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The Hero Of Company G
by
“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.