[The Four Feathers by A. E. W. Mason]@TWC D-Link book
The Four Feathers

CHAPTER VII
16/20

Durrance lay long awake that night on his camp bedstead spread out beneath the stars.

He forgot the letter in the mud wall.

Southward the Southern Cross hung slanting in the sky, above him glittered the curve of the Great Bear.

In a week he would sail for England; he lay awake, counting up the years since the packet had cast off from Dover pier, and he found that the tale of them was good.
Kassassin, Tel-el-Kebir, the rush down the Red Sea, Tokar, Tamai, Tamanieb--the crowded moments came vividly to his mind.

He thrilled even now at the recollection of the Hadendowas leaping and stabbing through the breach of McNeil's zareba six miles from Suakin; he recalled the obdurate defence of the Berkshires, the steadiness of the Marines, the rallying of the broken troops.


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