""Just spread your coat on that dresser, my man, will you?" he says. "Now lift him gently. Don"t wake him. He"s set his course for the Old Country.... Now just lay me on the floor, and prop me up against the wall--same as Soldier there.""
Knapp was sobbing now.
""Same as Soldier there," he repeated. "There weren"t to be no difference a-tween us. O no! "Same as Soldier there," he says--and me pull his nose only yesterday! And strike me dead!"--he lifted a streaming face--"if it didn"t come over me all of a pop what Mr. Piper said about him and Jesus."
II
He pulled himself together and went on.
"Then up come the orse-captain, great black charger in a lather.
""What luck?" says he.
""Why none," says the foot-captain, little black and red chap, plumpy.
"The Grenadier chaps in the farm-buildings surrendered at discretion.
Plucky fine sportsmen, these French beggars, ain"t they?"
""Well, you was about a thousand to one, Chollie, so I don"t know as I blames em," says the orse-captain, laughin.
""All very well for _you_," grumbles Plumpy, mighty bitter. "I suppose you bagged all _your_ lot."
""Every mother"s son on em," says t"other, chuckin himself off. "Rare sport. Look there !" and he shows the edge of his sword.
""Just your luck, Bill," says Chollie. "I sweats my soul out to get up in time, and just when I"m there, up you larrups on them blame ole camels o your"n, and dashes the cup from my lips. Who"d be a--foot-slogger?" says he; and he takes the other by the arm; "Now tell us all about it."
""Why that"s soon told," says the orse-captain. "Them we didn"t cut up in the open, we run to earth in a drain, and pots em pretty from the mouth."
""Any prisoners?" says Plumpy, mighty keen.
""There _was_ two," says, the orse-captain, sn.i.g.g.e.rin.
"Plumpy turns on his heel.
""Damme you might ha left me the prisoners, Bill," says he. "Given my chaps a taste o the stuff after all their trouble." And he says it so ot and uffy like that the Genelman, leanin against the wall, laughs.
"The orse-captain heard him, and pokes in.
""Who"s that?" he says.
"Then when he saw the Genelman agin the wall, he offs his helmet--he knoo what was what did the orse-captain, I will say that.
""Can we do anything for you, sir?" says he, hushed like.
""Nothing for Sailor and me, thank you," says the Genelman. "I don"t know about Soldier there."
""I"ll send a man back to Lewes for a doctor at once," says the orse-captain. "We must be going on. There"s a scare all over the country that Fighting Fitz has landed at Pevensey at the head of a Cavalry Division."
"The Genelman laughed a bit.
""A wild-goose chase, believe me," says he.
""I think so too, sir," says the orse-captain. "Still General Beauchamp got an express from Pitt to that effect last night. Some chap swore he"d seen him. And we all know if there"s any man in the world"d do it, it"s Fighting Fitz."
""I am Fighting Fitz," says the Genelman. "There"s no landing except what has took place.""
Knapp dried his eyes.
"Yes; he was a--General all right, and he give his life for Private Knapp."
III
THE WISH AT EVENING
CHAPTER Lx.x.xV
THE SANCTUARY
I
"Where is Piper?" asked the Parson.
The little rifleman pointed to the tall clothes--horse hung about with cloaks, which made a Sanctuary of the far end of the kitchen.
"Is he dead?" whispering.
"I fancies so, sir. Lingered it out wunnerful, chattin to the Genelman, ummin an ymn and that. But he"s not to say spoke these hours past."
The door opened and Kit entered on tip-toe.
The Parson beckoned him, and drawing aside the clothes-horse, entered the Sanctuary.
Kit followed reverently.
Within stood the kitchen dresser. On it, in the religious light, lay the old foretop-man.
Somebody had flung a horse-blanket about his lower body that, lying so, the horror of what was not might be concealed.