Daisy In The Field - Page 197/231

"You do not seem very grateful, Gary," said the doctor, who

all this while stood by with an impenetrable countenance.

"Grateful - for what?"

"For your cousin's affection and kindness, which has come here

to look after you."

"I am not grateful," said Preston. "I shall not have her

stay."

"What has brought you here, Preston?" I asked by way of

diversion.

"Me? Powder. It's an infernal invention. If one could fight

with steel, there would be some fun in it. But powder has no

respect of persons."

"How has it hurt you?" I asked. I had somehow never chosen to

put the question to Dr. Sandford; I can hardly tell why. Now

it was time to know. Preston's eye fell on me with sudden

gentleness.

"Daisy, go away," he said. "You have no business here. It is

of all places no place for you. Go away, and don't come

again."

"Dr. Sandford," said I, "will you take me with you and give me

my lesson? That is the first thing. I must earn my right to

the place, it seems."

The doctor looked at me in his turn; I avoided the eye of

Preston. He looked at me in a way not hard to read; quite

agreeing with Preston in wishing me away, but, I saw also,

respecting my qualifications for the work I had come to do. I

saw that he gave me a great reverence on account of it; but

then, Dr. Sandford always gave me more reverence than belonged

to me. I made use of this, and held my advantage. And the

doctor seeing that I was calmly in earnest, even took me at my

word.

We began a progress through the ward; during which every man's

condition was inquired into; wounds examined and dressed; and

course of treatment prescribed. I looked on at first as a mere

spectator; bearing the revelation of pain and suffering with

all the fortitude I could muster; but I found in a little

while that it would overmaster me if I continued an idle

looker-on; and putting aside the attendant nurse at last with

a whisper to which she yielded, I offered myself quietly in

her place to do her work. Dr. Sandford glanced at me then, but

made no remark whatever; suffering me to do my pleasure, and

employing me as if I had been there for a month. He began to

give me directions too. It seemed a long age of feeling and

experience, the time while we were passing through the ward;

yet Dr. Sandford was extremely quick and quiet in his work,

and lost no seconds by unnecessary delay. Even I could see

that. He was kind, too; never harsh, though very firm in his

authority and thorough in his business. I could not help an

unconscious admiration for him growing as we went on. That

steady, strong blue eye; what a thing it was for doubt and

fear to rest on. I saw how doubt and fear rested. I thought I

did; though the bearing of all the sufferers there was calm

and self-contained to an admirable degree. It was so, I heard,

with all our soldiers everywhere.