[The Star of Gettysburg by Joseph A. Altsheler]@TWC D-Link book
The Star of Gettysburg

CHAPTER XIII
5/65

He noticed often on the battlefields that the hurt usually shut their teeth together and endured in silence.

As he approached one of the little streams, a form twisted itself suddenly from his path, and a weak voice exclaimed: "For God's sake don't step on me!" Harry looked down.

It was a boy with yellow hair, younger than himself.
He could not have been over sixteen, but he wore a blue uniform and a bullet had gone through his shoulder.

Harry had a powerful sensation of pity.
"I would not have stepped on you," he said.

His duty urged him on, but his feelings would not let him go, and he added: "I'll help you." He lifted the lad, rapidly cut away his coat, and slicing it into strips, bound up tightly the two wounds in his shoulder where the bullet had gone in and where it had come out.
"You've lost a lot of blood," he said, "but you've got enough left to live on until you gather another supply, and you won't lose any more now." "Thank you," murmured the boy; "but you're very good for--for a rebel." Harry laughed.
"Why, you innocent child!" he said.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books