Again and again he said to his wife half in soliloquy, half in exalted prayer:

"We can conquer a peace against the world in arms and keep the rights of freemen if we are worthy of the privilege!"

The spirit which animated the patriotic soldiers who followed their commander in this b.l.o.o.d.y campaign was in every way as high as that which inspired their President.

Jennie spent an hour each day ministering to the sick prisoners who had returned from the North and were unable to go further than Richmond. It was her service of love for Jimmie"s friends and comrades.

A poor fellow was dying of the want he had endured in prison. He lifted his dimmed eyes to hers:

"Will you write to my wife for me, Miss?"

"Yes--yes--I will."

"And give her my love--"

He paused for breath and fumbled in his pocket.

"I"ve a letter from her here--read it before you write. Our little girl had malaria. She tried willow tea and everything she could think of for the chills. The doctor said nothin" but quinine could save her. She couldn"t get it, the blockade was too tight, and so our baby died--and now I"m dyin" and my poor starvin" girl will have nothin" to comfort her--but--"

He gasped and lifted himself on his elbow.

"If our folks can just quit free men, it"s all right. It"s all right!"

The women and children of Richmond were suffering now for food. The Thirteenth Virginia regiment sent Billy Barton into the city with a contribution for their relief.

Billy delivered it to Jennie with more than a boy"s pride. There was something bigger in the quiet announcement he made.

"Here"s one day"s rations from the regiment, sis," he said--"all our flour, pork, bacon and meal. The boys are fasting to-day. It"s their love offering to those we"ve left at home--"

Jennie kissed him.

"It"s beautiful of you and your men, boy. Give my love to them all and tell them I"m proud to be their countrywoman--"

"And they"re proud of their country and their General, too--maybe you wouldn"t believe it--but every regiment in Lee"s army has reenlisted for the war."

She seized Billy"s hand.

"Come with me--I want you to see the President and tell him what your regiment has done. It"ll help him."

As they approached the White House a long, piercing scream came through the open windows.

"What on earth?" Jennie exclaimed.

"An accident of some kind," the boy answered, seizing her arm and hurrying forward. Every window and door of the big lonely house set apart on its hill swung wide open, the lights streaming through them, the wind blowing the curtains through the windows. The lights blazed even in the third story.

Mrs. Burton Harrison, the wife of the President"s Secretary, met them at the door, her eyes red with weeping.

She pressed Jennie"s hand.

"Little Joe has been killed--"

"Mrs. Davis" beautiful boy--impossible!"

"He climbed over the bannisters and fell to the brick pavement and died a few minutes after his mother reached his side--"

The girl could make no answer. She had come on a sudden impulse to cheer the lonely leader of her people. Perhaps his need in this dark hour had called her. She thought of Socola"s story of his mother"s vision and wondered with a sudden pang of self-pity where the man she loved was to-night.

This beautiful child, named in honor of his favorite brother, was the greatest joy of the badgered soul of the Confederate leader.

Suddenly his white face appeared at the head of the stairs. A courier had come from the battlefield with an important dispatch. Grant and Lee were locked in their death grapple in the Wilderness. He would try even in this solemn hour to do his whole duty.

He pa.s.sed the sympathetic group murmuring a sentence whose pathos brought the tears again to Jennie"s eyes.

"Not my will, O Lord, but thine--thine--thine!"

He took the dispatch from the courier"s hand and held it open for some time, staring at it with fixed gaze.

He searched the courier"s face and asked pathetically:

"Will you tell me, my friend, what is in it--I--I--cannot read--"

The courier read the message in low tones. A great battle was joined.

The fate of a nation hung on its issue. The stricken man drew from his pocket a tiny gold pencil and tried to write an answer--stopped suddenly and pressed his hand on his heart.

Billy sprang to his side and seized the dispatch:

"I"ll take the message to General Cooper--Mr. President--"

The white face turned to the young soldier and looked at him pitifully:

"Thank you, my son--thank you--it is best--I must have this hour with our little boy--leave me with my dead!"

Jennie stayed to help the stricken home.

She took little Jeff in her arms to rock him to sleep. He drew her head down and whispered:

"Miss Jennie, I got to Joe first after he fell. I knelt down beside him and said all the prayers I know--but G.o.d wouldn"t wake him!"

The girl drew the child close and kissed the reddened eyes. Over her head beat the steady tramp of the father"s feet, back and forth, back and forth, a wounded lion in his cage. The windows and doors were still wide open, the curtains waving wan and ghost-like from their hangings.

Two days later she followed the funeral procession to the cemetery--thousands of children, each child with a green bough or bunch of flowers to pile on the red mound.

A beautiful girl pushed her way to Jennie"s side and lifted a handful of snowdrops.

"Please put these on little Joe," she said wistfully. "I knew him so well."

With a sob the child turned and fled. Jennie never learned her name.

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