The Able McLaughlins Margaret Wilson (best ebook reader under 100 TXT) š
- Author: Margaret Wilson
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He had so many things to tell them that he forgot how weary he was. Now that his danger was over, he had no need of minimizing for his motherās sake the discomforts he had been suffering. He said feelingly what he thought of a government that couldnāt get letters from a soldierās home in Iowa to a military hospital in New Orleans. He shouldnāt have minded the fever so much if he could have heard from home, and if he had been stronger he would likely have been more sensible about not getting letters. It seemed to him he had been confined in a madhouse devised for his torture. He would have preferred a battle months long to those endless, helpless, sick-minded days. And now he never wanted to speak of that time or hear of it again as long as he lived.
Young Peter had torn his coat half off his back at play that day, and it must be mended before schooltime next morning. It was a piece of patching not long or difficult, but his mother laid it down to look at her Wullyā āshe laid it down and took it again a dozen times before it was done. She couldnāt deny her eyes the sight of his white, thin, beautiful face. He ought to go to bed. She could see that. She urged him to again and again, as they sat around the stove. But he had always one more thing to tell as he started to go. He had never written in full about getting back to his regiment after his last visit home, had he? Well, when he got back, there was not an officer left whom he had known. And the one to whom he had to tell his tale of escaping from his guardā āoh, he was a new man, most hated by the boysā āhe had put Wully and two others in prison in the loft of a barn, on bread and water. And every night the guard, who knew them, used to hand up on the end of bayonets all the food they could desire. And the officer heard of it, and was more angry. He was a man who raged. And he changed the guard, and yet the men who hated his being there, in place of the colonel they had liked, Wullyās friends, managed some way to feed the prisoners, so that really in the loft they had nothing to do but to sleep well-fed, and rest. And presently the new colonel waxed more raging and swearing, and sent the three away to another place to be disciplined, sent themā āguess where, of all placesā āto Colonel Ingersoll for punishment!
āWhat? Not that infidel!ā
Yes, exactly, and that was just how Wully had felt about it! The prisoners made Wully their spokesman in the first hearing. Colonel Ingersoll listened to them kindly till he had finished speaking. He had a boil on the back of his neck and was not able to turn his head, and he sat there, just looking at Wully, a long time, too long, Wully began to fear. And then he said:
āI wouldnāt punish you if you were my man, McLaughlin. And I donāt see why I should because you arenāt.ā And he called an orderly and told him to take the men to a mess.
āIngersoll did that? That infidel?ā
āYes.ā
His mother was leaning forward, Peterās coat forgotten.
āYonās a grand man,ā she cried with conviction.
āHeās an infidel,ā her husband reminded her.
āHeās a grand man for aā that!ā she asserted.
āBut heās an infidel!ā
āHeās a grand man, Iām telling you, for aā that!ā After that, every time she sang the Antichristās praise to her neighbors she had the last word of characterization. (After all, her family had not been Covenanters.) Presently she laid the coat down againā āthe children were in bed now, and Wully, too, with only his father and mother beside him in the kitchen.
āYour father told you about Jeannieās death, Wully?ā His father had told him briefly about it on the way home. He didnāt say to his mother that the news had thrilled him with the certainty that now his plans could have no opposition, since Chirstie was left quite unprotected, and must be needing him. He was ashamed of the hope he had had from it, when he saw his motherās face harden with grief and resentment as she went on to relate the details of her friendās death, a death grim enough to be in keeping with Jeannieās life. For her part, she hoped to live till Alex McNair got home, till she could get one good chance to tell him what she thought of him! Oh, it had been altogether a terrible winter, almost as bad as that worst early one, just one fierce-driven blizzard after another. Jeannie had known in that darkening afternoon that it was no common illness coming over her. Chirstie, terrified by her isolation, had begged to be allowed at once to go for her aunt. But even then so thick was the storm raging that from the window she could not see the barn, and to venture out into the storm could mean only death. As the night had hurled itself upon the poor little shelter, almost hidden under drifts, and the maniac wind unchecked by a tree, unhindered
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