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fire the wagons left. It will not be very long before the enemy will be coming back. Hurry." Dickenson was turning to go when the major arrested him. "Any news of Lennox?" he said. "None, sir," said the lieutenant sadly. But his words were nearly drowned by an angry cry from Roby: "The coward! The cur! He shall be cashiered for this." "Go on, Dickenson," said the major; "the poor fellow's off his head. He doesn't mean you." The lieutenant hurried away, and for the next half-hour the men worked like slaves, laying the wounded Boers well away from the laager, and their own injured men out on the side nearest Groenfontein; while Dickenson, in the most business-like manner, helped by Sergeant James, sent off a large drove of oxen, the big, heavy, lumbering animals herding together and trudging steadily away after a wagon with its regular span laden heavily with mealies, straight for Groenfontein. For a few Kaffirs turned up after the firing was over, evidently with ideas of loot, and ready to be impressed for foreloper, driver, or herdsmen to the big drove of beasts. A few horses were rounded up as well, and followed the oxen; while, as fast as they could be got ready, three more provision-wagons were despatched, the whole making a long broken convoy on its way to the British camp. By this time the men, working under the orders of Captain Edwards and the major, had got the Boers' ammunition-wagons together in one place behind a mass of rocks, on the farther side of the kopje, away from the wounded. Then the weapons that could be found were piled amongst the wagons in another place; and the troops were still working hard when the major bade them cease. "We can do no more," he said; "we have no time. But oughtn't the ambulance-wagons to be here by now? The enemy can't be long; they're bound to attack. Ah, Dickenson, have you got all off?" "All I could, sir, in the time." "That's right. I want your men here. You'll be ready to help to get off the wounded as soon as the wagons come?" Dickenson nodded, with his head averted from the speaker and his eyes wandering over the injured men. "No news of Lennox?" he asked. "None. I can't understand where the poor fellow is, unless he was carried off in the rush of the Boers' retreat. A thorough search has been made. Here, get up on the highest part of the kopje with your glass, and see if you can make out anything of the enemy." The lie
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