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Rivers of War: Snippet Sixteen
Last updated: Friday, February 25, 2005 16:00 EST
An hour later, Jackson was ready to start the final drive. By then, hundreds of Red Sticks had already been slaughtered in the fighting. As poorly equipped as they were with firearms, they hadnt been able to fight very effectively once the Cherokees erupted into their rear and the Thirty-ninth breached the barricade.
Jackson had indeed given orders before the battle started that the Creek noncombatants were to be spared. There werent many on the peninsula, not more than a few hundred, since the Red Sticks had sent away most of their women and children and old folks before Jacksons army arrived. But any Red Stick warrior who didnt surrender was to be killed. And he knew perfectly well that his soldiersespecially the militiamenhadnt bothered to ask.
Jackson didnt blame them. In this sort of chaotic brawl not even the regulars would follow the established laws of war, at least not very often, and the general wasnt about to ask any questions. It just didnt pay to do so.
Still, thered been several incidents reported to him. In most cases, Jackson was inclined to accept the explanation that the killings had been accidental. They probably were, in truth, at least half the time. A woman running through the woods was just a blur of movement to a soldier whose nerves were at a fever pitch due to fear and battle-fury. Hed shoot first and think later. So would Jackson himself, being honest.
However, thered been one case involving a small boy that had angered Jackson as much as it had the officer whod reported to him. Confused and frightened, the boyhe hadnt been more than five or six years oldhad stumbled into a group of American soldiers. One of them had bashed his brains out with the butt of his musket.
Even then, for Jackson, the issue wasnt the killing as such. The officer reported that the culprit had justified his deed on the grounds that if the boy had lived hed have grown into a warriorso why not kill him now when it was still easy? It was a sentiment that Jackson didnt sharenot quitebut he had no trouble at all understanding it.
Yet that was beside the point. The general had given his orders, clear and simple, and a soldiera regular, too, to make it worsehad taken it upon himself to disobey them. If he could find out who the man was, hed have him punished.
That wasnt likely, though. The officer whod reported the outrage had been from a different unit, and didnt know the mans name. The odds were slim that the culprits own superior officer would identify himand the odds that his fellow soldiers would do so were exactly zero.
The general smiled thinly. Quite unlikeha!the instant readiness of a militia officer to report to him half an hour before, hotly and angrily, that Ensign Houston had brutalized an honest citizen of Tennessee and threatened several others just because . . .
Well, you know how it is, General, the boys like to have their trophies...
Jackson had given him short shrift. But the incident was enough to crystallize his feeling that this battle had gotten a little out of control. He didnt object to killing Indians, not in the least. In fact, hed planned the entire campaign in such a way as to trap the Red Sticks on this horseshoe bend of the Tallapoosa so he could kill as many of them as possible. Still, a civilized nation did have its established rules of war, and it had to follow them or it would become no better than the savages themselves.
Well give them a last chance to surrender, he announced.
The officers gathered around him exchanged looks. Finally, Major Reid was bold enough to speak.
Uh, who, General? What I mean is, whos supposed to take them the offer? Reid looked down at the ravine where most of the surviving Red Sticks were now forted up.
Forted up was the phrase, too. The Red Sticks hadnt had the time to build anything as solid and well designed as the barricade theyd placed across the neck of the peninsula. But the southern tribes were all woodsmen, and in the few hours theyd had, the warriors had been able to erect a rather substantial breastwork down there. Storming it would be a dangerous business.
Given the desperation and fanaticism of the Red Sticks, it would be equally dangerous taking them an offer to surrender.
Jacksons eyes moved past the little cluster of aides gathered immediately around him. He was looking for a particular officer, among the several hundred soldiers milling about in the immediate vicinity. Hed be there, for sure.
Sure enough, he found the young man quickly, even in that crowd. Partly because of his height, but partly because of the two Indians standing next to him. The three of them seemed to have become well-nigh inseparable in the course of the battle, and they stood out in a crowd.
Houston was perhaps thirty yards away, but his eyes met the generals immediately. Jackson suspected hed been anticipating the summons. Indeed, the young ensign began walking toward him immediately, without even waiting for a command.
Limping toward him, ratherand the limp seemed to have gotten worse. Jackson wasnt surprised. A flesh wound is still a real wound, and even a man as big as Houston would be feeling the effects of it this many hours later.
Still and all, it was a very firm sort of limp. Whatever pain and weariness the ensign might be feeling, it was clear enough that his determination hadnt flagged.
When Houston drew near, he spoke without being asked to do so.
Ill take them the offer, sir. But I can tell you right now its a waste of time.
Houston jerked his head, indicating the ravine behind him. Me and James and John snuck down there a little while back. I know the lingo well enough James knows it even betterthat we got the gist of it. Theyve got some shamans down there with them, and theyve been busy firing them up for a last stand.
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