This chapter's epigraph comes from a line in Gulliver's Travels. It's a line about a dog that needs to pee, and it's about the dog's reaction to the sight of its master. The dog asks Gulliver to hold on to the dog a bit longer, so that it doesn't bleed too much. Gulliver tells the dog to hold onto the dog, because the doctor is coming. The doctor is the medical officer for the Volks's "infiltration unit" , and he's bleeding so badly that Gulliver can't help but think that the doctor must be a Volk soldier. He grabs the dog and tells it to keep on hold. Gulliver says that he and the captain are talking, and the doctor asks if the sergeant can explain what happened. The sergeant says that they're inside their camp, and that they don't need to worry about it. They're just waiting for their superiors to arrive. They can let the sergeant go as soon as he cooperates with them. He says that Captain duvall still works as a doctor, even if she's not a soldier. The captain is still a suspect, the sergeant says, because she sent him a message when she fainted. She's asking them when this will all be over. They haven't finished their interrogation yet, so they tell the doctor to wait longer. Gulliver and the sergeant both know that the captain is spying on the soldier, but the sergeant keeps insisting that they should let the captain go. He's acting
This chapter's epigraph comes from a line in Gulliver's Travels. It's a line about a dog that needs to pee, and it's about the dog's reaction to the sight of its master. The dog asks Gulliver to hold on to the dog a bit longer, so that it doesn't bleed too much. Gulliver tells the dog to hold onto the dog, because the doctor is coming. The doctor is the medical officer for the Volks's "infiltration unit" , and he's bleeding so badly that Gulliver can't help but think that the doctor must be a Volk soldier. He grabs the dog and tells it to keep on hold. Gulliver says that he and the captain are talking, and the doctor asks if the sergeant can explain what happened. The sergeant says that they're inside their camp, and that they don't need to worry about it. They're just waiting for their superiors to arrive. They can let the sergeant go as soon as he cooperates with them. He says that Captain duvall still works as a doctor, even if she's not a soldier. The captain is still a suspect, the sergeant says, because she sent him a message when she fainted. She's asking them when this will all be over. They haven't finished their interrogation yet, so they tell the doctor to wait longer. Gulliver and the sergeant both know that the captain is spying on the soldier, but the sergeant keeps insisting that they should let the captain go. He's acting