An Apache Princess - Page 22/162

Within ten minutes of Todd's arrival at the spot the soft sands of the

mesa were tramped into bewildering confusion by dozens of trooper

boots. The muffled sound of excited voices, so soon after the

startling affair of the earlier evening, and hurrying footfalls

following, had roused almost every household along the row and brought

to the spot half the officers on duty at the post. A patrol of the

guard had come in double time, and soldiers had been sent at speed to

the hospital for a stretcher.

Dr. Graham had lost no moment of time in

reaching the stricken sentry. Todd had been sent back to Blakely's

bedside and Downs to fetch a lantern. They found the latter, five

minutes later, stumbling about the Trumans' kitchen, weeping for that

which was lost, and the sergeant of the guard collared and cuffed him

over to the guard-house--one witness, at least, out of the way. At

four o'clock the doctor was working over his exhausted and unconscious

patient at the hospital. Mullins had been stabbed twice, and

dangerously, and half a dozen men with lanterns were hunting about the

bloody sands where the faithful fellow had dropped, looking for a

weapon or a clew, and probably trampling out all possibility of

finding either. Major Plume, through Mr. Doty, his adjutant, had felt

it necessary to remind Captain Wren that an officer in close arrest

had no right to be away from his quarters. Late in the evening, it

seems, Dr. Graham had represented to the post commander that the

captain was in so nervous and overwrought a condition, and so

distressed, that as a physician he recommended his patient be allowed

the limits of the space adjoining his quarters in which to walk off

his superabundant excitement.

Graham had long been the friend of

Captain Wren and was his friend as well as physician now, even though

deploring his astounding outbreak, but Graham had other things to

demand his attention as night wore on, and there was no one to speak

for Wren when the young adjutant, a subaltern of infantry, with

unnecessary significance of tone and manner, suggested the captain's

immediate return to his proper quarters. Wren bowed his head and went

in stunned and stubborn silence. It had never occurred to him for a

moment, when he heard that half-stifled, agonized cry for help, that

there could be the faintest criticism of his rushing to the sentry's

aid. Still less had it occurred to him that other significance, and

damning significance, might attach to his presence on the spot, but,

being first to reach the fallen man, he was found kneeling over him

within thirty seconds of the alarm. Not another living creature was in

sight when the first witnesses came running to the spot. Both Truman

and Todd could swear to that.