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Authors: Rita Mae Brown

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Badly led or not, they had retreated in fairly good order. No signs of panic, discarded clothing or goods, cluttered the road.

Around three in the afternoon, the Virginians turned back toward their camp. If they didn’t have to give up the roads for infantry or artillery, they would make it in two hours.

Riding back, Mars wondered what would happen when the first twelve-month enlistments expired. The war was far from over, and it had not proven to be a glorious game. Men were often hungry and cold. Those that were not from Virginia grew increasingly nervous about military activities in their
own states and desired to return to protect their homes. Pay appeared like roses in December. Mars didn’t worry about the cavalry. Their esprit de corps would hold them together. They were mostly rich boys, and they had a lot to prove. The infantry and artillery were another question.

A biting northwesterly wind prickled his cheeks. The landscape, stripped of foliage, looked desolate, and even the comforting roll of rich meadows could not compensate for the barrenness of winter.

He thought about Kate and her cobalt blue eyes. No doubt she was unbuttoning Baron Schecter’s impeccably cut trousers. He no longer cared. What he wondered about these days was not so much Kate but himself. Could he ever love again? Would he know it if he did? He feared that he had grown away from that part of himself. He had hardened his heart to women. Well, no one ever died of lack of love, he thought.

DECEMBER 22, 1861

Having written a letter to both Lutie and Di-Peachy, Geneva read Matthew, chapter 3. She learned that John the Baptist ate locusts and wild honey. If she got hungry enough, she’d try it, too.

The flap of the tent opened and Nash, his face drawn, entered and sat next to her. “I have bad news.” He handed her a folded paper spattered with blood.

She unfolded the paper. It was Sumner’s drawings for Lutie’s fountains.

“Your brother couldn’t stay out of the fight. He went forward with the horse artillery commanded by Cutts. The fire raked them for two solid hours, and they were severely outgunned.”

“But we beat them!” Geneva shook.

Nash touched her hair. “We beat them, but Sumner’s gone.” He did not tell her that when they reached Sumner’s body, the grass around him was torn up. The man died in hideous agony.

Sobbing, she put her head on Nash’s chest. “Not my big brother!”

She cried for hours. Banjo quietly came in bringing Sumner’s guns, sword, articles of clothing, and his engineering books. He sat beside Geneva and patted her hand, but she sobbed uncontrollably.

That night, Banjo motioned to Nash to come out. “The little fella’s takin’ this powerful hard.” Banjo squinted.

“Death’s etched the first wrinkle on his skin.”

Banjo appreciated poetry but would have preferred a solution. “He’ll make hisself sick, and that’s dangerous in this wicked cold. You think some whiskey would stiffen him?”

“I tried that. He throws it up.”

“I’m gonna get the colonel. He’ll know what to do.”

“He’ll come in here all gunpowder and bluster,” Nash flared.

“I know you don’t like the colonel, but Jimmy does. He’ll know what to do. You can’t let him carry on like this.”

Nash reluctantly agreed. “It’s worth a try.”

When Mars turned up the tent flap, he saw Geneva lying facedown on her cot, Nash sitting helplessly next to her, his hand stroking her hair.

Mars knelt on one knee next to the cot. “Jimmy, I’m very sorry to hear about Sumner. He was everything a young man should be. The best blood is poured in the ground.”

She turned over. “I hate them. I’m gonna find the men who killed my brother and kill them. I want to make them bleed, damn their black hearts!” Her eyes were glazed.

“Jimmy, war is nothing personal. Those Yankees were doing their job, just like we’re doing our job. The selection of victims is impersonal.”

Geneva sat upright, breathing convulsively. “It doesn’t make sense.”

“I’m not arguing for it, but that’s the way it is. It’s not a duel. It’s business.”

“I don’t want to live,” she wailed and bent over, her head in her hands.

“You have to live. You’ve got a mother and a father that love you, and they’ll need you now more than ever. You’ve got Nash.” That was hard to say. “You’ve got Banjo. You have to live.”

She looked up at him.

“Come on, now. Pull yourself together. The regiment needs you. I need you.”

Her sobs slowed, but her body still shook.

“You need some sleep. It’s a terrible thing to lose someone you love. You’ll come through.”

“Do I have to write Mother and Father?”

“No, I’ll write them both. Will you go to sleep now, soldier?”

“Yes, sir, I promise.” She crawled under the covers and fell asleep before the tent flap closed behind Mars.

Mars and Banjo walked down the quiet rows of tents, white ghosts in line after line.

“We’re just bloody cards tossed on the table,” Mars said. “That’s all a soldier is, a bloody card.”

III
THESE
BLOODY
CARDS
JANUARY 20, 1862

“Most merciful Father, who hast been pleased to take unto thyself the soul of this thy servant, John Tyler: Grant to us who are still in our pilgrimage, and who walk as yet by faith, that having served thee with constancy on earth, we may be joined hereafter with thy blessed saints in glory everlasting; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.”

Henley, in full dress uniform with Kate Vickers next to him, watched as the body of the tenth President of the United States, John Tyler, was borne out of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church. The “Dead March” from Saul mournfully played.

Baron Schecter, sitting to Mrs. Vickers’s right, wore the blazing white tunic of imperial Austria. The fringe on his gold epaulets swayed as he breathed. Schecter, a bold Adonis with a thin blond moustache, accompanied Kate everywhere, as did Henley.

Henley could no longer ignore the condition of the Confederacy whose great victory last summer evaporated like a venomous vapor. The news, unilaterally bad, added to the depression that the funeral of this eminent man produced.

John Tyler died at seventy-two. His coffin was followed in the blasts of icy wind by his second wife, the former Julia Gardiner, and his nine-year-old son, Lyon Gardiner Tyler. Mrs. Tyler held her head up. She knew many a widow’s eye was upon her, and she had no right to falter. Lyon held his mother’s hand; taking his example from her, he did not cry.

As Henley, in the third column of official mourners, marched with Kate and the baron, he noticed that the sidewalks were crowded with people in obvious distress. The path, lined with mourners, wound the entire distance from Ninth and
Grace streets to Hollywood Cemetery. One hundred and fifty carriages followed the body. The people mourned not just the passing of an ex-President but of an era. There were no more John Tylers left in political life.

Henley wondered how many people also knew of the unseemly squabble over presentation of the casket. Should it be draped with the flag of our present enemy, our former nation? Some members of the cabinet, with disregard for the grieving widow, said absolutely not, his casket should be covered with the flag of the infant Confederacy. This display of smallness continued until Julia Tyler told them in so many words to go to hell. So President Tyler rolled to his freshly dug grave, a feat in itself since the ground was frozen, with a bare casket, save for his dress sword in remembrance of the company he raised in 1813 for the defense of Richmond against the marauding British. Before his casket, a single horse was led, boots reversed in the stirrups, the only sign that the leader of a nation was passing.

Tyler had done what he could to prevent the bloody rupture, but once it occurred, he served the Confederacy and his native Virginia literally until his last breath. He gave us Texas, Henley thought, an icon of independence. John Tyler kissed nobody’s ass, Democrat or Whig or the brand-new Republicans. He was able to disagree with a man as formidable as Andrew Jackson as well as make common cause with him when his conscience permitted him.

What troubled Henley was his own shyness about public life. It wasn’t just himself, he knew, but a generation of Virginians abdicated public life, leaving it to the second-raters and ultimately to the younger, radical elements of the Delta and coastal South. Virginia had a lot to answer for and so did Henley. Perhaps the richness of Virginia’s drowned river valleys from four great rivers, the Potomac, the Rappahannock, the York, and the James, invited people to wealth, not public service.

Jefferson, Monroe, and Madison had wealth, although they squandered much of it. After that triumvirate passed, Jackson and Tyler, both Virginians, took over. And then nothing. The youngbloods drove west because the valleys were tied up by rich and comfortable men, men like himself, Henley realized. Rash temperaments superseded temperate judgments, and slavery sucked away the talent of men of genius like John
Calhoun of South Carolina. The effort spent in justifying slavery, the foundation of rural economy, sapped people. They began to look to the past instead of to the future, and Henley cursed himself because he looked only to Chatfield. He abandoned the great issues of the day to become the best breeder of horses in the country. While it was a worthy achievement, it wasn’t enough. Now he, like thousands of others, was paying in blood for his complacency.

In meeting after meeting Henley marveled at the infinite capacity of the human brain to withstand the introduction of useful knowledge. Looking ahead as the six perfectly matched black horses pulled Tyler to the beyond, he wondered, how did the old man do it? How did he sit in endless meetings, listening to people avoid problems or puff themselves up like broody hens. In order to be successful in politics, one must suffer fools gladly. The Richmond soldier killed more enemies sitting around a conference table than in battle. Hell was a bureaucracy with twelve devils arguing at a conference table. Henley renewed his efforts to achieve the uptown of afterlife as opposed to the downtown.

As the procession passed by, Henley thought of Sumner’s funeral. They couldn’t have a graveside ceremony for Sumner, but the Very Reverend Manlius had arranged a service at the church. Henley and Lutie were gratified at the number of people who came to pay their last respects. Jennifer Fitzgerald had one of her servants, a man highly skilled with marble, carve a beautiful cenotaph with Sumner’s name, dates of birth and death, his regiment and brigade numbers. Over this were two crossed sabers.

Lutie had amazed Henley. He worried that she’d fall to pieces as she did when Jimmy died. Instead she bore it like a Roman matron of the Republic. Her only comment was, “If my son can die for Virginia, I can live for Virginia.”

Sin-Sin covered her face in ashes and kept to her house for two days. Di-Peachy cried continually. But Ernie had surprised them all. The enormous cook went down like the crumbling of a seawall.

Kate Vickers had come from Richmond. Henley was touched by Kate’s concern for himself and his wife. Kate was particularly solicitous of Di-Peachy who was wont to break into tears.

Poofy managed to smuggle a letter through the lines urging
Lutie to come to Bedford, New York, where she would care for her. Lutie answered her sister with a long letter. Lutie handed the document to Henley, telling him to get it on the other side of the Potomac. Once he returned to Richmond, Henley sent it by government courier, and it passed through the lines. He often wondered if anyone, zealous in his duty, read it before it reached Poofy’s hands.

What Henley could say to no one was his anguish for never having understood his son. He would awaken in the middle of the night feeling as though he had extricated himself from a black whirlpool. The pain pierced him because he feared his son was a braver man than he was. He failed as a father. He failed as a husband, and now he was failing as a soldier. Sometimes he would wake up to find his pillow wet. One terrible night he crawled out of bed, his knees hitting the cold floor, and he prayed to great God Almighty to forgive him and grant him atonement. He could never make it up to Sumner, but if he felt God’s grace, perhaps he would have the courage to make it up to the other people in his life whom he had ignored or hurt. The sins of omission began to loom as large as the sins of commission, and Henley knew he’d committed both. His only comfort was Geneva. Her love for him was the slender thread upon which dangled his self-respect.

Geneva haunted him day and night. He couldn’t stand to lose her, but he had given her his word that he wouldn’t tell.

“You’re so quiet, Colonel Chatfield. I’m afraid this funeral is distressing to you.” Kate’s low voice brought him back to the present.

“Memories.”

Kate, wisely knowing no conventional sentiment could ease him, said, “I know that we can live with deprivation, with war, but I sometimes wonder can we live with our sorrows?”

Baron Schecter, while he disliked Henley for obvious reasons, was not an unfeeling man. He added, “We must all live with our losses—and under God’s unblinking eye.”

“Right now, Baron,” Henley replied, “I feel as though I am seeing God’s hind parts, not his eye.”

FEBRUARY 2, 1862

A howling ice storm rattled the windows of the Livingston mansion. Bedford, New York, far from the fury of war, could not escape nature.

Wrapped in a fur blanket, Poofy Chalfonte Livingston read her sister’s letter which miraculously had arrived by government courier in this winter tempest.

1 January 1862

My Dearest Sister:

Words fall from my brain like leaves. I am becoming spare; perhaps I have the weariness of winter. Let’s hope I have the austerity and sinew of winter as well.

Thank you for your letter. It was a great consolation to me. Please give my tenderest affections to Daniel for informing you of what happened to Sumner. His expressions of sympathy for myself and Henley only confirm my belief that while our husbands fight on opposing sides of this repulsive war, nothing will ever shatter the bonds of love forged in our family.

Grief so numbs the senses that I am not always sure what I feel. Sometimes I think I can bear that pain, and other times I think it will crush me. I see around me, as you must in Bedford, other women in like anguish. How can I falter? This grief is not mine alone. We each suffer. We all suffer. Alone, I ask myself, is any cause worth the price of one human life? Do you harbor such thoughts?

I think of our brother. I think of my daughter. She’s quite lost her mind. She’s with Nash, and she’s been in the army disguised as a man since the beginning of the
war. I’ve kept it from you as she wished, but now I can’t hold it in any longer. Must I surrender my remaining child to the bloody jaws of hell, too?

You used to complain, dear Poofy, that you and Daniel had no children. Rejoice. You will never know the agony of birthing them, raising them, only to see them die before their time.

You asked me do I pray. Yes. But I look at the cross, and I no longer see a symbol of salvation, I see an instrument of torture. I feel I am sailing on a black river to midnight.

And yet, today I looked at Sin-Sin’s sweet face. I saw my friends gathered around me to help me though this time. A few of them secretly worry that like a tree, I’ll die from the top down. I won’t. Don’t worry, Poofy. I will not lose my mind. But I looked at them and realized that through my friends God has loved me. And that ray of hope, of comprehension, begins to work on my soul.

I don’t say that I shall immediately be restored nor that I shan’t continue to ask myself deeply disturbing questions. And grief will pull me like a slumberous undertow. But that radiant moment, lifting me quite out of myself, gives me hope. Perhaps the only way to heal, to find happiness, is to forget one’s self. Perhaps, too, we must even forget all that we know. We know too much; we feel too little. Perhaps we must become children again, and try and see the world as a bright new toy despite our suffering, despite the blood, the cruelty, the betrayals we call history! “Suffer the little children to come unto me.” This may be the only way to God.

I love you, Portia. You have been a good and faithful sister to me, and I long for the day when we can once again be physically reunited. Until then, know that my heart is with you every moment.

Lutie

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