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Betrayed by the Old Fox: The General’s Last Stand / Chapter 1: The Edge of Legend
Betrayed by the Old Fox: The General’s Last Stand

Betrayed by the Old Fox: The General’s Last Stand

Author: Susan Rodriguez


Chapter 1: The Edge of Legend

The founding of the New Republic was inked in blood, forged in the roar of cannon fire and the screams of the dying. At the center of the storm stood General Nathaniel Quinn—unstoppable, unbreakable, and the Republic’s greatest hope. With every campaign, Quinn and his elite Blackridge Battalion seemed unbeatable, their legend swelling with every victory.

They’d say it later, by lantern light and in quiet kitchens—there was something uncanny about the way Quinn moved through battle, as if fate itself bent to let him pass. But his legend wasn’t just about victory. It was about the mud on his boots, the sweat on his brow, and the men whose hope he carried. On this day, though, death reached out and nearly claimed him—closer than a whisper, closer than a heartbeat.

So what happened?

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## July, 1863, The Civil War Years

The midsummer sun scorched the world, a white-hot brand overhead. At the sprawling camp outside Maple Heights, Ohio, General Nathaniel Quinn made his inspection.

Dust shimmered in the heat, the air thick with the coppery taste of nerves and sweat. Cicadas screamed in the trees, the sharp aroma of hardtack and burnt coffee wafting from tent to tent. The heat clung to every man, drawing salt stains on every collar.

From the rise, the Republic’s army looked like a living river—banners snapping, bayonets glinting, sweat and steel as far as the eye could see.

Men joked about their mothers’ pies and Kentucky bourbon, boots digging into the trampled bluegrass. Scribes hustled between tents, cooks cursed and sweated over cauldrons of stew. This was a machine made of flesh and bone—a hundred thousand American hearts beating as one.

Quinn rode Midnight, his legendary stallion, slow and steady along the lines. The Four Pillars rode at his back: Colonel Paul Kinney with his battered campaign hat, Major Reuben Drake twirling his wedding band, Captain Charlie Jenkins grinning at the troops, and Lieutenant Leo Sinclair with haunted eyes, too old for his years.

Every twenty paces, the soldiers erupted—“Long live General Quinn!”—fifty thousand voices shaking the ground like thunder.

For a heartbeat, Quinn let himself believe the war was already won. He touched the brim of his hat, feeling the weight of hope press against his chest. The noise and pride rolled through him, dizzying and almost frightening in its intensity.

But beneath that confidence, a shadow flickered—a flash of his first day at West Point, trembling before a firing line; the memory of almost bleeding out in a Tennessee ditch, cold and alone. He wondered if his luck could really last, if he truly deserved the legend they made of him.

He shot a look at Kinney, who grinned and shrugged—two men remembering ice-cold beers and porch swings back home. Victory felt thick as the July haze, but somewhere in Quinn’s gut, a warning bell chimed.

He rode further along the line, pausing beside a young soldier with trembling hands. The kid’s face was pale, freckles standing out like bullet holes. Quinn leaned down. “First battle?”

The boy nodded, jaw clenched tight. Quinn gave him a quick, reassuring smile. “Stick close to your sergeant. And keep your head down. You’ll see sunrise, I promise.”

The boy nodded, his grip on his rifle steadying. For a second, the two locked eyes—general and private, both afraid in their own ways.

But this campaign would show Quinn just how close a man could come to dying—and how little legends mattered when the bullets flew.

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