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Chapter Five

Chapter Five

"Nell, see what you can do for the quartermaster," Jess said, then looked up to see that Nell was already at the man's side. He turned his attention back to Wilkie. "You are a disgrace to your uniform," he snapped, keeping his voice low. "Where is Harper?"

"He'll be here directly, I am sure," the private said, then groaned again for good effect. "The QM 'ere—Lord love him—sent 'arry inside the tent to find some cotton wadding for me wound."

Hippocrates, I wouldn't trust 'arry in a roomful of Jesuits, Jess thought sourly. "Harper!" he bellowed. "Show yourself!" He glanced at Nell, who gave him a reproachful look, then returned her attention to the quartermaster.

In a moment, Private Harper came out of the quartermaster's tent, his hands full of cotton wadding, with a righteous look on his face. "Captain, remember how you never could get any of this stuff from the quartermaster? He has rolls of it."

As Jess glowered at the private, he couldn't help asking himself if he was more irritated at Harper, or the quartermaster. He turned his attention to Private Wilkie, who began to writhe about as a small crowd gathered. "Do give him room," Jess ordered. "Surely all of you have something better to do." Oh, Lord, I am encouraging these two thieves, he thought as he carefully grasped the knife, gave it a yank, and played along.

The knife came away quite easily, as he knew it would, because it barely rested inside Wilkie's curious abdominal fistula. The quartermaster shrieked, which only earned the man a hard stare from Nell. Well, Hippocrates, did you ever fall among thieves? Jess asked himself as he dabbed at the wound, allowing the cotton wadding to soak up the cow's blood that had pooled so dramatically under Wilkie. Hating himself for such malpractice, Jess directed Harper to hold his hand tight over Wilkie's spurious wound while he dug in his medicine satchel, extracted a good length of bandage, and wrapped it quickly in place. "That should do until I get him back to the hospital," he told the quartermaster. "You won't mind if I take along this wadding, will you? I thought not."

It was on the tip of his tongue to ask Harper to make another rapid reconnaissance of the QM's tent to look for laudanum and new scalpels, but Jess resisted. Instead, he motioned for his stretcher bearers, and wondered what else the enterprising private had liberated from the QM's too-abundant stores.

While the bearers loaded Wilkie onto the stretcher— Wilkie had been so obliging as to fake a swoon—Jess assessed the quartermaster. A rapid glance told him there was nothing wrong with the man except an overactive imagination. How much have you been cheating this army? he thought, after taking the man's pulse. "What on earth happened here?" he asked, not because he wanted to know, but because the QM might be suspicious if he didn't ask.

"The private ran in front of my tent as though Soult himself was on his ass," he said. "I had just sat down to eat my beefsteak." He looked around. "Where is it?"

(Probably down the front of 'Arry 'Arper's uniform blouse, Jess thought sourly.) "I didn't know anyone had any beefsteak left," he said. "You were fortunate, indeed."

The QM realized his mistake. "Well, yes, rather," he stammered, and chose not to continue that line of conversation. "Shouldn't you hurry on to tend that poor sod?" Jesse nodded and gestured to Nell, who fell into step beside him.

She was looking so forlorn and puzzled that he clapped his arm around her shoulder and pulled her dose. "Don't worry, Mrs. Randall. There's not a thing wrong with Wilkie." He whispered to her what the man had done. She started to laugh. It was a delightful sound, and so unexpected right then that a wagoneer stopped to stare, and then grinned as he turned back to his less-than-cooperative mule.

"Why would he do such a thing?'' she asked.

He was pleased when she put her own arm around his waist so she could match his stride easier. "I haven't the slightest notion," he replied. "Wilkie and Harper constitute two members of a malingerer's army ever bent on mischief." Even as he said that, he felt the stirring of an idea so awful that he dismissed it immediately.

Jess didn't think Bones was following them, and truth to tell, he didn't care. He had walked with Nell before, but only on an errand, or as part of some duty. This was different. He relaxed his grip on her shoulders, just to see if she would loose her hold on him. To his pleasure, she did not. She seemed content to walk beside him.

When they returned to Number Eight, Major Sheffield was in the tent they shared, packing his own effects. Dan O'Leary, looking more indignant than fifty overworked hospital stewards, glared at Private Wilkie. Lying on the stretcher with his hand clasped around the bloody wound, Wilkie grinned at him.

"Explain yourself, Private," Jess said, as he pulled up a stool beside him.

Before Wilkie could speak, Harper took four little brown vials out of his sleeve and set them in a row beside Jess. "I believe you've been wanting this, sir," he said.

Dan O'Leary seemed to forget his pique in an instant. "Laudanum!" he exclaimed, as he looked over Jesse's shoulder.

Hippocrates, I can use this, Jess thought as he stared at the bottles. He watched the private as the man pulled a slim canvas case from his uniform blouse, where Jess had suspected a beefsteak resided. Harper undid the ties with a flourish, and Jess stared at a row of scalpels. They practically glowed, gleaming steel catching a glimpse of the watery sun to blink back at him in that wicked way of scalpels.

"I can't possibly take these," he protested. "I just couldn't," he said, ashamed at how feeble his protestation sounded.

Harper only shrugged and retied the strings. "Sir, you want me to take them back so the QM can sell them to some Spaniard who will sell 'um to the French? Begging your pardon, sir, but that's not a good idea."

"No, it isn't," Jess agreed, amazed at how little his conscience was already bothering him. I will become as depraved as 'Arry, 'Ippocrates, he thought, with some amusement. "Oh, hell, I'll keep the scalpels. Use'um on you, Harper, and give you a high voice."

His amusement vanished when Harper reached inside his pants. "Ain't it amazing what a good distraction will get?"

Jess stared, speechless, as the private groped around it his roomy pants—Nell looked away—and pulled out a handful of coins. He sprinkled than like golden rain onto Wilkie's stretcher, then looked at Nell. "There you are, Miss Mason. Didn't I hear the surgeon here tell us to empty our budget this morning to keep'im from a desperate act?" He winked at her. "Wilkie and I was thinking creatively."

"I'm . . . I'm afraid he already had to do the desperate act," Nell said, her voice subdued. "I know you meant well."

"Meant well?" Jesse burst out. "He's a damned thief. My God, Private, one word from me and you're with the provost marshal from now until Portugal!"

"If you can find him, sir, begging your pardon," Harper said. "We're on retreat."

Jess looked hard at the private. There was nothing of that irritating kind of subservience in his voice that he had become accustomed to from the man. "Explain yourself Private," he snapped, lowering his voice, because he could hear Jenks starting to hyperventilate, three cots over. "Go to him, Dan," he said, tired all of a sudden.

Harper crouched beside Wilkie's stretcher. "Pardon me, sir, but it takes a thief to know a thief. Wilkie and me, we've watched you skimp on everything here, and we've seen you and the Chief fill out QM requests by the wad."

No denying that, Jess thought. "There was no call for this." I am a weak man, indeed, he thought as Harper continued to press his point. Why am I not scooping up those guineas and rushing back to our QM with my apologies? He sighed.

"I heard you say only this morning, sir, that the army would be better off if someone tied the QM to an anvil and dropped 'im in the river," Harper concluded.

"I did," Jess said wryly. "And now you've picked a lock in the QM's tent and liberated what you feel is rightfully ours."

Harper grinned and poked Wilkie on the stretcher. "Told you our darlin' surgeon here was a bright one! Trust me, sir, he won't even miss this."

"Trust you?" Jess exclaimed. "I'm not in my dotage, Harper!"

"No, indeed, sir," the private agreed. "You can't be more than thirty."

Jess sighed again and stared long and hard at the private. I am arguing with a thief and a scoundrel who robbed another thief and a scoundrel, he told himself. And the deuce of it is, I actually think he did this out of the goodness of his heart. "How much did you take, Harper?" be asked finally.

The private knew surrender when he heard it, obviously. He smiled, and Jess was hard put to resist smiling back. "Sir, you said Miss Mason here needed fifty-two pounds." He looked at Wilkie. "We thought maybe sixty pounds would grease her through a bad spot, supposin' that old Bones had a few more pounds to up the ante over Captain Mason. Beggin' your pardon, Miss Mason, but your da is a little lean on scruples."

"And you're not?" Jess said, unable to resist.

"I know what I am," Harper said simply. "She needed our help, didn't she? Hold out your apron, Miss Mason. This is yours."

When she only looked at him, the private seemed less sure of himself. "We're too late?" he asked, then turned his attention to Jess. "She's still here."

"She's my wife, Private," he said. "While you were robbing the QM, I married her to keep Bones away." Oh, God, he thought, that's not even true. I married her because I have loved her these two years and more, probably. He knew he couldn't say that. He knew it would sound even stranger than his public reason.

He didn't want to interpret the look Nell gave him; he hadn't the heart. As she deflated before his eyes, he knew he was a worse thief than Harper, because he had robbed her of her dignity. Silence filled the tent, broken only by Jenks' ragged breathing and the steady whoosh of the bellows. He didn't know what to say.

Nell spoke, but it wasn't to him. "I'll take your money, Private Harper," she said, and he could hear she was on the ragged edge of tears. "I'll give it to my father." Her voice faltered then. "No, I'll find Major Bones and give it to him. No telling what my father would do with sixty pounds.''

No, he thought, no. "Private, I'll find Bones. Nell, you're my responsibility now." He wanted her to look him in the eye, but she was too ashamed. "Nell, please, it isn't quite what you think." He touched her arm. "Nell, I mean it."

Too late. She had withdrawn from him. It wasn't a physical gesture; she did not flinch when he touched her. He kept the pressure on her arm, but she was in another place deep inside herself. "Nell, it'll be all right. I promise," he told her. He meant it with all his heart, but he wondered how many other promises had been broken in her life. And this is one more, he thought. Oh, Hippocrates, why couldn't I have been an architect or the man who sells gelato on street corners?

He took the money from Harper. "Wilkie, when I get back, I'm going to sew up that fistula of yours before it gets you in more trouble. Harper, during this retreat you had better be on your best behavior. No lock pickings, no stealing, no creativity!"

He got up and went to the tent opening. To his surprise, Nell followed him. "I'm sorry I could not think of something else, Captain," she began. She looked down at the ground. "Mama ... Mama always used to say what a good contriver I was, and I . . ."

He put his finger to her lips. "Don't, Nell," he said softly. "Maybe you've had to do too much contriving for someone your age." Her face was so sad that he wondered if he was right to speak. "Maybe neither of us thought when we woke up this morning that we'd be married by suppertime, but since we are, you can share your worries with me."

It was the most he had ever said to her at once. Even though it sounded stupid to his ears, Nell raised her head and looked at him as though she had never considered such a thing. "Do you really mean that?" she asked quickly.

"With all my heart." He touched her cheek. "And now I'd better find your father and then Major Bones."

She shook her head. "He will only spend it before he gets to Bones."

"I must disagree, Nell," he told her. "It is more than likely that we are all charting a course toward each other."

He took out his timepiece. "Didn't the good major give your father until six o'clock? When I find your father, I will find Bones." He saw the fear in her eyes. "Nell, don't worry so much! It appears to me that thanks to my larcenous patients we have quite neutralized Bones."

"I pray you are right," she said finally. "Do this for me: take along Harper."

"I wouldn't take him across the street!"

To his dismay, Nell's eyes welled with tears. She swallowed, and dabbed at her eyes with her apron. "Didn't the chaplain tell you to do what I say?" she asked.

Jess sighed inwardly. Hippocrates, I am less than an hour married, and already she has run out the heavy guns, he thought. "Very well, but only because I cannot deal with tears!" He looked at Harper, reached deep within himself for some patience, and gestured at the man. "Private, you are to accompany me to find Captain Mason."

"That's right sensible of you, Captain, if you don't mind me saying so," the private said.

And if I did? Jess asked himself wearily. "Oh, come along."

Harper saluted in so haphazard a fashion that Jess could only be grateful that no one stood on parade. "I believe you must be the poorest excuse for a soldier in all the armies in Spain," he declared.

His mutterings didn't seem to daunt the private, who merely beamed at him as though he had been paid a compliment by Wellington himself. "Aye, sir, but I am very big, where you, if you will beg my pardon, are not."

He thought he would have no trouble finding Mason. Bones had said this morning that the captain would be drinking. If the man followed the pattern that Jess had observed during long years with the division, he would be drunk by noon, then remorseful by afternoon. By six o'clock, Jess reckoned, Mason would be low, indeed. His pattern was to come crawling home then.

Audrey Mason's remains were already coffined. Accompanied by his escort, Jess went first to the burying field, where under the watchful eyes of a provost sergeant, two French prisoners were digging pits for the recent deaths in the command. He thought of Jenks then, barely breathing back in the hospital tent, and wondered if he should requisition a coffin for the retreat.

Mason was not at the burying field, which hardly surprised Jess. Father-in-law, you are a coward, he thought. You treated your wife poorly when she lived, and you cannot face her now that she is dead.

He found his father-in-law in his ramshackle house, sitting on a stool that was the only thing remaining. Jess knew that Nell had retrieved nothing from the place because she had fled from it with the clothes on her back, but it was picked clean. Mason, his face more vacant than usual, appeared lost in thought, but Jess knew that thinking was not his strong suit. It must be an alcoholic haze. Indicating with his head for Harper to remain outside, he went in through the open door and stood in front of the man on the stool.

"I have ninety pounds for you, Captain," he said, "but I'm going to wait here and give it to Major Bones." He knew he shouldn't continue, but he did. "You're a pitiful excuse for a soldier, and a worse father." He dropped the money in Mason's lap. He couldn't remember when he had ever said anything so unkind, but his words barely seemed to register. Captain Mason merely nodded, and stared straight ahead.

"I also married your daughter so Bones couldn't get his hands on her."

His bald words penetrated then. Captain Mason looked at him, his face incredulous and then heavy with relief. "Thank God," he said fervently, and Jess actually thought he meant it.

Jess thought of all the unpleasant things he could say. He could remind Mason that he had been bailed out yet again, and not required to be accountable. He could have scolded, chided, and humiliated Mason as he had heard others do, but he did not have the heart. Instead, he put his hand on the captain's shoulder and gave it a little shake. "I will take good care of her, sir," he said softly. "You need not worry about her again."

If you ever did, he thought as he watched Mason's face. I am pretending that you care what happens to her. No matter what happens to you or me, I never need to have on my conscience that I kicked you when you were already prostrate. It's not something that is going to lie between me and Nell at nights, if we ever progress to that point.

"What brings you here, Randall?"

He didn't have to look around to know it was Major Bones, but be looked anyway. Harper stood behind the major, shrugging his shoulders.

He couldn't help himself; the man frightened him and repulsed him at the same time. For a brief moment he tightened his grip on Mason's shoulder, then looked down at his father-in-law when the captain touched his hand with his own, as if in reassurance.

"It's all right, Captain," Mason said under his breath. "I've been here before." With a visible effort, as though he were the most tired man on earth, Mason raised his face to the major. "Well, Major, is this our day of reckoning?"

"Call it what you want, Mason," the major said. "I know you don't have any money, and I mean to take care of your daughter. You can go, Randall. Surely there's a bedpan somewhere to empty. Tell Nell Mason I have her clothes and other effects in with my equipage."

He started to make some reply, but Mason interrupted him, his tone apologetic.

"Major, I have the money here." He hefted the bag once, almost longingly, and Jess wondered if he was thinking of all the drinks and good times it would contain, if he kept it. "Take it, sir. Thank you for the loan, and thank you for your kind consideration for my daughter, but she doesn't need you now."

Jess wanted to laugh at the astonishment on Bones' face, but the moment was too highly charged. The major took the money in the handkerchief, staring at it as though he expected pus to ooze from the folds. "My God," Bones exclaimed, breathing the word in a way that made the hair stand on Jess's neck. "She still needs an escort, Mason, now that your wife is dead. I aim to be that man."

"You're too late, Major," Captain Mason said calmly. There was nothing of defeat in his voice now; Jess could hardly recognize his tone. "Captain Randall here married my dear one this afternoon."

Jess wished he had leisure to analyze the finality and triumph in Captain Mason's voice. What a weak man you are, he marveled to himself. I can almost think that you truly are giving a thought to Elinore now, when it is too late.

"By God, you're joking," Bones said, his voice more a growl than human speech.

"Not at all. When he thought—as I am certain everyone in our division thought—that Bertie Mason would not come through again, he married my girl," Mason said. "You're too late."

Jess had cause to reflect, in the coming weeks, on the mischief three words could do. As he heard them coming in undisguised relief from Captain Mason, he knew that Major Bones' cup of bile—already full—ran over. He waited for Bones to slap him down to a bleeding nubbin.

Bones did nothing, even though the small room seemed almost to swell with his anger. He stared at the money handkerchief in his hand, and then at Jess. The tension was so palpable that Harper left his post by the door and came into the room.

"Captain Randall, you will regret this."

What will you do to me? Jess thought wearily. There are some rules in our society, rough as it is, and even you have to abide by them. "I love her," he said quietly. "I always have."

Bones smiled then, and it was an awful sight. "Hold that thought," he replied, his voice low and filled with menace. He left the room quietly, his face a study in control.

The men in the room each heaved a sigh of relief. "Well, that went better than I thought, Jess," Mason said finally. He stood there a long moment, as if wondering what to do.

"I believe your company needs you," Jess reminded him gently.

"Oh, yes." He extended his hand. "Do take good care of my daughter," he said, and then shook his head, as if realizing how fatuous he sounded. "It will be the first time anyone has done so. What a novelty for her." He made no effort to hide the shame in his voice. His eyes on the ground, Captain Mason left the house.

Jess walked back to the marching hospital in silence, Harper trailing along behind. The chief surgeon was in Number Eight. The last carton of supplies was tied with twine almost as carefully as though something was in it that would do any good. "We'll be fine if we meet with no emergencies, Jess," he said, his voice cheerful. "I am devoutly, fervently wishing for a retreat as boring as nature and war will allow. Do I ask too much?"

Jess smiled. "We can dream." He looked at his wife, who sat by Jenks' cot, her hand in his. "Ho, Jenks," he called. "You'll make me jealous." He was rewarded with a blush from Elinore, and the sketch of a smile from the man who labored to breathe.

He made his rounds, and regretfully dismissed six more patients. He did not think Jenks would last out the week on a retreat. Two patients might improve—those two sitting up in their cots—if the rain would let up, and they could rest frequently. Restorative jellies would be nice, as well, he thought, and porridge with cream and the occasional egg. Oh, Hippocrates, did ever a surgeon blather on to you as I am doing now?

"What is our order of march?" he asked Sheffield.

The Chief looked up from the roster in his hand. "The Thirteenth Foot is moving out now, and the Tenth is coming behind them." He looked closer at the roster in the fading light. "By morning, we will be escorted by our own favorite Eleventh."

"Good," Jess said fervently, thinking of his particular friends in that regiment, trusted men who watched his back when he was too busy to care for his own safety at Bussaco and Fuentes, and then Salamanca. Just knowing they would be marching with the Eleventh gave him his first peaceful moment since he said "I do" in the dead tent.

Sheffield came closer. "Dan and I will sleep here in the hospital tonight. You and Nell can have the tent."

He couldn't resist a smile at his mentor. "Chief, it's going to be a long time before Elinore and I share a cot."

Sheffield's reply didn't surprise him, but it did make him wish that through all these years of war and worry, he had been able to know the man better. "Jesse, would it surprise you to know that sometimes there is nothing finer than simply holding the hand of a lovely woman, or talking to her? I think you're going to learn a lot from Nell."

"More than she will learn from me?" he joked, touched at Sheffield's interest.

The chief surgeon smiled back. "You really have no notion of how obvious your own integrity is, do you? Oh, don't blush, Jess. It's true." He put his arm around Jess. "The only thing Nell needs to learn from you is that you will never let her down."

"I won't, you know," he said quickly.

"See that you don't."

Jess usually liked that moment in a marching hospital before the lights went dim, when all the patients had been tended and everything had been put in order. He stood a long moment before Jenks' cot. Dan already sat there, ready for the first watch. Jess touched his shoulder, and left the tent. He stood at the entrance to the sleeping tent for a long moment, wondering why he felt so uneasy, even during this twilight moment that usually brought him the most pleasure. He reckoned finally that there wasn't much that Major Bones could do to him. Surely, he had his own responsibilities on the retreat.

Elinore sat on the cot where the chief surgeon usually slept. His eyes went to the blue beads in her lap, and he sat down across from her on his own cot. "Did the Chief give those to you? He saved them all these years, and restrung them."

Her eyes glistened with tears. "He said he would get me a better wedding present when we were all safe behind the lines again, Captain." She let the beads click through her fingers. "I was awfully young then, wasn't I?"

You've never been allowed to be young, my love, he thought. "Yes, you were. Elinore, you can call me Jesse or Jess now."

"I will, eventually," she said.

He was too tired to comment, and maybe a little irritated with himself. Silly you, he thought. You're married a few hours under strange circumstances, and you think it will be Jess right off, no matter how many years she's known you? He took off his shoes and lay down on the cot. There was so much he wanted to say to the lovely lady sharing the tent with him, but his eyes closed, and he slept instead.

He slept soundly all night, only dimly aware of Elinore sleeping on the other cot, and then aware of nothing until the Thirteenth pulled out, and the Tenth pulled in. Or was it the Eleventh? Amazing how his tired mind could hear the rattle of chains and tack, the creak of leather, the suck and pull of heavy wheels rolling through mud, then filter it out.

He woke just as the sun was coming up. He glanced at Elinore curled up on the other cot, her breathing even and deep, then lay back to enjoy the moment of silence.

Silence. In one motion he was on his feet and out of the tent. The chief surgeon and Dan were ahead of him, standing by the opening to the marching hospital, staring as he was staring.

"Where are they?" he asked finally, his voice hoarse from sleep. "Where is the Eleventh?"

Sheffield said nothing for a long moment. His face appeared to drain of all color as he stared at the empty road, and the vacant clearing across it. "Dan, get me the roster," he said. His voice sounded unfamiliar to Jess.

In another moment Sheffield held the retreat order in his hands. He read it again as Jess stood beside him, hardly breathing, then balled up the paper and lobbed it into the middle of the road, where it quickly absorbed water from last night's rain, and sank in a wagon wheel rut.

"Damned foolish of me," he said finally, sounding more tired than if he had spent the day and night in surgery. "I must be getting old. I forgot that Major Bones was in charge of the order of march," he said. "Jess, I fear we have been abandoned."

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