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The Guns of Bull Run - A story of the civil war's eve by Joseph A. (Joseph Alexander) Altsheler
page 29 of 330 (08%)

"We are," they said, all together.

"I shall be glad and proud to go," said Harry, speaking for the first
time.

"I knew it without asking you," said Colonel Kenton. "I suggest to you,
friends, that he start before dawn, and that he go to Winton instead
of the nearest station. We wish to avoid observation and suspicion.
The fewer questions he has to answer, the better it will be for all of
us."

They agreed with him again, and, in order that he might be fresh and
strong for his journey, Harry was sent to his bedroom. Everything
would be made ready for him, and Colonel Kenton would call him at the
appointed hour. As he withdrew he bade them in turn good night, and
they returned his courtesy gravely.

It was one thing to go to his room, but it was another to sleep.
He undressed and sat on the edge of the bed. Only when he was alone did
he realize the tremendous change that had come into his life. Nor into
his life alone, but into the lives of all he knew, and of millions more.

It had ceased snowing and the wind was still. The earth was clothed
in deep and quiet white, and the pines stood up, rows of white cones,
silvered by the moonlight. Nothing moved out there. No sound came.
He felt awed by the world of night, and the mysterious future which must
be full of strange and great events.

He lay down between the covers and, although sleep was long in coming,
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