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The Andre Norton Megapack - 15 Classic Novels and Short Stories

The Andre Norton Megapack - 15 Classic Novels and Short Stories

Titel: The Andre Norton Megapack - 15 Classic Novels and Short Stories Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Andre Norton
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had not had to deliver that blow, a small relief which did not, however, lighten his sense of responsibility.
    “How’d he take it?”
    “Quiet—on the surface.”
    The Boyd who once would have fought stubbornly to get his own way, the Boyd who would have pulled himself out of that big rocker and announced fiercely that he was riding home whether the doctor said Yes or No—that Boyd was gone. Perhaps this new acceptance of hard facts was a matter of growing up. Drew clung to that. There was little he could do, except not go home without him.
    “The kid’s gonna be all right?”
    “Doc hopes so, if he takes it easy.”
    “Ever feel like this heah war’s runnin’ down?”
    “I don’t see how we can keep on much longer.”
    “Some of the boys are talkin’ Texas. Git us down theah an’ we can go off—be a republic again. Wouldn’t be the first time the Tejanos stood up all by themselves. Supposin’ this fightin’ heah stops…you ridin’ for Texas?”
    “I might.”
    Kirby slapped his hand on the horn of his Mexican saddle. “Now that’s what an hombre wants to hear. You change pasture on a good colt, makes him even fatter! Come blue bellies all ovah this heah territory, we jus’ shift range. An’ nobody gonna take Texas! Even the horny toads would spit straight in a Yankee’s eye—”
    “How ’bout it, Sarge?” They were at the cluster of rail-walled huts where the scouts had established a temporary headquarters. Webb hailed them from the door of one of those dwellings where he was rolling up the rubber cloth laid over corn husks to form the floor. “You Kaintuck bound?”
    “No. Ridin’ with you boys. Doc thinks Boyd can’t try it.”
    “Good enough, Sarge. We’re pullin’ out soon as Injun draws us some travelin’ rations. Jus’ enough to get us theah. We can eat off the Yankees later.”
    Since 1861 the clothing of the Confederate Army at large had never matched the colorful sketches hopefully issued by the Quartermaster General’s department. Perhaps in Richmond or some state capitol the gold-lace exponents did appear in tasteful and well-tailored gray with the proper insignia of rank. Forrest’s men, equipped from the first by the unwilling enemy, wore blue, a blue tempered tactfully and ingeniously by butternut shirts, dyed breeches—when there was time to do any dyeing—and slouch hats. But as Drew rode out with his squad he might have been leading a Union rather than a Rebel patrol, which, of course, was part of the necessary cover for venturing into the jaws of a very alert lion.
    Parts of West Tennessee were still Confederate-held and through those they rode openly. But the countryside could offer them nothing in the way of forage. Two armies had stripped it bare during the past few months. Sometimes foraging parties on opposite sides had been known to combine forces under a private truce, or had fought brisk, bitter skirmishes to decide which would collect the spoils. If there remained a hog or chicken still running loose, it certainly possessed the power of invisibility.
    They slipped across the river in one of the boats kept by local contacts acting in the scouts’ service. Drew questioned the boy who owned their transportation.
    “Sure they’s bummers-out. Yankees say they’s ourn, but they ain’t!” he returned indignantly. “They ain’t ridin’ for nobody but their own selves. Cut off a Yankee an’ shoot him for the boots on his feet—do the same if they want a hoss. Git ketched an’ they tell as how they’s scouts, workin’ secret-like. Scouts o’ ourn—if we ketch ’em; Yankees—do the blue bellies take ’em. But they ain’t nothin’ but lowdown trash as nobody wants, for sure!” He dug his pole into the water as if he were impaling a guerrilla on it. “They’s mean, plenty mean, suh. Don’t go foolin’ ’round them!”
    “Any special place they hang out?” Drew wanted to know.
    The boy shook his head. “Oh, they holes up now an’ then somewheahs. But they’s a lotta empty houses ’bout nowadays. An’ the bummers kin hide out good without no one knowin’ they be theah—till they git ready to jump. Cut off a supply wagon or raid a farm or somethin’ like that.”
    “Ridin’ the south side of the law.” Kirby settled his gun belt in a more comfortable circle about his thin middle. “Bet they know all the tricks of hoppin’ back an’ forth ’cross the border ahead of the sheriff, too. Time somebody collected bounty on

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