The Sword of Antietam
CONTENTS I. CEDAR MOUNTAIN II. AT THE CAPITAL III. BESIDE THE RIVER IV. SPRINGING THE TRAP V. THE SECOND MANASSAS VI. THE MOURNFUL FOREST VII. ORDERS NO. 191 VIII. THE DUEL IN THE PASS IX. ACROSS THE STREAM X. ANTIETAM
It made little impression that he had toiled and sweated early and late
in this struggle to get in somewhere--army, navy, air-service--anything
to follow the flag. He wasn't allowed. He was still a reporter on the
_Daybreak_ while the biggest doings of humanity were getting done, and
every young son of America had his chance to help. With a strong,
tireless body aching for soldier's work, America, his mother, refused
him work. He wasn't allowed.
Lance groaned, sitting in his one big chair in his one small room. There
were other problems. A Liberty Loan drive was on, and where could he lay
hands on money for bonds? He had plunged on the last loan and there was
yet something to pay on the $200 subscription. And there was no one and
nothing to fall back on except his salary as reporter for the
_Daybreak._ His father had died when he was six, and his mother eight
years ago; his small capital had gone for his four years, at Yale. There
was no one--except a legend of cousins in the South. Never was any one
poorer or more alone. Yet he must take a bond or two. How might he hold
up his head not to fight and not to buy bonds. A knock at the door.
"Come in," growled Lance.
The door opened, and a picture out of a storybook stood framed and
smiling. One seldom sees today in the North the genuine old-fashioned
negro-woman. A sample was here in Lance's doorway. A bandanna of red and
yellow made a turban for her head; a clean brownish calico dress stood
crisply about a solid and waistless figure, and a fresh white apron
CONTENTS I. CEDAR MOUNTAIN II. AT THE CAPITAL III. BESIDE THE RIVER IV. SPRINGING THE TRAP V. THE SECOND MANASSAS VI. THE MOURNFUL FOREST VII. ORDERS NO. 191 VIII. THE DUEL IN THE PASS IX. ACROSS THE STREAM X. ANTIETAM