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Greer picked himself off the ground. His left knee hurt fiercely, and his right ankle felt as if it had been twisted. He tested his legs, gradually putting his full weight on them. Nothing broken, he thought. Up ahead, he watched the train—his train — move faster and faster down the tracks, spouting great gouts of thick, black smoke as the locomotive picked up speed.

He clenched his fists in helpless rage. He should have known the thieves would tear up the rails. How could he have been so stupid?

"We'll never catch her now," said Schmidt, shaking himself like a bear as he crawled out of the brush lining the tracks. He uttered some choice Teutonic oaths, untangled a prickly strand of thorns from his sleeve, and dabbed at a gash on his forehead. "If we hadn't jumped, we'd have broken our necks."

They both stared down at the overturned push car. Aside from being upside down, it otherwise appeared undamaged. The wheels spun on, like a dog chasing rabbits in its dreams.

"At least it didn't go all the way down the ravine," Schmidt commented.

"We won't be getting that out of there anytime soon," Greer said. "Damn those bastards."

"Who are they, do you think?" Schmidt asked. "What do they want with our train?"

"To hell if I know. I guess it must be the payroll money they're after," Greer replied. He looked around. "Now, where the hell is Frost?"

They had been expecting him to appear out of the brush at any moment, but Frost was nowhere to be seen. Concerned, Greer and Schmidt began searching for him in the thick undergrowth that lined the tracks. The tangle of sumac, briars and poison ivy could hide a man until you stepped on him. Brush and rocks also were a favorite lair for poisonous copperhead snakes, so the two men kicked at the brush carefully.

"Frost?" Greer called. "Where in hell are you?"

"I hope he didn't break his Gott damn neck," Schmidt said. "I don't want to carry him all the way back to Baltimore."

"Just keep looking."

They heard a groan, and both men rushed toward the noise. Frost was on all fours, trying to extricate himself from a tangle of thorns. Schmidt reached down with a hand the size of a ham and pulled him free. Groggily, Frost got to his feet. He shook his head to clear it, coughed, and spat a stream of bloody phlegm toward the tracks. The thorns had carved a mosaic of cuts and scrapes on his face.

"Got knocked out cold," Frost said. "Must of landed on my damn head."

"Good thing it's hard," Schmidt remarked.

"You can just go to hell, Schmidt, you dumb Kraut. I damn near got killed. Hell, I believe I'm seeing double."

"All right, all right," Greer said. "Ain’t none of us feeling spry at the moment. But we'd best get on after our train."

Schmidt and Frost stared at him.

"What are you two gawking at?"

"Hell, Greer, we ain't going to catch that train now."

"Not standing around we ain't. Let's get moving." He turned and started toward the overturned hand car.

"You're crazy, Greer," Schmidt said. "You know that?"

Greer wheeled, his face contorted in anger. "Let me just remind you two goddamn fools of something. I'm the conductor—" he stabbed a finger at Schmidt, then Frost " — you're the engineer, and you're the fireman of that train." He pointed into the distance, where they could just see a plume of black smoke moving west, away from them. "That train is our responsibility, passengers and payroll money, too, and we allowed the train to be stolen and the passengers’ lives to be put in danger. I don't care if it was Rebels, horse thieves or Injuns that stole it, and the B&O Railroad ain't going to care. All that matters is that it got stolen. Now, if we catch that train, there might still be some chance of staying employed by the B&O. If we don't catch that train, we ain't going to have jobs on a train ever again. Nowhere, no how. Now, you tell me, are you jackasses going to help or not?"

Torn and bleeding, the two men looked stunned. Greer stared hard at them for a long moment, then turned abruptly and stomped over to the hand car, which lay half-buried in the weeds. He grabbed the frame and began tugging furiously at the car, trying to upright it, but it was too heavy for one man to move. Finally, Schmidt and Frost went to help. Once they raised the car enough for Schmidt to get his shoulder under it, they were able to tip the car back onto its wheels. That was the easy part. It was only after much swearing and sweating that they managed to wrestle the car back onto the tracks on the other side of the gap the raiders had made.

By then, the Chesapeake’s smoke was gone from the sky. Silently, the three men began pumping up and down, and the car rolled off in pursuit of the stolen train.

11 a.m., near Mount Airy, Maryland

Percy ordered another halt and had his men tear up more rails. Once again, the raiders found that sabotaging the tracks was far from easy, and tearing up just two rails took them much longer than it had last time.

The colonel had Willie Forbes cut the telegraph wires again, just in case the ones near Hood’s Mill were repaired. Percy knew the raid’s success relied heavily on surprise. If the Yankees were able to send telegraphs ahead, the train could be stopped at the next town or village by placing logs across the tracks or even by throwing a switch that would send the train onto a siding.

The colonel was so preoccupied with watching the tracks behind them that he didn’t hear Flynn walk up.

"They won't be catching up to us anytime soon," Flynn said. "You saw what happened when they hit that gap back at the Twin Arch Bridge."

"That's what we officers do, Flynn," Percy said. A note of bitterness crept into his voice. "We get paid to worry."

"Then you don’t get paid enough. Besides, there were only three men chasing us. It wouldn’t have been much of a fight."

"Maybe, maybe not.” Percy shrugged. At this point, we can't afford to lose anybody in a fight, so why take the chance? Our orders are to get Lincoln to Richmond, not fight Yankees. You should know that better than anyone."

"Then what about the passengers?” Flynn asked, ignoring Percy’s attempt to chastise him. “Do we put them off the train yet?"

Percy shook his head. "Not yet. The area we're in is too densely populated. They'll have cavalry down on us in no time. We've cut the telegraph wires here, but there must be others running north-south at every crossroads town. If a warning is sent north, the Yankees will be waiting for us at Harpers Ferry. So, the passengers stay. We can't have them fanning out through the countryside, sounding the alarm. No, the passengers stay on board for now."

"Whatever you say," Flynn said. "But you can be sure there will be more trouble with the passengers before the day is through."

Percy did not appear to be listening. He was staring down the tracks. "Damn," he said. “Don’t those people know when to give up?”

The hand car rolled into sight. The three men aboard pumped wildly as they raced toward the train.

"Jaysus, Mary and Joseph," Flynn said. "Sure, and the bastards have gumption, whoever they are. I can't believe they're still after us, after running off the tracks back at that bridge."

"You may get your fight after all, Flynn.” He turned and shouted, “Back on the train! "Let's get moving.”

The hand car was moving at a good clip and the engine was at a virtual standstill. It was obvious the pursuers would soon overtake the train.

"Here they come."