Supplies were transported from Paris to the field hospital in batches.
The first group of volunteers hurried over from the small town. Dejoka led them on foot to the field hospital. There were men and women, young and old, including Camille.
Perhaps because of the neighbors' trust, Camille naturally became the leader of the young women. Their task was to learn bandaging, dressing wounds, and other operations from the nurses to supplement the insufficient medical staff.
They had to replace all the old bandages on the wounded with new ones, change them daily, and wash, disinfect, and dry the used bandages, which was a staggering amount of work.
The older ones, due to their limited learning capacity, were assigned to take care of the wounded's daily lives, while the young men naturally took on physical labor.