Friday Fiction: Freeman's Fight
Busy, busy busy, but I can't complain. I mean who would listen, right? What follows is a complete short story. Not military horror, not science fiction, just straight up historical fiction. Revolutionary War, southern campaign. There's historical context at the end. Enjoy it.
Freeman’s Fight: The Battle of Kings Mountain
By Mark H. Walker
“Damn them.”
Darius Freeman cursed as a Tory musket
ball smacked the maple beside him. Nearby, a pair of Patriots fired their long
rifles, the guns’ crack lost amid the din of battle. The rifles’ smoke mixed
with a hundred others on the slope, the acrid air tasting like copper on the
back of his throat, the gauzy grey discharge clouds obscuring the blue autumn
sky.
“Our Lord may well do that,” shouted
his long-time friend Jethro Benis, “but first we must send them to him.”
As if in reply, Tory muskets thundered
above them, their .75 caliber balls whipping through the branches over the men
like angry hornets, showering them with cut twigs, and severed leaves.
Darius and Jethro ducked, pulling
their heads down between hunched shoulders. Both were tall, rawboned men,
clothed in doeskin, with moccasins covering their feet, long hunting knives
belted at the waist. Each wore their hair long, tied back with leather cord.
Wild beards grew from their cheeks and chin. They were mountain men, frontiersmen,
from the west side of the Appalachians . Darius
farmed corn and bean bushes outside the small village
of Sycamore Shoals , along the bank of
the Watauga River . Jethro trapped in the mountains
to the east. They had
mustered with hundreds more at the Shoals when asked by
Isaac Shelby and John Sevier. The British had trounced Horatio Gates army at
Camden, and when Lord Charles Cornwallis sent British Major Patrick Ferguson to
clear out the Patriots from the remainder of the Carolinas, Darius, Jethro, and
all the others mustered to protect their land, to protect their families, and
to put paid to Ferguson and his army of Tory militia and Provincials.
Jethro rose from behind the boulder
protecting him and aimed down the 40-inch barrel of his long rifle, resting the
gun on top of the stone. One heartbeat,
two heartbeats, and the rifle boomed, flames shooting at least 18 inches from
the tip of the muzzle. The retort was loud, adding to the general cacophony of
battle—the shouts, screams, and booming firearms almost deafening. Jethro slid
to a sitting position to duck return fire as Darius turned to aim his weapon.
The Overmountain Men, as Darius and
his like were called, had marched from Sycamore Shoals, south through North Carolina , and across the border of South Carolina . They had
camped at Hannah’s Cowpens on the night of October 6, enduring a cold, autumn
rain, and then at last cornered Ferguson and his
troops on this rugged hump of ground—a hump of ground named Kings Mountain .
Darius caught a glimpse of red cloth
through the trees. It was hard to be sure; overgrowth clung thickly to the
sloping sides of the hill. Winter had not yet come and the trees were far from
sparse, the leaves of the maples brilliant orange and yellow, the oaks an aged
green, and the pine needles fresh, still damp from the previous day’s soaking.
The Overmountain Men’s enemies were like them, dressed in working clothes, but
most with a rag of red tied to a sleeve or stuck into a hatband.
But not like us, mused Darius. We are not murderers.
All of them heard the news back home.
They spoke in hushed tones at muster. “Did you hear ‘bout Lancaster ?”
one man asked, drawing on his corncob pipe, referring to the village north of Charleston .
Another spat on the ground, “Called it
a battle they did, the Battle of Waxhaws.”
“Twern’t no battle,” Corncob replied.
“It was a massacre. Them Continentals asked for quarter. Tarleton and his men
slaughtered them.” It was Corncob’s turn to spit. “Tarleton’s Quarter.”
Tarleton’s
Quarter. The words
flamed in Darius’s mind. Again, he caught sight of the red cloth on the crest
above them, and he squeezed the trigger. His long rifle bucked, spewing smoke
and flame. The wind shifted, clearing the air, and the red cloth was gone.
Darius put his back to the maple and
squinted through the canopy above. He figured it was about 3:15. They had been
fighting a short while. Around him, the other hundred or so of William
Campbell’s men fired hard at the Tory militia on the ridge above them. Many
Overmountain Men were moving towards the crest, running from tree to rock.
Darius couldn’t see where any of them were hurt yet. The Tories were terrible
shots, their muskets inaccurate, but you needed to watch out for their volleys.
One musket wasn’t much of a problem, but two hundred were.
William Campbell’s men fought on the
southern tip of the boot-shaped mountain. Across from them, Darius could catch
an occasional glimpse of John Sevier’s boys, shooting at the Tories in front of
them. To their left, Isaac Shelby had a group advancing up the west slope.
Darius knew that there were about a
thousand Patriots advancing on the hill. Campbell
had got his men started first, but Sevier and Shelby had joined in pretty quick, and from
what he heard while filling his canteen, a bunch of boys under the likes of Joe
McDowell and Ben Cleveland were aiming to attack the hill’s northern “toes” as
soon as they could get there.
His rifle loaded, Darius turned to
search for another target.
“They’re leaving us, Darius.”
Darius glanced at his friend, and
Jethro motioned with his chin at the rising ground. Sure enough, Darius saw
that most of Campbell ’s
men were further up the slope, running with a crouch toward the summit.
“Let’s go.” Darius took a step and
then froze as a clap of thunder rolled across the sky. Only it wasn’t thunder.
Smoke swirled on the slope, ahead of Darius several of the Overmountain Men
writhed on the ground. The Tories had volley fired into the advancing Patriots.
The realization no sooner struck Darius, than a war cry rose from the ridge,
and British Redcoats charged down the slope, the sun glinting off their lowered
bayonets. His hands grew sweaty on the rifle’s stock.
To his left a pair of men fired their
long rifles at the Redcoats. Darius saw a soldier fall, but the formation
advanced, a mounted officer at their fore, urging them on, blowing a silver
whistle, and pointing his saber directly at Darius.
A hand pulled at Darius's arm, and he
turned, surprised to find Jethro pulling him back. Hadn’t they been advancing but a moment before? Darius’s heart beat like a drum. All around
him, the Overmountain Men were running down the slope, trying to put as much
distance as possible between themselves and those glinting bayonets, and
without another thought, Darius ran.
**
“Damn them!”
Major Patrick Ferguson, formerly of
the 71st Foot, commander of the Loyalist forces at Kings Mountain ,
glared at the retreating rifleman. Damn
them to hell! Ferguson
knew he could end this battle here and now if the backwoods colonists would stand
and fight, but stand they would not. His Provincials’ charge had driven them
from the mountain’s slopes, but now the frontiersmen melted into the woods at
the mountain’s foot.
“Halt,” cried Ferguson . The sergeants yelled and bullied
the Provincials about him into a line.
“Reload,” a lanky, red-coated
lieutenant shouted. The Provincials responded by shaking powder in their
measuring caps and pouring it in their Brown Bess musket barrels. The man next
to Ferguson
began to push the lead ball with his ramrod when suddenly he collapsed into the
soldier behind him. Both fell, the front of the nearest man’s white smock
covered in blood. Two more men flopped backward, and a sergeant screamed, a
bloody flap of skin all that remained of his right ear.
“Fall back,” Ferguson bellowed, “Back to the ridge!”
**
“What’s the point?” Jethro gasped.
Darius slid behind a thick oak and reloaded, glancing at his winded friend as
he did so. Blood seeped from a tear in Jethro’s doeskin coat. Three inches
above his elbow, the ripped fabric bore mute testimony to a grazing musket
ball, not serious enough to send Jethro to the rear, but aggravating, symbolic
of the afternoon’s battle. Twice William Campbell’s riflemen had pushed within
a dozen yards of Kings
Mountain ’s summit, and
twice the British Redcoats had countercharged, driving them back to the bottom
of the mountain. Once while catching his breath, Darius witnessed the
Provincials do the same to Sevier’s boys.
Jethro was right, the skirmishing
seemed futile, a stalemate. Darius drew a long breath, sucking in the
smoke-laced air. His legs burned with fatigue, and the burning made him smile.
He was in the best of shape, a mountain man and farmer, capable of wringing a
living from this hard land. If he was tired, those Redcoats had to be
exhausted. One more push might do the trick. He focused his grin on Jethro.
“I’ll tell you the point.”
Ignoring Jethro’s quizzical
expression, Darius stepped from the oak’s shadow. “The point is to kill them
Tories.” He pulled his rifle to his shoulder, fired, and looked back at his
friend. “Now let’s do it.”
Once again, Darius started up the
hill.
**
In front of Ferguson , the loyalist militia’s firing
intensified. Once again the mountain men were coming. Less than 170 of his
Provincials stood ready to fight. Those in the ranks leaned on their rifles,
those with water pulled heavily from their canteens, others tended to wounds on
themselves or their neighbors. The southern “heel” of the mountain roiled under
gun smoke, flaming muskets flashing within the swirling gray cloud. Ferguson blew hard on his
silver whistle.
“Sergeants, form the men!”
“Sergeants, forward … ” Piercing war
whoops rose from the northern “toes” of the hill, drowning Ferguson ’s words. Next came the popping of
individual muskets, and then a moment later a ragged volley. Ferguson stood in his stirrups, craning his
neck to see. Below him, the Provincials fidgeted uneasily, to their front the
loyalist militia cried for help.
Through the churning smoke on the far,
north end of the hill came Ferguson ’s
worst nightmare. Hordes of rebel militia swarmed over the crest on three sides,
swamping the loyalists.
**
Darius heard the war whoops as clearly
as Ferguson ,
and recognized them immediately. “It’s
Mcdowell’s boys,” he yelled to no one. “They’re catching them Tories in the
rear.”
At the crest, Darius parried a Tory’s
bayonet with his rifle, and drove the butt into his face, breaking his nose,
and dropping him like a rock. Next to him, Jethro fired, the ball catching a
green-coated Tory in the side of the head, felling the man like a tree. Darius
stopped to reload, his eyes sweeping the chaos in front of him. Most of the
Tory’s ran, some dropped their rifles and stood still; others kneeled,
screaming for mercy. The smoke parted, revealing a knot of Redcoats and Tory
militia who still resisted, led by the sword-bearing British officer.
Several Patriot rifles cracked and the
officer jumped as if stung by a bee. An instant latter he slid from his white
stallion, landing hard on his back. Darius aimed at the supine figure, but the
smoke hid the officer before he could fire.
“Quarter, give us quarter!” The fight
was gone from the Tories now. Everywhere the Overmountain Men poured onto the
hilltop. The Tories pleaded for mercy.
“They’re more of them up yonder,” a
near-toothless woodsman yelled as he ran past. Darius followed, heading to the
mountain’s northern summit. Sure enough, the toothless man was right. Hundreds
stood surrounded by Overmountain Men. Redcoats and Tories alike, their enemy
stood with their hands in the air or begged on bended knee for their life.
Darius lowered his rifle until the
ball sights rested on a pleading Redcoat. “Tarleton’s Quarter,” Darius
whispered, and he pulled the trigger.
###
Historical
Note
The Battle of Kings Mountain was
short. Approximately a thousand Overmountain Men from Tennessee ,
Virginia , and North Carolina fought a similar number of
Tory militia and red-coated Provincials, defeating them in a little over an
hour on the afternoon of October 7, 1780.
Colonel William Campbell led the
Overmountain Men, although the men tended to follow the leader that recruited
them, be it Campbell, Shelby, Mcdowell, or whoever, into battle. Ferguson commanded the Tories, the only British soldier on
Kings Mountain .
The Tories set their defenses on the
boot-shaped mountain’s edge. The Overmountain Men’s plan was simple: surround
and overwhelm the Tories, and that’s what they did. Loose groupings of
Overmountain Men from the same locale would advance up the slopes, the
frontiersmen’s long rifle taking a terrible toll on the loyalists above.
Brutality characterized the
Revolutionary War in the south. In fact, it was a civil war, Tory against
Patriot, and bloody reprisals, hangings, rape, and murder were commonplace.
After the Tories broke and Ferguson died, the Overmountain Men slaughtered
dozens of surrendering loyalists in retribution for Lieutenant-Colonel Banastre
Tarleton’s massacre of Continental soldiers at the Battle of Waxhaws, before Campbell
and Sevier regained control.
Darius Freeman and Jethro Benis are
typical, but fictitious Overmountain Men. I drew the characters from my
imagination, loads of research, and thirteen years of experience living among
their descendants. I also took a bit of poetic license with Major Ferguson’s
death. Most historians place his wounding and subsequent death at the north end
of the mountain. Darius appears to witness it just north of the southern crest.
###
Mark H.
Walker, U.S. Navy
(retired), served seventeen years active and six years reserve in the Navy as a
surface warfare officer and explosive ordnance disposal diver. He is the
designer of the award-winning Lock ‘n
Load and World at War game
systems, Night of Man, and '65 Squad Level Combat in Vietnam, and author of numerous novels and short stories.
Other Books by Mark
World at
War: Revelation
Desert
Moon
Epiphany
Total
Victory
The
Greatest Fear
Elevator
Connect with Mark
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Comments
Second, I wondered about the red armband the loyalist troops wear in your story. Is that an historical detail or an assumption on your part? I have read elsewhere that Loyalists wore white strips in other battles in the north or placed white in the brims of their hats.
Again, well done!