To Wager Her Heart Page 36
Mention of General Bragg got Jake’s attention.
Stratton eyed him. “It’s a gathering of women, one of the Women’s Relief Societies.”
“A Women’s Relief Society, sir?” Jake caught Stratton’s frown and knew better than to interrupt again, their history and the permission to speak freely notwithstanding.
“They’re hosting a fund-raiser for the Confederacy. It’s being sponsored by some of Nashville’s most prominent families, including General Bragg’s cousin.” Stratton picked up a letter from his desk. “The fund-raiser is being held at the home of a Colonel John McGavock of Carnton. Colonel McGavock’s father was mayor of Nashville some time back. You heard of him? Or of Carnton?”
Jake shook his head. Had it really come to this for him? Looking after a bunch of petticoats?
“Carnton looks to be three or four miles south of here, down in Franklin.” He pointed to the map lying open on his desk. “Seems Mrs. Colonel John McGavock, as she apparently prefers to be addressed, petitioned the higher-ups. She must have some pull with someone, too, because she sufficiently gained their attention. The letter is in General Bragg’s own hand.” Stratton began reading. “‘Mrs. Colonel John McGavock requests that we show our support for the Women’s Relief Society as they show their continued support for the soldiers.’” Stratton looked up from the letter. “In short, Mrs. McGavock thinks that having a soldier in their midst would not only be an encouragement to the women, but also provide security for the event and the funds they’ll be raising. But with the recent losses we’ve sustained”—Stratton tossed the letter aside—“I can’t spare to send a man who has the ability to fight.”
“So you’re sending me . . . sir?”
Stratton smiled. “That’s right, Captain. General Bragg expresses, and frankly, I agree, that sending a visibly wounded soldier—one of the amputees, for instance—would upset the ladies, make them more anxious about their men. But your shoulder’s healing, and you’re healthy looking enough. And according to my wife, you’re young and dashing.” Sarcasm weighted the colonel’s tone. “At least you might be . . . somewhere beneath all that growth of beard. And I imagine you can be sufficiently charming, when you put your mind to it.”
Jake didn’t share his humor. “Wouldn’t it be easier, sir, just to tell the women to donate their money and valuables and be done with it? Would save us all a lot of time. After all, the gentler sex has no place in matters of war, sir. They’re best shielded from war’s cruelties. Better for them to stick to hearth and home.”
Stratton smiled. “You sound like that letter to the editor I read yesterday.”
“Sir?”
Stratton reached for the newspaper buried beneath the piles on his desk and pushed it toward him. “Fellow wrote in and lambasted the editor for suggesting that some women were actually fighting, even now, alongside the men. As if we wouldn’t be able to tell the difference.”
Jake unfolded the paper, found the editorial page, and scanned the letter.
“Next thing you know, Captain, they’ll be saying we ought to allow women to hold command.” Stratton laughed. “Can you imagine?”
Jake finally looked up and managed a smile. The wording in the letter was overly harsh, but he couldn’t say he disagreed with the opinion overall. The way he looked at it, it wasn’t so much that women lacked the constitution for war as it was that men had a God-bestowed duty to protect them from the horrors of it. He laid the paper aside.
“Back to your assignment at Carnton.” Stratton reached for his partially smoked cigar, struck a match, and breathed new life into the tightly rolled tobacco leaves. Circles of smoke coiled upward. “We already know the Federals pulled out of Franklin some time back. Scouts confirmed this week that General Grant’s army is advancing toward Mississippi while Rosecrans is pushing toward Chattanooga. There’s a small garrison still holed up at Fort Granger, but they’re keeping to that area. And word is, the fort has fallen into disrepair. We have Confederate troops quietly patrolling the area. Still, there’s enough Federal rabble around to raise a ruckus, so best be on watch. And considering the money the women will be raising for the cause, having a soldier on the premises isn’t a bad idea.”
“Even one who can’t see to shoot, sir?”
“I’m not sending you down there to kill Yankees, Captain. I’m sending you because you’re not ready to fight again yet. I need you back here as soon as possible. The Army needs you back. But I need the man who moves like a ghost in the wind and hits his target from another world away. So keep to Carnton and to the town. And concentrate on healing up.” His gaze sobered. “I trust you won’t disappoint me or the General . . . Jake.”
Jake shook his head, both humbled and resigned. “No, sir, Colonel. No disappointment. What are my duties while I’m there?”
Stratton puffed on the cigar, his smile coming slowly. “Whatever Mrs. Colonel John McGavock bids you to do. General Bragg also requests that something be written up about the Christmas event the women are hosting. You’re good enough with a pencil. I’ve seen your sketches. Capture a scene or two that the newspaper can print and pen a few words to go with it. Come Christmas, it’ll be published with a paragraph from General Bragg.”
Jake simply nodded.
Stratton stood and rounded the desk, then moved toward the entrance of the tent, the canvas flap whipping in the wind. He nudged back the opening, and Jake stared past him out across the rippling tide of dingy-looking tents dotting the field as far as the eye could see, interrupted only by the occasional confiscated Federal soldier’s tent, so prized among the men.
“Morale is low in the camps. You already know that,” Stratton continued. “The men are worn down, short on hope, and they’re worried about their families back home. So whatever scarves or gloves or knitted together whatnot you bring back from Carnton will be a boon to them, I’m sure. All Christmas furloughs are being canceled too. So when the men are told they won’t be seeing their families, that won’t help either. And despite the overall victory at Chickamauga, the losses at Vicksburg . . . and all that happened there . . . haunt us still.”
At the mention of Vicksburg, Jake briefly bowed his head. He’d lost so much on that battlefield. Far more even than he’d lost at Chickamauga.
Stratton said nothing for a moment, then sighed. “Your fellow soldiers need to be reminded of why they’re fighting, Captain. And of who they’re fighting for. We could all use that reminder.”
Jake heard fatigue in the colonel’s voice.
Clearing his throat, Stratton turned back. “Captain Roland Jones from Captain P. R. Leigh’s Company of Infantry, Mississippi Volunteers, should be here anytime to escort you to Carnton. Meet him on the main road south of camp. Godspeed, Captain. Dismissed.”
Jake saluted, and Colonel Stratton returned the gesture.
“And, Captain . . .”
Jake turned.
“First chance, you might want to get a shave and a haircut. No need offending the ladies.”
Jake managed a smile and hurried to his tent to grab his gear. He shoved his clothes into the knapsack along with his notebook and the spectacles the doctor had given him a few days earlier. He didn’t like relying on the eyeglasses, but they did help him see close up when his eyes were tired, much as he didn’t like to admit it. Knapsack slung over his good shoulder and haversack and rifle in hand, he quickly covered the distance to the road. Colonel Stratton was wrong about him needing time away for his sight to heal. It wasn’t time away he needed. He needed to be back with his regiment, at least in some capacity, pushing the Federal Army farther north, sending them back where they belonged.
Not kowtowing to a bunch of crinolines.
The story continues in Christmas at Carnton by Tamera Alexander, available October 2017!
About the Author
Author photo by Mandy Whitley Photography
TAMERA ALEXANDER is a USA Today bestselling novelist whose deeply drawn characters, thought-provoking plots, an
d poignant prose resonate with readers worldwide. She and her husband make their home in Nashville, not far from Belle Meade Plantation.
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