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tempt at evasion was being made by our prisoners, who all appeared to be asleep. And so my part of the uneasy night watch passed away, and I was relieved by Brace. "Thought out anything?" I said. "No," he replied. "Have you?" I shook my head, and went and lay down to drop asleep on the instant, and wake up at daybreak according to my custom. I had hardly risen when the doctor came to me. "Vincent, my lad," he said, "I don't think Craig is any worse, but he is uneasy. He has got something on his mind, and wants to speak to you." "To me?" I said eagerly. "I'll go." I hurried to where the poor fellow lay, and he signed to me to kneel down by him. "Why, Craig, man," I said, "what is it?" "What is it?" he said angrily. "That doctor has been giving me stuff to keep me asleep just at a time when I could help you all so." "Help us? How? With that plan of yours for getting the guns and horses back?" "Yes," he whispered eagerly. "I wouldn't say a word to any one else as I spoke to you first." I looked at him curiously. "Oh no," he said, as he interpreted my look. "I'm not feverish or delirious. Quite calm and cool, sir. Listen!" I bent down, and he began talking in a low whisper, full of earnestness, as he unrolled his plan, and as he went on my heart began to beat, and my cheeks to flush. "That makes your eyes sparkle, sir, doesn't it?" he said. "That will do, won't it?" "Do, Craig!" I whispered. "It's glorious. If it succeeds, they ought to give you a commission." "Think so?" he said. "Ah, well, perhaps I shan't live to want it. But what are you going to do?" "Go and tell the captain, of course," I cried. "That's right; go and tell him, sir," whispered the wounded man; "and good luck to you. Oh, if I could only have been in the game!" "I wish from my heart you could have been, Craig," I said, pressing his hand. "And you won't leave me behind, sir, to the crows?" "If you are left behind, Craig, I shall be left behind too," I said. "But left! Why, you'll be riding on a limber or in the waggon, man. There, I must go and tell him. Hurrah! Oh, Craig, if I had only been born with a brain like yours!" "Perhaps you would have only wasted your life, sir, as I did. But go along and tell him, and God bless your efforts, for it may mean saving thousands of innocent lives, and preventing the pandies from running riot over the country, and marking their track in
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