The Fury of El Tigre
By B.S. Dunn
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B.S. Dunn
Brent Towns is an Australian author who writes under several other names such as B S Dunn, Sam Clancy and Jake Henry, as well as his own. He has written 17 Westerns to date. He lives in Queensland, Australia with his wife and young son.
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The Fury of El Tigre - B.S. Dunn
Prologue
Shiloh, afternoon 6 April 1862
Hell is a place on earth. Or so it seemed at that moment in time, what with the carnage of war surrounding the desperate Union troops as they fought for their lives in the place that would become known as the Hornet’s Nest.
Up to this point, the Confederates had thrown brigade after brigade into the Hornet’s Nest, and still the stubborn Yankees held on. Commanders such as A.P. Stewart, Shaver, Patton, Anderson and Wood, all sent their battle-hardened men forward, only to be thrown back by the resolute Federal resistance.
Then came the artillery.
Between fifty and sixty cannons commanded by Brigadier General Daniel Ruggles threw shot after shot into that stand of trees split by a sunken road. The once living, breathing vegetation was now a mass of shredded sticks only suitable for kindling. Amidst it all were the soldiers of generals W.H.L. Wallace, Prentiss and Hurlbut.
On the right flank, Sherman and McClernand had already fallen back to re-form along the heights of a ravine.
Altogether, the Rebs had gathered some fourteen brigades. The Union troops were outnumbered, outgunned, and staring down the barrel of disaster.
‘Captain Reynolds?’ a soldier shouted. ‘Captain Reynolds?’
Jack Reynolds fired another shot from his 1860 Army Colt, and the figure he was aiming for, dressed in Confederate grey and carrying a musket complete with bayonet, disappeared behind the cloud of blue-grey gunsmoke that spewed forward. When it cleared, he was gone.
‘Captain Reynolds?’ the voice shouted again.
‘Over here!’ Reynolds called back.
Hurrying across to the man he sought, the soldier found himself standing before a six-foot tall, powerfully built officer with dark hair and matching facial hair. The face was lined, and from beneath a battered campaign hat, steel-grey eyes stared out.
‘What can I do for you, Sergeant?’ Reynolds asked, as another Reb ball fizzed past his head.
‘General Hurlbut has been forced to withdraw, sir,’ the sergeant shouted above the sound of musket fire. ‘General Prentiss wants this side of the flank refused, so as to meet the Rebs as they come on, sir. The general told the colonel. The colonel told me, and I’m telling you. The 14th Iowa will be on your right when you swing your line. Others will link to them.’
Reynolds looked to his left and saw that the flank was indeed hanging in the wind and the Rebs were gathering in force to try and roll them up from that side. His men, part of the 23rd Missouri, were now the left of the line.
More cannon shots landed amongst the Union lines, leaving big holes in it where men had fallen or completely disappeared.
‘Shit,’ Reynolds cursed. ‘Take word back to the colonel that we’ll refuse his line and we shall await further orders.’
‘Yes, sir!’
Reynolds looked around his depleted line. Troubled eyes searched for his second-in-command, Lieutenant Lucius Frame. He grabbed a corporal from the line in front of him and barked loud enough for the man to hear.
‘Find Lieutenant Frame and have him report to me. Double-time it.’
‘Yes, sir.’
Somewhere further along the line, case-shot exploded and stripped a handful of men from an already thin line. To the Union front, a long row of Confederate troops stopped and shouldered arms. They sighted along their musket barrels, and upon command, fired as one, the sound rippling along a line soon to be consumed in powder smoke.
The cries of Union troops sounded through the din as lead balls found their target. One man had part of his face shot away, another took three balls in his guts. Even more took wounds that were ghastly to see. Ones that would eventually cost arms or legs.
‘Close the gap in the line!’ Reynolds shouted at his men. ‘Fill the damned holes! Keep up the fire!’
Suddenly, Lieutenant Frame appeared beside him. ‘You wanted me, sir?’
‘Yes. It would seem that General Hurlbut has pulled back and left our flank exposed. I’ve orders to refuse the line on the left before the Rebs roll us up. See to it. And make sure every man has some ammunition. The Iowa boys will be on our right.’
‘Yes, sir.’
Frame hurried away and began to organize the line. It wasn’t long before he had them turned at ninety degrees to the firing line and moving left to allow the 14th Iowa, 3rd Iowa, 18th Wisconsin, 21st Missouri and others to link in with them. They would be ready to meet the new onslaught when it came.
‘Runner!’ Reynolds cried out. ‘Smith, on me!’
A young private with a grime-covered face came across to Reynolds, looking up at him with red and tear-filled eyes from the harshness of the powder smoke the firing line produced.
‘Yes, sir?’
Reynolds opened his mouth to speak when a sharp crack sounded, and a Reb musket ball smashed into the private’s head, making it snap to the side. The man fell into a heap at the captain’s feet.
‘Damn it,’ Reynolds cursed. He stepped forward to the firing line and pulled a private out of it. ‘I need you to find the colonel and tell him we’ve refused the line and are expecting to be able to hold the Rebs.’
‘Yes, sir.’
Immediately to the front of the 23rd Missouri, the Confederate forces were starting to fall back. Not surprising, considering the amount of fire the Union troops were pouring into them. The lead being flung at the Rebs seemed to be cutting them down in rows.
Yet although they had withdrawn, the Union troops were still in dire trouble. Their right and left flank had withdrawn, leaving the centre to fend for themselves in a patch of wooded hell where the bodies were piling up fast.
Then as the Confederate forces gathered themselves for another assault, the cannons commenced firing again and steel rain once more opened large gaps along the front of the defensive line. Huge eruptions of earth shot skyward, and every now and then contained the remnants of a trooper.
When the cannon fire ceased five minutes later, Reynolds could see the enemy troops forming to their front.
‘Get ready, men!’ he heard Sergeant Jim Curtis shout. ‘Remember, hold the line. I’ll shoot any man who takes a backward step. You’re the 23rd Missouri, and I’ll not have any of you tarnishing that wonderful name.’
Jim Curtis was, of all things, from Texas. The men looked up to him, and Reynolds was pleased to have such a backbone for them to rely on.
There was movement at Reynolds’ side and he turned to face the private he’d sent with the message for the general.
‘Report, private,’ Reynolds urged the wide-eyed man.
‘The – ahh – the general sends his – ahh. . . .’
‘Yes, yes,’ Reynolds cut him short, ‘get on with it.’
‘The Rebs are getting in behind our lines, sir, and the general said to be ready to withdraw at a moment’s notice.’
Reynolds was nodding when something occurred to him. ‘Private, why are you telling me this and not the colonel?’
He’d not thought about it earlier when the sergeant had first approached him, and for that to happen meant. . . .
‘The colonel is dead, sir,’ the private said, confirming his suspicions.
Reynolds nodded, a grim expression on his face. What he’d give to be back home about now. ‘All right. Find Lieutenant Frame and tell him of our new orders. Then report back to me.’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘One more thing,’ Reynolds said, stopping him. ‘Your name. What is it?’
‘Hunt, sir.’
‘All right, Hunt. Carry on.’
‘Here they come!’ Reynolds heard Curtis’ shouted warning.
On cue, the trees filled with a rousing Rebel yell which was immediately followed by the staccato sound of the Union line opening fire. The men in Reynolds’ company stood shoulder to shoulder, steadily loading and firing.
After the battle was finished, the Confederate survivors who fought in the place that would be known as The Hornet’s Nest would recall of those opposite, ‘The air was filled with so much lead that I saw a bird walking across it. There was no need for him to fly.’
Something tugged at Reynolds’ left sleeve and when he looked down he saw a tear in his jacket. Although it wasn’t the only one. He counted four others.
Reynolds noticed a concentrated Confederate push to the left, towards a gap that had opened tantalizingly wide. If they got through that breach then the line would disintegrate and the Rebs would roll up the line.
‘Every third man drop out and move to your left!’ Reynolds shouted at his men.
The cry was taken up by the NCOs along the line and almost immediately men were falling out of the line and moving to fuse the gap on the left.
Reynolds spotted Curtis moving with them. ‘Sergeant Curtis!’
Curtis halted. ‘Sir?’
There was a fresh cut on the sergeant’s right cheek and a thin trickle of blood had streaked his grime-covered face.
‘You hold that line,’ Reynolds ordered. ‘I don’t care how. But you hold it.’
‘We’ll hold it, sir,’ the Texan growled.
‘Take care, Jim,’ Reynolds said.
‘That’ll be the day, Captain,’ the sergeant said with a smile, then noticed the captain looking toward the Confederate line.
‘See to the men.’
‘Yes, sir.’
The crackle of musketry ebbed and flowed along the line and still the Rebs came on. Reynolds saw an officer out front waving a sabre in the air, encouraging his men onwards.
‘Can’t have that,’ Reynolds growled.
‘Corporal Murphy!’ the captain called out.
‘Sir!’
The voice came from in front of Reynolds where a tall man stood almost within reach.
‘That damned Johnny Reb out there waving that toothpick around like a madman. You see him?’
‘Yes,