It was hard for him to believe that he really was going to war, even

now, when the long sail was near an end and the ships were running

fearlessly along the big, grim coast-mountains of Cuba, with bands

playing and colors to the breeze; hard to realize that he was not to

land in peace and safety and, in peace and safety, go back as he came;

that a little further down those gashed mountains, showing ever clearer

through the mist, were men with whom the quiet officers and men around

him would soon be in a death-grapple. The thought stirred him, and he

looked around at the big, strong fellows--intelligent, orderly,

obedient, good-natured, and patient; patient, restless, and sick as they

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were from the dreadful hencoop life they had led for so many

days--patient beyond words. He had risen early that morning. The rose

light over the eastern water was whitening, and all over the deck his

comrades lay asleep, their faces gray in the coming dawn and their

attitudes suggesting ghastly premonitions--premonitions that would come

true fast enough for some of the poor fellows--perhaps for him. Stepping

between and over the prostrate bodies, he made his way forward and

leaned over the prow, with his hat in his hand and his hair blowing back

from his forehead.

Already his face had suffered a change. For more than three long weeks

he had been merely a plain man among plain men. At once when he became

Private Crittenden, No. 63, Company C, --th United States Regular

Cavalry, at Tampa, he was shorn of his former estate as completely as

though in the process he had been wholly merged into some other man. The

officers, at whose table he had once sat, answered his salute precisely

as they answered any soldier's. He had seen Rivers but seldom--but once

only on the old footing, and that was on the night he went on board,

when Rivers came to tell him good-by and to bitterly bemoan the luck

that, as was his fear from the beginning, had put him among the

ill-starred ones chosen to stay behind at Tampa and take care of the

horses; as hostlers, he said, with deep disgust, adding hungrily: "I wish I were in your place."

With the men, Crittenden was popular, for he did his work thoroughly,

asked no favors, shirked no duties. There were several officers' sons

among them working for commissions, and, naturally, he drifted to them,

and he found them all good fellows. Of Blackford, he was rather wary,

after Rivers's short history of him, but as he was friendly, unselfish,

had a high sense of personal honour, and a peculiar reverence for women,

Crittenden asked no further questions, and was sorry, when he came back

to Tampa, to find him gone with the Rough Riders. With Reynolds, he was

particularly popular, and he never knew that the story of the Tampa

fight had gone to all the line officers of the regiment, and that nearly

every one of them knew him by sight and knew his history. Only once from

an officer, however, and steadily always from the old Sergeant, could he

feel that he was regarded in a different light from the humblest soldier

in the ranks--which is just what he would have asked. The Colonel had

cast an envious eye on Raincrow at Tampa, and, straightway, he had taken

the liberty of getting the Sergeant to take the horse to the Colonel's

tent with the request that he use him throughout the campaign. The horse

came back with the Colonel's thanks; but, when the order came that the

cavalry was to go unmounted, the Colonel sent word that he would take

the horse now, as the soldier could not use him. So Raincrow was aboard

the ship, and the old Colonel, coming down to look at the horse one day,

found Crittenden feeding him, and thanked him and asked him how he was

getting along; and, while there was a smile about his humorous mouth,

there was a kindly look in his blue eyes that pleased Crittenden

mightily. As for the old Sergeant, he could never forget that the

soldier was a Crittenden--one of his revered Crittendens. And, while he

was particularly stern with him in the presence of his comrades, for

fear that he might be betrayed into showing partiality--he was always

drifting around to give him a word of advice and to shake his head over

the step that Crittenden had taken.