“You got him!”
“Yes—I—I got him.”
“I have forgotten—what was the coward’s name?”
“Eugene Le Fevre, but in Kansas they called him Dupont.”
“Dupont! Dupont!” Sheridan struck
the table with his closed fist.
“Good Lord, man! Not the husband of that
woman who ran off with
Lieutenant Gaskins, from Dodge?”
“I—I never heard—”
The room whirled before him in mist, the faces vanished; he heard an exclamation from Shultz, a sharp command from Sheridan, and then seemed to crumble up on the floor. There was the sharp rustle of a woman’s skirt, a quick, light step, the pressure of an arm beneath his head.
“Quick, orderly, he ’s fainted,” it was the General’s voice, sounding afar off. “Get some brandy, Shultz. Here, Miss McDonald, let me hold the man’s head.”
She turned slightly, her soft hand pressing back the hair from Hamlin’s forehead.
“No,” she protested firmly, “he is my soldier.”
And the Sergeant, looking past the face of the girl he loved saw tears dimming the stern eyes of his commander.