“Oh, Lord!” cried the captive. “It’s Josiah. For God’s sake, let me loose.”
“Reckon I won’t,” said Josiah.
“I’m in agony—my arms—I shall die—and I am innocent. I did not do anything. Won’t you help me?”
“No—the Rebs will come and hang you.”
The man’s cunning awoke. He said the one thing, made the one plea which, as he spoke, troubled Josiah’s decision. “Is the Squire alive?”
“Why shouldn’t he be alive?” asked Josiah, surprised.
“Oh, I saw in a paper that he was wounded at Gettysburg. Now, Josiah, if he was here—if he was to know you left me to die.”
Josiah was uncertain what he would have done. His simple-minded view of things was disturbed, and his tendency to be forgiving kindly assisted to give potency to the appeal. He said, “I won’t set you free, but I’ll do this much,” and he tore the paper from Peter’s breast, saying, “You’ll get off with some lie when the Rebs come.” Then he turned and walked away, tearing up the death warrant and hearing the wild pleas of the painfully bound man.
The night had come, but save for the faintly heard complaint of some far-distant dog, there was nothing to break the quiet of the deserted land which lay between the two armies. Having torn to pieces and carefully scattered the bits of paper, Josiah, who while doing one thing could not think of another, began to reflect on what he had done. He had been too long in servitude not to respect authority. If any one knew—but no one could know. He himself had said that what had come upon Lamb was a judgment—the act of one who had said, “I will repay.” It troubled a mind whose machinery was of childlike incapacity to deal with problems involving the moral aspects of conduct. Perhaps this had been a chance to give Lamb an opportunity to repent by setting him free; but there had already been interference with the judgment of God. More personally material events relieved the black from responsibility. His quick ear caught the sound of troopers, the sharp notes of steel clinking; he had no mind to be picked up by the enemy’s horse, and dismissing all other considerations he took to the woods and walked rapidly away. Late in the evening he crossed the North Anna with a train of wagons, as driver of an unruly mule team, one of which had rewarded his driver in kind for brutal use of the whip and perverted English. The man groaning in the wagon informed Josiah concerning mules and their ways. After a day or two he was pleased to get back on his legs, for when bullets were not flying the army life was full of interest. A man who could cook well, shave an officer or shoe a horse, never lacked the friends of an hour; and too, his unfailing good-humour was always helpful. An officer of the line would have been easy to find, but the engineers were continually in motion and hard to locate. He got no news of John Penhallow until the 29th of May, when he came on General Wilson’s cavalry