[The Sword of Antietam by Joseph A. Altsheler]@TWC D-Link book
The Sword of Antietam

CHAPTER IV
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They carried only three days' rations, expecting to feed off the enemy at the end of that time.

Near midnight they lay down and slept a while, but long before dawn they were in line again marching over the hills and across the mountains.

There were skirmishers in advance on either side, but they met no Union scouts.

The march of Jackson's great fighting column was still unseen and unsuspected.

A single Union scout or a message carried by a woman or child might destroy the whole plan, as a grain of dust stops all the wheels and levers of a watch, but neither the scout, the woman nor the child appeared.
Toward dawn the marching Southerners heard far behind them the thunder of guns along the Rappahannock.


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