From the Ranks eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 243 pages of information about From the Ranks.

From the Ranks eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 243 pages of information about From the Ranks.
convoy of matrons and maids came tripping homeward after midnight.  He was a crusty old bachelor, to use his own description, and rarely ventured into these scenes of social gayety, and, besides, he was officer of the day, and it was a theory he was fond of expounding to juniors that when on guard no soldier should permit himself to be drawn from the scene of his duties.  With his books and his pipe Chester whiled away the lonely hours of the early night, and wondered if the wind would blow up a rain or disperse the clouds entirely.  Towards one o’clock a light, bounding footstep approached his door, and the portal flew open as a trim-built young fellow with laughing eyes and an air of exuberant health and spirits came briskly in.  It was Rollins, the junior second lieutenant of the regiment, and Chester’s own and only pet,—­so said the envious others.  He was barely a year out of leading-strings at the Point, and as full of hope and pluck and mischief as a colt.  Moreover, he was frank and teachable, said Chester, and didn’t come to him with the idea that he had nothing to learn and less to do.  The boy won upon his gruff captain from the very start, and, to the incredulous delight of the whole regiment, within six months the old cynic had taken him into his heart and home, and Mr. Rollins occupied a pleasant room under Chester’s roof-tree, and was the sole accredited sharer of the captain’s mess.  To a youngster just entering service, whose ambition it was to stick to business and make a record for zeal and efficiency, these were manifest advantages.  There were men in the regiment to whom such close communion with a watchful senior would have been most embarrassing, and Mr. Rollins’s predecessor as second lieutenant of Chester’s company was one of these.  Mr. Jerrold was a happy man when promotion took him from under the wing of “Crusty Jake” and landed him in Company B. More than that, it came just at a time when, after four years of loneliness and isolation at an up-river stockade, his new company and his old one, together with four others from the regiment, were ordered to join head-quarters and the band at the most delightful station in the Northwest.  Here Mr. Rollins had reported for duty during the previous autumn, and here they were with troops of other arms of the service, enjoying the close proximity of all the good things of civilization.

Chester looked up with a quizzical smile as his “plebe” came in: 

“Well, sir, how many dances had you with ‘Sweet Alice, Ben Bolt’?  Not many, I fancy, with Mr. Jerrold monopolizing everything, as usual.  By gad! some good fellow could make a colossal fortune in buying that young man at my valuation and selling him at his own.”

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From the Ranks from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.