Kings, Queens and Pawns - An American Woman at the Front by Mary Roberts Rinehart
page 74 of 375 (19%)
page 74 of 375 (19%)
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the care of the ministry of war. I did not know what the future would
bring, and the few days at La Panne and the Ambulance Ocean had made friends for me there. Things move quickly in war time. The conventions with which we bind up our souls in ordinary life are cut away. La Panne was already familiar and friendly territory. I went down the wide staircase. An ambulance had stopped and its burden was being carried in. The bearers rested the stretcher gently on the floor, and a nurse was immediately on her knees beside it. "Shell!" she said. The occupant was a boy of perhaps nineteen--a big boy. Some mother must have been very proud of him. He was fully conscious, and he looked up from his stained bandages with the same searching glance that now I have seen so often--the glance that would read its chances in the faces of those about. With his uninjured arm he threw back the blanket. His right arm was wounded, broken in two places, but not shattered. "He'll do nicely," said the nurse. "A broken jaw and the arm." His eyes were on me, so I bent over. "The nurse says you will do nicely," I assured him. "It will take time, but you will be very comfortable here, and--" The nurse had been making further investigation. Now she turned back the other end of the blanket His right leg had been torn off at the hip. |
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