Uncle Joe quickly took hold of his nose with thumb and finger; stooping, he put his face under water to his ears, left the preacher standing in the creek as he rushed out, not to the church members but to his old cronies, until led to his proper place among the congregation.
The conversion of Uncle Joe made Aunt Betsy happy. Alfred had liberties he never enjoyed previously. He rode Billy, the pony, when and where he chose. He ran rabbits, chased through the woods until the scant wardrobe he brought from home was in rags and tatters.
The great Civil War had just begun. All the country was marching mad--soldiers pa.s.sing and repa.s.sing along the pike. Aunt Betsy and Lacy Hare, the hired girl, decided that Alfred should have a soldier"s suit that would surprise the natives. Neither had ever been blessed with children, neither had ever attempted to make a garment such as they fashioned in their minds for Alfred.
The original that Alfred"s suit was patterned after was a military uniform worn by John Stevenson in the War of 1848 between Mexico and the United States.
As the faded garment was brought from the garret and Alfred, with wood-ashes and vinegar brightened up the ornaments and medals, he thought John had been a mighty general, judging from the medals he wore.
When he learned John was only a fifer his admiration for him greatly increased and often he coaxed John to play the old tunes that cheered the warriors on to victory in the many battles John graphically described not recorded in history.
Lacy with a pair of sheep shears cut out the coat, while Aunt Betsy held the pattern down on the heavy grey cloth. The goods were of the home-made quality, known as "linsey-woolsey," a material worn by farmers almost universally in those days. The household scissors were too dull to cut it, hence the sheep shears were pressed into service by Lacy.
The coat cut, Alfred had to stand out in the entry while the women used his nether garments to pattern by. The door a little ajar, Alfred impatiently watched the two women cut out the pants. Lacy remarked, after he had asked for his pants twice:
"Land sakes! Have a little patience. You climb trees, run through thickets, till you"re rags and tatters, and I hope when we get these clothes done you"ll settle down and save them to wear when you go anywhar."
The women decided, or rather endeavored, to make the suit after the cut of the uniforms worn by the soldiers. Lacy insisted that a blouse would not look well on Alfred and it was decided to make him a jacket at the bottom "close fittin"" as Lacy expressed it.
Nothing like this suit was ever seen before or after the war. Angles and folds were, where should have been smoothness; too short at the bottom, too high at the top, too tight where they should have been loose and vice versa. The jacket was short in the waist and high in the neck. Lacy remarked as they basted the thing that there seemed too much cloth in some parts but she thought it would take up in the sewing. The surplus cloth in the west side of the pants hung to the boy"s calves, covering the limbs that far down. Therefore, it was difficult to decide at a distance where the jacket ended and the pants began. In fact, the boy, from a backside view at a little distance, seemed to be wearing a long-tailed coat.
Going from you, Alfred looked like a grown man; coming towards you he looked more natural. Wherever there appeared a bunch or angle that seemed out of place, Lacy endeavored to modify the over abundance by tacking on one of the ornaments taken from the old uniform of which a great number were used. The shoulders of the jacket seemed to fit to suit Lacy, therefore she used the epaulets from the shoulders of the old soldier"s uniform elsewhere. The seat of the pants hanging so low, Lacy said looked too bare, whereupon she tacked the epaulets on that part of the pants, with the yellow and red fringe hanging down.
There was a very large lump resembling "Richard the Third"s" hump; on this Lacy perched a bra.s.s eagle with wings spread as if about to fly off with the coat. Red and yellow stripes ran up and down the outside seam of the pants.
Lacy said they "looked so purty it was a shame the folds of the cloth kivered so much of the stripe"; she "allowed it was too bad that more of the folds had not found their way into the seat of the pants cos it wa"n"t noticed there, the epaulets hid it."
Lacy had such a great quant.i.ty of this yellow and red material, she insisted on running a double row around the cuffs of the coat and around the bottom of the pants. Aunt Betsy gently dissented but Lacy seemed the moving spirit in the project and the elder woman deferred to her. The aunt said the only fear she had was that folks might think the suit too gaudy. Aunt Betsy said she feared they had not sewed the braid on straight or the pants wouldn"t pucker so at the knees.
All the ornaments, s.p.a.ce could not be found for elsewhere, were tacked on the cap. The vizor or brim was the only disappointment to the women.
No stiff leather procurable, they used cardboard and blackened it with shoe polish. This soon broke and crumpled. Lacy remarked:
"The blame rim spiles the whole outfit."
It dangled in Alfred"s eyes all the time, hence he generally wore the vizor behind.
The soldier clothes were to Alfred a thing of beauty and joy until he went to town. Alfred collected all the country boys he could enlist and called them the "Red Stone Blues." He found an old, rusty sword, its scabbard a load, yet he carried it wherever he went. Others of his company had corn cutters, old scythes and muskets.
Alfred attempted to drill the boys as he had seen the home guards and Sam Graham"s Zouaves do in town. Two old stove pipes were mounted on wheels for cannon.
It was Alfred"s ambition to ride at the head of his command as did the commander of the Ringold Cavalry, but Lacy had attached the epaulets to the seat of Alfred"s trousers as they came from the shoulders of the old coat, and the tin shape frames prevented Alfred a.s.suming any att.i.tude while in the uniform than that of standing. When Alfred spoke to Lacy as to the advisability of changing the location of the epaulets she explained that they had nothing suitable to replace them. When Alfred complained he could not sit down, Lacy said:
"Law sakes, you shouldn"t think of it. Them "air things are too purty to kiver up."
The battle of Bull Run had been fought. The country was ablaze with excitement, war and rumors of war, war stories, war talk. Everybody was up in arms, soldiers moving everywhere, as the locality was not far from where battles were soon expected.
Uncle Joe and Aunt Betsy went to town to hear the news. Alfred, left alone, marshalled his hosts in battle array.
In the romance of Pierce Forrest, a young knight being dubbed by King Alexander, he was so elated he galloped into the woods, cut and slashed trees until he eased his effervescence and convinced the army he was a most courageous soldier.
Alfred at the head of his army, strode down the column as Jupiter is said to have strode down the spheres as he hurled his thunderbolts at the t.i.tans.
Alfred and his army charged and recharged, Uncle Joe"s hedge fence. On and on they charged, coming on the enemy standing ten deep in line, asking or giving no quarter; the enemy fell bruised and bleeding. Every stalk of Uncle Joe"s broom corn patch lay on the ground, not one stalk standing to tell the tale.
How vain are the baubles of war. Alfred standing in the midst of the field of slaughter--he could not sit down--heard a roar that froze his hot blood and scattered his army to the winds of anywhere and to the thickets.
Uncle Joe, returning, had witnessed the slaughter of his broom corn from the top of the hill by the big sh.e.l.l-bark hickory nut trees. His yells not only struck terror to Alfred"s heart but Black Fan and other stock broke from the fields into the big road where they stood trembling.
[Ill.u.s.tration: Alfred"s Redstone Blues]
Lacy said she hadn"t heard Uncle Joe chirp since he was baptized. When he hit his finger with a hammer she felt certain he would "break out,"
but he stuck to his religion.
As he crossed the apex of the hill and saw the broom corn falling before Alfred and his minions, the roar that floated across the flat sounded very much like:
"Whatintheh.e.l.landd.a.m.nationdoesthismean?"
When Alfred saw Ajax drawing nearer, his sword fell from his hand and Alfred fell on the broom corn, an object of abject fear. Ajax grabbed him by the nape of the neck and seat of his uniform, nearly ruining one of the epaulets.
Never was warrior so ign.o.bly driven or dragged from a field of victory.
Aunt Betsy could find no excuse for Alfred. Broom corn was a necessity in the household work. Every farmer made his own brooms.
After a very short trial by court martial it was decided that the country was too quiet for Alfred and that he should be transferred to town at once.
Although tried and found guilty, Alfred, to his delight, was permitted to retain his side-arms and wear his uniform. The next day, standing between Aunt Betsy and Uncle Joe in the old buggy driving the old mare, he began the journey home. He was arrayed in full regimentals, the brim of the cap turned behind, his yellow hair hanging in strings, (it had never been curled since he went to the country).
Everyone they met cast admiring glances at Alfred"s uniform. The aunt was proud of the attention attracted. Pa.s.sing through Sandy Hollow, Sid Gaskill, the roughest girl in the neighborhood, motioned the buggy to stop. As Sid inspected Alfred she requested him to turn around. Looking him over she asked:
"Who made "em?" referring to the uniform.
Alfred promptly replied:
"Lacy Hare helped Aunt Betsy make "em."
The aunt"s face showed her satisfaction. Not even when Sid inquired if the clothes were made to wear in a show did the aunt"s pride in Alfred"s suit diminish, although the inference is that it was the military character of the clothes rather than the cloth or fit, she was proud of, as Aunt Betsy was very patriotic.
All the way to town she was picturing what a surprise the suit would be to Mary and John, and it was.
Alfred was driving the old mare as she had not been driven in years.
Uncle Joe made him slow down. Uncle Joe sometimes exceeded the speed limit leaving town but usually went in at a respectable gait.
Alfred"s desire to see the loved ones at home was so strong that he jumped out of the buggy as they entered the town. Running ahead of the buggy he pa.s.sed Uncle Bill"s: Waving a welcome to Martha and Hester, who stood in the front yard, he regarded their laughter as evidence of their pleasure at seeing him back home again.
When Martha shouted, "What devilment are you up to now?" he never imagined it was his appearance that so amused the girls.
Over the fence, across lots to the rear of the house he scampered. Lin was out mopping the floor of the back porch. Perched on the top of the fence he caught sight of her.
"h.e.l.lo, Lin? How-dye?"
Lin heard the voice. She did not recognize the speaker at once.