The Deserter | Page 5

Charles King
help wishing he were
with the rest of the crowd instead of here, train-guarding.
Presently Mr. Hayne appears, elastic and debonair as though he had not
been working like a horse all day. His voice sounds so full of cheer and
life that Hull looks up smilingly:
"Well, youngster, you seem to love this frontier life."
"Every bit of it, captain. I was cut out for the army, as father thought."
"We used to talk it over a good deal in the old days when I was
stationed around Washington," answers Hull. "Your father was the
warmest friend I had in civil circles, and he made it very pleasant for
me. How little we thought it would be my luck to have you for
quartermaster!"
"The fellows seemed struck all of a heap in the Riflers at the idea of
your applying for me, captain. I was ready to swear it was all on
father's account, and would have told them so, only Rayner happened
to be the first man to tackle me on the subject, and he was so crusty
about it I kept the whole thing to myself rather than give him any
satisfaction."
"Larry, my boy, I'm no preacher, but I want to be the friend to you your
father was to me. You are full of enthusiasm and life and spirits, and
you love the army ways and have made yourself very popular with the
youngsters, but I'm afraid you are too careless and independent where
the seniors are concerned. Rayner is a good soldier; and you show him
very scant respect, I'm told."
"Well, he's such an interfering fellow. They will all tell you I'm
respectful enough to--to the captains I like--"

"That's just it, Lawrence. So long as you like a man your manner is
what it should be. What a young soldier ought to learn is to be
courteous and respectful to senior officers whether he likes them or not.
It costs an effort sometimes, but it tells. You never know what trouble
you are laying up for yourself in the army by bucking against men you
don't like. They may not be in position to resent it at the time, but the
time is mighty apt to come when they will be, and then you are
helpless."
"Why, Captain Hull, I don't see it that way at all. It seems to me that so
long as an officer attends to his duty, minds his own business, and
behaves like a gentleman, no one can harm him; especially when all the
good fellows of the regiment are his friends, as they are mine, I think,
in the Riflers."
"Ah, Hayne, it is a hard thing to teach a youngster that--that there are
men who find it very easy to make their juniors' lives a burden to them,
and without overstepping a regulation. It is harder yet to say that
friends in the army are a good deal like friends out of it: one only has to
get into serious trouble to find how few they are. God grant you may
never have to learn it, my boy, as many another has had to, by sharp
experience! Now we must get a good night's rest. You sleep like a log, I
see, and I can only take cat-naps. Confound this money! How I wish I
could get rid of it!"
"Where do you keep it to-night?"
"Right here in my saddle-bags under my head. Nobody can touch them
that I do not wake; and my revolver is here under the blanket. Hold on!
Let's take a look and see if everything is all right." He holds a little
camp-lantern over the bags, opens the flap, and peers in. "Yes,--all
serene. I got a big hunk of green sealing-wax from the paymaster and
sealed it all up in one package with the memorandum-list inside. It's all
safe so far,--even to the hunk of sealing-wax.--What is it, sergeant?"
A tall, soldierly, dark-eyed trooper appears at the door-way of the little
tent, and raises his gauntleted hand in salute. His language, though
couched in the phraseology of the soldier, tells both in choice of words

and in the intonation of every phrase that he is a man whose
antecedents have been far different from those of the majority of the
rank and file:
"Will the captain permit me to take my horse and those of three or four
more men outside the corral? Sergeant Clancy says he has no authority
to allow it. We have found a patch of excellent grass, sir, and there is
hardly any left inside. I will sleep by my picket-pin, and one of us will
keep awake all the time, if the captain will permit."
"How far away is it, sergeant?"
"Not seventy-five yards,
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