sapling gate remained empty, the dirt lane beyond leading to pale distances, smoky with cold, where nothing moved. Ambrose wouldn't be back. None of them would be back.
Who should he recommend for promotion before someone began electioneering for it? His junior lieutenant, Wanderly, was a nonentity; his first sergeant, well intentioned, was not smart enough. He recalled that Nelson Gervais had gone out with Ambrose. Along with the letters to the families of the men in the detachment, there was another to write, to Miss Sally Mills.
The changes were coming, steady as the seasons. Old Scott had been pushed aside. McClellan was waiting. First thing you knew, one of his troopers would go to Company Q and come back with a mule. He felt like hell.
Safe from observation in his hut, he bowed his head, swallowed several times, then straightened up. He walked to the mantel, gazed a while at the photograph of himself and his merry lieutenant, both of them looking so confident among the ferns and columns in front of the great proud flag. He turned the photograph face down.
Without removing his gauntlet he picked up the busthead and pulled the cork with his teeth. He emptied the bottle before reveille.
BOOK THREE
A WORSE PLACE THAN HELL
49
'Mounted men up ahead, sir.'
Charles, seated on Sport beneath a dripping tree where they had halted to await the scout's report, drew a quick breath. There were six of them, returning from Stuart's headquarters on this third day of 1862: Charles; the lieutenant shipped in to replace Ambrose; the junior lieutenant, bland Julius Wanderly; two noncoms; and the scout, Lieutenant Abner Woolner, who had just ridden out of the white murk to utter those five words and set Charles's stomach churning.
He tugged down the scarf tied around the lower part of his face. The Virginia winter was proving cruel — snow, winds, drizzle. Though it was above freezing this morning, the cold somehow struck through all his layers of clothing. The time was a little after seven. Visibility was down to a few yards. The world consisted of muddy ground, the wet black pillars of tree trunks, and the fog, luminous because the sun shone above but could not penetrate.
'How many, Ab?' Charles asked.
'Couldn't see them in this soup, Cap, but I reckoned it to be at least a squad.' The scout, a lanky man of thirty, wore cord trousers, covered with mud, a farmer's coat, and a crushed soft hat. He wiped his dripping nose before continuing. 'Moving nice and quiet, right on the other side of the tracks.'
The Orange & Alexandria. Charles's party had to cross the right of way on this return trip from Camp Qui Vive. 'Which way are they headed?'
'Toward the Potomac.'
Hope took a tumble. The direction almost certainly meant Yanks. Perhaps they had slipped through the lines to tear up stretches of track during the night. He was depressed by the possibility of a scrap, perhaps because it was the last thing he had expected.
Calbraith Butler had sent the detachment to Stuart's camp for three reasons. Two were military, one personal. The cavalry had run short of corn, and the major wanted the loan of some; he guessed that a request carried by an old friend of the brigadier — Stuart now had his promotion; Hampton was still awaiting his — might get more prompt and positive attention than a letter by courier.
The detachment stayed two nights, and Beauty, who seemed jollier than ever, thriving in the atmosphere of war, entertained Charles at the small house in Warrenton where he had installed his wife, Flora, and his son and daughter. Of course he could spare some corn for fellow cavalrymen in need; he had brought back a whole wagon train of fodder from Dranesville in the autumn, though not without a price. He had maneuvered too boldly, as was his wont sometimes. Pennsylvania infantry had ambushed and threatened him in a two-hour battle, in which the wagon train had almost been lost.
But it hadn't been after all, so wagons would quickly be on their way to Major Butler, compliments of Brigadier Stuart, who asked politely about the health of Colonel Hampton. From that, Charles knew nothing had changed; Stuart had a professional regard for the older officer, but no affection.
Calbraith Butler's second reason concerned the replacement for Ambrose Pell. The new man had come from Richmond two days before New Year's, having waited sixty days to be posted to the lines, so he said. Butler wanted to know how he would behave in the field. The day after his arrival, Butler spoke privately to Charles.
'He was foisted on us because he's somehow connected with Old Pete or his family' — Old Pete was Major General Longstreet, a South Carolinian by birth — 'and, after I reported Pell missing, he showed up so fast I suspect someone was just waiting for an opportunity to get shed of him. I have talked with your new man no more than a half hour, but I received two strong impressions.
He's a dunce and a schemer. A bad combination, Charles. I suggest you be on your guard.'
First Lieutenant Reinhard von Helm was a German from Charleston, eight or nine years older than Charles. He was a small, slim man, bald except for an encircling fringe of dark hair. His artificial teeth fit badly. Twice already, Charles had spied him standing alone in the open staring off to some private hell. Each time, he remained motionless for about half a minute, then bolted off like a rabbit.
Von Helm said he had given up a law practice to answer the call to arms. This, together with the names of noted Charlestonians he dropped into his conversation, greatly impressed Wanderly. The young lieutenant and von Helm became a chummy pair the first day they met.
On New Year's Day, an officer from another troop, Chester Moore, from Charleston, had invited Charles to his hut for a drop and the purveying of additional facts about Lieutenant von Helm.
'He was a lawyer, all right, but not much of a one. It was his father who had the successful practice, with three partners. He forced 'em to take sonny into the firm. Bad mistake. All the inherited money and high life ruined him. It does that to some. When he wrote a brief or was permitted to argue some unimportant case, he was usually drunk. The moment his father went to his grave, the partners showed von Helm the door. No other firm would touch him. That of your cousin's husband, Huntoon, rejected him in a trice. Only his money kept him from sinking out of sight. He's worthless, Charles. What's more, he knows it. Failures are often vindictive. Be careful.'
The personal reason for the mission was Charles's own state of mind; gloom had possessed him ever since Christmas Eve, and Calbraith Butler recognized it. But the famed festivity of a Stuart encampment had done little to dispel this mood, even though Charles had been personally entertained by the brigadier, and he and his two lieutenants had received a cordial welcome at the officers' mess. Charles soon learned that the famed Black Horse, the Fourth Virginia, now rode horses of different colors.
The South Carolinians found innumerable visitors of the fair sex bustling around the camp at all hours; Stuart's frequent parties and his reputation for gaiety attracted them. One to whom Charles was introduced was Miss Belle Ames of Front Royal. In cold need of a woman, he arranged a rendezvous at a nearby country inn where Miss Ames was staying the night.
Miss Ames had forgotten to put away the certificate the prettiest visitors received. The certificates named