Thomas Dixon.
CONTENTS
| PAGE | ||
| PROLOGUE | [3] | |
| CHAPTER | ||
| I | The Curtain Rises | [69] |
| II | The Parting | [82] |
| III | A Midnight Session | [100] |
| IV | A Friendly Warning | [107] |
| V | Boy and Girl | [109] |
| VI | God's Will | [115] |
| VII | The Best Man Wins | [120] |
| VIII | The Storm Center | [125] |
| IX | The Old Régime | [137] |
| X | The Gauge of Battle | [145] |
| XI | Jennie's Vision | [156] |
| XII | A Little Cloud | [164] |
| XIII | The Closing of the Ranks | [166] |
| XIV | Richmond in Gala Dress | [179] |
| XV | The House on Church Hill | [189] |
| XVI | The Flower-Decked Tent | [195] |
| XVII | The Fatal Victory | [201] |
| XVIII | The Aftermath | [219] |
| XIX | Socola's Problem | [233] |
| XX | The Anaconda | [242] |
| XXI | Gathering Clouds | [245] |
| XXII | Jennie's Recruit | [257] |
| XXIII | The Fatal Blunder | [264] |
| XXIV | The Sleeping Lioness | [274] |
| XXV | The Bombardment | [284] |
| XXVI | The Irreparable Loss | [305] |
| XXVII | The Light that Failed | [315] |
| XXVIII | The Snare of the Fowler | [326] |
| XXIX | The Panic in Richmond | [336] |
| XXX | The Deliverance | [350] |
| XXXI | Love and War | [360] |
| XXXII | The Path of Glory | [363] |
| XXXIII | The Accusation | [385] |
| XXXIV | The Turn of the Tide | [392] |
| XXXV | Suspicion | [406] |
| XXXVI | The Fatal Deed | [409] |
| XXXVII | The Raiders | [417] |
| XXXVIII | The Discovery | [424] |
| XXXIX | The Conspirators | [440] |
| XL | In Sight of Victory | [447] |
| XLI | The Fall of Richmond | [459] |
| XLII | The Capture | [470] |
| XLIII | The Victor | [484] |
| XLIV | Prison Bars | [487] |
| XLV | The Master Mind | [496] |
| XLVI | The Torture | [501] |
| XLVII | Vindication | [506] |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
| "The man in front gave a short laugh and advanced on the girl" | Frontispiece |
| "'You have given me new eyes—'" | [47] |
| "'We have won, sir!' was the short curt answer" | [217] |
| "Dick saluted and sprang into the saddle— 'I understand,sir'" | [310] |
| "Jennie thrust her trembling little figure between the two men and confronted Dick" | [390] |
| "'Do your duty— put them on him!'" | [491] |