in the
fighting-line. When all was over, Tony helped him back to his tent, and
fetched the regimental doctor, who bandaged the wound.
"It's a simple flesh wound," the latter said encouragingly, "and, if you
rest a little, will give you no trouble beyond a little stiffness. The
difficulty is to get you young fellows to sit still for a moment. But
you must rest, and as there happens to be a convoy going to Balaclava in
an hour's time I'll send you with it and have you put on one of the
ships."
"I'd rather stay here and get well," said Phil eagerly. "After all,
it's only a scratch, and will be right in a week."
"Now, I'm treating you, my boy," the doctor exclaimed shortly, "and for
your own good I shall send you on board ship, so there is an end of the
matter."
Phil resigned himself to what he thought was a hard fate, for he was
anxious to stay with his regiment. But no doubt rest for a few days was
required, and the doctor was right in insisting upon it.
"Pack up my things, Tony, and we'll see whether I cannot get a lift in
an araba," he said. "The convoy is to start from the crest, so you
might slip up and see what can be done."
Tony did as he was told, and was able to secure a place for his master.
Phil was then carried to the top of the hill, and, being lifted into the
cart, was driven off. The convoy reached Balaclava at dawn, and Phil,
with Tony in attendance, and some fifty other wounded men was sent on
board a small schooner, which at once weighed anchor, and sailed out of
the harbour.
"Nasty place that," said the captain, a rough-faced, genial old sea-dog,
jerking his thumb towards the harbour. "Safe as a house so long as the
wind's off shore; but once it begins to blow the other way, God help
those aboard ship. There'll be only bare rocky cliffs to welcome them
if the vessels go ashore, and how could they help doing that, for the
anchorage is notoriously unsafe? Can't imagine why they stick there!
There's many a safer harbour hereabouts."
The captain looked anxiously at the fine transports swinging to their
cables, and then muttering "Thank heavens I shall be at sea and have a
better chance than they!" nodded to Phil and dived below.
He was a knowing man, this sailor, and, being accustomed to the Black
Sea, was well aware that the season for violent gales and storms of rain
and snow had now arrived. That night indeed, and all the following day,
it blew so fiercely that the vessel's
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