Part 13 (1/2)
The nurse won. Swiftly she prepared the table, called the doctor and helped to lift him from the stretcher.
Zaidos and Velo left to rescue the man whose weight had kept the captain from bleeding to death. His scalp wound was serious but not dangerous, Zaidos decided, and they returned to the First Aid with lighter hearts.
The room was empty. Hazelden was not there. Zaidos' heart dropped.
Had he died?
Helen answered the question in his face. She came to meet Zaidos. Her eyes shone, her cheeks were the loveliest pink. Her step was light.
”Well?” said Zaidos.
”More than well!” said Helen. ”Oh, John, it is wonderful! Wonderful!
And you brought me my happiness! I am to be transferred to the field hospital tomorrow, where I can nurse him myself. He will live; he _must_ live! We could not talk, but he knew me. And I know everything is all right!”
”Certainly it's all right!” said Zaidos. ”Didn't I tell you so? I knew just how it would be,” and the hero of a single ballroom looked as wise as only a fellow could who had been dead-crazy over a girl all one evening.
”What are you going to do about things?” asked Zaidos. ”Go on being engaged?”
”Indeed I'm not!” said Helen as she bathed the soldier's head. ”Not at all! Just as soon as he can hold my hand, we will be married by the chaplain. I'll never, never risk another misunderstanding!”
”See that you don't!” said Zaidos quite gruffly.
CHAPTER IX
VISIONS
While Zaidos, aided by Velo, continued his heart-rending task among the dead and wounded on that b.l.o.o.d.y field, now applying the tourniquet to some emptying artery, now administering, drop by drop, the stimulant needed to hold life in some poor fellow, hurrying back with others on their stretcher, or giving way to the fearless and pitiful priests who moved among the dying--while all these things happened, it would be well to pause and reflect on the wise preparation which had made it possible for Zaidos to do well his allotted task.
As a Boy Scout, and in the extra work of school, he had taken a keen interest in the Red Cross work. Zaidos was the sort of a fellow who takes a keen pleasure in doing things well. He stood well in his cla.s.ses always, not for the benefit of school marks, but because he thought that if he studied at all, he might as well be thorough about it and try to get at what the ”book Johnny,” as the boys called the textbook writers, really was driving at. It was the same with athletics. He had jumped higher and run faster than anyone else in school, not so much because he was quick and light and agile, but because, having found out that he could run and jump and put up a good boost for the team at other sports, he practiced every spare moment he could find. Zaidos was always trying to see if he could break his own records. He got a lot of fun out of it. It was like a good game of solitaire. He was not dependent on some other fellow. The other fellow was incidental, a sort of side issue and like a good pace-maker.
Of course you had to beat him, but the sport was in coming in ahead of your own time.
It was for this that Zaidos had always worked. It had kept him from feeling the petty jealousies and envy which r.e.t.a.r.d the progress of so many of the fellows. Racing with himself, in Red Cross drills, or running, racing, riding or studying, his rival was always present, always ready and willing to take another ”try” at something. It was like having a punching bag in his room. Every time he pa.s.sed it he took a whack or two, and developed his muscles accordingly.
So, in this unexpected and supreme test of his life, Zaidos found himself fit. As the work went on and on, endlessly as it seemed, Zaidos found that his brain commenced to work independently of his hands. The unbelievable wounds of war no longer shocked his deadened nerves. His hands worked more and more accurately and rapidly, but on the inside of his brain was a sort of screen on which flashed the moving picture of his life.
They started from his little boyhood, when he first crossed the ocean up to the time of the last crossing, at the sad summons which had taken him to his dying father. No real moving picture, thought Zaidos, had ever been screened with so many thrills and exciting incidents as the real life-film through which he saw himself rapidly moving. Here and there on the b.l.o.o.d.y field he puzzled it out for himself, finding that the plot was complete, and that Velo, his cousin, must be the villain.
Zaidos was still ignorant of the fact that Velo had stolen the papers, but that Velo hated him and would be glad enough to get him out of the way grew clearer and clearer, in spite of the apparent friendliness with which he had treated him up to the present time. But now, hour by hour, Zaidos was conscious of a sort of sour look of hatred which seemed to grow plainer and plainer in Velo's sharp face. Zaidos had an uncomfortable feeling that he must keep a watchful eye on Velo. It was nothing but an instinct, but even so, he felt it, and feeling it, was ashamed.
So the time wore on.
Bending over a soldier with a gaping, b.l.o.o.d.y hole in his side, Zaidos turned to the hospital corps pouch spread open beside him, and felt for a roll of gauze bandage. One little roll remained.
”Get back to the hospital and get another outfit of gauze and tape,” he ordered Velo.
Velo stood up and straightened his back. He looked down at Zaidos, then his gaze traveled to the unconscious soldier.
”What do you bother with him for?” he said heartlessly. ”It's no use.
I'm going to quit. What's the use of working myself to death?”
”Going to desert?” asked Zaidos coldly. He was holding the hurt soldier in a position where he could treat the wound quickly.