For her part, Martha Anderson commended Mary for her choice
of husband and was unfailingly polite to Arthur Baker. Among themselves the other four Anderson siblings believed their mother secretly
saw Baker for the same stiff-collar bore they did.
One evening while Mary sat out on the porch in Baker’s company, the rest of the family was indoors preparing to make music,
Will Anderson and his sons and daughters whispering jokes about
Baker’s collars and bowler hats and his ridiculous dancing. Finally,
Martha made a shushing gesture at them and said, “Stop it, all you.
The heart can’t help what it wants.”
The remark brought them up short in their tittering—and
prompted a glance between Bill and Josie that did not escape Jim’s
notice. They all knew she was right. Mary had not lacked for
prospects before meeting Baker but none of the suitors had struck
her fancy. Yet neither was it in her nature to marry someone simply
for the comfort of his holdings. There was no question she loved this
man and no matter she hardly knew him. That none of them could
understand why she loved him was no argument against the truth of
it. The wedding was set for the second Sunday in June.
extent all the southeastern portion of Jackson
County. . . . Murders and robberies have been committed; Union men threatened and driven from their
homes; the U.S. mails have been stopped; farmers
have been prohibited planting by the proclamation of
a well-known and desperate leader of these outlaws by the name of Quantrill, and the whole county
designated reduced to a state of anarchy. This state
of things must be terminated and the guilty punished. All those found in arms and opposition to the
laws and legitimate authorities, who are known
familiarly as guerrillas . . . murderers, marauders,
and horse-thieves, will be shot down by the military
upon the spot when found perpetrating their foul
acts.
James Totten
The larger war was now more than a year under way and the bushfighting along the Missouri border was reported to have grown
meaner. The Berrys occasionally rode to the Anderson place of an
early evening and joined them on the porch to share in a jug and the
latest news before taking supper together. On this occasion they were
speaking of the new company of border scouts the Federals had
formed, the redlegs, so named for the color of their Moroccan leggings. The outfit’s captains were George Hoyt—a lawyer who had
vainly defended John Brown at his trial—and the hated Doc Jennison, who’d recruited many of his old jayhawker comrades to the
redlegs with him.
“I never thought I’d hear of a worse pack of bastards than those
reivers of Jim Lane’s,” Will Anderson said. “But I’ll kiss all your
asses if these goddam redlegs ain’t the ones.”
“It was redlegs hung Ellsworth Mallory in front of his wife and
children down in Cass County last month because he wouldn’t tell
where Quantrill was hiding,” Jim Anderson said. “In the past two
weeks they burned a half-dozen farms in Jackson for the same reason. I can’t help but wonder if those farmers just wouldn’t tell on
Quantrill even if they knew where he was, or if they were just more
scared of what
They had first heard of this man Quantrill two months ago and
heard much more of him since. Of the various guerrilla bands harrying the Federals and jayhawkers along the border, his had been the
most effective, his name become the most widely revered by Missouri rebels, the most despised by Union loyalists. Bushwhackers
they were called, because the bush, the wildwood, was their hideaway, and their preferred tactic the ambush.
Maryland is what I heard.”
A few evenings later when the Berrys made their next visit and while
the sky was yet daylit Bill Anderson left the porch and went around
behind the house and then returned with two empty bottles in one
hand and two in the other. He was wearing his Navies on his belt.
He stood well away from the porch so they all might have clear
witness. He flung up his arms and all four bottles sailed high in the
air and he drew the revolvers and there was a quick sequence of pistol cracks echoed by bursts of glass and no bottle did hit the ground
whole.
The men cheered and whistled, stomped their boots on the
planks. Behind them the Anderson girls had come out to watch and
they applauded wildly while their mother stood in the shadowed
doorway behind them unsmiling and with her arms crossed tightly
over her breast.
Bill Anderson swept off his hat and bowed like a cavalier, then
grinned around at them all and intoned, “The Holy Order of
William T. Anderson welcomes ye one and all.”
Came an April daybreak when Martha Anderson was beset by a pain
in her stomach and the affliction worsened through the morning. In
the late forenoon Mary noted the strain in her mother’s face and
asked what was wrong. Martha gestured irritably and said she felt
like she had a big bubble of gas in her belly she couldn’t get shed of.
Josie joked that she sure hoped for a warning before that gas came
loose so she could quick scoot out of the kitchen. Mary gaped and
said, “
Young Jenny giggled and Josie grinned at her and then said to her
mother, “You reckon all that gas might come busting out so loud
Daddy and the boys’ll hear it at the corral and think it’s a Yankee
cannon firing at them?”
Jenny squealed with mirth behind her hands and Martha gave
Josie a look of mock outrage and took a playful swipe at her with a
dishrag and they all giggled even as they blushed.
Martha’s pain persisted and by that afternoon she was sick at her
stomach and began to feel weak and feverish. Her joints hurt. She
had never been ill in her life and was as much vexed as distressed by
this sudden malady. At supper that evening she ate but two bites
before rushing from the table and out the door to throw up over the
porch rail. The girls put her to bed and bathed her face by candlelight with a cool washcloth. Jenny offered to read to her from the
Bible or a volume of poems but Martha waved away the idea. They
placed a bowl close to hand and she was sick into it several more
times that evening before she finally fell into a sweaty and fitful sleep.
They could fix on no cause for her sickness but the cup of milk
she had taken that morning shortly after rising. No one else had
drunk of that morning’s milking. Now Will Anderson wondered if
their cow might have fed on snakeroot.
“We ain’t hunted out that damned snakeroot in a while,” he
said. “Could be some sprouted since we last cleared it. Son of a
He went out to the barn and closely inspected the cow by the
light of a lantern and determined that the animal was indeed
infected, its milk poisoned. In the house they heard the shotgun
blast. Will reappeared at the door and told Bill and Jim to bury the
animal first thing in the morning. In order that his wife might rest
more comfortably with the bed to herself he would sleep in the barn
that night.
Martha began to moan in the later hours and the girls took turns
sitting at her bedside and mopping the fever sweat off her face and
neck. When Bill and Jim came into the room at daybreak she looked
ghastly. Her mouth was tight with pain and she lay with her eyes
closed and her hands pressed to her stomach. Her breathing was
strained. The girls were redeyed and Bill and Jim offered to tend their
mother through the morning so they might get some rest but the girls
said they could manage all right. Will Anderson came in the house
and stood over the bed and looked down at Martha for a time without saying anything and then he went out again.
She nevermore opened her eyes nor spoke another word. Just
before noon she died.