登陆注册
38635100000044

第44章 Little Darby(10)

Thus no one outside knew what the women of the district went through.

When they wrote to their husbands or sons that they were in straits, it meant that they were starving.Such a letter meant all the more because they were used to hunger, but not to writing, and a letter meant perhaps days of thought and enterprise and hours of labor.

As the war went on the hardships everywhere grew heavier and heavier;the letters from home came oftener and oftener.Many of the men got furloughs when they were in winter quarters, and sometimes in summer, too, from wounds, and went home to see their families.Little Darby never went;he sent his mother his pay, and wrote to her, but he did not even apply for a furlough, and he had never been touched except for a couple of flesh wounds which were barely skin-deep.When he heard from his mother she was always cheerful; and as he knew Vashti had never even visited her, there was no other reason for his going home.It was in the late part of the third campaign of the war that he began to think of going.

When Cove Mills got a letter from his wife and told Little Darby how "ailin'" and "puny" his mother was getting, Darby knew that the letter was written by Vashti, and he felt that it meant a great deal.He applied for a furlough, but was told that no furloughs would be granted then --which then meant that work was expected.It came shortly afterward, and Little Darby and the company were in it.Battle followed battle.

A good many men in the company were killed, but, as it happened, not one of the men from the district was among them, until one day when the company after a fierce charge found itself hugging the ground in a wide field, on the far side of which the enemy -- infantry and artillery -- was posted in force.Lying down they were pretty well protected by the conformation of the ground from the artillery; and lying down, the infantry generally, even with their better guns, could not hurt them to a great extent; but a line of sharp-shooters, well placed behind cover of scattered rocks on the far side of the field, could reach them with their long-range rifles, and galled them with their dropping fire, picking off man after man.A line of sharp-shooters was thrown forward to drive them in; but their guns were not as good and the cover was inferior, and it was only after numerous losses that they succeeded in silencing most of them.They still left several men up among the rocks, who from time to time sent a bullet into the line with deadly effect.

One man, in particular, ensconced behind a rock on the hill-side, picked off the men with unerring accuracy.Shot after shot was sent at him.

At last he was quiet for so long that it seemed he must have been silenced, and they began to hope; Ad Mills rose to his knees and in sheer bravado waved his hat in triumph.Just as he did so a puff of white came from the rock, and Ad Mills threw up his hands and fell on his back, like a log, stone dead.A groan of mingled rage and dismay went along the line.

Poor old Cove crept over and fell on the boy's body with a flesh wound in his own arm.Fifty shots were sent at the rock, but a puff of smoke from it afterward and a hissing bullet showed that the marksman was untouched.

It was apparent that he was secure behind his rock bulwark and had some opening through which he could fire at his leisure.

It was also apparent that he must be dislodged if possible; but how to do it was the question; no one could reach him.The slope down and the slope up to the group of rocks behind which he lay were both in plain view, and any man would be riddled who attempted to cross it.A bit of woods reached some distance up on one side, but not far enough to give a shot at one behind the rock; and though the ground in that direction dipped a little, there was one little ridge in full view of both lines and perfectly bare, except for a number of bodies of skirmishers who had fallen earlier in the day.It was discussed in the line; but everyone knew that no man could get across the ridge alive.While they were talking of it Little Darby, who, with a white face, had helped old Cove to get his boy's body back out of fire, slipped off to one side, rifle in hand, and disappeared in the wood.

They were still talking of the impossibility of dislodging the sharp-shooter when a man appeared on the edge of the wood.He moved swiftly across the sheltered ground, stooping low until he reached the edge of the exposed place, where he straightened up and made a dash across it.

He was recognized instantly by some of the men of his company as Little Darby, and a buzz of astonishment went along the line.What could he mean, it was sheer madness; the line of white smoke along the wood and the puffs of dust about his feet showed that bullets were raining around him.The next second he stopped dead-still, threw up his arms, and fell prone on his face in full view of both lines.

A groan went up from his comrades; the whole company knew he was dead, and on the instant a puff of white from the rock and a hissing bullet told that the sharp-shooter there was still intrenched in his covert.

The men were discussing Little Darby, when someone cried out and pointed to him.He was still alive, and not only alive, but was moving --moving slowly but steadily up the ridge and nearer on a line with the sharp-shooter, as flat on the ground as any of the motionless bodies about him.A strange thrill of excitement went through the company as the dark object dragged itself nearer to the rock, and it was not allayed when the whack of a bullet and the well-known white puff of smoke recalled them to the sharp-shooter's dangerous aim; for the next second the creeping figure sprang erect and made a dash for the spot.

He had almost reached it when the sharp-shooter discovered him, and the men knew that Little Darby had underestimated the quickness of his hand and aim; for at the same moment the figure of the man behind the rock appeared for a second as he sprang erect; there was a puff of white and Little Darby stopped and staggered and sank to his knees.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 全能影后今天又上热搜了

    全能影后今天又上热搜了

    〈甜,宠,长情〉全能影后VS腹黑总裁从在一起时,人就被吃的死死的。
  • 七羽之上

    七羽之上

    【前篇】爷爷不幸去世,不得已生活在凉薄冷漠的家中的少女该如何应对?她知道,唯有努力变强,登上顶峰,才是最好的出路!帝国学院,生活在幸福家庭中的少年与少女在命运指引下相遇,互相托付后背,成为并肩作战的最默契搭档。这变强之路,又将有怎样的荆棘和阻碍?唯有竭尽全力,跨过一切苦难,才完成自己的理想,到达顶峰!从学生到军队军官,由优秀的学业至极高的任务完成度,或许这就是青春成长所能提交的,最好答卷。[无感情戏][男女主共同奋斗史](一月一更或两更)
  • 绝世艳遇神

    绝世艳遇神

    我们修的不是仙,而是修的寂寞。要想强大,只能修仙。修道之路,何其难,难于上青天!
  • 恶神龙笛赋

    恶神龙笛赋

    这是一个无知又无畏的的少年。他历经坎坷,寻兄心切。可惜,命运跟他开了一个大大的玩笑。岐月山下,血流成河。岐月山上,夜夜笙歌。本是修仙的圣地,却变成了人间最污浊的地方。小子胡越能否拯救苍生?能否带领人界魔界抵御神界兽界的侵略。我们的主人公在兄弟情,恋人爱间如何选择?这是一部充满人性的修真故事。珠紫玉笛魔界至宝,却使人进入了丧心病狂的境地,道家诸人俗不可耐,一本虚无缥缈的《登仙传》却使得兄弟反目,师徒残杀。恶神重生能否担当重任?恶神重生,让一切的一切,万劫不复。
  • 璃茉的日常生活

    璃茉的日常生活

    真不知道简介这造型是谁发明的,真是烦死了。
  • 我的村庄及其它

    我的村庄及其它

    用诗歌抒写村庄的历史;用诗歌记录村庄的人文。
  • 专属深情,墨少的心尖爱妻

    专属深情,墨少的心尖爱妻

    钱月说在她遇到流云左的时候她就不再是自己,她有了另一个身份,一个不能公布于众的身份。貂雪,不仅是娱乐圈的宠儿,更是流云左放在心尖上的人。流云左说:“你和雪儿长得一模一样,那么从此你就是雪儿的替身了。”所以,每次貂雪拍片的时候,凡是有一丁点儿危险的时候,钱月就会上场顶替,甚至吻戏,床戏都由她顶替。宗政莲墨,一个既神秘又充满神话的人物,初次相遇,她是被毁容,又被迫整容的女人,而他是嫌弃她长相的过路人。再次相遇,谁又会知他们彼此的命运紧紧的连在了一起。你会爱吗?如果爱的前提是拜托你消失,这样你还会爱吗?钱月说在二十五岁之前她会毫不犹豫的说会,可是二十五岁之后她说她既不会消失,也不会再爱了。宗政莲墨说,那个女人让他的视觉发生错误,从此一发不可收拾。片段一,“请问墨少您最爱什么?”“钱钱”墨少说的是money的钱吗?片段二:“钱钱,帮我减肥。”“帮?减肥?
  • 总裁独爱:宝贝,不要离开

    总裁独爱:宝贝,不要离开

    在她十八岁生日的那天,他说,只要你没交到男朋友,我就陪你过生日。他们拉钩为定。到了她二十岁生日的那天,她准备与男友一起庆祝,但是被他强拉回家。他将她变成了他的女人。世俗的观念不允许他们在一起,她逃,他追,终究还是无法分开。当他们决定不顾一切的在一起时,一个尘封已久的秘密浮了出来,一场阴谋,让他们无法释怀的继续在一起。她在科学的领域探索。而他周旋于各种势力之间。她的才华让她逐步陷入危险。而他一直都徘徊在生死边缘。一场“死亡”的布局,他消失在众人的视线里。所以,她决定放手,准备与他人步入婚姻的殿堂。可就在她即将说出那句“我愿意”的时候,他出现了。
  • 末世黑科技手机

    末世黑科技手机

    末世来临之际,方皓得到了一部黑科技智能手机,随之而来的,是各种有关末世的攻略手册指南以及令人意想不到的黑科技技术,于是,带着这部手机,方皓开启了他的末世之旅。
  • 黄泉买魂人

    黄泉买魂人

    人死如灯灭,身死魂亦存。秦末年间硝烟四起,生灵涂炭。而在这人鬼不分的年代里,却造就了一个特殊的职业-黄泉买魂人。收世间之残魂,售天下之鬼魄。收阴物,驱妖邪。“我游走于阴阳两界,徘徊于人鬼之间。亦正亦邪,亦人亦鬼。吾乃黄泉买魂人。”