A couple of weeks later, Todd got word that a Yankee patrol had
showed up at the Jorgenson farm and gone straight to the barn loft
where Yeager was hidden. They dangled him from a tree by his
ankles and shot him repeatedly until he looked like a side of raw beef
pasted with bloody rags. They tied him behind a horse and dragged
him into town and there decapitated him and told the citizens to
have a good look at how bushwhackers ended up. They rode off and
left his remains in the street for the townfolk to bury.
The word to George was that old Jorgenson had betrayed Dick
for a fat reward. When Todd went back to the Jorgenson place, the
old man came out of the house with his hands together like he was
praying. He swore he hadn’t been the one to inform. Todd had the
house searched, all the outbuildings, the well. A poke of U.S.
money—nearly $200—was uncovered behind a stone in the springhouse. Mrs. Jorgenson tried to shield her husband but Todd flung her
aside and clubbed the man with a singletree like he was trying to beat
out a fire. He broke his knees, his arms, his skull, then dragged him
broken and groaning into the house and set the place aflame. Then
sat his horse out front and watched the building burn while the old
woman stood by and shrieked like she’d gone crazy.
August wore on. The Kansas First Guerrillas were several times badly
bloodied. Two of their members were killed in a fight with militia in
lower Boone County, then two more in a scrap with a Federal detachment north of Rocheport. A company scout named Oliphant was
captured by the Feds and hanged before a crowd of civilians, then cut
down and his body burned by the roadside. For some of the new Yankee recruits the entire episode was so vehemently novel they cast up
their breakfast to the great amusement of their seasoned fellows.
Back in Carroll County and encamped on Wakenda Creek, the
company was ambushed by a Federal patrol in the middle of a
moonless night. Dock Rupe was on picket and cried out the alarm
just before he was throatcut by an Indian scout. The fight lasted ten
minutes and no man clearly saw another but only caught glimpses by
the flaring lights of the gunfire storm. The Yanks at last retreated,
nine of their dead left behind, and the guerrillas rode away in the
other direction, the dust of their departure settling in the darkness on
three of their own killed comrades.
Among the casualties was Bill himself, who’d been hit in the
upper arm by a bullet fragment without damage to the bone. Hi
Guess took a round in the thigh but would be all right to keep riding
with the company. Arch Clement was shot cleanly through the calf.
Frank James had been scraped on the side of the head by a passing
round and the long welt where the hair had been removed looked
more like a burn than a bullet wound.
The worst of the wounded was the younger James, who’d been
shot in the chest and two miles down the road fell off his horse. The
company halted long enough for comrades to hoist him back onto
his saddle and then Sock Johnson lashed the boy’s feet together
under his horse’s belly and tied him snugly to his saddle by the waist.
When they reined up at the Rudd farm to tend their wounds at last
and take a day’s shelter, the James boy was slumped unconscious
against his horse’s neck and the front of his shirt was weighted with
blood. His eyes fluttered as they carried him into the house and put
him on a bed. He coughed weakly and blood spilled over his
whiskerless chin. His breath rasped. The Rudd woman shooed the
men away and set to tending him. Not a man of them believed he
would survive the night, but at dawn he yet clung to the spirit.
As the company readied to ride off, he beckoned Bill to the bedside and whispered hoarsely that he would be ready to rejoin him by
the time they returned.
A month after losing his arm, Fletch Taylor was back with the company, his comrades much impressed with the swiftness of his recovery and the skill of his riding and shooting in spite of his crippling. “I
don’t need but one arm to fight a bunch of damn Yankees,” Taylor
said. “It’s anyhow more of a fair fight this way.”
Some days later, they ambushed a militia patrol near Russellville
and Taylor was at the forefront of the charge when his remaining
arm was hit from behind by a revolver round. Both bones of his
lower arm were shattered, but amputation was unnecessary. Still,
Fletcher Taylor took it for a sign that his luck was arrived at the rim
of the abyss. He told Bill he’d had enough and was quitting the war.
Bill gave him no argument. The next morning Fletch said so long to
them all and that he hoped they’d meet for a drink some day. As they
watched him being led away on his horse by a bushwhacker who
would see him home, somebody said softly, “I hope Fletch’s wife
truly loves him, else it’ll be a goodly while before his ass gets wiped
again.”
They said this about him, they said that, they said the other....
Everyone knew of his vanity, his adoration of his own hand
They are trotting in a double column through a wide meadow awash
in goldenrod and flanked by dense wildwood. Crows observe their
progress on this bright morning smelling faintly of woodfires. Riley
Crawford is telling a story of a one-eyed dog he used to own when he
was just a boy—Riley now all of sixteen—a dog given to poking
around the creek in search of adventure who one day was bitten on the
nose by a snapping turtle that wouldn’t turn loose for love or money.
“I mean to tell you,” Riley says, “you never heard such a holler
as that poor dog was raising. I had to—”
So fare thee well, Eliza Jane,
He played the tune for a good five minutes before at last stroking
the final note and raising his chin off the fiddle, his face losing the
shut-eyed smile it had held all through the number that had been his
reprieve. But now somebody hollered “Do another!” and he hastened to it, tucking the instrument in place and stroking into a lively
rendition of “Old Joe Clarke.” When he was done with that one, he
didn’t wait to be asked but segued directly into “Cripple Creek,” and
then “The Bully of the Town,” and then “The Johnson Boys.” He
went through one number after another with hardly a break in notes
between them for fear that even a moment’s respite from the music
would snap the spell and the guerrillas would think to get back to
the matter at hand. He played for his life, played each number with
more fervor than the one before.
Some of the men were stepdancing and some doing dances of
their own invention. Buster Parr shyly asked the man’s wife if she
would take a turn with him and she glanced at her husband and then
quickly accepted, though her smile was a stiff mask of desperation.
She spun around with one after another of the bushwhackers as
her husband played on. He was careful not to repeat himself, as fearful of repetition as of hesitation between numbers, but more than an
hour after he’d begun, he’d exhausted his repertoire of lively tunes,
and he segued into a composition of slower pulse.
It was not a tune to dance to, and the guerrilla who held the
man’s wife in readiness for the next turn now blushed and let go of
her and backed away. This tune was so different from the music of
the past hour that the bushwhackers only stood and stared. The wife
read their unsmiling faces as a bad sign and could think of nothing to
do but to sing the song he played:
I wonder as I wander under the sky
how poor baby Jesus was born for to die for
poor wretched sinners like you and like I.
I wonder as I wander out under the sky.