Peachtree Creek, Decatur, Ezra Church, Utoy Creek.
Never names of places any more.
Names of graves where friends lay buried, names of tangled underbrush and thick woods where bodies rotted unburied, names of the four sides of Atlanta where Sherman had tried to force his army in and Hood’s men had doggedly beaten him back.
At last, news came from the south to the strained town and it was alarming news, especially to Scarlett.
General Sherman was trying the fourth side of the town again, striking again at the railroad at Jonesboro.
Yankees in large numbers were on that fourth side of the town now, no skirmishing units or cavalry detachments but the massed Yankee forces.
And thousands of Confederate troops had been withdrawn from the lines close about the city to hurl themselves against them.
And that explained the sudden silence.
“Why Jonesboro?” thought Scarlett, terror striking at her heart at the thought of Tara’s nearness.
“Why must they always hit Jonesboro?
Why can’t they find some other place to attack the railroad?”
For a week she had not heard from Tara and the last brief note from Gerald had added to her fears.
Carreen had taken a turn for the worse and was very, very sick.
Now it might be days before the mails came through, days before she heard whether Carreen was alive or dead.
Oh, if she had only gone home at the beginning of the siege, Melanie or no Melanie!
There was fighting at Jonesboro—that much Atlanta knew, but how the battle went no one could tell and the most insane rumors tortured the town.
Finally a courier came up from Jonesboro with the reassuring news that the Yankees had been beaten back.
But they had made a sortie into Jonesboro, burned the depot, cut the telegraph wires and torn up three miles of track before they retreated.
The engineering corps was working like mad, repairing the line, but it would take some time because the Yankees had torn up the crossties, made bonfires of them, laid the wrenched-up rails across them until they were red hot and then twisted them around telegraph poles until they looked like giant corkscrews.
These days it was so hard to replace iron rails, to replace anything made of iron.
No, the Yankees hadn’t gotten to Tara.
The same courier who brought the dispatches to General Hood assured Scarlett of that.
He had met Gerald in Jonesboro after the battle, just as he was starting to Atlanta, and Gerald had begged him to bring a letter to her.
But what was Pa doing in Jonesboro?
The young courier looked ill at ease as he made answer.
Gerald was hunting for an army doctor to go to Tara with him.
As she stood in the sunshine on the front porch, thanking the young man for his trouble, Scarlett felt her knees go weak.
Carreen must be dying if she was so far beyond Ellen’s medical skill that Gerald was hunting a doctor!
As the courier went off in a small whirlwind of red dust, Scarlett tore open Gerald’s letter with fingers that trembled.
So great was the shortage of paper in the Confederacy now that Gerald’s note was written between the lines of her last letter to him and reading it was difficult.
“Dear Daughter, Your Mother and both girls have the typhoid.
They are very ill but we must hope for the best.
When your mother took to her bed she bade me write you that under no condition were you to come home and expose yourself and Wade to the disease.
She sends her love and bids you pray for her.”
“Pray for her!”
Scarlett flew up the stairs to her room and, dropping on her knees by the bed, prayed as she had never prayed before.
No formal Rosaries now but the same words over and over:
“Mother of God, don’t let her die!
I’ll be so good if you don’t let her die!
Please, don’t let her die!”
For the next week Scarlett crept about the house like a stricken animal, waiting for news, starting at every sound of horses’ hooves, rushing down the dark stair at night when soldiers came tapping at the door, but no news came from Tara. The width of the continent might have spread between her and home instead of twentyfive miles of dusty road.
The mails were still disrupted, no one knew where the Confederates were or what the Yankees were up to. No one knew anything except that thousands of soldiers, gray and blue, were somewhere between Atlanta and Jonesboro.
Not a word from Tara in a week.
Scarlett had seen enough typhoid in the Atlanta hospital to know what a week meant in that dread disease.
Ellen was ill, perhaps dying, and here was Scarlett helpless in Atlanta with a pregnant woman on her hands and two armies between her and home.
Ellen was ill—perhaps dying.
But Ellen couldn’t be ill!
She had never been ill.
The very thought was incredible and it struck at the very foundations of the security of Scarlett’s life.
Everyone else got sick, but never Ellen.