The Desert of Wheat eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 469 pages of information about The Desert of Wheat.

The Desert of Wheat eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 469 pages of information about The Desert of Wheat.

“Lenore, it’s not been so long ago that right here in this room Jim begged me to let him enlist.  He wasn’t of age.  But would I let him go—­to fight for the honor of our country—­for the future safety of our home?...  We all felt the boy’s eagerness, his fire, his patriotism.  Wayward as he’s been, we suddenly were proud of him.  We let him go.  We gave him up.  He was a part of our flesh an’ blood—­sent by us Andersons—­to do our share.”

Anderson paused in his halting speech, and swallowed hard.  His white face twitched strangely and his brow was clammy.  Lenore saw that his piercing gaze looked far beyond her for the instant that he broke down.

“Jim was a born fighter,” the father resumed.  “He wasn’t vicious.  He just had a leanin’ to help anybody.  As a lad he fought for his little pards—­always on the right side—­an’ he always fought fair....  This opportunity to train for a soldier made a man of him.  He’d have made his mark in the war.  Strong an’ game an’ fierce, he’d ... he’d ...  Well, he’s dead—­he’s dead!...  Four months after enlistment he’s dead....  An’ he never had a rifle in his hands!  He never had his hands on a machine-gun or a piece of artillery!...  He never had a uniform!  He never had an overcoat!  He never ...”

Then Mr. Anderson’s voice shook so that he had to stop to gain control.  Lenore was horrified.  She felt a burning stir within her.

“Lemme get this—­out,” choked Anderson, his face now livid, his veins bulging.  “I’m drove to tell it.  I was near all day locatin’ Jim’s company.  Found the tent where he’d lived.  It was cold, damp, muddy.  Jim’s messmates spoke high of him.  Called him a prince!...  They all owed him money.  He’d done many a good turn for them.  He had only a thin blanket, an’ he caught cold.  All the boys had colds.  One night he gave that blanket to a boy sicker than he was.  Next day he got worse....  There was miles an’ miles of them tents.  I like to never found the hospital where they’d sent Jim.  An’ then it was six o’clock in the mornin’—­a raw, bleak day that’d freeze one of us to the marrow.  I had trouble gettin’ in.  But a soldier went with me an’—­an’ ...”

Anderson’s voice went to a whisper, and he looked pityingly at Lenore.

“That hospital was a barn.  No doctors!  Too early....  The nurses weren’t in sight.  I met one later, an’, poor girl! she looked ready to drop herself!...  We found Jim in one of the little rooms.  No heat!  It was winter there....  Only a bed!...  Jim lay on the floor, dead!  He’d fallen or pitched off the bed.  He had on only his underclothes that he had on—­when he—­left home....  He was stiff—­an’ must have—­been dead—­a good while.”

Lenore held out her trembling hands.  “Dead—­Jim dead—­like that!” she faltered.

“Yes.  He got pneumonia,” replied Anderson, hoarsely.  “The camp was full of it.”

“But—­my God!  Were not the—­the poor boys taken care of?” implored Lenore, faintly.

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The Desert of Wheat from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.