David Healey - Rebel Train

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Rebel Train: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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In a daring plan, the Confederate Secret Service sends a group of cavalrymen to kidnap, or kill, President Abraham Lincoln by seizing the train secretly carrying him to Gettysburg on the eve of his famous Address.
Colonel Arthur Percy leads the rebel raiders into enemy territory. His crew includes Tom Flynn, an assassin sent to make sure Percy follows orders — or dies trying.
Lincoln is not the only valuable cargo on the train. A fortune in Union payroll is the target of a Baltimore belle and a tough gambler.
The situation is further complicated when the original crew of the seized train finds another locomotive and gives chase.
Based on a true story, Rebel Train runs a mile a minute in a steam-driven race through the farmlands and mountains of Maryland and Virginia. The outcome will decide not only the fate of Lincoln and the Raiders, but of the Union and the Confederacy.

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He would go on, with or without them. He vowed to chase the bastards who had stolen his train to hell and back if necessary. Frost and Schmidt would come along. As conductor, they did as he told them. Even if they refused, Greer was determined to bully them into it.

Captain Lowell was another matter. Even a B&O Railroad conductor held no power over a Union officer. Besides, Greer knew well enough that the captain’s duty was to protect the Monocacy River crossing, not chase train thieves. Greer had been a soldier just long enough before being wounded at Bull Run to know that an officer was best off following orders. Nothing more, nothing less.

Greer decided to take a chance. He needed the captain and the soldiers if he was going to stop the train thieves. He clenched his fists at his sides and looked the captain in the face, then raised his voice so the soldiers nearby could hear clearly: “You’re a damned coward, Captain.”

Captain Lowell could not have looked more surprised if the conductor had slapped him. “What did you say?”

Greer took a deep breath. “I called you a goddamn coward. You and your men.”

Lowell reddened. “Look here, Mr. Greer—”

Greer raised his voice even louder to make certain all the soldiers could hear him. “You’re scared of what might happen when we catch up to these train thieves. Scared . Scared they might turn out to have guns and that there might be a fight. Hell, most of you are conscripts who ain’t worth a drink of piss. I reckon now I know why they set you to guarding a railroad bridge in the middle of nowhere.” Greer sneered at them, then looked at Frost and Schmidt. “Come on, let’s go.”

Then Greer turned to leave.

“Wait!”

The captain took the bait. Greer spun to face him. Beyond Captain Lowell, the eyes of his men snapped with anger. No man can stand being accused of cowardice.

The captain himself was so enraged his voice shook, and he was obviously struggling to keep it under control. “You have no right to speak to me that way, Greer. I am a Union officer.”

“Then act like one. The three of us are going after those train thieves. You can come or not.”

Greer turned again and started off. He said a silent prayer that the soldiers would follow him. He had walked twenty feet when he finally heard the captain curse, then bark out an order. The boots of twenty men on the move behind him was music to his ears.

“Tighten it up,” Lowell ordered. “Fast march. We’ll move ahead another couple miles, and if we don’t find anything, we’ll turn around.”

Greer didn’t look back. He had been holding his breath, unsure of what the soldiers would do. For now, they would keep on going. Greer kept his eyes on the beacon of smoke ahead and kept moving.

• • •

Just a few miles away, the Rebel raiders also had their eyes on the horizon ahead.

“It’s another train,” Percy said, studying the smoke. “Eastbound. We had best get going before she gets here.”

Flynn nodded and took the still-unconscious Lieutenant Cater by the shoulders. “Easy,” he said. “The last thing we want to do is have this wound start bleeding again.”

Still unconscious, Cater groaned as they loaded him onto the makeshift stretcher.

“He looks bad, Colonel,” Pettibone said.

Percy didn’t say anything.

“He might come around,” Flynn said, adding another strip of cloth to the blood-stained bandage. He had doctored his share of ugly wounds on the battlefield and in the back alleys of Baltimore and Richmond, and he was always amazed by how hard people were to kill. “I’ve seen worse, and he’s a strong lad.”

Colonel Percy nodded. There was a sadness about the sharp blue eyes. Already, he had lost so many good boys from back home in the war. Silas Cater was the first of his men to be wounded during this impossible mission. Percy knew they would be very lucky if the lieutenant turned out to be the only casualty.

“Carry him forward,” Percy said. “Put him on the second passenger train. It’s that much closer. Cook, you stay here to guard Lincoln’s car until I send Hudson and Pettibone back to relieve you.”

The truth was that the colonel just didn’t trust John Cook. The man might have been a decent soldier, but he had also been a small-time livestock thief back home. With Cater wounded, Percy wasn’t about to leave him alone. Hudson and Pettibone were far more trustworthy and capable.

With a man at each corner of the stretcher, they started forward. They moved quickly, taking care not to jostle the injured officer. Each of them kept glancing toward the smoke of the approaching train. The B&O line was double-tracked, meaning one set of rails carried trains west, the other set east, so there was no danger of a head-on collision between trains headed in opposite directions.

The oncoming train could mean one of two things, none of them good. It was possible news of the raid had somehow been telegraphed ahead, after all, and this approaching train might be loaded with soldiers, sent to head them off. In which case they would have a fight on their hands. The second possibility was simply that this was just an eastbound train bound for Baltimore. However, if the Chesapeake didn’t get underway before the oncoming train came into sight, it would stop to see what was wrong, and there would be trouble. Even if it didn’t stop, the train had spotted them and would be carrying news toward whatever pursuers trailed behind.

“Come on, boys,” Percy urged them. “Hurry it up.”

As they carried the stretcher aboard the passenger car, Henrietta Parker let out a gasp at the sight of the wounded lieutenant swaddled in bloody bandages.

“A wounded Rebel!” She sounded pleased.

Captain Fletcher stood, mouth wide open, and stared at Cater. He was the only one of the raiders who had never been in combat. His face was pale.

“Is he—”

“Clear a space, Captain!” Percy barked at him. “Clear a space!”

Only young Johnny Benjamin had the sense to keep an eye on the passengers, one hand resting on the handle of his holstered Colt.

They lifted Silas Cater off the stretcher and laid him on the floor between the rows of seats. Percy walked to the head of the car, turned, and faced the passengers. It was clear that the colonel was about to make a statement of some kind, and they waited expectantly.

“Contrary to what some of you may think, we are not barbarians.”

Mrs. Parker made an indignant noise, which Percy quickly silenced with a glance from his steely eyes.

“We are not in the business of taking hostages,” he continued. “You have been kept on this train for military purposes, not criminal ones. Those who have died did so in armed opposition to us, and suffered the consequences. Thus are the rules of war.” Percy paused, his eyes lingering for a moment on the unconscious Lieutenant Cater. “However, you will be relieved to know the time has come for us to part company. Please gather your belongings and Sergeant Flynn will escort you from the train.”

There was a murmur of relief from the passengers, who were more than happy to escape the train and the bloody business of the Rebel raid. Three passengers had already been killed: the two overly heroic Yankee soldiers and Charles Gilmore. The rest were glad to get off alive. At least, most of them would be, Flynn decided, thinking of Nellie’s lost opportunity for a fortune in Yankee greenbacks.

Mrs. Parker spoke up, sounding alarmed. “You’re putting us off here? In this wilderness? In the middle of nowhere? There’s not a house, not so much as a farm—”

“That’s precisely the idea, ma’am,” Percy said, touching the brim of his hat in a gallant gesture.

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