y?"
"Never mind--don't; I daresay he will find out soon enough."
"Anyhow," said Pickford, "he is awfully popular with himself just now;
I hear he is certain to be a Major in a few days, and will be Colonel
in no time. You know he is engaged?"
"Engaged? To whom?"
"You know her--old Tresize's daughter; Nancy, I think her name is. Of
course you know her: Penwennack, her father's place, is close by St.
Ia."
"And--and is he engaged to her?"
"Yes," replied Pickford.
"Did he tell you so himself?"
"No, not in so many words; but he spoke of her to one of the other men
as his _fiancee_."
Bob's heart sank like lead; the worst he had feared had come to pass.
This, then, was his reward for his fidelity to his conscience. He
could not understand it. He knew Nancy was angry with him--angry at
what she had called his cowardice, at his refusal to obey the call of
his country. But he was sure she loved him: had she not told him
so?--and now, to become engaged within only a few weeks, to the man she
had spoken of, almost with scorn, was simply unbelievable.
For the moment he had become heedless of his surroundings; the fact
that thousands of soldiers were crouching in the trenches waiting for
any possible advance of the enemy, the groans of men who were wounded
and perhaps dying, did not exist to him.
At that moment the issue of battles was less to him than the action of
the woman he loved.
"I used to imagine you were gone on her," went on Pickford; "I suppose
it was only a boy-and-girl affair."
Bob did not reply; he could not discuss the tragedy of his life with
his old school-fellow.
"Where is Trevanion now?" he asked presently.
"He must be close by," was the reply. "I saw him less than an hour
ago, when the Germans were beginning to give way. Of course I have
always known him to be a fine soldier, but I never knew he had so much
of the fighting devil in him. Man, you should have seen his eyes burn
red--he was just like a wild savage. I think he forgot his duties as
an officer and gave himself up to the lust of fighting."
Pickford had scarcely uttered the words when a man came up to him. "I
say, Trevanion's missing," he said.
"Trevanion missing? I was telling Nancarrow here that I saw him less
than an hour ago."
"Yes, so did I; but we have had later reports. Sergeant Beel says he
saw him fall; I think he was wounded by a bullet. Beel was at that
time so hard pressed that he could
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