The flies and the sun! The sun
and the flies! The two tents of the division
ward in the hospital had been pitched end to end, thus
turning them into one. The sun filtered through
the cracks of the canvas; it poured in a broad, dancing,
shifting column of gold through the open tent flap.
The air was hot, not an endurable, dry heat, but a
moist, sticky heat which drew an intolerable mist
from the water standing in pools beneath the plain
flooring of the tents. The flies had no barrier
and they entered in noisome companies, to swarm, heavily
buzzing, about the medicine spoons and the tumblers
and crawl over the nostrils and mouths of the typhoid
patients, too weak and stupid to brush them away.
The other sick men would lift their feeble skeletons
of hands against them; and a tall soldier who walked
between the cots and was the sole nurse on duty, waved
his palm-leaf fan at them and swore softly under his
breath.
There were ten serious cases in the
ward. The soldier was a raw man detailed only
the day before and not used to nursing, being a blacksmith
in civil life. An overworked surgeon had instructed
him in the use of a thermometer; but he was much more
confident of the success of his lesson than the instructed
one. There was one case in particular bothered
the nurse; he returned to the cot where this case
lay more than once and eyed the gaunt figure which
lay so quietly under the sheet, with a dejected attention.
Once he laid his hand shyly on the sick man’s
forehead, and when he took it away he strangled a desperate
sort of sigh. Then he walked to the end of the
tent and stared dismally down the camp street, flooded
with sunshine. “Well, thank God, there’s
Spruce!” said he. A man in a khaki uniform,
carrying a bale of mosquito netting, was walking smartly
through the glare. He stopped at the tent.
“How goes it?” said he, cheerfully but
in the lowest of tones. He was a short man and
thin, but with a good color under his tan, and teeth
gleaming at his smile, white as milk.
“Why, I’m kinder worried about Maxwell ”
Before he could finish his sentence,
Spruce was at Maxwell’s cot. His face changed.
“Git the hot-water bottle quick’s you can!”
he muttered, “and git the screen the
one I made!” As he spoke he was dropping brandy
into the corners of Maxwell’s mouth. The
brandy trickled down the chin.
“He looks awful quiet, don’t
he?” whispered the nurse with an awestruck glance.
“You git them things!”
said Spruce, and he sent a flash of his eyes after
his words, whereat the soldier shuffled out of the
tent, returning first with the screen and last with
the bottles. Then he watched Spruce’s rapid
but silent movements. At last he ventured to breathe:
“Say, he ain’t he ain’t he
ain’t ?”
Spruce nodded. The other turned
a kind of groan into a cough and wiped his face.
Awkwardly he helped Spruce wherever there was the chance
for a hand; and in a little while his bungling agitation
reached the worker, who straightened up and turned
a grim face on him.
“Was it me?” he whispered
then. “For God’s sake, Spruce I
did everything the doctor told me, nigh’s I
could remember. I didn’t disturb him, ’cause
he ’peared to be asleep. I I
never saw a man die before!”
“It ain’t no fault of
yours,” said Spruce in the same low whisper.
“I’m sorry for you. Did you give
him the ice I got?”
“Yes, I did, Sergeant.”
“And was there enough for Green and Dick Danvers?”
“Yes, I kept it rolled up in
flannel and newspapers. Say, I got a little more,
Sergeant.”
“How?”
“The doctors or some fellers
had a tub of lemonade outside, a little bit further
down. I chipped off a bit.”
Spruce ground his teeth, but he made
no comment. All he said was, “You go git
Captain Hale and report. Tell the captain I got
his folks’ address. They’ll want
him sent home. They’re rich folks and they
were coming on; guess they’re on the way now.
Be quiet!”
The soldier was looking at the placid
face. A sob choked him. “He said,
‘Thank you,’ every time I gave him anything,”
he gulped. “God! it’s murder to put
fools like me at nursing; and the country full of women
that know how and want to come!”
“S-s-s! ’Tain’t
no good talking. You done your best. Go and
report.”
As the wretched soldier lumbered off,
Spruce set his teeth on an ugly oath.
“I ought to have stayed, maybe,”
he thought, “but I’ve been doing with
so little sleep, my head was feeling dirty queer; and
the doctor sent me. Collapse, of course; temperature
ran down to normal, and poor Tooley didn’t notice,
and him too weak to talk! Well, I hope I git the
G boys through, that’s all I ask!”
He went over to the next cot, where
lay the nearest of the G boys, greeting him cheerily.
“Hello, Dick?”
Dick was a handsome young specter,
just beginning to turn the corner in a bad case of
typhoid fever. His blue eyes lighted at Spruce’s
voice; and he sent a smile back at Spruce’s
smile. “Did you get some sleep?”
said he. “What’s that you have in
your hand?”
“That’s milk, real milk
from a cow. Yes, lots of sleep; you drink that.”
The sick man drank it with an expression
of pleasure. “I don’t believe any
of the others get milk,” he murmured; “save
the rest for Edgar.”
“Edgar don’t need it, Dick,” Spruce
answered gently.
Dick drew a long, shivering sigh and
his eyes wandered to the screen. “He was
a soldier and he died for his country jest the same
as if he were hit by a Mauser,” said Spruce he
had taken the sick boy’s long, thin hand and
was smoothing his fingers.
“It’s no more ’an
what we all got to expect when we enlist.”
“Of course,” said Dick,
smiling, “that’s all right, for him or
for me, but he he was an awfully good fellow,
Chris.”
“Sure,” said Spruce.
“Now, you lie still; I got to look after the
other boys.”
“Come back when you have seen them, Chris.”
“Sure.”
Spruce made his rounds. He was
the star nurse of the hospital. It was partly
experience. Chris Spruce had been a soldier in
the regulars and fought Indians and helped the regimental
surgeon through a bad attack of typhoid. But
it was as much a natural gift. Chris had a light
foot, a quick eye, a soft voice; he was indomitably
cheerful and consoled the most querulous patient in
the ward by describing how much better was his lot
with no worse than septic pneumonia, than that of a
man whom he (Spruce) had known well who was scalped.
Spruce had enlisted from a Western town where he had
happened to be at the date of his last discharge.
He had a great opinion of the town. And he never
tired recalling the scene of their departure, amid
tears and cheers and the throbbing music of a brass
band, with their pockets full of cigars, and an extra
car full of luncheon boxes, and a thousand dollars
company spending money to their credit.
“A man he comes up to me,”
says Spruce, “big man in the town, rich and
all that. He says, calling me by name I
don’t know how he ever got my name, but he had
it he says, ’I’m told you’ve
been with the regulars; look after the boys a little,’
says he. ‘That I will,’ says I, ’I’ve
been six years in the service and I know a few wrinkles.’
I do, too. He gave me a five-dollar bill after
he’d talked a while to me, and one of his own
cigars. ‘Remember the town’s back
of you!’ says he. ’Tis, too.
I’d a letter from the committee they got there,
asking if we had everything; offering to pay for nurses
if they’d be allowed. Oh, it’s a
bully town!”
Spruce himself had never known the
sweets of local pride. He had drifted about in
the world, until at twenty he drifted into the regular
army. He had no kindred except a brother whose
career was so little creditable that Spruce was relieved
when it ended were the truth known, in a
penitentiary. He had an aunt of whom he often
spoke and whom he esteemed a credit to the family.
She was a widow woman in an Iowa village, who kept
a boarding house for railway men, and had reared a
large family, not one of whom (Spruce was accustomed
to explain in moments of expansion, on pay-day, when
his heart had been warmed with good red liquor) had
ever been to jail. Spruce had never seen this
estimable woman, but he felt on terms of intimacy
with her because, occasionally, on these same pay-days,
he would mail her a five-dollar bank-note, the receipt
of which was always promptly acknowledged by a niece
who could spell most of her words correctly and who
always thanked him for his “kind and welcome
gift,” told him what they proposed to do with
the money, and invited him to come to see them.
He always meant to go, although he
never did go. It was his favorite air-castle,
being able to go on furlough to the village where his
aunt lived and show his medal. He had won the
medal in an Indian fight where he had rescued his
captain. The captain died of his wounds and Spruce
never got drunk (which I regret to confess he did oftener
than was good either for his soul or the service)
that he didn’t talk about his captain, who had
been his hero; and cry over him. Spruce, who was
a cheery creature in his normal state, always developed
sentiment and pathos when he was revealed by liquor.
Now he had another day-dream. It was to be greeted
by the cheering crowds again he would march
down the sunny streets with the band playing, amid
the faces and the shouts. And the men who had
stood by the company so stanchly would be pointing
him out and telling each other his mythical exploits and
adding the record of his Indian exploits which
Spruce felt that an inattentive country had not appreciated.
A dozen times a day he pictured the scene, he mentally
listened to the talk he, walking with a
rigid and unseeing military mien. He approximated
the number of glasses a man could take without even
grazing indecorum for he was determined
he would not be riotous in his joy and
he used to whistle the refrain of a convivial song:
Enj’y yourselves, enj’y
yourselves
But don’t do no disgrace!
Meanwhile, his consciousness of in
some way caring for the whole company held him a model
of sobriety. In fact, he did take care of the
company, secretly instructing the captain in the delicacies
of military etiquette and primitive sanitary conditions,
and openly showing the commissary sergeant how to
make requisitions and barter his superfluous rations
for acceptable canned goods at the groceries of the
town. He explained all the regulars’ artless
devices for being comfortable; he mended the boys’
morals and their blouses in the same breath; and he
inculcated all the regular traditions and superstitions.
But it is to be confessed again, that while Spruce
was living laboriously up to his lights of righteousness
under this new stimulus, the lights were rather dim;
and, in particular, as regards the duty of a man to
pick up outlying portable property for his company they
would have shocked a police magistrate. Neither
did he rank among the martial virtues the ornament
of a meek and quiet spirit. “A good captain
is always a kicker,” says Spruce firmly; “he’s
got to be. Look at this here camp, Captain; the
mess tent’s all under water; we’re standing
in the slush every damned meal we eat. Water’s
under our tent, water ”
“I know, I know, Sergeant,”
interrupts the perplexed and worried young captain,
a clever young dandy bright enough to be willing to
take wisdom without shoulder straps; “I’ve
been to the colonel; he agrees with me, and he’s
been to Major Green, and that’s all comes of
it. I don’t see what I can do further,
if I did ”
“Begging your pardon, Captain,
the men will be falling sick soon and dying.
They’re weakened by the climate and being fretted,
expecting always to git off and never going.”
“But what can I do? Oh,
speak out, we’re off here alone. Have you
any idea?”
“Well, sir, if you was my captain
in the old th, you’d say to the
colonel, ’Colonel, I’ve remonstrated and
remonstrated. Now I’m desperate. I’m
desperate,’ says you. ’If there ain’t
something done to-morrow I’m going to march
my company out and find a new camp, and you kin court-martial
me if you please. I’d rather stand a court-martial
than see my men die!’ He’d talk real pleasant
at first, so as to git in all his facts, and then
he’d blaze away. And he’d do it, too,
if they didn’t listen.”
The captain gave the sergeant a keen
glance. “And that’s your notion of
discipline?” said he.
“There’s a newspaper fellow
asking for you, Captain, this morning. I see
him a-coming now,” was the sergeant’s oblique
response. But he chuckled, walking stiffly away,
“He’ll do it; I bet we won’t be here
two days longer.” For which glee there
was reason, since, inside the hour, the captain was
in the colonel’s tent, concluding an eloquent
picture of his company’s discomforts with “Somebody
has to do something. If you are powerless, Colonel,
I’m not. If they don’t give some assurance
of changing the camp to-morrow I shall march Company
G out and pitch a camp myself, and stand a court-martial.
I would rather risk a court-martial than see my men
die and that’s what it has come to!”
The colonel looked the fiery young
speaker sternly in the eye, and said something about
unsoldierly conduct.
“It would be unmanly conduct
for me to let the boys trusted to me die, because
I was afraid to speak out,” flung back the captain.
“And I know one thing: if I am court-martialed
the papers are likely to get the true story.”
“You mean the reporter on the
Chicago papers who is snooping around? Let me
advise you to give him a wide berth.”
“I mean nothing of the kind,
sir. I only mean that the thing will not be done
in a corner.”
“Well, well, keep cool, Captain,
you’re too good a fellow to fling yourself away.
Wait and see if I can’t get something definite
out of the major to-day.”
Whereupon the captain departed with
outward decent gloom and inward premonitions of rejoicing,
for when he had hit a nail on the head he had eyes
to see. And the colonel betook himself, hot-foot,
to the pompous old soldier in charge of the camp,
who happened to be a man of fixed belief in himself,
but, if he feared anything, was afraid of a newspaper
reporter. The colonel gave him the facts, sparing
no squalid detail; indeed, adding a few picturesque
embellishments from his own observations. He
cut short the other’s contemptuous criticism
of boy soldiers, and his comparison with the hardships
endured during the Civil War, with a curt “I
know they fooled away men’s lives then; that
is no reason we should fool them away now. The
men are sickening to-day they will be dying
to-morrow; I’m desperate. If that camp is
not changed by to-morrow I shall march my regiment
out myself and pitch my own camp, and you may court-martial
me for it if you like. I would rather stand a
court-martial than see my men die, because I was afraid
to speak out! The camp we have now is murder,
as the reporters say! I don’t wonder that
young fellow from Chicago talks hard!”
“You’re excited, Colonel; you forget yourself.”
“I am excited, Major;
I’m desperate! Will you walk round the camp
with me?”
The end of the colloquy was that the
captain saw the major and the colonel and told the
first-lieutenant, who told, the first-sergeant, whose
name was Spruce. “Captain’s kicked
to the colonel, I guess,” says Spruce, “and
colonel’s kicked to the major. That’s
the talk. Git ready, boys, and pack.”
True enough, the camp was moved the very next day.
“I guess captain will make an
officer if he lives and don’t git the big head,”
Spruce moralized. “It’s mighty prevalent
in the volunteers.”
The captain wrote the whole account
home to one single confidant his father and
him he swore to secrecy. The captain’s father
was the man who had committed Company G to Spruce’s
good offices. He sent a check to the company
and a special box of cigars to Spruce. And Spruce,
knowing nothing of the intermediary, felt a more brilliant
pride in his adopted town, and bragged of its virtues
more vehemently than ever. The camp was not moved
soon enough. Pneumonia and typhoid fever appeared.
One by one the boys of the regiment sickened.
Presently one by one they began to die.
Then Spruce suggested to the captain:
“I guess I’d be more good in the hospital
than I am here, Captain.” And the captain
(who was scared, poor lad, and had visions of the
boys’ mothers demanding the wasted lives of
their sons at his hands) had his best sergeant put
on the sick detail. If Spruce had been useful
in camp he was invaluable in hospital. The head
surgeon leaned on him, with a jest, and the young surgeon
in charge with pretense of abuse. “You’ll
burst if you don’t work off your steam, Spruce,
so out with it. What is it now?”
In this fashion he really sought both information
and suggestion. Nor was he above being instructed
in the innumerable delicacies of requisitions by the
old regular, and he did not, when requisitions were
unanswered and supplies appeared in unusual form,
ask any embarrassing questions. “I get ’em
from the Red Cross, sir,” was Spruce’s
invariable and unquestioned formula.
And the doctor in his reports accounted
for what he had received and complained lustily because
his requisitions were not honored, even as Spruce
had desired, and, thereby, he obtained much credit,
in the days to come. Spruce did not obtain any
particular credit, but he saved a few lives, it is
likely; and the sick men found him better than medicine.
The captain always handed the committee letters over
to him; and bought whatever he desired.
“Captain’s going to distinguish
himself, give him a chance,” thought Spruce,
“he’s got sense!”
And by degrees he began to feel for
the young volunteer a reflection of the worship which
had secretly been offered to a certain fat little
bald-headed captain of the old steenth.
His picture of the great day when he should have his
triumph quite as dear to him, perhaps, as
any Roman general’s to the Roman now
always included a vision of the captain, slender and
straight and bright-eyed, at the head of the line;
and he always could see the captain, later in the day,
presenting him to his father; “Here’s
Sergeant Spruce, who has coached us all!” He
had overheard those very words once said to a girl
visiting the camp, and they clung to his memory with
the persistent sweetness of the odor of violets.
To-day he was thinking much more of
the captain than of young Danvers, though Danvers
ranked next in his good will. Danvers was a college
lad who had begged and blustered his mother into letting
him go. He would not let her know how ill he
was, but had the captain write to his married sister,
in the same town but not the same house. She,
in sore perplexity, wrote to both the captain and
Spruce and kept her trunk packed, expecting a telegram.
Danvers used to talk of her and of his mother and
of his little nephews and nieces to Spruce, at first
in mere broken sentences this was when
he was so ill they expected that he might die any
day later in little happy snatches of reminiscence.
He was perfectly aware that he owed his life to Spruce’s
nursing; and he gave Spruce the same admiration which
he had used to give the great man who commanded the
university football team. The social hiatus between
them closed up insensibly, as it always does between
men who are in danger and suffering together.
Danvers knew Spruce’s footfall and his thin
face would lighten with a smile whenever the sergeant
came in sight. He liked the strong, soft touch
of his hand, the soothing cadence of his voice; he
felt a gratitude which he was too boyish to express
for the comfort of Spruce’s baths and rubbings
and cheerfulness. The other sick lads had a touch
of the same feeling for the sergeant. As he passed
from cot to cot, even the sickest man could make some
little sign of relief at his return.
Spruce’s heart, a simple and
tender affair, as a soldier’s is, oftener than
people know, swelled within him, not for the first
time.
“Well, I guess I done right
to come here,” thought he, “and I guess
all the G boys will be out of the woods this week,
and then I don’t care how soon we git our orders.”
Danvers stopped him when he returned.
“I want to speak to you, Chris,” he next
said, and a new note in his voice turned Spruce about
abruptly.
“What’s the matter, Dick?”
“Oh, nothing, I only wanted
to be sure you’d come back and say good-by before
you got off. The regiment’s got its orders,
you know?”
“No!” cried Spruce.
He swallowed a little gasp. “What are you
giving me?”
“Oh, it’s straight; I
heard them talking. Colonel has the order; the
boys are packing to-day.”
Spruce’s eyes burned, he was
minded to make some exclamations of profane joy, but
his mood fell at the sight of the boy’s quivering
smile.
“Great, isn’t it?”
said Danvers. “I wish they’d waited
two weeks and given us fellows a show, but I dare
say there won’t be any show by that time, the
way they are after the dons at Santiago. Can’t
you get off now, to pack? But you’ll
be sure to come back and say good-by, Chris!”
“I ain’t off yet,”
said Spruce, “and I ain’t too sure I will
be. They’re always gitting orders and making
an everlasting hustle to pack up, and then unpacking.
You go to sleep.”
He was about to move away, but Danvers
detained him, saying that he wanted to be turned;
and as the soldier gently turned him, the boy got
one of his hands and gave it a squeeze. He tried
to say something, but was barely able to give Spruce
a foolish smile. “Spruce, you’re a
soldier and a gentleman!” he stammered.
He turned away his head to hide the tears in his eyes.
But Spruce had seen them. Of course he made no
sign, stepping away briskly, with a little pat on the
lean shoulder.
He came back softly in a little while.
He looked at Danvers, who was simulating sleep, with
his dark lashes fallen over red eyelids, and he shook
his head. During his absence he had found that
the orders were no rumor. The regiment was going
to Porto Rico sure enough. Spruce stood a moment,
before he sat down by Danvers’ side. But
he barely was seated ere he was on his feet again,
in a nervous irritation which none had ever seen in
Spruce. He walked to the door of the tent and
gazed, in the same attitude that the nurse had gazed,
an hour earlier, at the low, white streets. Two
great buzzards were flying low against the hot, cloudless
vault of blue.
“Them boys’ll be all broke up if I go!”
said Spruce.
He frowned and fidgeted. In fact,
he displayed every symptom of a man struggling with
a fit of furious temper. What really was buffeting
Spruce’s soul was not, however, anger, it was
the temptation of his life. Spruce had known
few temptations; at least, he had recognized few.
His morality was the lenient, rough-hewn article which
satisfies a soldier’s conscience. He had
no squeamishness about the sins outside his limited
category; he fell into them blithely and had no remorse
when he remembered them, wherefore he preserved a
certain incongruous innocence even in his vices, as
has happened to many a man before. It is, perhaps,
the moral nature’s own defense; and keeps untouched
and ever fresh little nooks and corners of a sinner’s
soul, into which the conscience may retreat and from
which sometimes she sallies forth to conquer the abandoned
territory. What Spruce called his duty he had
done quite as a matter of course. He had not
wavered any more than he wavered when the war bonnets
were swooping down on his old captain’s crumpled-up
form. But this this was different.
The boys needed him. But if he stayed with the
boys, there was the regiment and the company and the
captain and the chance to distinguish himself and
march back in glory to his town.
“I guess most folks would say
I’d ought to follow the colors,”
he thought; “raw fellers like them, they need
a steady, old hand. Well, they’ve got Bates.”
(Bates was an old regular, also, of less enterprising
genius than Spruce, but an admirable soldier.) “I
s’pose,” grudgingly “that
Bates would keep ’em steady. And captain
can fight, and the colonel was a West Point man, though
he’s been out of the army ten years, fooling
with the millish. I guess they don’t need
me so awful bad this week; and these ’ere boys Oh,
damn it all!” He walked out of the tent.
There was a little group about a wagon, at which he
frowned and sighed. “Poor Maxwell!”
he said. Then he tossed his head and stamped
his foot. “Oh, damn it all!” said
he again, between his teeth.
But his face and manner were back
on their old level of good cheer when he bent over
Danvers, half an hour later.
“Sa y! Dick!”
“Yes, Chris. You come to say
good-by! Well, it’s good luck to you and
God bless you from every boy here; and we know what
you’ve done for us, and we won’t forget
it; and we’ll all hurry up to get well and join
you!” Danvers’ voice was steady enough
now and a pathetic effort at a cheer came from all
the cots.
Spruce lifted his fist and shook it
severely. “You shut up! All of you!
You’ll raise your temperature! I ain’t
going, neither. Be quiet. It’s all
settled. I’ve seen captain, and he wants
me to stay and see you boys through; all the G boys.
Then we’re all going together. I tell you,
keep quiet.”
Dick Danvers was keeping quiet enough,
for one; he was wiping away the tears that rolled
down his cheeks.
The others in general shared his relief
in greater or less measure; but they were too ill
to think much about anything except themselves.
In some way, however, every one in the tent showed
to Spruce that he felt that a sacrifice had been made.
“I know you hated it like the
devil, and just stayed for fear some of your precious
chickens would come to mischief if they got from under
your wings, you old hen!” was Dick’s tribute;
“and I know why you went into town yesterday
when the boys went off. It is rough, Chris,
and that’s the truth!”
“Oh, it’s only putting
things off a bit; the captain told me so himself,”
said Spruce, very light and airy. But his heart
was sore. The G boys understood; he wasn’t
so sure that all the others did understand. He
caught his name on one gossiping group’s lips,
and was conscious that they gazed after him curiously.
“Wonder if I’m scared that I stayed home,
I guess,” he muttered, being a sensitive fellow
like all vain men. “I wish they’d
see the things I’ve been in! Damn ’em!”
The men really were discussing his
various Indian experiences and admiring him in their
boyish hearts. But he was unluckily out of earshot.
Unluckily, also, he was not out of earshot when a lieutenant
of another regiment who had had a difference about
a right of way with Spruce’s captain and been
worsted by Spruce’s knowledge of military traditions
freed his mind about that “bumptious regular
who was so keen to fight, but (he noticed) was hanging
on to his sick detail, now the regiment had a chance
to see a few Spaniards.” Spruce, in his
properly buttoned uniform, his face red with the heat
and something of the words, saluted rigorously and
passed by, not a single muscle twitching. All
the while he was thinking: “I’m glad
he don’t belong to my town! God!
If anybody was to write them things about me!”
By this time the town was not only
his town, but he was sure that he was a figure in
the conversation of the place. Thus his anxiety
of mind increased daily. He kept it from his
charges, who grew stronger all the week, and the next;
and he read such papers as drifted out to the camp
and such shreds of news about the fighting with frantic
interest. Danvers was able to sit up at the end
of three weeks, but most of the boys were further
along, walking about the wards, or gone back to their
regiment.
“You get out, Chris,”
said Danvers, “we all know you’re on your
head with aching to go. We’re all right;
and I’m off home on furlough to-morrow; I’ll
get straightened out there quicker, and I’ll
be after you next week, see if I don’t!
I knew you’d be hanging on, so I won’t
give you the excuse. My sister’s coming
to-morrow.”
“Really, Dick,” gasped
Spruce, “and you you’re sure
the other boys are so’s I can leave?”
“Well, you know there are going
to be some women from the Red Cross, last of the week Oh,
by the time we are all out of it, this will be a swell
hospital, with all the luxuries! Spruce, go, and
don’t get hurt, or I’ll murder you!”
Spruce giggled like a happy girl.
He was on his way to put in his application to join
his regiment the next day after Dick Danvers’
sister had arrived, when something happened. He
did not exactly know what it was himself, until he
felt the water on his forehead and tried to lift himself
up from the sand, catching the arm of the surgeon-in-chief.
“Sunstroke, doctor?” he whispered.
“Just fainted,” the surgeon
answered cheerfully, “you’ve been overdoing
it in this heat. Be careful.”
“Oh, it’s nothing, sir,”
Spruce grinned back; “had it lots of times,
only not so bad. All the boys git giddy heads ”
Somehow the ready words faltered off
his tongue; the surgeon had been fumbling at his blouse,
under the pretext of opening it for air, he was looking
in a queer, intent way at Spruce’s chest.
Of a sudden the eyes of doctor and
soldier, who had been nurse, met and challenged each
other. There was a dumb terror in the soldier’s
eyes, a grave pity in the surgeon’s. “I
seen them spots yesterday,” said Spruce, slowly,
in a toneless voice, “but I wouldn’t believe
they was typhoid spots, nor they ain’t!”
“You get inside and get a drink,
Spruce, and go to bed,” said the doctor.
“Of course, I’m not certain, but as good
a nurse as you knows that it isn’t safe to try
to bluff typhoid fever.”
By this time Spruce was on his feet,
able to salute with his reply: “That’s
all right, Major, but I got to keep up till
Danvers gits off with his folks, or he’d be
kicking and want to stay. Jest let me see him
off, and I’ll go straight to bed.”
“No walking about, mind, though,”
said the doctor, not well pleased, yet knowing enough
of the two men to perceive the point of the argument.
Spruce saw Danvers off, with a joke
and a grin, and an awkward bow for Danvers’
sister. Then he went back to the hospital and
went to bed, having written his aunt’s address
on a prescription pad (one of his acquirements in
his foraging trips) with a remarkably spelled request
that his pay be sent her, and his other property be
given his friend, R. E. Danvers, to divide among his
friends, giving the captain first choice.
“Lots of folks die of typhoid
fever,” he remarked quite easily, “and
it don’t hurt to be ready. I feel like
I was in for a bad time, and I ain’t stuck on
the nursing here a little bit.”
Before the week was out he recognized
as well as the doctors that he was a very sick man.
“If you’d only gone off
with your regiment three weeks ago,” the doctor
growled one day, “you’d have missed this,
Spruce.”
“That’s all right,”
said Spruce, “but some of the boys are home that
wouldn’t be, maybe. I guess it’s all
right. Only, you know captain and Danvers; I
wish you’d write back to the old town and tell
the committee I done my duty. I can’t be
a credit to the company, but I done my duty, though
I expect there’s folks in town may think I was
malingering.”
“Stop talking!” commanded
the doctor. “Did you know the women are
coming to-morrow; you are to have a nurse of your
own here?”
“Time,” said Spruce; “if
my town had its way they’d been here long ago.
Ever been in my town, Major?”
“No. Good-by, Spruce; keep quiet.”
“It’s the bulliest town
in the country, and the prettiest. And when G
company goes back Oh, Lord, I won’t
be with ’em!”
The surgeon’s hand on his shoulder
prevented the movement which he would have made, and
he apologized; “I didn’t mean to do that!
Moving’s so bad. Tell you, I’d a
time keeping the boys still; they would turn
when they got a little off. Say, I got to talk,
Major, something’s broke loose in me and I got
to talk. I don’t want to, I just got to.”
When the nurse came he was so light-headed
as to have no control of his words, yet quite able
to recognize her and welcome her with an apologetic
politeness.
“I’d have had some lemonade
for you if I’d been up myself, ma’am.
We’re glad to see you. All the G boys are
convalescing; most of ’em’s gone.
We all come from the same city; it’s an awful
pretty town. I got a lot of friends there that
maybe don’t take it in why I’m here ’stead
of with my regiment, with the old man. I got
a good reason; only I can’t remember it now.”
The captain’s father stood outside
the telegraph office in Spruce’s town.
Beside him was the chairman of the relief committee.
“Too bad about that regular,”
said the chairman. “Spruce isn’t
that his name? One of the boys telegraphed he
couldn’t live through the day. Better have
him brought here for the funeral, I guess; he’s
been very faithful. Young Danvers wanted to go
right down to Florida; but he had a relapse after
he got home and he’s flat on his back.”
“I heard,” said the captain’s
father; “I’ve just telegraphed, on my own
responsibility, for them to send him here. It
won’t make any difference to him, poor fellow;
but we owe it to him. I wish we could do something
that would help him, but I don’t see anything.”
“We have told them to spare
no expense, and he’s got plenty of money.
No, you have done everything. Well, good-by; remember
me to the captain; we’re all proud of him.”
The captain’s father thanked
him with rather an absent air. “I wish we
could do something for that fellow,” he was thinking;
“I don’t suppose a message to him would when
a fellow’s dying, messages are nonsense it’s
a bit of sentiment I don’t care, I’ll
do it!” He turned and went back into the office.
“I am afraid there is not a
chance,” said the doctor; “too bad, he
was a good fellow. Well, you can give him all
the morphine he needs and strychnine, though
he’s past strychnine, I fear; morphine’s
the one chance, and that’s mighty little.”
“He talked about wanting to
see you,” said the nurse. She had a sweet
voice, plainly a lady’s voice; and her slim figure,
in the blue-striped gown and white surplice, had a
lady’s grace. Her face was not handsome,
nor was it very young, but it had a touch of her voice’s
sweetness. The doctor found himself glad to look
at her; and forgetting his patients in his interest
in the nurse.
“Oh, yes,” he
roused himself “I’ll look ’round
later; I suppose he is delirious?”
“Not so much that he does not
recognize us. He talks all the time of his town,
poor fellow, and seems to want to have them understand
that he hasn’t neglected his duty. He only
once has spoken of any relations. It’s
all the town, and the captain and Danvers making it
right there; and the boys going back I
suppose he has lived there all his life and ”
“Not a bit of it; Danvers told
me he merely enlisted from there. But they are
making a great time over him. Telegraphed to have
his body sent there; and here’s another telegram.
See ”
“I’ll let him see,”
said the nurse, taking it, “may I, Doctor?”
“Yes, but not the first part
about sending him back; that’s a little too
previous.”
The nurse’s touch roused Spruce.
“Dick,” he murmured, “Dick, you tell
the folks. I couldn’t go with the regiment you
know why.”
“They know why, too; here’s
a telegram from your captain’s father: ’Tell
Spruce he’s the hero of Company G.’”
“Read it again!”
She read it. His hand tightened
on hers. Her trained eyes were on his face.
“Ain’t it the the
bulliest town! I wisht I’d enough
money to go back; but you see my folks got to have
my pay. But I wisht ”
Her eyes, not the nurse’s now,
but a woman’s, sought the doctor’s in a
glance of question and appeal. He nodded.
Her sweet voice said: “And
the town has telegraphed that no expense must be spared
to cure you; but if you don’t recover you are
to go back to them.”
Spruce drew a long, ecstatic sigh.
“Oh didn’t I tell you?
Ain’t it the bulliest town!”
A minute later he murmured, “Thank
you, Dick,” and, still holding the nurse’s
hand, Spruce went to see his town.