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Victory Song
Victory Song
Victory Song
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Victory Song

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The United States is a country at war. Andy Richardson sees enlistment as an opportunity to get away from the farm life he so desperately hates.

During his three year enlistment in the army Andy finds out who is really is and who God is. He learns what it is to have a true relationship with the Lord. Saying he is a Christian is no longer good enough.

Along with Andy’s spiritual growth is the growth of a nation - a nation that is stronger as a whole not separated.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherRuth ONeil
Release dateApr 26, 2013
ISBN9780978933739
Victory Song
Author

Ruth ONeil

Ruth O’Neil has been a freelance writer for 20-plus years. She sees everything as a writing opportunity in disguise, whether it is an interesting character, setting, or situation. You can find her book series “What a Difference a Year Makes” on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, or her website (http://ruthoneil.weebly.com/). You can also visit her on her blog at http://ruths-real-life.blogspot.com/. When she’s not writing or homeschooling her kids, Ruth spends her time quilting, reading, scrapbooking, camping and hiking with her family.

Read more from Ruth O Neil

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    Book preview

    Victory Song - Ruth ONeil

    Victory Song

    Ruth ONeil and Jeri Doner

    Published by Ruth ONeil, 2013.

    This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.

    VICTORY SONG

    First edition. April 26, 2013.

    Copyright © 2013 Ruth ONeil and Jeri Doner.

    ISBN: 978-0978933739

    Written by Ruth ONeil and Jeri Doner.

    VICTORY SONG

    By Jeri Doner

    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced,

    stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any

    means -electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other

    - without the prior permission of the publisher, except as provided

    by USA copyright law. The only exception is brief quotations in

    printed reviews. Every effort has been made to assure that this

    book is accurate.

    All Scripture quotations were taken from the King James Version

    of the Bible. Copyright 1984, 1977 by Thomas Nelson, Inc.

    Published by Three Paths Publishing

    An imprint of Pine Haven Press, Inc.

    116 Valleywood Dr.

    Forest, VA 24551

    www.pinehavenpress.com

    434-525-9200

    Cover design by Bethany O’Neil and Ruth O’Neil

    ISBN-13 978-0-9789337-3-9

    Library of Congress Control Number 20079028553

    ©Ruth Doner O’Neil

    Contents

    VICTORY SONG

    By Jeri Doner

    Chapter One

    Chapter Two

    Chapter Three

    Chapter Four

    Chapter Five

    Chapter Six

    Chapter Seven

    Chapter Eight

    Chapter Nine

    Chapter Ten

    Chapter Eleven

    Chapter Twelve

    Chapter Thirteen

    Chapter Fourteen

    Chapter Fifteen

    Chapter Sixteen

    Chapter Seventeen

    Chapter Eighteen

    Chapter Nineteen

    Chapter Twenty

    Chapter Twenty-One

    Chapter Twenty-Two

    Chapter Twenty-Three

    Chapter Twenty-Four

    Chapter Twenty-Five

    Chapter Twenty-Six

    Chapter Twenty-Seven

    Chapter Twenty-Eight

    Chapter Twenty-Nine

    Chapter Thirty

    Chapter Thirty-One

    Chapter Thirty-Two

    Chapter One

    It was not a good time to be leaving that was certain. His mother said so often enough. She never missed a chance to remind him of the harvest, that it was a monumental task at best. It would be almost too much for one aging farmer and a sixteen-year-old boy. He half listened. There was always too much work, and that was not going to change. He knew his father was not getting any younger, and his brother, Peter, was not doing well in school. He knew that his mother’s work had increased since his big sister, Lydia, had married and moved to her husband’s home.

    Andy had always been the bright one, the strong one, and the reliable one. He was tired of it. He had listened eagerly to the army recruiters, and read all the patriotic articles in the newspapers. They had promised much in the way of adventure, glory, and victory. They had called for the people to sacrifice for the good of the country. While the war might seem remote and irrelevant to the rest of the Richardson family, it was very real to Andy. He wanted a part in it. He had heard all the colorful words until they circled continually in his mind. Adventure. Glory. Victory. Sacrifice. He admitted only to himself that the most prominent and appealing word of all was none of those. It was the word that had become the theme of his existence, his prayer and constant desire. Escape.

    He did not feel guilty about leaving the milking chores on this last day of boyhood. His father did not approve of his enlisting in the army, but he had given permission for him to have this time for himself. If they could get by without him tomorrow, they could just as easily begin managing today, the old man had said. It was his stern way of expressing that, though he disapproved, he was trying to understand.

    Andy wandered along the windbreak at the edge of a field, enjoying for the last time the peacefulness of the land, which had been his lifelong home. He let the slope of the ground carry him down toward the brook where cattle were watered. Many a summer day had been spent fishing in that stream. Through a tangle of brush, he located the well-worn path, which led to the swimming hole. A stout rope was still suspended from an overhanging branch. It had been the most important thing in his world the year he and his best friend, Eddie, had hung it there. The water was still now, for Eddie had moved away to distant Auburn, and Andy had grown up. Not many splashes were heard in the old swimming hole these days. This summer of 1862 had been an uncommonly dry one, and the water level was low.

    Childhood was a thing of the past, Andy told himself. Only one day separated him from manhood and a life of his own. In the morning he was leaving for Syracuse to be mustered into the 149th New York Infantry Regiment, and the farm boy life would be over. For now he could afford to stop resenting the confines of the farm, the dullness of life here, and the everlasting chores. He could simply meander about enjoying his surroundings.

    There were things to enjoy here. September in Central New York was a brightly busy time. The heat of summer was, for the most part, past. Though there was still an occasional hot day or two, the air more often than not held a chill that warned of winter’s inevitable approach. The southwest breeze blew about industrious honeybees as they salvaged the last useful specks from brilliant goldenrod blossoms. Gray squirrels that had been summer-sleek were now fall-fluffy, romping with their abundance of hickory nuts and black walnuts. The stately maples had not yet reached their peak of color, but lacy sumac fairly blazed from every neglected hedgerow and patch of wasteland. Fruit trees were heavy with spring promises kept. Pale Queen-Anne’s lace and blue chicory cushioned the fall of ripening apples, pears, and plums. The hills lay in gentle folds, no longer green, but gold and brown awaiting the scythe.

    Andy had circled back toward the house, and could see a horse saddled and hitched to the fence in the side yard. He felt a sudden excitement upon recognizing it as his Aunt Jen’s. She was one of the few people he would miss. As he neared the door, he mentally braced himself, anticipating that because of Aunt Jen’s presence he was about to walk into a roomful of tension.

    ––––––––

    He’s leaving, Callie, and there’s nothing more to be done about it. You’ll have to face the fact." The voice was raspy with age, edged with impatience.

    Callie Richardson looked up from the pot of apple butter she had been stirring, and eyed her sister-in-law across the steamy summer kitchen. I’m trying to make the most of this, Jen, and I don’t need you to tell me what I already know. I just can’t feel the way you do about it. I think he’s making a big mistake.

    Don’t you read the papers, girl? Jen asked. There’s a war going on in this country. The worst kind of a war. Tearing the country apart. And your son is going for a soldier in Mr. Lincoln’s army. Can’t you be proud of him?

    I am. In my own way. But he’s needed here at home. He never gave that a thought when he signed up.

    Pete is sixteen. It’s time he did his share around here. Andy did at that age.

    Pete is not Andy, the mother replied. He needs more time with his school work. He tries his best, but he can’t keep up like Andy did.

    That’s not Andy’s fault, Jen pointed out. He’d be leaving home one of these days, no matter what. If it weren’t for the war it would be for something else. You know I’m right, Callie.

    Callie’s brow was moist, and so were her eyes. She wiped her face on her apron. I know, Jen. But you really can’t understand. He’s not your son.

    He’s my brother’s. And since I never had a family of my own, he’s as close to being mine as anyone can be. It’s not a secret Andy was always my favorite. I’ll miss him something awful, but I’d never try to keep him from going. He’s nineteen. He’s not a child.

    Callie decided the apple butter had cooked long enough, and lifted the heavy kettle from the stove. She moved to the wooden table in the middle of the room and set it down a little harder than necessary. I suppose I wouldn’t mind so much if he just wasn’t going with that Henry Birch. That boy worries me.

    Oh, they’ll be all right! Jen tried to assure her. I thought you liked Mrs. Birch. Don’t they go to your church?

    They did years ago. They’ve been to all different churches since then. Never satisfied. I don’t see Henry’s mother any more. But hear plenty about him. He’s a wild one. I don’t like Andy with him.

    It’s time you started trusting Andy. He’s a grown man, and your job of raising him is over. You’ve given him a proper Christian upbringing, and that’s all you can do. Besides, I hear that Captain Townsend that was recruiting in Elbridge was some kind of a preacher in civilian life. He was a chaplain in the cavalry before he resigned to raise a company for the Fourth Onondagas. That’s whose company they’ll be in, isn’t it?

    Yes...that gives me some comfort, Callie admitted. But I still worry that he’ll turn out like that good-for-nothing Henry.

    Or like me? Jen asked.

    Callie let the exasperation show on her face. Something was wrong here. She was a Godly woman, but it was Jen’s total honesty that made her the most uncomfortable. It was hard enough making polite conversation after all the differences they had suffered over the years. She did not know how to respond to this. Jen was the undisputed black sheep of the Richardson family, having rejected the strict moral standards of the rest of the clan. She was a painfully honest woman, and occasionally used some colorful language to tell her relatives what she thought of the way they pressured their children to conform. She was a true non-conformist, dressing as she pleased, coming and going bareheaded in the streets at all hours. She commonly hung laundry out on Sunday, read scandalous novels, and it was said she used alcohol to relieve a chronic cough. Callie wondered once or twice if the cough could have been the result of the use of tobacco, but that seemed rather outrageous, even for Jen. It was true she found it easy to disapprove of the old woman, and the more she gave voice to her disapproval, the more Andy seemed to admire his aunt. Perhaps he would turn out like her, a religious agnostic and a social outcast. There was nothing wrong with wanting more for him than that.

    Before Callie had a chance to think of anything to say, the front door banged and loud footsteps came through the house toward the summer kitchen.

    What’s cooking?’ Andy’s voice called. It smells great in here!"

    Both mother and aunt turned toward the doorway as he entered. His gray-green eyes blinked as he tried to hurry the adjustment from outdoor sunlight to the dimness of the room.

    Aunt Jen! Glad you came over, he said, looking with satisfaction at the old woman sitting near the table. I figured on coming over to your place tonight to say good-bye.

    You’re a fine one! Jen scolded playfully. I come visiting and you’re off someplace!

    I just went for a walk in the woods and down by the old swimming hole. Wanted to see it once more before I leave. Water sure is low this year. Having discovered the apple butter, he cut a generous slice of bread from a loaf on the sideboard and sat down on the edge of the table to dip it into the steaming kettle.

    Get out of there! Callie chided, swatting him on the thigh with a dishtowel to remove him from the table. You know better than that!

    How come you’re making this stuff when it’s so hot out? He asked with his mouth full. Apples ‘ll keep till cold weather.

    Because it’s your favorite, and what I made last year is all gone, the mother replied.

    Mom, you didn’t have to do that. He tried to sound grateful, but suspected that she was too busy or too tired to notice.

    When you were gone so long I thought you walked into Canton to say good-bye to somebody, she said.

    I said all my farewells Sunday, he told her. And it’s Memphis, not Canton.

    It seemed he was forever correcting her about that. The nearest village was always called Canton, short for Canal Town, and that word best described the little settlement. A year ago, for some obscure reason, the name had been changed to Memphis. Andy had no trouble recalling the new name and thought his parents should have been able to keep it in mind too coming as it did from the Bible. He would never understand how older people could bring to mind lengthy passages from their favorite book, quoting chapter and verse without error, and not recall that they were members of the First Baptist Church of Memphis, not Canton. The inconsistency baffled him; if that was a characteristic of old age, he hoped never to reach it.

    The door banged again, and a familiar voice called, Mom, we’re finally here. Where do you want the pies?

    I’ll take care of them, Andy offered, bounding into the dining room where his sister Lydia was unpacking her contribution to dinner.

    Not a chance, little brother, she said. Somebody else might like a taste.

    It was a joke they shared, her calling him a little brother, for she said it looking up into his face as she had been doing for years. Not all Richardsons were tall; when it came to height, Lydia favored Callie, but Andy had inherited all his father’s considerable size and more. While many youngsters experienced a winter of illness sometime during their growing years resulting in a slowed growth rate, Andy had always enjoyed excellent health and an unimpaired appetite for the abundance of good food with which the family had always been blessed. Besides his long, muscular arms and legs, he received from his father a distinctive face, which was easily recognizable in the locality as belonging to a Richardson. The forehead was broad and high, the nose a bit longer than most would consider becoming. The cheekbones were prominent and deeply tanned from exposure to sun and wind. The mouth was the most distinctive feature of all, and the one Andy liked the least. It had a tendency to turn down at the corners, producing a look of immovable sternness on his father’s face. On Aunt Jen the look was one of impudence. On Lydia it was just plain pouty. Andy, when he thought of it, smiled a lot in hopes that the effort would make him look less like the rest of the family.

    Callie came in from the summer kitchen to greet her only daughter. The oldest of the three children, Lydia had married the son of a neighboring farmer less than a year ago. She was still much in evidence about the homestead and especially on important occasions like today.

    Where’s Don? Callie asked, referring to Lydia’s husband.

    He went down to the barn to meet Daddy and Pete, the girl explained. I hope they finish milking soon. I’m starved. Too bad SOME people don’t see fit to help with the chores anymore. With that she nudged Andy in the ribs.

    Before you barged in I was trying to have a nice visit with Aunt Jen, he said.

    Lydia made a face at the mention of the aunt, but dutifully went to the doorway and called, Hello, Aunt Jen. I hope you’re staying for supper.

    The old woman got to her feet and replied, No, I got my own food at home. Just came over to see Andy before he goes off tomorrow. Now if you’ll walk me out to my horse, boy, I’ll be on my way and out from under foot.

    They all politely tried to convince her to stay, but she would not be persuaded. Callie and Lydia did not seem overly disappointed when she insisted upon leaving, but Andy was reluctant to walk out into the yard with her.

    I hoped I’d get to see you in your uniform, Aunt Jen said when they were outside and the commotion left behind.

    We have to go to Syracuse to get all our stuff issued. I don’t know how quick the government can supply us. You’ll have to come to the camp at the fairgrounds to see us in uniform.

    I ain’t traipsing all the way to Syracuse! Aunt Jen informed him. You send me a picture.

    I’ll try. But I won’t be gone forever. I’ll be over to see you when I get back, and that’s a promise.

    She did not respond except to shake her head sadly. It won’t be the same here with you gone.

    Andy nodded. I can’t say I’ll miss everything here, but I sure will miss you, Aunt Jen.

    They had been close and he thought he knew her as well as anyone alive, but he was surprised when she did something uncharacteristic. She stretched to hug and kiss him. When he lifted her onto her horse she did something else he did not expect. She wept.

    Aunt Jen, I only enlisted for three years. And if we get the Rebels licked before then, I can come back earlier. Please don’t act as if it’s the end of everything.

    She wiped her eyes and cleared her throat as if to speak, but said nothing. She had the unladylike habit of riding astride, and had designed her skirts to accommodate the man’s saddle she used. Once sure of her seat, she slapped the horse on the withers and cantered off down the road.

    Andy watched for a while after the dust settled. After a few moments he looked out across the field to see his father, Pete and Don leaving the barn. They were weary, but walked quickly toward the house, for supper would soon be ready. Andy thought of the same thing, but waited for them to catch up to him so they could all enter together.

    The sun was beginning to fade when he turned back to the old house. It was painted barn red and looked dark in the shadows. It sat on a hillside protected from the ferocity of the north wind, its front yard sloping down toward the road, which ran south of it. Light spilled from the kitchen window along with mingled smells of roasting beef, fresh bread, and the apple butter. Behind the house the kitchen garden looked well used, offering the last of its beans and squash. The corn stalks were brown and dry, holding one another erect against the autumn winds. His eyes followed the road until it twisted out of sight among surrounding maples. It was edged by a split rail fence he had built with his father. Beyond that lay a field newly cultivated this year. Wrestling the stubborn sumac out of the ground had been an ordeal he would not soon forget. He came up to the house and pumped some fresh water up from the well he had helped to dig and keep clean. It was good water, and had proved sufficient for their needs. He took a last look around the place and sighed. While his parents took pride in the home and saw in it a testimony to achievement, Andy saw only backbreaking work—work that would never be done. It was not the sort of life he wanted for himself, and he was excited to think that his escape was only a day in the future.

    Chapter Two

    The trip to Syracuse was pleasant enough, for Andy and Henry went with high expectations about their new life in the army. They had elected to travel by canal boat, and would have resented the slowness of the vehicle had not the early autumn day been so perfect for relaxing and watching the countryside go by.

    I wonder where we’ll go and what kind of places we’ll see, Henry asked, becoming bored.

    Andy shrugged. I guess we’ll go wherever the government sends us. It’s one way to see the country.

    I figure wherever they send us, it can’t be any worse than here. Right?

    Andy was surprised. What’s so bad about your life up till now?

    Are you kidding? Try spending all day behind the counter in my father’s store. Measuring out flour and sugar and helping old ladies pick out dress goods. You’d get sick of it in a big hurry. That’s the worst place I’ve ever seen!

    I suppose you’d rather shovel out the barn, Andy suggested. That’s what I’ve been doing all my life.

    At least you get outside, Henry pointed out.

    "Yeah. No matter how cold or how hot or how wet. I do get outside. And plenty of brilliant conversation from my father, who’s usually mad at me about something. At least you can talk to the old ladies with the dress goods. And they smell better than the milk cows.

    Not always, Henry said. They both laughed, and went on thinking about how pleasant it would be to do something different. Andy had not realized until now how much Henry wanted to change the course of his life. He had always thought his friend’s lot in life to be pretty agreeable when compared to his own. As the son of an Elbridge shopkeeper, Henry dressed decently, smelled respectable and always had spending money. He was always fun to have around. Though bright, he had never been an outstanding student. Henry did not worry about such things, for one day he would inherit his father’s business and be well situated for life, not having to prove himself to anyone. He was a handsome boy, well built with dark wavy hair and bright blue eyes. Girls liked him for that, and his witty conversation, and his father’s money. Andy was not one to object to having girls around, but his parents had never approved of Henry, and that was probably why. Their objections meant nothing now, for the boys were getting farther from home every minute, enjoying the friendship they had shared for all their growing years, and looking forward to good times ahead in the 149th New York Infantry Regiment.

    The city presented a marked contrast to the countryside they left behind. While in a rural area the seasons flow uninterrupted allowing one to forget there was a war going on, Syracuse was full of patriotic activity. There was endless traffic on the streets, canals, and rail. Public buildings were decorated with bright bunting and posters advertising war meetings at various churches and meeting halls. There was no limit to the charitable causes for which funds needed to be raised: relief for the families of soldiers and medical supplies being sent to the south. Women left their homes to make shirts and socks in City Hall for the departing troops, or to take a clerking job in some local business, thus freeing an able-bodied man for the army. Children waved flags and played soldier with wooden guns, while bands played patriotic airs in the streets. Men of commerce discussed the prices of horses, iron, and salt.

    Newspapers with moist ink were snatched up, as attention turned toward a town in Maryland called Sharpsburg. There, according to all they could learn at so great a distance, General Lee had attempted to invade the north. In a battle that defied the news correspondents’ poor powers of description, Union troops under the command of General McClellan halted their advance. The gains were small, the cost in lives enormous. The main outcome of the battle was to change the attitude of the northern people. This was not going to be a short, glorious war, as they had been led to believe. The Rebels were in deadly earnest, and would continue to pursue their goal of independence. Boys, who had enlisted in a hurry, fearing that the war would end too soon for them to be involved, knew now there would be plenty of fighting for all who cared to participate.

    It did not take long for Andy and Henry to settle in at Camp White, their regiment’s temporary resting place at the fairgrounds near the city limits. The place looked well worn, for the third regiment to be raised in Onondaga County, the 122nd New York Volunteer Infantry, had left it only a day before. They had been hustled off to Albany, where they would proceed to the seat of war in Virginia. Now it was the turn of the Fourth Onondaga regiment, the 149th New York, to be outfitted and readied for the task of protecting Washington City from attack.

    In spite of the commotion and much visiting by local civilians, the surroundings at Camp White were incurably drab. Some makeshift barracks had been thrown together with what looked like ancient lumber. There was a high wall surrounding the place, but it kept no one in or out, for there were no trained guards. Outside the grounds food was served, but eaten with little enthusiasm by the new recruits.

    Boy, this is terrible! was Henry’s opinion. Don’t they know how to do anything but boil stuff? Boiled beef and boiled potatoes again!

    I guess they’re doing their best with so many of us, Andy commented with a shrug. It’s awful salty for my taste, though. And I’ve had better beef.

    Sure you have. Back home you didn’t eat it unless you knew what it died of.

    Andy chuckled, but with not humor.

    Suppose everybody else has the same thing? Henry wondered.

    Look around. Do you see anybody looking happy about this? It’s all the same.

    Henry persisted with, I heard some of the companies have permission to take their food allowance in cash and their captain can buy whatever they need. Maybe that works out better.

    IF they can do it, Andy considered. Maybe not all the army’s promises come true.

    Henry sighed and went back to trying to chew a chunk of his meat. No more thought was given to the problems of other companies. The problems might have been real enough, but they seemed remote and insignificant to Andy and Henry, preoccupied as they were with getting underway their noble mission of saving the Union. They had plenty of comrades in their own group, and were dubious about some of the others. In order to avoid having to draft men to fill their quotas, the government had allowed some innovative recruiting practices to be adopted. It was common knowledge that everyone in Company A was Jewish, Company B was largely German, and all of Company C was Irish.

    Many of the members of those companies spoke broken English and adhered to strange customs. They had enlisted in groups in order stay among their own kind, and that was fine. Though not in agreement with his parents on every point of Christian conduct, Andy knew it would be wise to avoid close association with men of questionable living standards and stay with those similar in background and beliefs to himself.

    The boys from the town of Elbridge shared their company with others from Skaneateles, Van Buren and Lysander, surrounding communities with a predominantly agricultural economy. They did not have much interest in the Syracusans who made up the majority of the unit, and very early learned to resent the nickname attached to the whole. They were not, by any stretch of the imagination, Salt boilers.

    Chapter Three

    Dear Aunt Jen,

    It is Tuesday afternoon and we are finally on our way to the war. Since you did not make it to Syracuse to see us off, I thought I would write to you and tell what has happened so far.

    We were sworn in last Thursday by a Capt., Clay. We had uniforms, but did not get knapsacks and canteens till Sunday. Men have been enlisting so fast that the government can’t supply us fast enough. Yesterday we got the national flag presented to Col. Barnum. I expect you have read about him in the papers. He is in poor health from having a wound at Malvern Hill. In fact, they thought he was dead for a while. But he is improving and will be a fine commanding officer. The men all think highly of him.

    Our camp at the fairgrounds, Camp White was pretty poor, just old board buildings and the food was bad, but this morning we went on the New York Central train to Geneva, it was interesting traveling that way, but noisy and rough riding. I could not write then. Not many of us had ever been on a train before, but I guess we will get plenty of chances now we are in the army. The infantry doesn’t march everywhere like in the old days.

    Now we are on steam transports on Seneca Lake. We will get to Watkins about nightfall. It is relaxing riding in the boats. One of them had a band from Skaneateles, so we can hear music all the time and it is enjoyable. Some of the men left Syracuse drunk and are not much improved yet.

    We don’t have guns yet. We are supposed to get them at Elmira. Col. Barnum wanted Springfields, but we will probably get British Enfields. You take what you get, and going by the looks of some of the men in the regiment, it does not matter to them what kind of gun they get.

    I am in Company G. Captain Townsend is our commander. One of the men said he is forty-eight and the oldest man in the regiment. He looks younger, but we wonder if he is up to army life. Even some of the younger ones complain of being ill-treated. So it is not too likely everyone will stick it out if the war lasts much past next summer.

    We will probably settle somewhere near Washington. I am not writing to my parents until I knew where we will be, and then I

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