It never entered my head. But why don't you get a
commission in the volunteers from your uncle? He can get just what he
wants, and they're talking of him for Secretary of War. All you've got
to do is to resign here and apply for a commission as colonel. Then
you'll probably land as a major, or a captain at any rate. By the time
the war is over, you'll be a general, if I know you, and then you can
be appointed captain in the regular army on retiring from the
volunteers, when our class is just graduating. You're just made for a
successful soldier. You've got the ambition and the courage, and you've
got just the brains for a soldier. You don't want to remain a
lieutenant until you are fifty, do you?"
There was great force in Cleary's argument, and Sam knew it. East
Pointers were scandalized at the manner in which outsiders were
jumped into important commands in the field, and when engagements
took place the volunteers came in for all the praise, while the
regulars who did almost all the work were hardly mentioned.
"I'll think it over," said Sam. "I'll speak to Marian about it. It's very
kind of you to think of me."
"Not a bit," said Cleary. "I'm looking out for myself. If you go as a
major and I go as correspondent, I'll just freeze to you and make a
hero of you whether you will or not. I'll make your fortune, and you'll
make mine. I'll see that you get a chance, and I know that you'll take
it if you get it.
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