Part 22 (2/2)

”Then in that case I won't disturb the bandages. They are all tight now, and the man who bandaged you evidently knew what he was about, which is more than I can say for some of those who have sent me in specimens of their handiwork. For the present there is nothing for you to do but to lie quiet. I will have a look at you again later, there are so many cases that must be attended to at once.”

”I am in no hurry, I can a.s.sure you, Doctor. I suffered too much when they bandaged me to want a repet.i.tion of it until it is absolutely necessary.”

The doctor nodded and then hurried off to visit the men who had been carried off into the other marquees. As he pushed aside the flaps at the entrance he stopped abruptly, for a few yards away Mary Brander was lying insensible on the ground, now covered with a light sprinkle of snow that had fallen in the morning.

”Poor little girl!” he said, as he raised her in his arms, and carried her into his own tent and placed her in a rocking-chair, ”this affair coming on the top of the work last night has been too much for her.” He went into the next marque.

”Miss Betham,” he said to one of the nurses, ”Miss Brander has just broken down; she has fainted. You will find her in a chair in my tent.

Take a bottle of salts and a little brandy. When she comes round make her lie down on the bed there, tell her that my orders are absolute, that she is to keep quiet for a time. She is not to go to work in the wards again and she is not to leave my tent until I have seen her. There is no getting a conveyance, and she won't be fit to walk home for some time.”

An hour later Dr. Swinburne s.n.a.t.c.hed a moment from his work and looked in at his tent. Mary sprang up from the bed as he entered.

”That is right, my dear,” he said, ”I see you are active again. I am sure you will be glad to hear that the patient you called me to has recovered consciousness. The bullet pa.s.sed right through him, which is a good sign. So that trouble is disposed of. As to the future I can say nothing as yet. Of course it depends upon what damage the ball did on its way through. However, I am inclined to view the case favorably. I can only judge by his face, and, although it is, of course, white and drawn, there is not that ashen sort of pallor which is almost a sure sign of injury to vital parts.”

”Then you think there is some hope, Doctor,” she asked, with her hands lightly clasped before her.

”Honestly, I think there is. He must, of course, be kept absolutely free from anything like agitation, and if you think your presence is likely to agitate him in the slightest degree, I should say that when you come to work again you had better exchange into one of the other wards.”

”It will not agitate him in the least, Doctor,” she said, after a moment's pause, ”I can answer for that. We are old friends, for he has known me since I was a little child; we are more like cousins than anything else, and if he knows which ambulance he is in, I am sure he will be surprised if I do not come to him.”

”I think it is likely he will guess,” Dr. Swinburne said, ”when he hears the nurses speaking English; and, indeed, it seems that either he or one of the others particularly asked to be sent here. If it is as you say, your presence may do him good rather than harm, and you can go to him for a short time; but remember that you are not fit for nursing and that the sooner you are able to get home again the better. You have been on duty more than twenty-four hours and it has been a terribly trying time for you all.”

Mary nodded.

”I really feel better now, Doctor. I have been very anxious about Mr.

Hartington ever since I knew that his corps had gone out, and I think suspense is harder to bear than anything. You will see I shan't break down again.”

”If you do, Miss Brander, remember I shall have to take your name off the list of nurses. We have enough to do and think about here without having fainting young ladies on our hands.” He spoke gravely, but Mary saw he was not really in earnest.

”I never thought,” she said, ”that I should come under the category of a fainting young lady, and I feel humiliated. Then I may go in, Doctor?”

”Yes, if you are sure of yourself and are certain that it won't agitate him.”

A minute later she stood by Cuthbert's side. He was lying on his back with his eyes open. A hospital rug had been thrown over him. As she bent over him his eyes fell on her face and he smiled faintly.

”I was wondering whether you had heard I was here,” he said, in a voice so low that she could scarce hear it. ”Well, you see, I brought my eggs to a bad market, and your friends, the Prussians, have given me a lesson I would not learn from you. But we beat them fairly and squarely, there is a satisfaction in that.”

”There does not seem much consolation in it, Cuthbert,” she said, quietly.

”There is to me,” he said, ”that shows you are not a soldier. To a soldier it makes all the difference as he lies wounded, whether he has shared in a victory or suffered in a defeat.”

”Then I am very glad that you have won if it makes any difference to you, Cuthbert. Now you know you have to lie very still, and I am sure talking is very bad for you.”

”I don't suppose it makes any difference one way or the other, Mary. A few hours, perhaps, but whether it is to-day or to-morrow is immaterial.”

”You must not talk like that, Cuthbert, and you must not think so. The doctor says that although, of course, you are badly wounded, he thinks there is every hope for you.”

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