Chapter 1
Tennessee Homecoming
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hey blended with
the damp, cold Northern Tennessee night—the two weary men. A log caught—the
flames flickered. Light from the fire fell across lean, haggard faces. Sunken,
tired eyes stared beyond the fire into the darkness. A tattered Confederate
cavalry officer’s uniform hung on one of the men like rags on a scarecrow. The
other wore the twin stripes of a corporal sewn to one frayed sleeve.
Tiny
red rockets radiated out from the fire. The officer turned his slender frame,
watched the corporal thrusting a small limb into the dying flames. He made no
comment, turned back to his own thoughts. After one last poke into the ashes,
the limb landed on top of the fire’s remnants.
“Cap’n,
we must be near to Montgomery County now,” the corporal, a short man with red
hair, said.
The
officer turned, leaned on one elbow. He pondered the remark before answering.
“A few hours ride, I believe.”
“We’ll be there tomorrow then.”
“I
would expect to.”
“Well,
Cap’n, what do you think we’ll find?”
The
captain considered that question. “I hope for the best, but experience tells me
we’ll find what war tends to leave behind, destruction.”
The
corporal nodded. “Yep. From what I heerd, them Yanks been there for most of
four years. I ’spect they’ve taken about all that’s worth taking.”
“That
could well be. Tomorrow we’ll know,” the captain said.
“Yes
sir, tomorrow we’ll know.” The corporal got up and retrieved a dirty blanket
from a saddlebag at the edge of the camp. “I believe I’ll be turning in now,
Cap’n McKane.”
“All
right, Corporal Hays, splendid idea. We’ve got a long day ahead of us tomorrow.”
Hays
lay down on the damp ground and pulled the blanket around him. Soon, he was
snoring.
James
McKane stared into the dying flames. Tomorrow, he would be home. Home! For four
long, bloody years he had thought of little else. Now, he was just a day’s ride
away from his family. So, where was the enthusiasm he should be feeling? It was
a time for elation; instead he felt only doubt and fear. It was the hard, cold
reality of war staring him in the face. So many times during the past four
years he had seen, had felt, the horrors of war. His experiences left little
room for optimism, for hope. Unlike so many of his comrades, he had been spared
death, but for what purpose? There was so much to lose, so much that could be
taken from him: his wife and children, his mother and father, and the
plantation. These thoughts had plagued him so since slipping out of Nashville.
The
war—blast the bloody conflict that had brought him to this state. Throughout
the campaigns, he had seen so much of the South laid to ruin, battered by
artillery fire, trampled under, reduced to ashes. Would it be any better in
Clarksville? From what he had been able to learn, the Yankees had occupied it
during most of his absence. How had they treated the people?
How
different things had been four years earlier. People treated the upcoming
conflict like a carnival. Pomp and ceremony ruled. The residents of Clarksville
stood on the sidewalks cheering as the military parades passed the town square.
“How innocent we were,” James mumbled.
Patriotism,
the idealism of youth. With the enthusiasm of a young man going on a hunt, he
journeyed from Clarksville up to Kentucky in April of 1861 to join a cavalry
unit. The thrill of the campaign, a fight for his land and way of life had been
his motto. Standing proud with other men from Clarksville, he watched Captain
Blanchard take command of the new unit. “Bravo,” they all thought. They’d show
those Yanks what proud Southerners were made of.
Idealism
faded in the face of reality. There were no bands playing or pompous
celebrations on the battlefield. The somber reality of war met them head on in
April of 1862. After the Cumberland and Tennessee River Valley campaigns, the
glory of war was forever shattered. Bitter retreats followed, first to Shiloh,
then further south. Hell on Earth, the battlefields covered with the dead, and
the screams of the wounded had replaced their idealism.
The
specter of death stared James in the face at Garrettsburg, Kentucky. His horse
was shot from under him. For the duration of the battle, he was forced to lie
under the dead animal, bleeding from a wound to his side. When the skirmish
ended, he worked himself free and wandered for hours to reach the Confederate
lines. Then came weeks in a field hospital: it offered no reprieve; just grim
reminders of the carnage.
The
remaining war years found him in Chicamauga, Columbia, South Carolina, and
Bentonville, where his unit was almost decimated. Then there was the
humiliating end. In Washington, Georgia, James and what remained of his cavalry
unit were captured trying to escort Jefferson Davis, the Confederate president.
James
and his comrades were paroled in early May of 1865. The Yanks allowed them to
keep their horses for a time. Then, at Chattanooga, the Federals went back on
their word and took their horses from them. They were marched to Nashville on
foot. Once there, they were forced to take the Oath of Allegiance to the Union.
During
his confinement at Nashville, James made the acquaintance of Corporal Arlen
Hays, a farm boy from near Clarksville. They stole some horses from the Yanks;
as a bonus, James took a Henry repeating rifle and a pistol from a sleeping
sentry. The rifle was a weapon he knew well. At Bentonville, the Confederate
forces had encountered Yanks armed with these repeaters. The firepower of the
44-caliber rifles left a lasting impression.
They
traveled the back roads, often at night, to avoid Yankee patrols. They carried
their oaths, but four years of bloody combat left them suspicious of the
Federal troops. James also kept the Henry rolled up in a blanket. A Confederate
carrying a weapon even few Yanks had been issued invited questions best left
unasked, he figured.
Aided
by sympathetic farm families and luck, they were poised to enter Montgomery
County, back on home soil again. When he thought of home now, how far in the
past it seemed. Memories obscured by war, of a summer evening
on the balcony with his wife and children, riding his favorite horse across the
plantation, Sunday dinners in the dining room of the main house, walking across
a tobacco field with his father, days of innocence now lost, perhaps forever.
The
guilt—it would not leave him in peace. Most of it was guilt for not
communicating with his family. The war, he told himself, the bloody war was to
blame. But that would not placate his conscience. He was returning with not a
hint of what he would find, a victim of his short-sightedness.
When
drowsiness came, he got his blanket, spread it out and lay down next to the
fire. Dreams came, omens of things to come; they were not pleasant.
* * *
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ist, thick and
gray, greeted them. James pushed aside the damp blanket and stood up. Hays
stirred and got to his feet. “I’ll fetch some wood, Cap’n.”
While
the corporal searched for firewood, James poured some water from his canteen
into their small coffee pot. Poking around in the ashes, he found a few red
coals. He used some damp hickory leaves and bits of grass to start a flame. The
wet fuel was slow to catch. He blew on it until a small flame erupted. Smoke
spiraled upward. Not a good thing if Yankee patrols were about. The mist was
their ally; the smoke couldn’t be seen from any great distance.
Corporal
Hays stepped out of the woods carrying an arm full of tree limbs. “It ain’t
much Cap’n, but it’s the best I can find.”
“They’ll
do.”
Hays
dropped the limbs beside the fire. James broke them into pieces before casting
them into the flames. The moisture in the wood sizzled; clouds of smoke drifted
up into the gray sky. When they caught, he set the coffee pot over the flames
using some small rocks to support it. “All we got is a couple of biscuits and a
little coffee,” James said.
“Well
Cap’n, I’ve forgotten what it’s like to eat regular.”
The
scant rations from sympathetic families had played out. Hunger had been their
constant companion for much of the war, so they were accustomed to living on
little. “You know, Cap’n, when I get home I’m gonna ask my ma to fry up a big
skillet of side meat, make some gravy from the drippings, and bake a big pan of
biscuits.”
“That
does sound appetizing, Corporal. Be careful you don’t founder yourself.”
The
corporal laughed. When the coffee was ready, they sat by the fire, wrapped in
their blankets, eating the biscuits and sipping the hot liquid. It was weak,
tasteless.
The
mist thickened into drizzle. James pulled a rain slicker from his saddlebags;
all Corporal Hayes could find was a wool coat. “I’ll fetch the horses, Cap’n.”
The
corporal led the poor, wet horses into camp. In their emaciated condition,
would they last the ride into Clarksville? They might have to finish the
journey home on foot. But without some grain or hay, there wasn’t much the men
could do. When the horses were saddled and their gear packed, they set out for
the road. As always, James had the Henry wrapped in a blanket. “Cap’n, what you
expect them Yanks might do if they found that rifle on you?”
“Don’t
know, Corporal. Maybe hang me.” The comment wasn’t meant for amusement; neither
of them took any from it.
They
rode out of the woods onto a makeshift road. This morning, gray clouds hung
over the tops of the tall oak and hickory trees. The horses plodded through the
mud, carrying their wet and tired riders.
Hays
wiped water from his forehead with his sleeve. “Cap’n, what do you plan to do
now that the war is over?”
James
thought. Often, during the past four years, he never expected to have a future.
“Can’t say, Corporal. My family owned a tobacco and grain plantation. But now,
I don’t know what’s happened to it. There may be nothing left.”
“You
know, Cap’n, maybe that’s one of the advantages of being poor. When you ain’t
got much to lose, you don’t miss it so much when it’s gone. All my folks had
when the war started was a little dirt farm south of Clarksville, next to the
Cumberland. Makes it easier to start over again. You ain’t got so far to go to get
back to where you were. A man don’t miss what he never had.”
“I
suppose you’re right, Corporal.”
James
lapsed into silence. Worry—more like downright apprehension—was back again.
What was he going to find today? Beyond that, what would he do now? The plantation
might be gone. First, he had to get back with Kate and the children. With his
family beside him, he would find a way to start over. After all, the McKanes
had not always been people of means. His grandfather had come to Montgomery
County when it was nothing but wilderness.
There
were farm houses along the road. But James noticed something peculiar, many of
them looked deserted. He pointed it out to the corporal. “Most these folks
ain’t very trustin’, Cap’n. It’s the Yanks. These folks try to avoid them as
much as possible, so they don’t get out much.”
“Thank
God it’s over, Corporal. Maybe the Union troops will soon be gone.”
“I
hope so Cap’n, but I ain’t countin’ on it too much. Them Yanks, they wanta punish
us for leaving the Union. I ’spect they gonna be around for awhile.”
“I
suppose. They want to make as much profit as they can.”
“Yes
sir, I believe they do.”
The
drizzle continued. The water dripping off the front of James’s hat ran in
little streams down the front of his rain slicker. The corporal’s wool coat
became soaked, so he removed it. “I hope I don’t come down with pneumonia,” he
said.
They
had endured such as this for most of the war. James recounted the times they
had gone without protection against the elements. Confederate forces had
shivered in the cold without coats, and many without even shoes. Human
endurance had been pushed to the limit; how did any of them survive?
In
the heavy drizzle, they were close on them before James spotted the men
standing next to the road, mere shadows in the gray mist. “Corporal Hays, it
seems we have some company ahead,” he said.
“I
see ’em, Cap’n. What do you reckon they’re about?”
“I
don’t know. I think you better take this.” He passed his pistol over to the
corporal.
“What
’bout you, Cap’n?”
“I think
it’s time to get the Henry out.” James pulled the blanket concealing the weapon
around in front of him. He kept the rifle covered with his hand resting on the
trigger.
There
were five in the group. They all appeared to be in dire straits. One was stooped,
a beard hanging down the front of his tattered gray jacket. A battered cap
partially covered his head. He was holding an old muzzle loading shotgun at his
side. The rest were in a similar state and dress. Only one other had a visible
firearm, an old muzzle loading rifle.
They
watched James and Corporal Hays approach. James figured he’d try and ride past
while keeping a wary eye on them. When they were even, the one with the shotgun
spoke. “Mornin’.”
“Morning,”
James replied.
The
man spit out a stream of tobacco juice. “You gents wouldn’t mind sharing a
little something?” he asked.
“If
it’s food you’re asking about, we’re out ourselves,” James said.
“Damn
shame when a man ain’t got nothin’ to eat.”
“I
can understand your plight,” James replied. “We’ve had to skimp and scrounge
ourselves.”
More
tobacco juice on the ground. “You men coming home from the war?” the man with
the shotgun asked.
“We
are,” James said.
The
shotgun barrel came up a few inches. James tightened his finger on the Henry
trigger. Damn—the last thing he wanted this close to home was a shootout with a
group of desperate men. Wasn’t that the
way of things? he thought. Survive
four bloody years of war and get shot down coming home.
“The
only thing worse than being hungry is being hungry and afoot,” the shotgun
holder said.
Their
horses were tempting these men. James glanced at Corporal Hays. He had the
pistol in his right hand, resting on his saddle horn.
“Mister,
I don’t like the way you keep raising up the barrel of that shotgun.”
“Well
how about that? Now sir, there’s a great many things I’ve encountered these
past few years I did’t like. Man don’t always get what he likes.”
The
old shotgun barrel was up to where, with one quick move, it could blast him or
the corporal off their horses. The man holding it laughed. “For soldiers coming
home, you fellas ain’t very well armed. I ’spect this old gun could take both
of you off your horses with one shot. That before you could get a shot off with
that old pistol.”
“That
might be so,” James replied. He eased the Henry from under the blanket. “But I
wouldn’t count on it.”
All
five of them stared at the rifle in James’s hand. The one holding the shotgun
wavered, looked at the rifle barrel pointing at him.
“Let
me explain to you gentlemen what you’re looking at here,” James said. “This is
a Henry repeating rifle that came to me courtesy of a Yank soldier in
Nashville. Forty-four caliber. You’ve never seen a gun that can match this one.
I believe I could bring down the lot of you before you could get a shot off
with your old guns.”
The
man spit out more tobacco juice, swallowed, and lowered the old shotgun until
the muzzle was pointed at the ground. “Hellfire, mister. I was just jawing a
little. I never had no intention of harming you fellas. We’re Southern men,
just like you.”
“Well
sir, these are desperate times,” James replied. “A desperate man is a dangerous
man, in my view. Now, I’m afraid we’re going to have to take that old scatter
gun and that rifle, just to keep you men honest.”
“Ain’t
no damn call for that,” the man said. He stared at James’s hand on the trigger
of the Henry. James urged his horse closer, the rifle pointed at the man’s
chest.
“It’s
not a debatable question,” James said. “It’s not a request either. Me and the
corporal here are cold and hungry. We’ve been through four long years of bloody
war. We’re close to home. We’re not going to be stopped by a band of highwaymen.
I don’t know what brought you men to the state you’re in, and right now I don’t
have time to care.”
“Hell,
mister, these two guns are all that stand between us and starving. We have to
live off what we hunt.”
“I
can sympathize with that. We’ll leave both of them a little ways down the road.
You can walk down and pick them up. Time you get there, we’ll be almost to
Clarksville.”
All
five stared at James, their faces expressionless. “Just lay the old shotgun and
that rifle down on the ground and step back away,” James commanded.
For
an agonizing moment, the men stood motionless, not complying with James’s
request. “One more time, gents,” he said. “Lay ’em down.”
The
one with the old rifle laid his down first. The one with the shotgun wavered a
bit longer, gave the Henry another look, then put the old gun down next to the
rifle. “Corporal Hays, would you please pick up those two weapons.”
The
corporal dismounted and picked up the rifle and shotgun while James held the
Henry on the other five. “Your arms will be about two miles down the road,” he
said. They rode off leaving the five men to watch them go.
“Cap’n,
I don’t mind telling you I thought it was going to come to shooting it out with
that bunch.” He handed the pistol back to James.
“So
did I, Corporal. Let’s put some distance between them and us.”
“Who
you reckon they are?” James asked after they had ridden away from the men.
“Hard
to say, Cap’n. Some of the irregulars that operated around here during the war,
I ’spect. I figure they might have slipped down from Kentucky. Lot of guerrilla
bunches up there. Old Nathan Forrest raised a lot of havoc there during the
war. Now it’s over, the Union folks are going to be out looking for revenge. So
some of the Southern bands have to scatter.”
James
sought to put the incident out of his mind. It was just another reminder of the
war and its aftermath. Home—perhaps there he would put it all behind him. The
rain eased. They stopped, leaned the old shotgun and rifle against a tree, and
then rode on. The muddy road took them to the Port Royal Road—the route to
Clarksville.
Traveling
was easier on the macadamized road than the muddy back roads, but it came with
a price. Now they were sure to encounter Union patrols. Would the papers he and
the corporal were carrying get them past the Federals? James hoped they didn’t
have to find out.
They
had the road to themselves much of the time. There would be an occasional rider
or farm wagon; otherwise, the busy thoroughfare that James remembered had no
travelers. For thirty minutes they eased along, and then they could see the
outline of Clarksville in the distance. Emotions swept over James. His bitter
memories of war eased. Kate and the children, his mother and father, and the
plantation all danced around in his mind. His happy thoughts couldn’t take
hold. They were replaced by apprehension and doubts. He had been gone so long, would
they remember him? Kate had been pregnant when he left for war. His homecoming
would be the first time to see his latest child.
“Corporal,
I’ll be leaving you just ahead. I want to ride out to the plantation first.”
“Sure,
Cap’n. I hope you find everything in order.”
At
the edge of Clarksville, where the tollbooth once stood, the road came to an
end. There, James stopped his horse. He looked toward Clarksville then turned
his gaze northward, toward home. Hays stopped his horse nearby. “Cap’n, been my
pleasure to ride home with you. We sure gave them Yanks back in Nashville the
slip.”
“That
we did, Corporal. It’s been my pleasure as well.” James urged his horse over
and extended his hand. “We’re home Corporal Hays; not under the best of
circumstances, but we’re here.”
“Yes
sir, that’s so. I hope your family’s in good health.”
“And
I wish the same for yours.”
They
shook hands. Hays rode on toward Clarksville; James turned his horse north
toward the family plantation. His heart was beating fast. Surrounded by death
and destruction the past four years, he often felt this day would never come.
So many of his comrades had fallen; they would never come home. Widows and
fatherless children with no means of support were their legacy.
In
the distance, through the very light rain, James could see the gate to the
plantation. Hope, worry, guilt all tugged at him. The moment of truth was
almost at hand. He urged the horse forward.

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