and discovered that the
weight was Wade who lay sleeping with his head pillowed on her knees.
Melanie’s bare feet were almost in her face and, under the wagon
seat, Prissy was curled up like a black cat with the small baby
wedged in between her and Wade.
Then she remembered everything. She
popped up to a sitting position and looked hastily all around. Thank
God, no Yankees in sight! Their hiding place had not been discovered
in the night. It all came back to her now, the nightmare journey
after Rhett’s footsteps died away, the endless night, the black
road full of ruts and boulders along which they jolted, the deep
gullies on either side into which the wagon slipped, the fear-crazed
strength with which she and Prissy had pushed the wheels out of the
gullies. She recalled with a shudder how often she had driven the
unwilling horse into fields and woods when she heard soldiers
approaching, not knowing if they were friends or foes—recalled,
too, her anguish lest a cough, a sneeze or Wade’s hiccoughing might
betray them to the marching men.
Oh, that dark road where men went by
like ghosts, voices stilled, only the muffled tramping of feet on
soft dirt, the faint clicking of bridles and the straining creak of
leather! And, oh, that dreadful moment when the sick horse balked and
cavalry and light cannon rumbled past in the darkness, past where
they sat breathless, so close she could almost reach out and touch
them, so close she could smell the stale sweat on the soldiers’
bodies!
When, at last, they had neared Rough
and Ready, a few camp fires were gleaming where the last of Steve
Lee’s rear guard was awaiting orders to fall back. She had circled
through a plowed field for a mile until the light of the fires died
out behind her. And then she had lost her way in the darkness and
sobbed when she could not find the little wagon path she knew so
well. Then finally having found it, the horse sank in the traces and
refused to move, refused to rise even when she and Prissy tugged at
the bridle.
So she had unharnessed him and crawled,
sodden with fatigue, into the back of the wagon and stretched her
aching legs. She had a faint memory of Melanie’s voice before sleep
clamped down her eyelids, a weak voice that apologized even as it
begged: “Scarlett, can I have some water, please?”
She had said: “There isn’t any,”
and gone to sleep before the words were out of her mouth.
Now it was morning and the world was
still and serene and green and gold with dappled sunshine. And no
soldiers in sight anywhere. She was hungry and dry with thirst,
aching and cramped and filled with wonder that she, Scarlett O’Hara,
who could never rest well except between linen sheets and on the
softest of feather beds, had slept like a field hand on hard planks.
Blinking in the sunlight, her eyes fell
on Melanie and she gasped, horrified. Melanie lay so still and white
Scarlett thought she must be dead. She looked dead. She looked like a
dead, old woman with her ravaged face and her dark hair snarled and
tangled across it. Then Scarlett saw with relief the faint rise and
fall of her shallow breathing and knew that Melanie had survived the
night.
Scarlett shaded her eyes with her hand
and looked about her. They had evidently spent the night under the
trees in someone’s front yard, for a sand and gravel driveway
stretched out before her, winding away under an avenue of cedars.
“Why, it’s the Mallory place!”
she thought, her heart leaping with gladness at the thought of
friends and help.
But a stillness as of death hung over
the plantation. The shrubs and grass of the lawn were cut to pieces
where hooves and wheels and feet had torn frantically back and forth
until the soil was churned up. She looked toward the house and
instead of the old white clapboard place she knew so well, she saw
there only a long rectangle of blackened granite foundation stones
and two tall chimneys rearing smoke-stained bricks into the charred
leaves of still trees.
She drew a deep shuddering breath.
Would she find Tara like this, level with the ground, silent as the
dead?
“I mustn’t think about that now,”
she told herself hurriedly. “I mustn’t let myself think about it.
I’ll get scared again if I think about it.” But, in spite of
herself, her heart quickened and each beat seemed to thunder: “Home!
Hurry! Home! Hurry!”
They must be starting on toward home
again. But first they must find some food and water, especially
water. She prodded Prissy awake. Prissy rolled her eyes as she looked
about her.
“Fo’ Gawd, Miss Scarlett, Ah din’
spec ter wake up agin ‘cept in de Promise Lan’.”
“You’re a long way from there,”
said Scarlett, trying to smooth back her untidy hair. Her face was
damp and her body was already wet with sweat. She felt dirty and
messy and sticky, almost as if she smelled bad. Her clothes were
crushed and wrinkled from sleeping in them and she had never felt
more acutely tired and sore in all her life. Muscles she did not know
she possessed ached from her unaccustomed exertions of the night
before and every movement brought sharp pain.
She looked down at Melanie and saw that
her dark eyes were opened. They were sick eyes, fever bright, and
dark baggy circles were beneath them. She opened cracking lips and
whispered appealingly: “Water.”
“Get up, Prissy,” ordered Scarlett.
“We’ll go to the well and get some water.”
“But, Miss Scarlett! Dey mout be
hants up dar. Sposin’ somebody daid up dar?”
“I’ll make a hant out of you if you
don’t get out of this wagon,” said Scarlett, who was in no mood
for argument, as she climbed lamely down to the ground.
And then she thought of the horse. Name
of God! Suppose the horse had died in the night! He had seemed ready
to die when she unharnessed him. She ran around the wagon and saw him
lying on his side. If he were dead, she would curse God and die too.
Somebody in the Bible had done just that thing. Cursed God and died.
She knew just how that person felt. But the horse was alive—breathing
heavily, sick eyes half closed, but alive. Well, some water would
help him too.
Prissy climbed reluctantly from the
wagon with many groans and timorously followed Scarlett up the
avenue. Behind the ruins the row of whitewashed slave quarters stood
silent and deserted under the overhanging trees. Between the quarters
and the smoked stone foundations, they found the well, and the roof
of it still stood with the bucket far down the well. Between them,
they wound up the rope, and when the bucket of cool sparkling water
appeared out of the dark depths, Scarlett tilted it to her lips and
drank with loud sucking noises, spilling the water all over herself.
She drank until Prissy’s petulant:
“Well, Ah’s thusty, too, Miss Scarlett,” made her recall the
needs of the others.
“Untie the knot and take the bucket
to the wagon and give them some. And give the rest to the horse.
Don’t you think Miss Melanie ought to nurse the baby? He’ll
starve.”
“Law, Miss Scarlett, Miss Melly ain’
got no milk—ain’ gwine have none.”
“How do you know?”
“Ah’s seed too many lak her.”
“Don’t go putting on any airs with
me. A precious little you knew about babies yesterday. Hurry now. I’m
going to try to find something to eat.”
Scarlett’s search was futile until in
the orchard she found a few apples. Soldiers had been there before
her and there was none on the trees. Those she found on the ground
were mostly rotten. She filled her skirt with the best of them and
came back across the soft earth, collecting small pebbles in her
slippers. Why hadn’t she thought of putting on stouter shoes last
night? Why hadn’t she brought her sun hat? Why hadn’t she brought
something to eat? She’d acted like a fool. But, of course, she’d
thought Rhett would take care of them.
Rhett! She spat on the ground, for the
very name tasted bad. How she hated him! How contemptible he had
been! And she had stood there in the road and let him kiss her—and
almost liked it. She had been crazy last night. How despicable he
was!
When she came back, she divided up the
apples and threw the rest into the back of the wagon. The horse was
on his feet now but the water did not seem to have refreshed him
much. He looked far worse in the daylight than he had the night
before. His hip bones stood out like an old cow’s, his ribs showed
like a washboard and his back was a mass of sores. She shrank from
touching him as she harnessed him. When she slipped the bit into his
mouth, she saw that he was practically toothless. As old as the
hills! While Rhett was stealing a horse, why couldn’t he have
stolen a good one?
She mounted the seat and brought down
the hickory limb on his back. He wheezed and started, but he walked
so slowly as she turned him into the road she knew she could walk
faster herself with no effort whatever. Oh, if only she didn’t have
Melanie and Wade and the baby and Prissy to bother with! How swiftly
she could walk home! Why, she would run home, run every step of the
way that would bring her closer to Tara and to Mother.
They couldn’t be more than fifteen
miles from home, but at the rate this old nag traveled it would take
all day, for she would have to stop frequently to rest him. All day!
She looked down the glaring red road, cut in deep ruts where cannon
wheels and ambulances had gone over it. It would be hours before she
knew if Tara still stood and if Ellen were there. It would be hours
before she finished her journey under the broiling September sun.
She looked back at Melanie who lay with
sick eyes closed against the sun and jerked loose the strings of her
bonnet and tossed it to Prissy.
“Put that over her face. It’ll keep
the sun out of her eyes.” Then as the heat beat down upon her
unprotected head, she thought: “I’ll be as freckled as a guinea
egg before this day is over.”
She had never in her life been out in
the sunshine without a hat or veils, never handled reins without
gloves to protect the white skin of her dimpled hands. Yet here she
was exposed to the sun in a broken-down wagon with a broken-down
horse, dirty, sweaty, hungry, helpless to do anything but plod along
at a snail’s pace through a deserted land. What a few short weeks
it had been since she was safe and secure! What a little while since
she and everyone else had thought that Atlanta could never fall, that
Georgia could never be invaded. But the small cloud which appeared in
the northwest four months ago had blown up into a mighty storm and
men into a screaming tornado, sweeping away her world, whirling her
out of her sheltered life, and dropping her down in the midst of this
still, haunted desolation.
Was Tara still standing? Or was Tara
also gone with the wind which had swept through Georgia?
She laid the whip on the tired horse’s
back and tried to urge him on while the waggling wheels rocked them
drunkenly from side to side.
¯
There was death in the air. In the rays
of the late afternoon sun, every well-remembered field and forest
grove was green and still, with an unearthly quiet that struck terror
to Scarlett’s heart. Every empty, shell-pitted house they had
passed that day, every gaunt chimney standing sentinel over
smoke-blackened ruins, had frightened her more. They had not seen a
living human being or animal since the night before. Dead men and
dead horses, yes, and dead mules, lying by the road, swollen, covered
with flies, but nothing alive. No far-off cattle lowed, no birds
sang, no wind waved the trees. Only the tired plop-plop of the
horse’s feet and the weak wailing of Melanie’s baby broke the
stillness.
The countryside lay as under some dread
enchantment Or worse still, thought Scarlett with a chill, like the
familiar and dear face of a mother, beautiful and quiet at last,
after death agonies. She felt that the once-familiar woods were full
of ghosts. Thousands had died in the fighting near Jonesboro. They
were here in these haunted woods where the slanting afternoon sun
gleamed eerily through unmoving leaves, friends and foes, peering at
her in her rickety wagon, through eyes blinded with blood and red
dust—glazed, horrible eyes.
“Mother! Mother!” she whispered. If
she could only win to Ellen! If only, by a miracle of God, Tara were
still standing and she could drive up the long avenue of trees and go
into the house and see her mother’s kind, tender face, could feel
once more the soft capable hands that drove out fear, could clutch
Ellen’s skirts and bury her face in them. Mother would know what to
do. She wouldn’t let Melanie and her baby die. She would drive away
all ghosts and fears with her quiet “Hush, hush.” But Mother was
ill, perhaps dying.
Scarlett laid the whip across the weary
rump of the horse. They must go faster! They had crept along this
never-ending road all the long hot day. Soon it would be night and
they would be alone in this desolation that was death. She gripped
the reins tighter with hands that were blistered and slapped them
fiercely on the horse’s back, her aching arms burning at the
movement.
If she could only reach the kind arms
of Tara and Ellen and lay down her burdens, far too heavy for her
young shoulders—the dying woman, the fading baby, her own hungry
little boy, the frightened negro, all looking to her for strength,
for guidance, all reading in her straight back courage she did not
possess and strength which had long since failed.
The exhausted horse did not respond to
the whip or reins but shambled on, dragging his feet, stumbling on
small rocks and swaying as if ready to fall to his knees. But, as
twilight came, they at last entered the final lap of the long
journey. They rounded the bend of the wagon path and turned into the
main road. Tara was only a mile away!
Here loomed up the dark bulk of the
mock-orange hedge that marked the beginning of the Macintosh
property. A little farther on, Scarlett drew rein in front of the
avenue of oaks that led from the road to old Angus Macintosh’s
house. She peered through the gathering dusk down the two lines of
ancient trees. All was dark. Not a single light showed in the house
or in the quarters. Straining her eyes in the darkness she dimly
discerned a sight which had grown familiar through that terrible
day—two tall chimneys, like gigantic tombstones towering above the
ruined second floor, and broken unlit windows blotching the walls
like still, blind eyes.
“Hello!” she shouted, summoning all
her strength. “Hello!”
Prissy clawed at her in a frenzy of
fright and Scarlett, turning, saw that her eyes were rolling in her
head.
“Doan holler, Miss Scarlett! Please,
doan holler agin!” she whispered, her voice shaking. “Dey ain’
no tellin’ whut mout answer!”
“Dear God!” thought Scarlett, a
shiver running through her. “Dear God! She’s right Anything might
come out of there!”
She flapped the reins and urged the
horse forward. The sight of the Macintosh house had pricked the last
bubble of hope remaining to her. It was burned, in rums, deserted, as
were all the plantations she had passed that day. Tara lay only half
a mite away, on the same road, right in the path of the army. Tara
was leveled, too! She would find only the blackened bricks, starlight
shining through the roofless walls, Ellen and Gerald gone, the girls
gone, Mammy gone, the negroes gone, God knows where, and this hideous
stillness over everything.
Why had she come on this fool’s
errand, against all common sense, dragging Melanie and her child?
Better that they had died in Atlanta than, tortured by this day of
burning sun and jolting wagon, to die in the silent ruins of Tara.
But Ashley had left Melanie in her
care. Take care of her.” Oh, that beautiful, heartbreaking day when
he had kissed her good-by before he went away forever! “You’ll
take care of her, won’t you? Promise!” And she had promised. Why
had she ever bound herself with such a promise, doubly binding now
that Ashley was gone? Even in her exhaustion she hated Melanie, hated
the tiny mewing voice of her child which, fainter and fainter,
pierced the stillness. But she had promised and now they belonged to
her, even as Wade and Prissy belonged to her, and she must struggle
and fight for them as long as she had strength or breath. She could
have left them in Atlanta, dumped Melanie into the hospital and
deserted her. But had she done that, she could never face Ashley,
either on this earth or in the hereafter and tell him she had left
his wife and child to die among strangers.
Oh, Ashley! Where was he tonight while
she toiled down this haunted road with his wife and baby? Was he
alive and did he think of her as he lay behind the bars at Rock
Island? Or was he dead of smallpox months ago, rotting in some long
ditch with hundreds of other Confederates?
Scarlett’s taut nerves almost cracked
as a sudden noise sounded in the underbrush near them. Prissy
screamed loudly, throwing herself to the floor of the wagon, the baby
beneath her. Melanie stirred feebly, her hands seeking the baby, and
Wade covered his eyes and cowered, too frightened to cry. Then the
bushes beside them crashed apart under heavy hooves and a low moaning
bawl assaulted their ears.
“It’s only a cow,” said Scarlett,
her voice rough with fright. “Don’t be a fool, Prissy. You’ve
mashed the baby and frightened Miss Melly and Wade.”
“It’s a ghos’,” moaned Prissy,
writhing face down on the wagon boards.
Turning deliberately, Scarlett raised
the tree limb she had been using as a whip and brought it down across
Prissy’s back. She was too exhausted and weak from fright to
tolerate weakness in anyone else.
“Sit up, you fool,” she said,
“before I wear this out on you.”
Yelping, Prissy raised her head and
peering over the side of the wagon saw it was, indeed, a cow, a red
and white animal which stood looking at them appealingly with large
frightened eyes. Opening its mouth, it lowed again as if in pain.
“Is it hurt? That doesn’t sound
like an ordinary moo.”
“Soun’ ter me lak her bag full an’
she need milkin’ bad,” said Prissy, regaining some measure of
control. “Spec it one of Mist’ Macintosh’s dat de niggers driv
in de woods an’ de Yankees din’ git.”
“Well take it with us,” Scarlett
decided swiftly. “Then we can have some milk for the baby.”
“How all we gwine tek a cow wid us,
Miss Scarlett? We kain tek no cow wid us. Cow ain’ no good nohow
effen she ain’ been milked lately. Dey bags swells up and busts.
Dat’s why she hollerin’.”
“Since you know so much about it,
take off your petticoat and tear it up and tie her to the back of the
wagon.”
“Miss Scarlett, you knows Ah ain’
had no petticoat fer a month an’ did Ah have one, Ah wouldn’ put
it on her fer nuthin’. Ah nebber had no truck wid cows. Ah’s
sceered of cows.”
Scarlett laid down the reins and pulled
up her skirt. The lace-trimmed petticoat beneath was the last garment
she possessed that was pretty—and whole. She untied the waist tape
and slipped it down over her feet, crushing the soft linen folds
between her hands. Rhett had brought her that linen and lace from
Nassau on the last boat he slipped through the blockade and she had
worked a week to make the garment. Resolutely she took it by the hem
and jerked, put it in her mouth and gnawed, until finally the
material gave with a rip and tore the length. She gnawed furiously,
tore with both hands and the petticoat lay in strips in her hands.
She knotted the ends with fingers that bled from blisters and shook
from fatigue.
“Slip this over her horns,” she
directed. But Prissy balked.
“Ah’s sceered of cows, Miss
Scarlett. Ah ain’ nebber had nuthin’ ter do wid cows. Ah ain’
no yard nigger. Ah’s a house nigger.”
“You’re a fool nigger, and the
worst day’s work Pa ever did was to buy you,” said Scarlett
slowly, too tired for anger. “And if I ever get the use of my arm
again, I’ll wear this whip out on you.”
There, she thought, I’ve said
“nigger” and Mother wouldn’t like that at all.
Prissy rolled her eyes wildly, peeping
first at the set face of her mistress and then at the cow which
bawled plaintively. Scarlett seemed the less dangerous of the two, so
Prissy clutched at the sides of the wagon and remained where she was.
Stiffly, Scarlett climbed down from the
seat, each movement of agony of aching muscles. Prissy was not the
only one who was “sceered” of cows. Scarlett had always feared
them, even the mildest cow seemed sinister to her, but this was no
time to truckle to small fears when great ones crowded so thick upon
her. Fortunately the cow was gentle. In its pain it had sought human
companionship and help and it made no threatening gesture as she
looped one end of the torn petticoat about its horns. She tied the
other end to the back of the wagon, as securely as her awkward
fingers would permit. Then, as she started back toward the driver’s
seat, a vast weariness assailed her and she swayed dizzily. She
clutched the side of the wagon to keep from falling.
Melanie opened her eyes and, seeing
Scarlett standing beside her, whispered: “Dear—are we home?”
Home! Hot tears came to Scarlett’s
eyes at the word. Home. Melanie did not know there was no home and
that they were alone in a mad and desolate world.
“Not yet,” she said, as gently as
the constriction of her throat would permit, “but we will be, soon.
I’ve just found a cow and soon well have some milk for you and the
baby.”
“Poor baby,” whispered Melanie, her
hand creeping feebly toward the child and falling short.
Climbing back into the wagon required
all the strength Scarlett could muster, but at last it was done and
she picked up the lines. The horse stood with head drooping
dejectedly and refused to start. Scarlett laid on the whip
mercilessly. She hoped God would forgive her for hurting a tired
animal. If He didn’t she was sorry. After all, Tara lay just ahead,
and after the next quarter of a mile, the horse could drop in the
shafts if he liked.
Finally he started slowly, the wagon
creaking and the cow lowing mournfully at every step. The pained
animal’s voice rasped on Scarlett’s nerves until she was tempted
to stop and untie the beast. What good would the cow do them anyway
if there should be no one at Tara? She couldn’t milk her and, even
if she could, the animal would probably kick anyone who touched her
sore udder. But she had the cow and she might as well keep her. There
was little else she had in this world now.
Scarlett’s eyes grew misty when, at
last, they reached the bottom of a gentle incline, for just over the
rise lay Tara! Then her heart sank. The decrepit animal would never
pull the hill. The slope had always seemed so slight, so gradual, in
days when she galloped up it on her fleet-footed mare. It did not
seem possible it could have grown so steep since she saw it last. The
horse would never make it with the heavy load.
Wearily she dismounted and took the
animal by the bridle.
“Get out, Prissy,” she commanded,
“and take Wade. Either carry him or make him walk. Lay the baby by
Miss Melanie.”
Wade broke into sobs and whimperings
from which Scarlett could only distinguish: “Dark—dark— Wade
fwightened!”
“Miss Scarlett, Ah kain walk. Mah
feets done blistered an’ dey’s thoo mah shoes, an’ Wade an’
me doan weigh so much an’—”
“Get out! Get out before I pull you
out! And if I do, I’m going to leave you right here, in the dark by
yourself. Quick, now!”
Prissy moaned, peering at the dark
trees that closed about them on both sides of the road—trees which
might reach out and clutch her if she left the shelter of the wagon.
But she laid the baby beside Melanie, scrambled to the ground and,
reaching up, lifted Wade out. The little boy sobbed, shrinking close
to his nurse.
“Make him hush. I can’t stand it,”
said Scarlett, taking the horse by the bridle and pulling him to a
reluctant start. “Be a little man, Wade, and stop crying or I will
come over there and slap you.”
Why had God invented children, she
thought savagely as she turned her ankle cruelly on the dark
road—useless, crying nuisances they were, always demanding care,
always in the way. In her exhaustion, there was no room for
compassion for the frightened child, trotting by Prissy’s side,
dragging at her hand and sniffling—only a weariness that she had
borne him, only a tired wonder that she had ever married Charles
Hamilton.
“Miss Scarlett” whispered Prissy,
clutching her mistress’ arm, “doan le’s go ter Tara. Dey’s
not dar. Dey’s all done gone. Maybe dey daid—Maw an’ all’m.”
The echo of her own thoughts infuriated
her and Scarlett shook off the pinching fingers.
“Then give me Wade’s hand. You can
sit right down here and stay.”
“No’m! No’m!”
Then hush!”
How slowly the horse moved! The
moisture from his slobbering mouth dripped down upon her hand.
Through her mind ran a few words of the song she had once sung with
Rhett—she could not recall the rest:
“Just a few more days for to tote the
weary load—”
“Just a few more steps,” hummed her
brain, over and over, “just a few more steps for to tote the weary
load.”
Then they topped the rise and before
them lay the oaks of Tara, a towering dark mass against the darkening
sky. Scarlett looked hastily to see if there was a light anywhere.
There was none.
“They are gone!” said her heart,
like cold lead in her breast. “Gone!”
She turned the horse’s head into the
driveway, and the cedars, meeting over their heads, cast them into
midnight blackness. Peering up the long tunnel of darkness, straining
her eyes, she saw ahead—or did she see? Were her tired eyes playing
her tricks?—the white bricks of Tara blurred and indistinct Home!
Home! The dear white walls, the windows with the fluttering curtains,
the wide verandas—were they all there ahead of her, in the gloom?
Or did the darkness mercifully conceal such a horror as the Macintosh
house?
The avenue seemed miles long and the
horse, pulling stubbornly at her hand, plopped slower and slower.
Eagerly her eyes searched the darkness. The roof seemed to be intact
Could it be—could it be—? No, it wasn’t possible. War stopped
for nothing, not even Tara, built to last five hundred years. It
could not have passed over Tara.
Then the shadowy outline did take form.
She pulled the horse forward faster. The white walls did show there
through the darkness. And untarnished by smoke. Tara had escaped!
Home! She dropped the bridle and ran the last few steps, leaped
forward with an urge to clutch the walls themselves in her arms. Then
she saw a form, shadowy in the dimness, emerging from the blackness
of the front veranda and standing at the top of the steps. Tara was
not deserted. Someone was home!
A cry of joy rose to her throat and
died there. The house was so dark and still and the figure did not
move or call to her. What was wrong? What was wrong? Tara stood
intact, yet shrouded with the same eerie quiet that hung over the
whole stricken countryside. Then the figure moved. Stiffly and
slowly, it came down the steps.
“Pa?” she whispered huskily,
doubting almost that it was he. “It’s me—Katie Scarlett. I’ve
come home.”
Gerald moved toward her, silent as a
sleepwalker, his stiff leg dragging. He came close to her, looking at
her in a dazed way as if he believed she was part of a dream. Putting
out his hand, he laid it on her shoulder. Scarlett felt it tremble,
tremble as if he had been awakened from a nightmare into a half-sense
of reality.
“Daughter,” he said with an effort
“Daughter.”
Then he was silent
Why—he’s an old man! thought
Scarlett
Gerald’s shoulders sagged. In the
face which she could only see dimly, there was none of the virility,
the restless vitality of Gerald, and the eyes that looked into hers
had almost the same fear-stunned look that lay in little Wade’s
eyes. He was only a little old man and broken.
And now, fear of unknown things seized
her, leaped swiftly out of the darkness at her and she could only
stand and stare at him, all the flood of questioning dammed up at her
lips.
From the wagon the faint wailing
sounded again and Gerald seemed to rouse himself with an effort
“It’s Melanie and her baby,”
whispered Scarlett rapidly. “She’s very ill—I brought her
home.”
Gerald dropped his hand from her arm
and straightened his shoulders. As he moved slowly to the side of the
wagon, there was a ghostly semblance of the old host of Tara
welcoming guests, as if Gerald spoke words from out of shadowy
memory.
“Cousin Melanie!”
Melanie’s voice murmured
indistinctly.
“Cousin Melanie, this is your home.
Twelve Oaks is burned. You must stay with us.”
Thoughts of Melanie’s prolonged
suffering spurred Scarlett to action. The present was with her again,
the necessity of laying Melanie and her child on a soft bed and doing
those small things for her that could be done.
“She must be carried. She can’t
walk.”
There was a scuffle of feet and a dark
figure emerged from the cave of the front hall. Pork ran down the
steps.
“Miss Scarlett! Miss Scarlett!” he
cried.
Scarlett caught him by the arms. Pork,
part and parcel of Tara, as dear as the bricks and the cool
corridors! She felt his tears stream down on her hands as he patted
her clumsily, crying: “Sho is glad you back! Sho is—”
Prissy burst into tears and incoherent
mumblings: “Poke! Poke, honey!” And little Wade, encouraged by
the weakness of his elders, began sniffling: “Wade thirsty!”
Scarlett caught them all in hand.
“Miss Melanie is in the wagon and her
baby too. Pork, you must carry her upstairs very carefully and put
her in the back company room. Prissy, take the baby and Wade inside
and give Wade a drink of water. Is Mammy here, Pork? Tell her I want
her.”
Galvanized by the authority in her
voice, Pork approached the wagon and fumbled at the backboard. A moan
was wrenched from Melanie as he half-lifted, half-dragged her from
the feather tick on which she had lain so many hours. And then she
was in Pork’s strong arms, her head drooping like a child’s
across his shoulder. Prissy, holding the baby and dragging Wade by
the hand, followed them up the wide steps and disappeared into the
blackness of the hall.
Scarlett’s bleeding fingers sought
her father’s hand urgently.
“Did they get well, Pa?”
“The girls are recovering.”
Silence fell and in the silence an idea
too monstrous for words took form. She could not, could not force it
to her lips. She swallowed and swallowed but a sudden dryness seemed
to have stuck the sides of her throat together. Was this the answer
to the frightening riddle of Tara’s silence? As if answering the
question in her mind Gerald spoke.
“Your mother—” he said and
stopped.
“And—Mother?”
“Your mother died yesterday.”
Her father’s arm held tightly in her
own, Scarlett felt her way down the wide dark hall which, even in its
blackness, was as familiar as her own mind. She avoided the
high-backed chairs, the empty gun rack, the old sideboard with its
protruding claw feet, and she felt herself drawn by instinct to the
tiny office at the back of the house where Ellen always sat, keeping
her endless accounts. Surely, when she entered that room, Mother
would again be sitting there before the secretary and would look up,
quill poised, and rise with sweet fragrance and rustling hoops to
meet her tired daughter. Ellen could not be dead, not even though Pa
had said it, said it over and over like a parrot that knows only one
phrase: “She died yesterday—she died yesterday—she died
yesterday.”
Queer that she should feel nothing now,
nothing except a weariness that shackled her limbs with heavy iron
chains and a hunger that made her knees tremble. She would think of
Mother later. She must put her mother out of her mind now, else she
would stumble stupidly like Gerald or sob monotonously like Wade.
Pork came down the wide dark steps
toward them, hurrying to press close to Scarlett like a cold animal
toward a fire.
“Lights?” she questioned. “Why is
the house so dark, Pork? Bring candles.”
“Dey tuck all de candles, Miss
Scarlett, all ‘cept one we been usin’ ter fine things in de dahk
wid, an’ it’s ‘bout gone. Mammy been usin’ a rag in a dish of
hawg fat fer a light fer nussin’ Miss Careen an’ Miss Suellen.”
“Bring what’s left of the candle,”
she ordered. “Bring it into Mother’s—into the office.”
Pork pattered into the dining room and
Scarlett groped her way into the inky small room and sank down on the
sofa. Her father’s arm still lay in the crook of hers, helpless,
appealing, trusting, as only the hands of the very young and the very
old can be.
“He’s an old man, an old tired
man,” she thought again and vaguely wondered why she could not
care.
Light wavered into the room as Pork
entered carrying high a half-burned candle stuck in a saucer. The
dark cave came to life, the sagging old sofa on which they sat, the
tall secretary reaching toward the ceiling with Mother’s fragile
carved chair before it, the racks of pigeonholes, still stuffed with
papers written in her fine hand, the worn carpet—all, all were the
same, except that Ellen was not there, Ellen with the faint scent of
lemon verbena sachet and the sweet look in her tip-tilted eyes.
Scarlett felt a small pain in her heart as of nerves numbed by a deep
wound, struggling to make themselves felt again. She must not let
them come to life now; there was all the rest of her life ahead of
her in which they could ache. But, not now! Please, God, not now!
She looked into Gerald’s
putty-colored face and, for the first time in her life, she saw him
unshaven, his once florid face covered with silvery bristles. Pork
placed the candle on the candle stand and came to her side. Scarlett
felt that if he had been a dog he would have laid his muzzle in her
lap and whined for a kind hand upon his head.
“Pork, how many darkies are here?”
“Miss Scarlett, dem trashy niggers
done runned away an’ some of dem went off wid de Yankees an’—”
“How many are left?”
“Dey’s me, Miss Scarlett, an’
Mammy. She been nussin’ de young Misses all day. An’ Dilcey, she
settin’ up wid de young Misses now. Us three, Miss Scarlett.”
“Us three” where there had been a
hundred. Scarlett with an effort lifted her head on her aching neck.
She knew she must keep her voice steady. To her surprise, words came
out as coolly and naturally as if there had never been a war and she
could, by waving her hand, call ten house servants to her.
“Pork, I’m starving. Is there
anything to eat?”
“No’m. Dey tuck it all.”
“But the garden?”
“Dey tuhned dey hawses loose in it.”
“Even the sweet potato hills?”
Something almost like a pleased smile
broke his thick lips.
“Miss Scarlett, Ah done fergit de
yams. Ah specs dey’s right dar. Dem Yankee folks ain’ never seed
no yams an’ dey thinks dey’s jes’ roots an’—”
“The moon will be up soon. You go out
and dig us some and roast them. There’s no corn meal? No dried
peas? No chickens?”
“No’m. No’m. Whut chickens dey
din’ eat right hyah dey cah’ied off ‘cross dey saddles.”
They— They— They— Was there no
end to what “They” had done? Was it not enough to burn and kill?
Must they also leave women and children and helpless negroes to
starve in a country which they had desolated?
“Miss Scarlett, Ah got some apples
Mammy buhied unner de house. We been eatin’ on dem today.”
“Bring them before you dig the
potatoes. And, Pork—I—I feel so faint. Is there any wine in the
cellar, even blackberry?”
“Oh, Miss Scarlett, de cellar wuz de
fust place dey went.”
A swimming nausea compounded of hunger,
sleeplessness, exhaustion and stunning blows came on suddenly and she
gripped the carved roses under her hand.
“No wine,” she said dully,
remembering the endless rows of bottles in the cellar. A memory
stirred.
“Pork, what of the corn whisky Pa
buried in the oak barrel under the scuppernong arbor?”
Another ghost of a smile lit the black
face, a smile of pleasure and respect.
“Miss Scarlett, you sho is de
beatenes’ chile! Ah done plum fergit dat bahn.” But, Miss
Scarlett, dat whisky ain’ no good. Ain’ been dar but ‘bout a
year an’ whisky ain’ no good fer ladies nohow.”
How stupid negroes were! They never
thought of anything unless they were told. And the Yankees wanted to
free them.
“It’ll be good enough for this lady
and for Pa. Hurry, Pork, and dig it up and bring us two glasses and
some mint and sugar and I’ll mix a julep.”
“Miss Scarlett, you knows dey ain’
been no sugar at Tara fer de longes’. An’ dey hawses done et up
all de mint an’ dey done broke all de glasses.”
If he says “They” once more, I’ll
scream. I can’t help it, she thought, and then, aloud: “Well,
hurry and get the whisky, quickly. We’ll take it neat.” And, as
he turned: “Wait, Pork. There’s so many things to do that I can’t
seem to think. … Oh, yes. I brought home a horse and a cow and the
cow needs milking, badly, and unharness the horse and water him. Go
tell Mammy to look after the cow. Tell her she’s got to fix the cow
up somehow. Miss Melanie’s baby will die if he doesn’t get
something to eat and—”
“Miss Melly ain’—kain—?” Pork
paused delicately.
“Miss Melanie has no milk.” Dear
God, but Mother would faint at that!
“Well, Miss Scarlett, mah Dilcey ten’
ter Miss Melly’s chile. Mah Dilcey got a new chile herself an’
she got mo’n nuff fer both.”
“You’ve got a new baby, Pork?”
Babies, babies, babies. Why did God
make so many babies? But no, God didn’t make them. Stupid people
made them.
“Yas’m, big fat black boy. He—”
“Go tell Dilcey to leave the girls.
I’ll look after them. Tell her to nurse Miss Melanie’s baby and
do what she can for Miss Melanie. Tell Mammy to look after the cow
and put that poor horse in the stable.”
“Dey ain’ no stable, Miss Scarlett.
Dey use it fer fiah wood.”
“Don’t tell me any more what ‘They’
did. Tell Dilcey to look after them. And you, Pork, go dig up that
whisky and then some potatoes.”
“But, Miss Scarlett, Ah ain’ got no
light ter dig by.”
“You can use a stick of firewood,
can’t you?”
“Dey ain’ no fiah wood—Dey—”
“Do something. … I don’t care
what. But dig those things and dig them fast. Now, hurry.”
Pork scurried from the room as her
voice roughened and Scarlett was left alone with Gerald. She patted
his leg gently. She noted how shrunken were the thighs that once
bulged with saddle muscles. She must do something to drag him from
his apathy—but she could not ask about Mother. That must come
later, when she could stand it.
“Why didn’t they burn Tara?”
Gerald stared at her for a moment as if
not hearing her and she repeated her question.
“Why—” he fumbled, “they used
the house as a headquarters.”
“Yankees—in this house?”
A feeling that the beloved walls had
been defiled rose in her. This house, sacred because Ellen had lived
in it, and those—those—in it.
“So they were, Daughter. We saw the
smoke from Twelve Oaks, across the river, before they came. But Miss
Honey and Miss India and some of their darkies had refugeed to Macon,
so we did not worry about them. But we couldn’t be going to Macon.
The girls were so sick—your mother—we couldn’t be going. Our
darkies ran—I’m not knowing where. They stole the wagons and the
mules. Mammy and Dilcey and Pork—they didn’t run. The girls—your
mother—we couldn’t be moving them.
“Yes, yes.” He mustn’t talk about
Mother. Anything else. Even that General Sherman himself had used
this room, Mother’s office, for his headquarters. Anything else.
“The Yankees were moving on
Jonesboro, to cut the railroad. And they came up the road from the
river—thousands and thousands—and cannon and horses—thousands.
I met them on the front porch.”
“Oh, gallant little Gerald!”
thought Scarlett, her heart swelling, Gerald meeting the enemy on the
stairs of Tara as if an army stood behind him instead of in front of
him.
“They said for me to leave, that they
would be burning the place. And I said that they would be burning it
over my head. We could not leave—the girls—your mother were—”
“And then?” Must he revert to Ellen
always?
“I told them there was sickness in
the house, the typhoid, and it was death to move them. They could
burn the roof over us. I did not want to leave anyway—leave Tara—”
His voice trailed off into silence as
he looked absently about the walls and Scarlet! understood. There
were too many Irish ancestors crowding behind Gerald’s shoulders,
men who had died on scant acres, fighting to the end rather than
leave the homes where they had lived, plowed, loved, begotten sons.
“I said that they would be burning
the house over the heads of three dying women. But we would not
leave. The young officer was—was a gentleman.”
“A Yankee a gentleman? Why, Pa!”
“A gentleman. He galloped away and
soon he was back with a captain, a surgeon, and he looked at the
girls—and your mother.”
“You let a damned Yankee into their
room?”
“He had opium. We had none. He saved
your sisters. Suellen was hemorrhaging. He was as kind as he knew
how. And when he reported that they were—ill—they did not burn
the house. They moved in, some general, his staff, crowding in. They
filled all the rooms except the sick room. And the soldiers—”
He paused again, as if too tired to go
on. His stubbly chin sank heavily in loose folds of flesh on his
chest With an effort he spoke again.
They camped all round the house,
everywhere, in the cotton, in the corn. The pasture was blue with
them. That night there were a thousand campfires. They tore down the
fences and burned them to cook with and the barns and the stables and
the smokehouse. They killed the cows and the hogs and the
chickens—even my turkeys.” Gerald’s precious turkeys. So they
were gone. They took things, even the pictures—some of the
furniture, the china—”
“The silver?”
“Pork and Mammy did something with
the silver—put it in the well—but I’m not remembering now,”
Gerald’s voice was fretful. “Then they fought the battle from
here—from Tara—there was so much noise, people galloping up and
stamping about. And later the cannon at Jonesboro—it sounded like
thunder—even the girls could hear it, sick as they were, and they
kept saying over and over: ‘Papa, make it stop thundering.’ ”
“And—and Mother? Did she know
Yankees were in the house?”
“She—never knew anything.”
“Thank God,” said Scarlett. Mother
was spared that. Mother never knew, never heard the enemy in the
rooms below, never heard the guns at Jonesboro, never learned that
the land which was part of her heart was under Yankee feet.
“I saw few of them for I stayed
upstairs with the girls and your mother. I saw the young surgeon
mostly. He was kind, so kind, Scarlett. After he’d worked all day
with the wounded, he came and sat with them. He even left some
medicine. He told me when they moved on that the girls would recover
but your mother— She was so frail, he said—too frail to stand it
all. He said she had undermined her strength. …”
In the silence that fell. Scarlett saw
her mother as she must have been in those last days, a thin power of
strength in Tara, nursing, working, doing without sleep and food that
the others might rest and eat.
“And then, they moved on. Then, they
moved on.”
He was silent for a long time and then
fumbled at her hand.
“It’s glad I am you are home,” he
said simply.
There was a scraping noise on the back
porch. Poor Pork, trained for forty years to clean his shoes before
entering the house, did not forget, even in a time like this. He came
in, carefully carrying two gourds, and the strong smell of dripping
spirits entered before him.
“Ah spilt a plen’y, Miss Scarlett.
It’s pow’ful hard ter po’ outer a bung hole inter a go’de.”
“That’s quite all right, Pork, and
thank you.” She took the wet gourd dipper from him, her nostrils
wrinkling in distaste at the reek.
“Drink this, Father,” she said,
pushing the whisky in its strange receptacle into his hand and taking
the second gourd of water from Pork. Gerald raised it, obedient as a
child, and gulped noisily. She handed the water to him but he shook
his head.
As she took the whisky from him and
held it to her mouth, she saw his eyes follow her, a vague stirring
of disapproval in them.
“I know no lady drinks spirits,”
she said briefly. “But today I’m no lady, Pa, and there is work
to do tonight.”
She tilted the dipper, drew a deep
breath and drank swiftly. The hot liquid burned down her throat to
her stomach, choking her and bringing tears to her eyes. She drew
another breath and raised it again.
“Katie Scarlett,” said Gerald, the
first note of authority she had heard in his voice since her return,
“that is enough. You’re not knowing spirits and they will be
making you tipsy.”
“Tipsy?” She laughed an ugly laugh.
“Tipsy? I hope it makes me drunk. I would like to be drunk and
forget all of this.”
She drank again, a slow train of warmth
lighting in her veins and stealing through her body until even her
finger tips tingled. What a blessed feeling, this kindly fire. It
seemed to penetrate even her ice-locked heart and strength came
coursing back into her body.’ Seeing Gerald’s puzzled hurt face,
she patted his knee again and managed an imitation of the pert smile
he used to love.
“How could it make me tipsy, Pa? I’m
your daughter. Haven’t I inherited the steadiest head in Clayton
County?”
He almost smiled into her tired face.
The whisky was bracing him too. She handed it back to him.
“Now you’re going to take another
drink and then I am going to take you upstairs and put you to bed.”
She caught herself. Why, this was the
way she talked to Wade—she should not address her father like this.
It was disrespectful. But he hung on her words.
“Yes, put you to bed,” she added
lightly, “and give you another drink—maybe all the dipper and
make you go to sleep. You need sleep and Katie Scarlett is here, so
you need not worry about anything. Drink.”
He drank again obediently and, slipping
her arm through his, she pulled him to his feet
“Pork. …”
Pork took the gourd in one hand and
Gerald’s arm in the other. Scarlett picked up the flaring candle
and the three walked slowly into the dark hall and up the winding
steps toward Gerald’s room.
The room where Suellen and Carreen lay
mumbling and tossing on the same bed stank vilely with the smell of
the twisted rag burning in a saucer of bacon fat, which provided the
only light. When Scarlett first opened the door the thick atmosphere
of the room, with all windows closed and the air reeking with
sick-room odors, medicine smells and stinking grease, almost made her
faint. Doctors might say that fresh air was fatal in a sick room but
if she were to sit here, she must have air or die. She opened the
three windows, bringing in the smell of oak leaves and earth, but the
fresh air could do little toward dispelling the sickening odors which
had accumulated for weeks in this close room.
Carreen and Suellen, emaciated and
white, slept brokenly and awoke to mumble with wide, staring eyes in
the tall four-poster bed where they had whispered together in better,
happier days. In the corner of the room was an empty bed, a narrow
French Empire bed with curling head and foot, a bed which Ellen had
brought from Savannah. This was where Ellen had lain.
Scarlett sat beside the two girls,
staring at them stupidly. The whisky taken on a stomach long empty
was playing tricks on her. Sometimes her sisters seemed far away and
tiny and their incoherent voices came to her like the buzz of
insects. And again, they loomed large, rushing at her with lightning
speed. She was tired, tired to the bone. She could lie down and sleep
for days.
If she could only lie down and sleep
and wake to feel Ellen gentry shaking her arm and saying: “It is
late, Scarlett. You must not be so lazy.” But she could not ever do
that again. If there were only Ellen, someone older than she, wiser
and unweary, to whom she could go! Someone in whose lap she could lay
her head, someone on whose shoulders she could rest her burdens!
The door opened softly and Dilcey
entered, Melanie’s baby held to her breast, the gourd of whisky in
her hand. In the smoky, uncertain light, she seemed thinner than when
Scarlett last saw her and the Indian blood was more evident in her
face. The high cheek bones were more prominent, the hawk-bridged nose
was sharper and her copper skin gleamed with a brighter hue. Her
faded calico dress was open to the waist and her large bronze breast
exposed. Held close against her, Melanie’s baby pressed his pale
rosebud mouth greedily to the dark nipple, sucking, gripping tiny
fists against the soft flesh like a kitten in the warm fur of its
mother’s belly.
Scarlett rose unsteadily and put a hand
on Dilcey’s arm.
“It was good of you to stay, Dilcey.”
“How could I go off wid them trashy
niggers, Miss Scarlett, after yo’ pa been so good to buy me and my
little Prissy and yo’ ma been so kine?”
“Sit down, Dilcey. The baby can eat
all right, then? And how is Miss Melanie?”
“Nuthin’ wrong wid this chile ‘cept
he hongry, and what it take to feed a hongry chile I got. No’m,
Miss Melanie is all right. She ain’ gwine die, Miss Scarlett. Doan
you fret yo’seff. I seen too many, white and black, lak her. She
mighty tired and nervous like and scared fo’ this baby. But I hesh
her and give her some of whut was lef in that go’de and she
sleepin’.”
So the corn whisky had been used by the
whole family! Scarlett thought hysterically that perhaps she had
better give a drink to little Wade and see if it would stop his
hiccoughs— And Melanie would not die. And when Ashley came home—if
he did come home … No, she would think of that later too. So much
to think of—later! So many things to unravel—to decide. If only
she could put off the hour of reckoning forever! She started suddenly
as a creaking noise and a rhythmic “Ker-bunk—ker-bunk—” broke
the stillness of the air outside.
“That’s Mammy gettin’ the water
to sponge off the young Misses. They takes a heap of bathin’,”
explained Dilcey, propping the gourd on the table between medicine
bottles and a glass.
Scarlett laughed suddenly. Her nerves
must be shredded if the noise of the well windlass, bound up in her
earliest memories, could frighten her. Dilcey looked at her steadily
as she laughed, her face immobile in its dignity, but Scarlett felt
that Dilcey understood. She sank back in her chair. If she could only
be rid of her tight stays, the collar that choked her and the
slippers still full of sand and gravel that blistered her feet.
The windlass creaked slowly as the rope
wound up, each creak bringing the bucket nearer the top. Soon Mammy
would be with her—Ellen’s Mammy, her Mammy. She sat silent,
intent on nothing, while the baby, already glutted with milk,
whimpered because he had lost the friendly nipple. Dilcey, silent
too, guided the child’s mouth back, quieting him in her arms as
Scarlett listened to the slow scuffing of Mammy’s feet across the
back yard. How still the night air was! The slightest sounds roared
in her ears.
The upstairs hall seemed to shake as
Mammy’s ponderous weight came toward the door. Then Mammy was in
the room, Mammy with shoulders dragged down by two heavy wooden
buckets, her kind black face sad with the uncomprehending sadness of
a monkey’s face.
Her eyes lighted up at the sight of
Scarlett, her white teeth gleamed as she set down the buckets, and
Scarlett ran to her, laying her head on the broad, sagging breasts
which had held so many heads, black and white. Here was something of
stability, thought Scarlett, something of the old life that was
unchanging. But Mammy’s first words dispelled this illusion.
“Mammy’s chile is home! Oh, Miss
Scarlett, now dat Miss Ellen’s in de grabe, whut is we gwine ter
do? Oh, Miss Scarlett, effen Ah wuz jes’ daid longside Miss Ellen!
Ah kain make out widout Miss Ellen. Ain’ nuthin’ lef now but
mizry an’ trouble. Jes’ weery loads, honey, jes’ weery loads.”
As Scarlett lay with her head hugged
close to Mammy’s breast, two words caught her attention, “weery
loads.” Those were the words which had hummed in her brain that
afternoon so monotonously they had sickened her. Now, she remembered
the rest of the song, remembered with a sinking heart:
“Just a few more days for to tote the
weary load!
No matter, ‘twill never be light!
Just a few more days till we totter in
the road—”
“No matter, ‘twill never be
light”—she took the words to her tired mind. Would her load never
be light? Was coming home to Tara to mean, not blessed surcease, but
only more loads to carry? She slipped from Mammy’s arms and,
reaching up, patted the wrinkled black face.
“Honey, yo’ han’s!” Mammy took
the small hands with their blisters and blood clots in hers and
looked at them with horrified disapproval. “Miss Scarlett, Ah done
tole you an’ tole you dat you kin allus tell a lady by her han’s
an’—yo’ face sunbuhnt too!”
Poor Mammy, still the martinet about
such unimportant things even though war and death had just passed
over her head! In another moment she would be saying that young
Misses with blistered hands and freckles most generally didn’t
never catch husbands and Scarlett forestalled the remark.
“Mammy, I want you to tell me about
Mother. I couldn’t bear to hear Pa talk about her.”
Tears started from Mammy’s eyes as
she leaned down to pick up the buckets. In silence she carried them
to the bedside and, turning down the sheet, began pulling up the
night clothes of Suellen and Carreen. Scarlett, peering at her
sisters in the dim flaring light, saw that Carreen wore a nightgown,
clean but in tatters, and Suellen lay wrapped in an old negligee, a
brown linen garment heavy with tagging ends of Irish lace. Mammy
cried silently as she sponged the gaunt bodies, using the remnant of
an old apron as a cloth.
“Miss Scarlett, it wuz dem Slatterys,
dem trashy, no-good, low-down po’-w’ite Slatterys dat kilt Miss
Ellen. Ah done tole her an’ tole her it doan do no good doin’
things fer trashy folks, but Miss Ellen wuz so sot in her ways an’
her heart so sof’ she couldn’ never say no ter nobody whut needed
her.”
“Slatterys?” questioned Scarlett,
bewildered. “How do they come in?”
“Dey wuz sick wid disyere thing,”
Mammy gestured with her rag to the two naked girls, dripping with
water on their damp sheet. “Ole Miss Slattery’s gal, Emmie, come
down wid it an’ Miss Slattery come hotfootin’ it up hyah affer
Miss Ellen, lak she allus done w’en anything wrong. Why din’ she
nuss her own? Miss Ellen had mo’n she could tote anyways. But Miss
Ellen she went down dar an’ she nuss Emmie. An’ Miss Ellen wuzn’
well a-tall her-seff, Miss Scarlett. Yo’ ma hadn’ been well fer
de longes’. Dey ain’ been too much ter eat roun’ hyah, wid de
commissary stealin’ eve’y thing us growed. An’ Miss Ellen eat
lak a bird anyways. An’ Ah tole her an’ tole her ter let dem
w’ite trash alone, but she din’ pay me no mine. Well’m, “bout
de time Emmie look lak she gittin’ better, Miss Carreen come down
wid it. Yas’m, de typhoy fly right up de road an’ ketch Miss
Carreen, an’ den down come Miss Suellen. So Miss Ellen, she tuck
an’ nuss dem too.
“Wid all de fightin’ up de road an’
de Yankees ‘cross de river an’ us not knowin’ whut wuz gwine
ter happen ter us an’ de fe’el han’s runnin” off eve’y
night, Ah’s ‘bout crazy. But Miss Ellen jes’ as cool as a
cucumber. ‘Cept she wuz worried ter a ghos’ ‘bout de young
Misses kase we couldn’ git no medicines nor nuthin’. An’ one
night she say ter me affer we done sponge off de young Misses ‘bout
ten times, she say, ‘Mammy, effen Ah could sell mah soul, Ah’d
sell it fer some ice ter put on mah gals’ haids.’
“She wouldn’t let Mist’ Gerald
come in hyah, nor Rosa nor Teena, nobody but me, kase Ah done had de
typhoy. An’ den it tuck her, Miss Scarlett, an’ Ah seed right off
dat twarnt no use.”
Mammy straightened up and, raising her
apron, dried her streaming eyes.
“She went fas’, Miss Scarlett, an’
even dat nice Yankee doctah couldn’ do nuthin’ fer her. She din’
know nuthin’ a-tall. Ah call ter her an’ talk ter her but she
din’ even know her own Mammy.”
“Did she—did she ever mention
me—call for me?”
“No, honey. She think she is lil gal
back in Savannah, She din’ call nobody by name.”
Dilcey stirred and laid the sleeping
baby across her knees.
“Yes’m, she did. She did call
somebody.”
“You hesh yo’ mouf, you
Injun-nigger!” Mammy turned with threatening violence on Dilcey.
“Hush, Mammy! Who did she call,
Dilcey? Pa?”
“No’m. Not yo’ pa. It wuz the
night the cotton buhnt—”
“Has the cotton gone—tell me
quickly!”
“Yes’m, it buhnt up. The sojers
rolls it out of the shed into the back yard and hollers, ‘Here the
bigges’ bonfiah in Georgia,’ and tech it off.”
Three years of stored cotton—one
hundred and fifty thousand dollars, all in one blaze!
“And the fiah light up the place lak
it wuz day—we wuz scared the house would buhn, too, and it wuz so
bright in this hyah room that you could mos’ pick a needle offen
the flo’. And w’en the light shine in the winder, it look lak it
wake Miss Ellen up and she set right up in bed and cry out loud, time
and again: “Feeleep! Feeleep!’ I ain’ never heerd no sech name
but it wuz a name and she wuz callin’ him.”
Mammy stood as though turned to stone
glaring at Dilcey but Scarlett dropped her head into her hands.
Philippe—who was he and what had he been to Mother that she died
calling him?
The long road from Atlanta to Tara had
ended, ended in a blank wall, the road that was to end in Ellen’s
arms. Never again could Scarlett lie down, as a child, secure beneath
her father’s roof with the protection of her mother’s love
wrapped about her like an eiderdown quilt. There was no security or
haven to which she could turn now. No turning or twisting would avoid
this dead end to which she had come. There was no one on whose
shoulders she could rest her burdens. Her father was old and stunned,
her sisters ill, Melanie frail and weak, the children helpless, and
the negroes looking up. to her with childlike faith, clinging to her
skirts, knowing that Ellen’s daughter would be the refuge Ellen had
always been.
Through the window, in the faint light
of the rising moon, Tara stretched before her, negroes gone, acres
desolate, barns ruined, like a body bleeding under her eyes, like her
own body, slowly bleeding. This was the end of the road, quivering
old age, sickness, hungry mouths, helpless hands plucking at her
skirts. And at the end of this road, there was nothing—nothing but
Scarlett O’Hara Hamilton, nineteen years old, a widow with a little
child.
What would she do with all of this?
Aunt Pitty and the Burrs in Macon could take Melanie and her baby. If
the girls recovered, Ellen’s family would have to take them,
whether they liked it or not. And she and Gerald could turn to Uncle
James and Andrew.
She looked at the thin forms, tossing
before her, the sheets about them moist and dark from dripping water.
She did not like Suellen. She saw it now with a sudden clarity. She
had never liked her. She did not especially love Carreen—she could
not love anyone who was weak. But they were of her blood, part of
Tara. No, she could not let them live out their lives in their aunts’
homes as poor relations. An O’Hara a poor relation, living on
charity bread and sufferance! Oh, never that!
Was there no escape from this dead end?
Her tired brain moved so slowly. She raised her hands to her head as
wearily as if the air were water against which her arms struggled.
She took the gourd from between the glass and bottle and looked in
it. There was some whisky left in the bottom, how much she could not
tell in the uncertain light. Strange that the sharp smell did not
offend her nostrils now. She drank slowly but this time the liquid
did not burn, only a dull warmth followed.
She set down the empty gourd and looked
about her. This was all a dream, this smoke-filled dim room, the
scrawny girls, Mammy shapeless and huge crouching beside the bed,
Dilcey a still bronze image with the sleeping pink morsel against her
dark breast—all a dream from which she would awake, to smell bacon
frying in the kitchen, hear the throaty laughter of the negroes and
the creaking of wagons fieldward bound, and Ellen’s gentle
insistent hand upon her.
Then she discovered she was in her own
room, on her own bed, faint moonlight pricking the darkness, and
Mammy and Dilcey were undressing her. The torturing stays no longer
pinched her waist and she could breathe deeply and quietly to the
bottom of her lungs and her abdomen. She felt her stockings being
stripped gently from her and heard Mammy murmuring indistinguishable
comforting sounds as she bathed her blistered feet. How cool the
water was, how good to lie here in softness, like a child. She sighed
and relaxed and after a time which might have been a year or a
second, she was alone and the room was brighter as the rays of the
moon streamed in across the bed.
She did not know she was drunk, drunk
with fatigue and whisky. She only knew she had left her tired body
and floated somewhere above it where there was no pain and weariness
and her brain saw things with an inhuman clarity.
She was seeing things with new eyes
for, somewhere along the long road to Tara, she had left her girlhood
behind her. She was no longer plastic clay, yielding imprint to each
new experience. The clay had hardened, some time in this
indeterminate day which had lasted a thousand years. Tonight was the
last time she would ever be ministered to as a child. She was a woman
now and youth was gone.
No, she could not, would not, turn to
Gerald’s or Ellen’s families. The O’Haras did not take charity.
The O’Haras looked after their own. Her burdens were her own and
burdens were for shoulders strong enough to bear them. She thought
without surprise, looking down from her height, that her shoulders
were strong enough to bear anything now, having borne the worst that
could ever happen to her. She could not desert Tara; she belonged to
the red acres far more than they could ever belong to her. Her roots
went deep into the blood-colored soil and sucked up life, as did the
cotton. She would stay at Tara and keep it, somehow, keep her father
and her sisters, Melanie and Ashley’s child, the negroes.
Tomorrow—oh, tomorrow! Tomorrow she would fit the yoke about her
neck. Tomorrow there would be so many things to do. Go to Twelve Oaks
and the Macintosh place and see if anything was left in the deserted
gardens, go to the river swamps and beat them for straying hogs and
chickens, go to Jonesboro and Lovejoy with Ellen’s jewelry—there
must be someone left there who would sell something to eat.
Tomorrow—tomorrow—her brain ticked slowly and more slowly, like a
clock running down, but the clarity of vision persisted.
Of a sudden, the oft-told family tales
to which she had listened since babyhood, listened half-bored,
impatient and but partly comprehending, were crystal clear. Gerald,
penniless, had raised Tara; Ellen had risen above some mysterious
sorrow; Grandfather Robillard. surviving the wreck of Napoleon’s
throne, had founded his fortunes anew on the fertile Georgia coast;
Great-grandfather Prudhomme had carved a small kingdom out of the
dark jungles of Haiti, lost it, and lived to see his name honored in
Savannah. There were the Scarletts who had fought with the Irish
Volunteers for a free Ireland and been hanged for their pains and the
O’Haras who died at the Boyne, battling to the end for what was
theirs.
All had suffered crushing misfortunes
and had not been crushed. They had not been broken by the crash of
empires, the machetes of revolting slaves, war, rebellion,
proscription, confiscation. Malign fate had broken their necks,
perhaps, but never their hearts. They had not whined, they had
fought. And when they died, they died spent but unquenched. All of
those shadowy folks whose blood flowed in her veins seemed to move
quietly in the moonlit room. And Scarlett was not surprised to see
them, these kinsmen who had taken the worst that fate could send and
hammered it into the best. Tara was her fate, her fight, and she must
conquer it.
She turned drowsily on her side, a slow
creeping blackness enveloping her mind. Were they really there,
whispering wordless encouragement to her, or was this part of her
dream?
“Whether you are there or not,” she
murmured sleepily, “good night—and thank you.”
CHAPTER XXV
THE NEXT MORNING Scarlett’s body was
so stiff and sore from the long miles of walking and jolting in the
wagon that every movement was agony. Her face was crimson with
sunburn and her blistered palms raw. Her tongue was furred and her
throat parched as if flames had scorched it and no amount of water
could assuage her thirst. Her head felt swollen and she winced even
when she turned her eyes. A queasiness of the stomach reminiscent of
the early days of her pregnancy made the smoking yams on the
breakfast table unendurable, even to the smell. Gerald could have
told her she was suffering the normal aftermath of her first
experience with hard drinking but Gerald noticed nothing. He sat at
the head of the table, a gray old man with absent, faded eyes
fastened on the door and head cocked slightly to hear the rustle of
Ellen’s petticoats, to smell the lemon verbena sachet.
As Scarlett sat down, he mumbled: “We
will wait for Mrs. O’Hara. She is late.” She raised an aching
head, looked at him with startled incredulity and met the pleading
eyes of Mammy, who stood behind Gerald’s chair. She rose
unsteadily, her hand at her throat and looked down at her father in
the morning sunlight. He peered up at her vaguely and she saw that
his hands were shaking, that his head trembled a little.
Until this moment she had not realized
how much she had counted on Gerald to take command, to tell her what
she must do, and now— Why, last night he had seemed almost himself.
There had been none of his usual bluster and vitality, but at least
he had told a connected story and now—now, he did not even remember
Ellen was dead. The combined shock of the coming of the Yankees and
her death had stunned him. She started to speak, but Mammy shook her
head vehemently and raising her apron dabbed at her red eyes.
“Oh, can Pa have lost his mind?”
thought Scarlett and her throbbing head felt as if it would crack
with this added strain. “No, no. He’s just dazed by it all. Ifs
like he was sick. He’ll get over it. He must get over it. What will
I do if he doesn’t?—I won’t think about it now. I won’t think
of him or Mother or any of these awful things now. No, not till I can
stand it. There are too many other things to think about—things
that can be helped without my thinking of those I can’t help.”
She left the dining room without
eating, and went out onto the back porch where she found Pork,
barefooted and in the ragged remains of his best livery, sitting on
the steps cracking peanuts. Her head was hammering and throbbing and
the bright sunlight stabbed into her eyes. Merely holding herself
erect required an effort of will power and she talked as briefly as
possible, dispensing with the usual forms of courtesy her mother had
always taught her to use with negroes.
She began asking questions so brusquely
and giving orders so decisively Pork’s eyebrows went up in
mystification. Miss Ellen didn’t never talk so short to nobody, not
even when she caught them stealing pullets and watermelons. She asked
again about the fields, the gardens, the stock, and her green eyes
had a hard bright glaze which Pork had never seen in them before.
“Yas’m, dat hawse daid, lyin’ dar
whar Ah tie him wid his nose in de water bucket he tuhned over. No’m,
de cow ain’ daid. Din’ you know? She done have a calf las’
night Dat why she beller so.”
“A fine midwife your Prissy will
make,” Scarlett remarked caustically. “She said she was bellowing
because she needed milking.”
“Well’m, Prissy ain’ fixin’ ter
be no cow midwife, Miss Scarlett,” Pork said tactfully. “An’
ain’ no use quarrelin’ wid blessin’s, ‘cause dat calf gwine
ter mean a full cow an’ plen’y buttermilk fer de young Misses,
lak dat Yankee doctah say dey’ need.”
“All right, go on. Any stock left?”
“No’m. Nuthin’ ‘cept one ole
sow an’ her litter. Ah driv dem inter de swamp de day de Yankees
come, but de Lawd knows how we gwine git dem. She mean, dat sow.”
“Well get them all right. You and
Prissy can start right now hunting for her.”
Pork was amazed and indignant.
“Miss Scarlett, dat a fe’el han’s
bizness. Ah’s allus been a house nigger.”
A small fiend with a pair of hot
tweezers plucked behind Scarlett’s eyeballs.
“You two will catch the sow—or get
out of here, like the field hands did.”
Tears trembled in Pork’s hurt eyes.
Oh, if only Miss Ellen was here! She understood such niceties and
realized the wide gap between the duties of a field hand and those of
a house nigger.
“Git out, Miss Scarlett? Whar’d Ah
git out to, Miss Scarlett?”
“I don’t know and I don’t care.
But anyone at Tara who won’t work can go hunt up the Yankees. You
can tell the others that too.”
“Yas’m.”
“Now, what about the corn and the
cotton, Pork?”
“De cawn? Lawd, Miss Scarlett, dey
pasture dey hawses in de cawn an’ cah’ied off whut de hawses din’
eat or spile. An’ dey driv dey cannons an’ waggins ‘cross de
cotton till it plum ruint, ‘cept a few acres over on de creek
bottom dat dey din’ notice. But dat cotton ain’ wuth foolin’
wid, ‘cause ain’ but ‘bout three bales over dar.”
Three bales. Scarlett thought of the
scores of bales Tara usually yielded and her head hurt worse. Three
bales. That was little more than the shiftless Slatterys raised. To
make matters worse, there was the question of taxes. The Confederate
government took cotton for taxes in lieu of money, but three bales
wouldn’t even cover the taxes. Little did it matter though, to her
or the Confederacy, now that all the field hands had run away and
there was no one to pick the cotton.
“Well, I won’t think of that
either,” she told herself. “Taxes aren’t a woman’s job
anyway. Pa ought to look after such things, but Pa— I won’t think
of Pa now. The Confederacy can whistle for its taxes. What we need
now is something to eat.”
“Pork, have any of you been to Twelve
Oaks or the Macintosh place to see if there’s, anything left in the
gardens there?”
“No, Ma’m! Us ain’ lef’ Tara.
De Yankees mout git us.”
“I’ll send Dilcey over to
Macintosh. Perhaps she’ll find something there. And I’ll go to
Twelve Oaks.”
“Who wid, chile?”
“By myself. Mammy must stay with the
girls and Mr. Gerald can’t—”
Pork set up an outcry which she found
infuriating. There might be Yankees or mean niggers at Twelve Oaks.
She mustn’t go alone.”
“That will be enough, Pork. Tell
Dilcey to start immediately. And you and Prissy go bring in the sow
and her litter,” she said briefly, turning on her heel.
Mammy’s old sunbonnet, faded but
clean, hung on its peg on the back porch and Scarlett put it on her
head, remembering, as from another world, the bonnet with the curling
green plume which Rhett had brought her from Paris. She picked up a
large split-oak basket and started down the back stairs, each step
jouncing her head until her spine seemed to be trying to crash
through the top of her skull.
The road down to the river lay red and
scorching between the ruined cotton fields. There were no trees to
cast a shade and the sun beat down through Mammy’s sunbonnet as if
it were made of tarlatan instead of heavy quilted calico, while the
dust floating upward sifted into her nose and throat until she felt
the membranes would crack dryly if she spoke. Deep ruts and furrows
were cut into the road where horses had dragged heavy guns along it
and the red gullies on either side were deeply gashed by the wheels.
The cotton was mangled and trampled where cavalry and infantry,
forced off the narrow road by the artillery, had marched through the
green bushes, grinding them into the earth. Here and mere in the road
and fields lay buckles and bits of harness leather, canteens
flattened by hooves and caisson wheels, buttons, blue caps, worn
socks, bits of bloody rags, all the litter left by the marching army.
She passed the clump of cedars and the
low brick wall which marked the family burying ground, trying not to
think of the new grave lying by the three short mounds of her little
brothers. Oh, Ellen— She trudged on down the dusty hill, passing
the heap of ashes and the stumpy chimney where the Slattery house had
stood, and she wished savagely that the whole tribe of them had been
part of the ashes. If it hadn’t been for the Slatterys—if it
hadn’t been for that nasty Emmie who’d had a bastard brat by
their overseer—Ellen wouldn’t have died.
She moaned as a sharp pebble cut into
her blistered foot. What was she doing here? Why was Scarlett O’Hara,
the belle of the County, the sheltered pride of Tara, tramping down
this rough road almost barefoot? Her little feet were made to dance,
not to limp, her tiny slippers to peep daringly from under bright
silks, not to collect sharp pebbles and dust. She was born to be
pampered and waited upon, and here she was, sick and ragged, driven
by hunger to hunt for food in the gardens of her neighbors.
At the bottom of the long hill was the
river and how cool and still were the tangled trees overhanging the
water! She sank down on the low bank, and stripping off the remnants
of her slippers and stockings, dabbled her burning feet in the cool
water. It would be so good to sit here all day, away from the
helpless eyes of Tara, here where only the rustle of leaves and the
gurgle of slow water broke the stillness. But reluctantly she
replaced her shoes and stockings and trudged down the bank, spongy
with moss, under the shady trees. The Yankees had burned the bridge
but she knew of a footlog bridge across a narrow point of the stream
a hundred yards below. She crossed it cautiously and trudged uphill
the hot half-mile to Twelve Oaks.
There towered the twelve oaks, as they
had stood since Indian days, but with their leaves brown from fire
and the branches burned and scorched. Within their circle lay the
ruins of John Wilkes’ house, the charred remains of that once
stately home which had crowned the hill in white-columned dignity.
The deep pit which had been the cellar, the blackened field-stone
foundations and two mighty chimneys marked the site. One long column,
half-burned, had fallen across the lawn, crushing the cape jessamine
bushes.
Scarlett sat down on the column, too
sick at the sight to go on. This desolation went to her heart as
nothing she had ever experienced. Here was the Wilkes pride in the
dust at her feet. Here was the end of the kindly, courteous house
which had always welcomed her, the house where in futile dreams she
had aspired to be mistress. Here she had danced and dined and flirted
and here she had watched with a jealous, hurting heart how Melanie
smiled up at Ashley. Here, too, in the cool shadows of the trees,
Charles Hamilton had rapturously pressed her hand when she said she
would marry him.
“Oh, Ashley,” she thought, “I
hope you are dead! I could never bear for you to see this.”
Ashley had married his bride here but
his son and his son’s son would never bring brides to this house.
There would be no more matings and births beneath this roof which she
had so loved and longed to rule. The house was dead and to Scarlett,
it was as if all the Wilkeses, too, were dead in its ashes.
“I won’t think of it now. I can’t
stand it now. I’ll think of it later,” she said aloud, turning
her eyes away.
Seeking the garden, she limped around
the ‘ruins, by the trampled rose beds the Wilkes girls had tended
so zealously, across the back yard and through the ashes to the
smokehouse, barns and chicken houses. The split-rail fence around the
kitchen garden had been demolished and the once orderly rows of green
plants had suffered the same treatment as those at Tara. The soft
earth was scarred with hoof prints and heavy wheels and the
vegetables were mashed into the soil. There was nothing for her here.
She walked back across the yard and
took the path down toward the silent row of whitewashed cabins in the
quarters, calling “Hello!” as she went. But no voice answered
her. Not even a dog barked. Evidently the Wilkes negroes had taken
flight or followed the Yankees. She knew every slave had his own
garden patch and as she reached the quarters, she hoped these little
patches had been spared.
Her search was rewarded but she was too
tired even to feel pleasure at the sight of turnips and cabbages,
wilted for want of water but still standing, and straggling butter
beans and snap beans, yellow but edible. She sat down in the furrows
and dug into the earth with hands that shook, filling her basket
slowly. There would be a good meal at Tara tonight, in spite of the
lack of side meat to boil with the vegetables. Perhaps some of the
bacon grease Dilcey was using for illumination could be used for
seasoning. She must remember to tell Dilcey to use pine knots and
save the grease for cooking.
Close to the back step of one cabin,
she found a short row of radishes and hunger assaulted her suddenly.
A spicy, sharp-tasting radish was exactly what her stomach craved.
Hardly waiting to rub the dirt off on her skirt, she bit off half and
swallowed it hastily. It was old and coarse and so peppery that tears
started in her eyes. No sooner had the lump gone down than her empty
outraged stomach revolted and she lay in the soft dirt and vomited
tiredly.
The faint niggery smell which crept
from the cabin increased her nausea and, without strength to combat
it, she kept on retching miserably while the cabins and trees
revolved swiftly around her.
After a long time, she lay weakly on
her face, the earth as soft and comfortable as a feather pillow, and
her mind wandered feebly here and there. She, Scarlett O’Hara. was
lying behind a negro cabin, in the midst of ruins, too sick and too
weak to move, and no one in the world knew or cared. No one would
care if they did know, for everyone had too many troubles of his own
to worry about her. And all this was happening to her, Scarlett
O’Hara, who had never raised her hand even to pick up her discarded
stockings from the floor or to tie the laces of her
slippers—Scarlett, whose little headaches and tempers had been
coddled and catered to all her life.
As she lay prostrate, too weak to fight
off memories and worries, they rushed at her like buzzards waiting
for death. No longer had she the strength to say: I’ll think of
Mother and Pa and Ashley and all this ruin later— Yes, later when I
can stand it.” She could not stand it now, but she was thinking of
them whether she willed it or not. The thoughts circled and swooped
above her, dived down and drove tearing claws and sharp beaks into
her mind. For a timeless time, she lay still, her face in the dirt,
the sun beating hotly upon her, remembering things and people who
were dead, remembering a way of living that was gone forever—and
looking upon the harsh vista of the dark future.
When she arose at last and saw again
the black ruins of Twelve Oaks, her head was raised high and
something that was youth and beauty and potential tenderness had gone
out of her face forever. What was past was past. Those who were dead
were dead. The lazy luxury of the old days was gone, never to return.
And, as Scarlett settled the heavy basket across her arm, she had
settled her own mind and her own life.
There was no going back and she was
going forward.
Throughout the South for fifty years
there would be bitter-eyed women who looked backward, to dead times,
to dead men, evoking memories that hurt and were futile, bearing
poverty with bitter pride because they had those memories. But
Scarlett was never to look back.
She gazed at the blackened stones and,
for the last time, she saw Twelve Oaks rise before her eyes as it had
once stood, rich and proud, symbol of a race and a way of living.
Then she started down the road toward Tara, the heavy basket cutting
into her flesh.
Hunger gnawed at her empty stomach
again and she said aloud: “As God is my witness, as God is my
witness, the Yankees aren’t going to lick me. I’m going to live
through this, and when it’s over, I’m never going to be hungry
again. No, nor any of my folks. If I have to steal or kill— as God
is my witness, I’m never going to be hungry again.”
In the days that followed, Tara might
have been Crusoe’s desert island, so still it was, so isolated from
the rest of the world. The world lay only a few miles away, but a
thousand miles of tumbling waves might have stretched between Tara
and Jonesboro and Fayetteville and Lovejoy, even between Tara and the
neighbors’ plantations. With the old horse dead, their one mode of
conveyance was gone, and there was neither time nor strength for
walking the weary red miles.
Sometimes, in the days of backbreaking
work, in the desperate struggle for food and the never-ceasing care
of the three sick girls, Scarlett found herself straining her ears
for familiar sounds—the shrill laughter of the pickaninnies in the
quarters, the creaking of wagons home from the fields, the thunder of
Gerald’s stallion tearing across the pasture, the crunching of
carriage wheels on the drive and the gay voices of neighbors dropping
in for an afternoon of gossip. But she listened in vain. The road lay
still and deserted and never a cloud of red dust proclaimed the
approach of visitors. Tara was an island in a sea of rolling green
hills and red fields.
Somewhere was the world and families
who ate and slept safely under their own roofs. Somewhere girls in
thrice-turned dresses were flirting gaily and singing “When This
Cruel War Is Over,” as she had done, only a few weeks before.
Somewhere there was a war and cannon booming and burning towns and
men who rotted in hospitals amid sickening-sweet stinks. Somewhere a
barefoot army in dirty homespun was marching, fighting, sleeping,
hungry and weary with the weariness that comes when hope is gone. And
somewhere the hills of Georgia were blue with Yankees, well-fed
Yankees on sleek corn-stuffed horses.
Beyond Tara was the war and the world.
But on the plantation the war and the world did not exist except as
memories which must be fought back when they rushed to mind in
moments of exhaustion. The world outside receded before the demands
of empty and half-empty stomachs and life resolved itself into two
related thoughts, food and how to get it.
Food! Food! Why did the stomach have a
longer memory man the mind? Scarlett could banish heartbreak but not
hunger and each morning as she lay half asleep, before memory brought
back to her mind war and hunger, she curled drowsily expecting the
sweet smells of bacon frying and rolls baking. And each morning she
sniffed so hard to really smell the food she woke herself up.
There were apples, yams, peanuts and
milk on the table at Tara but never enough of even this primitive
fare. At the sight of them, three times a day, her memory would rush
back to the old days, the meals of the old days, the candle-lit table
and the food perfuming the air.
How careless they had been of food
then, what prodigal waste! Rolls, corn muffins, biscuits and waffles,
dripping butter, all at one meal. Ham at one end of the table and
fried chicken at the other, collards swimming richly in pot liquor
iridescent with grease, snap beans in mountains on brightly flowered
porcelain, fried squash, stewed okra, carrots in cream sauce thick
enough to cut. And three desserts, so everyone might have his choice,
chocolate layer cake, vanilla blanc mange and pound cake topped with
sweet whipped cream. The memory of those savory meals had the power
to bring tears to her eyes as death and war had failed to do, and the
power to turn her ever-gnawing stomach from rumbling emptiness to
nausea. For the appetite Mammy had always deplored, the healthy
appetite of a nineteen-year-old girl, now was increased fourfold by
the hard and unremitting labor she had never known before.
Hers was not the only troublesome
appetite at Tara, for wherever she turned hungry faces, black and
white, met her eyes. Soon Carreen and Suellen would have the
insatiable hunger of typhoid convalescents. Already little Wade
whined monotonously: “Wade doan like yams. Wade hungwy.”
The others grumbled, too:
“Miss Scarlett, ‘ness I gits mo’
to eat, I kain nuss neither of these chillun.”
“Miss Scarlett, ef Ah doan have mo’
in mah stummick, Ah kain split no wood.”
“Lamb, Ah’s perishra’ fer real
vittles.”
“Daughter, must we always have yams?”
Only Melanie did not complain, Melanie
whose face grew thinner and whiter and twitched with pain even in her
sleep.
“I’m not hungry, Scarlett. Give my
share of the milk to Dilcey. She needs it to nurse the babies. Sick
people are never hungry.”
It was her gentle hardihood which
irritated Scarlett more than the nagging whining voices of the
others. She could—and did—shout them down with bitter sarcasm but
before Melanie’s unselfishness she was helpless, helpless and
resentful. Gerald, the negroes and Wade clung to Melanie now, because
even in her weakness she was kind and sympathetic, and these days
Scarlett was neither.
Wade especially haunted Melanie’s
room. There was something wrong with Wade, but just what it was
Scarlett had no time to discover. She took Mammy’s word that the
little boy had worms and dosed him with the mixture of dried herbs
and bark which Ellen always used to worm the pickaninnies. But the
vermifuge only made the child look paler. These days Scarlett hardly
thought of Wade as a person. He was only another worry, another mouth
to feed. Some day when the present emergency was over, she would play
with him, tell him stories and teach him his ABCs but now she did not
have the time or the soul or the inclination. And, because he always
seemed underfoot when she was most weary and worried, she often spoke
sharply to him.
It annoyed her that her quick
reprimands brought such acute fright to his round eyes, for he looked
so simple minded when he was frightened. She did not realize that the
little boy lived shoulder to shoulder with terror too great for an
adult to comprehend. Fear lived with Wade, fear that shook his soul
and made him wake screaming in the night. Any unexpected noise or
sharp word set him to trembling, for in his mind noises and harsh
words were inextricably mixed with Yankees and he was more afraid of
Yankees than of Prissy’s hants.
Until the thunders of the siege began,
he had never known anything but a happy, placid, quiet life. Even
though his mother paid him little attention, he had known nothing but
petting and kind words until the night when he was jerked from
slumber to find the sky aflame and the air deafening with explosions.
In that night and the day which followed, he had been slapped by his
mother for the first time and had heard her voice raised at him in
harsh words. Life in the pleasant brick house on Peachtree Street,
the only life he knew, had vanished that night and he would never
recover from its loss. In the flight from Atlanta, he had understood
nothing except that the Yankees were after him and now he still lived
in fear that the Yankees would catch him and cut him to pieces.
Whenever Scarlett raised her voice in reproof, he went weak with
fright as his vague childish memory brought up the horrors of the
first time she had ever done it. Now, Yankees and a cross voice were
linked forever in his mind and he was afraid of his mother.
Scarlett could not help noticing that
the child was beginning to avoid her and, in the rare moments when
her unending duties gave her time to think about it, it bothered her
a great deal. It was even worse than having him at her skirts all the
time and she was offended that his refuge was Melanie’s bed where
he played quietly at games Melanie suggested or listened to stories
she told. Wade adored “Auntee” who had a gentle voice, who always
smiled and who never said: “Hush, Wade! You give me a headache”
or “Stop fidgeting, Wade, for Heaven’s sake!”
Scarlett had neither the time nor the
impulse to pet him but it made her jealous to see Melanie do it. When
she found him one day standing on his head in Melanie’s bed and saw
him collapse on her, she slapped him.
“Don’t you know better than to
jiggle Auntee like that when she’s sick? Now, trot right out in the
yard and play, and don’t come in here again.”
But Melanie reached out a weak arm and
drew the wailing child to her.
“There, there, Wade. You didn’t
mean to jiggle me, did you? He doesn’t bother me, Scarlett. Do let
him stay with me. Let me take care of him. It’s the only thing I
can do till I get well, and you’ve got your hands full enough
without having to watch him.”
“Don’t be a goose, Melly,” said
Scarlett shortly. “You aren’t getting well like you should and
having Wade fall on your stomach won’t help you. Now, Wade, if I
ever catch you on Auntee’s bed again, I’ll wear you out. And stop
sniffling. You are always sniffling. Try to be a little man.”
Wade flew sobbing to hide himself under
the house. Melanie bit her lip and tears came to her eyes, and Mammy
standing in the hall, a witness to the scene, scowled and breathed
hard. But no one talked back to Scarlett these days. They were all
afraid of her sharp tongue, all afraid of the new person who walked
in her body.
Scarlett reigned supreme at Tara now
and, like others suddenly elevated to authority, all the Bullying
instincts in her nature rose to the surface. It was not that she was
basically unkind. It was because she was so frightened and unsure of
herself she was harsh lest others learn her inadequacies: and refuse
her authority. Besides, there was some pleasure in shouting at people
and knowing they were afraid. Scarlett found that it relieved her
overwrought nerves. She was not blind to the fact that her
personality was changing. Sometimes when her curt orders made Pork
stick out his under lip and Mammy mutter: “Some folks rides mighty
high dese days,” she wondered where her good manners had gone. All
the courtesy, all the gentleness Ellen had striven to instill in her
had fallen away from her as quickly as leaves fall from trees in the
first chill wind of autumn.
Time and again, Ellen had said: “Be
firm but be gentle with inferiors, especially darkies.” But if she
was gentle the darkies would sit in the kitchen all day, talking
endlessly about the good old days when a house nigger wasn’t
supposed to do a field hand’s work.
“Love and cherish your sisters. Be
kind to the afflicted,” said Ellen. “Show tenderness to those in
sorrow and in trouble.”
She couldn’t love her sisters now.
They were simply a dead weight on her shoulders. And as for
cherishing them, wasn’t she bathing them, combing their hair
and-feeding them, even at the expense of walking miles every day to
find vegetables? Wasn’t she learning to milk the cow, even though
her heart was always in her throat when that fearsome animal shook
its horns at her? And as for being kind, that was a waste of time. If
she was overly kind to them, they’d probably prolong their stay in
bed, and she wanted them on their feet again as soon as possible, so
there would be four more hands to help her.
They were convalescing slowly and lay
scrawny and weak in their bed. While they had been unconscious, the
world had changed. The Yankees had come, the darkies had gone and
Mother had died. Here were three unbelievable happenings and their
minds could not take them in. Sometimes they believed they must still
be delirious and these things had not happened at all. Certainly
Scarlett was so changed she couldn’t be real. When she hung over
the foot of their bed and outlined the work she expected them to do
when they recovered, they looked at her as if she were a hobgoblin.
It was beyond their comprehension that they no longer had a hundred
slaves to do the work. It was beyond their comprehension that an
O’Hara lady should do manual labor.
“But, Sister,” said Carreen, her
sweet childish face blank with consternation. “I couldn’t split
kindling! It would ruin my hands!”
“Look at mine,” answered Scarlett
with a frightening smile as she pushed blistered and calloused palms
toward her.
“I think you are hateful to talk to
Baby and me like this!” cried Suellen. “I think you are lying and
trying to frighten us. If Mother were only here, she wouldn’t let
you talk to us like this! Split kindling, indeed!”
Suellen looked with weak loathing at
her older sister, feeling sure Scarlett said these things just to be
mean. Suellen had nearly died and she had lost her mother and she was
lonely and scared and she wanted to be petted and made much of.
Instead, Scarlett looked over the foot of the bed each day,
appraising their improvement with a hateful new gleam in her slanting
green eyes and talked about making beds, preparing food, carrying
water buckets and splitting kindling. And she looked as if she took a
pleasure in saying such awful things.
Scarlett did take pleasure in it. She
bullied the negroes and harrowed the feelings of her sisters not only
because she was too worried and strained and tired to do otherwise
but because it helped her to forget her own bitterness that
everything her mother had told her about life was wrong.
Nothing her mother had taught her was
of any value whatsoever now and Scarlett’s heart was sore and
puzzled. It did not occur to her that Ellen could not have foreseen
the collapse of the civilization in which she raised her daughters,
could not have anticipated the disappearings of the places in society
for which she trained them so well. It did not occur to her that
Ellen had looked down a vista of placid future years, all like the
uneventful years of her own life, when she had taught her to be
gentle and gracious, honorable and kind, modest and truthful. Life
treated women well when they had learned those lessons, said Ellen.
Scarlett thought in despair: “Nothing,
no, nothing, she taught me is of any help to me! What good will
kindness do me now? What value is gentleness? Better that I’d
learned to plow or chop cotton like a darky. Oh, Mother, you were
wrong!”
She did not stop to think that Ellen’s
ordered world was gone and a brutal world had taken its place, a
world wherein every standard, every value had changed. She only saw,
or thought she saw, that her mother had been wrong, and she changed
swiftly to meet this new world for which she was not prepared.
Only her feeling for Tara had not
changed. She never came wearily home across the fields and saw the
sprawling white house that her heart did not swell with love and the
joy of homecoming. She never looked out of her window at green
pastures and red fields and tall tangled swamp forest that a sense of
beauty did not fill her. Her love for this land with its softly
rolling hills of bright-red soil, this beautiful red earth that was
blood colored, garnet, brick dust, vermilion, which so miraculously
grew green bushes starred with white puffs, was one part of Scarlett
which did not change when all else was changing. Nowhere else in the
world was there land like this.
When she looked at Tara she could
understand, in part, why wars were fought. Rhett was wrong when he
said men fought wars for money. No, they fought for swelling acres,
softly furrowed by the plow, for pastures green with stubby cropped
grass, for lazy yellow rivers and white houses that were cool amid
magnolias. These were the only things worth fighting for, the red
earth which was theirs and would be their sons’, the red earth
which would bear cotton for their sons and their sons’ sons.
The trampled acres of Tara were all
that was left to her, now that Mother and Ashley were gone, now that
Gerald was senile from shock, and money and darkies and security and
position had vanished overnight. As from another world she remembered
a conversation with her father about the land and wondered how she
could have been so young, so ignorant, as not to understand what he
meant when he said that the land was the one thing in the world worth
fighting for.
“For ‘tis the only thing in the
world that lasts … and to anyone with a drop of Irish blood in them
the land they live on is like their mother. … ‘Tis the only thing
worth working for, fighting for, dying for.”
Yes, Tara was worth fighting for, and
she accepted simply and without question the fight. No one was going
to get Tara away from her. No one was going to set her and her people
adrift on the charity of relatives. She would hold Tara, if she had
to break the back of every person on it.
CHAPTER XXVI
SCARLETT HAD BEEN AT TARA two weeks
since her return from Atlanta when the largest blister on her foot
began to fester, swelling until it was impossible for her to put on
her shoe or do more than hobble about on her heel. Desperation
plucked at her when she looked at the angry sore on her toe. Suppose
it should gangrene like the soldiers’ wounds and she should die,
far away from a doctor? Bitter as life was now, she had no desire to
leave it. And who would look after Tara if she should die?
She had hoped when she first came home
that Gerald’s old spirit would revive and he would take command,
but in these two weeks that hope had vanished. She knew now that,
whether she liked it or not, she had the plantation and all its
people on her two inexperienced hands, for Gerald still sat quietly,
like a man in a dream, so frighteningly absent from Tara, so gentle.
To her pleas for advice he gave as his only answer: “Do what you
think best, Daughter.” Or worse still, “Consult with your mother,
Puss.”
He never would be any different and now
Scarlett realized the truth and accepted it without emotion—that
until he died Gerald would always be waiting for Ellen, always
listening for her. He was in some dim borderline country where time
was standing still and Ellen was always in the next room. The
mainspring of his existence was taken away when she died and with it
had gone his bounding assurance, his impudence and his restless
vitality. Ellen was the audience before which the blustering drama of
Gerald O’Hara had been played. Now the curtain had been rung down
forever, the footlights dimmed and the audience suddenly vanished,
while the stunned old actor remained on his empty stage, waiting for
his cues.
That morning the house was still, for
everyone except Scarlett, Wade and the three sick girls was in the
swamp hunting the sow. Even Gerald had aroused a little and stumped
off across the furrowed fields, one hand on Pork’s arm and a coil
of rope in the other. Suellen and Careen had cried themselves to
sleep, as they did at least twice a day when they thought of Ellen,
tears of grief and weakness oozing down their sunken cheeks. Melanie,
who had been propped up on pillows for the first time that day, lay
covered with a mended sheet between two babies, the downy flaxen head
of one cuddled in her arm, the kinky black head of Dilcey’s child
held as gently in the other. Wade sat at the bottom of the bed,
listening to a fairy story.
To Scarlett, the stillness at Tara was
unbearable, for it reminded her too sharply of the deathlike
stillness of the desolate country through which she had passed that
long day on her way home from Atlanta. The cow and the calf had made
no sound for hours. There were no birds twittering outside her window
and even the noisy family of mockers who had lived among the harshly
rustling leaves of the magnolia for generations had no song that day.
She had drawn a low chair close to the open window of her bedroom,
looking out on the front drive, the lawn and the empty green pasture
across the road, and she sat with her skirts well above her knees and
her chin resting on her arms on the window sill. There was a bucket
of well water on the floor beside her and every now and then she
lowered her blistered foot into it, screwing up her face at the
stinging sensation.
Fretting, she dug her chin into her
arm. Just when she needed her strength most, this toe had to fester.
Those fools would never catch the sow. It had taken them a week to
capture the pigs, one by one, and now after two weeks the sow was
still at liberty. Scarlett knew that if she were just there in the
swamp with them, she could tuck up her dress to her knees and take
the rope and lasso the sow before you could say Jack Robinson.
But even after the sow was caught—if
she were caught? What then, after she and her litter were eaten? Life
would go on and so would appetites. Winter was coming and there would
be no food, not even the poor remnants of the vegetables from the
neighbors’ gardens. They must have dried peas and sorghum and meal
and rice and—and—oh, so many things. Corn and cotton seed for
next spring’s planting, and new clothes too. Where was it all to
come from and how would she pay for it?
She had privately gone through Gerald’s
pockets and his cash box and all she could find was stacks of
Confederate bonds and three thousand dollars in Confederate bills.
That was about enough to buy one square meal for them all, she
thought ironically, now that Confederate money was worth almost less
than nothing at all. But if she did have money and could find food,
how would she haul it home to Tara? Why had God let the old horse
die? Even that sorry animal Rhett had stolen would make all the
difference in the world to them. Oh, those fine sleek mules which
used to kick up their heels in the pasture across the road, and the
handsome carriage horses, her little mare, the girls’ ponies and
Gerald’s big stallion racing about and tearing up the turf— Oh,
for one of them, even the balkiest mule!
But, no matter—when her foot healed
she would walk to Jonesboro. It would be the longest walk she had
ever taken in her life, but walk it she would. Even if the Yankees
had burned the town completely, she would certainly find someone in
the neighborhood who could tell her where to get food. Wade’s
pinched face rose up before her eyes. He didn’t like yams, he
repeated; wanted a drumstick and some rice and gravy.
The bright sunlight in the front yard
suddenly clouded and the trees blurred through tears. Scarlett
dropped her head on her arms and struggled not to cry. Crying was so
useless now. The only time crying ever did any good was when there
was a man around from whom you wished favors. As she crouched there,
squeezing her eyes tightly to keep back the tears, she was startled
by the sound of trotting hooves. But she did not raise her head. She
had imagined that sound too often in the nights and days of these
last two weeks, just as she had imagined she heard the rustle of
Ellen’s skirts. Her heart hammered, as it always did at such
moments, before she told herself sternly: “Don’t be a fool.”
But the hooves slowed down in a
startlingly natural way to the rhythm of a walk and there was the
measured scrunch-scrunch on the gravel. It was a horse—the
Tarletons, the Fontaines! She looked up quickly. It was a Yankee
cavalryman.
Automatically, she dodged behind the
curtain and peered fascinated at him through the dim folds of the
cloth, so startled that the breath went out of her lungs with a gasp.
He sat slouched in the saddle, a thick,
rough-looking man with an unkempt black beard straggling over his
unbuttoned brae jacket. Little close-set eyes, squinting in the sun
glare, calmly surveyed the house from beneath the visor of his tight
brae cap. As he slowly dismounted and tossed the bridle reins over
the hitching post, Scarlett’s breath came back to her as suddenly
and painfully as after a blow in the stomach. A Yankee, a Yankee with
a long pistol on his hip! And she was alone in the house with three
sick girls and the babies!
As he lounged up the walk, hand on
holster, beady little eyes glancing to right and left, a kaleidoscope
of jumbled pictures spun in her mind, stories Aunt Pittypat had
whispered of attacks on unprotected women, throat cuttings, houses
burned over the heads of dying women, children bayoneted because they
cried, all of the unspeakable horrors that lay bound up in the name
of “Yankee.”
Her first terrified impulse was to hide
in the closet, crawl under the bed, fly down the back stairs and run
screaming to the swamp, anything to escape him. Then she heard his
cautious feet on the front steps and his stealthy tread as he entered
the hall and she knew that escape was cut off. Too cold with fear to
move, she heard his progress from room to room downstairs, his steps
growing louder and bolder as he discovered no one. Now he was in the
dining room and in a moment he would walk out into the kitchen.
At the thought of the kitchen, rage
suddenly leaped up in Scarlett’s breast, so sharply that it jabbed
at her heart like a knife thrust, and fear fell away before her
overpowering fury. The kitchen! There, over the open kitchen fire
were two pots, one filled with apples stewing and the other with a
hodgepodge of vegetables brought painfully from Twelve Oaks and the
Macintosh garden—dinner that must serve for nine hungry people and
hardly enough for two. Scarlett had been restraining her appetite for
hours, waiting for the return of the others and the thought of the
Yankee eating their meager meal made her shake with anger.
God damn them all! They descended like
locusts and left Tara to starve slowly and now they were back again
to steal the poor leavings. Her empty stomach writhed within her. By
God, this was one Yankee who would do no more stealing!
She slipped off her worn shoe and,
barefooted, she pattered swiftly to the bureau, not even feeling her
festered toe. She opened the top drawer soundlessly and caught up the
heavy pistol she had brought from Atlanta, the weapon Charles had
worn but never fired. She fumbled in the leather box that hung on the
wall below his saber and brought out a cap. She slipped it into place
with a hand that did not shake. Quickly and noiselessly, she ran into
the upper hall and down the stairs, steadying herself on the
banisters with one hand and holding the pistol close to her thigh in
the folds of her skirt.
“Who’s there?” cried a nasal
voice and she stopped on the middle of the stairs, the blood thudding
in her ears so loudly she could hardly hear him. “Halt or I’ll
shoot!” came the voice.
He stood in the door of the dining
room, crouched tensely, his pistol in one hand and, in the other, the
small rosewood sewing box fitted with gold thimble, gold-handled
scissors and tiny gold-topped acorn of emery. Scarlett’s legs felt
cold to the knees but rage scorched her face. Ellen’s sewing box in
his hands. She wanted to cry: “Put it down! Put it down, you
dirty—” but words would not come. She could only stare over the
banisters at him and watch his face change from harsh tenseness to a
half-contemptuous, half-ingratiating smile.
“So there is somebody at home,” he
said, slipping his pistol back into its holster and moving into the
hall until he stood directly below her. “All alone, little lady?”
Like lightning, she shoved her weapon
over the banisters and into the startled bearded face. Before he
could even fumble at his belt, she pulled the trigger. The back kick
of the pistol made her reel, as the roar of the explosion filled her
ears and the acrid smoke stung her nostrils. The man crashed
backwards to the floor, sprawling into the dining room with a
violence that shook the furniture. The box clattered from his hand,
the contents spilling about him. Hardly aware that she was moving,
Scarlett ran down the stairs and stood over him, gazing down into
what was left of the face above the beard, a bloody pit where the
nose had been, glazing eyes burned with powder. As she looked, two
streams of blood crept across the shining floor, one from his face
and one from the back of his head.
Yes, he was dead. Undoubtedly. She had
killed a man.
The smoke curled slowly to the ceiling
and the red streams widened about her feet. For a timeless moment she
stood there and in the still hot hush of the summer morning every
irrelevant sound and scent seemed magnified, the quick thudding of
her heart, like, a drumbeat, the slight rough rustling of the
magnolia leaves, the far-off plaintive sound of a swamp bird and the
sweet smell of the flowers outside the window.
She had killed a man, she who took care
never to be in at the kill on a hunt, she who could not bear the
squealing of a hog at slaughter or the squeak of a rabbit in a snare.
Murder! she thought dully. I’ve done murder. Oh, this can’t be
happening to me! Her eyes went to the stubby hairy hand on the floor
so close to the sewing box and suddenly she was vitally alive again,
vitally glad with a cool tigerish joy. She could have ground her heel
into the gaping wound which had been his nose and taken sweet
pleasure in the feel of his warm blood on her bare feet. She had
struck a blow of revenge for Tara—and for Ellen.
There were hurried stumbling steps in
the upper hall, a pause and then more steps, weak dragging steps now,
punctuated by metallic clankings. A sense of time and reality coming
back to her, Scarlett looked up and saw Melanie at the top of the
stairs, clad only in the ragged chemise which served her as a
nightgown, her weak arm weighed down with Charles’ saber. Melanie’s
eyes took in the scene below in its entirety, the sprawling blue-clad
body in the red pool, the sewing box beside him, Scarlett, barefooted
and gray-faced, clutching the long pistol.
In silence her eyes met Scarlett’s.
There was a glow of grim pride in her usually gentle face,
approbation and a fierce joy in her smile that equaled the fiery
tumult in Scarlett’s own bosom.
“Why—why—she’s like me! She
understands how I feel!” thought Scarlett in that long moment
“She’d have done the same thing!”
With a thrill she looked up at the
frail swaying girl for whom she had never had any feelings but of
dislike and contempt. Now, straggling against hatred for Ashley’s
wife, there surged a feeling of admiration and comradeship. She saw
in a flash of clarity untouched by any petty emotion that beneath the
gentle voice and the dovelike eyes of Melanie there was a thin
flashing blade of unbreakable steel, felt too that there were banners
and bugles of courage in Melanie’s quiet blood.
“Scarlett! Scarlett!” shrilled the
weak frightened voices of Suellen and Carreen, muffled by their
closed door, and Wade’s voice screamed “Auntee! Auntee!”
Swiftly Melanie put her finger to her lips and, laying the sword on
the top step, she painfully made her way down the upstairs hall and
opened the door of the sick room.
“Don’t be scared, chickens!” came
her voice with teasing gaiety. “Your big sister was trying to clean
the rust off Charles’ pistol and it went off and nearly scared her
to death!” … “Now, Wade Hampton, Mama just shot off your dear
Papa’s pistol! When you are bigger, she will let you shoot it.”
“What a cool liar!” thought
Scarlett with admiration. “I couldn’t have thought that quickly.
But why lie? They’ve got to know I’ve done it.”
She looked down at the body again and
now revulsion came over her as her rage and fright melted away, and
her knees began to quiver with the reaction. Melanie dragged herself
to the top step again and started down, holding onto the banisters,
her pale lower lip caught between her teeth.
“Go back to bed, silly, you’ll kill
yourself!” Scarlett cried, but the half-naked Melanie made her
painful way down into the lower hall.
“Scarlett,” she whispered, “we
must get him out of here and bury him. He may not be alone and if
they find him here—” She steadied herself on Scarlett’s arm.
“He must be alone,” said Scarlett.
“I didn’t see anyone else from the upstairs window. He must be a
deserter.”
“Even if he is alone, no one must
know about it. The negroes might talk and then they’d come and get
you. Scarlett, we must get him hidden before the folks come back from
the swamp.”
Her mind prodded to action by the
feverish urgency of Melanie’s voice, Scarlett thought hard.
“I could bury him in the corner of
the garden under the arbor—the ground is soft there where Pork dug
up the whisky barrel. But how will I get him there?”
“We’ll both take a leg and drag
him,” said Melanie firmly.
Reluctantly, Scarlett’s admiration
went still higher.
“You couldn’t drag a cat. I’ll
drag him,” she said roughly. “You go back to bed. You’ll kill
yourself. Don’t dare try to help me either or I’ll carry you
upstairs myself.”
Melanie’s white face broke into a
sweet understanding smile. “You are very dear, Scarlett,” she
said and softly brushed her lips against Scarlett’s cheek. Before
Scarlett could recover from her surprise, Melanie went on: “If you
can drag him out, I’ll mop up the—the mess before the folks get
home, and Scarlett—”
“Yes?”
“Do you suppose it would be dishonest
to go through his knapsack? He might have something to eat.”
“I do not,” said Scarlett, annoyed
that she had not thought of this herself. “You take the knapsack
and I’ll go through his pockets.”
Stooping over the dead man with
distaste, she unbuttoned the remaining buttons of his jacket and
systematically began rifling his pockets.
“Dear God,” she whispered, pulling
out a bulging wallet, wrapped about with a rag. “Melanie—Melly, I
think it’s full of money!”
Melanie said nothing but abruptly sat
down on the floor and leaned back against the wall.
“You look,” she said shakily. I’m
feeling a little weak.”
Scarlett tore off the rag and with
trembling hands opened the leather folds.
“Look, Melly—just look!”
Melanie looked and her eyes dilated.
Jumbled together was a mass of bills, United States greenbacks
mingling with Confederate money and, glinting from between them, were
one ten-dollar gold piece and two five-dollar gold pieces.
“Don’t stop to count it now,”
said Melanie as Scarlett began fingering the bills. “We haven’t
time—”
“Do you realize, Melanie, that this
money means that we’ll eat?”
“Yes, yes, dear. I know but we
haven’t time now. You look in his other pockets and I’ll take the
knapsack.”
Scarlett was loath to put down the
wallet. Bright vistas opened before her—real money, the Yankee’s
horse, food! There was a God after all, and He did provide, even if
He did take very odd ways of providing. She sat on her haunches and
stared at the wallet smiling. Food! Melanie plucked it from her
hands—
“Hurry!” she said.
The trouser pockets yielded nothing
except a candle end, a jackknife, a plug of tobacco and a bit of
twine. Melanie removed from the knapsack a small package of coffee
which she sniffed as if it were the sweetest of perfumes, hardtack
and, her face changing, a miniature of a little girl in a gold frame
set with seed pearls, a garnet brooch, two broad gold bracelets with
tiny dangling gold chains, a gold thimble, a small silver baby’s
cup, gold embroidery scissors, a diamond solitaire ring and a pair of
earrings with pendant pear-shaped diamonds, which even their
unpracticed eyes could tell were well over a carat each.
“A thief!” whispered Melanie,
recoiling from the still body. “Scarlett, he must have stolen all
of this!”
“Of course,” said Scarlett. “And
he came here hoping to steal more from us.”
“I’m glad you killed him,” said
Melanie her gentle eyes hard. “Now hurry, darling, and get him out
of here.”
Scarlett bent over, caught the dead man
by his boots and tugged. How heavy he was and how weak she suddenly
felt. Suppose she shouldn’t be able to move him? Turning so that
she backed the corpse, she caught a heavy boot under each arm and
threw her weight forward. He moved and she jerked again. Her sore
foot, forgotten in the excitement, now gave a tremendous throb that
made her grit her teeth and shift her weight to the heel. Tugging and
straining, perspiration dripping from her forehead, she dragged him
down the hall, a red stain following her path.
“If he bleeds across the yard, we
can’t hide it,” she gasped. “Give me your shimmy, Melanie, and
I’ll wad it around his head.”
Melanie’s white face went crimson.
“Don’t be silly, I won’t look at
you,” said Scarlett “If I had on a petticoat or pantalets I’d
use them.”
Crouching back against the wall,
Melanie pulled the ragged linen garment over her head and silently
tossed it to Scarlett, shielding herself as best she could with her
arms.
“Thank God, I’m not that modest,”
thought Scarlett, feeling rather than seeing Melanie’s agony of
embarrassment, as she wrapped the ragged cloth about the shattered
face.
By a series of limping jerks, she
pulled the body down the hall toward the back porch and, pausing to
wipe her forehead with the back of her hand, glanced back toward
Melanie, sitting against the wall hugging her thin knees to her bare
breasts. How silly of Melanie to be bothering about modesty at a time
like this, Scarlett thought irritably. It was just part of her
nicey-nice way of acting which had always made Scarlett despise her.
Then shame rose in her. After all—after all, Melanie had dragged
herself from bed so soon after having a baby and had come to her aid
with a weapon too heavy even for her to lift. That had taken courage,
the kind of courage Scarlett honestly knew she herself did not
possess, the thin-steel, spun silk courage which had characterized
Melanie on the terrible night Atlanta fell and on the long trip home.
It was the same intangible, unspectacular courage that all the
Wilkeses possessed, a quality which Scarlett did not understand but
to which she gave grudging tribute.
“Go back to bed,” she threw over
her shoulder. “You’ll be dead if you don’t. I’ll clean up the
mess after I’ve buried him.”
“I’ll do it with one of the rag
rugs,” whispered Melanie, looking at the pool of blood with a sick
face.
“Well, kill yourself then and see if
I care! And if any of the folks come back before I’m finished, keep
them in the house and tell them the horse just walked in from
nowhere.”
Melanie sat shivering in the morning
sunlight and covered her ears against the sickening series of thuds
as the dead man’s head bumped down the porch steps.
No one questioned whence the horse had
come. It was so obvious he was a stray from the recent battle and
they were well pleased to have him. The Yankee lay in the shallow pit
Scarlett had scraped out under the scuppernong arbor. The uprights
which held the thick vines were rotten and that night Scarlett hacked
at them with the kitchen knife until they fell and the tangled mass
ran wild over the grave. The replacing of these posts was one bit of
repair work Scarlett did not suggest and, if the negroes knew why,
they kept their silence.
No ghost rose from that shallow grave
to haunt her in the long nights when she lay awake, too tired to
sleep. No feeling of horror or remorse assailed her at the memory.
She wondered why, knowing that even a month before she could never
have done the deed. Pretty young Mrs. Hamilton, with her dimple and
her jingling earbobs and her helpless little ways, blowing a man’s
face to a pulp and then burying him in a hastily scratched-out hole!
Scarlett grinned a little grimly thinking of die consternation such
an idea would bring to those who knew her.
“I won’t think about it any more,”
she decided. “It’s over and done with and I’d have been a ninny
not to kill him. I reckon—I reckon I must have changed a little
since coming home or else I couldn’t have done it.”
She did not think of it consciously but
in the back of her mind, whenever she was confronted by an unpleasant
and difficult task, the idea lurked giving her strength: I’ve done
murder and so I can surely do this.”
She had changed more than she knew and
the shell of hardness which had begun to form about her heart when
she lay in the slave garden at Twelve Oaks was slowly thickening.
Now that she had a horse, Scarlett
could find out for herself what had happened to their neighbors.
Since she came home she had wondered despairingly a thousand times:
“Are we the only folks left in the County? Has everybody else been
burned out? Have they all refugeed to Macon?” With the memory of
the ruins of Twelve Oaks, the Macintosh place and the Slattery shack
fresh in her mind, she almost dreaded to discover the truth. But it
was better to know the worst than to wonder. She decided to ride to
the Fontaines’ first, not because they were the nearest neighbors
but because old Dr. Fontaine might be there. Melanie needed a doctor.
She was not recovering as she should and Scarlett was frightened by
her white weakness.
So on the first day when her foot had
healed enough to stand a slipper, she mounted the Yankee’s horse.
One foot in the shortened stirrup and the other leg crooked about the
pommel in an approximation of a side saddle, she set out across the
fields toward Mimosa, steeling herself to find it burned.
To her surprise and pleasure, she saw
the faded yellow-stucco house standing amid the mimosa trees, looking
as it had always looked. Warm happiness, happiness that almost
brought tears, flooded her when the three Fontaine women came out of
the house to welcome her with kisses and cries of joy.
But when the first exclamations of
affectionate greeting were over and they all had trooped into the
dining room to sit down, Scarlett felt a chill. The Yankees had not
reached Mimosa because it was far off the main road. And so the
Fontaines still had their stock and their provisions, but Mimosa was
held by the same strange silence that hung over Tara, over the whole
countryside. All the slaves except four women house servants had run
away, frightened by the approach of the Yankees. There was not a man
on the place unless Sally’s little boy, Joe, hardly out of diapers,
could be counted as a man. Alone in the big house were Grandma
Fontaine, in her seventies, her daughter-in-law who would always be
known as Young Miss, though she was in her fifties, and Sally, who
had barely turned twenty. They were far away from neighbors and
unprotected, but if they were afraid it did not show on their faces.
Probably, thought Scarlett, because Sally and Young Miss were too
afraid of the porcelain-frail but indomitable old Grandma to dare
voice any qualms. Scarlett herself was afraid of the old lady, for
she had sharp eyes and a sharper tongue and Scarlett had felt them
both in the past.
Though unrelated by blood and far apart
in age, there was a kinship of spirit and experience binding these
women together. All three wore home-dyed mourning, all were worn,
sad, worried, all bitter with a bitterness that did not sulk or
complain but, nevertheless, peered out from behind their smiles and
their words of welcome. For their slaves were gone, their money was
worthless, Sally’s husband, Joe, had died at Gettysburg and Young
Miss was also a widow, for young Dr. Fontaine had died of dysentery
at Vicksburg. The other two boys, Alex and Tony, were somewhere in
Virginia and nobody knew whether they were alive or dead; and old Dr.
Fontaine was off somewhere with Wheeler’s cavalry.
“And the old fool is seventy-three
years old though he tries to act younger and he’s as full of
rheumatism as a hog is of fleas,” said Grandma, proud of her
husband, the light in her eyes belying her sharp words.
“Have you all had any news of what’s
been happening in Atlanta?” asked Scarlett when they were
comfortably settled. “We’re completely buried at Tara.”
“Law, child,” said Old Miss, taking
charge of the conversation, as was her habit, “we’re in the same
fix as you are. We don’t know a thing except that Sherman finally
got the town.”
“So he did get it. What’s he doing
now? Where’s the fighting now?”
“And how would three lone women out
here in the country know about the war when we haven’t seen a
letter or a newspaper in weeks?” said the old lady tartly. “One
of our darkies talked to a darky who’d seen a darky who’d been to
Jonesboro, and except for that we haven’t heard anything. What they
said was that the Yankees were just squatting in Atlanta resting up
their men and their horses, but whether it’s true or not you’re
as good a judge as I am. Not that they wouldn’t need a rest, after
the fight we gave them.”
To think you’ve been at Tara all this
time and we didn’t know!” Young Miss broke in. “Oh, how I blame
myself for not riding over to see! But there’s been so much to do
here with most all the darkies gone that I just couldn’t get away.
But I should have made time to go. It wasn’t neighborly of me. But,
of course, we thought the Yankees had burned Tara like they did
Twelve Oaks and the Macintosh house and that your folks had gone to
Macon. And we never dreamed you were home, Scarlett.”
“Well, how were we to know different
when Mr. O’Hara’s darkies came through here so scared they were
popeyed and told us the Yankees were going to burn Tara?” Grandma
interrupted.
“And we could see—” Sally began.
“I’m telling this, please,” said
Old Miss shortly. “And they said the Yankees were camped all over
Tara and your folks were fixing to go to Macon. And then that night
we saw the glare of fire over toward Tara and it lasted for hours and
it scared our fool darkies so bad they all ran off. What burned?”
“All our cotton—a hundred and fifty
thousand dollars worth,” said Scarlett bitterly.
“Be thankful it wasn’t your house,”
said Grandma, leaning her chin on her cane. “You can always grow
more cotton and you can’t grow a house. By the bye, had you all
started picking your cotton?”
“No,” said Scarlett, “and now
most of it is ruined. I don’t imagine there’s more than three
bales left standing, in the far field in the creek bottom, and what
earthly good will it do? All our field hands are gone and there’s
nobody to pick it.”
“Mercy me, all our field hands are
gone and there’s nobody to pick it!” mimicked Grandma and bent a
satiric glance on Scarlett “What’s wrong with your own pretty
paws, Miss, and those of your sisters?”
“Me? Pick cotton?” cried Scarlett
aghast, as if Grandma had been suggesting some repulsive crime. “Like
a field hand? Like white trash? Like the Slattery women?”
“White trash, indeed! Well, isn’t
this generation soft and ladylike! Let me tell you, Miss, when I was
a girl my father lost all his money and I wasn’t above doing honest
work with my hands and in the fields too, till Pa got enough money to
buy some more darkies. I’ve hoed my row and I’ve picked my cotton
and I can do it again if I have to. And it looks like I’ll have to.
White trash, indeed!”
“Oh, but Mama Fontaine,” cried her
daughter-in-law, casting imploring glances at the two girls, urging
them to help her smooth the old lady’s feathers. “That was so
long ago, a different day entirely, and times have changed.”
“Times never change when there’s a
need for honest work to be done,” stated the sharp-eyed old lady,
refusing to be soothed. “And I’m ashamed for your mother,
Scarlett, to hear you stand there and talk as though honest work made
white trash out of nice people. ‘When Adam delved and Eve span’—”
To change the subject, Scarlett hastily
questioned: “What about the Tarletons and the Calverts? Were they
burned out? Have they refugeed to Macon?”
“The Yankees never got to the
Tarletons. They’re off the main road, like we are, but they did get
to the Calverts and they stole all their stock and poultry and got
all the darkies to run off with them—” Sally began.
Grandma interrupted.
“Hah! They promised all the black
wenches silk dresses and gold earbobs—that’s what they did. And
Cathleen Calvert said some of the troopers went off with the black
fools behind them on their saddles. Well, all they’ll get will be
yellow babies and I can’t say that Yankee blood will improve the
stock.”
“Oh, Mama Fontaine!”
“Don’t pull such a shocked face,
Jane. We’re all married, aren’t we? And, God knows, we’ve seen
mulatto babies before this.”
“Why didn’t they burn the Calverts’
house?”
“The house was saved by the combined
accents of the second Mrs. Calvert and that Yankee overseer of hers,
Hilton,” said Old Miss, who always referred to the ex-governess as
the “second Mrs. Calvert,” although the first Mrs. Calvert had
been dead twenty years.
“ ‘We are staunch Union
sympathizers,’ ” mimicked the old lady, twanging the words
through her long thin nose. “Cathleen said the two of them swore up
hill and down dale that the whole passel of Calverts were Yankees.
And Mr. Calvert dead in the Wilderness! And Raiford at Gettysburg and
Cade in Virginia with the army! Cathleen was so mortified she said
she’d rather the house had been burned. She said Cade would bust
when he came home and heard about it. But then, that’s what a man
gets for marrying a Yankee woman—no pride, no decency, always
thinking about their own skins. … How come they didn’t burn Tara,
Scarlett?”
For a moment Scarlett paused before
answering. She knew the very next question would be: “And how are
all your folks? And how is your dear mother?” She knew she could
not tell them Ellen was dead. She knew that if she spoke those words
or even let herself think of them in the presence of these
sympathetic women, she would burst into a storm of tears and cry
until she was sick. And she could not let herself cry. She had not
really cried since she came home and she knew that if she once let
down the floodgates, her closely husbanded courage would all be gone.
But she knew, too, looking with confusion at the friendly faces about
her, that if she withheld the news of Ellen’s death, the Fontaines
would never forgive her. Grandma in particular was devoted to Ellen
and there were very few people in the County for whom the old lady
gave a snap of her skinny fingers.
“Well, speak up,” said Grandma,
looking sharply at her. “Don’t you know, Miss?”
“Well, you see, I didn’t get home
till the day after the battle,” she answered hastily. The Yankees
were all gone then. Pa— Pa told me that—that he got them not to
burn the house because Suellen and Carreen were so ill with typhoid
they couldn’t be moved.”
“That’s the first time I ever heard
of a Yankee doing a decent thing,” said Grandma, as if she
regretted hearing anything good about the invaders. “And how are
the girls now?”
“Oh, they are better, much better,
almost well but quite weak,” answered Scarlett. Then, seeing the
question she feared hovering on the old lady’s lips, she cast
hastily about for some other topic of conversation.
“I—I wonder if you could lend us
something to eat? The Yankees cleaned us out like a swarm of locusts.
But, if you are on short rations, just tell me so plainly and—”
“Send over Pork with a wagon and you
shall have half of what we’ve got, rice, meal, ham, some chickens,”
said Old Miss, giving Scarlett a sudden keen look.
“Oh, that’s too much! Really, I—”
“Not a word! I won’t hear it. What
are neighbors for?”
“You are so kind that I can’t—
But I have to be going now. The folks at home will be worrying about
me.”
Grandma rose abruptly and took Scarlett
by the arm.
“You two stay here,” she commanded,
pushing Scarlett toward the back porch. “I have a private word for
this child. Help me down the steps, Scarlett.”
Young Miss and Sally said good-by and
promised to come calling soon. They were devoured by curiosity as to
what Grandma had to say to Scarlett but unless she chose to tell
them, they would never know. Old ladies were so difficult, Young Miss
whispered to Sally as they went back to their sewing.
Scarlett stood with her hand on the
horse’s bridle, a dull feeling at her heart.
“Now,” said Grandma, peering into
her face, “what’s wrong at Tara? What are you keeping back?”
Scarlett looked up into the keen old
eyes and knew she could tell the truth, without tears. No one could
cry in the presence of Grandma Fontaine without her express
permission.
“Mother is dead,” she said flatly.
The hand on her arm tightened until it
pinched and the wrinkled lids over the yellow eyes blinked.
“Did the Yankees kill her?”
“She died of typhoid. Died—the day
before I came home.”
“Don’t think about it,” said
Grandma sternly and Scarlett saw her swallow. “And your Pa?”
“Pa is—Pa is not himself.”
“What do you mean? Speak up. Is he
ill?”
“The shock—he is so strange—he is
not—”
“Don’t tell me he’s not himself.
Do you mean his mind is unhinged?”
It was a relief to hear the truth put
so baldly. How good the old lady was to offer no sympathy that would
make her cry.
“Yes,” she said dully, “he’s
lost his mind. He acts dazed and sometimes he can’t seem to
remember that Mother is dead. Oh, Old Miss, it’s more than I can
stand to see him sit by the hour, waiting for her and so patiently
too, and he used to have no more patience than a child. But it’s
worse when he does remember that she’s gone. Every now and then,
after he’s sat still with his ear cocked listening for her, he
jumps up suddenly and stamps out of the house and down to the burying
ground. And then he comes dragging back with the tears all over his
face and he says over and over till I could scream: ‘Katie
Scarlett, Mrs. O’Hara is dead. Your mother is dead,’ and it’s
just like I was hearing it again for the first time. And sometimes,
late at night, I hear him calling her and I get out of bed and go to
him and tell him she’s down at the quarters with a sick darky. And
he fusses because she’s always tiring herself out nursing people.
And it’s so hard to get him back to bed. He’s like a child. Oh, I
wish Dr. Fontaine was here! I know he could do something for Pa! And
Melanie needs a doctor too. She isn’t getting over her baby like
she should—”
“Melly—a baby? And she’s with
you?”
“Yes.”
“What’s Melly doing with you? Why
isn’t she in Macon with her aunt and her kinfolks? I never thought
you liked her any too well, Miss, for all she was Charles’ sister.
Now, tell me all about it.”
“It’s a long story, Old Miss. Don’t
you want to go back in the house and sit down?”
“I can stand,” said Grandma
shortly. “And if you told your story in front of the others, they’d
be bawling and making you feel sorry for yourself. Now, let’s have
it.”
Scarlett began haltingly with the siege
and Melanie’s condition, but as her story progressed beneath the
sharp old eyes which never faltered in their gaze, she found words,
words of power and horror. It all came back to her, the sickeningly
hot day of the baby’s birth, the agony of fear, the flight and
Rhett’s desertion. She spoke of the wild darkness of the night, the
blazing camp fires which might be friends or foes, the gaunt chimneys
which met her gaze in the morning sun, the dead men and horses along
the road, the hunger, the desolation, the fear that Tara had been
burned.
“I thought if I could just get home
to Mother, she could manage everything and I could lay down the weary
load. On the way home I thought the worst had already happened to me,
but when I knew she was dead I knew what the worst really was.”
She dropped her eyes to the ground and
waited for Grandma to speak. The silence was so prolonged she
wondered if Grandma could have failed to comprehend her desperate
plight. Finally the old voice spoke and her tones were kind, kinder
than Scarlett had ever heard her use in addressing anyone.
“Child, it’s a very bad thing for a
woman to face the worst that can happen to her, because after she’s
faced the worst she can’t ever really fear anything again. And it’s
very bad for a woman not to be afraid of something. You think I don’t
understand what you’ve told me—what you’ve been through? Well,
I understand very well. When I was about your age I was in the Creek
uprising, right after the Fort Mims massacre—yes,” she said in a
far-away voice, “just about your age for that was fifty-odd years
ago. And I managed to get into the bushes and hide and I lay there
and saw our house burn and I saw the Indians scalp my brothers and
sisters. And I could only lie there and pray that the light of the
flames wouldn’t show up my hiding place. And they dragged Mother
out and killed her about twenty feet from where I was lying. And
scalped her too. And ever so often one Indian would go back to her
and sink his tommyhawk into her skull again. I—I was my mother’s
pet and I lay there and saw it all. And in the morning I set out for
the nearest settlement and it was thirty miles away. It took me three
days to get there, through the swamps and the Indians, and afterward
they thought I’d lose my mind. … That’s where I met Dr.
Fontaine. He looked after me. … Ah, well, that’s been fifty years
ago, as I said, and since that time I’ve never been afraid of
anything or anybody because I’d known the worst that could happen
to me. And that lack of fear has gotten me into a lot of trouble and
cost me a lot of happiness. God intended women to be timid frightened
creatures and there’s something unnatural about a woman who isn’t
afraid. … Scarlett, always save something to fear— even as you
save something to love. …”
Her voice trailed off and she stood
silent with eyes looking back over half a century to the day when she
had been afraid. Scarlett moved impatiently. She had thought Grandma
was going to understand and perhaps show her some way to solve her
problems. But like all old people she’d gotten to talking about
things that happened before anyone was born, things no one was
interested in. Scarlett wished she had not confided in her.
“Well, go home, child, or they’ll
be worrying about you,” she said suddenly. “Send Pork with the
wagon this afternoon. … And don’t think you can lay down the
load, ever. Because you can’t. I know.”
Indian summer lingered into November
that year and the warm days were bright days for those at Tara. The
worst was over. They had a horse now and they could ride instead of
walk. They had fried eggs for breakfast and fried ham for supper to
vary the monotony of the yams, peanuts and dried apples, and on one
festal occasion they even had roast chicken. The old sow had finally
been captured and she and her brood rooted and grunted happily under
the house where they were penned. Sometimes they squealed so loudly
no one in the house could talk but it was a pleasant sound. It meant
fresh pork for the white folks and chitterlings for the negroes when
cold weather and hog-killing time should arrive, and it meant food
for the winter for all.
Scarlett’s visit to the Fontaines had
heartened her more than she realized. Just the knowledge that she had
neighbors, that some of the family friends and old homes had
survived, drove out the terrible loss and alone feeling which had
oppressed her in her first weeks at Tara. And the Fontaines and
Tarletons, whose plantations had not been in the path of the army,
were most generous in sharing what little they had. It was the
tradition of the County that neighbor helped neighbor and they
refused to accept a penny from Scarlett, telling her that she would
do the same for them and she could pay them back, in kind, next year
when Tara was again producing.
Scarlett now had food for her
household, she had a horse, she had the money and jewelry taken from
the Yankee straggler, and the greatest need was new clothing. She
knew it would be risky business sending Pork south to buy clothes,
when the horse might be captured by either Yankees or Confederates.
But, at least, she had the money with which to buy the clothes, a
horse and wagon for the trip, and perhaps Pork could make the trip
without getting caught. Yes, the worst was over.
Every morning when Scarlett arose she
thanked God for the pale-blue sky and the warm sun, for each day of
good weather put off the inevitable time when warm clothing would be
needed. And each warm day saw more and more cotton piling up in the
empty slave quarters, the only storage place left on the plantation.
There was more cotton in the fields than she or Pork had estimated,
probably four bales, and soon the cabins would be full.
Scarlett had not intended to do any
cotton picking herself, even after Grandma Fontaine’s tart remark.
It was unthinkable that she, an O’Hara lady, now the mistress of
Tara, should work in the fields. It put her on the same level with
the snarly haired Mrs. Slattery and Emmie. She had intended that the
negroes should do the field work, while she and the convalescent
girls attended to the house, but here she was confronted with a caste
feeling even stronger than her own. Pork, Mammy and Prissy set up
outcries at the idea of working in the fields. They reiterated that
they were house niggers, not field hands. Mammy, in particular,
declared vehemently that she had never even been a yard nigger. She
had been born in the Robillard great house, not in the quarters, and
had been raised in Ole Miss’ bedroom, sleeping on a pallet at the
foot of the bed. Dilcey alone said nothing and she fixed her Prissy
with an unwinking eye that made her squirm.
Scarlett refused to listen to the
protests and drove them all into the cotton rows. But Mammy and Pork
worked so slowly and with so many lamentations that Scarlett sent
Mammy back to the kitchen to cook and Pork to the woods and the river
with snares for rabbits and possums and lines for fish. Cotton
picking was beneath Pork’s dignity but hunting and fishing were
not.
Scarlett next had tried her sisters and
Melanie in the fields, but that had worked no better. Melanie had
picked neatly, quickly and willingly for an hour in the hot sun and
then fainted quietly and had to stay in bed for a week. Suellen,
sullen and tearful, pretended to faint too, but came back to
consciousness spitting like an angry cat when Scarlett poured a
gourdful of water in her face. Finally she refused point-blank.
“I won’t work in the fields like a
darky! You can’t make me. What if any of our friends ever heard of
it? What if—if Mr. Kennedy ever knew? Oh, if Mother knew about
this—”
“You just mention Mother’s name
once more, Suellen O’Hara, and I’ll slap you flat,” cried
Scarlett. “Mother worked harder than any darky on this place and
you know it, Miss Fine Airs!”
“She did not! At least, not in the
fields. And you can’t make me. I’ll tell Papa on you and he won’t
make me work!”
“Don’t you dare go bothering Pa
with any of our troubles!” cried Scarlett, distracted between
indignation at her sister and fear for Gerald.
“I’ll help you, Sissy,”
interposed Carreen docilely. “I’ll work for Sue and me too. She
isn’t well yet and she shouldn’t be out in the sun.”
Scarlett said gratefully: “Thank you,
Sugarbaby,” but looked worriedly at her younger sister. Carreen,
who had always been as delicately pink and white as the orchard
blossoms that are scattered by the spring wind, was no longer pink
but still conveyed in her sweet thoughtful face a blossomlike
quality. She had been silent, a little dazed since she came back to
consciousness and found Ellen gone, Scarlett a termagant, the world
changed and unceasing labor the order of the new day. It was not in
Carreen’s delicate nature to adjust herself to change. She simply
could not comprehend what had happened and she went about Tara like a
sleepwalker, doing exactly what she was told. She looked, and was,
frail but she was willing, obedient and obliging. When she was not
doing Scarlett’s bidding, her rosary beads were always in her hands
and her lips moving in prayers for her mother and for Brent Tarleton.
It did not occur to Scarlett that Carreen had taken Brent’s death
so seriously and that her grief was unhealed. To Scarlett, Carreen
was still “baby sister,” far too young to have had a really
serious love affair.
Scarlett, standing in the sun in the
cotton rows, her back breaking from the eternal bending and her hands
roughened by the dry bolls, wished she had a sister who combined
Suellen’s energy and strength with Carreen’s sweet disposition.
For Carreen picked diligently and earnestly. But, after she had
labored for an hour it was obvious that she, and not Suellen, was the
one not yet well enough for such work. So Scarlett sent Carreen back
to the house too.
There remained with her now in the long
rows only Dilcey and Prissy. Prissy picked lazily, spasmodically,
complaining of her feet, her back, her internal miseries, her
complete weariness, until her mother took a cotton stalk to her and
whipped her until she screamed. After that she worked a little
better, taking care to stay far from her mother’s reach.
Dilcey worked tirelessly, silently,
like a machine, and Scarlett, with her back aching and her shoulder
raw from the tugging weight of the cotton bag she carried, thought
that Dilcey was worth her weight in gold.
“Dilcey,” she said, “when good
times come back, I’m not going to forget how you’ve acted. You’ve
been mighty good.”
The bronze giantess did not grin
pleasedly or squirm under praise like the other negroes. She turned
an immobile face to Scarlett and said with dignity: “Thankee, Ma’m.
But Mist’ Gerald and Miss Ellen been good to me. Mist’ Gerald buy
my Prissy so I wouldn’ grieve and I doan forgit it. I is part
Indian and Indians doan forgit them as is good to them. I sorry ‘bout
my Prissy. She mighty worthless. Look lak she all nigger lak her pa.
Her pa was mighty flighty.”
In spite of Scarlett’s problem of
getting help from the others in the picking and in spite of the
weariness of doing the labor herself, her spirits lifted as the
cotton slowly made its way from the fields to the cabins. There was
something about cotton that was reassuring, steadying. Tara had risen
to riches on cotton, even as the whole South had risen, and Scarlett
was Southerner enough to believe that both Tara and the South would
rise again out of the red fields.
Of course, this little cotton she had
gathered was not much but it was something. It would bring a little
in Confederate money and that little would help her to save the
hoarded greenbacks and gold in the Yankee’s wallet until they had
to be spent. Next spring she would try to make the Confederate
government send back Big Sam and the other field hands they had
commandeered, and if the government wouldn’t release them, she’d
use the Yankee’s money to hire field hands from the neighbors. Next
spring, she would plant and plant. … She straightened her tired
back and, looking over the browning autumn fields, she saw next
year’s crop standing sturdy and green, acre upon acre.
Next spring! Perhaps by next spring the
war would be over and good times would be back. And whether the
Confederacy won or lost, times would be better. Anything was better
than the constant danger of raids from both armies. When the war was
over, a plantation could earn an honest living. Oh, if the war were
only over! Then people could plant crops with some certainty of
reaping them!
There was hope now. The war couldn’t
last forever. She had her little cotton, she had food, she had a
horse, she had her small but treasured hoard of money. Yes, the worst
was over!
CHAPTER XXVII
ON A NOONDAY in mid-November, they all
sat grouped about the dinner table, eating the last of the dessert
concocted by Mammy from corn meal and dried huckleberries, sweetened
with sorghum. There was a chill in the air, the first chill of the
year, and Pork, standing behind Scarlett’s chair, rubbed his hands
together in glee and questioned: “Ain’ it ‘bout time fer de
hawg killin’, Miss Scarlett?”
“You can taste those chitlins
already, can’t you?” said Scarlett with a grin. “Well, I can
taste fresh pork myself and if the weather holds for a few days more,
we’ll—”
Melanie interrupted, her spoon at her
lips,
“Listen, dear! Somebody’s coming!”
“Somebody hollerin’,” said Pork
uneasily.
On the crisp autumn air came clear the
sound of horse’s hooves, thudding as swiftly as a frightened heart,
and a woman’s voice, high pitched, screaming: “Scarlett!
Scarlett!”
Eye met eye for a dreadful second
around the table before chairs were pushed back and everyone leaped
up. Despite the fear that made it shrill, they recognized the voice
of Sally Fontaine who, only an hour before, had stopped at Tara for a
brief chat on her way to Jonesboro. Now, as they all rushed pell-mell
to crowd the front door, they saw her coming up the drive like the
wind on a lathered horse, her hair streaming behind her, her bonnet
dangling by its ribbons. She did not draw rein but as she galloped
madly toward them, she waved her arm back in the direction from which
she had come.
“The Yankees are coming! I saw them!
Down the road! The Yankees—”
She sawed savagely at the horse’s
mouth just in time to swerve him from leaping up the front steps. He
swung around sharply, covered the side lawn in three leaps and she
put him across the four-foot hedge as if she were on the hunting
field. They heard the heavy pounding of his hooves as he went through
the back yard and down the narrow lane between the cabins of the
quarters and knew she was cutting across the fields to Mimosa.
For a moment they stood paralyzed and
then Suellen and Carreen began to sob and clutch each other’s
fingers. Little Wade stood rooted, trembling, unable to cry. What he
had feared since the night he left Atlanta had happened. The Yankees
were coming to get him.
“Yankees?” said Gerald vaguely.
“But the Yankees have already been here.”
“Mother of God!” cried Scarlett,
her eyes meeting Melanie’s frightened eyes. For a swift instant
there went through her memory again the horrors of her last night in
Atlanta, the ruined homes that dotted the countryside, all the
stories of rape and torture and murder. She saw again the Yankee
soldier standing in the hall with Ellen’s sewing box in his hand.
She thought: “I shall die. I shall die right here. I thought we
were through with all that. I shall die. I can’t stand any more.”
Then her eyes fell on the horse saddled
and hitched and waiting for Pork to ride him to the Tarleton place on
an errand. Her horse! Her only horse! The Yankees would take him and
the cow and the calf. And the sow and her litter— Oh, how many
tiring hours it had taken to catch that sow and her agile young! And
they’d take the rooster and the setting hens and the ducks the
Fontaines had given her. And the apples and the yams in the pantry
bins. And the flour and rice and dried peas. And the money in the
Yankee soldier’s wallet. They’d take everything and leave them to
starve.
“They shan’t have them!” she
cried aloud and they all turned startled faces to her, fearful her
mind had cracked under the tidings. “I won’t go hungry! They
shan’t have them!”
“What is it, Scarlett? What is it?”
“The horse! The cow! The pigs! They
shan’t have them! I won’t let them have them!”
She turned swiftly to the four negroes
who huddled in the doorway, their black faces a peculiarly ashen
shade.
“The swamp,” she said rapidly.
“Whut swamp?”
“The river swamp, you fools! Take the
pigs to the swamp. All of you. Quickly. Pork, you and Prissy crawl
under the house and get the pigs out. Suellen, you and Carreen fill
the baskets with as much food as you can carry and get to the woods.
Mammy, put the silver in the well again. And Pork! Pork, listen to
me, don’t stand there like that! Take Pa with you. Don’t ask me
where! Anywhere! Go with Pork, Pa. That’s a sweet pa.”
Even in her frenzy she thought what the
sight of bluecoats might do to Gerald’s wavering mind. She stopped
and wrung her hands and the frightened sobbing of little Wade who was
clutching Melanie’s skirt added to her panic.
“What shall I do, Scarlett?”
Melanie’s voice was calm amid the wailing and tears and scurrying
feet. Though her face was paper white and her whole body trembled,
the very quietness of her voice steadied Scarlett, revealing to her
that they all looked to her for commands, for guidance.
“The cow and the calf,” she said
quickly. “They’re in the old pasture. Take the horse and drive
them into the swamp and—”
Before she could finish her sentence,
Melanie shook off Wade’s clutches and was down the front steps and
running toward the horse, pulling up her wide skirts as she ran.
Scarlett caught a flashing glimpse of thin legs, a flurry of skirts
and underclothing and Melanie was in the saddle, her feet dangling
far above the stirrups. She gathered up the reins and clapped her
heels against the animal’s sides and then abruptly pulled him in,
her face twisting with horror.
“My baby!” she cried. “Oh, my
baby! The Yankees will kill him! Give him to me!”
Her hand was on the pommel and she was
preparing to slide off but Scarlett screamed at her.
“Go on! Go on! Get the cow! I’ll
look after the baby! Go on, I tell you! Do you think I’d let them
get Ashley’s baby? Go on!”
Melly looked despairingly backward but
hammered her heels into the horse and, with a scattering of gravel,
was off down the drive toward the pasture.
Scarlett thought: “I never expected
to see Melly Hamilton straddling a horse!” and then she ran into
the house. Wade was at her heels, sobbing, trying to catch her flying
skirts. As she went up the steps, three at a bound, she saw Suellen
and Carreen with split-oak baskets on their arms, running toward the
pantry, and Pork tugging none too gently at Gerald’s arm, dragging
him toward the back porch. Gerald was mumbling querulously and
pulling away like a child.
From the back yard she heard Mammy’s
strident voice: “You, Priss! You git unner dat house an’ han’
me dem shoats! You knows mighty well Ah’s too big ter crawl thoo
dem lattices. Dilcey, comyere an’ mek dis wuthless chile—”
“And I thought it was such a good
idea to keep the pigs under the house, so nobody could steal them,”
thought Scarlett, running into her room. “Why, oh, why didn’t I
build a pen for them down in the swamp?”
She tore open her top bureau drawer and
scratched about in the clothing until the Yankee’s wallet was in
her hand. Hastily she picked up the solitaire ring and the diamond
earbobs from where she had hidden them in her sewing basket and
shoved them into the wallet. But where to hide it? In the mattress?
Up the chimney? Throw it in the well? Put it in her bosom? No, never
there! The outlines of the wallet might show through her basque and
if the Yankees saw it they would strip her naked and search her.
“I shall die if they do!” she
thought wildly.
Downstairs there was a pandemonium of
racing feet and sobbing voices. Even in her frenzy, Scarlett wished
she had Melanie with her, Melly with her quiet voice, Melly who was
so brave the day she shot the Yankee. Melly was worth three of the
others. Melly—what had Melly said? Oh, yes, the baby!
Clutching the wallet to her, Scarlett
ran across the hall to the room where little Beau was sleeping in the
low cradle. She snatched him up into her arms and he awoke, waving
small fists and slobbering sleepily.
She heard Suellen crying: “Come on,
Carreen! Come on! We’ve got enough. Oh, Sister, hurry!” There
were wild squealings, indignant gruntings in the back yard and,
running to the window, Scarlett saw Mammy waddling hurriedly across
the cotton field with a struggling young pig under each arm. Behind
her was Pork also carrying two pigs and pushing Gerald before him.
Gerald was stumping across the furrows, waving his cane.
Leaning out of the window Scarlett
yelled: “Get the sow, Dilcey! Make Prissy drive her out You can
chase her across the fields!”
Dilcey looked up, her bronzed face
harassed. In her apron was a pile of silver tableware. She pointed
under the house.
“The sow done bit Prissy and got her
penned up unner the house.”
“Good for the sow,” thought
Scarlett. She hurried back into her room and hastily gathered from
their hiding place the bracelets, brooch, miniature and cup she had
found on the dead Yankee. But where to hide them? It was awkward,
carrying little Beau in one arm and the wallet and the trinkets in
the other. She started to lay him on the bed.
He set up a wail at leaving her arms
and a welcome thought came to her. What better hiding place could
there be than a baby’s diaper? She quickly turned him over, pulled
up his dress and thrust the wallet down the diaper next to his
backside. He yelled louder at this treatment and she hastily
tightened the triangular garment about his threshing legs.
“Now,” she thought, drawing a deep
breath, “now for the swamp!”
Tucking him screaming under one arm and
clutching the jewelry to her with the other, she raced into the
upstairs hall. Suddenly her rapid steps paused, fright weakening her
knees. How silent the house was! How dreadfully still! Had they all
gone off and left her? Hadn’t anyone waited for her? She hadn’t
meant for them to leave her here alone. These days anything could
happen to a lone woman and with the Yankees coming—
She jumped as a slight noise sounded
and, turning quickly, saw crouched by the banisters her forgotten
son, his eyes enormous with terror. He tried to speak but his throat
only worked silently.
“Get up, Wade Hampton,” she
commanded swiftly. “Get up and walk. Mother can’t carry you now.”
He ran to her, like a small frightened
animal, and clutching her wide skirt, buried his face in it. She
could feel his small hands groping through the folds for her legs.
She started down the stairs, each step hampered by Wade’s dragging
hands and she said fiercely: “Turn me loose, Wade! Turn me loose
and walk!” But the child only clung the closer.
As she reached the landing, the whole
lower floor leaped up at her. All the homely, well-loved articles of
furniture seemed to whisper: “Good-by! Good-by!” A sob rose in
her throat. There was the open door of the office where Ellen had
labored so diligently and she could glimpse a corner of the old
secretary. There was the dining room, with chairs pushed awry and
food still on the plates. There on the floor were the rag rugs Ellen
had dyed and woven herself. And there was the old portrait of Grandma
Robillard, with bosoms half bared, hair piled high and nostrils cut
so deeply as to give her face a perpetual well-bred sneer. Everything
which had been part of her earliest memories, everything bound up
with the deepest roots in her: “Good-by! Good-by, Scarlett O’Hara!”
The Yankees would burn it all—all!
This was her last view of home, her
last view except what she might see from the cover of the woods or
the swamp, the tall chimneys wrapped in smoke, the roof crashing in
flame.
“I can’t leave you,” she thought
and her teeth chattered with fear. “I can’t leave you. Pa
wouldn’t leave you. He told them they’d have to burn you over his
head. Then, they’ll burn you over my head for I can’t leave you
either. You’re all I’ve got left.”
With the decision, some of her fear
fell away and there remained only a congealed feeling in her breast,
as if all hope and fear had frozen. As she stood there, she heard
from the avenue the sound of many horses’ feet, the jingle of
bridle bits and sabers rattling in scabbards and a harsh voice crying
a command: “Dismount!” Swiftly she bent to the child beside her
and her voice was urgent but oddly gentle.
“Turn me loose, Wade, honey! You run
down the stairs quick and through the back yard toward the swamp.
Mammy will be there and Aunt Melly. Run quickly, darling, and don’t
be afraid.”
At the change in her tone, the boy
looked up and Scarlett was appalled at the look in his eyes, like a
baby rabbit in a trap.
“Oh, Mother of God!” she prayed.
“Don’t let him have a convulsion! Not—not before the Yankees.
They mustn’t know we are afraid.” And, as the child only gripped
her skirt the tighter, she said clearly: “Be a little man, Wade.
They’re only a passel of damn Yankees!”
And she went down the steps to meet
them.
Sherman was marching through Georgia,
from Atlanta to the sea. Behind him lay the smoking ruins of Atlanta
to which the torch had been set as the blue army tramped out. Before
him lay three hundred miles of territory virtually undefended save by
a few state militia and the old men and young boys of the Home Guard.
Here lay the fertile state, dotted with
plantations, sheltering the women and children, the very old and the
negroes. In a swath eighty miles wide the Yankees were looting and
burning. There were hundreds of homes in flames, hundreds of homes
resounding with their footsteps. But, to Scarlett, watching the
bluecoats pour into the front hall, it was not a countrywide affair.
It was entirely personal, a malicious action aimed directly at her
and hers.
She stood at the foot of the stairs,
the baby in her arms, Wade pressed tightly against her, his head
hidden in her skirts as the Yankees swarmed through the house,
pushing roughly past her up the stairs, dragging furniture onto the
front porch, running bayonets and knives into upholstery and digging
inside for concealed valuables. Upstairs they were ripping open
mattresses and feather beds until the air in the hall was thick with
feathers that floated softly down on her head. Impotent rage quelled
what little fear was left in her heart as she stood helpless while
they plundered and stole and ruined.
The sergeant in charge was a
bow-legged, grizzled little man with a large wad of tobacco in his
cheek. He reached Scarlett before any of his men and, spitting freely
on the floor and her skirts, said briefly:
“Lemme have what you got in yore
hand, lady.”
She had forgotten the trinkets she had
intended to hide and, with a sneer which she hoped was as eloquent as
that pictured on Grandma Robillard’s face, she flung the articles
to the floor and almost enjoyed the rapacious scramble that ensued.
“I’ll trouble you for thet ring and
them earbobs.”
Scarlett tucked the baby more securely
under her arm so that he hung face downward, crimson and screaming,
and removed the garnet earrings which had been Gerald’s wedding
present to Ellen. Then she stripped off the large sapphire solitaire
which Charles had given her as an engagement ring.
“Don’t throw um. Hand um to me,”
said the sergeant, putting out his hands. “Them bastards got enough
already. What else have you got?” His eyes went over her basque
sharply.
For a moment Scarlett went faint,
already feeling rough hands thrusting themselves into her bosom,
fumbling at her garters.
“That is all, but I suppose it is
customary to strip your victims?”
“Oh, I’ll take your word,” said
the sergeant good naturedly, spitting again as he turned away.
Scarlett righted the baby and tried to soothe him, holding her hand
over the place on the diaper where the wallet was hidden, thanking
God that Melanie had a baby and that baby had a diaper.
Upstairs she could hear heavy boots
trampling, the protesting screech of furniture pulled across the
floor, the crashing of china and mirrors, the curses when nothing of
value appeared. From the yard came loud cries: “Head um off! Don’t
let um get away!” and the despairing squawks of the hens and
quacking and honking of the ducks and geese. A pang went through her
as she heard an agonized squealing which was suddenly stilled by a
pistol shot and she knew that the sow was dead. Damn Prissy! She had
run off and left her. If only the shoats were safe! If only the
family had gotten safely to the swamp! But there was no way of
knowing.
She stood quietly in the hall while the
soldiers boiled about her, shouting and cursing. Wade’s fingers
were in her skirt in a terrified grip. She could feel his body
shaking as he pressed against her but she could not bring herself to
speak reassuringly to him. She could not bring herself to utter any
word to the Yankees, either of pleading, protest or anger. She could
only thank God that her knees still had the strength to support her,
that her neck was still strong enough to hold her head high. But when
a squad of bearded men came lumbering down the steps, laden with an
assortment of stolen articles and she saw Charles’ sword in the
hands of one, she did cry out.
That sword was Wade’s. It had been
his father’s and his grandfather’s sword and Scarlett had given
it to the little boy on his last birthday. They had made quite a
ceremony of it and Melanie had cried, cried with tears of pride and
sorrowful memory, and kissed him and said he must grow up to be a
brave soldier like his father and his grandfather. Wade was very
proud of it and often climbed upon the table beneath where it hung to
pat it. Scarlett could endure seeing her own possessions going out of
the house in hateful alien hands but not this—not her little boy’s
pride. Wade, peering from the protection of her skirts at the sound
of her cry, found speech and courage in a mighty sob. Stretching out
one hand he cried:
“Mine!”
“You can’t take that!” said
Scarlett swiftly, holding out her hand too.
“I can’t, hey?” said the little
soldier who held it, grinning impudently at her. “Well, I can! It’s
a Rebel sword!”
“It’s—it’s not. It’s a
Mexican War sword. You can’t take it. It’s my little boy’s. It
was his grandfather’s! Oh, Captain,” she cried, turning to the
sergeant, “please make him give it to me!”
The sergeant, pleased at his promotion,
stepped forward.
“Lemme see thet sword, Bub,” he
said. Reluctantly, the little trooper handed it to him. “It’s got
a solid-gold hilt,” he said.
The sergeant turned it in his hand,
held the hilt up to the sunlight to read the engraved inscription.
“ ‘To Colonel William R. Hamilton,’
” he deciphered. “ ‘From His Staff. For Gallantry. Buena Vista.
1847.’ ”
“Ho, lady,” he said, “I was at
Buena Vista myself.”
“Indeed,” said Scarlett icily.
“Was I? Thet was hot fightin’,
lemme tell you. I ain’t seen such hot fightin’ in this war as we
seen in thet one. So this sword was this little tyke’s
grandaddy’s?”
“Yes.”
“Well, he can have it,” said the
sergeant, who was satisfied enough with the jewelry and trinkets tied
up in his handkerchief.
“But it’s got a solid-gold hilt,”
insisted the little trooper.
“We’ll leave her thet to remember
us by,” grinned the sergeant.
Scarlett took the sword, not even
saying “Thank you.” Why should she thank these thieves for
returning her own property to her? She held the sword against her
while the little cavalryman argued and wrangled with the sergeant.
“By God, I’ll give these damn
Rebels something to remember me by,” shouted the private finally
when the sergeant, losing his good nature, told him to go to hell and
not talk back. The little man went charging toward the back of the
house and Scarlett breathed more easily. They had said nothing about
burning the house. They hadn’t told her to leave so they could fire
it. Perhaps—perhaps— The men came rambling into the hall from the
upstairs and the out of doors.
“Anything?” questioned the
sergeant.
“One hog and a few chickens and
ducks.”
“Some corn and a few yams and beans.
That wildcat we saw on the horse must have given the alarm, all
right.”
“Regular Paul Revere, eh?”
“Well, there ain’t much here,
Sarge. You got the pickin’s. Let’s move on before the whole
country gets the news we’re comin’.”
“Didja dig under the smokehouse? They
generally buries things there.”
“Ain’t no smokehouse.”
“Didja dig in the nigger cabins?”
“Nothin’ but cotton in the cabins.
We set fire to it.”
For a brief instant Scarlett saw the
long hot days in the cotton field, felt again the terrible ache in
her back, the raw bruised flesh of her shoulders. All for nothing.
The cotton was gone.
“You ain’t got much, for a fac’,
have you, lady?”
“Your army has been here before,”
she said coolly.
“That’s a fac’. We were in this
neighborhood in September,” said one of the men, turning something
in his hand. “I’d forgot.”
Scarlett saw it was Ellen’s gold
thimble that he held. How often she had seen it gleaming in and out
of Ellen’s fancy work. The sight of it brought back too many
hurting memories of the slender hand which had worn it. There it lay
in this stranger’s calloused duly palm and soon it would find its
way North and onto the finger of some Yankee woman who would be proud
to wear stolen things. Ellen’s thimble!
Scarlett dropped her head so the enemy
could not see her cry and the tears fell slowly down on the baby’s
head. Through the blur, she saw the men moving toward the doorway,
heard the sergeant calling commands in a loud rough voice. They were
going and Tara was safe, but with the pain of Ellen’s memory on
her, she was hardly glad. The sound of the banging sabers and horses’
hooves brought little relief and she stood, suddenly weak and
nerveless, as they moved off down the avenue, every man laden with
stolen goods, clothing, blankets, pictures, hens and ducks, the sow.
Then to her nostrils was borne the
smell of smoke and she turned, too weak with lessening strain, to
care about the cotton. Through the open windows of the dining room,
she saw smoke drifting lazily out of the negro cabins. There went the
cotton. There went the tax money and part of the money which was to
see them through this bitter winter. There was nothing she could do
about it either, except watch. She had seen fires in cotton before
and she knew how difficult they were to put out, even with many men
laboring at it. Thank God, the quarters were so far from the house!
Thank God, there was no wind today to carry sparks to the roof of
Tara!
Suddenly she swung about, rigid as a
pointer, and stared with horror-struck eyes down the hall, down the
covered passageway toward the kitchen. There was smoke coming from
the kitchen!
Somewhere between the hall and the
kitchen, she laid the baby down. Somewhere she flung off Wade’s
grip, slinging him against the wall. She burst into the smoke-filled
kitchen and reeled back, coughing, her eyes streaming tears from the
smoke. Again she plunged in, her skirt held over her nose.
The room was dark, lit as it was by one
small window, and so thick with smoke that she was blinded, but she
could hear the hiss and crackle of flames. Dashing a hand across her
eyes, she peered squinting and saw thin lines of flame creeping
across the kitchen floor, toward the walls. Someone had scattered the
blazing logs in the open fireplace across the whole room and the
tinder-dry pine floor was sucking in the flames and spewing them up
like water.
Back she rushed to the dining room and
snatched a rag rug from the floor, spilling two chairs with a crash.
“I’ll never beat it out—never,
never! Oh, God, if only there was someone to help! Tara is gone—gone!
Oh, God! This was what that little wretch meant when he said he’d
give me something to remember him by! Oh, if I’d only let him have
the sword!”
In the hallway she passed her son lying
in the corner with his sword. His eyes were closed and his face had a
look of slack, unearthly peace.
“My God! He’s dead! They’ve
frightened him to death!” she thought in agony but she raced by him
to the bucket of drinking water which always stood in the passageway
by the kitchen door.
She soused the end of the rug into the
bucket and drawing a deep breath plunged again into the smoke-filled
room slamming the door behind her. For an eternity she reeled and
coughed, beating the rug against the lines of fire that shot swiftly
beyond her. Twice her long skirt took fire and she slapped it out
with her hands. She could smell the sickening smell of her hair
scorching, as it came loose from its pins and swept about her
shoulders. The flames raced ever beyond her, toward the walls of the
covered runway, fiery snakes that writhed and leaped and, exhaustion
sweeping her, she knew that it was hopeless.
Then the door swung open and the
sucking draft flung the flames higher. It closed with a bang and, in
the swirling smoke, Scarlett, half blind, saw Melanie, stamping her
feet on the flames, beating at them with something dark and heavy.
She saw her staggering, heard her coughing, caught a lightning-flash
glimpse of her set white face and eyes narrow to slits against the
smoke, saw her small body curving back and forth as she swung her rug
up and down. For another eternity they fought and swayed, side by
side, and Scarlett could see that the lines of fire were shortening.
Then suddenly Melanie turned toward her and, with a cry, hit her
across the shoulders with all her might. Scarlett went down in a
whirlwind of smoke and darkness. When she opened her eyes she was
lying on the back porch, her head pillowed comfortably on Melanie’s
lap, and the afternoon sunlight was shining on her face. Her hands,
face and shoulders smarted intolerably from burns. Smoke was still
rolling from the quarters, enveloping the cabins in thick clouds, and
the smell of burning cotton was strong. Scarlett saw wisps of smoke
drifting from the kitchen and she stirred frantically to rise.
But she was pushed back as Melanie’s
calm voice said: “Lie still, dear. The fire’s out.”
She lay quiet for a moment, eyes
closed, sighing with relief, and heard the slobbery gurgle of the
baby near by and the reassuring sound of Wade’s hiccoughing. So he
wasn’t dead, thank God! She opened her eyes and looked up into
Melanie’s face. Her curls were singed, her face black with smut but
her eyes were sparkling with excitement and she was smiling.
“You look like a nigger,” murmured
Scarlett, burrowing her head wearily into its soft pillow.
“And you look like the end man in a
minstrel show,” replied Melanie equably. “Why did you have to hit
me?”
“Because, my darling, your back was
on fire. I didn’t dream you’d faint, though the Lord knows you’ve
had enough today to kill you. … I came back as soon as I got the
stock safe in the woods. I nearly died, thinking about you and the
baby alone. Did—the Yankees harm you?”
“If you mean did they rape me, no,”
said Scarlett, groaning as she tried to sit up. Though Melanie’s
lap was soft, the porch on which she was lying was far from
comfortable. “But they’ve stolen everything, everything. We’ve
lost everything— Well, what is there to look so happy about?”
“We haven’t lost each other and our
babies are all right and we have a roof over our heads,” said
Melanie and there was a lilt in her voice. “And that’s all anyone
can hope for now. … Goodness but Beau is wet! I suppose the Yankees
even stole his extra diapers. He— Scarlett, what on earth is in his
diaper?”
She thrust a suddenly frightened hand
down the baby’s back and brought up the wallet. For a moment she
looked at it as if she had never seen it before and then she began to
laugh, peal on peal of mirth that had in it no hint of hysteria.
“Nobody but you would ever have
thought of it,” she cried and flinging her arms around Scarlett’s
neck she kissed her. “You are the beatenest sister I ever had!”
Scarlett permitted the embrace because
she was too tired to struggle, because the words of praise brought
balm to her spirit and because, in the dark smoke-filled kitchen,
there had been born a greater respect for her sister-in-law, a closer
feeling of comradeship.
“I’ll say this for her,” she
thought grudgingly, “she’s always there when you need her.”
CHAPTER XXVIII
COLD WEATHER set in abruptly with a
killing frost Chilling winds swept beneath the doorsills and rattled
the loose windowpanes with a monotonous tinkling sound. The last of
the leaves fell from the bare trees and only the pines stood clothed,
black and cold against pale skies. The rutted red roads were frozen
to flintiness and hunger rode the winds through Georgia.
Scarlett recalled bitterly her
conversation with Grandma Fontaine. On that afternoon two months ago,
which now seemed years in the past, she had told the old lady she had
already known the worst which could possibly happen to her, and she
had spoken from the bottom of her heart. Now that remark sounded like
schoolgirl hyperbole. Before Sherman’s men came through Tara the
second time, she had her small riches of food and money, she had
neighbors more fortunate than she and she had the cotton which would
tide her over until spring. Now the cotton was gone, the food was
gone, the money was of no use to her, for there was no food to buy
with it, and the neighbors were in worse plight than she. At least,
she had the cow and the calf, a few shoats and the horse, and the
neighbors had nothing but the little they had been able to hide in
the woods and bury in the ground.
Fairhill, the Tarleton home, was burned
to the foundations, and Mrs. Tarleton and the four girls were
existing in the overseer’s house. The Munroe house near Lovejoy was
leveled too. The wooden wing of Mimosa had burned and only the thick
resistant stucco of the main house and the frenzied work of the
Fontaine women and their slaves with wet blankets and quilts had
saved it The Calverts’ house had again been spared, due to the
intercession of Hilton, the Yankee overseer, but there was not a head
of livestock, not a fowl, not an ear of corn left on the place.
At Tara and throughout the County, the
problem was food. Most of the families had nothing at all but the
remains of their yam crops and their peanuts and such game as they
could catch in the woods. What they had, each shared with less
fortunate friends, as they had done in more prosperous days. But the
time soon came when there was nothing to share.
At Tara, they ate rabbit and possum and
catfish, if Pork was lucky. On other days a small amount of milk,
hickory nuts, roasted acorns and yams. They were always hungry. To
Scarlett it seemed that at every turn she met outstretched hands,
pleading eyes. The sight of them drove her almost to madness, for she
was as hungry as they.
She ordered the calf killed, because he
drank so much of the precious milk, and that night everyone ate so
much fresh veal all of them were ill. She knew that she should kill
one of the shoats but she put it off from day to day, hoping to raise
them to maturity. They were so small. There would be so little of
them to eat if they were killed now and so much more if they could be
saved a little longer. Nightly she debated with Melanie the
advisability of sending Pork abroad on the horse with some greenbacks
to try to buy food. But the fear that the horse might be captured and
the money taken from Pork deterred them. They did not know where the
Yankees were. They might be a thousand miles away or only across the
river. Once, Scarlett, in desperation, started to ride out herself to
search for food, but the hysterical outbursts of the whole family
fearful of the Yankees made her abandon the plan.
Pork foraged far, at times not coming
home all night, and Scarlett did not ask him where he went. Sometimes
he returned with game, sometimes with a few ears of corn, a bag of
dried peas. Once he brought home a rooster which he said he found in
the woods. The family ate it with relish but a sense of guilt,
knowing very well Pork had stolen it, as he had stolen the peas and
corn. One night soon after this, he tapped on Scarlett’s door long
after the house was asleep and sheepishly exhibited a leg peppered
with small shot. As she bandaged it for him, he explained awkwardly
that when attempting to get into a hen coop at Fayetteville, he had
been discovered. Scarlett did not ask whose hen coop but patted
Pork’s shoulder gently, tears in her eyes. Negroes were provoking
sometimes and stupid and lazy, but there was loyalty in them that
money couldn’t buy, a feeling of oneness with their white folks
which made them risk their lives to keep food on the table.
In other days Pork’s pilferings would
have been a serious matter, probably calling for a whipping. In other
days she would have been forced at least to reprimand him severely.
“Always remember, dear,” Ellen had said, “you are responsible
for the moral as well as the physical welfare of the darkies God has
entrusted to your care. You must realize that they are like children
and must be guarded from themselves like children, and you must
always set them a good example.”
But now, Scarlett pushed that
admonition into the back of her mind. That she was encouraging theft,
and perhaps theft from people worse off than she, was no longer a
matter for conscience. In fact the morals of the affair weighed
lightly upon her. Instead of punishment or reproof, she only
regretted he had been shot.
“You must be more careful, Pork. We
don’t want to lose you. What would we do without you? You’ve been
mighty good and faithful and when we get some money again, I’m
going to buy you a big gold watch and engrave on it something out of
the Bible. ‘Well done, good and faithful servant.’ ”
Pork beamed under the praise and
gingerly rubbed his bandaged leg.
“Dat soun’ mighty fine, Miss
Scarlett. W’en you speckin’ ter git dat money?”
“I don’t know, Pork, but I’m
going to get it some time, somehow.” She bent on him an unseeing
glance that was so passionately bitter he stirred uneasily, “Some
day, when this war is over, I’m going to have lots of money, and
when I do I’ll never be hungry or cold again. None of us will ever
be hungry or cold. We’ll all wear fine clothes and have fried
chicken every day and—”
Then she stopped. The strictest rule at
Tara, one which she herself had made and which she rigidly enforced,
was that no one should ever talk of the fine meals they had eaten in
the past or what they would eat now, if they had the opportunity.
Pork slipped from the room as she
remained staring moodily into the distance. In the old days, now dead
and gone, life had been so complex, so full of intricate and
complicated problems. There had been the problem of trying to win
Ashley’s love and trying to keep a dozen other beaux dangling and
unhappy. There had been small breaches of conduct to be concealed
from her elders, jealous girls to be flouted or placated, styles of
dresses and materials to be chosen, different coiffures to be tried
and, oh, so many, many other matters to be decided! Now life was so
amazingly simple. Now all that mattered was food enough to keep off
starvation, clothing enough to prevent freezing and a roof overhead
which did not leak too much.
It was during these days that Scarlett
dreamed and dreamed again the nightmare which was to haunt her for
years. It was always the same dream, the details never varied, but
the terror of it mounted each time it came to her and the fear of
experiencing it again troubled even her waking hours. She remembered
so well the incidents of the day when she had first dreamed it.
Cold rain had fallen for days and the
house was chill with drafts and dampness. The logs in the fireplace
were wet and smoky and gave little heat. There had been nothing to
eat except milk since breakfast, for the yams were exhausted and
Pork’s snares and fishlines had yielded nothing. One of the shoats
would have to be killed the next day if they were to eat at all.
Strained and hungry faces, black and white, were staring at her,
mutely asking her to provide food. She would have to risk losing the
horse and send Pork out to buy something. And to make matters worse,
Wade was ill with a sore throat and a raging fever and there was
neither doctor nor medicine for him.
Hungry, weary with watching her child,
Scarlett left him to Melanie’s care for a while and lay down on her
bed to nap. Her feet icy, she twisted and turned, unable to sleep,
weighed down with fear and despair. Again and again, she thought:
“What shall I do? Where shall I turn? Isn’t there anybody in the
world who can help me?” Where had all the security of the world
gone? Why wasn’t there someone, some strong wise person to take the
burdens from her? She wasn’t made to carry them. She did not know
how to carry them. And then she fell into an uneasy doze.
She was in a wild strange country so
thick with swirling mist she could not see her hand before her face.
The earth beneath her feet was uneasy. It was a haunted land, still
with a terrible stillness, and she was lost in it, lost and terrified
as a child in the night. She was bitterly cold and hungry and so
fearful of what lurked in the mists about her that she tried to
scream and could not. There were things in the fog reaching out
fingers to pluck at her skirt, to drag her down into the uneasy
quaking earth on which she stood, silent, relentless, spectral hands.
Then, she knew that somewhere in the opaque gloom about her there was
shelter, help, a heaven of refuge and warmth. But where was it? Could
she reach it before the hands clutched her and dragged her down into
the quicksands?
Suddenly she was running, running
through the mist like a mad thing, crying and screaming, throwing out
her arms to clutch only empty air and wet mist Where was the haven?
It eluded her but it was there, hidden, somewhere. If she could only
reach it! If she could only reach it she would be safe! But terror
was weakening her legs, hunger making her faint. She gave one
despairing cry and awoke to find Melanie’s worried face above her
and Melanie’s hand shaking her to wakefulness.
The dream returned again and again,
whenever she went to sleep with an empty stomach. And that was
frequently enough. It so frightened her that she feared to sleep,
although she feverishly told herself there was nothing in such a
dream to be afraid of. There was nothing in a dream about fog to
scare her so. Nothing at all—yet the thought of dropping off into
that mist-filled country so terrified her she began sleeping with
Melanie, who would wake her up when her moaning and twitching
revealed that she was again in the clutch of the dream.
Under the strain she grew white and
thin. The pretty roundness left her face, throwing her cheek bones
into prominence, emphasizing her slanting green eyes and giving her
the look of a prowling, hungry cat.
“Daytime is enough like a nightmare
without my dreaming things,” she thought desperately and began
hoarding her daily ration to eat it just before she went to sleep.
At Christmas time Frank Kennedy and a
small troop from the commissary department jogged up to Tara on a
futile hunt for grain and animals for the army. They were a ragged
and ruffianly appearing crew, mounted on lame and heaving horses
which obviously were in too bad condition to be used for more active
service. Like their animals the men had been invalided out of the
front-line forces and, except for Frank, all of them had an arm
missing or an eye gone or stiffened joints. Most of them wore blue
overcoats of captured Yankees and, for a brief instant of horror,
those at Tara thought Sherman’s men had returned.
They stayed the night on the
plantation, sleeping on the floor in the parlor, luxuriating as they
stretched themselves on the velvet rug, for it had been weeks since
they had slept under a roof or on anything softer than pine needles
and hard earth. For all their dirty beards and tatters they were a
well-bred crowd, full of pleasant small talk, jokes and compliments
and very glad to be spending Christmas Eve in a big house, surrounded
by pretty women as they had been accustomed to do in days long past.
They refused to be serious about the war, told outrageous lies to
make the girls laugh and brought to the bare and looted house the
first lightness, the first hint of festivity it had known in many a
day.
“It’s almost like the old days when
we had house parties, isn’t it?” whispered Suellen happily to
Scarlett. Suellen was raised to the skies by having a beau of her own
in the house again and she could hardly take her eyes off Frank
Kennedy. Scarlett was surprised to see that Suellen could be almost
pretty, despite the thinness which had persisted since her illness.
Her cheeks were flushed and there was a soft luminous look in her
eyes.
“She really must care about him,”
thought Scarlett in contempt. “And I guess she’d be almost human
if she ever had a husband of her own, even if her husband was old
fuss-budget Frank.”
Carreen had brightened a little too,
and some of the sleep-walking look left her eyes that night. She had
found that one of the men had known Brent Tarleton and had been with
him the day he was killed, and she promised herself a long private
talk with him after supper.
At supper Melanie surprised them all by
forcing herself out of her timidity and being almost vivacious. She
laughed and joked and almost but not quite coquetted with a one-eyed
soldier who gladly repaid her efforts with extravagant gallantries.
Scarlett knew the effort this involved both mentally and physically,
for Melanie suffered torments of shyness in the presence of anything
male. Moreover she was far from well. She insisted she was strong and
did more work even than Dilcey but Scarlett knew she was sick. When
she lifted things her face went white and she had a way of sitting
down suddenly after exertions, as if her legs would no longer support
her. But tonight she, like Suellen and Carreen, was doing everything
possible to make the soldiers enjoy their Christmas Eve. Scarlett
alone took no pleasure in the guests.
The troop had added their ration of
parched corn and side meat to the supper of dried peas, stewed dried
apples and peanuts which Mammy set before them and they declared it
was the best meal they had had in months. Scarlett watched them eat
and she was uneasy. She not only begrudged them every mouthful they
ate but she was on tenterhooks lest they discover somehow that Pork
had slaughtered one of the shoats the day before. It now hung in the
pantry and she had grimly promised her household that she would
scratch out the eyes of anyone who mentioned the shoat to their
guests or the presence of the dead pig’s sisters and brothers, safe
in their pen in the swamp. These hungry men could devour the whole
shoat at one meal and, if they knew of the live hogs, they could
commandeer them for the army. She was alarmed, too, for the cow and
the horse and wished they were hidden in the swamp, instead of tied
in the woods at the bottom of the pasture. If the commissary took her
stock, Tara could not possibly live through the winter. There would
be no way of replacing them. As to what this army would eat, she did
not care. Let the army feed the army—if it could. It was hard
enough for her to feed her own.
The men added as dessert some “ramrod
rolls” from their knapsacks, and this was the first time Scarlett
had ever seen this Confederate article of diet about which there were
almost as many jokes as about lice. They were charred spirals of what
appeared to be wood. The men dared her to take a bite and, when she
did, she discovered that beneath the smoke-blackened surface was
unsalted corn bread. The soldiers mixed their ration of corn meal
with water, and salt too when they could get it, wrapped the thick
paste about their ramrods and roasted the mess over camp fires. It
was as hard as rock candy and as tasteless as sawdust and after one
bite Scarlett hastily handed it back amid roars of laughter. She met
Melanie’s eyes and the same thought was plain in both faces. …
“How can they go on fighting if they have only this stuff to eat?”
The meal was gay enough and even
Gerald, presiding absently at the head of the table, managed to evoke
from the back of his dim mind some of the manner of a host and an
uncertain smile. The men talked, the women smiled and flattered—but
Scarlett turning suddenly to Frank Kennedy to ask him news of Miss
Pittypat, caught an expression on his face which made her forget what
she intended to say.
His eyes had left Suellen’s and were
wandering about the room, to Gerald’s childlike puzzled eyes, to
the floor, bare of rugs, to the mantelpiece denuded of its ornaments,
the sagging springs and torn upholstery into which Yankee bayonets
had ripped, the cracked mirror above the sideboard, the unfaded
squares on the wall where pictures had hung before the looters came,
the scant table service, the decently mended but old dresses of the
girls, the flour sack which had been made into a kilt for Wade.
Frank was remembering the Tara he had
known before the war and on his face was a hurt look, a look of tired
impotent anger. He loved Suellen, liked her sisters, respected Gerald
and had a genuine fondness for the plantation. Since Sherman had
swept through Georgia, Frank had seen many appalling sights as he
rode about the state trying to collect supplies, but nothing had gone
to his heart as Tara did now. He wanted to do something for the
O’Haras, especially Suellen, and there was nothing he could do. He
was unconsciously wagging his whiskered head in pity and clicking his
tongue against his teeth when Scarlett caught his eye. He saw the
flame of indignant pride in them and he dropped his gaze quickly to
his plate in embarrassment.
The girls were hungry for news. There
had been no mail service since Atlanta fell, now four months past,
and they were in complete ignorance as to where the Yankees were, how
the Confederate Army was faring, what had happened to Atlanta and to
old friends. Frank, whose work took him all over the section, was as
good as a newspaper, better even, for he was kin to or knew almost
everyone from Macon north to Atlanta, and he could supply bits of
interesting personal gossip which the papers always omitted. To cover
his embarrassment at being caught by Scarlett, he plunged hastily
into a recital of news. The Confederates, he told them, had retaken
Atlanta after Sherman marched out, but it was a valueless prize as
Sherman had burned it completely.
“But I thought Atlanta burned the
night I left,” cried Scarlett, bewildered. “I thought our boys
burned it!”
“Oh, no, Miss Scarlett!” cried
Frank, shocked. “We’d never burn one of our own towns with our
own folks in it! What you saw burning was the warehouses and the
supplies we didn’t want the Yankees to capture and the foundries
and the ammunition. But that was all. When Sherman took the town the
houses and stores were standing there as pretty as you please. And he
quartered his men in them.”
“But what happened to the people? Did
he—did he kill them?”
“He killed some—but not with
bullets,” said the one-eyed soldier grimly. “Soon’s he marched
into Atlanta he told the mayor that all the people in town would have
to move out, every living soul. And there were plenty of old folks
that couldn’t stand the trip and sick folks that ought not to have
been moved and ladies who were—well, ladies who hadn’t ought to
be moved either. And he moved them out in the biggest rainstorm you
ever saw, hundreds and hundreds of them, and dumped them in the woods
near Rough and Ready and sent word to General Hood to come and get
them. And a plenty of the folks died of pneumonia and not being able
to stand that sort of treatment.”
“Oh, but why did he do that? They
couldn’t have done him any harm,” cried Melanie.
“He said he wanted the town to rest
his men and horses in,” said Frank. “And he rested them there
till the middle of November and then he lit out. And he set fire to
the whole town when he left and burned everything.”
“Oh, surely not everything!” cried
the girls in dismay.
It was inconceivable that the bustling
town they knew, so full of people, so crowded with soldiers, was
gone. All the lovely homes beneath shady trees, all the big stores
and the fine hotels—surely they couldn’t be gone! Melanie seemed
ready to burst into tears, for she had been born there and knew no
other home. Scarlett’s heart sank because she had come to love the
place second only to Tara.
“Well, almost everything,” Frank
amended hastily, disturbed by the expressions on their faces. He
tried to look cheerful, for he did not believe in upsetting ladies.
Upset ladies always upset him and made him feel helpless. He could
not bring himself to tell them the worst. Let them find out from some
one else.
He could not tell them what the army
saw when it marched back into Atlanta, the acres and acres of
chimneys standing blackly above ashes, piles of half-burned rubbish
and tumbled heaps of brick clogging the streets, old trees dying from
fire, their charred limbs tumbling to the ground in the cold wind. He
remembered how the sight had turned him sick, remembered the bitter
curses of the Confederates when they saw the remains of the town. He
hoped the ladies would never hear of the horrors of the looted
cemetery, for they’d never get over that. Charlie Hamilton and
Melanie’s mother and father were buried there. The sight of that
cemetery still gave Frank nightmares. Hoping to find jewelry buried
with the dead, the Yankee soldiers had broken open vaults, dug up
graves. They had robbed the bodies, stripped from the coffins gold
and silver name plates, silver trimmings and silver handles. The
skeletons and corpses, flung helter-skelter among their splintered
caskets, lay exposed and so pitiful.
And Frank couldn’t tell them about
the dogs and the cats. Ladies set such a store by pets. But the
thousands of starving animals, left homeless when their masters had
been so rudely evacuated, had shocked him almost as much as the
cemetery, for Frank loved cats and dogs. The animals had been
frightened, cold, ravenous, wild as forest creatures, the strong
attacking the weak, the weak waiting for the weaker to die so they
could eat them. And, above the ruined town, the buzzards splotched
the wintry sky with graceful, sinister bodies.
Frank cast about in his mind for some
mitigating information that would make the ladies feel better.
“There’s some houses still
standing,” he said, “houses that set on big lots away from other
houses and didn’t catch fire. And the churches and the Masonic hall
are left And a few stores too. But the business section and all along
the railroad tracks and at Five Points—well, ladies, that part of
town is flat on the ground.”
“Then,” cried Scarlett-bitterly,
“that warehouse Charlie left me, down on the tracks, it’s gone
too?”
“If it was near the tracks, it’s
gone, but—” Suddenly he smiled. Why hadn’t he thought of it
before? “Cheer up, ladies! Your Aunt Pitty’s house is still
standing. It’s kind of damaged but there it is.”
“Oh, how did it escape?”
“Well, it’s made of brick and it’s
got about the only slate roof in Atlanta and that kept the sparks
from setting it afire, I guess. And then it’s about the last house
on the north end of town and the fire wasn’t so bad over that way.
Of course, the Yankees quartered there tore it up aplenty. They even
burned the baseboard and the mahogany stair rail for firewood, but
shucks! It’s in good shape. When I saw Miss Pitty last week in
Macon—”
“You saw her? How is she?”
“Just fine. Just fine. When I told
her her house was still standing, she made up her mind to come home
right away. That is—if that old darky, Peter, will let her come.
Lots of the Atlanta people have already come back, because they got
nervous about Macon. Sherman didn’t take Macon but everybody is
afraid Wilson’s raiders will get there soon and he’s worse than
Sherman.”
“But how silly of them to come back
if there aren’t any houses! Where do they live?”
“Miss Scarlett, they’re living in
tents and shacks and log cabins and doubling up six and seven
families in the few houses still standing. And they’re trying to
rebuild. Now, Miss Scarlett, don’t say they are silly. You know
Atlanta folks as well as I do. They are plumb set on that town, most
as bad as Charlestonians are about Charleston, and it’ll take more
than Yankees and a burning to keep them away. Atlanta folks
are—begging your pardon, Miss Melly—as stubborn as mules about
Atlanta. I don’t know why, for I always thought that town a mighty
pushy, impudent sort of place. But then, I’m a countryman born and
I don’t like any town. And let me tell you, the ones who are
getting back first are the smart ones. The ones who come back last
won’t find a stick or stone or brick of their houses, because
everybody’s out salvaging things all over town to rebuild their
houses. Just day before yesterday, I saw Mrs. Merriwether and Miss
Maybelle and their old darky woman out collecting brick in a
wheelbarrow. And Mrs. Meade told me she was thinking about building a
log cabin when the doctor comes back to help her. She said she lived
in a log cabin when she first came to Atlanta, when it was
Marthasville, and it wouldn’t bother her none to do it again.
‘Course, she was only joking but that shows you how they feel about
it.”
“I think they’ve got a lot of
spirit,” said Melanie proudly. “Don’t you, Scarlett?”
Scarlett nodded, a grim pleasure and
pride in her adopted town filling her. As Frank said, it was a pushy,
impudent place and that was why she liked it. It wasn’t hidebound
and stick-in-the-muddish like the older towns and it had a brash
exuberance that matched her own. “I’m like Atlanta,” she
thought. “It takes more than Yankees or a burning to keep me down.”
“If Aunt Pitty is going back to
Atlanta, we’d better go back and stay with her, Scarlett,” said
Melanie, interrupting her train of thought. “She’ll die of fright
alone.”
“Now, how can I leave here, Melly?”
Scarlett asked crossly. “If you are so anxious to go, go. I won’t
stop you.”
“Oh, I didn’t mean it that way,
darling,” cried Melanie, flushing with distress. “How thoughtless
of me! Of course, you can’t leave Tara and—and I guess Uncle
Peter and Cookie can take care of Auntie.”
“There’s nothing to keep you from
going,” Scarlett pointed out, shortly.
“You know I wouldn’t leave you,”
answered Melanie. “And I—I would be just frightened to death
without you.”
“Suit yourself. Besides, you wouldn’t
catch me going back to Atlanta. Just as soon as they get a few houses
up, Sherman will come back and burn it again.”
“He won’t be back,” said Frank
and, despite his efforts, his face drooped. “He’s gone on through
the state to the coast. Savannah was captured this week and they say
the Yankees are going on up into South Carolina.”
“Savannah taken!”
“Yes. Why, ladies, Savannah couldn’t
help but fall. They didn’t have enough men to hold it, though they
used every man they could get—every man who could drag one foot
after another. Do you know that when the Yankees were marching on
Milledgeville, they called out all the cadets from the military
academies, no matter how young they were, and even opened the state
penitentiary to get fresh troops? Yes, sir, they turned loose every
convict who was willing to fight and promised him a pardon if he
lived through the war. It kind of gave me the creeps to see those
little cadets in the ranks with thieves and cutthroats.”
“They turned loose the convicts on
us!”
“Now, Miss Scarlett, don’t you get
upset. They’re a long way off from here, and furthermore they’re
making good soldiers. I guess being a thief don’t keep a man from
being a good soldier, does it?”
“I think it’s wonderful,” said
Melanie softly.
“Well, I don’t,” said Scarlett
flatly. “There’s thieves enough running around the country
anyway, what with the Yankees and—” She caught herself in time
but the men laughed.
“What with Yankees and our commissary
department,” they finished and she flushed.
“But where’s General Hood’s
army?” interposed Melanie hastily. “Surely he could have held
Savannah.”
“Why, Miss Melanie,” Frank was
startled and reproachful, “General Hood hasn’t been down in that
section at all. He’s been fighting up in Tennessee, trying to draw
the Yankees out of Georgia.”
“And didn’t his little scheme work
well!” cried Scarlett sarcastically. “He left the damn Yankees to
go through us with nothing but schoolboys and convicts and Home
Guards to protect us.”
“Daughter,” said Gerald rousing
himself, “you are profane. Your mother will be grieved.”
“They are damn Yankees!” cried
Scarlett passionately. “And I never expect to call them anything
else.”
At the mention of Ellen everyone felt
queer and conversation suddenly ceased. Melanie again interposed.
“When you were in Macon did you see
India and Honey Wilkes? Did they—had they heard anything of
Ashley?”
“Now, Miss Melly, you know if I’d
had news of Ashley, I’d have ridden up here from Macon right away
to tell you,” said Frank reproachfully. “No, they didn’t have
any news but—now, don’t you fret about Ashley, Miss Melly. I know
it’s been a long time since you heard from him, but you can’t
expect to hear from a fellow when he’s in prison, can you? And
things aren’t as bad in Yankee prisons as they are in ours. After
all, the Yankees have plenty to eat and enough medicines and
blankets. They aren’t like we are—not having enough to feed
ourselves, much less our prisoners.”
“Oh, the Yankees have got plenty,”
cried Melanie, passionately bitter. “But they don’t give things
to the prisoners. You know they don’t, Mr. Kennedy. You are just
saying that to make me feel better. You know that our boys freeze to
death up there and starve too and die without doctors and medicine,
simply because the Yankees hate us so much! Oh, if we could just wipe
every Yankee off the face of the earth! Oh, I know that Ashley is—”
“Don’t say it!” cried Scarlett,
her heart in her throat. As long as no one said Ashley was dead,
there persisted in her heart a faint hope that he lived, but she felt
that if she heard the words pronounced, in that moment he would die.
“Now, Mrs. Wilkes, don’t you bother
about your husband,” said the one-eyed man soothingly. “I was
captured after first Manassas and exchanged later and when I was in
prison, they fed me off the fat of the land, fried chicken and hot
biscuits—”
“I think you are a liar,” said
Melanie with a faint smile and the first sign of spirit Scarlett had
ever seen her display with a man. “What do you think?”
“I think so too,” said the one-eyed
man and slapped his leg with a laugh.
“If you’ll all come into the
parlor, I’ll sing you some Christmas carols,” said Melanie, glad
to change the subject. “The piano was one thing the Yankees
couldn’t carry away. Is it terribly out of tune, Suellen?”
“Dreadfully,” answered Suellen,
happily beckoning with a smile to Frank.
But as they all passed from the room,
Frank hung back, tugging at Scarlett’s sleeve.
“May I speak to you alone?”
For an awful moment she feared he was
going to ask about her livestock and she braced herself for a good
lie.
When the room was cleared and they
stood by the fire, all the false cheerfulness which had colored
Frank’s face in front of the others passed and she saw that he
looked like an old man. His face was as dried and brown as the leaves
that were blowing about the lawn of Tara and his ginger-colored
whiskers were thin and scraggly and streaked with gray. He clawed at
them absently and cleared his throat in an annoying way before he
spoke.
“I’m mighty sorry about your ma,
Miss Scarlett.”
“Please don’t talk about it.”
“And your pa— Has he been this way
since—?”
“Yes—he’s—he’s not himself,
as you can see.”
“He sure set a store by her.”
“Oh, Mr. Kennedy, please don’t
let’s talk—”
“I’m sorry, Miss Scarlett,” and
he shuffled his feet nervously. “The truth is I wanted to take up
something with your pa and now I see it won’t do any good.”
“Perhaps I can help you, Mr. Kennedy.
You see—I’m the head of the house now.”
“Well, I,” began Frank and again
clawed nervously at his beard. “The truth is— Well, Miss
Scarlett, I was aiming to ask him for Miss Suellen.”
“Do you mean to tell me,” cried
Scarlett in amused amazement, “that you haven’t yet asked Pa for
Suellen? And you’ve been courting her for years!”
He flushed and grinned embarrassedly
and in general looked like a shy and sheepish boy.
“Well, I—I didn’t know if she’d
have me. I’m so much older than she is and—there were so many
good-looking young bucks hanging around Tara—”
“Hump!” thought Scarlett, “they
were hanging around me, not her!”
“And I don’t know yet if she’ll
have me. I’ve never asked her but she must know how I feel. I—I
thought I’d ask Mr. O’Hara’s permission and tell him the truth.
Miss Scarlett, I haven’t got a cent now. I used to have a lot of
money, if you’ll forgive me mentioning it, but right now all I own
is my horse and the clothes I’ve got on. You see, when I enlisted I
sold most of my land and I put all my money in Confederate bonds and
you know what they’re worth now. Less than the paper they’re
printed on. And anyway, I haven’t got them now, because they burned
up when the Yankees burned my sister’s house. I know I’ve got
gall asking for Miss Suellen now when I haven’t a cent but—well,
it’s this way. I got to thinking that we don’t know how things
are going to turn out about this war. It sure looks like the end of
the world for me. There’s nothing we can be sure of and—and I
thought it would be a heap of comfort to me and maybe to her if we
were engaged. That would be something sure. I wouldn’t ask to marry
her till I could take care of her, Miss Scarlett, and I don’t know
when that will be. But if true love carries any weight with you, you
can be certain Miss Suellen will be rich in that if nothing else.”
He spoke the last words with a simple
dignity that touched Scarlett, even in her amusement. It was beyond
her comprehension that anyone could love Suellen. Her sister seemed
to her a monster of selfishness, of complaints and of what she could
only describe as pure cussedness.
“Why, Mr. Kennedy,” she said
kindly, “it’s quite all right. I’m sure I can speak for Pa. He
always set a store by you and he always expected Suellen to marry
you.”
“Did he now?” cried Frank,
happiness in his face.
“Indeed yes,” answered Scarlett,
concealing a grin as she remembered how frequently Gerald had rudely
bellowed across the supper table to Suellen: “How now, Missy!
Hasn’t your ardent beau popped the question yet? Shall I be asking
him his intentions?”
“I shall ask her tonight,” he said,
his face quivering, and he clutched her hand and shook it. “You’re
so kind, Miss Scarlett.”
“I’ll send her to’ you,” smiled
Scarlett, starting for the parlor. Melanie was beginning to play. The
piano was sadly out of tune but some of the chords were musical and
Melanie was raising her voice to lead the others in “Hark, the
Herald Angels Sing!”
Scarlett paused. It did not seem
possible that war had swept over them twice, that they were living in
a ravaged country, close to the border of starvation, when this old
sweet Christmas hymn was being sung. Abruptly she turned to Frank.
“What did you mean when you said it
looked like the end of the world to you?”
“I’ll talk frankly,” he said
slowly, “but I wouldn’t want you to be alarming the other ladies
with what I say. The war can’t go on much longer. There arent any
fresh men to fill the ranks and the desertions are running
high—higher than the army likes to admit You see, the men can’t
stand to be away from their families when they know they’re
starving, so they go home to try to provide for them. I can’t blame
them but it weakens the army. And the army can’t fight without food
and there isn’t any food. I know because, you see, getting food is
my business. I’ve been all up and down this section since we retook
Atlanta and there isn’t enough to feed a jaybird. It’s the same
way for three hundred miles south to Savannah. The folks are starving
and the railroads are torn up and there aren’t any new rifles and
the ammunition is giving out and there’s no leather at all for
shoes. … So, you see, the end is almost here.”
But the fading hopes of the Confederacy
weighed less heavily on Scarlett than his remark about the scarcity
of food. It had been her intention to send Pork out with the horse
and wagon, the gold pieces and the United States money to scour the
countryside for provisions and material for clothes. But if what
Frank said was true—
But Macon hadn’t fallen. There must
be food in Macon. Just as soon as the commissary department was
safely on its way, she’d start Pork for Macon and take the chance
of having the precious horse picked up by the army. She’d have to
risk it.
“Well, let’s don’t talk about
unpleasant things tonight, Mr. Kennedy,” she said. “You go and
sit in Mother’s little office and I’ll send Suellen to you so you
can—well, so you’ll have a little privacy.”
Blushing, smiling, Frank slipped out of
the room and Scarlett watched him go.
“What a pity he can’t marry her
now,” she thought. “That would be one less mouth to feed.”
CHAPTER XXIX
THE FOLLOWING APRIL General Johnston,
who had been given back the shattered remnants of his old command,
surrendered them in North Carolina and the war was over. But not
until two weeks later did the news reach Tara. There was too much to
do at Tara for anyone to waste time traveling abroad and hearing
gossip and, as the neighbors were just as busy as they, there was
little visiting and news spread slowly.
Spring plowing was at its height and
the cotton and garden seed Pork had brought from Macon was being put
into the ground. Pork had been almost worthless since the trip, so
proud was he of returning safely with his wagon-load of dress goods,
seed, fowls, hams, side meat and meal. Over and over, he told the
story of, his many narrow escapes, of the bypaths and country lanes
he had taken on his return to Tara, the unfrequented roads, the old
trails, the bridle paths. He had been five weeks on the road,
agonizing weeks for Scarlett. But she did not upbraid him on his
return, for she was happy that he had made the trip successfully and
pleased that he brought back so much of the money she had given him.
She had a shrewd suspicion that the reason he had so much money left
over was that he had not bought the fowls or most of the food. Pork
would have taken shame to himself had he spent her money when there
were unguarded hen coops along the road and smokehouses handy.
Now that they had a little food,
everyone at Tara was busy trying to restore some semblance of
naturalness to life. There was work for every pair of hands, too much
work, never-ending work. The withered stalks of last year’s cotton
had to be removed to make way for this year’s seeds and the balky
horse, unaccustomed to the plow, dragged unwillingly through the
fields. Weeds had to be pulled from the garden and the seeds planted,
firewood had to be cut, a beginning had to be made toward replacing
the pens and the miles and miles of fences so casually burned by the
Yankees. The snares Pork set for rabbits had to be visited twice a
day and the fishlines in the river rebaited. There were beds to be
made and floors to be swept, food to be cooked and dishes washed,
hogs and chickens to be fed and eggs gathered. The cow had to be
milked and pastured near the swamp and someone had to watch her all
day for fear the Yankees or Frank Kennedy’s men would return and
take her. Even little Wade had his duties. Every morning he went out
importantly with a basket to pick up twigs and chips to start the
fires with.
It was the Fontaine boys, the first of
the County men home from the war, who brought the news of the
surrender. Alex, who still had boots, was walking and Tony,
barefooted, was riding on the bare back of a mule. Tony always
managed to get the best of things in that family. They were swarthier
than ever from four years’ exposure to sun and storm, thinner, more
wiry, and the wild black beards they brought back from the war made
them seem like strangers.
On their way to Mimosa and eager for
home, they only stopped a moment at Tara to kiss the girls and give
them news of the surrender. It was all over, they said, all finished,
and they did not seem to care much or want to talk about it. All they
wanted to know was whether Mimosa had been burned. On the way south
from Atlanta, they had passed chimney after chimney where the homes
of friends had stood and it seemed almost too much to hope that their
own house had been spared. They sighed with relief at the welcome
news and laughed, slapping their thighs when Scarlett told them of
Sally’s wild ride and how neatly she had cleared their hedge.
“She’s a spunky girl,” said Tony,
“and it’s rotten luck for her, Joe getting killed. You all got
any chewing tobacco, Scarlett?”
“Nothing but rabbit tobacco. Pa
smokes it in a corn cob.”
“I haven’t fallen that low yet,”
said Tony, “but I’ll probably come to it.”
“Is Dimity Munroe all right?” asked
Alex, eagerly but a little embarrassed, and Scarlett recalled vaguely
that he had been sweet on Sally’s younger sister.
“Oh, yes. She’s living with her
aunt over in Fayetteville now. You know their house in Lovejoy was
burned. And the rest of her folks are in Macon.”
“What he means is—has Dimity
married some brave colonel in the Home Guard?” jeered Tony, and
Alex turned furious eyes upon him.
“Of course, she isn’t married,”
said Scarlett, amused.
“Maybe it would be better if she
had,” said Alex gloomily. “How the hell—I beg your pardon,
Scarlett. But how can a man ask a girl to marry him when his darkies
are all freed and his, stock gone and he hasn’t got a cent in his
pockets?”
“You know that wouldn’t bother
Dimity,” said Scarlett. She could afford to be loyal to Dimity and
say nice things about her, for Alex Fontaine had never been one of
her own beaux.
“Hell’s afire— Well, I beg your
pardon again. I’ll have to quit swearing or Grandma will sure tan
my hide. I’m not asking any girl to marry a pauper. It mightn’t
bother her but it would bother me.”
While Scarlett talked to the boys on
the front porch, Melanie, Suellen and Carreen slipped silently into
the house as soon as they heard the news of the surrender. After the
boys had gone, cutting across the back fields of Tara toward home,
Scarlett went inside and heard the girls sobbing together on the sofa
in Ellen’s little office. It was all over, the bright beautiful
dream they had loved and hoped for, the Cause which had taken their
friends, lovers, husbands and beggared their families. The Cause they
had thought could never fall had fallen forever.
But for Scarlett, there were no tears.
In the first moment when she heard the news she thought: Thank God!
Now the cow won’t be stolen. Now the horse is safe. Now we can take
the silver out of the well and everybody can have a knife and fork.
Now I won’t be afraid to drive round the country looking for
something to eat.
What a relief! Never again would she
start in fear at the sound of hooves. Never again would she wake in
the dark nights, holding her breath to listen, wondering if it were
reality or only a dream that she heard in the yard the rattle of
bits, the stamping of hooves and the harsh crying of orders by the
Yankees. And, best of all, Tara was safe! Now her worst nightmare
would never come true. Now she would never have to stand on the lawn
and see smoke billowing from the beloved house and hear the roar of
flames as the roof fell in.
Yes, the Cause was dead but war had
always seemed foolish to her and peace was better. She had never
stood starry eyed when the Stars and Bars ran up a pole or felt cold
chills when “Dixie” sounded. She had not been sustained through
privations, the sickening duties of nursing, the fears of the siege
and the hunger of the last few months by the fanatic glow which made
all these things endurable to others, if only the Cause prospered. It
was all over and done with and she was not going to cry about it.
All over! The war which had seemed so
endless, the war which, unbidden and unwanted, had cut her life in
two, had made so clean a cleavage that it was difficult to remember
those other care-tree days. She could look back, unmoved, at the
pretty Scarlett with her fragile green morocco slippers and her
flounces fragrant with lavender but she wondered if she could be that
same girl. Scarlett O’Hara, with the County at her feet, a hundred
slaves to do her bidding, the wealth of Tara like a wall behind her
and doting parents anxious to grant any desire of her heart. Spoiled,
careless Scarlett who had never known an ungratified wish except
where Ashley was concerned.
Somewhere, on the long road that wound
through those four years, the girl with her sachet and dancing
slippers had slipped away and there was left a woman with sharp green
eyes, who counted pennies and turned her hands to many menial tasks,
a woman to whom nothing was left from the wreckage except the
indestructible red earth on which she stood.
As she stood in the hall, listening to
the girls sobbing, her mind was busy.
“We’ll plant more cotton, lots
more. I’ll send Pork to Macon tomorrow to buy more seed. Now the
Yankees won’t burn it and our troops won’t need it Good Lord!
Cotton ought to go sky high this fall!”
She went into the little office and,
disregarding the weeping girls on the sofa, seated herself at the
secretary and picked up a quill to balance the cost of more cotton
seed against her remaining cash.
“The war is over,” she thought and
suddenly she dropped the quill as a wild happiness flooded her. The
war was over and Ashley—if Ashley was alive he’d be coming home!
She wondered if Melanie, in the midst of mourning for the lost Cause,
had thought of this.
“Soon we’ll get a letter—no, not
a letter. We can’t get letters. But soon—oh, somehow he’ll let
us know!”
But the days passed into weeks and
there was no news from Ashley. The mail service in the South was
uncertain and in the rural districts there was none at all.
Occasionally a passing traveler from Atlanta brought a note from Aunt
Pitty tearfully begging the girls to come back. But never news of
Ashley.
After the surrender, an ever-present
feud over the horse smoldered between Scarlett and Suellen. Now that
there was no danger of Yankees, Suellen wanted to go calling on the
neighbors. Lonely and missing the happy sociability of the old days,
Suellen longed to visit friends, if for no other reason than to
assure herself that the rest of the County was as bad off as Tara.
But Scarlett was adamant. The horse was for work, to drag logs from
the woods, to plow and for Pork to ride in search of food. On Sundays
he had earned the right to graze in the pasture and rest. If Suellen
wanted to go visiting she could go afoot.
Before the last year Suellen had never
walked a hundred yards in her life and this prospect was anything but
pleasing:’ So she stayed at home and nagged and cried and said,
once too often: “Oh, if only Mother was here!” At that, Scarlett
gave her the long-promised slap, hitting her so hard it knocked her
screaming to the bed and caused great consternation throughout the
house. Thereafter, Suellen whined the less, at least in Scarlett’s
presence.
Scarlett spoke truthfully when she said
she wanted the horse to rest but that was only half of the truth. The
other half was that she had paid one round of calls on the County in
the first month after the surrender and the sight of old friends and
old plantations had shaken her courage more than she liked to admit.
The Fontaines had fared best of any,
thanks to Sally’s hard ride, but it was flourishing only by
comparison with the desperate situation of the other neighbors.
Grandma Fontaine had never completely recovered from the heart attack
she had the day she led the others in beating out the flames and
saving the house. Old Dr. Fontaine was convalescing slowly from an
amputated arm. Alex and Tony were turning awkward hands to plows and
hoe handles. They leaned over the fence rail to shake hands with
Scarlett when she called and they laughed at her rickety wagon, their
black eyes bitter, for they were laughing at themselves as well as
her. She asked to buy seed corn from them and they promised it and
fell to discussing farm problems. They had twelve chickens, two cows,
five hogs and the mule they brought home from the war. One of the
hogs had just died and they were worried about losing the others. At
bearing such serious words about hogs from these ex-dandies who had
never given life a more serious thought than which cravat was most
fashionable, Scarlett laughed and this time her laugh was bitter too.
They had all made her welcome at Mimosa
and had insisted on giving, not selling, her the seed corn. The quick
Fontaine tempers flared when she put a greenback on the table and
they flatly refused payment. Scarlett took the corn and privately
slipped a dollar bill into Sally’s hand. Sally looked like a
different person from the girl who had greeted her eight months
before when Scarlett first came home to Tara. Then she had been pale
and sad but there had been a buoyancy about her. Now that buoyancy
had gone, as if the surrender had taken all hope from her.
“Scarlett,” she whispered as she
clutched the bill, “what was the good of it all? Why did we ever
fight? Oh, my poor Joe! Oh, my poor baby!”
“I don’t know why we fought and I
don’t care,” said Scarlett, “And I’m not interested. I never
was interested. War is a man’s business, not a woman’s. All I’m
interested in now is a good cotton crop. Now take this dollar and buy
little Joe a dress. God knows, he needs it. I’m not going to rob
you of your corn, for all Alex and Tony’s politeness.”
The boys followed her to the wagon and
assisted her in, courtly for all their rags, gay with the volatile
Fontaine gaiety, but with the picture of their destitution in her
eyes, she shivered as she drove away from Mimosa. She was so tired of
poverty and pinching. What a pleasure it would be to know people who
were rich and not worried as to where the next meal was coming from!
Cade Calvert was at home at Pine Bloom
and, as Scarlett came up the steps of the old house in which she had
danced so often in happier days, she saw that death was in his face.
He was emaciated and he coughed as he lay in an easy chair in the
sunshine with a shawl across his knees, but his face lit up when he
saw her. Just a little cold which had settled in his chest, he said,
trying to rise to greet her. Got it from sleeping so much in the
rain. But it would be gone soon and then he’d lend a hand in the
work.
Cathleen Calvert, who came out of the
house at the sound of voices, met Scarlett’s eyes above her
brother’s head and in them Scarlett read knowledge and bitter
despair. Cade might not know but Cathleen knew. Pine Bloom looked
straggly and overgrown with weeds, seedling pines were beginning to
show in the fields and the house was sagging and untidy. Cathleen was
thin and taut.
The two of them, with their Yankee
stepmother, their four little half-sisters, and Hilton, the Yankee
overseer, remained in the silent, oddly echoing house. Scarlett had
never liked Hilton any more than she liked their own overseer Jonas
Wilkerson, and she liked him even less now, as he sauntered forward
and greeted her like an equal. Formerly he had the same combination
of servility and impertinence which Wilkerson possessed but now, with
Mr. Calvert and Raiford dead in the war and Cade sick, he had dropped
all servility. The second Mrs. Calvert had never known how to compel
respect from negro servants and it was not to be expected that she
could get it from a white man.
“Mr. Hilton has been so kind about
staying with us through these difficult times,” said Mrs. Calvert
nervously, casting quick glances at her silent stepdaughter. “Very
kind. I suppose you heard how he saved our house twice when Sherman
was here. I’m sure I don’t know how we would have managed without
him, with no money and Cade—”
A flush went over Cade’s white face
and Cathleen’s long lashes veiled her eyes as her mouth hardened.
Scarlett knew their souls were writhing in helpless rage at being
under obligations to their Yankee overseer. Mrs. Calvert seemed ready
to weep. She had somehow made a blunder. She was always blundering.
She just couldn’t understand Southerners, for all that she had
lived in Georgia twenty years. She never knew what not to say to her
stepchildren and, no matter what she said or did, they were always so
exquisitely polite to her. Silently she vowed she would go North to
her own people, taking her children with her, and leave these
puzzling stiff-necked strangers.
After these visits, Scarlett had no
desire to see the Tarletons. Now that the four boys were gone, the
house burned and the family cramped in the overseer’s cottage, she
could not bring herself to go. But Suellen and Carreen begged and
Melanie said it would be unneighborly not to call and welcome Mr.
Tarleton back from the war, so one Sunday they went.
This was the worst of all.
As they drove up by the ruins of the
house, they saw Beatrice Tarleton dressed in a worn riding habit, a
crop under her arm, sitting on the top rail of the fence about the
paddock, staring moodily at nothing. Beside her perched the
bow-legged little negro who had trained her horses and he looked as
glum as his mistress. The paddock, once full of frolicking colts and
placid brood mares, was empty now except for one mule, the mule Mr.
Tarleton had ridden home from the surrender.
“I swear I don’t know what to do
with myself now that my darlings are gone,” said Mrs. Tarleton,
climbing down from the fence. A stranger might have thought she spoke
of her four dead sons, but the girls from Tara knew her horses were
in her mind. “All my beautiful horses dead. And oh, my poor Nellie!
If I just had Nellie! And nothing but a damned mule on the place. A
damned mule,” she repeated, looking indignantly at the scrawny
beast. “It’s an insult to the memory of my blooded darlings to
have a mule in their paddock. Mules are misbegotten, unnatural
critters and it ought to be illegal to breed them.”
Jim Tarleton, completely disguised by a
bushy beard, came out of the overseer’s house to welcome and kiss
the girls and his four red-haired daughters in mended dresses
streamed out behind him, tripping over the dozen black and tan hounds
which ran barking to the door at the sound of strange voices. There
was an air of studied and determined cheerfulness about the whole
family which brought a colder chill to Scarlett’s bones than the
bitterness of Mimosa or the deathly brooding of Pine Bloom.
The Tarletons insisted that the girls
stay for dinner, saying they had so few guests these days and wanted
to hear all the news. Scarlett did not want to linger, for the
atmosphere oppressed her, but Melanie and her two sisters were
anxious for a longer visit, so the four stayed for dinner and ate
sparingly of the side meat and dried peas which were served them.
There was laughter about the skimpy
fare and the Tarleton girls giggled as they told of makeshifts for
clothes, as if they were telling the most amusing of jokes. Melanie
met them halfway, surprising Scarlett with her unexpected vivacity as
she told of trials at Tara, making light of hardships. Scarlett could
hardly speak at all. The room seemed so empty without the four great
Tarleton boys, lounging and smoking and teasing. And if it seemed
empty to her, what must it seem to the Tarletons who were offering a
smiling front to their neighbors?
Carreen had said little during the meal
but when it was over she slipped over to Mrs. Tarleton’s side and
whispered something. Mrs. Tarleton’s face changed and the brittle
smile left her lips as she put her arm around Carreen’s slender
waist. They left the room, and Scarlett, who felt she could not
endure the house another minute, followed them. They went down the
path through the garden and Scarlett saw they were going toward the
burying ground. Well, she couldn’t go back to the house now. It
would seem too rude. But what on earth did Carreen mean dragging Mrs.
Tarleton out to the boys’ graves when Beatrice was trying so hard
to be brave?
There were two new marble markers in
the brick-enclosed lot under the funereal cedars—so new that no
rain had splashed them with red dust.
“We got them last week,” said Mrs.
Tarleton proudly. “Mr. Tarleton went to Macon and brought them home
in the wagon.”
Tombstones! And what they must have
cost! Suddenly Scarlett did not feel as sorry for the Tarletons as
she had at first. Anybody who would waste precious money on
tombstones when food was so dear, so almost unattainable, didn’t
deserve sympathy. And there were several lines carved on each of the
stones. The more carving, the more money. The whole family must be
crazy! And it had cost money, too, to bring the three boys’ bodies
home. They had never found Boyd or any trace of him.
Between the graves of Brent and Stuart
was a stone which read: “They were lovely and pleasant in their
lives, and in their death they were not divided.”
On the other stone were the names of
Boyd and Tom with something in Latin which began “Dulce et—”
but it meant nothing to Scarlett who had managed to evade Latin at
the Fayetteville Academy.
All that money for tombstones! Why,
they were fools! She felt as indignant as if her own money had been
squandered.
Carreen’s eyes were shining oddly.
“I think it’s lovely,” she
whispered pointing to the first stone.
Carreen would think it lovely. Anything
sentimental stirred her.
“Yes,” said Mrs. Tarleton and her
voice was soft, “we thought it very fitting—they died almost at
the same time. Stuart first and then Brent who caught up the flag he
dropped.”
As the girls drove back to Tara,
Scarlett was silent for a while, thinking of what she had seen in the
various homes, remembering against her will the County in its glory,
with visitors at all the big houses and money plentiful, negroes
crowding the quarters and the well-tended fields glorious with
cotton.
“In another year, there’ll be
little pines all over these fields,” she thought and looking toward
the encircling forest she shuddered. “Without the darkies, it will
be all we can do to keep body and soul together. Nobody can run a big
plantation without the darkies, and lots of the fields won’t be
cultivated at all and the woods will take over the fields again.
Nobody can plant much cotton, and what will we do then? What’ll
become of country folks? Town folks can manage somehow. They’ve
always managed. But we country folks will go back a hundred years
like the pioneers who had little cabins and just scratched a few
acres—and barely existed.
“No—” she thought grimly, “Tara
isn’t going to be like that. Not even if I have to plow myself.
This whole section, this whole state can go back to woods if it wants
to, but I won’t let Tara go. And I don’t intend to waste my money
on tombstones or my time crying about the war. We can make out
somehow. I know we could make out somehow if the men weren’t all
dead. Losing the darkies isn’t the worst part about this. It’s
the loss of the men, the young men.” She thought again of the four
Tarletons and Joe Fontaine, of Raiford Calvert and the Munroe
brothers and all the boys from Fayetteville and Jonesboro whose names
she had read on the casualty lists. “If there were just enough men
left, we could manage somehow but—”
Another thought struck her—suppose
she wanted to marry again. Of course, she didn’t want to marry
again. Once was certainly enough. Besides, the only man she’d ever
wanted was Ashley and he was married if he was still living. But
suppose she would want to marry. Who would there be to marry her? The
thought was appalling.
“Melly,” she said, “what’s
going to happen to Southern girls?”
“What do you mean?”
“Just what I say. What’s going to
happen to them? There’s no one to marry them. Why, Melly, with all
the boys dead, there’ll be thousands of girls all over the South
who’ll die old maids.”
“And never have any children,”
added Melanie, to whom this was the most important thing.
Evidently the thought was not new to
Suellen who sat in the back of the wagon, for she suddenly began to
cry. She had not heard from Frank Kennedy since Christmas. She did
not know if the lack of mail service was the cause, or if he had
merely trifled with her affections and then forgotten her. Or maybe
he had been killed in the last days of the war! The latter would have
“been infinitely preferable to his forgetting her, for at least
there was some dignity about a dead love, such as Carreen and India
Wilkes had, but none about a deserted fiancée.
“Oh, in the name of God, hush!”
said Scarlett.
“Oh, you can talk,” sobbed Suellen,
“because you’ve been married and had a baby and everybody knows
some man wanted you. But look at me! And you’ve got to be mean and
throw it up to me that I’m an old maid when I can’t help myself.
I think you’re hateful.”
“Oh, hush! You know how I hate people
who bawl all the time. You know perfectly well old Ginger Whiskers
isn’t dead and that he’ll come back and marry you. He hasn’t
any better sense. But personally, I’d rather be an old maid than
marry him.”
There was silence from the back of the
wagon for a while and Carreen comforted her sister with absent-minded
pats, for her mind was a long way off, riding paths three years old
with Brent Tarleton beside her. There was a glow, an exaltation in
her eyes.
“Ah,” said Melanie, sadly, “what
will the South be like without all our fine boys? What would the
South have been if they had lived? We could use their courage and
their energy and their brains. Scarlett, all of us with little boys
must raise them to take the places of the men who are gone, to be
brave men like them.”
“There will never again be men like
them,” said Carreen softly. “No one can take their places.”
They drove home the rest of the way in
silence.
One day not long after this, Cathleen
Calvert rode up to Tara at sunset. Her sidesaddle was strapped on as
sorry a mule as Scarlett had ever seen, a flop-eared lame brute, and
Cathleen was almost as sorry looking as the animal she rode. Her
dress was of faded gingham of the type once worn only by house
servants, and her sunbonnet was secured under her chin by a piece of
twine. She rode up to the front porch but did not dismount, and
Scarlett and Melanie, who had been watching the sunset, went down the
steps to meet her. Cathleen was as white as Cade had been the day
Scarlett called, white and hard and brittle, as if her face would
shatter if she spoke. But her back was erect and her head was high as
she nodded to them.
Scarlett suddenly remembered the day of
the Wilkes barbecue when she and Cathleen had whispered together
about Rhett Butler. How pretty and fresh Cathleen had been that day
in a swirl of blue organdie with fragrant roses at her sash and
little black velvet slippers laced about her small ankles. And now
there was not a trace of that girl in the stiff figure sitting on the
mule.
“I won’t get down, thank you,”
she said. “I just came to tell you that I’m going to be married.”
“What!”
“Who to?”
“Cathy, how grand!”
“When?”
“Tomorrow,” said Cathleen quietly
and there was something in her voice which took the eager smiles from
their faces. “I came to tell you that I’m going to be married
tomorrow, in Jonesboro—and I’m not inviting you all to come.”
They digested this in silence, looking
up at her, puzzled. Then Melanie spoke.
“Is it someone we know, dear?”
“Yes,” said Cathleen, shortly.
“It’s Mr. Hilton.”
“Mr. Hilton?”
“Yes, Mr. Hilton, our overseer,”
Scarlett could not even find voice to
say “Oh!” but Cathleen, peering down suddenly at Melanie, said in
a low savage voice: “If you cry, Melly, I can’t stand it. I shall
die!”
Melanie said nothing but patted the
foot in its awkward home-made shoe which hung from the stirrup. Her
bead was low.
“And don’t pat me! I can’t stand
that either.”
Melanie dropped her hand but still did
not look up.
“Well, I must go. I only came to tell
you.” The white brittle mask was back again and she picked up the
reins.
“How is Cade?” asked Scarlett,
utterly at a loss but fumbling for some words to break the awkward
silence.
“He is dying,” said Cathleen
shortly. There seemed to be no feeling in her voice. “And he is
going to die in some comfort and peace if I can manage it, without
worry about who will take care of me when he’s gone. You see, my
stepmother and the children are going North for good, tomorrow. Well,
I must be going.”
Melanie looked up and met Cathleen’s
hard eyes. There were bright tears on Melanie’s lashes and
understanding in her eyes, and before them, Cathleen’s lips curved
into the crooked smile of a brave child who tries not to cry. It was
all very bewildering to Scarlett who was still trying to grasp the
idea that Cathleen Calvert was going to marry an overseer—Cathleen,
daughter of a rich planter, Cathleen who, next to Scarlett, had had
more beaux than any girl in the County.
Cathleen bent down and Melanie tiptoed.
They kissed. Then Cathleen flapped the bridle reins sharply and the
old mule moved off.
Melanie looked after her, the tears
streaming down her face. Scarlett stared, still dazed.
“Melly, is she crazy? You know she
can’t be in love with him.”
“In love? Oh, Scarlett, don’t even
suggest such a horrid thing! Oh, poor Cathleen! Poor Cade!”
“Fiddle-dee-dee!” cried Scarlett,
beginning to be irritated. It was annoying that Melanie always seemed
to grasp more of situations than she herself did. Cathleen’s plight
seemed to her more startling than catastrophic. Of course it was no
pleasant thought, marrying Yankee white trash, but after all a girl
couldn’t live alone on a plantation; she had to have a husband to
help her run it
“Melly, it’s like I said the other
day. There isn’t anybody for girls to marry and they’ve got to
marry someone.”
“Oh, they don’t have to marry!
There’s nothing shameful in being a spinster. Look at Aunt Pitty.
Oh, I’d rather see Cathleen dead! I know Cade would rather see her
dead. It’s the end of the Calverts. Just think what her—what
their children will be. Oh, Scarlett, have Pork saddle the horse
quickly and you ride after her and tell her to come live with us!”
“Good Lord!” cried Scarlett,
shocked at the matter-of-fact way in which Melanie was offering Tara.
Scarlett certainly had no intention of feeding another mouth. She
started to say this but something in Melanie’s stricken face halted
the words.
“She wouldn’t come, Melly,” she
amended. “You know she wouldn’t. She’s so proud and she’d
think it was charity.”
“That’s true, that’s true!”
said Melanie distractedly, watching the small cloud of red dust
disappear down the road.
“You’ve been with me for months,”
thought Scarlett grimly, looking at her sister-in-law, “and it’s
never occurred to you that it’s charity you’re living on. And I
guess it never will. You’re one of those people the war didn’t
change and you go right on thinking and acting just like nothing had
happened—like we were still rich as Croesus and had more food than
we know what to do with and guests didn’t matter. I guess I’ve
got you on my neck for the rest of my life. But I won’t have
Cathleen too.”
CHAPTER XXX
IN THAT warm summer after peace came,
Tara suddenly lost its isolation. And for months thereafter a stream
of scarecrows, bearded, ragged, footsore and always hungry, toiled up
the red hill to Tara and came to rest on the shady front steps,
wanting food and a night’s lodging. They were Confederate soldiers
walking home. The railroad had carried the remains of Johnston’s
army from North Carolina to Atlanta and dumped them there, and from
Atlanta they began their pilgrimages afoot. When the wave of
Johnston’s men had passed, the weary veterans from the Army of
Virginia arrived and then men from the Western troops, beating their
way south toward homes which might not exist and families which might
be scattered or dead. Most of them were walking, a few fortunate ones
rode bony horses and mules which the terms of the surrender had
permitted them to keep, gaunt animals which even an untrained eye
could tell would never reach far-away Florida and south Georgia.
Going home! Going home! That was the
only thought in the soldiers’ minds. Some were sad and silent,
others gay and contemptuous of hardships, but the thought that it was
all over and they were going home was the one thing that sustained
them. Few of them were bitter. They left bitterness to their women
and their old people. They had fought a good fight, had been licked
and were willing to settle down peaceably to plowing beneath the flag
they had fought.
Going home! Going home! They could talk
of nothing else, neither battles nor wounds, nor imprisonment nor the
future. Later, they would refight battles and tell children and
grandchildren of pranks and forays and charges, of hunger, forced
marches and wounds, but not now. Some of them lacked an arm or a leg
or an eye, many had scars which would ache in rainy weather if they
lived for seventy years but these seemed small matters now. Later it
would be different.
Old and young, talkative and taciturn,
rich planter and sallow Cracker, they all had two things in common,
lice and dysentery. The Confederate soldier was so accustomed to his
verminous state he did not give it a thought and scratched
unconcernedly even in the presence of ladies. As for dysentery—the
“bloody flux” as the ladies delicately called it—it seemed to
have spared no one from private to general. Four years of
half-starvation, four years of rations which were coarse or green or
half-putrefied, had done its work with them, and every soldier who
stopped at Tara was either just recovering or was actively suffering
from it.
“Dey ain’ a soun’ set of bowels
in de whole Confedrut ahmy,” observed Mammy darkly as she sweated
over the fire, brewing a bitter concoction of blackberry roots which
had been Ellen’s sovereign remedy for such afflictions. “It’s
mah notion dat ‘twarn’t de Yankees whut beat our gempmum. Twuz
dey own innards. Kain no gempmum fight wid his bowels tuhnin’ ter
water.”
One and all, Mammy dosed them, never
waiting to ask foolish questions about the state of their organs and,
one and all, they drank her doses meekly and with wry faces,
remembering, perhaps, other stern black faces in far-off places and
other inexorable black hands holding medicine spoons.
In the matter of “comp’ny” Mammy
was equally adamant. No lice-ridden soldier should come into Tara.
She marched them behind a clump of thick bushes, relieved them of
their uniforms, gave them a basin of water and strong lye soap to
wash with and provided them with quilts and blankets to cover their
nakedness, while she boiled their clothing in her huge wash pot. It
was useless for the girls to argue hotly that such conduct humiliated
the soldiers. Mammy replied that the girls would be a sight more
humiliated if they found lice upon themselves.
When the soldiers began arriving almost
daily, Mammy protested against their being allowed to use the
bedrooms. Always she feared lest some louse had escaped her. Rather
than argue the matter, Scarlett turned the parlor with its deep
velvet rug into a dormitory. Mammy cried out equally loudly at the
sacrilege of soldiers being permitted to sleep on Miss Ellen’s rug
but Scarlett was firm. They had to sleep somewhere. And, in the
months after the surrender, the deep soft nap began to show signs of
wear and finally the heavy warp and woof showed through in spots
where heels had worn it and spurs dug carelessly.
Of each soldier, they asked eagerly of
Ashley. Suellen, bridling, always asked news of Mr. Kennedy. But none
of the soldiers had ever heard of them nor were they inclined to talk
about the missing. It was enough that they themselves were alive, and
they did not care to think of the thousands in unmarked graves who
would never come home.
The family tried to bolster Melanie’s
courage after each of these disappointments. Of course, Ashley hadn’t
died in prison. Some Yankee chaplain would have written if this were
true. Of course, he was coming home but his prison was so far away.
Why, goodness, it took days riding on a train to make the trip and if
Ashley was walking, like these men … Why hadn’t he written? Well,
darling, you know what the mails are now—so uncertain and slipshod
even where mail routes are re-established. But suppose—suppose he
had died on the way home. Now, Melanie, some Yankee woman would have
surely written us about it! … Yankee women! Bah! … Melly, there
are some nice Yankee women. Oh, yes, there are! God couldn’t make a
whole nation without having some nice women in it! Scarlett, you
remember we did meet a nice Yankee woman at Saratoga that
time—Scarlett, tell Melly about her!
“Nice, my foot!” replied Scarlett.
“She asked me how many bloodhounds we kept to chase our darkies
with! I agree with Melly. I never saw a nice Yankee, male or female.
But don’t cry, Melly! Ashley’ll come home. It’s a long walk and
maybe—maybe he hasn’t got any boots.”
Then at the thought of Ashley
barefooted, Scarlett could have cried. Let other soldiers limp by in
rags with their feet tied up in sacks and strips of carpet, but not
Ashley. He should come home on a prancing horse, dressed in fine
clothes and shining boots, a plume in his hat. It was the final
degradation for her to think of Ashley reduced to the state of these
other soldiers.
One afternoon in June when everyone at
Tara was assembled on the back porch eagerly watching Pork cut the
first half-ripe watermelon of the season, they heard hooves on the
gravel of the front drive. Prissy started languidly toward the front
door, while those left behind argued hotly as to whether they should
hide the melon or keep it for supper, should the caller at the door
prove to be a soldier.
Melly and Carreen whispered that the
soldier guest should have a share and Scarlett, backed by Suellen and
Mammy, hissed to Pork to hide it quickly.
“Don’t be a goose, girls! There’s
not enough for us as it is and if there are two or three famished
soldiers out there, none of us will even get a taste,” said
Scarlett.
While Pork stood with the little melon
clutched to him, uncertain as to the final decision, they heard
Prissy cry out.
“Gawdlmighty! Miss Scarlett! Miss
Melly! Come quick!”
“Who is it?” cried Scarlett,
leaping up from the steps and racing through the hall with Melly at
her shoulder and the others streaming after her.
Ashley! she thought Oh, perhaps—
“It’s Uncle Peter! Miss Pittypat’s
Uncle Peter!”
They all ran out to the front porch and
saw the tall grizzled old despot of Aunt Pitty’s house climbing
down from a rat-tailed nag on which a section of quilting had been
strapped. On his wide black face, accustomed dignity strove with
delight at seeing old friends, with the result that his brow was
furrowed in a frown but his mouth was hanging open like a happy
toothless old hound’s.
Everyone ran down the steps to greet
him, black and white shaking his hand and asking questions, but
Melly’s voice rose above them all.
“Auntie isn’t sick, is she?”
“No’m. She’s po’ly, thank God,”
answered Peter, fastening a severe look first on Melly and then on
Scarlett, so that they suddenly felt guilty but could think of no
reason why. “She’s po’ly but she is plum outdone wid you young
Misses, an’ ef it come right down to it, Ah is too!”
“Why, Uncle Peter! What on earth—”
“Y’all nee’n try ter ‘scuse
you’seffs. Ain’ Miss Pitty writ you an’ writ you ter come home?
Ain’ Ah seed her write an’ seed her a-cryin’ w’en y’all
writ her back dat you got too much ter do on disyere ole farm ter
come home?”
“But, Uncle Peter—”
“Huccome you leave Miss Pitty by
herseff lak dis w’en she so scary lak? You know well’s Ah do Miss
Pitty ain’ never live by herseff an’ she been shakin’ in her
lil shoes ever since she come back frum Macom. She say fer me ter
tell y’all plain as Ah knows how dat she jes’ kain unnerstan’
y’all desertin’ her in her hour of need.”
“Now, hesh!” said Mammy tartly, for
it sat ill upon her to hear Tara referred to as an “ole farm.”
Trust an ignorant city-bred darky not to know the difference between
a farm and a plantation. “Ain’ us got no hours of need? Ain’ us
needin’ Miss Scarlett an’ Miss Melly right hyah an’ needin’
dem bad? Huccome Miss Pitty doan ast her brudder fer ‘sistance,
does she need any?”
Uncle Peter gave her a withering look.
“Us ain’ had nuthin’ ter do wid
Mist’ Henry fer y’ars, an’ us is too ole ter start now.” He
turned back to the girls, who were trying to suppress their smiles.
“You young Misses ought ter tek shame, leavin’ po’ Miss Pitty
lone, wid half her frens daid an’ de other half in Macom, an’
‘Lanta full of Yankee sojers an’ trashy free issue niggers.”
The two girls had borne the castigation
with straight faces as long as they could, but the thought of Aunt
Pitty sending Peter to scold them and bring them back bodily to
Atlanta was too much for their control. They burst into laughter and
hung on each other’s shoulders for support. Naturally, Pork and
Dilcey and Mammy gave vent to loud guffaws at hearing the detractor
of their beloved Tara set at naught. Suellen and Carreen giggled and
even Gerald’s face wore a vague smile. Everyone laughed except
Peter, who shifted from one large splayed foot to the other in
mounting indignation.
“Whut’s wrong wid you, nigger?”
inquired Mammy with a grin. “Is you gittin’ too ole ter perteck
yo’ own Missus?” Peter was outraged.
“Too ole! Me too ole? No, Ma’m! Ah
kin perteck Miss Pitty lak Ah allus done. Ain’ Ah perteck her down
ter Macom when us refugeed? Ain’ Ah perteck her w’en de Yankees
come ter Macom an’ she so sceered she faintin’ all de time? An’
ain’ Ah ‘quire disyere nag ter bring her back ter ‘Lanta an’
perteck her an’ her pa’s silver all de way?” Peter drew himself
to his full height as he vindicated himself. “Ah ain’ talkin’
about perteckin’. Ah’s talkin’ ‘bout how it look.”
“How who look?”
“Ah’m talkin’ ‘bout how it look
ter folks, seein’ Miss Pitty livin’ lone. Folks talks scanlous
‘bout maiden ladies dat lives by deyseff,” continued Peter, and
it was obvious to his listeners that Pittypat, in his mind, was still
a plump and charming miss of sixteen who must be sheltered against
evil tongues. “An’ Ah ain’ figgerin’ on havin’ folks
criticize her. No, Ma’m. … An’ Ah ain’ figgerin’ on her
takin’ in no bo’ders, jes’ fer comp’ny needer. Ah done tole
her dat. ‘Not w’ile you got yo’ flesh an’ blood dat belongs
wid you,’ Ah says. An’ now her flesh an’ blood denyin’ her.
Miss Pitty ain’ nuthin’ but a chile an’—”
At this, Scarlett and Melly whooped
louder and sank down to the steps. Finally Melly wiped tears of mirth
from her eyes.
“Poor Uncle Peter! I’m sorry I
laughed. Really and truly. There! Do forgive me. Miss Scarlett and I
just can’t come home now. Maybe I’ll come in September after the
cotton is picked. Did Auntie send you all the way down here just to
bring us back on that bag of bones?”
At this question, Peter’s jaw
suddenly dropped and guilt and consternation swept over his wrinkled
black face. His protruding underlip retreated to normal as swiftly as
a turtle withdraws its head beneath its shell.
“Miss Melly, Ah is gittin’ ole, Ah
spec’, ‘cause Ah clean fergit fer de moment whut she sent me fer,
an’ it’s important too. Ah got a letter fer you. Miss Pitty
wouldn’ trust de mails or nobody but me ter bring it an’—”
“A letter? For me? Who from?”
“Well’m, it’s—Miss Pitty, she
says ter me, “You, Peter, you brek it gen’ly ter Miss Melly,’
an’ Ah say—”
Melly rose from the steps, her hand at
her heart.
“Ashley! Ashley! He’s dead!”
“No’m! No’m!” cried Peter, his
voice rising to a shrill bawl, as he fumbled in the breast pocket of
his ragged coat. “He’s live! Disyere a letter frum him. He comin’
home. He— Gawdlmighty! Ketch her, Mammy! Lemme—”
“Doan you tech her, you ole fool!”
thundered Mammy, struggling to keep Melanie’s sagging body from
falling to the ground. “You pious black ape! Brek it gen’ly! You,
Poke, tek her feet. Miss Carreen, steady her haid. Lessus lay her on
de sofa in de parlor.”
There was a tumult of sound as everyone
but Scarlett swarmed about the fainting Melanie, everyone crying out
in alarm, scurrying into the house for water and pillows, and in a
moment Scarlett and Uncle Peter were left standing alone on the walk.
She stood rooted, unable to move from the position to which she had
leaped when she heard his words, staring at the old man who stood
feebly waving a letter. His old black face was as pitiful as a
child’s under its mother’s disapproval, his dignity collapsed.
For a moment she could not speak or
move, and though her mind shouted: “He isn’t dead! He’s coming
home!” the knowledge brought neither joy nor excitement, only a
stunned immobility. Uncle Peter’s voice came as from a far
distance, plaintive, placating.
“Mist’ Willie Burr frum Macom whut
is kin ter us, he brung it ter Miss Pitty. Mist’ Willie he in de
same jail house wid Mist’ Ashley. Mist’ Willie he got a hawse an’
he got hyah soon. But Mist’ Ashley he a-walkin’ an’—”
Scarlett snatched the letter from his
hand. It was addressed to Melly in Miss Pitty’s writing but that
did not make her hesitate a moment. She ripped it open and Miss
Pitty’s enclosed note fell to the ground. Within the envelope there
was a piece of folded paper, grimy from the dirty pocket in which it
had been carried, creased and ragged about the edges. It bore the
inscription in Ashley’s hand: “Mrs. George Ashley Wilkes, Care
Miss Sarah Jane Hamilton, Atlanta, or Twelve Oaks, Jonesboro, Ga.”
With fingers that shook, she opened it
and read:
“Beloved, I am coming home to you—”
Tears began to stream down her face so
that she could not read and her heart swelled up until she felt she
could not bear the joy of it. Clutching the letter to her, she raced
up the porch steps and down the hall, past the parlor where an the
inhabitants of Tara were getting in one another’s way as they
worked over the unconscious Melanie, and into Ellen’s office. She
shut the door and locked it and flung herself down on the sagging old
sofa crying, laughing, kissing the letter.
“Beloved,” she whispered, “I am
coming home to you.”
Common sense told them that unless
Ashley developed wings, it would be weeks or even months before he
could travel from Illinois to Georgia, but hearts nevertheless beat
wildly whenever a soldier turned into the avenue at Tara. Each
bearded scarecrow might be Ashley. And if it were not Ashley, perhaps
the soldier would have news of him or a letter from Aunt Pitty about
him. Black and white, they rushed to the front porch every time they
heard footsteps. The sight of a uniform was enough to bring everyone
flying from the woodpile, the pasture and the cotton patch. For a
month after the letter came, work was almost at a standstill. No one
wanted to be out of the house when he arrived. Scarlett least of all.
And she could not insist on the others attending to their duties when
she so neglected hers.
But when the weeks crawled by and
Ashley did not come or any news of him, Tara settled back into its
old routine. Longing hearts could only stand so much of longing. An
uneasy fear crept into Scarlett’s mind that something had happened
to him along the way. Rock Island was so far away and he might have
been weak or sick when released from prison. And he had no money and
was tramping through a country where Confederates were hated. If only
she knew where he was, she would send money to him, send every penny
she had and let the family go hungry, so he could come home swiftly
on the train.
“Beloved, I am coming home to you.”
In the first rush of joy when her eyes
met those words, they had meant only that Ashley was coming home to
her. Now, in the light of cooler reason, it was Melanie to whom he
was returning, Melanie who went about the house these days singing
with joy. Occasionally, Scarlett wondered bitterly why Melanie could
not have died in childbirth in Atlanta. That would have made things
perfect. Then she could have married Ashley after a decent interval
and made little Beau a good stepmother too. When such thoughts came
she did not pray hastily to God, telling Him she did not mean it. God
did not frighten her any more.
Soldiers came singly and in pairs and
dozens and they were always hungry. Scarlett thought despairingly
that a plague of locusts would be more welcome. She cursed again the
old custom of hospitality which had flowered in the era of plenty,
the custom which would not permit any traveler, great or humble, to
go on his journey without a night’s lodging, food for himself and
his horse and the utmost courtesy the house could give. She knew that
era had passed forever, but the rest of the household did not, nor
did the soldiers, and each soldier was welcomed as if he were a
long-awaited guest.
As the never-ending line went by, her
heart hardened. They were eating the food meant for the mouths of
Tara, vegetables over whose long rows she had wearied her back, food
she had driven endless miles to buy. Food was so hard to get and the
money in the Yankee’s wallet would not last forever. Only a few
greenbacks and the two gold pieces were left now. Why should she feed
this horde of hungry men? The war was over. They would never again
stand between her and danger. So, she gave orders to Pork that when
soldiers were in the house, the table should be set sparely. This
order prevailed until she noticed that Melanie, who had never been
strong since Beau was born, was inducing Pork to put only dabs of
food on her plate and giving her share to the soldiers.
“You’ll have to stop it, Melanie,”
she scolded. “You’re half sick yourself and if you don’t eat
more, you’ll be sick in bed and we’ll have to nurse you. Let
these men go hungry. They can stand it. They’ve stood it for four
years and it won’t hurt them to stand it a little while longer.”
Melanie turned to her and on her face
was the first expression of naked emotion Scarlett had ever seen in
those serene eyes.
“Oh, Scarlett, don’t scold me! Let
me do it. You don’t know how it helps me. Every time I give some
poor man my share I think that maybe, somewhere on the road up north,
some woman is giving my Ashley a share of her dinner and it’s
helping him to get home to me!”
“My Ashley.”
“Beloved, I am coming home to you.”
Scarlett turned away, wordless. After
that, Melanie noticed there was more food on the table when guests
were present, even though Scarlett might grudge them every mouthful.
When the soldiers were too ill to go
on, and there were many such, Scarlett put them to bed with none too
good grace. Each sick man meant another mouth to feed. Someone had to
nurse him and that meant one less worker at the business of fence
building, hoeing, weeding and plowing. One boy, on whose face a blond
fuzz had just begun to sprout, was dumped on the front porch by a
mounted soldier bound for Fayetteville. He had found him unconscious
by the roadside and had brought him, across his saddle, to Tara, the
nearest house. The girls thought he must be one of the little cadets
who had been called out of military school when Sherman approached
Milledgeville but they never knew, for he died without regaining
consciousness and a search of his pockets yielded no information.
A nice-looking boy, obviously a
gentleman, and somewhere to the south, some woman was watching the
roads, wondering where he was and when he was coming home, just as
she and Melanie, with a wild hope in their hearts, watched every
bearded figure that came up their walk. They buried the cadet in the
family burying ground, next to the three little O’Hara boys, and
Melanie cried sharply as Pork filled in the grave, wondering in her
heart if strangers were doing this same thing to the tall body of
Ashley.
Will Benteen was another soldier, like
the nameless boy, who arrived unconscious across the saddle of a
comrade. Will was acutely ill with pneumonia and when the girls put
him to bed, they feared he would soon join the boy in the burying
ground.
He had the sallow malarial face of the
south Georgia Cracker, pale pinkish hair and washed-out blue eyes
which even in delirium were patient and mild. One of his legs was
gone at the knee and to the stump was fitted a roughly whittled
wooden peg. He was obviously a Cracker, just as the boy they had
buried so short a while ago was obviously a planter’s son. Just how
the girls knew this they could not say. Certainly Will was no
dirtier, no more hairy, no more lice infested than many fine
gentlemen who came to Tara. Certainly the language he used in his
delirium was no less grammatical than that of the Tarleton twins. But
they knew instinctively, as they knew thoroughbred horses from
scrubs, that he was not of their class. But this knowledge did not
keep them from laboring to save him.
Emaciated from a year in a Yankee
prison, exhausted by his long tramp on his ill-fitting wooden peg, he
had little strength to combat pneumonia and for days he lay in the
bed moaning, trying to get up, fighting battles over again. Never
once did he call for mother, wife, sister or sweetheart and this
omission worried Carreen.
“A man ought to have some folks,”
she said. “And he sounds like he didn’t have a soul in the
world.”
For all his lankiness he was tough, and
good nursing pulled him through. The day came when his pale blue
eyes, perfectly cognizant of his surroundings, fell upon Carreen
sitting beside him, telling her rosary beads, the morning sun shining
through her fair hair.
“Then you warn’t a dream, after
all,” he said, in his flat toneless voice. “I hope I ain’t
troubled you too much, Ma’m.”
His convalescence was a long one and he
lay quietly looking out of the window at the magnolias and causing
very little trouble to anyone. Carreen liked him because of his
placid and unembarrassed silences. She would sit beside him through
the long hot afternoons, fanning him and saying nothing.
Carreen had very little to say these
days as she moved, delicate and wraithlike, about the tasks which
were within her strength. She prayed a good deal, for when Scarlett
came into her room without knocking, she always found her on her
knees by her bed. The sight never failed to annoy her, for Scarlett
felt that the time for prayer had passed. If God had seen fit to
punish them so, then God could very well do without prayers. Religion
had always been a bargaining process with Scarlett. She promised God
good behavior in exchange for favors. God had broken the bargain time
and again, to her way of thinking, and she felt that she owed Him
nothing at all now. And whenever she found Carreen on her knees when
she should have been taking an afternoon nap or doing the mending,
she felt that Carreen was shirking her share of the burdens.
She said as much to Will Benteen one
afternoon when he was able to sit up in a chair and was startled when
he said in his flat voice: “Let her be, Miss Scarlett. It comforts
her.”
“Comforts her?”
“Yes, she’s prayin’ for your ma
and him.”
“Who is ‘him’?”
His faded blue eyes looked at her from
under sandy lashes without surprise. Nothing seemed to surprise or
excite him. Perhaps he had seen too much of the unexpected ever to be
startled again. That Scarlett did not know what was in her sister’s
heart did not seem odd to him. He took it as naturally as he did the
fact that Carreen had found comfort in talking to him, a stranger.
“Her beau, that boy Brent
something-or-other who was killed at Gettysburg.”
“Her beau?” said Scarlett shortly.
“Her beau, nothing! He and his brother were my beaux.”
“Yes, so she told me. Looks like most
of the County was your beaux. But, all the same, he was her beau
after you turned him down, because when he come home on his last
furlough they got engaged. She said he was the only boy she’d ever
cared about and so it kind of comforts her to pray for him.”
“Well, fiddle-dee-dee!” said
Scarlett, a very small dart of jealousy entering her.
She looked curiously at this lanky man
with his bony stooped shoulders, his pinkish hair and calm unwavering
eyes. So he knew things about her own family which she had not
troubled to discover. So that was why Carreen mooned about, praying
all the time. Well, she’d get over it. Lots of girls got over dead
sweethearts, yes, dead husbands, too. She’d certainly gotten over
Charles. And she knew one girl in Atlanta who had been widowed three
times by the war and was still able to take notice of men. She said
as much to Will but he shook his head.
“Not Miss Carreen,” he said with
finality.
Will was pleasant to talk to because he
had so little to say and yet was so understanding a listener. She
told him about her problems of weeding and hoeing and planting, of
fattening the hogs and breeding the cow, and he gave good advice for
he had owned a small farm in south Georgia and two negroes. He knew
his slaves were free now and the farm gone to weeds and seedling
pines. His sister, his only relative, had moved to Texas with her
husband years ago and he was alone in the world. Yet, none of these
things seemed to bother him any more than the leg he had left in
Virginia.
Yes, Will was a comfort to Scarlett
after hard days when the negroes muttered and Suellen nagged and
cried and Gerald asked too frequently where Ellen was. She could tell
Will anything. She even told him of killing the Yankee and glowed
with pride when he commented briefly: “Good work!”
Eventually all the family found their
way to Will’s room to air their troubles—even Mammy, who had at
first been distant with him because he was not quality and had owned
only two slaves.
When he was able to totter about the
house, he turned his hands to weaving baskets of split oak and
mending the furniture ruined by the Yankees. He was clever at
whittling and Wade was constantly by his side, for he whittled out
toys for him, the only toys the little boy had. With Will in the
house, everyone felt safe in leaving Wade and the two babies while
they went about their tasks, for he could care for them as deftly as
Mammy and only Melly surpassed him at soothing the screaming black
and white babies.
“You’ve been mighty good to me,
Miss Scarlett,” he said, “and me a stranger and nothin’ to you
all. I’ve caused you a heap of trouble and worry and if it’s all
the same to you, I’m goin’ to stay here and help you all with the
work till I’ve paid you back some for your trouble. I can’t ever
pay it all, ‘cause there ain’t no payment a man can give for his
life.”
So he stayed and, gradually,
unobtrusively, a large part of the burden of Tara shifted from
Scarlett’s shoulders to the bony shoulders of Will Benteen.
It was September and time to pick the
cotton. Will Benteen sat on the front steps at Scarlett’s feet in
the pleasant sunshine of the. early autumn afternoon and his flat
voice went on and on languidly about the exorbitant costs of ginning
the cotton at the new gin near Fayetteville. However, he had learned
that day in Fayetteville that he could cut this expense a fourth by
lending the horse and wagon for two weeks to the gin owner. He had
delayed closing the bargain until he discussed it with Scarlett.
She looked at the lank figure leaning
against the porch column, chewing a straw. Undoubtedly, as Mammy
frequently declared, Will was something the Lord had provided and
Scarlett often wondered how Tara could have lived through the last
few months without him. He never had much to say, never displayed any
energy, never seemed to take much interest in anything that went on
about him, but he knew everything about everybody at Tara. And he did
things. He did them silently, patiently and competently. Though he
had only one leg, he could work faster than Pork. And he could get
work out of Pork, which was, to Scarlett, a marvelous thing. When the
cow had the colic and the horse fell ill with a mysterious ailment
which threatened to remove him permanently from them, Will sat up
nights with them and saved them. That he was a shrewd trader brought
him Scarlett’s respect, for he could ride out in the mornings with
a bushel or two of apples, sweet potatoes and other vegetables and
return with seeds, lengths of cloth, flour and other necessities
which she knew she could never have acquired, good trader though she
was.
He had gradually slipped into the
status of a member of the family and slept on a cot in the little
dressing room off Gerald’s room. He said nothing of leaving Tara,
and Scarlett was careful not to question him, fearful that he might
leave them. Sometimes, she thought that if he were anybody and had
any gumption he would go home, even if he no longer had a home. But
even with this thought, she would pray fervently that he would remain
indefinitely. It was so convenient to have a man about the house.
She thought, too, that if Carreen had
the sense of a mouse she would see that Will cared for her. Scarlett
would have been eternally grateful to Will, had he asked her for
Carreen’s hand. Of course, before the war, Will would certainly not
have been an eligible suitor. He was not of the planter class at all,
though he was not poor white. He was just plain Cracker, a small
farmer, half-educated, prone to grammatical errors and ignorant of
some of the finer manners the O’Haras were accustomed to in
gentlemen. In fact, Scarlett wondered if he could be called a
gentleman at all and decided that he couldn’t. Melanie hotly
defended him, saying that anyone who had Will’s kind heart and
thoughtfulness of others was of gentle birth. Scarlett knew that
Ellen would have fainted at the thought of a daughter of hers
marrying such a man, but now Scarlett had been by necessity forced
too far away from Ellen’s teachings to let that worry her. Men were
scarce, girls had to marry someone and Tara had to have a man. But
Carreen, deeper and deeper immersed in her prayer book and every day
losing more of her touch with the world of realities, treated Will as
gently as a brother and took him as much for granted as she did Pork.
“If Carreen had any sense of
gratitude to me for what I’ve done for her, she’d marry him and
not let him get away from here,” Scarlett thought indignantly. “But
no, she must spend her time mooning about a silly boy who probably
never gave her a serious thought.”
So Will remained at Tara, for what
reason she did not know and she found his businesslike man-to-man
attitude with her both pleasant and helpful. He was gravely
deferential to the vague Gerald but it was to Scarlett that he turned
as the real head of the house.
She gave her approval to the plan of
hiring out the horse even though it meant the family would be without
any means of transportation temporarily. Suellen would be especially
grieved at this. Her greatest joy lay in going to Jonesboro or
Fayetteville with Will when he drove over on business. Adorned in the
assembled best of the family, she called on old friends, heard all
the gossip of the County and felt herself again Miss O’Hara of
Tara. Suellen never missed the opportunity to leave the plantation
and give herself airs among people who did not know she weeded the
garden and made beds.
Miss Fine Airs will just have to do
without gadding for two weeks, thought Scarlett, and we’ll have to
put up with her nagging and her bawling.
Melanie joined them on the veranda, the
baby in her arms, and spreading an old blanket on the floor, set
little Beau down to crawl. Since Ashley’s letter Melanie had
divided her time between glowing, singing happiness and anxious
longing. But happy or depressed, she was too thin, too white. She did
her share of the work uncomplainingly but she was always ailing. Old
Dr. Fontaine diagnosed her trouble as female complaint and concurred
with Dr. Meade in saying she should never have had Beau. And he said
frankly that another baby would kill her.
“When I was over to Fayetteville
today,” said Will, “I found somethin’ right cute that I thought
would interest you ladies and I brought it home.” He fumbled in his
back pants pocket and brought out the wallet of calico, stiffened
with bark, which Carreen had made him. From it, he drew a Confederate
bill.
“If you think Confederate money is
cute, Will, I certainly don’t,” said Scarlett shortly, for the
very sight of Confederate money made her mad. “We’ve got three
thousand dollars of it in Pa’s trunk this minute, and Mammy’s
after me to let her paste it over the holes in the attic walls so the
draft won’t get her. And I think I’ll do it. Then it’ll be good
for something.”
“ ‘Imperious Caesar, dead and
turned to clay,’ ” said Melanie with a sad smile. “Don’t do
that, Scarlett. Keep it for Wade. He’ll be proud of it some day.”
“Well, I don’t know nothin’ about
imperious Caesar,” said Will, patiently, “but what I’ve got is
in line with what you’ve just said about Wade, Miss Melly. It’s a
poem, pasted on the back of this bill. I know Miss Scarlett ain’t
much on poems but I thought this might interest her.”
He turned the bill over. On its back
was pasted a strip of coarse brown wrapping paper, inscribed in pale
homemade ink. Will cleared his throat and read slowly and with
difficulty.
“The name is ‘Lines on the Back of
a Confederate Note,’ ” he said.
“Representing nothing on God’s
earth now
And naught in the waters below it—
As the pledge of nation that’s passed
away
Keep it, dear friend, and show it.
Show it to those who will lend an ear
To the tale this trifle will tell
Of Liberty, born of patriots’ dream,
Of a storm-cradled nation that fell.”
“Oh, how beautiful! How touching!”
cried Melanie. “Scarlett, you mustn’t give the money to Mammy to
paste in the attic. It’s more than paper—just like this poem
said: ‘The pledge of a nation that’s passed away!’ ”
“Oh, Melly, don’t be sentimental!
Paper is paper and we’ve got little enough of it and I’m tired of
hearing Mammy grumble about the cracks in the attic. I hope when Wade
grows up I’ll have plenty of greenbacks to give him instead of
Confederate trash.”
Will, who had been enticing little Beau
across the blanket with the bill during this argument, looked up and,
shading his eyes, glanced down the driveway.
“More company,” he said, squinting
in the sun. “Another soldier.”
Scarlett followed his gaze and saw a
familiar sight, a bearded man coming slowly up the avenue under the
cedars, a man clad in a ragged mixture of blue and gray uniforms,
head bowed tiredly, feet dragging slowly.
“I thought we were about through with
soldiers,” she said. “I hope this one isn’t very hungry.”
“He’ll be hungry,” said Will
briefly.
Melanie rose.
“I’d better tell Dilcey to set an
extra plate,” she said, “and warn Mammy not to get the poor
thing’s clothes off his back too abruptly and—”
She stopped so suddenly that Scarlett
turned to look at her. Melanie’s thin hand was at her throat,
clutching it as if it was torn with pain, and Scarlett could see the
veins beneath the white skin throbbing swiftly. Her face went whiter
and her brown eyes dilated enormously.
She’s going to faint, thought
Scarlett, leaping to her feet and catching her arm.
But, in an instant, Melanie threw off
her hand and was down the steps. Down the graveled path she flew,
skimming lightly as a bird, her faded skirts streaming behind her,
her arms outstretched. Then, Scarlett knew the truth, with the impact
of a blow. She reeled back against an upright of the porch as the man
lifted a face covered with a dirty blond beard and stopped still,
looking toward the house as if he was too weary to take another step.
Her heart leaped and stopped and then began racing, as Melly with
incoherent cries threw herself into the dirty soldier’s arms and
his head bent down toward hers. With rapture, Scarlett took two
running steps forward but was checked when Will’s hand closed upon
her skirt.
“Don’t spoil it,” he said
quietly.
“Turn me loose, you fool! Turn me
loose! It’s Ashley!”
He did not relax his grip.
“After all, he’s her husband, ain’t
he?” Will asked calmly and, looking down at him in a confusion of
joy and impotent fury, Scarlett saw in the quiet depths of his eyes
understanding and pity.
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