He Was Only
Twenty-Eight Years Old, The Age When Life Has Just Begun, But He
Rested His Head On The Surgeon's Shoulder Like A Man Who Knew He Was
Already Through With It And That, Though They Might Peck And Mend At
The Body, He Had Received His Final Orders.
His breast and shoulders
were bare, and as the surgeon cut the tunic from him the sight of his
Great chest and the skin, as white as a girl's, and the black open
wound against it made the yellow stripes and the brass insignia on
the tunic, strangely mean and tawdry.
Fifty yards farther on, around a turn in the trail, behind a rock, a
boy was lying with a bullet wound between his eyes. His chest was
heaving with short, hoarse noises which I guessed were due to some
muscular action entirely, and that he was virtually dead. I lifted
him and gave him some water, but it would not pass through his fixed
teeth. In the pocket of his blouse was a New Testament with the name
Fielder Dawson, Mo., scribbled in it in pencil. While I was writing
it down for identification, a boy as young as himself came from
behind me down the trail.
"It is no use," he said; "the surgeon has seen him; he says he is
just the same as dead. He is my bunkie; we only met two weeks ago at
San Antonio; but he and me had got to be such good friends - But
there's nothing I can do now." He threw himself down on the rock
beside his bunkie, who was still breathing with that hoarse inhuman
rattle, and I left them, the one who had been spared looking down
helplessly with the tears creeping across his cheeks.
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