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enough for only one horse at a time. Billy, of course, led, Harry followed, and Dalton brought up the rear. The path, evidently a short cut used by farmers, was enclosed by great oaks, beeches and elms, now in full leaf, and it was dark there. Only a slit of moonlight showed from above, and the figures of the three riders grew shadowy.

β€œThey'll never find us here, will they, Billy?” said Harry.

β€œNot one chance in a thousand. Them Yankees don't know a thing about the country. Anyway, if they should come into the path at the other end, we'd hear them long before they heard us.”

β€œYou're right, Billy, and as we ride on we'll all three listen with six good ears.”

β€œYes, sir,” said Billy.

Harry, although only a boy himself, was so much older than Billy, who addressed him as β€œsir,” that he felt himself quite a veteran.

β€œBilly,” he said, β€œhow did it happen that you were riding down this way, so far from home, to-day?”

β€œ'Cause we heard there was Yanks in the Gap. Ma won't let me go an' fight with Stonewall Jackson. She says I ain't old enough an' big enough, but she told me herself to get on the horse an' ride down this way, an' see if what we heard was true. I saw 'em in little bunches, an' then that gang come to our house to-night, less 'n ten minutes after I come back. We'll be at a creek, sir, in less than five minutes. It runs down from the mountains, an' it's pretty deep with all them big spring rains. I guess we'll have to swim, sir. We could go lower down, where there's always a ford, but that's where the Yankees would be crossing.”

β€œWe'll swim, if necessary, Billy.”

β€œWhen even the women and little children fight for us, the South will be hard to conquer,” was Harry's thought, but he said no more until they reached the creek, which was indeed swollen by the heavy rains, and was running swiftly, a full ten feet in depth.

β€œHold on, Billy, I'll lead the way,” said Harry.

But Billy was already in the stream, his short legs drawn up, and his horse swimming strongly. Harry and Dalton followed without a word, and the three emerged safely on the eastern side.

β€œYou're a brave swimmer, Billy,” said Harry admiringly.

β€œ'Tain't nothin, sir. I didn't swim. It was my horse. I guess he'd take me across the Mississippi itself. I wouldn't have anything to do but stick on his back. Look up, sir, an' you can see the mountains close by.”

Harry and Dalton looked up through the rift in the trees, and saw almost over them the lofty outline of the Blue Ridge, the eastern rampart of the valley, heavy with forest from base to top.

β€œWe must be near the Gap,” said Dalton.

β€œWe are,” said Billy. β€œWe've been coming fast. It's nigh on to fifteen miles from here to home.”

β€œAnd must be a full thirty to Harper's Ferry,” said Dalton.

β€œDoes this path lead to some point overlooking the Gap,” asked Harry, β€œwhere we can see the enemy if he's there, and he can't see us?”

β€œYes, sir. We can ride on a slope not more than two miles from here and look right down into the Gap.”

β€œAnd if troops are there we'll be sure to see their fires,” said Dalton. β€œLead on, Billy.”

Billy led with boldness and certainty. It was the greatest night of his life, and he meant to fulfill to the utmost what he deemed to be his duty. The narrow path still wound among mighty trees, the branches of which met now and then over their heads, shutting out the moonlight entirely. It led at this point toward the north and they were rapidly ascending a shoulder of the mountain, leaving the Gap on their right.

Harry, riding on such an errand, felt to the full the weird quality of mountains and forest, over which darkness and silence brooded. The foliage was very heavy, and it rustled now and then as the stray winds wandered along the slopes of the Blue Ridge. But for that and the hoofbeats of their own horses, there was no sound save once, when they heard a scuttling on the bark of a tree. They saw nothing, but Billy pronounced it a wildcat, alarmed by their passage.

The three at length came out on a level place or tiny plateau. Billy, who rode in advance, stopped and the others stopped with him.

β€œLook,” said the boy, pointing to the bottom of the valley, about five hundred feet below.

A fire burned there and they could discern men around it, with horses in the background.

β€œYankees,” said Billy. β€œLook at 'em through the glasses.”

Harry raised his glasses and took a long look. They had the full moonlight where they stood and the fire in the valley below was also a help. He saw that the camp was made by a strong cavalry force. Many of them were asleep in their blankets, but the others sat by the fire and seemed to be talking.

Then he passed the glasses to Dalton, who also, after looking long and well, passed them to Billy, as a right belonging to one who had been their real leader, and who shared equally with them their hardships and dangers.

β€œHow large would you say that force is, George?” asked Harry.

β€œThree or four hundred men at least. There's a great bunch of horses. I should judge, too, from the careless way they've camped, that they've no fear of being attacked. How many do you think they are, Billy?”

β€œJust about what you said, Cousin George. Are you going to attack them?”

Harry and Dalton laughed.

β€œNo, Billy,” replied Dalton. β€œYou see we're only three, and there must be at least three hundred down there.”

β€œBut we've been hearin' that Stonewall Jackson's men never mind a hundred to one,” said Billy, in an aggrieved tone. β€œWe hear that's just about what they like.”

β€œNo, Billy, my boy. We don't fight a hundred to one. Nobody does, unless it's like Thermopylae and the Alamo.”

β€œThen what are we going to do?” continued Billy in his disappointed tone.

β€œI think, Billy, that Harry and I are going to dismount, slip down the mountainside, see what we can see, hear what we can hear, and that you'll stay here, holding and guarding the horses until we come back.”

β€œI won't!” exclaimed Billy in violent indignation. β€œI won't, Cousin George. I'm going down the mountain with you an' Mr. Kenton.”

β€œNow, Billy,” said Dalton soothingly, β€œyou've got a most important job here. You're the reserve, and you also hold the means of flight. Suppose we're pursued hotly, we couldn't get away without the horses that you'll hold for us. Suppose we should be taken. Then it's for you to gallop

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