Miss Lou
Miss Lou
Book Excerpt
cavalrymen, whom she
knew to be Federals from their blue uniforms, galloped into view and
passed on in the direction of the forest. One of the group turned
his horse sharply behind the concealing copse and spurred directly
toward her. She had only time to throw up her hands and utter an
involuntary cry of warning about the steep bank, when the horse
sprang through the treacherous shrubbery and fell headlong into the
stream. The rider saw his peril, withdrew his feet from the
stirrups, and in an instinctive effort for self-preservation, threw
himself forward, falling upon the sand almost at the young girl's
feet. He uttered a groan, shivered, and became insensible. A moment
or two later a band in gray galloped by wholly intent upon the
Federals, who had disappeared spurring for the woods, and she
recognized her cousin, Madison Whately, leading the pursuit. Neither
he nor any of his party looked her way, and it was evident that the
Union soldier who had so abruptly diverged from the road behind the
screening c
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