The firing was pretty hot now, and the wounded were too many to be

handled. A hospital man called out sharply: "Give a hand here."

Grafton gave a hand to help a poor fellow back to

the field hospital, in a little hollow, and when he reached the road

again that black horse and his boy rider were coming back like shadows,

through a rain of bullets, along the edge of the woods. Once the horse

plunged sidewise and shook his head angrily--a Mauser had stung him in

the neck--but the lad, pale and his eyes like stars, lifted him in a

flying leap over a barbed-wire fence and swung him into the road again.

"Damn!" said Grafton, simply.

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Then rose a loud cheer from the battery on the hill, and, looking west,

he saw the war-balloon hung high above the trees and moving toward

Santiago. The advance had begun over there; there was the main

attack--the big battle. It was interesting and horrible enough where he

was, but Caney was not Santiago; and Grafton, too, mounted his horse and

galloped after Basil.

* * * * *

At head-quarters began the central lane of death that led toward San

Juan, and Basil picked his way through it at a slow walk--his excitement

gone for the moment and his heart breaking at the sight of the terrible

procession on its way to the rear. Men with arms in slings; men with

trousers torn away at the knee, and bandaged legs; men with brow, face,

mouth, or throat swathed; men with no shirts, but a broad swathe around

the chest or stomach--each bandage grotesquely pictured with human

figures printed to show how the wound should be bound, on whatever part

of the body the bullet entered. Men staggering along unaided, or between

two comrades, or borne on litters, some white and quiet, some groaning

and blood-stained, some conscious, some dying, some using a rifle for a

support, or a stick thrust through the side of a tomato-can. Rolls,

haversacks, blouses, hardtack, bibles, strewn by the wayside, where the

soldiers had thrown them before they went into action. It was curious,

but nearly all of the wounded were dazed and drunken in appearance,

except at the brows, which were tightly drawn with pain. There was one

man, with short, thick, upright red hair, stumbling from one side of the

road to the other, with no wound apparent, and muttering:

"Oh, I don't know what happened to me. I don't know what happened to

me."

Another, hopping across the creek on one leg--the other bare and

wounded--and using his gun, muzzle down, as a vaulting-pole. Another,

with his arm in the sling, pointing out the way.