"But what were you doing at the hospital?"

"I went to see a fellow who told me he'd been fired out of our camp. He

came up just after the dago knifed you, and knocked out the man I was

grappling with, but got an ugly stab from one of the gang. We didn't find

this out until we had disposed of you. However, he's nearly all right and

they'll let him out soon."

"Ah!" said Dick. "That must be Payne, the storekeeper. But, you see, I

fired him. Why did he interfere?"

"I don't know. He said something about your being a white man and it was

three to one."

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Dick pondered this and then his thoughts resumed their former groove.

"Who's the mulatto woman in black?"

"She's called Lucille. A nice old thing, and seems to have looked after

you well. When I came in she was singing you to sleep. Voice all gone, of

course, but I'd like to write down the song. It sounded like the genuine

article."

"What do you mean by the 'genuine article'?"

"Well, I think it was one of the plantation lullabies they used to sing

before the war; not the imitation trash fourth-rate composers turned out

in floods some years ago. That, of course, has no meaning, but the other

expressed the spirit of the race. Words quaint coon-English with a touch

of real feeling; air something after the style of a camp-meeting hymn,

and yet somehow African. In fact, it's unique music, but it's good."

"Hadn't I another nurse?" Dick asked.

Jake laughed. "I ought to have remembered that you're not musical. There

was a nursing sister of some religious order."

"I don't mean a nun," Dick persisted. "A girl came in now and then."

"It's quite possible. Some of them are sympathetic and some are curious.

No doubt, you were an interesting patient; anyhow, you gave the Spanish

doctor plenty trouble. He was rather anxious for a time; the fever you

had before the dago stabbed you complicated things." Jake paused and

looked at his watch. "Now I've got to quit. I had orders not to stay

long, but I'll come back soon to see how you're getting on."

Dick let him go and lay still, thinking drowsily. Jake had apparently not

meant to answer his questions. He wanted to know where he was and had not

been told. It looked as if his comrade had been warned not to enlighten

him; but there was no reason for this. Above all, he wanted to know who

was the girl with the sweet voice and light step. Jake, who had admitted

that she might have been in his room, had, no doubt, seen her, and Dick

could not understand why he should refuse to speak of her. While he

puzzled about it he went to sleep again.




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