登陆注册
15479200000099

第99章 VI(1)

The next morning Doctor Trueman asked Claude to help him at sick call. "I've got a bunch of sergeants taking temperatures, but it's too much for one man to oversee. I don't want to ask anything of those dude officers who sit in there playing poker all the time. Either they've got no conscience, or they're not awake to the gravity of the situation."

The Doctor stood on deck in his raincoat, his foot on the rail to keep his equilibrium, writing on his knee as the long string of men came up to him. There were more than seventy in the line that morning, and some of them looked as if they ought to be in a drier place. Rain beat down on the sea like lead bullets. The old Anchises floundered from one grey ridge to another, quite alone.

Fog cut off the cheering sight of the sister ships. The doctor had to leave his post from time to time, when seasickness got the better of his will. Claude, at his elbow, was noting down names and temperatures. In the middle of his work he told the sergeants to manage without him for a few minutes. Down near the end of the line he had seen one of his own men misconducting himself, snivelling and crying like a baby,--a fine husky boy of eighteen who had never given any trouble. Claude made a dash for him and clapped him on the shoulder.

"If you can't stop that, Bert Fuller, get where you won't be seen. I don't want all these English stewards standing around to watch an American soldier cry. I never heard of such a thing!"

"I can't help it, Lieutenant," the boy blubbered. "I've kept it back just as long as I can. I can't hold in any longer!"

"What's the matter with you? Come over here and sit down on this box and tell me."

Private Fuller willingly let himself be led, and dropped on the box. "I'm so sick, Lieutenant!"

"I'll see how sick you are." Claude stuck a thermometer into his mouth, and while he waited, sent the deck steward to bring a cup of tea. "Just as I thought, Fuller. You've not half a degree of fever. You're scared, and that's all. Now drink this tea. I expect you didn't eat any breakfast."

"No, sir. I can't eat the awful stuff on this boat."

"It is pretty bad. Where are you from?"

"I'm from P-P-Pleasantville, up on the P-P-Platte," the boy gulped, and his tears began to flow afresh.

"Well, now, what would they think of you, back there? I suppose they got the band out and made a fuss over you when you went away, and thought they were sending off a fine soldier. And I've always thought you'd be a first rate soldier. I guess we'll forget about this. You feel better already, don't you?"

"Yes, sir. This tastes awful good. I've been so sick to my stomach, and last night I got pains in my chest. All my crowd is sick, and you took big Tannhauser, I mean Corporal, away to the hospital. It looks like we're all going to die out here."

"I know it's a little gloomy. But don't you shame me before these English stewards."

"I won't do it again, sir," he promised.

When the medical inspection was over, Claude took the Doctor down to see Fanning, who had been coughing and wheezing all night and hadn't got out of his berth. The examination was short. The Doctor knew what was the matter before he put the stethoscope on him. "It's pneumonia, both lungs," he said when they came out into the corridor. "I have one case in the hospital that will die before morning."

"What can you do for him, Doctor?"

"You see how I'm fixed; close onto two hundred men sick, and one doctor. The medical supplies are wholly inadequate. There's not castor oil enough on this boat to keep the men clean inside. I'm using my own drugs, but they won't last through an epidemic like this. I can't do much for Lieutenant Fanning. You can, though, if you'll give him the time. You can take better care of him right here than he could get in the hospital. We haven't an empty bed there."

Claude found Victor Morse and told him he had better get a berth in one of the other staterooms. When Victor left with his belongings, Fanning stared after him. "Is he going?"

"Yes. It's too crowded in here, if you've got to stay in bed."

"Glad of it. His stories are too raw for me. I'm no sissy, but that fellow's a regular Don Quixote."

Claude laughed. "You mustn't talk. It makes you cough."

"Where's the Virginian?"

"Who, Bird?" Claude asked in astonishment,--Fanning had stood beside him at Bird's funeral. "Oh, he's gone, too. You sleep if you can."

After dinner Doctor Trueman came in and showed Claude how to give his patient an alcohol bath. "It's simply a question of whether you can keep up his strength. Don't try any of this greasy food they serve here. Give him a raw egg beaten up in the juice of an orange every two hours, night and day. Waken him out of his sleep when it's time, don't miss a single two-hour period. I'll write an order to your table steward, and you can beat the eggs up here in your cabin. Now I must go to the hospital. It's wonderful what those band boys are doing there. I begin to take some pride in the place. That big German has been asking for you. He's in a very bad way."

As there were no nurses on board, the Kansas band had taken over the hospital. They had been trained for stretcher and first aid work, and when they realized what was happening on the Anchises, the bandmaster came to the Doctor and offered the services of his men. He chose nurses and orderlies, divided them into night and day shifts.

When Claude went to see his Corporal, big Tannhauser did not recognize him. He was quite out of his head and was conversing with his own family in the language of his early childhood. The Kansas boys had singled him out for special attention. The mere fact that he kept talking in a tongue forbidden on the surface of the seas, made him seem more friendless and alone than the others.

同类推荐
  • 丹方鉴源

    丹方鉴源

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 清初海强图说

    清初海强图说

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 张庄僖文集

    张庄僖文集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 番禺杂记

    番禺杂记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 欧阳修集

    欧阳修集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 中华成语故事(第六卷)

    中华成语故事(第六卷)

    在中华民族五千年的传统文化中,成语故事是汉语中的璀璨明珠,是中华民族语言的瑰宝。其精练、形象,极富表现力,有着历史历史文化、民族文化的丰厚积淀。每个历史成语的形成都有一段真实的历史史实,它反映了政治、军事、文化、民间风尚、道德及理想。我们可以通过这些历史成语故事去了解中华民族悠久的历史、高超的智慧和历久弥新的语言文字。
  • 超级元素召唤师

    超级元素召唤师

    好不容易爬上49层大楼跳了下去被警察推了下去,唐果却发现自己摔进了一个腾空的绿色的门里,就这样,唐果意外来到了,龙腾大陆,这个充满魔法的世界……
  • 我的同桌是勋鹿

    我的同桌是勋鹿

    我们要幸福——吴世勋永远不分离——鹿晗好兄弟,祝你们幸福,同时也祝我幸福——叶宏辰我们要一起幸福,不管风雨有多大——吴梓萱叶宏辰遇见了勋鹿,成为了同桌也成为了形影不离的兄弟,同艰苦,共患难。殊不知,他已成为李氏姐妹的眼中钉,肉中刺。经勋鹿以及女友的帮助战胜了李氏姐妹。(本人比较笨,笨到不会写简介,所以,我的朋友们,见谅啦!!我一定会努力的!!!努力努力再努力,有兴趣的可以加我qq2589241823)
  • 鲲鹏决

    鲲鹏决

    十万年前,妖魔大陆神魔横行,妖兽作乱,民不聊生。妖族和神魔为生存斗争不断,两族仇恨日积月累,终于惊动了两族大圣。神魔领袖蚩尤约战妖族大圣女娲于九天之上,那一战打的天昏地暗。在战斗中两族大圣双双突破,最后带领两族高阶修士破空而去,留下被打的千疮百孔的世界和被打碎的一个个残缺的空间以及一些低阶的神魔和妖族。而人类就是在那个时候崛起的,先人们有感于妖族的漫长寿命和神魔的强大融合神魔练体和妖族的吸天地之灵气创造出了适合人类的修炼之法:修真和练气。修真分十个境界分别是:聚气、灵动、筑基、金丹、元婴、分神、合体、渡劫、地仙、天仙。每个境界分为初期、中期和后期。而练气分为八个境界:练气、辟谷、炼体、脱胎换骨、滴血重生、渡劫、破空、天神。聚气分九重,其他境界都只分初期、中期、后期。一般人们认为聚气的九重是对应修真境界中的前三重境界的。
  • 悠悠和她的同学们

    悠悠和她的同学们

    夏悠悠承认!黄亲答应和夏悠悠订婚!确实有夏悠悠死缠烂打以及黄父威逼利诱的成分!但是总没人拿刀架在黄亲脖子上吧!真要是那样的话!订婚典礼那天!现场那么多亲朋好友和媒体记者!还不乱成一锅粥啊!
  • 猫的梦

    猫的梦

    又到了蓝花楹盛开的季节,我不确定能不能在这铺满蓝色花朵的小路上遇到你。你知道吗?我又梦到你了,我又笑着哭了!我又闻到了那满池荷花的清香,你的那片荷叶上的水珠滴落了吗?你是不是也会有那么一秒钟想起我?
  • 魔龙侠梦传

    魔龙侠梦传

    梦里奇遇颠覆传统穿越,带入新的魔幻。
  • 腹黑继承男:愿寻夏至天涯

    腹黑继承男:愿寻夏至天涯

    家族之间的斗争,王子与公主的邂逅,摩天轮上的告白,她失恋后去跳楼,竟然在半空之中穿越了,可在古代却又被抛弃了......她强势归来,他能否挽回她的心?
  • 五虎平南

    五虎平南

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 战萝军神

    战萝军神

    来自宇宙尽头的天外来客,意外与亡友的灵魂合二为一,从而诞生了史上最狡猾的腹黑萝莉。主角来不及兴奋,却被告知宇宙海盗来袭,地球成了众矢之的,世界陷入了危机。是成为救世的英雄,还是逃亡的天使?是一腔热血的毁灭,还是背负骂名的苟活?铁血军人将燃烧自己的军魂,照亮整个宇宙!