S.O.S. Stand to! by Reginald Grant
page 69 of 202 (34%)
page 69 of 202 (34%)
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ears continually.
Crawling along on his hands and knees, with the wire running through his hand, he came to a little bush, where it slipped away from him, denoting that there was the break. At that moment the sniper got him in the leg, but he held to until he repaired it, and was in touch with headquarters, reporting that he had mended the break, when the wire was again cut. The bleeding from his wound now made it necessary for him to mend that break first, and he bandaged it as quickly as his nervous fingers would work. Again he took hold of the wire, crawling and stumbling along until he again came to the break, and again mended it. He was being closely watched now, as the bullets were whistling about him ceaselessly. Again he turned his attention to his wound, adjusting the bandage, and he noticed a British soldier crawling toward him on his hands and knees. "Hello, matey, what you doing out here?" he asked. "I'm mendin' me bloomin' leg now," Butler answered. "Well, if you hadn't been out here you wouldn't have got it. Why didn't you stay in your trenches?" "Someone's got to repair the wire," said Butler. He was growing perceptibly weaker from the loss of blood. "Oh, repairing the wire, were you? Well, don't repair any more"--and Butler had just time to see him level his revolver and then he dropped unconscious. The bullet had hit him in the thigh. But his communication had reached headquarters that he was wounded and it was not long before the stretcher bearers came out and found him. They took him to the |
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