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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Last Shot, by Frederick Palmer</title>
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13738 ***</div>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Last Shot, by Frederick Palmer</h1>
+<hr class="full" noshade>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h1>THE LAST SHOT</h1>
+<h3>By</h3>
+<h2>FREDERICK PALMER</h2>
+<p style='text-align: center;'>Author of "Over the Pass," etc.</p>
+<p style='text-align: center;'>1914</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>TO THE READER</p>
+<p>This story of war grew out of my experience in many wars. I have
+been under fire without fighting; known the comradeship of arms
+without bearing arms, and the hardships and the humors of the march
+with only an observer's incentive. A singular career, begun by
+chance, was pursued to the ends of the earth in the study of the
+greatest drama which the earth stages. Whether watching a small
+force of white regulars disciplining a primitive people, or the
+complex tactics of huge army against huge army; whether watching
+war in the large or in the small, I have found the same basic human
+qualities in the white heat of conflict working out the same
+illusions, heroisms, tragedies, and comedies.</p>
+<p>The fellowship of campaigning made the cause of the force that I
+accompanied mine for the time being. Thus, one who settles in the
+town of A absorbs its local feeling of rivalry against the town of
+B in athletic games or character of citizenship. To A, B is never
+quite sportsmanlike; B is provincial and bigoted and generally
+inferior. But settle in B and your prejudices reverse their favor
+from A to B.</p>
+<p>Yet in the midst of battle, with the detachment of a
+non-combatant marvelling at the irony of two lines of men engaged
+in an effort at mutual extermination, I have caught myself thinking
+with the other side. I knew why my side was busy at killing. Why
+was the other? For the same reasons as ours.</p>
+<p>I was seeing humanity against humanity. A man killed was a man
+killed, courage was courage, sacrifice was sacrifice, romance was
+romance, a heart-broken mother was a heart-broken mother, a village
+burned was a village burned, regardless of race or nation. Every
+war became a story in a certain set form: the rise of the war
+passion; the conflict; victory and defeat; and then peace, in
+joyous relief, which the nations enjoyed before they took the
+trouble to fight for it.</p>
+<p>But such thoughts have been a familiar theme to the poet, the
+novelist, the dramatist, the satirist, the dreamer, and the peace
+propagandist, while the world goes on arming. In want of their
+talent, I offer experience of the monstrous object of their gibes
+and imagination. To me, the old war novels have the atmosphere of
+smoke powder and antiquated tactics which still survived when I
+went on my first campaign sixteen years ago. These classic
+masterpieces endure through their genius; the excuse of any plodder
+who chooses their theme to-day is that he deals with the material
+of to-day.</p>
+<p>Methods of light and of motive power have not changed more
+rapidly in the forty-odd years since the last great European war
+than the soldier's weapons and his work. With all the symbols of
+economic improvement the public is familiar, while usually it
+thinks of war in the old symbols for want of familiarity with the
+new. My aim is to express not only war as fought to-day, soldiers
+of to-day under the fire of arms of to-day, but also the effects of
+war in the <i>n</i>th degree of modern organization and methods on
+a group of men and women, free in its realism from the wild
+improbabilities of some latter-day novelists who have given us wars
+in the air or regaled us with the decimation of armies by
+explosives dropped from dirigibles or their asphyxiation by noxious
+gases compounded by the hero of the tale.</p>
+<p>The Russo-Japanese and the Balkan campaigns, particular in their
+nature, gave me useful impressions, but not the scene for my
+purpose. The world must think of those wars comparatively as
+second-rate and only partially illustrative, when its fearful
+curiosity and more fearful apprehension centre on the possibility
+of the clash of arms between the enormous forces of two first-class
+European land-powers, with their supreme training and precision in
+arms. What would such a war mean in reality to the soldiers
+engaged? What the play of human elements? What form the new
+symbols? Therefore have I laid my scene in a small section of a
+European frontier, and the time the present.</p>
+<p>Identify your combatants, some friends insist. Make the Italians
+fight the Austrians or the French fight the Germans. As a spectator
+of wars, under the spell of the growing cosmopolitanism that makes
+mankind more and more akin, I could not see it in that way and be
+true to my experience. My soldiers exist for my purpose only as
+human beings. Race prejudices they have. Race prejudice is one of
+the factors of war. But make the prejudice English, Italian,
+German, Russian, or French and there is the temptation for reader
+and author to forget the story of men as men and war as war. Even
+as in the long campaign in Manchuria I would see a battle simply as
+an argument to the death between little fellows in short khaki
+blouses and big fellows in long gray coats, so I see the Browns and
+the Grays in "The Last Shot" take the field.</p>
+<p>But, though the scene is imaginary, the characters are from
+life. Their actions and their sayings are those of men whom I have
+studied under the stress of danger and sudden emergency. The
+delightful, boyish confidence of Eugene Aronson has been at my
+elbow in a charge; Feller I knew in the tropics as an outcast who
+shared my rations; Dellarme's last words I heard from a dying
+captain; the philosophy of Hugo Mallin is no less familiar than the
+bragging of Pilzer or the transformation of Stransky, who whistled
+a wedding-march as he pumped bullets at the enemy. In Lanstron we
+have a type of the modern officer; in the elder Fragini a type of
+the soldier of another day. Each marches in his place and plays his
+part in the sort of spectacle that I have often watched. If there
+be no particular hero, then I can only say, in confidence behind
+the scenes, that I have found no one man, however heroic in the
+martial imagination of his country, to be a particular hero in
+fact. Take, for example, our trembling little Peterkin, who won the
+bronze cross for courage.</p>
+<p>As for Marta and Minna, they speak for another element&mdash;for
+a good half of the world's population that does not bear arms. In a
+siege once I had glimpses of women under fire and I learned that
+bravery is not an exclusively masculine trait. The game of
+solitaire? Well, it occurred in a house in the midst of bursting
+shells. But the part that Marta plays? Is it extravaganza? Not in
+war. The author sees it as something very real.</p>
+<p>FREDERICK PALMER.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+<table align='center' border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0'
+summary=''>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#I'>I.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#I'>A SPECK IN THE SKY</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#II'>II.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#II'>TEN YEARS LATER</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#III'>III.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#III'>OURS AND THEIRS</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#IV'>IV.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#IV'>THE DIVIDENDS OF POWER</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#V'>V.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#V'>OFF TO THE FRONTIER</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#VI'>VI.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#VI'>THE SECOND PROPHECY</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#VII'>VII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#VII'>TIMES HAVE CHANGED</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#VIII'>VIII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#VIII'>THANKS TO A BUMBLEBEE</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#IX'>IX.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#IX'>A SUNDAY MORNING CALL</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#X'>X.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#X'>A LUNCHEON AT THE GALLANDS'</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XI'>XI.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XI'>MARTA HEARS FELLER'S STORY</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XII'>XII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XII'>A CRISIS WITHIN A CRISIS</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XIII'>XIII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XIII'>BREAKING A PAPER-KNIFE</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XIV'>XIV.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XIV'>IN PARTOW'S OFFICE</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XV'>XV.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XV'>CLOSE TO THE WHITE POSTS</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XVI'>XVI.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XVI'>DELLARME'S MEN GET A
+MASCOT</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XVII'>XVII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XVII'>A SUNDAY MORNING IN TOWN</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XVIII'>XVIII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XVIII'>THE BAPTISM OF FIRE</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XIX'>XIX.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XIX'>RECEIVING THE CHARGE</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XX'>XX.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XX'>MARTA'S FIRST GLIMPSE OF
+WAR</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXI'>XXI.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXI'>SHE CHANGES HER MIND</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXII'>XXII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXII'>FLOWERS FOR THE WOUNDED</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXIII'>XXIII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXIII'>STRANSKY FIGHTS ALONE</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXIV'>XXIV.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXIV'>THE MAKING OF A HERO</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXV'>XXV.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXV'>THE TERRIBLE NIGHT</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXVI'>XXVI.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXVI'>FELLER IS TEMPTED</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXVII'>XXVII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXVII'>HAND TO HAND</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXVIII'>XXVIII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXVIII'>AN APPEAL TO PARTOW</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXIX'>XXIX.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXIX'>THROUGH THE VENEER</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXX'>XXX.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXX'>MARTA MEETS HUGO</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXXI'>XXXI.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXXI'>UNTO C&AElig;SAR</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXXII'>XXXII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXXII'>TEA ON THE VERANDA AGAIN</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXXIII'>XXXIII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXXIII'>IN FELLER'S PLACE</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXXIV'>XXXIV.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXXIV'>THREE VOICES</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXXV'>XXXV.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXXV'>MRS. GALLAND INSISTS</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXXVI'>XXXVI.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXXVI'>MARKING TIME</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXXVII'>XXXVII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXXVII'>THUMBS DOWN FOR
+BOUCHARD</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXXVIII'>XXXVIII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXXVIII'>HUNTING GHOSTS</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XXXIX'>XXXIX.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XXXIX'>A CHANGE OF PLAN</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XL'>XL.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XL'>WITH FRACASSE'S MEN</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XLI'>XLI.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XLI'>WITH FELLER AND STRANSKY</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XLII'>XLII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XLII'>THE RAM</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XLIII'>XLIII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XLIII'>JOVE'S ISOLATION</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XLIV'>XLIV.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XLIV'>TURNING THE TABLES</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XLV'>XLV.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XLV'>THE RETREAT</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XLVI'>XLVI.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XLVI'>THE LAST SHOT</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href='#XLVII'>XLVII.</a></td>
+<td align='left'><a href='#XLVII'>THE PEACE OF WISDOMDOM</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<h1>THE LAST SHOT</h1>
+<br>
+<a name='I' id="I"></a>
+<h2>I</h2>
+<h3>A SPECK IN THE SKY</h3>
+<br>
+<p>It was Marta who first saw the speck in the sky. Her outcry and
+her bound from her seat at the tea-table brought her mother and
+Colonel Westerling after her onto the lawn, where they became
+motionless figures, screening their eyes with their hands. The
+newest and most wonderful thing in the world at the time was this
+speck appearing above the irregular horizon of the Brown range, in
+view of a landscape that centuries of civilization had fertilized
+and cultivated and formed.</p>
+<p>At the base of the range ran a line of white stone posts, placed
+by international commissions of surveyors to the nicety of an
+inch's variation. In the very direction of the speck's flight a
+spur of foot-hills extended into the plain that stretched away to
+the Gray range, distinct at the distance of thirty miles in the
+bright afternoon light. Faithful to their part in refusing to
+climb, the white posts circled around the spur, hugging the
+levels.</p>
+<p>In the lap of the spur was La Tir, the old town, and on the
+other side of the boundary lay South La Tir, the new town. Through
+both ran the dusty ribbon of a road, drawn straight across the
+plain and over the glistening thread of a river. On its way to the
+pass of the Brown range it skirted the garden of the Gallands,
+which rose in terraces to a seventeenth-century house overlooking
+the old town from its outskirts. They were such a town, such a
+road, such a landscape as you may see on many European frontiers.
+The Christian people who lived in the region were like the
+Christian people you know if you look for the realities of human
+nature under the surface differences of language and habits.</p>
+<p>Beyond the house rose the ruins of a castle, its tower still
+intact. Marta always referred to the castle as the baron; for in
+her girlhood she had a way of personifying all inanimate things. If
+the castle walls were covered with hoar frost, she said that the
+baron was shivering; if the wind tore around the tower, she said
+that the baron was groaning over the democratic tendencies of the
+time. On such a summer afternoon as this, the baron was growing old
+gracefully, at peace with his enemies.</p>
+<p>Centuries older than the speck in the sky was the baron; but the
+pass road was many more, countless more, centuries older than he.
+It had been a trail for tribes long before Roman legions won a
+victory in the pass, which was acclaimed an imperial triumph. To
+hold the pass was to hold the range. All the blood shed there would
+make a red river, inundating the plain. Marta, a maker of pictures,
+saw how the legions, brown, sinewy, lean aliens, looked in their
+close ranks. They were no less real to her imagination than the
+infantry of the last war thirty years ago, or the Crusaders who
+came that way, or the baron in person and his shaggy-bearded,
+uncouth, ignorant ruffians who were their own moral law, leaving
+their stronghold to plunder the people of the fertile plain of the
+fruits of their toil.</p>
+<p>Stone axe, spear and bow, javelin and broadsword, blunderbuss
+and creaking cannon&mdash;all the weapons of all stages in the art
+of war&mdash;had gone trooping past. Now had come the speck in the
+sky, straight on, like some projectile born of the ether.</p>
+<p>"Beside the old baron, we are parvenus," Marta would say. "And
+what a parvenu the baron would have been to the Roman
+aristocrat!"</p>
+<p>"Our family is old enough&mdash;none older in the province!"
+Mrs. Galland would reply. "Marta, how your mind does wander! I'd
+get a headache just contemplating the things you are able to think
+of in five minutes."</p>
+<p>The first Galland had built a house on the land that his king
+had given him for one of the most brilliant feats of arms in the
+history of the pass. He had the advantage of the baron in that he
+could read and write, though with difficulty. Marta had an idea
+that he was not presentable at a tea-table; however, he must have
+been more so than the baron, who, she guessed, would have grabbed
+all the cakes on the plate as a sheer matter of habit in taking
+what he wanted unless a stronger than he interfered.</p>
+<p>Even the tower, raised to the glory of an older family whose
+descendants, if any survived, were unaware of their lineage, had
+become known as the Galland tower. The Gallands were rooted in the
+soil of the frontier; they were used to having war's hot breath
+blow past their door; they were at home in the language and customs
+of two peoples; theirs was a peculiar tradition, which Marta had
+absorbed with her first breath. Every detail of her circumscribed
+existence reminded her that she was a Galland.</p>
+<p>Town and plain and range were the first vista of landscape that
+she had seen; doubtless they would be the last. Meanwhile, there
+was the horizon. She was particularly fond of looking at it. If you
+are seventeen, with a fanciful mind, you can find much information
+not in histories or encyclop&aelig;dias or the curricula of schools
+in the horizon.</p>
+<p>There she had learned that the Roman aristocrat had turned his
+thumb down to a lot of barbarian captives because he had a fit of
+indigestion, and the next day, when his digestion was better, he
+had scattered coins among barbarian children; that Napoleon, who
+had also gone over the pass road, was a pompous, fat little man,
+who did not always wipe his upper lip clean of snuff when he was on
+a campaign; that the baron's youngest daughter had lost her
+eyesight from a bodkin thrust for telling her sister, who had her
+father's temper, that she was developing a double chin.</p>
+<p>For the people of Maria's visions were humanly real to her, and
+as such she liked and understood them. If the first Galland were
+half a robber, to disguise the fact because he was her ancestor was
+not playing fair. It made him only a lay figure of romance.</p>
+<p>One or two afternoons a week Colonel Hedworth Westerling,
+commander of the regimental post of the Grays on the other side of
+the white posts, stretched his privilege of crossing the frontier
+and appeared for tea at the Gallands'. It meant a pleasant
+half-hour breaking a long walk, a relief from garrison
+surroundings. Favored in mind and person, favored in high places,
+he had become a colonel at thirty-two. People with fixed ideas as
+to the appearance of a soldier said that he looked every inch the
+commander. He was tall, strong-built, his deep, broad chest
+suggesting powerful energy. Conscious of his abilities, it was not
+without reason that he thought well of himself, in view of the
+order, received that morning, which was to make this a farewell
+call.</p>
+<p>He had found Mrs. Galland an agreeable reflection of an
+aristocratic past. The daughter had what he defined vaguely as
+girlish piquancy. He found it amusing to try to answer her unusual
+questions; he liked the variety of her inventive mind, with its
+flashes of downright matter-of-factness.</p>
+<p>Ascending the steps with his firm, regular tread, he suggested
+poise and confidence and, perhaps, vanity also in his fastidious
+dress. As Marta's slight, immature figure came to the edge of the
+veranda, he wondered what she would be like five years later, when
+she would be twenty-two and a woman. It was unlikely that he would
+ever know, or that in a month he would care to know. He would pass
+on; his rank would keep him from returning to South La Tir, which
+was a colonel's billet except in time of war.</p>
+<p>Not until tea was served did he mention his new assignment; he
+was going to the general staff at the capital. Mrs. Galland
+murmured her congratulations in conventional fashion.</p>
+<p>"Into the very holy of holies of the great war machine, isn't
+it?" Marta asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes&mdash;yes, exactly!" he replied.</p>
+<p>Her chair was drawn back from the table. She leaned forward in a
+favorite position of hers when she was intensely interested, with
+hands clasped over her knee, which her mother always found
+aggravatingly tomboyish. She had a mass of lustrous black hair and
+a mouth rather large in repose, but capable of changing curves of
+emotion. Her large, dark eyes, luminously deep under long lashes,
+if not the rest of her face, had beauty. Her head was bent, the
+lashes forming a line with her brow now, and her eyes had the still
+flame of wonder that they had when she was looking all around a
+thing and through it to find what it meant. Westerling knew by the
+signs that she was going to break out with one of her visions,
+rather than one of her whimsical ideas. She was seeing the Roman
+general, the baron, the first Galland, and the fat, pompous little
+man, no less in the life than Hedworth Westerling. She had fused
+them into one.</p>
+<p>"Some day you will be chief of staff, the head of the Gray
+army!" she suddenly exclaimed.</p>
+<p>Westerling started as if he had been surprised in a secret. Then
+he flushed slightly.</p>
+<p>"Why?" he asked with forced carelessness. "Your reasons? They're
+more interesting than your prophecy."</p>
+<p>"Because you have the will to be," she said without emphasis, in
+the impersonal revelations of thought. "You want power. You have
+ambition."</p>
+<p>He looked the picture of it, with his square jaw, his
+well-moulded head set close to the shoulders on a sturdy neck, his
+even teeth showing as his lips parted in an unconscious smile.</p>
+<p>"Marta, Marta! She is&mdash;is so explosive," Mrs. Galland
+remarked apologetically to the colonel.</p>
+<p>"I asked for her reasons. I brought it on myself&mdash;and it is
+not a bad compliment," he replied. Indeed, he had never received
+one so thrilling.</p>
+<p>His smile, a smile well pleased with itself, remained as Mrs.
+Galland began to talk of other things, and its lingering
+satisfaction disappeared only with Marta's cry at sight of the
+speck in the sky over the Brown range. She was out on the lawn
+before the others had risen from their seats.</p>
+<p>"An aeroplane! Hurry!" she called.</p>
+<p>This was a summons that aroused even Mrs. Galland's serenity to
+haste. For the first time they were seeing the new wonder in all
+the fascination of novelty to us moderns, who soon make our new
+wonders commonplace and clamor impatiently for others.</p>
+<p>"He flies! A man flies!" Marta exclaimed. "Look at
+that&mdash;coming straight for your tower, baron! You'd better pull
+up the drawbridge and go on your knees in the chapel, for devils
+are abroad!"</p>
+<p>How fast the speck grew! How it spread to the entranced vision!
+It became a thing of still, soaring wings with a human atom in its
+centre, Captain Arthur Lanstron, already called a fool for his
+rashness by a group of Brown officers on the aviation grounds
+beyond the Brown range.</p>
+<p>Naturally, the business of war, watching for every invention
+that might serve its ends, was the first patron of flight.
+Lanstron, pupil of a pioneer aviator, had been warned by him and by
+the chief of staff of the Browns, who was looking on, to keep in a
+circle close to the ground. But he was doing so well that he
+thought he would try rising a little higher. When the levers
+responded with the ease of a bird's wings, temptation became
+inspiration and inspiration urged on temptation. He had gone mad
+with the ecstasy of his sensation, there between heaven and earth.
+Five seconds of this was worth five thousand years of any other
+form of life.</p>
+<p>The summits of the range shot under him, unfolding a variegated
+rug of landscape. He dipped the planes slightly, intending to
+follow the range's descent and again they answered to his desire.
+He saw himself the eyes of an army, the scout of the empyrean. If a
+body of troops were to march along the pass road they would be as
+visible as a cloud in the sky. Yes, here was revolution in
+detecting the enemy's plans! He had become momentarily unconscious
+of the swiftness of his progress, thanks to its hypnotic facility.
+He was in the danger which too active a brain may bring to a
+critical and delicate mechanical task. The tower loomed before him
+as suddenly as if it had been shot up out of the earth. He must
+turn, and quickly, to avoid disaster; he must turn, or he would be
+across the white posts in the enemy's country.</p>
+<p>"Oh, glorious magic!" cried Marta.</p>
+<p>"A dozen good shots could readily bring it down," remarked
+Westerling critically. "It makes a steady target at that angle of
+approach. He's going to turn&mdash;but take care, there!"</p>
+<p>"Oh!" groaned Marta and Mrs. Galland together.</p>
+<p>In an agony of suspense they saw the fragile creation of cloth
+and bamboo and metal, which had seemed as secure as an albatross
+riding on the lap of a steady wind, dip far over, careen back in
+the other direction, and then the whirring noise that had grown
+with its flight ceased. It was no longer a thing of winged life,
+defying the law of gravity, but a thing dead, falling under the
+burden of a living weight.</p>
+<p>"The engine has stopped!" exclaimed Westerling, any trace of
+emotion in his observant imperturbability that of satisfaction that
+the machine was the enemy's. He was thinking of the exhibition, not
+of the man in the machine.</p>
+<p>Marta was thinking of the man who was about to die, a silhouette
+against the soft blue holding its own balance resolutely in the
+face of peril. She could not watch any longer; she could not wait
+on the catastrophe. She was living the part of the aviator more
+vividly than he, with his hand and mind occupied. She rushed down
+the terrace steps wildly, as if her going and her agonized prayer
+could avert the inevitable. The plane, descending, skimmed the
+garden wall and passed out of sight. She heard a thud, a crackling
+of braces, a ripping of cloth, but no cry.</p>
+<p>Westerling had started after her, exclaiming, "This is a case
+for first aid!" while Mrs. Galland, taking the steps as fast as she
+could, brought up the rear. Through the gateway in the garden wall
+could be seen the shoulders of a young officer, a streak of red
+coursing down his cheek, rising from the wreck. An inarticulate sob
+of relief broke from Marta's throat, followed by quick gasps of
+breath. Captain Arthur Lanstron was looking into the startled eyes
+of a young girl that seemed to reflect his own emotions of the
+moment after having shared those he had in the air.</p>
+<p>"I flew! I flew clear over the range, at any rate!" he said.
+"And I'm alive. I managed to hold her so she missed the wall and
+made an easy bump."</p>
+<p>Marta smiled in the reaction from terror at his idea of an easy
+bump, while he was examining the damage to his person. He got one
+foot free of the wreck and that leg was all right. She shared his
+elation. Then he found that the other was uninjured, just as she
+cried in distress:</p>
+<p>"But your hand&mdash;oh, your hand!"</p>
+<p>His left hand hung limp from the wrist, cut, mashed, and
+bleeding. Its nerves numbed, he had not as yet felt any pain from
+the injury. Now he regarded it in a kind of awakening stare of
+realization of a deformity to come.</p>
+<p>"Wool-gathering again!" he muttered to himself crossly.</p>
+<p>Then, seeing that she had turned white, he thrust the disgusting
+thing behind his back and twinged with the movement. The pain was
+arriving.</p>
+<p>"It must be bandaged! I have a handkerchief!" she begged. "I'm
+not going to faint or anything like that!"</p>
+<p>"Only bruised&mdash;and it's the left. I am glad it was not the
+right," he replied. Westerling arrived and joined Marta in offers
+of assistance just as they heard the prolonged honk of an
+automobile demanding the right of way at top speed in the direction
+of the pass.</p>
+<p>"Thank you, but they're coming for me," said Lanstron to
+Westerling as he glanced up the road.</p>
+<p>Westerling was looking at the wreck. Lanstron, who recognized
+him as an officer, though in mufti, kicked a bit of the torn cloth
+over some apparatus to hide it. At this Westerling smiled faintly.
+Then Lanstron saluted as officer to officer might salute across the
+white posts, giving his name and receiving in return
+Westeling's.</p>
+<p>They made a contrast, these two men, the colonel of the Grays,
+swart and sturdy, his physical vitality so evident, and the captain
+of the Browns, some seven or eight years the junior, bareheaded, in
+dishevelled fatigue uniform, his lips twitching, his slender body
+quivering with the pain that he could not control, while his rather
+bold forehead and delicate, sensitive features suggested a man of
+nerve and nerves who might have left experiments in a laboratory
+for an adventure in the air. There was a kind of challenge in their
+glances; the challenge of an ancient feud of their peoples; of the
+professional rivalry of polite duellists. Lanstron's slight figure
+seemed to express the weaker number of the three million soldiers
+of the Browns; Westerling's bulkier one, the four million five
+hundred thousand of the Grays.</p>
+<p>"You had a narrow squeak and you made a very snappy recovery at
+the last second," said Westerling, passing a compliment across the
+white posts. Marta could literally see a white post there between
+the two.</p>
+<p>"That's in the line of duty for you and me, isn't it?" Lanstron
+replied, his voice thick with pain as he forced a smile.</p>
+<p>There was no pose in his fortitude. He was evidently disgusted
+with himself over the whole business, and he turned to the group of
+three officers and a civilian who alighted from a big Brown army
+automobile as if he were prepared to have them say their worst.
+They seemed between the impulse of reprimanding and embracing
+him.</p>
+<p>"I hope that you are not surprised at the result," said the
+oldest of the officers, a man of late middle age, rather
+affectionately and teasingly. He wore a single order on his breast,
+a plain iron cross, and the insignia of his rank was that of a
+field-marshal.</p>
+<p>"Not now. I should be again, sir," said Lanstron, looking full
+at the field-marshal in the appeal of one asking for another
+chance. "I was wool-gathering. My mind was off duty for a second
+and I got a lesson in self-control at the expense of the machine. I
+treated it worse than it deserved, and it treated me better than I
+deserved. But I shall not wool-gather next time. I've got a
+reminder more urgent than a string tied around my finger."</p>
+<p>"Yes, that hand needs immediate attention," said the doctor. He
+and another officer began helping Lanstron into the automobile.</p>
+<p>"The first flight ever made over a range&mdash;even a low one!
+Thirty miles straightaway!" remarked the civilian, making a cursory
+examination of the wreck of the machine which was a pattern known
+by his name.</p>
+<p>"Very educational for our young man," said the field-marshal,
+and at sight of Mrs. Galland paused while they exchanged the
+greetings of old friends.</p>
+<p>"Your Excellency, may we send back for you, sir?" called the
+doctor. He was not one to let rank awe him when duty pressed. "This
+hand ought to be at the hospital at once."</p>
+<p>"I'm coming along. I've a train to catch," replied His
+Excellency, springing into the car. "No more wool-gathering, eh?"
+he said, giving Lanstron a pat on the shoulder. To Lanstron this
+pat meant another chance.</p>
+<p>"Good-by!" he called to the young girl, who was still watching
+him with big, sympathetic eyes. "I am coming back soon and land in
+the field, there, and when I do. I'll claim a bunch of
+flowers."</p>
+<p>"Do! What fun!" she cried, as the car started.</p>
+<p>"The field-marshal was Partow, their chief of staff?" Westerling
+asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes," said Mrs. Galland. "I remember when he was a young
+infantry officer before the last war, before he had won the iron
+cross and become so great. He was not of an army family&mdash;a
+doctor's son, but very clever and skilful."</p>
+<p>"Getting a little old for his work!" remarked Westerling. "But
+apparently he is keen enough to take a personal interest in
+anything new."</p>
+<p>"Wasn't it thrilling and&mdash;and terrible!" Marta
+exclaimed.</p>
+<p>"Yes, like war at our own door again," replied Mrs. Galland, who
+knew war. She had seen war raging on the pass road. "Lanstron, the
+young man said his name was," she resumed after a pause. "No doubt
+the Lanstrons of Thorbourg. An old family and many of them in the
+army."</p>
+<p>"The way he refused to give in&mdash;that was fine!" said
+Marta.</p>
+<p>Westerling, who had been engrossed in his own thoughts, looked
+up.</p>
+<p>"Courage is the cheapest thing an army has! You can get hundreds
+of young officers who are glad to take a risk of that kind. The
+thing is," and his fingers pressed in on the palm of his hand in a
+pounding gesture of the forearm, "to direct and command&mdash;head
+work&mdash;organization!"</p>
+<p>"If war should come again&mdash;" Marta began. Mrs. Galland
+nudged her. A Brown never mentioned war to an officer of the Grays;
+it was not at all in the accepted proprieties. But Marta rushed on:
+"So many would be engaged that it would be more horrible than
+ever."</p>
+<p>"You cannot make omelets without breaking eggs," Westerling
+answered with suave finality.</p>
+<p>"I wonder if the baron ever said that!" Marta recollected that
+it was a favorite expression of the fat, pompous little man. "It
+sounds like the baron, at all events."</p>
+<p>Westerling did not mind being likened to the baron. It was a
+corroboration of her prophecy. The baron must have been a great
+leader of men in his time.</p>
+<p>"The aeroplane will take its place as an auxiliary," he went on,
+his mind still running on the theme of her prophecy, which the
+meeting with Lanstron had quickened. "But war will, as ever, be won
+by the bayonet that takes and holds a position. We shall have no
+miracle victories, no&mdash;"</p>
+<p>There he broke off. He did not accompany Mrs. Galland and Marta
+back to the house, but made his adieus at the garden-gate.</p>
+<p>"I'm sure that I shall never marry a soldier!" Marta burst out
+as she and her mother were ascending the steps.</p>
+<p>"No?" exclaimed Mrs. Galland with the rising inflection of a
+placid scepticism that would not be drawn into an argument. Another
+of Marta's explosions! It was not yet time to think of marriage for
+her. If it had been Mrs. Galland would not have been so hospitable
+to Colonel Westerling. She would hardly have been, even if the
+colonel had been younger, say, of Captain Lanstron's age. Though an
+officer was an officer, whether of the Browns or the Grays, and,
+perforce, a gentleman to be received with the politeness of a
+common caste, every beat of her heart was loyal to her race. Her
+daughter's hand was not for any Gray. Young Lanstron certainly must
+be of the Thorbourg Lanstrons, she mused. A most excellent family!
+Of course, Marta would marry an officer. It was the natural destiny
+of a Galland woman. Yet she was sometimes worried about Marta's
+whimsies. She, too, could wonder what Marta would be like in five
+years.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='II' id="II"></a>
+<h2>II</h2>
+<h3>TEN YEARS LATER</h3>
+<br>
+<p>Does any man of power know whither the tendencies of his time
+are leading him, or the people whom he leads whither they are being
+led? Had any one of these four heroes of the Grays in their heavy
+gilt frames divined what kind of a to-morrow his day was preparing?
+All knew the pass of La Tir well, and if all had not won decisive
+battles they would have been hung in the outer office or even in
+the corridors, where a line of half-forgotten or forgotten generals
+crooked down the stairways into the oblivion of the basement. That
+unfortunate one whom the first Galland had driven through the pass
+was quite obscured in darkness. He would soon be crowded out to an
+antique shop for sale as an example of the portrait art of his
+period.</p>
+<p>The privileged quartet on that Valhalla of victories, the walls
+of the chief of staff's room, personified the military inheritance
+of a great nation; their names shone in luminous letters out of the
+thickening shadows of the past, where those of lesser men grew
+dimmer as their generations receded into history. He in the steel
+corselet, with high cheek-bones, ferret, cold eyes, and high, thin
+nose, its nostrils drawn back in an aristocratic sniff&mdash;camps
+were evil-smelling in those days&mdash;his casquette resting on his
+arm, was the progenitor of him with the Louis XIV. curls; he of the
+early nineteenth century, with a face like Marshal Ney's, was the
+progenitor of him with the mustache and imperial of the
+sixties.</p>
+<p>It was whispered that the aristocratic sniff had taken to
+fierce, no-quarter campaigns in the bitterness of a broken heart.
+Did the Grays, then, really owe two of their fairest provinces to
+the lady who had jilted him? Had they to thank the clever wife of
+him of the Louis XIV. curls, whose intrigues won for her husband
+command of the army, for another province? It was whispered, too,
+that the military glory of him of the Marshal Ney physiognomy was
+due to the good fortune of a senile field-marshal for an opponent.
+But no matter. These gentlemen had seen the enemy fly. They had
+won. Therefore, they were the supermen of sagas who incarnate a
+people's valor.</p>
+<p>The Browns gratified their own sense of superiority, in turn, by
+admiration of the supermen who had vanquished the Gray generals
+consigned to the oblivion of the basement. In their staff building,
+the first Galland occupied a prominent position in the main hall;
+while in the days of Marta's old baron heroes did not have their
+portraits painted for want of painters, and the present nations had
+consisted only of warring baronies and principalities.</p>
+<p>They must have been rather lonely, these immortals in the Gray
+Valhalla, as His Excellency the chief of staff was seldom in his
+office. His Excellency had years, rank, prestige. The breast of his
+uniform sagged with the weight of his decorations. He appeared for
+the army at great functions, his picture was in the shop-windows.
+Hedworth Westerling, the new vice-chief of staff, was content with
+this arrangement. His years would not permit him the supreme honor.
+This was for a figurehead, while he had the power.</p>
+<p>His appointment to the staff ten years ago had given him the
+fields he wanted, the capital itself, for the play of his
+abilities. His vital energy, his impressive personality, his gift
+for courting the influences that counted, whether man's or woman's,
+his astute readiness in stooping to some measures that were in
+keeping with the times but not with army precedent, had won for him
+the goal of his ambition. He had passed over the heads of older
+men, whom many thought his betters, rather ruthlessly. Those who
+would serve loyally he drew around him; those who were bitter he
+crowded out of his way.</p>
+<p>The immortals would have been still more lonely, or at least
+confused, in the adjoining room occupied by Westerling. There the
+walls were hung with the silhouettes of infantrymen, such as you
+see at man[oe]uvres, in different positions of firing, crouching in
+shallow trenches, standing in deep trenches, or lying flat on the
+stomach on level earth. Another silhouette, that of an infantryman
+running, was peppered with white points in arms and legs and parts
+of the body that were not vital, to show in how many places a man
+may be hit with a small-calibre bullet and still survive.</p>
+<p>The immortals had small armies. Even the mustache and imperial
+had only three hundred thousand in the great battle of the last
+war. In this day of universal European conscription, if Westerling
+were to win it would be with five millions&mdash;five hundred
+thousand more than when he faced a young Brown officer over the
+wreck of an aeroplane&mdash;including the reserves; each man
+running, firing, crouching, as was the figure on the wall, and
+trying to give more of the white points that peppered the
+silhouette than he received.</p>
+<p>Now Turcas, the assistant vice-chief of staff, and Bouchard,
+chief of the division of intelligence, standing on either side of
+Westerling's desk, awaited his decisions on certain matters which
+they had brought to his attention. Both were older than Westerling,
+Turcas by ten and Bouchard by fifteen years.</p>
+<p>Turcas had been strongly urged in inner army circles for the
+place that Westerling had won, but his manner and his inability to
+court influence were against him A lath of a man and stiff as a
+lath, pale, with thin, tightly-drawn lips, quiet, steel-gray eyes,
+a tracery of blue veins showing on his full temples, he suggested
+the ascetic no less than the soldier, while his incisive brevity of
+speech, flavored now and then with pungent humor, without any
+inflection in his dry voice, was in keeping with his appearance. He
+arrived with the clerks in the morning and frequently remained
+after they were gone. His life was an affair of calculated units of
+time; his habits of diet and exercise all regulated for the end of
+service. His subordinates, whose respect he held by the power of
+his intellect, said that his brain never tired and he had not
+enough body to tire. He was one of the wheels of the great army
+machine and loved the work for its own sake too well to be
+embittered at being overshadowed by a younger man. As a master of
+detail Westerling regarded him as an invaluable assistant, with
+certain limitations, which were those of the pigeonhole and the
+treadmill.</p>
+<p>As for Bouchard, nature had meant him to be a wheel-horse. He
+had never had any hope of being chief of staff. Hawk-eyed, with a
+great beak nose and iron-gray hair, intensely and solemnly serious,
+lacking a sense of humor, he would have looked at home with his
+big, bony hands gripping a broadsword hilt and his lank body
+clothed in chain armor. He had a mastiff's devotion to its master
+for his chief.</p>
+<p>"Since Lanstron became chief of intelligence of the Browns
+information seems to have stopped," said Westerling, but not
+complainingly. He appreciated Bouchard's loyalty.</p>
+<p>"Yes, they say he even burns his laundry bills, he is so
+careful," Bouchard replied.</p>
+<p>"But that we ought to know," Westerling proceeded, referring
+very insistently to a secret of the Browns which had baffled
+Bouchard. "Try a woman," he went on with that terse, hard
+directness which reflected one of his sides. "There is nobody like
+a woman for that sort of thing. Spend enough to get the right
+woman."</p>
+<p>Turcas and Bouchard exchanged a glance, which rose suggestively
+from the top of the head of the seated vice-chief of staff. Turcas
+smiled slightly, while Bouchard was graven as usual.</p>
+<p>"You could hardly reach Lanstron though you spent a queen's
+ransom," said Bouchard in his literal fashion.</p>
+<p>"I should say not!" Westerling exclaimed. "No doubt about
+Lanstron's being all there! I saw him ten years ago after his first
+aeroplane flight under conditions that proved it. However, he must
+have susceptible subordinates."</p>
+<p>"We'll set all the machinery we have to work to find one, sir,"
+Bouchard replied.</p>
+<p>"Another thing, we may dismiss any idea that they are concealing
+either artillery or dirigibles or planes that we do not know of,"
+continued Westerling. "That is a figment of our apprehensions. The
+fact that we find no truth in the rumors proves that there is none.
+Such things are too important to be concealed by one army from
+another."</p>
+<p>"Lanstron certainly cannot carry them in his pockets," remarked
+Turcas. "Still, we must be sure," he added thoughtfully, more to
+himself than to Westerling, who had already turned his attention to
+a document which Turcas had laid on the desk.</p>
+<p>"A recommendation by the surgeon-in-chief," said Turcas, "for a
+new method of prompt segregation of ghastly cases among the
+wounded. I have put it in the form of an order. If reserves coming
+into action see men badly lacerated by shell fire it is bound to
+make them self-conscious and affect morale."</p>
+<p>"Yes," Westerling agreed. "If moving pictures of the horrors of
+Port Arthur were to be shown in our barracks before a war, it would
+hardly encourage martial enthusiasm. I shall look this over and
+then have it issued. It will not be necessary to wait on action of
+the staff in council."</p>
+<p>Turcas and Bouchard exchanged another glance. They had fresh
+evidence of Westerling's tendency to concentrate authority in
+himself.</p>
+<p>"The 128th Regiment has been ordered to South La Tir, but no
+order yet given for the 132d, whose place it takes," Turcas went
+on.</p>
+<p>"Let it remain for the present!" Westerling replied.</p>
+<p>After they had withdrawn, the look that passed between Turcas
+and Bouchard was a pointed question. The 132d to remain at South La
+Tir! Was there something more than "newspaper talk" in this latest
+diplomatic crisis between the Grays and the Browns? Westerling
+alone was in the confidence of the premier of late. Any exchange of
+ideas between the two subordinates would be fruitless surmise and
+against the very instinct of staff secrecy, where every man knew
+only his work and asked about no one else's.</p>
+<p>Westerling ran through the papers that Turcas had prepared for
+him. If Turcas had written the order for the wounded, Westerling
+knew that it was properly done. Having cleared his desk into the
+hands of his executive clerk, he looked at the clock. It had barely
+turned four. He picked up the final staff report of observations on
+the late Balkan campaign, just printed in book form, glanced at it
+and laid it aside. Already he knew the few lessons afforded by this
+war "done on the cheap," with limited equipment and over bad roads.
+No dirigibles had been used and few planes. It was no criterion,
+except in the effect of the fire of the new pattern guns, for the
+conflict of vast masses of highly trained men against vast masses
+of highly trained men, with rapid transportation over good roads,
+complete equipment, thorough organization, backed by generous
+resources, in the cataclysm of two great European powers.</p>
+<p>Rather idly, now, he drew a pad toward him and, taking up a
+pencil, made the figures seventeen and twenty-seven. Then he made
+the figures thirty-two and forty-two. He blackened them with
+repeated tracings as he mused. This done, he put seventeen under
+twenty-seven and thirty-two under forty-two. He made the
+subtraction and studied the two tens.</p>
+<p>A swing door opened softly and his executive clerk reappeared
+with a soft tread, unheard by Westerling engaged in mechanically
+blackening the tens. The clerk, pausing as he waited for a signal
+of recognition, observed the process wonderingly. To be absently
+making figures on a pad was not characteristic of the vice-chief of
+staff. When he was absorbed his habit was to tap the desk edge with
+the blunt end of his pencil.</p>
+<p>"Some papers for your signature, sir," said the clerk as he
+slipped them on the blotter in front of Westerling. "And the
+132d&mdash;no order about that, sir?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"None. It remains!" Westerling replied.</p>
+<p>The clerk went out impressed. His chief taking to sums of
+subtraction and totally preoccupied! The 132d to remain! He, too,
+had a question-mark in his secret mind.</p>
+<p>Westerling proceeded with his mathematics. Having heavily shaded
+the tens, he essayed a sum in division. He found that ten went into
+seventy just seven times.</p>
+<p>"One-seventh the allotted span of life!" he mused. "Take off
+fifteen years for youth and fifteen after fifty-five&mdash;nobody
+counts after that, though I mean to&mdash;and you have ten into
+forty, which is one fourth. That is a good deal. But it's more to a
+woman than to a man&mdash;yes, a lot more to a woman than to a
+man!"</p>
+<p>The clerk was right in thinking Westerling preoccupied; but it
+was not with the international crisis. He had dismissed that for
+the present from his thoughts by sending the 128th Regiment to
+South La Tir. He might move some other regiments in the morning if
+advices from the premier warranted. At all events, the army was
+ready, always ready for any emergency. He was used to international
+crises. Probably a dozen had occurred in the ten years since he had
+spoken his adieu to a young girl at a garden-gate. Over his coffee
+the name of Miss Marta Galland, in a list of arrivals at a hotel,
+had caught his eye in the morning paper. A note to her had brought
+an answer, saying that her time was limited, but she would be glad
+to have him call at five that afternoon.</p>
+<p>Rather impatiently he watched the slow minute-hand on the clock.
+He had risen from his desk at four-thirty, when his personal aide,
+a handsome, boyish, rosy-cheeked young officer, who seemed to be
+moulded into his uniform, appeared.</p>
+<p>"Your car is waiting, sir," he said. His military correctness
+could not hide the admiration and devotion in his eyes. He thought
+himself the most fortunate lieutenant in the army. To him
+Westerling was, indeed, great. Westerling realized this.</p>
+<p>"This is a personal call," Westerling explained; "so you are at
+liberty to make one yourself, if you like," he added, with that
+magnetic smile of a genial power which he used to draw men to him
+and hold them.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='III' id="III"></a>
+<h2>III</h2>
+<h3>OURS AND THEIRS</h3>
+<br>
+<p>On the second terrace, Feller, the Gallands' gardener, a patch
+of blue blouse and a patch of broad-brimmed straw hat over a fringe
+of white hair, was planting bulbs. Mrs. Galland came down the path
+from the veranda loiteringly, pausing to look at the flowers and
+again at the sweep of hills and plain. The air was singularly
+still, so still that she heard the cries of the children at play in
+the yards of the factory-workers' houses which had been steadily
+creeping up the hill from the town. She breathed in the peace and
+beauty of the surroundings with that deliberate appreciation of age
+which holds to the happiness in hand. To-morrow it might rain;
+to-day it is pleasant. She was getting old. Serenely she made the
+most of to-day.</p>
+<p>The gardener did not look up when she reached his side. She
+watched his fingers firmly pressing the moist earth around the
+bulbs that he had sunk in their new beds. There were only three
+more to set out, and her inclination, in keeping with her
+leisureliness, was to wait on the completion of his task before
+speaking. Again she let her glance wander away to the distances. It
+was arrested and held this time by two groups of far-away points in
+the sky along the frontier, in the same bright light of that other
+afternoon when Captain Arthur Lanstron had made his first night
+over the range.</p>
+<p>"Look!" she cried. "Look, look!" she repeated, a girlish
+excitement rippling her placidity.</p>
+<p>Aeroplanes and dirigibles had become a familiar sight. They were
+always going and coming and man[oe]uvring, the Browns over their
+territory and the Grays over theirs. But here was something new:
+two squadrons of dirigibles and planes in company, one on either
+side of the white posts. For the fraction of a second the
+dirigibles seemed prisms and the planes still-winged dragon-flies
+hung on a blue wall. With the next fraction the prisms were seen to
+be growing and the stretch of the plane wings broadening.</p>
+<p>"They are racing&mdash;ours against theirs!" exclaimed Mrs.
+Galland. "Look, look!"</p>
+<p>Still the gardener bent to his work, unconcerned.</p>
+<p>"I forgot! I always forget that you are deaf!" she murmured.</p>
+<p>She touched his shoulder. The effect was magical on the
+stoop-shouldered figure, which rose with the spring of muscles that
+are elastic and joints that are limber. His hat was removed with
+prompt and rather graceful deference, revealing eyebrows that were
+still dark in contrast to the white hair. For only an instant did
+he remain erect, but long enough to suggest how supple and
+well-formed he must have been in youth. Then he made a grimace and
+dropped his hand demonstratively over his knee.</p>
+<p>"Pardon, Mrs. Galland, I have old bones. They always remind me
+if I try to play any youthful tricks on them. Pardon! I did not see
+that you were here. I," he said, in the monotonous voice of the
+deaf, which, however, had a certain attractive
+wistfulness&mdash;"I&mdash;" and from the same throat as he saw the
+object of her gaze came a vibration of passionate interest. "Yes,
+neck and neck! Coming right for the baron's tower, neck and neck!"
+he cried, in the zest of a contest understood and enjoyed.</p>
+<p>His hand rose in a vigorous, pulsating gesture; his eyes were
+snapping; his lips parted in an ecstasy that made him seem twenty
+years younger; his shoulders broadened and his chest expanded with
+the indrawing of a deep breath. This let go, the stoop returned in
+a sudden reaction, the briefly kindled flame died out of his eyes,
+his lips took on the droop of age, and he thrust his hat back on
+his head, pulling the brim low over his brow.</p>
+<p>"Wonderful, but terrible&mdash;terrible!" said Mrs. Galland.
+"Another horror is added to war, as if there were not already
+enough. Oh, I know what war is! I've seen this garden all spattered
+with blood and dead bodies in a row here at our feet, and heard the
+groans and the cheers&mdash;the groans of the wounded here in the
+garden and the cheers of the men who had taken the castle
+hill!"</p>
+<p>Feller, with the lids of shaded eyes half closed, watched the
+oncoming squadrons in a staring mesmerism. His only movement was a
+tattoo of the fingers on his trousers' legs.</p>
+<p>"War!" he exclaimed with motionless lips. "War!" he repeated
+softly, coaxingly. One would easily have mistaken the thought of
+war as something delightful to him if he had not appeared so gentle
+and detached. It seemed doubtful if he realized what he was saying
+or even that he was speaking aloud.</p>
+<p>As the Gray squadron started to turn in order to keep on their
+side of the white posts which circled around the spur of La Tir,
+one of the dirigibles failed to respond to its rudder and lost
+speed; that in the rear, responding too readily, had its leader on
+the thwart. An aeroplane, sheering too abruptly to make room,
+tipped at a dangerous angle and a tragedy seemed due within another
+wink of the eye.</p>
+<p>"Huh-huh-huh!" came from Feller in quick breaths, like the
+panting of a dog on a hot day.</p>
+<p>"Oh!" gasped Mrs. Galland in one long breath of suspense.</p>
+<p>The envelope of the second dirigible grazed the envelope of its
+leader; the groggy plane righted itself and volplaned underneath a
+dirigible; and, though scattered, the Gray squadron drew away
+safely from the Brown, which, slowing down, came on as straight as
+an arrow in unchanged formation in a line over the castle tower.
+From the forward Brown aeroplane, as its shadow shot over the
+garden, pursued by the great, oblong shadows of the dirigibles, a
+white ball was dropped. It made a plummet streak until about fifty
+feet above the earth, when it exploded into a fine shower of
+powder, leaving intact a pirouetting bit of white.</p>
+<p>"I think that was Colonel Lanstron leading when he ought to
+leave such work to his assistants," said Mrs. Galland. "You
+remember him&mdash;why, it was the colonel who recommended you!
+There, now, I've forgotten again that you are deaf!"</p>
+<p>The slip of paper glided back and forth on slight currents of
+air and finally fell among the rose-bushes a few yards from where
+the two were standing. Feller brought it to Mrs. Galland.</p>
+<p>"Yes, it was Colonel Lanstron," she said, after reading the
+message. "The message says: 'Hello, Marta!' Any other officer would
+have said: 'How do you do, Miss Galland!' He could not have known
+that she was away. I've just had a telegram from her that she will
+be home in the morning, and that takes me back to my idea that I
+came to speak about to you," she babbled on, while Feller regarded
+her with a gentle, uncomprehending smile. "You know how she likes
+chrysanthemums and they are in full bloom. We'll cut them and fill
+all the vases in the living-room and her room and&mdash;oh, how I
+do forget! You're not hearing a word!" she exclaimed as she noted
+the helpless eagerness of his eyes.</p>
+<p>"It is a great nuisance, deafness in a gardener. But I love my
+work. I try to do it well," he said in his monotone.</p>
+<p>"You do wonderfully, wonderfully!" she assented; "and you
+deserve great credit. Many deaf people are irritable&mdash;and you
+are so cheerful!"</p>
+<p>He smiled as pleasantly as if he had heard the compliment and
+passed her a small pad from his blouse pocket. With the pencil
+attached to it by a string she wrote her instructions slowly, in an
+old-fashioned hand, dotting all the i's and crossing all the
+t's.</p>
+<p>"Pardon me, madam, but Miss Galland"&mdash;he paused, dwelling
+with a slight inflection on his mention of the daughter as the
+talisman that warranted his presuming to disagree with the
+mother&mdash;"Miss Galland, when she took her last look around
+before going, said: 'Please don't cut any yet. I want to see them
+all abloom in their beds first.'"</p>
+<p>"She has taken such an interest in them, and my idea was to
+please her. Of course, leave them," said Mrs. Galland. She made
+repeated vigorous nods of assent to save herself the trouble of
+writing. Starting back up the steps, she murmured: "I suppose cut
+flowers are out of fashion&mdash;I know I am&mdash;and deaf
+gardeners are in." She sighed. "And you are twenty-seven, Marta,
+twenty-seven!" She drew another, a very long sigh, and then her
+serenity returned.</p>
+<p>"Ours did not pass theirs," observed the gardener, with a musing
+smile when he was alone; "but theirs nearly had a jolly spill there
+at the turn!"</p>
+<p>As he bent once more to his work a bumblebee approached on its
+glad, piratical errand from flower to flower in the rapt stillness,
+and Feller looked around with a slight courtesy of his hat
+brim.</p>
+<p>"You and your fussily thunderous wings!" he said, half aloud. "I
+wonder if you think you're an aeroplane. Surely, they'd never train
+you to evolute in squadrons. You are an anarchist, you are, and an
+epicurean into the bargain!"</p>
+<p>He went with his barrow for more bulbs. Meanwhile, the sun sank
+behind the range. The plain lay bathed in soft, golden light; the
+ravines were tongues of black shadow. As the evening gun boomed out
+from a fortress on the Brown side of the frontier, Feller glanced
+around to see if any one were watching. Assured that he was alone,
+he removed his hat, and, though he wiped the brim and wiped his
+brow, in his attitude was the suggestion of the military stance of
+attention at colors. A minute later, when the evening gun of the
+Grays across the white posts reverberated over the plain, he jammed
+his hat back on his head rather abruptly and started to the tool
+house with his barrow.</p>
+<p>"War! war!" he repeated softly. "Yes, war!" he added in eager
+desire.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='IV' id="IV"></a>
+<h2>IV</h2>
+<h3>THE DIVIDENDS OF POWER</h3>
+<br>
+<p>Westerling realized that the question of marriage as a social
+requirement might arise when he should become officially chief of
+staff with the retirement of His Excellency the field-marshal. For
+the present he enjoyed his position as a bachelor who was the most
+favored man in the army too much to think of marriage. This did not
+imply an absence of fondness for women; rather the contrary. He
+liked sitting next to a beautiful neck and shoulders and having a
+pair of feminine eyes sparkle into his at dinner; though, with rare
+exceptions, not the same neck and shoulders on succeeding nights.
+His natural sense of organization divided women into two classes:
+those of family and wealth, whom he met at great houses, and those
+purring kittens who live in small flats. Both afforded him
+diversion. A woman had been the most telling influence in making
+him vice-chief of staff; an affair to which gossip gave the breath
+of scandal had been an argument against him.</p>
+<p>It was a little surprising that the bell that the girl of
+seventeen had rung in his secret mind when he was on one of the
+first rounds of the ladder, now lost in the mists of a lower
+stratum of existence, should ever tinkle again.... Yet he had heard
+its note in the tone of her prophecy with each step in his
+promotion; and while the other people whom he had known at La Tir
+were the vaguest shadows of personalities, her picture was as
+definite in detail as when she said: "You have the will! You have
+the ambition!" She had recognized in him the power that he felt;
+foreseen his ascent to the very apex of the pyramid. She was still
+unmarried, which was strange; for she had not been bad-looking and
+she was of a fine old family. What was she like now? Commonplace
+and provincial, most likely. Many of the people he had known in his
+early days appeared so when he met them again. But, at the worst,
+he looked for an interesting half-hour.</p>
+<p>The throbbing activity of the streets of the capital, as his car
+proceeded on the way to her hotel, formed an energetic
+accompaniment to his gratifying backward survey of how all his
+plans had worked out from the very day of the prophecy. Had he
+heard the remark of a great manufacturer to the banker at his side
+in a passing limousine, "There goes the greatest captain of
+industry of us all!" Westerling would only have thought:
+"Certainly. I am chief of staff. I am at the head of all your
+workmen at one time or another!" Had he heard the banker's answer,
+"But pretty poor pay, pretty small dividends!" he would have
+thought: "Splendid dividends&mdash;the dividends of power!"</p>
+<p>He had a caste contempt for the men of commerce, with their
+mercenary talk about credit and market prices; and also for the
+scientists, doctors, engineers, and men of other professions, who
+spoke of things in books which he did not understand. Reading books
+was one of the faults of Turcas, his assistant. No bookish soldier,
+he knew, had ever been a great general. He resented the growing
+power of these leaders of the civil world, taking distinction away
+from the military, even when, as a man of parts, he had to court
+their influence. His was the profession that was and ever should be
+the elect. A penniless subaltern was a gentleman, while he could
+never think of a man hi business as one.</p>
+<p>All the faces in the street belonged to a strange, busy world
+outside his interest and thoughts. They formed what was known as
+the public, often making a clatter About things which they did not
+understand, when they Should obey the orders of their superiors. Of
+late, their clatter had been about the extra taxes for the recent
+increase of the standing forces by another corps. The public was
+bovine with a parrot's head. Yet it did not admire the toiling ox,
+but the eagle and the lion.</p>
+<p>As his car came to the park his eyes lighted at sight of one of
+the dividends&mdash;one feature of urban life that ever gave him a
+thrill. A battalion of the 128th, which he had ordered that
+afternoon to the very garrison at South La Tir that he had once
+commanded, was marching through the main avenue. Youths all, of
+twenty-one or two, they were in a muddy-grayish uniform which was
+the color of the plain as seen from the veranda of the Galland
+house.</p>
+<p>Around them, in a mighty, pervasive monotone, was the roar of
+city traffic, broken by the nearer sounds of the cries of children
+playing in the sand piles, the bark of motor horns, the screech of
+small boys' velocipedes on the paths of the park; while they
+themselves were silent, except for the rhythmic tramp of the
+military shoes of identical pattern, as was every article of their
+clothing and equipment from head to foot, whose character had been
+the subject of the weightiest deliberation of the staff.</p>
+<p>How much can a soldier carry and how best carry it easily? What
+shoes are the most serviceable for marching and yet cheap? Nothing
+was so precise in all their surroundings, nothing seemed so
+resolutely dependable as this column of soldiers. They were the
+last word in filling human tissue into a mould for a set task.
+Where these came from were other boys growing up to take their
+places. The mothers of the nation were doing their duty. All the
+land was a breeding-ground for the dividends of Hedworth
+Westerling.</p>
+<p>At the far side of the park he saw another kind of
+dividend&mdash;another group of marching men. These were not in
+uniform. They were the unemployed. Many were middle-aged, with
+worn, tired faces. Beside the flag of the country at the head of
+the procession was that of universal radicalism. And his car had to
+stop to let them pass. For an instant the indignation of military
+autocracy rose strong within him at sight of the national colors in
+such company. But he noted how naturally the men kept step; the
+solidarity of their movement. The stamp of their army service in
+youth could not be easily removed. He realized the advantage of
+heading an army in which defence was not dependent on a mixture of
+regulars and volunteers, but on universal conscription that brought
+every able-bodied man under discipline.</p>
+<p>These reservists, in the event of war, would hear the call of
+race and they would fight for the one flag that then had any
+significance. Yes, the old human impulses would predominate and the
+only enemy would be on the other side of the frontier. They would
+be pawns of his will&mdash;the will that Marta Galland had said
+would make him chief of staff.</p>
+<p>Wasn't war the real cure for the general unrest? Wasn't the
+nation growing stale from the long peace? He was ready for war now
+that he had become vice-chief, when the retirement of His
+Excellency, unable to bear the weight of his years and decorations
+in the field, would make him the supreme commander. One ambition
+gained, he heard the appeal of another: to live to see the guns and
+rifles that had fired only blank cartridges in practice pouring out
+shells and bullets, and all the battalions that had played at sham
+war in man[oe]uvres engaged in real war, under his direction. He
+saw his columns sweeping up the slopes of the Brown range. Victory
+was certain. He would be the first to lead a great modern army
+against a great modern army; his place as the master of modern
+tactics secure in the minds of all the soldiers of the world. The
+public would forget its unrest in the thrill of battles won and
+provinces conquered, and its clatter would be that of acclaim for a
+new idol of its old faith.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='V' id="V"></a>
+<h2>V</h2>
+<h3>OFF TO THE FRONTIER</h3>
+<br>
+<p>Ranks broken in the barracks yard, backs free of packs,
+shoulders free of rifles, the men of the first battalion of the
+28th, which Westerling had seen marching through the park, had no
+thought except the prospect of the joyous lassitude of resting
+muscles and of loosening tongues that had been silent on the march.
+They were simply tired human beings in the democracy of a common
+life and service.</p>
+<p>The 128th had been recruited from a province in the high country
+distant from the capital. In the days of Maria's old baron, a baron
+of the same type had plundered their ancestors, and in the days of
+the first Galland they formed a principality frequently at war with
+their neighbors of the same blood and language. At length they had
+united with their neighbors who had in turn united with other
+neighbors, forming the present nation of the Grays, which vented
+its fighting spirit against other nations. Each generation must
+send forth its valorous and adventurous youth to the proof of its
+manhood in battle, while those who survived wounds and disease
+became the heroes of their reminiscences, inciting the younger
+generation to emulation. With each step in the evolution learning
+had spread and civilization developed.</p>
+<p>Since the last war universal conscription had gone hand in hand
+with popular education and the telegraphic click of the news of the
+world to all breakfast tables and cheap travel and better living.
+Every private of the five millions was a scholar compared to the
+old baron; he had a broader horizon than the first Galland. In the
+name of defence, to hold their borders secure, the great powers
+were straining their resources to strengthen the forces that kept
+an armed peace. Evolution never ceases. What next?</p>
+<p>In a group of the members of Company B, who dropped on a bench
+in the barrack room, were the sons of a farmer, a barber, a
+butcher, an army officer, a day-laborer, a judge, a blacksmith, a
+rich man's valet, a banker, a doctor, a manufacturer, and a small
+shopkeeper.</p>
+<p>"Six months more and my tour is up!" cried the judge's son.</p>
+<p>"Six months more for me!"</p>
+<p>"Now you're counting!"</p>
+<p>"And for me&mdash;one, two, three, four, five, six!"</p>
+<p>"Oh, don't rub it in," the manufacturer's son shouted above the
+chorus, "you old fellows! I've a year and six months more."</p>
+<p>"Here, too!" chimed in the banker's son. "A year and six months
+more of iron spoons and tin cups and army shoes and army fare and
+early rising. Hep-hep-hep, drill-drill-drill, and drudgery!"</p>
+<p>"Oh, I don't know!" said the day-laborer's son. "I don't have to
+get up any earlier than I do at home, and I don't have to work as
+hard as I'll have to when I leave."</p>
+<p>"Nor I!" agreed the blacksmith's son. "It's a kind of holiday
+for me."</p>
+<p>"Holiday!" the banker's son gasped. "That's so," he added
+thoughtfully, and smiled gratefully over a fate that had been
+indulgent to him in a matter of fathers and limousines.</p>
+<p>"Look at the newspapers! Maybe we shall be going to war," said
+the manufacturer's son.</p>
+<p>"Stuff! Nonsense!" said the judge's son. "We are always having
+scares. They sell papers and give the fellows at the Foreign Office
+a chance to look unconcerned. But let's have the opinion of an
+international expert, of the great and only philosopher, guide,
+companion, and friend. What do you think of the crisis, eh, Hugo?
+Soberly, now. The fate of nations may hang on your words. If not,
+at least the price of a ginger soda!"</p>
+<p>It was around Hugo Mallin that the group had formed. Groups were
+always forming around Hugo. He could spring the unexpected and
+incongruous and make people laugh. Slight but wiry of physique, he
+had light hair, a freckled and rather nondescript nose, large brown
+eyes, and a broad, sensitive mouth. Nature had not attempted any
+regularity of features in his case. She had been content with
+making each one a mobile servant of his mind. In repose his face
+was homely, and it was a mask.</p>
+<p>"Come on, Hugo! Out with it!"</p>
+<p>Hugo's brow contracted; the lines of the mask were drawn in
+deliberate seriousness.</p>
+<p>"I never hear war mentioned that I don't have a shiver right
+down my spine, as I did when I was a little boy and went into the
+cellar without a light," he replied.</p>
+<p>"Fear?" exclaimed Eugene Aronson, the farmer's son, whose big,
+plain face expressed dumb incomprehension. He alone was standing.
+Being the giant and the athlete of the company, the march had not
+tired him.</p>
+<p>"Fear?" some of the others repeated. The sentiment was
+astounding, and Hugo was as manifestly in earnest as if he were a
+minister addressing a parliamentary chamber.</p>
+<p>"Yes, don't you?" asked Hugo, in bland surprise.</p>
+<p>"I should say not!" declared Eugene.</p>
+<p>"Do you want to be killed?" asked Hugo, with profound
+interest.</p>
+<p>"The bullet isn't made that will get me!" answered Eugene,
+throwing back his broad shoulders.</p>
+<p>"I don't know," mused Hugo, eying the giant up and down. "You're
+pretty big, Gene, and a bullet that only nicked one of us in the
+bark might get you in the wood. However, if you are sure that you
+are in no danger, why, you don't count. But let's take a census
+while we are about it and see who wants to be killed. First, you,
+Armand; do you?" he asked the doctor's son, Armand Daution.</p>
+<p>Armand grinned. The others grinned, not at him, but at the
+quizzical solemnity of Hugo's manner.</p>
+<p>"If so, state whether you prefer bullets or shrapnel, early in
+the campaign or late, &agrave; la carte or table d'h&ocirc;te,
+morning or&mdash;" Hugo went on.</p>
+<p>But laughter drowned the sentence, though Hugo's face was
+without a smile.</p>
+<p>"You ought to go on the stage!" some one exclaimed.</p>
+<p>"If it were as easy to amuse a pay audience as you fellows, I
+might," Hugo replied. "But I've another question," he pursued. "Do
+you think that the fellows on the other side of the frontier want
+to be killed?"</p>
+<p>"No danger! They'll give in. They always do," said Eugene.</p>
+<p>"I confess that it hardly seems reasonable to make war over the
+Bodlapoo affair!" This from the judge's son.</p>
+<p>"Over some hot weather, some swamp, and some black policemen in
+Africa," said Hugo.</p>
+<p>"But they hauled down our flag!" exclaimed the army officer's
+son.</p>
+<p>"On their territory, they say. We were the aggressors," Hugo
+interposed.</p>
+<p>"It was <i>our</i> flag!" said Eugene.</p>
+<p>"But we wouldn't want them to put up their flag on our
+territory, would we?" Hugo asked.</p>
+<p>"Let them try it!" thundered Eugene, with a full breath from the
+big bellows in his broad chest. "Hugo, I don't like to hear you
+talk that way," he added, shaking his head sadly. Such views from a
+friend really hurt him; indeed, he was almost lugubrious. This
+brought another laugh.</p>
+<p>"Don't you see he's getting you, Gene?"</p>
+<p>"He's acting!"</p>
+<p>"He always gets you, you old simpleton!" The judge's son gave
+Eugene an affectionate dig in the ribs.</p>
+<p>Eugene was well liked and in the way that a big Saint Bernard
+dog is liked. At the latest man[oe]uvres, on the night that their
+division had made a rapid flank movement, without any apparent
+sense that his own load was the heavier for it, he had carried the
+rifle and pack of Peter Kinderling, a valet's pasty-faced little
+son "Peterkin," as he was called, was the stupid of Company B.
+Being generally inoffensive, the butt of the drill sergeant, who
+thought that he would never learn even the manual of arms, and
+rounding out the variety of characters which makes for fellowship,
+he was regarded with a sympathetic kindliness by his comrades.</p>
+<p>"But I don't think you ought to joke about the flag That's
+sacred!" declared Eugene.</p>
+<p>"Now you're talking!" said Jacob Pilzer, the butcher's son, who
+sat on the other side of the bench from Eugene. He was heavily
+built, with an undershot jaw and a patch of liverish birthmark on
+his cheek.</p>
+<p>"Yes," piped Peterkin, who had an opinion when the two strong
+men of the company agreed on any subject. But he spoke tentatively,
+nevertheless. He was taking no risks.</p>
+<p>"Oh, if we went to war the Bodlapoo affair would be only an
+excuse," said the manufacturer's son. "We shall go to war as a
+matter of broad national policy."</p>
+<p>"Right you are!" agreed the banker's son. "No emotion about it.
+Emotion as an international quantity is dead. Everything is
+business now in this business age."</p>
+<p>"Killing people as a broad international policy!" mused Hugo
+<i>sotto voce</i>, as if this were a matter of his own
+thoughts.</p>
+<p>The others scarcely heard him as the manufacturer's son struck
+his fist in the palm of his hand resoundingly to demand
+attention.</p>
+<p>"We need room in which to expand. We have eighty million people
+to their fifty, while our territory is only a little larger than
+theirs. Our population grows; the Browns' does not!" he
+announced.</p>
+<p>"But there is a remedy for that," Hugo interjected loftly, so
+softly that everybody looked at him. "Why, all the conscripts of
+the army for two years could take a vow not to marry," he said. "We
+could reduce the output, as your father's factory does when the
+market is dull. We should not have so many babies. This would be
+cheaper than rearing them to be slaughtered in their young
+manhood."</p>
+<p>"Hear ye! Hear ye!" shouted the doctor's son, in the midst of
+the hilarity that ensued. "Hugo Mallin solves the whole problem of
+eugenics by destroying the field for eugenics!"</p>
+<p>"The levity of a lot of mere unthinking privates who mistake
+themselves for sociological experts shall not deter me from
+finishing my speech," pursued the manufacturer's son.</p>
+<p>"Speak on!"</p>
+<p>"Listen to the fount of wisdom play!"</p>
+<p>"A beer if you produce an idea!"</p>
+<p>"War must come some day. It must come if for no other reason
+than to stop the strikes, arouse patriotism, and give an impetus to
+industry. An army of five millions on our side against the Browns'
+three millions! Of course, they won't start it! We shall have to
+take the aggressive; naturally, they'll not."</p>
+<p>"And they'll run, they'll run, just as they always have" Eugene
+cried enthusiastically.</p>
+<p>"You bet they will, or they'll be mush for our bayonets!" said
+Pilzer, the butcher's son.</p>
+<p>"Will they? Do you really think they will?" asked Hugo, drawing
+down the corners of his mouth in profound contemplation that was
+actually mournful. "I wonder, now, I wonder if they can run any
+faster than I can?"</p>
+<p>Everybody was laughing except him. If he had laughed too, he
+would not have been funny. His faint, look of surprise over their
+outburst only served to prolong it.</p>
+<p>"Hugo, you're immense!"</p>
+<p>"You're a scream!"</p>
+<p>"But I am considering," Hugo resumed, when there was silence.
+"If both sides ran as fast as they could when the war began, it
+would be interesting to see which army reached home first. Some of
+us might get out of breath, but nobody would be killed." He had to
+wait on another laugh before he could continue. It takes little to
+amuse men in garrison if one knows how. "I don't want to be killed,
+and why should I want to kill strangers on the other side of the
+frontier?" He paused on the rising inflection of his question, a
+calm, earnest challenge in his eyes. "I don't know them. I haven't
+the slightest grudge against them."</p>
+<p>No grudge against the Browns&mdash;against the ancient enemy!
+The faces around were frowning, as if in doubt how to take him.</p>
+<p>"What did you come into the army for, then?" called Pilzer, the
+butcher's son. "You didn't have to, being an only son. Talk that
+stuff to your officers! They will let you out. They don't want any
+cowards like you!"</p>
+<p>"Cowards! Hold on, there!" said Eugene, who was very fond of
+Hugo. He spoke in the even voice of his vast good nature, but he
+looked meaningly at the butcher's son.</p>
+<p>"Coward? Is that the word, Jake?" Hugo inquired amiably. "Now,
+maybe I am. I don't know. But it wouldn't prove that I wasn't if I
+fought you any more than if I fought the strangers on the other
+side of the frontier."</p>
+<p>"Well, if you don't want to fight, what are you in the army for?
+That's a fair question, isn't it?" growled Pilzer, in an appeal to
+public opinion.</p>
+<p>"Yes, you can carry a joke too far," said the army officer's
+son. "Yes, why?"</p>
+<p>The others nodded. An atmosphere of hostility was gathering
+around Hugo. In face of it a smile began playing about the corners
+of his lips. The smile spread. For the first time he was laughing,
+while all the others were serious. Suddenly he threw his arms
+around the necks of the men next to him.</p>
+<p>"Why, to be with all you good fellows, of course!" he said, "and
+to complete my education. If I hadn't taken my period in the army,
+you might have shaved me, Eduardo; you might have fixed a horseshoe
+for me, Henry; you might have sold me turnips, Eugene, but I
+shouldn't have known you. Now we all know one another by eating the
+same food, wearing the same clothes, marching side by side, and
+submitting to another kind of discipline than that of our
+officers&mdash;the discipline of close association in a community
+of service. There's hope for humanity in that&mdash;for humanity
+trying to free itself of its fetters. We have mixed with the people
+of the capital. They have found us and we have found them to be of
+the same human family."</p>
+<p>"That's so! This business of moving regiments about from one
+garrison to another is a good cure for provincialism," said the
+doctor's son.</p>
+<p>"Judge's son or banker's son or blacksmith's son, whenever we
+meet in after-life there will be a thought of fellowship exchanged
+in our glances," Hugo continued. "Haven't we got something that we
+couldn't get otherwise? Doesn't it thrill you now when we're all
+tired from the march except leviathan Gene&mdash;thrill you with a
+warm glow from the flow of good, rich, healthy red blood?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes, yes!"</p>
+<p>There was a chorus of assent. Banker's son clapped valet's son
+on the shoulder; laborer's son and doctor's son locked arms and
+teetered on the edge of the cot together.</p>
+<p>"And I've another idea," proceeded Hugo very seriously as the
+vows of eternal friendship subsided. "It is one to spread education
+and the spirit of comradeship still further. Instead of two sets of
+autumn man[oe]uvres, one on either side of the frontier, I'd have
+our army and the Browns hold a man[oe]uvre together&mdash;this year
+on their side and next year on ours."</p>
+<p>The biggest roar yet rose from throats that had been venting a
+tender tone. Only the slow Eugene Aronson was blank and puzzled.
+But directly he, too, broke into laughter, louder and more
+prolonged than the others.</p>
+<p>"You can be so solemn that it takes a minute to see your joke,"
+he said.</p>
+<p>"And humorous when we expect him to be solemn&mdash;and, presto,
+there he goes!" added the judge's son.</p>
+<p>Hugo's lips were twitching peculiarly.</p>
+<p>"Look at him!" exclaimed the manufacturer's son. "Oh, you've had
+us all going this afternoon, you old farceur, you, Hugo!"</p>
+<p>In the silence that waited on another extravagance from the
+entertainer the sergeant entered the room.</p>
+<p>"We shall entrain to-morrow morning!" he announced. "We are
+going to South La Tir on the frontier."</p>
+<p>Oh, joy! Oh, lucky 128th! It was to see still more of the world!
+The sergeant stood by listening to the uproar and cautioning the
+men not to overturn the tables and benches. Even the banker's and
+the manufacturer's sons, who had toured the country from frontier
+to frontier in paternal automobiles, were as happy as the laborer's
+son.</p>
+<p>"What fun it would be if we could visit back and forth with the
+fellows on the other side of the frontier!" said Hugo.</p>
+<p>"What the&mdash;eh!" exclaimed the sergeant. "Will you never
+stop your joking, you, Hugo Mallin?"</p>
+<p>"Never, sir," replied Hugo dryly. "It comes natural to me!"</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='VI' id="VI"></a>
+<h2>VI</h2>
+<h3>THE SECOND PROPHECY</h3>
+<br>
+<p>In the reception-room, where he awaited the despatch of his
+card, Hedworth Westerling caught a glimpse of his person in a panel
+glass so convenient as to suggest that an adroit hotel manager
+might have placed it there for the delectation of well-preserved
+men of forty-two. He saw a face of health that was little lined;
+brown hair that did not reveal its sprinkle of gray at that
+distance; shoulders, bearing the gracefully draped gold cords of
+the staff, squarely set on a rigid spine in his natural attitude.
+Yes, he had taken good care of himself, enjoying his pleasures with
+discreet, epicurean relish as he would this meeting with a woman
+whom he had not seen for ten years.</p>
+<p>On her part, Marta, when she had received the note, had been in
+doubt as to her answer. Her curiosity to see him again was not of
+itself compelling. The actual making of the prophecy was rather dim
+to her mind until he recalled it. She had heard of his rise and she
+had heard, too, things about him which a girl of twenty-seven can
+better understand than a girl of seventeen. His reason for wanting
+to see her he had said was to "renew an old acquaintance." He could
+have little interest in her, and her interest in him was that he
+was head of the Gray army. His work had intimate relation to that
+which the Marta of twenty-seven, a Marta with a mission, had set
+for herself.</p>
+<p>A page came to tell Westerling that Miss Galland should be down
+directly. But before she came a waiter entered with a tea-tray.</p>
+<p>"By the lady's direction, sir," he explained as he set the tray
+on a table opposite Westerling.</p>
+<p>Across a tea-table the prophecy had been made and across a
+tea-table they had held most of their talks. Having a picture in
+memory for comparison, he was seeing the doorway as the frame for a
+second picture. When she appeared the picture seemed the same as of
+old. There was an undeniable delight in this first impression of
+externals. There had been no promise that she would be beautiful,
+and she was not. There had been promise of distinction, and she
+seemed to have fulfilled it. For a second she paused on the
+threshold rather diffidently. Then she smiled as she had when she
+greeted him from the veranda as he came up the terrace steps. She
+crossed the room with a flowing, spontaneous vitality that appealed
+to him as something familiar.</p>
+<p>"Ten years, isn't it?" she exclaimed, putting a genuine quality
+of personal interest into the words as she gave his hand a quick,
+firm shake. Then, with the informality of old acquaintances who had
+parted only yesterday, she indicated a place on the sofa for him,
+while she seated herself on the other side of the tea-table. "The
+terrace there in the foreground," she said with conforming gestures
+of location, "the church steeple over the town, the upward sweep of
+the mountains, and there the plain melting into the horizon. And,
+let me see, you took two lumps, if I remember?"</p>
+<p>He would have known the hand that poised over the sugar bowl
+though he had not seen the face; a brownish hand, not
+long-fingered, not narrow for its length&mdash;a compact, deft,
+firm little hand.</p>
+<p>"None now," he said.</p>
+<p>"Do you find it fattening?" she asked.</p>
+<p>He recognized the mischievous sparkle of the eyes, the quizzical
+turn of the lips, which was her asset in keeping any question from
+being personal. Nevertheless, he flushed slightly.</p>
+<p>"A change of taste," he averred.</p>
+<p>"Since you've become such a great man?" she hazarded. "Is that
+too strong?" This referred to the tea.</p>
+<p>"No, just right!" he nodded.</p>
+<p>He was studying her with the polite, veiled scrutiny of a man of
+the world. A materialist, he would look a woman over as he would a
+soldier when he had been a major-general making an inspection. She
+was slim, supple; he liked slim, supple women. Her eyes, though
+none the less luminous, and her lips, though none the less
+flexible, did not seem quite as out of proportion with the rest of
+her face as formerly, now that it had taken on the contour of
+maturity, which was noticeable also in the lines of her figure.
+Yes, she was twenty-seven, with the vivacity of seventeen retained,
+though she were on the edge of being an old maid according to the
+conventional notions. Necks and shoulders that happened to be at
+his side at dinner, he had found, when they were really beautiful,
+were not averse to his glance of appreciative and discriminating
+admiration of physical charm. But he saw her shrug slightly and
+caught a spark from her eyes that made him vaguely conscious of an
+offence to her sensibilities, and he was wholly conscious that the
+suggestion, bringing his faculties up sharply, had the pleasure of
+a novel sensation.</p>
+<p>"How fast you have gone ahead!" she said. "That little prophecy
+of mine did come true. You are chief of Staff!"</p>
+<p>After a smile of satisfaction he corrected her.</p>
+<p>"Not quite; vice-chief&mdash;the right-hand man of His
+Excellency. I am a buffer between him and the heads of divisions.
+This has led to the erroneous assumption which I cannot too
+forcibly deny&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He was proceeding with the phraseology habitual whenever men or
+women, to flatter him, had intimated that they realized that he was
+the actual head of the army. His Excellency, with the prestige of a
+career, must be kept soporifically enjoying the forms of authority.
+To arouse his jealousy might curtail Westerling's actual power.</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes!" breathed Marta softly, arching her eyebrows a trifle
+as she would when looking all around and through a thing or when
+she found any one beating about the bush. The little frown
+disappeared and she smiled understandingly. "You know I'm not a
+perfect goose!" she added. "Had you been made chief of staff in
+name, too, all the old generals would have been in the sulks and
+the young generals jealous," she continued. "The one way that you
+might have the power to exercise was by proxy."</p>
+<p>This downright frankness was another reflection of the old days
+before he was at the apex of the pyramid. Now it was so unusual in
+his experience as to be almost a shock. On the point of arguing, he
+caught a mischievous, delightful "Isn't that so?" in her eyes, and
+replied:</p>
+<p>"Yes, I shouldn't wonder if it were!"</p>
+<p>Why shouldn't he admit the truth to the one who had rung the
+bell of his secret ambition long ago by recognizing in him the
+ability to reach his goal? He marvelled at her grasp of the
+situation.</p>
+<p>"It wasn't so very hard to say, was it?" she asked happily, in
+response to his smile. Then, her gift of putting herself in
+another's place, while she strove to look at things with his
+purpose and vision, in full play, she went on in a different tone,
+as much to herself as to him: "You have labored to make yourself
+master of a mighty organization. You did not care for the
+non-essentials. You wanted the reality of shaping results."</p>
+<p>"Yes, the results, the power!" he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>"Fifteen hundred regiments!" she continued thoughtfully, looking
+at a given point rather than at him. "Every regiment a blade which
+you would bring to an even sharpness! Every regiment a unit of a
+harmonious whole, knowing how to screen itself from fire and give
+fire as long as bidden, in answer to your will if war comes! That
+is what you live and plan for, isn't it?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, exactly! Yes, you have it!" he said. His shoulders
+stiffened as he thrilled at seeing a picture of himself, as he
+wanted to see himself, done in bold strokes. It assured him that
+not only had his own mind grown beyond what were to him the narrow
+associations of his old La Tir days, but that hers had grown, too.
+"And you&mdash;what have you been doing all these years?" he
+asked.</p>
+<p>"Living the life of a woman on a country estate," she replied.
+"Since you made a rule that no Gray officers Should cross the
+frontier we have been a little lonelier, having only the Brown
+officers to tea. Did you really find it so bad for discipline in
+your own case?" she concluded with playful solemnity.</p>
+<p>"One cannot consider individual cases in a general order," he
+explained. "And, remember, the Browns made the ruling first. You
+see, every year means a tightening&mdash;yes, a tightening, as arms
+and armies grow more complicated and the maintaining of staff
+secrets more important. And you have been all the time at La Tir,
+truly?" he asked, changing the subject. He was convinced that she
+had acquired something that could not be gained on the outskirts of
+a provincial town.</p>
+<p>"No. I have travelled. I have been quite around the world."</p>
+<p>"You have!" This explained much. "How I envy you! That is a
+privilege I shall not know until I am superannuated." While he
+should remain chief of staff he must be literally a prisoner in his
+own country.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I should say it was splendid! Splendid&mdash;yes, indeed!"
+Snappy little nods of the head being unequal to expressing the joy
+of the memories that her exclamation evoked, she clasped her hands
+over her knees and swung back and forth in the ecstasy of
+seventeen.</p>
+<p>"Splendid! I should say so!" She nestled the curling tip of her
+tongue against her teeth, as if the recollection must also be
+tasted. "Splendid, enchanting, enlightening, stupendous, and
+wickedly expensive! Another girl and I did it all on our own."</p>
+<p>"O-oh!" he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>"Oh, oh, oh!" she repeated after him. "Oh, what, please?"</p>
+<p>"Oh, nothing!" he said. It was quite comprehensible to him how
+well equipped she was to take care of herself on such an
+adventure.</p>
+<p>"Precisely, when you come to think it over!" she concluded.</p>
+<p>"What interested you most? What was the big lesson of all your
+journeying?" he asked, ready to play the listener.</p>
+<p>"Being born and bred on a frontier, of an ancestry that was born
+and bred on a frontier, why, frontiers interested me most," she
+said. "I collected impressions of frontiers as some people collect
+pictures. I found them all alike&mdash;stupid, just stupid! Oh, so
+stupid!" Her frown grew with the repetition of the word; her
+fingers closed in on her palm in vexation. He recollected that he
+had seen her like this two or three times at La Tir, when he had
+found the outbursts most entertaining. He imagined that the small
+fist pressed against the table edge could deliver a stinging blow.
+"As stupid as it is for neighbors to quarrel! It put me at war with
+all frontiers."</p>
+<p>"Apparently," he said.</p>
+<p>She withdrew her fist from the table, dropped the opened hand
+over the other on her knee, her body relaxing, her wrath passing
+into a kind of shamefacedness and then into a soft, prolonged
+laugh.</p>
+<p>"I laugh at myself, at my own inconsistency," she said. "I was
+warlike against war. At all events, if there is anything to make a
+teacher of peace lose her temper it is the folly of frontiers."</p>
+<p>"Yes?" he exclaimed. "Yes? Go on!" And he thought: "I'm really
+having a very good time."</p>
+<p>"You see, I came home from my tour with an idea&mdash;an idea
+for a life occupation just as engrossing as yours," she went on,
+"and opposed to yours. I saw there was no use of working with the
+grown-up folks. They must be left to The Hague conferences and the
+peace societies. But children are quite alike the world over. You
+can plant thoughts in the young that will take root and grow as
+they grow."</p>
+<p>"Patriotism, for instance," he observed narrowly.</p>
+<p>"No, the follies of martial patriotism! The wickedness of war,
+which is the product of martial patriotism!"</p>
+<p>The follies of patriotism! This was the red flag of anarchy to
+him. He started to speak, flushing angrily, but held his tongue and
+only emitted a "whew!" in good-humored wonder.</p>
+<p>"I see you are not very frightened by my opposition," she
+rejoined in a flash of amusement not wholly untempered by
+exasperation.</p>
+<p>"We got the appropriation for an additional army corps this
+year," he explained contentedly, his repose completely
+regained.</p>
+<p>"Thus increasing the odds against us. But perhaps not; for we
+are dealing with the children not with recruits, as I said. We call
+ourselves the teachers of peace. I organized the first class in La
+Tir. I have the children come together every Sunday morning and I
+tell them about the children that live in other countries. I tell
+them that a child a thousand miles away is just as much a neighbor
+as the one across the street. At first I feared that they would
+find it uninteresting. But if you know how to talk to them they
+don't."</p>
+<p>"Naturally they don't, when you talk to them," he
+interrupted.</p>
+<p>She was so intent that she passed over the compliment with a
+gesture like that of brushing away a cobweb. Her eyes were like
+deep, clear wells of faith and repose.</p>
+<p>"I try to make the children of other countries so interesting
+that our children will like them too well ever to want to kill them
+when they grow up. We have a little peace prayer&mdash;they have
+even come to like to recite it&mdash;a prayer and an oath. But I'll
+not bother you with it. Other women have taken up the idea. I have
+found a girl who is going to start a class on your side in South La
+Tir, and I came here to meet some women who want to inaugurate the
+movement in your capital."</p>
+<p>"I'll have to see about that!" he rejoined, half-banteringly,
+half-threateningly.</p>
+<p>"There is something else to come, even more irritating," she
+said, less intently and smiling. "So please be prepared to hold
+your temper."</p>
+<p>"I shall not beat my fist on the table defending war as you did
+defending peace!" he retaliated with significant enjoyment.</p>
+<p>But she used his retort for an opening.</p>
+<p>"Oh, I'd rather you would do that than jest! It's human. It's
+going to war because one is angry. You would go to war as a matter
+of cold reason."</p>
+<p>"If otherwise, I should lose," he replied.</p>
+<p>"Exactly. You make it easy for me to approach my point. I want
+to prevent you from losing!" she announced cheerfully yet very
+seriously.</p>
+<p>"Yes? Proceed. I brace myself against an explosion of
+indignation!"</p>
+<p>"It is the duty of a teacher of peace to use all her influence
+with the people she knows," she went on. "So I am going to ask you
+not to let your country ever go to war against mine while you are
+chief of staff."</p>
+<p>"Mine against yours?" he equivocated. "Why, you live almost
+within gunshot of the line! Your people have as much Gray as Brown
+blood in their veins, <i>Your</i> country! <i>My</i> country! Isn't
+that patriotism?"</p>
+<p>"Patriotism, but not martial patriotism," she corrected him. "My
+thought is to stop war for both countries as war, regardless of
+sides. Promise me that you will not permit it!"</p>
+<p>"I not permit it!" He smiled with the kindly patronage of a
+great man who sees a charming woman floundering in an attempt at
+logic. "It is for the premier to say. I merely make the machine
+ready. The government says the word that makes it move. I able to
+stop war! Come, come!"</p>
+<p>"But you can&mdash;yes, you can with a word!" she declared
+positively.</p>
+<p>"How?" he asked, amazed. "How?" he repeated blandly.</p>
+<p>Was she teasing him? he wondered. What new resources of
+confusion had ten years and a tour around the world developed in
+her? Was it possible that the Whole idea of the teachers of peace
+was an invention to make conversation at his expense? If so, she
+carried it off with a sincerity that suggested other depths yet
+unsounded.</p>
+<p>"Very easily," she answered. "You can tell the premier that you
+cannot win. Tell him that you will break your army to pieces
+against the Browns' fortifications!"</p>
+<p>He gasped. Then an inner voice prompted him that the cue was
+comedy.</p>
+<p>"Excellent fooling&mdash;excellent!" he said with a laugh. "Tell
+the premier that I should lose when I have five million men to
+their three million! What a harlequin chief of staff I should be!
+Excellent fooling! You almost had me!"</p>
+<p>Again he laughed, though in the fashion of one who had hardly
+unbent his spine, while he was wishing for the old days when he
+might take tea with her one or two afternoons a week. It would be a
+fine tonic after his isolation at the apex of the pyramid surveying
+the deference of the lower levels. Then he saw that her eyes,
+shimmering with wonder, grew dull and her lips parted in a rigid,
+pale line as if she were hurt.</p>
+<p>"You think I am joking?" she asked.</p>
+<p>"Why, yes!"</p>
+<p>"But I am not! No, no, not about such a ghastly subject as a war
+to-day!" She was leaning toward him, hands on knee and eyes burning
+like coals without a spark. "I"&mdash;she paused as she had before
+she broke out with the first prophecy&mdash;"I will quote part of
+our children's oath: 'I will not be a coward. It is a coward who
+strikes first. A brave man even after he receives a blow tries to
+reason with his assailant, and does not strike back until he
+receives a second blow. I shall not let a burglar drive me from my
+house. If an enemy tries to take my land I shall appeal to his
+sense of justice and reason with him, but if he then persists I
+shall fight for my home. If I am victorious I shall not try to take
+his land but to make the most of my own. I shall never cross a
+frontier to kill my fellowmen.'"</p>
+<p>Very impressive she made the oath. Her deliberate recital of it
+had the quality which justifies every word with an urgent
+faith.</p>
+<p>"You see, with that teaching there can be no war," she
+proceeded, "and those who strike will be weak; those who defend
+will be strong."</p>
+<p>"Perhaps," he said.</p>
+<p>"You would not like to see thousands, hundreds of thousands, of
+men killed and maimed, would you?" she demanded, and her eyes held
+the horror of the sight in reality. "You can prevent it&mdash;you
+<i>can</i>!" Her heart was in the appeal.</p>
+<p>"The old argument! No, I should not like to see that," he
+replied. "I only do my duty as a soldier to my country."</p>
+<p>"The old answer! The more reason why you should tell the premier
+you can't! But there is still another reason for telling him," she
+urged gently.</p>
+<p>Now he saw her not at twenty-seven but at seventeen, girlish,
+the subject of no processes of reason but in the spell of an
+intuition, and he knew that something out of the blue in a flash
+was coming.</p>
+<p>"For you will not win!" she declared.</p>
+<p>This struck fire. Square jaw and sturdy body, in masculine
+energy, resolute and trained, were set indomitably against feminine
+vitality.</p>
+<p>"Yes, we shall win! We shall win!" he said without even the
+physical demonstration of a gesture and in a hard, even voice which
+was like that of the machinery of modern war itself, a voice which
+the aristocratic sniff, the Louis XVI. curls, or any of the old
+gallery-display heroes would have thought utterly lacking in
+histrionics suitable to the occasion. He remained rigid after he
+had spoken, handsome, self-possessed.</p>
+<p>There was no use of beating feminine fists against such a stone
+wall. The force of the male was supreme. She smiled with a strange,
+quivering loosening of the lips. She spread out her hands with
+fingers apart, as if to let something run free from them into the
+air, and the flame of appeal that had been in her eyes broke into
+many lights that seemed to scatter into space, yet ready to return
+at her command. She glanced at the clock and rose, almost
+abruptly.</p>
+<p>"I was very strenuous riding my hobby against yours, wasn't I?"
+she exclaimed in a flutter of distraction that made it easy for him
+to descend from his own steed. "I stated a feeling. I made a guess,
+a threat about your winning&mdash;and all in the air. That's a
+woman's privilege; one men grant, isn't it?"</p>
+<p>"We enjoy doing so," he replied, all urbanity.</p>
+<p>"Thank you!" she said simply. "I must be at home in time for the
+children's lesson on Sunday. My sleeper is engaged, and if I am not
+to miss the train I must go immediately."</p>
+<p>With an undeniable shock of regret he realized that the
+interview was over. Really, he had had a very good time; not only
+that, but&mdash;.</p>
+<p>"Will it be ten years before we meet again?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"Perhaps, unless you change the rules about officers dossing the
+frontier to take tea," she replied.</p>
+<p>"Even if I did, the vice-chief of staff might hardly go."</p>
+<p>"Then perhaps you must wait," she warned him, "until the
+teachers of peace have done away with all frontiers."</p>
+<p>"Or, if there were war, I should come!" he answered in kind. He
+half wished that this might start another argument and she would
+miss her train. But she made no reply. "And you may come to the
+Gray capital again. You are not through travelling!" he added.</p>
+<p>This aroused her afresh; the flame was back in her eyes.</p>
+<p>"Yes. I have all the memories of my journeys to enjoy, all their
+lessons to study," she said. "There is the big world, and you want
+to have had the breath of all its climates in your lungs, the
+visions of all its peoples yours. Then the other thing is three
+acres and a cow. If you could only have the solidarity of the
+Japanese, their public spirit, with the old Chinese love of family
+and peace, and a cathedral near-by on a hill! Patriotism? Why, it
+is in the soil of your three acres. I love to feel the warm, rich
+earth of our own garden in my hands! Hereafter I shall be a
+stay-at-home; and if my children win," she held out her hand in
+parting with the same frank, earnest grip of her greeting, "why,
+you will find that tea is, as usual, at four-thirty."</p>
+<p>He had found the women of his high official world&mdash;a
+narrower world than he realized&mdash;much alike. Striking certain
+keys, certain chords responded. He could probe the depths of their
+minds, he thought, in a single evening. Then he passed on, unless
+it was in the interest of pleasure or of his career to linger. This
+meeting had left his curiosity baffled. He understood how Marta's
+vitality demanded action, which exerted itself in a feminine way
+for a feminine cause. The cure for such a fad was most clear to his
+masculine-perception. What if all the power she had shown in her
+appeal for peace could be made to serve another ambition? He knew
+that he was a great man. More than once he had wondered what would
+happen if he were to meet a great woman. And he should not see
+Marta Galland again unless war came.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='VII' id="VII"></a>
+<h2>VII</h2>
+<h3>TIMES HAVE CHANGED</h3>
+<br>
+<p>A prodigious brown worm, its body turning and rising and falling
+with the grade and throbbing with the march of its centipede feet,
+wound its way along a rising mountain road. In the strong, youthful
+figures set in the universal type of military mould it might have
+been a regiment of any one of many nations' but the tint of its
+uniform was the brown of the nine hundred regiments that prepared
+for war against the gray of the fifteen hundred under Hedworth
+Westerling.</p>
+<p>The 53d of the Browns had started for La Tir on the same day
+that the 128th of the Grays had started for South La Tir. While the
+128th was going to new scenes, the 53d was returning to familiar
+ground. It had detrained in the capital of the province from which
+its ranks had been recruited. After a steep incline, there was a
+welcome bugle note and with shouts of delight the centipede's legs
+broke apart! Bankers', laborers', doctors', valets', butchers',
+manufacturers', and judges' sons threw themselves down on the
+greensward of the embankment to rest. With their talk of home, of
+relatives whom they had met at the station, and of the changes in
+the town was mingled talk of the crisis.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, an aged man was approaching. At times he would break
+into a kind of trot that ended, after a few steps, in shortness of
+breath. He was quite withered, his bright eyes twinkling out of an
+area of moth patches, and he wore a frayed uniform coat with a
+medal on the breast.</p>
+<p>"Is this the 53d?" he quavered to the nearest soldier</p>
+<p>"It certainly is!" some one answered. "Come and join us,
+veteran!"</p>
+<p>"Is Tom&mdash;Tom Fragini here?"</p>
+<p>The answer came from a big soldier, who sprang to his feet and
+leaped toward the old man.</p>
+<p>"It's grandfather, as I live!" he called out, kissing the
+veteran on both cheeks. "I saw sister in town, and she said you'd
+be at the gate as we marched by."</p>
+<p>"Didn't wait at no gate! Marched right up to you!" said
+grandfather. "Marched up with my uniform and medal on! Stand off
+there, Tom, so I can see you. My word! You're bigger'n your father,
+but not bigger'n I was! No, sir, not bigger'n I was in my day
+before that wound sort o' bent me over. They say it's the lead in
+the blood. I've still got the bullet!"</p>
+<p>The old man's trousers were threadbare but well darned, and the
+holes in the uppers of his shoes were carefully patched. He had a
+merry air of optimism, which his grandson had inherited.</p>
+<p>"Well, Tom, how much longer you got to serve?" asked
+grandfather.</p>
+<p>"Six months," answered Tom.</p>
+<p>"One, two, three, four&mdash;" grandfather counted the numbers
+off on his fingers. "That's good. You'll be in time for the spring
+ploughing. My, how you have filled out! But, somehow, I can't get
+used to this kind of uniform. Why, I don't see how a girl'd be
+attracted to you fellows, at all!"</p>
+<p>"They have to, for we're the only kind of soldiers there are
+nowadays. Not as gay as in your day, that's sure, when you were in
+the Hussars, eh?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, I was in the Hussars&mdash;in the Hussars! I tell you,
+with our sabres a-gleaming, our horses' bits a-jingling, our
+pennons a-flying, and all the color of our uniform&mdash;I tell
+you, the girls used to open their eyes at us. And we went into the
+charge like that&mdash;yes, sir, just that gay and grand, Colonel
+Galland leading!"</p>
+<p>Military history said that it had been a rather foolish charge,
+a fine example of the vainglory of unreasoning bravery that
+accomplishes nothing, but no one would suggest such scepticism of
+an immortal event in popular imagination in hearing of the old man
+as he lived over that intoxicated rush of horses and men into a
+battery of the Grays.</p>
+<p>"Well, didn't you find what I said was true about the
+lowlanders?" asked grandfather after he had finished the charge,
+referring to the people of the southern frontier of the Browns,
+where the 53d had just been garrisoned.</p>
+<p>"No, I kind of liked them. I made a lot of friends," admitted
+Tom. "They're very progressive."</p>
+<p>"Eh? eh? You're joking!" To like the people of the southern
+frontier was only less conceivable than liking the people of the
+Grays. "That's because you didn't see deep under them. They're all
+on the outside&mdash;a flighty lot! Why, if they'd done their part
+in that last war we'd have licked the Grays until they cried for
+mercy! If their army corps had stood its ground at
+Volmer&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"So you've always said," interrupted Tom.</p>
+<p>"And the way they cook tripe! I couldn't stomach it, could you?
+And if there's anything I am partial to it's a good dish of tripe!
+And their light beer&mdash;like drinking froth! And their
+bread&mdash;why, it ain't bread! It's chips! 'Taint fit for
+civilized folks!"</p>
+<p>"But I sort of got used to their ways," said Tom.</p>
+<p>"Eh? eh?" Grandfather looked at grandson quizzically, seeking
+the cause of such heterodoxy in a northern man. "Say, you ain't
+been falling in love?" he hazarded. "You&mdash;you ain't going to
+bring one of them southern girls home?"</p>
+<p>"No!" said Tom laughing.</p>
+<p>"Well, I'm glad you ain't, for they're naturally light-minded. I
+remember 'em well." He wandered on with his questions and comments.
+"Is it a fact, Tom, or was you just joking when you wrote home that
+the soldiers took so many baths?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, they do."</p>
+<p>"Well, that beats me! It's a wonder you didn't all die of
+pneumonia!" He paused to absorb the phenomenon. Then his
+half-childish mind, prompted by a random recollection, flitted to
+another subject which set him to giggling. "And the little
+crawlers&mdash;did they bother you much, the little crawlers?"</p>
+<p>"The little crawlers?" repeated Tom, mystified.</p>
+<p>"Yes. Everybody used to get 'em just from living close together.
+Had to comb 'em out and pick 'em out of your clothes. The chase we
+used to call it."</p>
+<p>"No, grandfather, crawlers have gone out of fashion. And no more
+epidemics of typhoid and dysentery either," said Tom.</p>
+<p>"Times have certainly changed!" grumbled Grandfather
+Fragini.</p>
+<p>Interested in their own reunion, they had paid no attention to a
+group of Tom's comrades near-by, sprawled around a newspaper
+containing the latest despatches from both capitals. It was a group
+as typical as that of the Grays around Hugo Mallin's cot; only the
+common voice was that of defence.</p>
+<p>"Five million soldiers to our three million!"</p>
+<p>"Eighty million people to our fifty million!"</p>
+<p>"Because of the odds, they think we are bound to yield, no
+matter if we are in the right!"</p>
+<p>"Let them come!" said the butcher's son. "If we have to go, it
+will be on a wave of blood."</p>
+<p>"And they will come some time," said the judge's son. "They want
+our land."</p>
+<p>"We gain nothing if we beat them back. War will be the ruin of
+business,"-said the banker's son.</p>
+<p>"Yes, we are prosperous now. Let well enough alone!" said the
+manufacturer's son.</p>
+<p>"Some say it makes wages higher," said the laborer's son, "but I
+am thinking it's a poor way of raising your pay."</p>
+<p>"There won't be any war," said the banker's son "There can't be
+without credit. The banking interests will lot permit it."</p>
+<p>"There can always be war," said the judge's son, "always when
+one people determines to strike at another people&mdash;even if it
+brings bankruptcy."</p>
+<p>"It would be a war that would make all others in history a mere
+exchange of skirmishes. Every able-bodied man in
+line&mdash;automatics a hundred shots a minute&mdash;guns a dozen
+shots a minute&mdash;and aeroplanes and dirigibles!" said the
+manufacturer's son.</p>
+<p>"To the death, too!"</p>
+<p>"And not for glory! We of the 53d who live on the frontier will
+be fighting for our homes."</p>
+<p>"If we lose them we'll never get them back. Better die than be
+beaten!"</p>
+<p>There was no humorist Hugo Mallin in this group; no nimble fancy
+to send heresy skating over thin ice; but there was Herbert
+Stransky, with deep-set eyes, slightly squinting inward, and a
+heavy jaw, an enormous man who was the best shot in the company
+when he cared to be. He had listened in silence to the others, his
+rather thick but expressive lips curving with cynicism. His only
+speech all the morning had been in the midst of the reception in
+the public square of the town when he said:</p>
+<p>"This home-coming doesn't mean much to me. Home? Hell! The
+hedgerows of the world are my home!"</p>
+<p>He appeared older than his years, and hard and bitter, except
+when his eyes would light with a feverish sort of fire which shone
+now as he broke into a lull in the talk.</p>
+<p>"Comrades," he began.</p>
+<p>"Let us hear from the socialist!" a Tory exclaimed.</p>
+<p>"No, the anarchist!" shouted a socialist.</p>
+<p>"There won't be any war!" said Stransky, his voice gradually
+rising to the pitch of an agitator relishing the sensation of his
+own words. "Patriotism is the played-out trick of the ruling
+classes to keep down the proletariat. There won't be any war! Why?
+Because there are too many enlightened men on both sides who do the
+world's work. We of the 53d are a provincial lot, but throughout
+our army there are thousands upon thousands like me. They march,
+they drill, but when battle comes they will refuse to
+fight&mdash;my comrades in heart, to whom the flag of this country
+means no more than that of any other country!"</p>
+<p>"Hold on! The flag is sacred!" cried the banker's son.</p>
+<p>"Yes, that will do!"</p>
+<p>"Shut up!"</p>
+<p>Other voices formed a chorus of angry protest.</p>
+<p>"I knew you thought it; now I've caught you!" This from the
+sergeant, who had seen hard fighting against a savage foe in Africa
+and therefore was particularly bitter about the Bodlapoo affair.
+The welt of a scar on his gaunt, fever-yellowed cheek turned a
+deeper red as he seized Stransky by the collar of the blouse.</p>
+<p>Stransky raised his free hand as if to strike, but paused as he
+faced the company's boyish captain, slender of figure, aristocratic
+of feature. His indignation was as evident as the sergeant's, but
+he was biting his lips to keep it under control.</p>
+<p>"You heard what he said, sir?"</p>
+<p>"The latter part&mdash;enough!"</p>
+<p>"It's incitation to mutiny! An example!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, put him under arrest."</p>
+<p>The sergeant still held fast to the collar of Stransky's blouse.
+Stransky could have shaken himself free, as a mastiff frees himself
+from a puppy, but this was resistance to arrest and he had not yet
+made up his mind to go that far. His muscles were weaving under the
+sergeant's grip, his eyes glowing as with volcanic fire waiting on
+the madness of impulse for eruption.</p>
+<p>"I wonder if it is really worth while to put him under arrest?"
+said some one at the edge of the group in amiable inquiry.</p>
+<p>The voice came from an officer of about thirty-five, who
+apparently had strolled over from a near-by aeroplane station to
+look at the regiment. From his shoulder hung the gold cords of the
+staff. His left hand thrust in the pocket of his blouse heightened
+the ease of his carriage, which was free of conventional military
+stiffness, while his eyes had the peculiar eagerness of a man who
+seems to find everything that comes under his observation
+interesting and significant.</p>
+<p>It was Colonel Arthur Lanstron, whose plane had skimmed the
+Gallands' garden wall for the "easy bump" ten years ago. There was
+something more than mere titular respect in the way the young
+captain saluted&mdash;-admiration and the diffident, boyish glance
+of recognition which does not presume to take the lead in recalling
+a slight acquaintance with a man of distinction.</p>
+<p>"Dellarme! It's all of two years since we met at Miss Galland's,
+isn't it?" Lanstron said, shaking hands with the captain.</p>
+<p>"Yes, just before we were ordered south," said Dellarme,
+obviously pleased to be remembered.</p>
+<p>"I overheard your speech," Lanstron continued, nodding toward
+Stransky. "It was very informing."</p>
+<p>A crowd of soldiers was now pressing around Stransky, and in the
+front rank was Grandfather Fragini.</p>
+<p>"Said our flag was no better'n any other flag, did he?" piped
+the old man. "Beat him to a pulp! That's what the Hussars would
+have done."</p>
+<p>"If you don't mind telling it in public, Stransky, I should like
+to know your origin," said Lanstron, prepared to be as considerate
+of an anarchist's private feelings as of anybody's.</p>
+<p>Stransky squinted his eyes down the bony bridge of his nose and
+grinned sardonically.</p>
+<p>"That won't take long," he answered. "My father, so far as I
+could identify him, died in jail and my mother of drink."</p>
+<p>"That was hardly to the purple!" observed Lanstron
+thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>"No, to the red!" answered Stransky savagely.</p>
+<p>"I mean that it was hardly inclined to make you take ft roseate
+view of life as a beautiful thing in a well-ordered world where
+favors of fortune are evenly distributed," continued Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"Rather to make me rejoice in the hope of a new order of
+things&mdash;the re-creation of society!" Stransky uttered the
+sentiment with the triumphant pride of a pupil who knows his
+text-book thoroughly.</p>
+<p>By this time the colonel commanding the regiment, who had
+noticed the excitement from a distance, appeared, forcing a gap for
+his passage through the crowd with sharp words. He, too, recognized
+Lanstron. After they had shaken hands, the colonel scowled as he
+heard the situation explained, with the old sergeant, still holding
+fast to Stransky's collar, a capable and insistent witness for the
+prosecution; while Stransky, the fire in his eyes dying to coals,
+stared straight ahead.</p>
+<p>"It is only a suggestion, of course," said Lanstron, speaking
+quite as a spectator to avoid the least indication of interference
+with the colonel's authority, "but it seems possible that Stransky
+has clothed his wrongs in a garb that could never set well on his
+nature if he tried to wear it in practice. He is really an
+individualist. Enraged, he would fight well. I should like nothing
+better than a force of Stranskys if I had to defend a redoubt in a
+last stand."</p>
+<p>"Yes, he might fight." The colonel looked hard at Stransky's
+rigid profile, with its tight lips and chin as firm as if cut out
+of stone. "You never know who will fight in the pinch, they say.
+But that's speculation. It's the example that I have to deal
+with."</p>
+<p>"He is not of the insidious, plotting type. He spoke his mind
+openly," suggested Lanstron. "If you give him the limit of the law,
+why, he becomes a martyr to persecution. I should say that his
+remarks might pass for barrack-room gassing."</p>
+<p>"Very well," said the colonel, taking the shortest way out of
+the difficulty. "We will excuse the first offence."</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir!" said the sergeant mechanically as he released his
+grip of the offender. "We had two anarchists in my company in
+Africa," he observed in loyal agreement with orders. "They fought
+like devils. The only trouble was to keep them from shooting
+innocent natives for sport."</p>
+<p>Stransky's collar was still crumpled on the nape of his neck. He
+remained stock-still, staring down the bridge of his nose. For a
+full minute he did not vouchsafe so much as a glance upward over
+the change in his fortunes. Then he looked around at Lanstron
+gloweringly.</p>
+<p>"I know who you are!" he said. "You were born to the purple. You
+have had education, opportunity, position&mdash;everything that you
+and your kind want to keep for your kind. You are smarter than the
+others. You would hang a man with spider-webs instead of hemp. But
+I won't fight for you! No, I won't!"</p>
+<p>He threw back his head with a determination in his defiance so
+intense that it had a certain kind of dignity that freed it of
+theatrical affectation.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I was fortunate; but perhaps nature was not altogether
+unkind to you," said Lanstron. "In Napoleonic times, Stransky, I
+think you might even have carried a marshal's baton in your
+knapsack."</p>
+<p>"You&mdash;what rot!" A sort of triumph played around Stransky's
+full lips and his jaw shot out challengingly. "No, never against my
+comrades on the other side of the border!" he concluded, his dogged
+stare returning.</p>
+<p>Now the colonel gave the order to fall in; the bugle sounded and
+the centipede's legs began to assemble on the road. But Stransky
+remained a statue, his rifle untouched on the sward. He seemed of a
+mind to let the regiment go on without him.</p>
+<p>"Stransky, fall in!" called the sergeant.</p>
+<p>Still Stransky did not move. A comrade picked up the rifle and
+fairly thrust it into his hands.</p>
+<p>"Come on, Bert, and knead dough with the rest of us!" he
+whispered. "Come on! Cheer up!" Evidently his comrades liked
+Stransky.</p>
+<p>"No!" roared Stransky, bringing the rifle down on the ground
+with a heavy blow.</p>
+<p>Then impulse broke through the restraint that seemed to
+characterize the Lanstron of thirty-five. The Lanstron of
+twenty-five, who had met catastrophe because he was
+"wool-gathering," asserted himself. He put his hand on Stransky's
+shoulder. It was a strong though slim hand that looked as if it had
+been trained to do the work of two hands in the process of its
+owner's own transformation. Thus the old sergeant had seen a
+general remonstrate with a brave veteran who had been guilty of bad
+conduct in Africa. The old colonel gasped at such a subversion of
+the dignity of rank. He saw the army going to the devil. But young
+Dellarme, watching with eager curiosity, was sensible of no
+familiarity in the act. It all depended on how such a thing was
+done, he was thinking.</p>
+<p>"We all have minutes when we are more or less anarchists," said
+Lanstron in the human appeal of one man to another. "But we don't
+want to be judged by one of those minutes. I got a hand mashed up
+for a mistake that took only a second. Think this over to-night
+before you act. Then, if you are of the same opinion, go to the
+colonel and tell him so. Come, why not?"</p>
+<p>"All right, sir, you're so decent about it!" grumbled Stransky,
+taking his place in the ranks.</p>
+<p>Hep-hep-hep! the regiment started on its way, with Grandfather
+Fragini keeping at his grandson's side.</p>
+<p>"Makes me feel young again, but it's darned solemn beside the
+Hussars, with their horses' bits a-jingling. Times have certainly
+changed&mdash;officers' hands in their pockets, saying 'if you
+don't mind' to a man that's insulted the flag! Kicking ain't good
+enough for that traitor! Ought to hang him&mdash;yes, sir, hang and
+draw him!"</p>
+<p>Lanstron watched the marching column for a time.</p>
+<p>"Hep-hep-hep! It's the brown of the infantry that counts in the
+end," he mused. "I liked that wall-eyed giant. He's all man!"</p>
+<p>Then his livening glance swept the heavens inquiringly. A speck
+in the blue, far away in the realms of atmospheric infinity, kept
+growing in size until it took the form of the wings with which man
+flies. The plane volplaned down with steady swiftness, till its
+racing shadow lay large over the landscape for a few seconds before
+it rose again with beautiful ease and precision.</p>
+<p>"Bully for you, Etzel!" Lanstron thought, as he started back to
+the aeroplane station. "You belong in the corps. We shall not let
+you return to your regiment for a while. You've a cool head and
+you'd charge a church tower if that were the orders."</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='VIII' id="VIII"></a>
+<h2>VIII</h2>
+<h3>THANKS TO A BUMBLEBEE</h3>
+<br>
+<p>"Has he changed much?" Mrs. Galland asked, when she learned that
+Marta had seen Westerling.</p>
+<p>"Jove has reached his own&mdash;the very top of Olympus, and he
+likes the prospect," Marta replied.</p>
+<p>The only home news of importance that her mother had to impart
+related to a tiny strip of paper with the greeting, "Hello, Marta!"
+that had been dropped from the pilot aeroplane as the Brown aerial
+squadron flew over the garden after its race with the Gray. She
+noted Marta's customary quickening interest at mention of
+Lanstron's name. It had become the talisman of a hope whose
+fulfilment was always being deferred.</p>
+<p>"How different Lanny and Westerling are!" Marta exclaimed, the
+picture of the two men rising before her vision. "Lanny trying so
+hard under the pressure of his responsibility not to be human and
+unable to forget himself, and Westerling trying, really trying, to
+be human at times, but unable to forget that he is Jove! Did you
+wave your acknowledgments to Lanny,'?"</p>
+<p>"Why, no! How could I?" asked Mrs. Galland. "He went over so
+fast I didn't know it was he&mdash;a little figure so far
+overhead."</p>
+<p>"It's odd, but I think I'd know Lanny a mile away by a sort of
+instinct," said Marta. "You know I'd like a gun that would fire a
+bomb and drop a message of 'Hello, yourself!' right on his knee.
+Wouldn't that give him a surprise?"</p>
+<p>"You and he are so full of nonsense that you&mdash;" But Mrs.
+Galland desisted. What was the use?</p>
+<p>Sometimes she wished that Colonel Lanstron would stay away
+altogether and leave a free field for a newcomer. Yet if two or
+three weeks passed without a call from him she was apprehensive.
+Besides being one of the Thorbourg Lanstrons, he was a most
+charming, capable man, who had risen very rapidly in his
+profession. It had been only six months after he had bolted up from
+the wreck of his plane by way of self-introduction to Marta before
+he alighted in the field across the road from the garden to report
+a promise kept.</p>
+<p>Once she knew that he was a Lanstron of Thorbourg, a fact of
+hardly passing interest to Marta, Mrs. Galland made him intimately
+welcome. By the time he had paid his third call he was Lanny to
+Marta and she was Marta to him, quite as if they had known each
+other from childhood. She had a gift for unaffected comradeship. He
+was the kind of man with whom she could be a comrade. There was
+always something to say the moment they met and they were never
+through talking when he had to go. They disagreed so often that
+Mrs. Galland thought they made a business of it. She wondered how
+real friendship could exist between two such controversialists.
+They could be seriously disputatious to the point of quarrelling;
+they could be light-heartedly disputatious to the bantering point,
+where either was uncertain which side of the argument he had
+originally espoused.</p>
+<p>"The gardener did not cut the chrysanthemums," Mrs. Galland
+said. "That is why we had asters in the bowl at luncheon. His
+deafness is really a cross, I never realized before what a
+companion one naturally makes of a gardener."</p>
+<p>"No, there's no purpose in having a deaf gardener," said Marta.
+"Nature distributes her defects unintelligently. Now, if we had
+dumb demagogues, deaf gossips, and steel that when it was being
+formed into a sword-blade or a gun would turn to putty, we should
+be much better off. But we couldn't let Feller go, could we? He's
+already made himself a fixture. So few people would put up with his
+deafness! He's so desirous of pleasing and he loves flowers."</p>
+<p>"And Colonel Lanstron recommended him. Except for his deafness
+he is a perfect gardener. Of course he had to have some drawback,
+for complete perfection is impossible," Mrs. Galland agreed.</p>
+<p>The old straw hat that shaded the fringe of white hair had been
+hovering within easy approaching distance of the chrysanthemum bed
+ever since the whistle of the train that brought Marta home had
+been heard from the station. Feller was watching Marta when she
+paused for a moment on the second terrace steps, enjoying the sweep
+of landscape anew with the freshness of a first glimpse and the
+intimacy of every familiar detail cut in the memory. It was her
+landscape, famed in history, where history might yet be made.</p>
+<p>His greeting was picturesque and effective. With white head
+bared, he looked up from the chrysanthemums to her and back at them
+and up at her again, with a sort of covert comradeship in his eyes
+which were young, very young for such white hair, and held out his
+little pad and pencil. She smiled approval and slowly worked out a
+"perfect" in the deaf-and-dumb alphabet before she took the
+proffered pencil and wrote:</p>
+<p>"I practised the deaf-and-dumb alphabet on the train. I'm
+learning fast. We've never had such chrysanthemums before. Next
+year we shall have some irises&mdash;just a few&mdash;as fine as
+they have in Japan. How's your rheumatism?"</p>
+<p>He had replaced the broad-brimmed hat over his brow and his lips
+were visible in a lingering smile as he read the message.</p>
+<p>"Thank you, Miss Galland," he said in his even monotone. "You
+are very kind and I am very fortunate to find a place like this. I
+already knew something about irises and I've been reading up on the
+subject. We'll try to hold our own with those little Japanese. As
+for the rheumatism, since you are good enough to inquire, Miss
+Galland, it's about the same. My legs are getting old. There are
+bound to be some kinks in them."</p>
+<p>"You select those to cut&mdash;a great armful!" she slowly
+spelled out on her fingers, clapping her hands with a triumphant
+cry of "How's that?" at the finish.</p>
+<p>"Your time has come! To the sacrifice!" he exclaimed to the
+flowers.</p>
+<p>Very tenderly, as if he were an executioner considerate of the
+victims of an inexorable law, he was snipping the stems, his head
+bent close to the blooms, when a bumblebee appeared among the
+salvias a few feet away. Perhaps army staffs who neglect no detail
+have made a mistake in overlooking the whirring of bumblebees'
+wings in affecting the fate of nations. These plunderers are not
+dangerous from their size, but they have not yet been organized to
+the hep-hep-hep of partisanship. They would as soon live in a Gray
+as a Brown garden, as soon probe for an atom of honey on one side
+of the white posts as the other. This one as it drew nearer was
+well to one side over Feller's shoulders. With eyes and mind intent
+on his work, Feller turned his head absently, as one will at an
+interruption.</p>
+<p>"There you are again, my dear!" he said. "You must think you're
+a battery of automatics."</p>
+<p>He went on cutting chrysanthemums, apparently unconscious that
+he had spoken.</p>
+<p>"Bring them up on the veranda, please," Marta wrote on the pad,
+her fingers moving with unusual nervous rapidity, the only sign of
+her inward excitement.</p>
+<p>Coming to the head of the steps of the terrace above, she looked
+back. Feller's face was quite hidden under his hat and suddenly she
+seemed to stub her toe and fall, while she uttered a low cry of
+pain. The hat rose like a jack-in-the-box with the cover released.
+Feller bounded toward her, taking two of steps at a time. She
+scrambled to her feet hastily, laughed, and gestured to show that
+she was not hurt. He drew his shoulders together and bent over
+spasmodically, gripping his knee.</p>
+<p>"I can run off if something starts me just as spry as if I were
+twenty," he said. "But after I've done it and the kinks come, I
+realize I've got old legs."</p>
+<p>"Now I know he's not deaf!" Marta murmured, as he returned to
+his work. She frowned. She was angry. "Lanny, you have something to
+explain," she thought.</p>
+<p>But when Feller brought his armful of chrysanthemums to her on
+the veranda, there was no trace in her expression of the discovery
+she had made, and she wrote a direction on his pad in the usual
+fashion.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='IX' id="IX"></a>
+<h2>IX</h2>
+<h3>A SUNDAY MORNING CALL</h3>
+<br>
+<p>As a boy, Arthur Lanstron had persisted in being an exception to
+the influences of both heredity and environment. Though his father
+and both grandfathers were officers who believed theirs to be the
+true gentleman's profession, he had preferred any kind of
+mechanical toy to arranging the most gayly painted tin soldiers in
+formation on the nursery floor; and he would rather read about the
+wonders of natural history and electricity than the campaigns of
+Napoleon and Frederick the Great and my lord Nelson. Left to his
+own choice, he would miss the parade of the garrison for inspection
+by an excellency in order to ask questions of a man wiping the oil
+off his hands with cotton-waste, who was far more entertaining to
+him than the most spick-and-span ramrod of a sergeant.</p>
+<p>The first time he saw a dynamo in motion he was spellbound. This
+was even more fascinating than the drill that the family dentist
+worked with his foot. His tutor found him inclined to estimate a
+C&aelig;sar, self-characterized in his commentaries, as less
+humanly appealing than his first love, the engine-driver, with whom
+he kept up a correspondence after his father had been transferred
+to another post. He was given to magic lanterns, private telegraph
+and telephone lines, trying to walk a tight rope, and parachute
+acts and experiments in chemistry. When the family were not worried
+lest he should break his neck or blow his head off investigating,
+they were irritated by a certain plebeian strain in him which kept
+all kinds of company. His mother disapproved of his picking an
+acquaintance with a group of acrobats in order to improve his skill
+on the trapeze. His excuse for his supple friends was that they
+were all "experts" in something, just as his tutor was in Greek
+verbs.</p>
+<p>Very light-hearted he was, busy, vital, reckless, with an
+earnest smile that could win the post telegrapher to teach him the
+code alphabet or persuade his father not to destroy his laboratory
+after he had singed off his eyebrows. This may explain why he had
+to cram hard in the dead languages at times, with a towel tied
+around his head. He complained that they were out of date; and he
+wanted to hear the Gauls' story, too, before he fully made up his
+mind about C&aelig;sar. But for the living languages he had a
+natural gift which his father's service abroad as military
+attach&eacute; for a while enabled him to cultivate.</p>
+<p>Upon being told one day that he was to go to the military school
+the following autumn, he broke out in open rebellion. He had just
+decided, after having passed through the stages of engine-driver,
+telegraph operator, railroad-signal watchman, automobile
+manufacturer, and superintendent of the city's waterworks, to build
+bridges over tropical torrents that always rose in floods to try
+all his skill in saving his construction work.</p>
+<p>"I don't want to go into the army!" he said.</p>
+<p>"Why?" asked his father, thinking that when the boy had to give
+his reasons he would soon be argued out of the heresy.</p>
+<p>"It's drilling a few hours a day, then nothing to do," Arthur
+replied. "All your work waits on war and you don't know that there
+will ever be any war. It waits on something nobody wants to happen.
+Now, if you manufacture something, why, you see wool come out
+cloth, steel come out an automobile. If you build a bridge you see
+it rising little by little. You're getting your results every day;
+you see your mistakes and your successes. You're making something,
+creating something; there's something going on all the while that
+isn't guesswork. I think that's what I want to say. You won't order
+me to be a soldier will you?"</p>
+<p>The father, loath to do this, called in the assistance of an
+able pleader then, Eugene Partow, lately become chief of staff of
+the Browns, who was an old friend of the Lanstron family. It was
+not in Partow's mind to lose such a recruit in a time when the
+heads of the army were trying, in answer to the demands of a new
+age, to counteract the old idea that made an officer's the
+conventional avocation of a gentleman of leisurely habits.</p>
+<p>"No army that ever worked as hard in peace as the average
+manufacturer or bridge-builder was ever beaten in battle if it
+fought anything like equal numbers," he said. "The officer who
+works hard in the army deserves more credit than he would in any
+other profession because the incentive for results seems remote.
+But what a terrible test of results may be made in a single hour's
+action. There is nothing you have learned or ever will learn that
+may not be of service to you. There is no invention, no form of
+industrial organization that must not be included in the greatest
+organization of all, whose plant and methods must be up to date in
+every particular. To be backward in a single particular may mean
+disaster&mdash;may mean that the loss of thousands of lives is due
+to you. You must have self-control, courage, dash, judgment If you
+have not kept up, if you are not equal to the test, your
+inefficiency will mean your shame and your country's suffering;
+while efficiency means a clear conscience and your country's
+security."</p>
+<p>Thus Partow turned the balance on the side of filial affection.
+He kept watch of the boy, but without favoring him with influence.
+Young Lanstron, who wanted to see results, had to earn them. He
+realized in practice the truth of Partow's saying that there was
+nothing he had ever learned but what could be of service to him as
+an officer. What the acrobats had taught him probably saved his
+life on the occasion of his first flight across the range. The
+friendships with all sorts of people in his youth were the
+forerunner of his sympathy with the giant, wall-eyed Stransky who
+had mutinied on the march.</p>
+<p>"Finding enough work to do?" Par tow would ask with a chuckle
+when they met in these days, for he had made Lanstron both chief of
+intelligence and chief aerostatic officer. Young Colonel Lanstron's
+was the duty of gaining the secrets of the Gray staff and keeping
+those of the Brown and organizing up-to-the-moment efficiency in
+the new forces of the air.</p>
+<p>He had remarked truly enough that the injury to his left hand
+served as a better reminder against the folly of wool-gathering
+than a string, even a large red string, tied around his finger.
+Thanks to skilful surgery working ingeniously with splintered bone
+and pulpy flesh, there was nothing unpleasant to the eye in a
+stiffened wrist and scarred knuckles slightly misshapen. The
+fingers, incapable of spreading much, were yet serviceable and had
+a firm grip of the wheel as he rose from the aeroplane station on
+the Sunday morning after Marta's return home for a flight to La
+Tir.</p>
+<p>He knew the pattern weaving under his feet as one knows that of
+his own garden from an overlooking window. Every detail of the
+staff map, ravines, roads, buildings, battery positions, was
+stitched together in the flowing reality of actual vision. No white
+posts were necessary to tell him where the boundary between the two
+nations lay. The line was drawn in his brain.</p>
+<p>Nature was in a gracious humor, the very tree tops motionless.
+The rich landscape in Sunday quiet appealed to his affections. He
+loved his country and he loved Marta. It had been on such a day as
+this when there would be no danger, that he had taken her for her
+first flight. The glimpses, as they flew, of her profile, so alive
+and tense, were fresh to his eye. How serious she had been! How
+vivid her impressions! How tempestuous her ideas! He recalled their
+talk upon their return; all his questions and her answers.</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>"Sublime and ridiculous!" she had begun in a summing up. "It is
+like seeing the life of a family through a glass roof&mdash;the
+big, universal family! Valleys seemed no larger than sauce-dishes
+on a table."</p>
+<p>"What was the sublime thing?"</p>
+<p>"Man's toil! The cumulative result of it, on every hand, in the
+common aim for food, comfort, happiness, and progress! Little
+details of difference disappeared. Towns, villages, houses were
+simply towns, villages, houses of any country."</p>
+<p>"And the supremely ridiculous thing?"</p>
+<p>"A regiment of cavalry of the Grays and one of the Browns on the
+same road! They appeared so self-important, as if the sky would
+fall or the earth heave up to meet the sky if they got out of
+formation. I imagined each man a metal figure that fitted astride a
+metal horse of the kind that comes to children at Christmas time.
+They might better be engaged in brass-ring-snatching contests at
+the merry-go-rounds of public fairs. I wanted to brush them all
+over with a wave of the hand as you might the battalions of the
+nursery floor. Just drilling and drilling in order to slash at one
+another some day. Flight! flight! It makes one's mind as big and
+broad as the world. Oh, what a wonderful talk I'll have for my kids
+next Sunday!"</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>Now that Lanstron was the organizer of the aviation corps his
+own flights were rare. Mostly they were made to La Tir. His visits
+to Marta were his holidays? All the time that she was absent on her
+journey around the world they had corresponded. Her letters, so
+revealing of herself and her peculiar angles of observation, formed
+a bundle sacredly preserved. Her mother's joking reference about
+her girlish resolution not to marry a soldier often recurred to
+him. There, he sometimes thought, was the real obstacle to his
+great desire.</p>
+<p>He wished, this morning, that he were not Colonel Lanstron, but
+the bridge-builder returning from his triumph after he had at last
+spanned the chasm and controlled the floods. Ah, there was
+something like romance and real accomplishment in that! What an
+easy time a bridge-builder had, comparatively, too! What an easy
+master capital must be compared to Eugene Partow! But no! If Marta
+loved it would not matter whether he were bridge builder or army
+builder. Yes, she was like that. And what right had he to think of
+marriage? He could not have any home. He was now in the capital;
+again, along the frontier&mdash;a vagabond of duty and Partow's
+orders.</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>When he alighted from the plane he thrust his left hand into his
+blouse pocket. He always carried it there, as if it were literally
+sewn in place. In moments of emotion the scarred nerves would
+twitch as the telltale of his sensitiveness; and this was something
+he would conceal from others no matter how conscious he was of it
+himself. He found the Galland veranda deserted. In response to his
+ring a maid came to the open door. Her face was sad, with a beauty
+that had prematurely faded. But it lighted pleasurably in
+recognition. Her hair was thick and tawny, lying low over the brow;
+her eyes were a softly luminous brown and her full lips sensitive
+and yielding. Lanstron, an intimate of the Galland household, knew
+her story well and the part that Marta had played in it.</p>
+<p>Some four years previously, when a baby was in prospect for
+Minna, who wore no wedding-ring, Mrs. Galland had been inclined to
+send the maid to an institution, "where they will take good care of
+her, my dear. That's what such institutions are for. It is quite
+scandalous for her and for us&mdash;never happened in our family
+before!"</p>
+<p>Marta arched her eyebrows.</p>
+<p>"We don't know!" she exclaimed softly.</p>
+<p>"How can you think such a thing, let alone saying it &mdash;you,
+a Galland!" her mother gasped in indignation.</p>
+<p>"That is, if we go far back," said Marta. "At all events, we
+have no precedent, so let's establish one by keeping her."</p>
+<p>"But for her own sake! She will have to live with her shame!"
+Mrs. Galland objected. "Let her begin afresh in the city. We shall
+give her a good recommendation, for she is really an excellent
+servant. Yes, she will readily find a place among strangers."</p>
+<p>"Still, she doesn't want to go, and it would be cruel to send
+her away."</p>
+<p>"Cruel! Why, Marta, do you think I would be cruel? Oh, very
+well, then we will let her stay!"</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>"Both are away at church. Mrs. Galland ought to be here any
+minute, but Miss Galland will be later because of her children's
+class," said Minna. "Will you wait on the veranda?"</p>
+<p>He was saying that he would stroll in the garden when childish
+footsteps were heard in the hall, and after a curly head had
+nestled against the mother's skirts its owner, reminded of the
+importance of manners in the world where the stork had left her,
+made a curtsey. Lanstron shook a small hand which must have lately
+been on intimate terms with sugar or jam.</p>
+<p>"How do you do, flying soldier man?" chirruped Clarissa Eileen.
+It was evident that she held Lanstron in high favor.</p>
+<p>"Let me hear you say your name," said Lanstron.</p>
+<p>Clarissa Eileen was triumphant. She had been waiting for days
+with the revelation when he should make that old request. Now she
+enunciated it with every vowel and consonant correctly and primly
+uttered; indeed, she repeated it four or five times in proof of
+complete mastery.</p>
+<p>"A pretty name. I've often wondered how you came to give it to
+her," said Lanstron to Minna.</p>
+<p>"You do like it!" exclaimed Minna with girlish eagerness. "I
+gave her the most beautiful name I could think of
+because"&mdash;she laid her hand caressingly on the child's head
+and a madonna-like radiance stole into her face&mdash;"because she
+might at least have a beautiful name when"&mdash;the dull blaze of
+a recollection now burning in her eyes&mdash;"when there wasn't
+much prospect of many beautiful things coming into her life; though
+I know, of course, that the world thinks she ought to be called
+Maggie."</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>Proceeding leisurely along the main path of the first terrace,
+Lanstron followed it past the rear of the house to the old tower.
+Long ago the moat that surrounded the castle had been filled in.
+The green of rows of grape-vines lay against the background of a
+mat of ivy on the ancient stone walls, which had been cut away from
+the loopholes set with window-glass. The door was open, showing a
+room that had been closed in by a ceiling of boards from the walls
+to the circular stairway that ran aloft from the dungeons. On the
+floor of flags were cheap rugs. A number of seed and nursery
+catalogues were piled on a round table covered with a brown
+cloth.</p>
+<p>"Hello!" Lanstron called softly. "Hello!" he called louder and
+yet louder.</p>
+<p>Receiving no answer, he retraced his steps and seated himself on
+the second terrace in a secluded spot in the shadow of the first
+terrace wall, where he could see any one coming up the main flight
+of steps from the road. When Marta walked she usually came from
+town by that way. At length the sound of a slow step from another
+direction broke on his car. Some one was approaching along the path
+that ran at his feet. Around the corner of the wall, in his
+workman's Sunday clothes of black, but still wearing his old straw
+hat, appeared Feller, the gardener. He paused to examine a
+rose-bush and Lanstron regarded him thoughtfully and sadly: his
+white hair, his stoop, his graceful hands, their narrow finger-tips
+turning over the leaves.</p>
+<p>As he turned away he looked up, and a glance of definite and
+unfaltering recognition was exchanged between the two men. Feller's
+hat was promptly lowered enough to form a barrier between their
+eyes. His face was singularly expressionless. It seemed withered,
+clayish, like the walls of a furnace in which the fire has died
+out. After a few steps he paused before another rose-bush.
+Meanwhile, both had swept the surroundings in a sharp, covert
+survey. They had the garden to themselves.</p>
+<p>"Gustave!" Lanstron exclaimed under his breath.</p>
+<p>"Lanny!" exclaimed the gardener, turning over a branch of the
+rose-bush. He seemed unwilling to risk talking openly with
+Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"You look the good workman in his Sunday best to a T!" said
+Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"Being stone-deaf," returned Feller, with a trace of drollery in
+his voice, "I hear very well&mdash;at times. Tell me"&mdash;his
+whisper was quivering with eagerness&mdash;"shall we fight? Shall
+we fight?"</p>
+<p>"We are nearer to it than we have ever been in our time,"
+Lanstron replied.</p>
+<p>The hat still shaded Feller's face, his stoop was unchanged, but
+the branch in his hand shook.</p>
+<p>"Honest?" he exclaimed. "Oh, the chance of it! the chance of
+it!"</p>
+<p>"Gustave!" Lanstron's voice, still low, came in a gust of
+sympathy, and the pocket which concealed his hand gave a nervous
+twitch as if it held something alive and distinct from his own
+being. "The trial wears on you! You feel you must break out?"</p>
+<p>"No, I'm game&mdash;game, I tell you!" Still Feller spoke to the
+branch, which was steady now in a firm hand. "No, I don't grow
+weary of the garden and the isolation as long as there is hope. But
+being deaf, always deaf, and yet hearing everything! Always
+stooped, even when the bugles are sounding to the artillery
+garrison&mdash;that is somewhat tiresome!"</p>
+<p>"The idea of being deaf was yours, you know, Gustave," said
+Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"Yes, and the right plan. It was fun at first going through the
+streets and hearing people say, 'He's deaf as a stone!' and having
+everybody work their lips at me while I pretended to study them in
+a dumb effort to understand. Actors have two hours of it an
+evening, and an occasional change of parts, but I act one part all
+the time. I get as taciturn as a clam. If war doesn't come pretty
+soon I shall be ready for a monastery of perpetual silence."</p>
+<p>"Confound it, Gustave!" exclaimed Lanstron. "It's inhuman, old
+boy! You shan't stay another day!" Discretion to the winds, he
+sprang to his feet.</p>
+<p>An impulse of the same sort overwhelmed Feller. His hand let go
+of the branch. The brim of the hat shot up, revealing a face that
+was not old, but in mercurial quickness of expressive,
+uncontrollable emotion was young, handsomely and attractively young
+in its frame of prematurely white hair. The stoop was wholly gone.
+He was tall now, his eyes sparkling with wild, happy lights and the
+soles of the heavy workman's shoes unconsciously drawn together in
+a military stance. Lanstron's twitching hand flew from his pocket
+and with the other found Feller's hand in a strong, warm, double
+grip. For a second's silence they remained thus. Feller was the
+first to recover himself and utter a warning.</p>
+<p>"Miss Galland&mdash;Minna&mdash;some one might be looking."</p>
+<p>He drew away abruptly, his face becoming suddenly old, his stoop
+returning, and began to study the branch as before. Lanstron
+dropped back to his seat and gazed at the brown roofs of the town.
+Thus they might continue their conversation as guest and
+gardener.</p>
+<p>"I didn't think you'd stick it out, but you wanted to
+try&mdash;you chose," said Lanstron. "Come&mdash;this
+afternoon&mdash;now!"</p>
+<p>"This is best for me&mdash;this to the end of the chapter!"
+Feller replied doggedly. "Because you say you didn't think I'd
+stick it out&mdash;ah, how well you know me. Lanny!&mdash;is the
+one reason that I should."</p>
+<p>"True!" Lanstron agreed. "A victory over yourself!"</p>
+<p>"How often I have heard in imagination the outbreak of
+rifle-fire down there by the white posts! How often I have longed
+for that day&mdash;for war! I live for war!"</p>
+<p>"It may never come," Lanstron said in frank protest. "And, for
+God's sake, don't pray for it in that way!"</p>
+<p>"Then I shall be patient&mdash;patient under all irritations.
+The worst is," and Feller raised his head heavily, in a way that
+seemed to emphasize both his stoop and his age, "the worst is Miss
+Galland."</p>
+<p>"Miss Galland! How?"</p>
+<p>"She is learning the deaf-and-dumb alphabet in order the better
+to communicate with me. She likes to talk of the
+flowers&mdash;gardening is a passion with her, too&mdash;and all
+the while, in face of the honesty of those big eyes of hers and of
+her gentle old mother's confidence, I am living a lie! Oh, the
+satire of it! And I have not been used to lying. That is my only
+virtue; at any rate, I was never a liar!"</p>
+<p>"Then, why stay, Gustave? I will find something else for
+you."</p>
+<p>"No!" Feller shot back irritably. "No!" he repeated resolutely.
+"I don't want to go! I mean to be game&mdash;I&mdash;" He shifted
+his gaze dismally from the bush which he still pretended to examine
+and suddenly broke off with: "Miss Galland is coming!"</p>
+<p>He started to move away with a gardener's shuffling steps,
+looking from right to left for weeds. Then pausing, he glanced
+back, his face in another transformation&mdash;that of a
+comedian.</p>
+<p>"La, la, la!" he clucked, tossing his head gayly. "Depend on me,
+Lanny! They'll never know I'm not deaf. I get my blue fits only on
+Sundays! And deafness has its compensations. Think if I had to
+listen to all the stories of my table companion, Peter, the
+coachman! La, la, la!" he clucked again, before disappearing around
+a bend in the path. "La, la, la! I'm the man for this part!"</p>
+<p>Lanstron started toward the steps that Marta was ascending. She
+moved leisurely, yet with a certain springy energy that suggested
+that she might have come on the run without being out of breath or
+seeming to have made an effort. Without seeing him, she paused
+before one of the urns of hydrangeas in full bloom that flanked the
+third terrace wall, and, as if she would encompass and plunge her
+spirit into their abundant beauty, she spread out her arms and drew
+the blossoms together in a mass in which she half buried her face.
+The act was delightful in its grace and spontaneity. It was like
+having a page out of her secret self. It brought the glow of his
+great desire into Lanstron's eyes.</p>
+<p>"Hello, stranger!" she called as she saw him, and quickened her
+pace.</p>
+<p>"Hello, pedagogue!" he responded.</p>
+<p>As they shook hands they swung their arms back and forth like a
+pair of romping children for a moment.</p>
+<p>"We had a grand session of the school this morning, the largest
+class ever!" she said. "And the points we scored off you soldiers!
+You'll find disarmament already in progress when you return to
+headquarters. We're irresistible, or at least," she added, with a
+flash of intensity, "we're going to be some day."</p>
+<p>"So you put on your war-paint!"</p>
+<p>"It must be the pollen from the hydrangeas!" She flicked her
+handkerchief from her belt and passed it to him. "Show that you
+know how to be useful!"</p>
+<p>He performed the task with deliberate care.</p>
+<p>"Heavens! You even have some on your ear and some on your hair;
+but I'll leave it on your hair; it's rather becoming. There you
+are!" he concluded.</p>
+<p>"Off my hair, too!"</p>
+<p>"Very well. I always obey orders."</p>
+<p>"I oughtn't to have asked you to do it at all!" she exclaimed
+with a sudden change of manner as they started up to the house.
+"But a habit of friendship, a habit of liking to believe in one's
+friends, was uppermost. I forgot. I oughtn't even to have shaken
+hands with you!"</p>
+<p>"Marta! What now, Marta?" he asked.</p>
+<p>He had known her in reproach, in anger, in laughing mockery, in
+militant seriousness, but never before like this. The pain and
+indignation in her eyes came not from the sheer hurt of a wound but
+from the hurt of its source. It was as if he had learned by the
+signal of its loss that he had a deeper hold on her than he had
+realized.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I have a bone to pick with you," she said, recovering a
+grim sort of fellowship. "A big bone! If you're half a friend
+you'll give me the very marrow of it."</p>
+<p>"I am ready!" he answered more pathetically than
+philosophically.</p>
+<p>"There's not time now; after luncheon, when mother is taking her
+nap," she concluded as they came to the last step and saw Mrs.
+Galland on the veranda.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='X' id="X"></a>
+<h2>X</h2>
+<h3>A LUNCHEON AT THE GALLANDS'</h3>
+<br>
+<p>Seated at the head of the table at luncheon, Mrs. Galland, with
+her round cheeks, her rather becoming double chin, and her nicely
+dressed hair, almost snow-white now, suggested a girlhood in the
+Bulwer Lytton and Octave Feuillet age, when darkened rooms were
+favored for the complexion and it was the fashion for gentlewomen
+to faint on occasion. She lived in the past; the present interested
+her only when it aroused some memory. To-day all her memories were
+of the war of forty years ago.</p>
+<p>"I remember how Mrs. Karly collapsed when they brought word of
+the death of her son, and never recovered her mind. And I remember
+Eunice Steiner when they brought Charles home looking so
+white&mdash;and it was the very day set for their wedding! And I
+remember all the wounded gathered at the foot of the terrace and
+being carried in here, while the guns were roaring out on the
+plain&mdash;and now it's all coming again!"</p>
+<p>"Why, mother, you're very blue to-day!" said Marta.</p>
+<p>"We have had these crises before. We&mdash;" Lanstron began,
+rallying her.</p>
+<p>"Oh, yes, you have reason and argument," she parried gently. "I
+have only my feelings. But it's in the air&mdash;yes, war is in the
+air, as it was that other time. And I remember that young private,
+only a boy, who lay crumpled up on the steps where he fell. I
+bandaged him myself and helped to make his position easier. Yes, I
+almost lifted him in my arms" She was looking at the flowers on the
+table but not seeing them. She was seeing the face of the young
+private forty years ago.</p>
+<p>"He asked me to bring him a rose. He said the smell of roses was
+so sweet and he felt so faint. I brought him the rose&mdash;and he
+was dead!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes!" Marta breathed. She, too, in her quick imagination,
+was seeing the young private and spatters of blood on the terrace.
+Lanstron feasted his eyes on her face, which mirrored her
+emotion.</p>
+<p>"Oh, the groans of the dying in the night and the cheering when
+the news of victory came in!" Mrs. Galland continued. "I could not
+cheer. But that was, long, long ago&mdash;long ago, and yet only
+yesterday! And now we are to have it all over again. The young men
+must have their turn. They will not be satisfied by the experience
+of their fathers. Yes, all over again; still more
+horrible&mdash;and it was horrible enough then! I used to get giddy
+easily. I do yet. But I didn't faint&mdash;no, not once through the
+days of nursing, the weeks of suspense. I wondered afterward how I
+could have endured so much."</p>
+<p>"Are we of the septicized-serum age equal to it?" Marta
+exclaimed.</p>
+<p>"Yes, we of the matter-of-fact, automatic gun-recoil age!" put
+in Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"Oh, mother," Marta went on, "I wish you would go with me to the
+class some morning, you who have seen and felt war, and tell it all
+as you saw it to the children!"</p>
+<p>"But," remonstrated Mrs. Galland, "I'm an old-fashioned woman;
+and, Marta, your father was an officer, as your grandfather was,
+too. I am sure he would not approve of your school, and I could do
+nothing against his wishes."</p>
+<p>She looked up with moistening eyes to a portrait on the opposite
+wall over the seat which her husband had occupied at table.
+Lanstron saw there a florid, jaunty gentleman in riding-habit,
+gloves on knee, crop in hand. The spirit of the first Galland or of
+the stern grandfather on the side wall&mdash;with Bl&uuml;cher
+tufts in front of his ears sturdy defiance of that parvenu
+Bonaparte and of his own younger brother who had fallen fighting
+for Bonaparte&mdash;would have frowned on the descendant who had
+filled the house with many guests and paid the bills with mortgages
+in the ebbing tide of the family fortunes. But Mrs. Galland saw
+only a hero. She shared his prejudices against the manufacturers of
+the town; she saw the sale of land to be cut up into dwelling
+sites, which had saved the Gallands from bankruptcy, as the working
+of the adverse fate of modern tendencies. Even as she had left all
+details of business to her husband, so she had of late left them to
+Marta's managing.</p>
+<p>"Edward and I were just engaged before the outbreak of the war,"
+she proceeded. "How handsome he was in his Hussars' uniform! How
+frightened I was and hew proud of his fine bravado when I heard him
+and a number of fellow officers drinking here in this room to quick
+death and speedy promotion! Do they still have that toast,
+Colonel?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, in some regiments," Lanstron answered. He would not say
+that what was good form in the days of the <i>beau sabreur</i> was
+considered a little theatrical in the days of the automatic
+gun-recoil.</p>
+<p>"And when he came&mdash;oh, when you came home," breathed Mrs.
+Galland to the portrait, "with the scar on your cheek, how tanned
+and strong your hands were and how white mine as you held them so
+fast! And then"&mdash;she smiled in peaceful content&mdash;"then I
+did faint. I am not ashamed of it&mdash;I did!"</p>
+<p>"Without any danger of falling far!" said Lanstron happily.</p>
+<p>"Or with much of a jar!" added Marta.</p>
+<p>"You prattling children!" gasped Mrs. Galland, her cheeks
+flushing. "Do you think that I fainted purposely? I would have been
+ashamed to my dying day if I had feigned it!"</p>
+<p>"And you did not faint in the presence of the dead and dying!"
+said Marta thoughtfully, wonderingly, leaning nearer to her mother,
+her eyes athirst and drinking.</p>
+<p>"But I believe it is only a wispy-waspy sort of girl that faints
+at all these days. They're all so businesslike," said Mrs.
+Galland&mdash;"so businesslike that they are ceasing to marry."</p>
+<p>How many girls she had known to wait a little too long! If
+anything could awaken Marta to action it ought to be war, which was
+a great match-maker forty years ago. The thought of a lover in
+danger had precipitated wavering hearts into engagements. Marta's
+mood was such that she received the hint openly and playfully
+to-day.</p>
+<p>"Oh, I don't despair!" she exclaimed, straightening her
+shoulders and drawing in her chin with a mock display of bravery.
+"I believe it was in an English novel that I read that any woman
+without a hump can get any man she sets out for. It is a matter of
+determination and concentration and a wise choice of vulnerable
+objects."</p>
+<p>"Marta, Marta!" gasped Mrs. Galland. In her tone was a volume of
+lamentation.</p>
+<p>"Now that I'm twenty-seven mother is ready to take any risk on
+my behalf, if it is masculine. By the time I'm thirty she will be
+ready to give me to a peddler with a harelip!" she said
+mischievously.</p>
+<p>"A peddler with a harelip! Marta, will you never be
+serious?"</p>
+<p>"Some day, mother," Marta went on, "when we find the right man,
+you hold him while I propose, and together we'll surely&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Mrs. Galland could not resist laughing, which was one way to
+stop further absurdities&mdash;absurdities concealing a nervous
+strain they happened to be this time&mdash;while Colonel Lanstron
+was a little flushed and ill at ease. She had a truly silvery
+laugh&mdash;the kind no longer in fashion among the gentry since
+golden laughs came in,&mdash;that went well with the dimples
+dipping into her pink cheeks.</p>
+<p>Contrary to custom, she did not excuse herself immediately after
+luncheon for her afternoon nap, but kept battling with her nods
+until nature was victorious and the fell fast asleep. Marta, grown
+restless with impatience, suggested to Lanstron that they stroll in
+the garden, and they took the path past the house toward the castle
+tower, stopping in an arbor with high hedges on either side around
+a statue of Mercury.</p>
+<p>"Now!" exclaimed Marta narrowly. "It was you, Lanny, who
+recommended Feller to us as a gardener, competent though deaf!"
+With literal brevity she told how she had proved him to be a man of
+most sensitive hearing. "I didn't let him know that he was
+discovered. I felt too much pity for him to do that. You brought
+him here&mdash;you, Lanny, you are the one to explain."</p>
+<p>"True, he is not deaf!" Lanstron replied.</p>
+<p>"You knew he was not deaf, while we wrote our messages to him
+and I have been learning the deaf-and-dumb alphabet! It was pretty
+fun, wasn't it?"</p>
+<p>"Not fun&mdash;no, Marta!" he parried.</p>
+<p>"He is a spy?" she asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes, a spy. You can put things in a bright light, Marta!" He
+found words coming with difficulty in face of the pain and
+disillusion of her set look.</p>
+<p>"Using some broken man as a pawn; setting him as a spy in the
+garden where you have been the welcome friend!" she exclaimed. "A
+spy on what&mdash;on my mother, on Minna, on me, on the flowers, as
+a part of this monstrous game of trickery and lies that you are
+playing?"</p>
+<p>There was no trace of anger in her tone. It was that of one
+mortally hurt. Anger would have been easier to bear than the
+measuring, penetrating wonder that found him guilty of such a
+horrible part. Those eyes would have confused Partow himself with
+the steady, welling intensity of their gaze. She did not see how
+his left hand was twitching and how he stilled its movement by
+pressing it against the bench.</p>
+<p>"You will take Feller with you when you go!" she said,
+rising.</p>
+<p>Lanstron dropped his head in a kind of shaking throb of his
+whole body and raised a face white with appeal.</p>
+<p>"Marta!" He was speaking to a profile, very sensitive and yet
+like ivory. "I've no excuse for such an abuse of hospitality except
+the obesssion of a loathsome work that some man must do and I was
+set to do. My God, Marta! I cease to be natural and human. I am a
+machine. I keep thinking, what if war comes and some error of mine
+let the enemy know where to strike the blow of victory; or if there
+were information I might have gained and failed to gain that would
+have given us the victory&mdash;if, because I had not done my part,
+thousands of lives of our soldiers were sacrificed needlessly!"</p>
+<p>At that she turned on him quickly, her face softening.</p>
+<p>"You do think of that&mdash;the lives?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, why shouldn't I?"</p>
+<p>"Of those on your side!" she exclaimed, turning away.</p>
+<p>"Yes, of those first," he replied. "And, Marta, I did not tell
+you why Feller was here because he did not want me to, and I was
+curious to see if he had sustained power enough to keep you from
+discovering his simulation. I did not think he would remain. I
+thought that in a week he would tire of the part. But now you must
+have the whole story. You will listen?"</p>
+<p>"I should not be fair if I did not, should I?" she replied, with
+a weary shadow of a smile.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XI' id="XI"></a>
+<h2>XI</h2>
+<h3>MARTA HEARS FELLER'S STORY</h3>
+<br>
+<p>To tell the story as Lanstron told it is to have it from the
+partisan lips of a man speaking for a man out of the depths of a
+friendship grown into the fibre of youth. It is better written by
+the detached narrator.</p>
+<p>Gustave Feller's father had died when Gustave was twelve and his
+mother found it easy to spoil an only son who was handsome and
+popular. He suffered the misfortune of a mental brilliancy that
+learns too readily and of a personal charm that wins its way too
+easily. He danced well; he was facile at the piano; and he had so
+pronounced a gift as an amateur actor that a celebrated
+professional had advised him to go on the stage.</p>
+<p>The two entering the cadet officers' school at the same time,
+chance made them roommates and choice soon made them chums. They
+had in common cleverness and the abundant energy that must
+continually express itself in action, and a mutual attraction in
+the very complexity of dissimilar traits that wove well in
+companionship.</p>
+<p>While they were together Lanstron was a brake on his friend's
+impulses of frivolity which carried him to extremes; but they
+separated after receiving their commissions, Feller being assigned
+to the horse-artillery and Lanstron to the infantry and later to
+the staff. In charge of a field-battery at man[oe]uvres Feller was
+at his best. But in the comparative idleness of his profession he
+had much spare time for amusement, which led to gambling. Soon many
+debts hung over his head, awaiting liquidation at high rates of
+interest when he should come into the family property.</p>
+<p>To the last his mother, having ever in mind a picture of him as
+a fine figure riding at the head of his guns, was kept in ignorance
+of this side of his life. With her death, when he had just turned
+thirty, a fortune was at his disposal. He made an oath of his
+resolution to pay his debts, marry and settle down and maintain his
+inheritance unimpaired. This endured for a year before it began to
+waver; and the wavering was soon followed by headlong obsession
+which fed on itself. As his passion for gambling grew it seemed to
+consume the better elements of his nature. Lanstron reasoned with
+him, then implored, then stormed; and Feller, regularly promising
+to reform, regularly fell each time into greater excesses. Twice
+Lanstron saved him from court-martial, but the third time no
+intercession or influence would induce his superiors to overlook
+the offence. Feller was permitted to resign to avoid a scandal, and
+at thirty-three, penniless, disgraced, he faced the world and
+sought the new land which has been the refuge for numbers of his
+kind. Only one friend bade him farewell as he boarded a steamer for
+New York, and this was Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"Keep away from cities! Seek the open country! And write me,
+Gustave&mdash;don't fail!" said Lanstron.</p>
+<p>Letters full of hope came from a Wyoming ranch; letters that
+told how Feller had learned to rope a steer and had won favor with
+his fellows and the ranch boss; of a one-time gourmet's healthy
+appetite for the fare of the chuck wagon. Lanstron, reading more
+between the lines than in them, understood that as muscles hardened
+with the new life the old passion was dying and in its place was
+coming something equally dangerous as a possible force in driving
+his ardent nature to some excess for the sake of oblivion. Finally,
+Feller broke out with the truth.</p>
+<p>"My hair is white now, Lanny," he wrote. "I have aged ten years
+in these two. With every month of this new life the horror of my
+career has become clear to me. I lie awake thinking of it. I feel
+unworthy to associate with my simple, outspoken, free-riding
+companions. Remorse is literally burning up my brain. It is better
+to have my mind diseased, my moral faculties blurred, my body
+unsound; for to be normal, healthy, industrious is to remember the
+whole ghastly business of my dishonor.</p>
+<p>"'Pay back! Pay back in some way!' a voice keeps saying. 'Pay
+back! Have an object in mind. Get to work on something that will
+help you to pay back or you will soon take a plunge to lower depths
+than you have yet sounded.'</p>
+<p>"It is not the gambling, not the drinking&mdash;no! The thing
+that I cannot forget, that grows more horrible the more keenly
+awake clean living makes me to the past, is that I am inwardly
+foul&mdash;as foul as a priest who has broken his vows. I have
+disgraced the uniform&mdash;my country's uniform. I may never wear
+that uniform again; never look the meanest private in a battery in
+the face without feeling my cheeks hot with shame. While I cannot
+right myself before the service, I should like to do something to
+right myself with my conscience. I should like to see a battery
+march past and look at the flag and into the faces of the soldiers
+of my country feeling that I had atoned&mdash;feeling so for my own
+peace of mind&mdash;atoned by some real deed of service.</p>
+<p>"I have been reading how Japanese volunteers made a bridge of
+their bodies for their comrades into a Russian trench, and when
+everybody else felt a horrible, uncanny admiration for such madness
+I have envied them the glorious exhilaration of the moment before
+the charge. That was a sufficient reward in life for death. So I
+come again to you for help. Now that you are chief of intelligence
+you must have many secret agents within the inner circle of the
+army's activities. In the midst of peace and the commonplaces of
+drill and man[oe]uvres there must be dangerous and trying work
+where the only distinction is service for the cause&mdash;our cause
+of three million against five. Find a task for me, no matter how
+mean, thankless, or dangerous, Lanny. The more exacting it is the
+more welcome, for the better will be my chance to get right with
+myself."</p>
+<p>"Come!" was Lanstron's cable in answer.</p>
+<p>At the time he had not chosen any employment for Feller. He was
+thinking only that something must be found. When he heard of the
+death of the Gallands' gardener he recollected that before the
+passion for gambling overtook Feller he had still another passion
+besides his guns. The garden of the Feller estate had been famous
+in its neighborhood. Young Lanstron had not been more fond of the
+society of an engine-driver than young Feller of a gardener's. On a
+holiday in the capital with his fellow cadets he would separate
+from them to spend hours in the botanical gardens. Once, after his
+downfall began, at a riotous dinner party he had broken into a
+temper with a man who had torn a rose to pieces in order to toss
+the petals over the table.</p>
+<p>"Flowers have souls!" he had cried in one of his tumultuous,
+abandoned reversions to his better self which his companions found
+eccentric and diverting. "That rose is the only thing in the room
+that is not foul &mdash;and I am the foulest of all!"</p>
+<p>The next minute, perhaps after another glass of champagne, he
+would be winning a burst of laughter by his mimicry of a gouty old
+colonel reprimanding him for his erring career.</p>
+<p>Naturally, in the instinct of friendship, Lanstron's own account
+left out the unpleasant and dwelt on the pleasant facts of Feller's
+career.</p>
+<p>"His colonel did not understand him," he said. "But I knew the
+depths of his fine spirit and generous heart. I knew his talent. I
+knew that he was a victim of unsympathetic surroundings, of wealth,
+of love of excitement, and his own talent. Where he was, something
+must happen. He bubbled with energy. The routine of drill, the same
+old chaff of the mess, the garrison gossip, the long hours of
+idleness while the busy world throbs outside, which form a
+privileged life to most officers, were stifling to him. 'Let's set
+things going!' he would say in the old days, and we'd set them.
+Most of our demerits were for some kind of deviltry. And how he
+loved the guns! I can see the sparkle of his men's eyes at sight of
+him. Nobody could get out of them what he could. If he had not been
+put in the army as a matter of family custom, if he had been an
+actor, or if he and I had gone to build bridges, then he might have
+a line of capital letters and periods after his name, and he would
+not be a spy or I an employer of spies, doing the work of a
+detective agency in an officer's uniform because nobody but an
+officer may do it."</p>
+<p>At first Marta listened rigidly, but as the narrative proceeded
+her interest grew. When Lanstron quoted Feller's appeal for any
+task, however mean and thankless, she nodded sympathetically and
+understandingly; when he related the incident of the rose, its
+appeal was irresistible. She gave a start of delight and broke
+silence.</p>
+<p>"Yes. I recall just how he looked as he stood on the porch, his
+head bent, his shoulders stooped, twirling his hat in his hands,
+while mother and I examined him as to his qualifications," she
+said. "I remember his words. He said that he knew flowers and that,
+like him, flowers could not hear; but perhaps he would be all the
+better gardener because he could not hear. He was so ingratiating;
+yet his deafness seemed such a drawback that I hesitated."</p>
+<p>Following the path to the tower leisurely, they had reached the
+tower. Feller's door was open. Marta looked into the room, finding
+in the neat arrangement of its furniture a new significance. He was
+absent, for it was the dinner hour.</p>
+<p>"And on my recommendation you took him," Lanstron continued.</p>
+<p>"Yes, on yours, Lanny, on a friend's! You"&mdash;she put a cold
+emphasis on the word&mdash;"you wanted him here for your plans! And
+why? You haven't answered that yet. What purpose of the war game
+does he serve in our garden?"</p>
+<p>His look pleaded for patience, while he tried to smile, which
+was rather difficult in face of her attitude.</p>
+<p>"Not altogether in the garden; partly in the tower," he replied.
+"You are to be in the whole secret and in such a way as to make my
+temptation clear, I hope. First, I think you ought to see the
+setting. Let us go in"</p>
+<p>Impelled by the fascination of Feller's romantic story and by a
+curiosity that Lanstron's manner accentuated, she entered the room.
+Apparently Lanstron was familiar with the premises. Passing through
+the sitting-room into the room adjoining, where Feller stored his
+tools, he opened a door that gave onto the circular stone steps
+leading down into the dungeon tunnel.</p>
+<p>"I think we had better have a light," he said, and when he had
+fetched one from the bedchamber he descended the steps, asking her
+to follow.</p>
+<p>They were in a passage six feet in height and about three feet
+broad, which seemed to lead on indefinitely into clammy darkness.
+The dewy stone walls sparkled in fantastic and ghostly iridescence
+under the rays from the lantern. The dank air lay moist against
+their faces.</p>
+<p>"It's a long time since I've been here," said Marta, glad to
+break the uncanny sound of their footsteps in the weird silence
+with her voice. "Not since I was a youngster. Then I came on a dare
+to see if there were goblins. There weren't any; at least, none
+that cared to manifest himself to me."</p>
+<p>"We have a goblin here now that we are nursing for the
+Grays&mdash;an up-to-date one that is quite visible," said
+Lanstron. "This is far enough." He paused and raised the lantern.
+With its light full in her face, she blinked. "There, at the height
+of your chin!"</p>
+<p>She noted a metal button painted gray, set at the side of one of
+the stones of the wall, which looked unreal. She struck the stone
+with her knuckles and it gave out the sound of hollow wood, which
+was followed, as an echo, by a little laugh from Lanstron. Pressing
+the button, a panel door flew open, revealing a telephone
+mouthpiece and receiver set in the recess. Without giving him time
+to refuse permission, her thought all submissive to the prompting
+spirit of adventure, she took down the receiver and called:
+"Hello!"</p>
+<p>"The wire isn't connected," explained Lanstron.</p>
+<p>Marta hung up the receiver and closed the door abruptly in a
+spasm of reaction.</p>
+<p>"Like a detective play!" were the first words that sprang to her
+lips. "Well?" As she faced around her eyes glittered in the
+lantern's rays. "Well, have you any other little tricks to show me?
+Are you a sleight-of-hand artist, too, Lanny? Are you going to take
+a machine gun out of your hat?"</p>
+<p>"That is the whole bag," he answered. "I thought you'd rather
+see it than have it described to you."</p>
+<p>"Having seen it, let us go!" she said, in a manner that implied
+further reckoning to come.</p>
+<p>"If out of a thousand possible sources one source succeeds, then
+the cost and pains of the other nine hundred and ninety-nine are
+more than repaid," he was saying urgently, the soldier uppermost in
+him. "Some of the best service we have had has been absurd in its
+simplicity and its audacity. In time of war more than one battle
+has been decided by a thing that was a trifle in itself. No matter
+what your preparation, you can never remove the element of chance.
+An hour gained in information about your enemy's plans may turn the
+tide in your favor. A Chinese peasant spy, because he happened to
+be intoxicated, was able to give the Japanese warning in time for
+Kuroki to make full dispositions for receiving the Russian attack
+in force at the Sha-ho. There are many other incidents of like
+nature in history. So it is my duty to neglect no possible method,
+however absurd."</p>
+<p>By this time he was at the head of the steps. Standing to one
+side, he offered his hand to assist Marta. But she seemed not to
+see it. Her aspect was that of downright antagonism.</p>
+<p>"However absurd! yes, it is absurd to think that you can make me
+a party to any of your plans, for&mdash;" She broke off abruptly
+with starting eyes, as if she had seen an apparition.</p>
+<p>Lanstron turned and through the door of the tool-room saw Feller
+entering the sitting-room. He was not the bent, deferential old
+gardener, nor was he the Feller changed to youth as he thought of
+himself at the head of a battery. His features were hard-set, a
+fighting rage burning in his eyes, his sinews taut as if about to
+spring upon an adversary. When he recognized the intruders he
+turned limp, his head dropped, hiding his face with his hat brim,
+and he steadied himself by resting a hand on the table edge.</p>
+<p>"Oh, it's you, Lanny&mdash;Colonel Lanstron!" he exclaimed
+thickly. "I saw that some one had come in here and naturally I was
+alarmed, as nobody but myself ever enters. And Miss Galland!" He
+removed his hat deferentially and bowed; his stoop returned and the
+lines of his face drooped. "I was so stupid; it did not occur to me
+that you might be showing the tower to Colonel Lanstron."</p>
+<p>"We are sorry to have given you a fright!" said Marta very
+gently.</p>
+<p>"Eh? eh?" queried Feller, again deaf. "Fright? Oh, no, no
+fright. It might have been some boys from the town marauding."</p>
+<p>He was about to withdraw, in keeping with his circumspect
+adherence to his part, which he played with a sincerity that
+half-convinced even himself at times that he was really deaf, when
+the fire flickered back suddenly to his eyes and he glanced from
+Lanstron to the stairway in desperate inquiry.</p>
+<p>"Wait, Feller! Three of us share the secret now. These are Miss
+Galland's premises. I thought best that she should know
+everything," said Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"Everything!" exclaimed Feller. "Everything&mdash;" the word
+caught in his throat. "You mean my story, too?" He was neither
+young nor old now. He seemed nondescript and miserable. "She knows
+who I am?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes!" Lanstron answered.</p>
+<p>"Lanny!" This almost reproachfully, as if the ethics of
+friendship had been abused.</p>
+<p>"Yes. I'm sorry, Gustave. I&mdash;" Lanstron began
+miserably.</p>
+<p>"But why not?" said Feller, with a wan attempt at a smile. "You
+see&mdash;I mean&mdash;it does not matter!" he concluded in a
+hopeless effort at philosophy.</p>
+<p>"My thoughtlessness, my callousness, my obsession with my work!
+I should not have told your story," said Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"His story!" exclaimed Marta, with a puzzled look to Lanstron
+before she turned to Feller with a look of warm sympathy. "Why,
+there is no story! You came with excellent recommendations. You are
+our very efficient gardener. That is all we need to know. Isn't
+that the way you wish it, Mr. Feller?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, just that!" he said softly, raising his eyes to her in
+gratitude. "Thank you, Miss Galland!"</p>
+<p>He was going after another "Thank you!" and a bow; going with
+the slow step and stoop of his part, when Lanstron, with a
+masculine roughness of impulse which may be a sublime gentleness,
+swung him around and seized his hands in a firm caress.</p>
+<p>"Forgive me, Gustave!" he begged. "Forgive the most brutal of
+all injuries&mdash;that which wounds a friend's sensibilities."</p>
+<p>"Why, there is nothing I could ever have to forgive you, Lanny,"
+he said, returning Lanstron's pressure while for an instant his
+quickening muscles gave him a soldierly erectness. Then his
+attitude changed to one of doubt and inquiry. "And you found out
+that I was not deaf when you had that fall on the terrace?" he
+asked, turning to Marta. "That is how you happened to get the whole
+story? Tell me, honestly!"</p>
+<p>"Yes"</p>
+<p>"Had you suspected me before that?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, if you must know. I observed you speak to a bumblebee you
+could not see," she said frankly, though she knew that her answer
+hurt him. There was no parleying with the insistence of his pale,
+drawn face and his fingers playing in nervous tension on the table
+edge. Suddenly he smiled as he had at the bumblebee.</p>
+<p>"There you are again, confound you!" he exclaimed, shaking his
+finger at the imaginary intruder on the silence of the garden. "Did
+anyone else suspect?" he asked in fierce intensity.</p>
+<p>"No, I don't think so."</p>
+<p>He drew back with a long breath of relief, while his fingers now
+beat a merry tattoo.</p>
+<p>"You saw so much more of me than the others, Miss Galland," he
+said with a charming bow, "and you are so quick to observe that you
+are hardly a fair test. That little thunderer will not get me
+again. I'll fool the ones I want to fool. And I'm learning, Lanny,
+learning all the time&mdash;getting a little deafer all the time.
+Miss Galland," he added, struck in visible contrition by a new
+thought, "I am sorry"&mdash;he paused with head down for an
+instant&mdash;"very sorry to have deceived you."</p>
+<p>"But you are still a deaf gardener to me," said Marta, finding
+consolation in pleasing him.</p>
+<p>"Eh? eh?" He put his hand to his ear as he resumed his stoop.
+"Yes, yes," he added, as a deaf man will when understanding of a
+remark which he failed at first to catch comes to him in an echo.
+"Yes, the gardener has no past," he declared in the gentle old
+gardener's voice, "when all the flowers die every year and he
+thinks only of next year's blossoms&mdash;of the future!"</p>
+<p>Now the air of the room seemed to be stifling him, that of the
+roofless world of the garden calling him. His face spoke pitifully
+a desire for escape as he withdrew. The bent figure disappeared
+around a turn in the path and they listened without moving until
+the sound of his slow, dragging footfalls had died away.</p>
+<p>"When he is serving those of his own social station I can see
+how it would be easier for him not to have me know," said Marta.
+"Sensitive, proud, and intense&mdash;" and a look of horror
+appeared in her eyes. "As he came across the room his face was
+transformed. I imagine it was like that of a man giving no quarter
+in a bayonet charge!"</p>
+<p>"His secret was at stake!" Lanstron said in ready
+championship.</p>
+<p>She put up her hand as if to shut out a picture.</p>
+<p>"Don't let us think of it!" she exclaimed with a shudder. "He
+did not know what he was doing. His is one of the natures that have
+moments when an impulse throws them off their balance and ruins the
+work of years. No, we must think only of his sacrifice, his
+enforced humiliation, in order to try to make amends for the past
+according to his light. No one could refuse him sympathy and
+respect."</p>
+<p>Feller had won the day for himself where a friend's pleas might
+have failed. This was as it should be, Lanstron thought; and he
+smiled happily over the rare thing in Marta that felt the appeal
+which Feller had for him.</p>
+<p>"The right view&mdash;the view that you were bound to take!" he
+said.</p>
+<p>"And yet, I don't know your plans for him, Lanny. Pity is one
+thing; there is another thing to consider," she replied, with an
+abrupt change of tone. "But first let us leave Feller's quarters.
+We are intruders here."</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XII' id="XII"></a>
+<h2>XII</h2>
+<h3>A CRISIS WITHIN A CRISIS</h3>
+<br>
+<p>"A broken-hearted man playing deaf; a secret telephone installed
+on our premises without our consent&mdash;this is all I know so
+far," said Marta, who was opposite Lanstron at one end of the
+circular seat in the arbor of Mercury, leaning back, with her
+weight partly resting on her hand spread out on the edge of the
+bench, head down, lashes lowered so that they formed a curtain for
+her glance. "I listen!" she added.</p>
+<p>"Of course, with our three millions against their five, the
+Grays will take the offensive," he said. "For us, the defensive. La
+Tir is in an angle. It does not belong in the permanent tactical
+line of our defences. Nevertheless, there will be hard fighting
+here. The Browns will fall back step by step, and we mean, with
+relatively small cost to ourselves, to make the Grays pay a heavy
+price for each step&mdash;just as heavy as we can!"</p>
+<p>They had often argued before with all the weapons known to
+controversy; but now the realization that his soldierly precision
+was bringing the forces of war into their personal relations struck
+her cold, with a logic as cold as his own seemed to her.</p>
+<p>"You need not use euphonious terms," she said without lifting
+her lashes or any movement except a quick, nervous gesture of her
+free hand that fell back into place on her lap. "What you mean is
+that you will kill as many as possible of the Grays, isn't it? And
+if you could kill five for every man you lost, that would be
+splendid, wouldn't it?"</p>
+<p>"I don't think of it as splendid. There is nothing splendid
+about war," he objected; "not to me, Marta."</p>
+<p>"Still you would like to kill five to one, even ten to one,
+wouldn't you?" she persisted.</p>
+<p>"Marta, you are merciless!"</p>
+<p>"So is war. It should be treated mercilessly."</p>
+<p>"Yes, twenty to one if they try to take our land!" he declared.
+"If we could keep up that ratio the war would not last more than a
+week. It would mean a great saving of lives in the end. We should
+win."</p>
+<p>"Exactly. Thank you. Westerling could not have said it better as
+a reason for another army-corps. For the love of humanity&mdash;the
+humanity of our side&mdash;please give us more weapons for murder!
+And after you have made them pay five to one or ten to one in human
+lives for the tangent, what then? Go on! I want to look at war face
+to face, free of the will-o'-the-wisp glamour that draws on
+soldiers!"</p>
+<p>"We fall back to our first line of defence, fighting all the
+time. The Grays occupy La Tir, which will be out of the reach of
+our guns. Your house will no longer be in danger, and we happen to
+know that Westerling means to make it his headquarters."</p>
+<p>"Our house Westerling's headquarters!" she repeated. With a
+start that brought her up erect, alert, challenging, her lashes
+flickering, she recalled that Westerling had said at parting that
+he should see her if war came. This corroborated Lanstron's
+information. One side wanted a spy in the garden; the other a
+general in the house. Was she expected to make a choice? He had
+ceased to be Lanny. He personified war. Westerling personified war.
+"I suppose you have spies under his very nose&mdash;in his very
+staff offices?" she asked.</p>
+<p>"And probably he has in ours," said Lanstron, "though we do our
+best to prevent it."</p>
+<p>"What a pretty example of trust among civilized nations!" she
+exclaimed. "And you say that Westerling, who commands the killing
+on his side, will be in no danger?"</p>
+<p>"Naturally not. As you know, a chief of staff must be at the
+wire head where all information centres, free of interruption or
+confusion or any possibility of broken lines of communication with
+his corps and divisions."</p>
+<p>"Then Partow will not be in any danger?"</p>
+<p>"For the same reasons, no."</p>
+<p>"How comfortable! In perfect safety themselves, they will order
+other men to death!"</p>
+<p>"Marta, you are unjust!" exclaimed Lanstron, for he revered
+Partow as disciple reveres master. "Partow has the iron
+cross!"&mdash;the prized iron cross given to both officers and men
+of the Browns for exceptional courage in action and for that alone.
+"He won it leading a second charge with a bullet in his arm, after
+he had lost thirty per cent, of his regiment. The second charge
+succeeded."</p>
+<p>"Yes, I understand," she went on a little wildly. "And perhaps
+the colonel on the other side, who fought just as bravely and had
+even heavier losses, did not get the bronze cross of the Grays
+because he failed. Yes, I understand that bravery is a requisite of
+the military cult. You must take some risk or you will not cause
+enough slaughter to win either iron or bronze crosses. And, Lanny,
+are you a person of such distinction in the business of killing
+that you also will be out of danger?"</p>
+<p>She had forgotten about the telephone; she had forgotten the
+picture of dare-devil nerve he made when he rose from the wreck of
+his plane. If his work were to make war, her work was against
+war&mdash;the mission of her life as she saw it in the intense,
+passionate moments when some new absurdity of its processes
+appeared to her. She was ready to seize any argument his talk
+offered to combat the things for which he stood. She did not see,
+as her eyes poured her hot indignation into his, that his maimed
+hand was twitching or how he bit his lips and flushed before he
+replied:</p>
+<p>"Each one goes where he is sent, link by link, down from the
+chief of staff. Only in this way can you have that solidarity, that
+harmonious efficiency which means victory."</p>
+<p>"An autocracy, a tyranny over the lives of all the adult males
+in countries that boast of the ballot and self-governing
+institutions!" she put in.</p>
+<p>"But I hope," he went on, with the quickening pulse and eager
+smile that used to greet a call from Feller to "set things going"
+in their cadet days, "that I may take out a squadron of dirigibles.
+After all this spy business, that would be to my taste."</p>
+<p>"And if you caught a regiment in close formation with a shower
+of bombs, that would be positively heavenly, wouldn't it?" She bent
+nearer to him, her eyes flaming demand and satire.</p>
+<p>"No! War&mdash;necessary, horrible, hellish!" he replied.
+Something in her seemed to draw out the brutal truth she had asked
+for in place of euphonious terms.</p>
+<p>"You apparently know where your profession ought to feel
+perfectly at home&mdash;but what is the use? What?" She put her
+hands over her face and shuddered. "I grow savage; but it is
+because I have known you so well and because everything you say
+brings up its answer irresistibly to my mind. I keep thinking of
+what mother said at luncheon&mdash;of her certainty that war is
+coming. I see the garden spattered with blood, the wounded and the
+dying&mdash;an eddy in the conflict! And I am in a controversial
+eddy whirling round and round away from the main current of what
+you were to tell me." She let her hands drop, but her eyes still
+held their lights of hostility. "Go on. I listen!"</p>
+<p>"When I became chief of intelligence I found that an underground
+wire had been laid to the castle from the Eighth Division
+headquarters, which will be our general staff headquarters in time
+of war," he said. "The purpose was the same as now, but abandoned
+as chimerical. All that was necessary was to install the
+instrument, which Feller did. I, too, saw the plan as chimerical,
+yet it was a chance&mdash;the one out of a thousand. If it should
+happen to succeed we should play with our cards concealed and
+theirs on the table."</p>
+<p>"The noble art of war, so sportsmanlike!" she exclaimed. "So
+like the rules and ideals of the Olympic games! But the games will
+not serve to keep nations virile. They must shed blood!"</p>
+<p>"Sportsmanlike? Not in the least!" he said. "The sport and
+glamour of war are past. The army becomes a business, a trade that
+ought to be uniformed in blue jumpers rather than gold lace. We are
+in an era of enormous forces, untried tactics, and rapidly changing
+conditions. This is why the big nations hesitate to make war; why
+they prepare well; why the stake is so great that the smallest
+detail must not be overlooked."</p>
+<p>She could not hold back her arguments, reason was so
+unquestionably on her side.</p>
+<p>"Yes, the cunning of the fox, the brutality of Cain, using
+modern science and invention! Feint and draw your enemy into a
+cul-de-sac; screen your flank attacks; mask your batteries and hold
+their fire till the infantry charge is ripe for decimation! Oh, I
+have been brought up among soldiers! I know!"</p>
+<p>"The rest of Feller's part you have guessed already," he
+concluded. "You can see how a deaf, inoffensive old gardener would
+hardly seem to know a Gray soldier from a Brown; how it might no
+more occur to Westerling to send him away than the family dog or
+cat; how he might retain his quarters in the tower; how he could
+judge the atmosphere of the staff, whether elated or depressed,
+pick up scraps of conversation, and, as a trained officer, know the
+value of what he heard and report it over the 'phone to Partow's
+headquarters."</p>
+<p>"But what about the aeroplanes?" she asked. "I thought you were
+to depend on them for scouting."</p>
+<p>"We shall use them, but they are the least tried of all the new
+resources," he said. "A Gray aeroplane may cut a Brown aeroplane
+down before it returns with the news we want. At most, when the
+aviator may descend low enough for accurate observation he can see
+only what is actually being done. Feller would know Westerling's
+plans before they were even in the first steps of execution.
+This"&mdash;playing the thought happily&mdash;"this would be the
+ideal arrangement, while our planes and dirigibles were kept over
+our lines to strike down theirs. And, Marta, that is all," he
+concluded. "I've tried to make everything clear."</p>
+<p>"You have, quite!" Marta replied decisively. "Now it is my turn
+to talk."</p>
+<p>"You have been talking a little already!" he intimated
+good-naturedly.</p>
+<p>"Only interruptions. That's not really talking," she answered,
+and broke into a sharp little laugh. A laugh was helpful to both
+after such a taut colloquy, but it seemed only to renew her
+energies for conflict. "If there is war, the moment that Feller's
+ruse is discovered he will be shot as a spy?" she asked.</p>
+<p>"I warned him of that," said Lanstron. "I made the situation
+plain. He refused the assignments I first suggested to him. He
+objected that they did not offer any real expiation; they were not
+difficult or hazardous enough. I saw that I could not trick his
+conscience&mdash;what a conscience old Gustave has!&mdash;by any
+nominal task. When I mentioned this one he was instantly keen. The
+deafness was his idea of a ruse for his purpose. He wanted his
+secret kept. Thinking that his weakness for change would not let
+him bear the monotony of a gardener's life as he saw himself
+bearing it in imagination, I recommended him to you. And there was
+the chance&mdash;the thousandth chance, Marta! He is a soldier,
+with a soldier's fatalism. He sees no more danger in this than in
+commanding a battery in a crisis."</p>
+<p>"Naturally, as he is all impulse and fire. But you are the
+tempered steel of self-control. You should save him from his
+impulses, not make use of them."</p>
+<p>"You put it bluntly, Marta. You&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"My turn to talk!" she reminded him. "Did you of all her views
+of Feller from his entrance to his quarters till he had gone. Her
+lips, which had kept so firm in argument, were parted and trembling
+in sympathy.</p>
+<p>"I can see how he would take it!" she exclaimed. "I see his
+white hair, his eyes, his fingers trembling on the edge of the
+table, his utter dejection&mdash;and then impulse, headlong,
+irresponsible, craving the devil's company!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, nothing could hold him," Lanstron agreed. "What makes it
+worse is that with regular living, the pleasure of the garden, and
+a settled purpose I have noticed his improvement already!"</p>
+<p>"There is something so fine about him, something that deserves
+to win out against his weaknesses," she said reflectively.</p>
+<p>"If there is no war, I hope&mdash;after a year or so, I hope and
+believe that I may have him rewarded in some way that would make
+him feel that he had atoned."</p>
+<p>"And we have been talking as if war were due to-morrow!" she
+exclaimed. The breaking light of a discovery, followed by a wave of
+happy relief, swept over her responsive features, from relaxing
+brows to chin, which gave a toss on its own account. "Why, of
+course, Lanny! Till war does come he is only a gardener with an
+illusion that is giving mental strength. Why didn't you put it that
+way before?" she asked in surprise at so easy a solution having
+escaped them. "Let him stay, at least until war comes."</p>
+<p>"And then?"</p>
+<p>"Lanny, you yourself, with all your information, you don't
+think&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"No; though we are nearer it than ever before, it seems to me,"
+he said, choosing his words carefully. "But it is likely that
+diplomacy will find its way out of this crisis as it has out of
+many others."</p>
+<p>"Then we'll leave that question till the evil day," she replied.
+"We have had a terrific argument, Lanny, haven't we? And you have
+won!"</p>
+<p>Her fingers flew out to his arm and rested lightly there after
+an instant's firm pressure, as was her wont after an argument and
+they sheathed their blades. Their comradeship seemed to be restored
+in all its old glory of freedom from petty restraint. He was sure
+of one thing: that she would let her fingers remain on no other
+man's sleeve in this fashion; and he hoped that she would let them
+remain there a long time. Very foolish he was about her, very
+foolish for a piece of human machinery driven by the dynamo of a
+human will.</p>
+<p>"I have an impression that your goodness of heart has won," he
+suggested gently.</p>
+<p>"Or rather let us say that Feller has won."</p>
+<p>"Better still, yes, Feller has won!" he agreed. "Oh, it is good,
+good, good to be here with you, Marta, away from the grind for a
+little while," he was saying, in the fulness of his anticipation of
+the hours they should have together before he had to go, when they
+heard the sound of steps. He looked around to see an orderly from
+the nearest military wireless station.</p>
+<p>"I was told it was urgent, sir," said the orderly, in excuse for
+his intrusion, as he passed a telegram to Lanstron.</p>
+<p>Immediately Lanstron felt the touch of the paper his features
+seemed to take on a mask that concealed his thought as he read:</p>
+<p>"Take night express. Come direct from station to me.
+Partow."</p>
+<p>This meant that he would be expected at Partow's office at eight
+the next morning. He wrote his answer; the orderly saluted and
+departed at a rapid pace; and then, as a matter of habit of the
+same kind that makes some men wipe their pens when laying them
+down, he struck a match and set fire to one corner of the paper,
+which burned to his fingers' ends before he tossed the charred
+remains away. Marta imagined what he would be like with the havoc
+of war raging around him&mdash;all self-possession and mastery; but
+actually he was trying to reassure himself that he ought not to
+feel petulant over a holiday cut short.</p>
+<p>"I shall have to go at once," he said. "Marta, if there were to
+be war very soon&mdash;within a week or two weeks&mdash;what would
+be your attitude about Feller's remaining?"</p>
+<p>"To carry out his plan, you mean?"</p>
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+<p>There was a perceptible pause on her part.</p>
+<p>"Let him stay," she answered. "I shall have time to decide even
+after war begins."</p>
+<p>"But instantly war begins you must go!" he declared
+urgently.</p>
+<p>"You forget a precedent," she reminded him. "The Galland women
+have never deserted the Galland house!"</p>
+<p>"I know the precedent. But this time the house will be in the
+thick of the fighting."</p>
+<p>"It has been in the thick of the fighting before," she said,
+with a gesture of impatience.</p>
+<p>"Not this kind of fighting, Marta," he proceeded very soberly.
+"Other wars are no criterion for this. I know about the defences of
+the tangent because I helped to plan them. In order to keep the
+enemy in ignorance we have made no permanent fortifications. But
+the engineers and the material will be ready, instantly the
+frontier is closed to intelligence, to construct defences suited to
+a delaying and punishing action. Every human being will be subject
+to martial law; every resource at military command. Every hill,
+house, ditch, and tree will be used as cover or protection and will
+be subject to attack."</p>
+<p>Not argument this, but the marshalling of facts of the kind in
+which he dealt as unanswerable evidence, while she listened with a
+still face and dilating eyes that did not look at him until he had
+finished. Then a smile came, a faint, drawn smile of irony, and her
+eyes staring into his were chilling and greenish-black in their
+anger.</p>
+<p>"And the house of a friend meant nothing! It was only fuel for
+the hell you devise!" she said, making each word count like shot
+singing over glare ice.</p>
+<p>"It is only fair to myself to say that when I laid the sheets of
+my map before Partow I had excluded your house and grounds," he
+pleaded in defence. "His thumb pounced on that telltale blank
+space. 'A key-point! So this is your tendon of Achilles, eh?' he
+said in his blunt fashion."</p>
+<p>"The blunt fashion is admired by soldiers," she replied without
+softening. "Yes, he could play chess with heaps of bodies! He is
+worse than Westerling!"</p>
+<p>"No, he would use his own premises, his brother's, his father's
+if it would help. Well, then he took a pen and filled in the blank
+space with the detail which is to make your house and garden the
+centre of an inferno."</p>
+<p>"How Christian!" breathed Marta. "I suppose he loves his
+grandchildren and that they are taught the Lord's prayer!"</p>
+<p>"I believe his only pastime is playing with them," admitted
+Lanstron, stumbling on, trying to be loyal to Partow, to duty, to
+country, no longer calm or dispassionate, but demoralized under the
+lash. "He tells them that when they are grown he hopes there will
+be an end of war."</p>
+<p>"Worse yet&mdash;a hypocrite!"</p>
+<p>"But, Marta, I never knew a man more sincere. He is working to
+the same end as you&mdash;peace. If the Grays would play with fire
+he would give them such a burning that they will never try again.
+He would make war too horrible for practice; fix the frontier
+forever where by, right it belongs; make conquest by one civilized
+nation of another impossible hereafter. Yes, when it is stalemate,
+when it is proved that the science of modern defence has made the
+weak so strong that superior numbers cannot play the bully, then
+shall we have peace in practice!"</p>
+<p>"My children's prayer and Partow in the same gallery!" she
+laughed stonily. "The peace of armament, not of man's superiority
+to the tiger and the tarantula! And you say it all so calmly. You
+picture the hell of your manufacture as coolly as if it were some
+fairies' dance!"</p>
+<p>"Should I be enthusiastic? Should I view the prospect with an
+old-fashioned Hussar's hurrah?" he asked. "The right way is without
+illusions. Let us lose our heads, cry out for glory&mdash;and then
+chaos!"</p>
+<p>"The heedless barbarism of ignorance intoxicated with primitive
+passion versus calculating, refined, intellectual, comprehending
+barbarism! I see no choice," she concluded, rising slowly in the
+utter weariness of spirit that calls for the end of an
+interview.</p>
+<p>"Marta, you will promise not to remain at the house?" he
+urged.</p>
+<p>"Isn't that my affair?" she asked. "Aren't you willing to leave
+even that to me after all you have been telling how you are to make
+a redoubt of our lawn, inviting the shells of the enemy into our
+drawing-room?"</p>
+<p>What could he say in face of a hostility so resolute and armed
+with the conviction of its logic? Only call up from the depths the
+two passions of his life in an outburst, with all the force of his
+nature in play.</p>
+<p>"I love this soil, my country's soil, ours by right&mdash;-and I
+love you! I would be true to both!"</p>
+<p>"Love! What mockery to mention that now!" she cried chokingly.
+"It's monstrous!"</p>
+<p>"I&mdash;I&mdash;" He was making an effort to keep his nerves
+under control.</p>
+<p>This time the stiffening elbow failed. With a lurching
+abruptness he swung his right hand around and seized the wrist of
+that trembling, injured hand that would not be still. She could not
+fail to notice the movement, and the sight was a magic that struck
+anger out of her.</p>
+<p>"Lanny, I am hurting you!" she cried miserably.</p>
+<p>"A little," he said, will finally dominant over its servant, and
+he was smiling as when, half stunned and in agony&mdash;and ashamed
+of the fact&mdash;he had risen from the d&eacute;bris of cloth and
+twisted braces. "It's all right," he concluded.</p>
+<p>She threw back her arms, her head raised, with a certain abandon
+as if she would bare her heart.</p>
+<p>"Lanny, there have been moments when I would have liked to fly
+to your arms. There have been moments when I have had the call that
+comes to every woman in answer to a desire. Yet I was not ready.
+When I really go it must be in a flame, in answer to your
+flame!"</p>
+<p>"You mean&mdash;I&mdash;."</p>
+<p>But if the flame were about to burst forth she smothered it in
+the spark.</p>
+<p>"And all this has upset me," she went on incoherently. "We've
+both been cruel without meaning to be, and we're in the shadow of a
+nightmare; and next time you come perhaps all the war talk will be
+over and&mdash;oh, this is enough for to-day!"</p>
+<p>She turned quickly in veritable flight and hurried toward the
+house. At the bend of the path she wheeled and stood facing him, a
+hand tossed up and opening and closing as if she had caught a shaft
+of sunshine and let it go again. Thus she would wave to him from
+the veranda as he came up the terrace steps. Indelible to him this
+picture, radiant of a versatile, impressionable vitality, of
+capacities yet unsounded, of a downright sincerity of impulses,
+faiths, and ideals which might buffet her this way and that over a
+strange course. A woman unafraid of destiny; a woman too objective
+yet to know herself!</p>
+<p>"If it ever comes," she called, "I'll let you know! I'll fly to
+you in a chariot of fire bearing my flame&mdash;I am that bold,
+that brazen, that reckless! For I am not an old maid yet. They've
+moved the age limit up to thirty. But you can't drill love into me
+as you drill discipline into armies&mdash;no, no more than I can
+argue peace into armies!"</p>
+<p>For a while, motionless, Lanstron watched the point where she
+had disappeared.</p>
+<p>"If I had only been a bridge-builder or an engine-driver," he
+thought; "anything except this beastly&mdash;"</p>
+<p>But he was wool-gathering again. He pulled himself together and
+started at a rapid pace for the tower, where he found Feller
+sitting by the table, one leg over the other easily, engaged in the
+prosaic business of sewing a button on his blouse. Lanstron rapped;
+no answer. He beat a tattoo on the casing; no answer.</p>
+<p>"Gustave!" he called; no answer.</p>
+<p>Now he entered and touched Feller's shoulder.</p>
+<p>"Hello, Lanny!" exclaimed Feller, rising and setting a chair and
+breaking into a stream of talk. "That's the way they all have to do
+when they want to attract my attention. I heard your voice and Miss
+Galland's&mdash;having an argument in the garden, I should say.
+Then I heard your step. Since I became deaf my sense of hearing has
+really grown keener, just as the blind develop a keener sense of
+feeling. Eh? eh?" He cupped his hand over his ear in the unctuous
+enjoyment of his gift of acting. "Yes, Colonel Lanstron, would you
+like to know what a perfect triumph we're going to pull off in
+irises next season&mdash;but, Lanny, you seem in a hurry!"</p>
+<p>"Gustave, I am ordered to headquarters by the night express and
+I came to tell you that I think it means war."</p>
+<p>"War! war!" Feller shouted. "Ye gods and little fishes!" In
+riotous glee he seized a chair and flung it across the room. "Ye
+salty, whiskery gods and ye shiny-eyed little fishes! War, do you
+hear that, you plebeian trousers of the deaf gardener? War!"
+Flinging the trousers after the chair, he executed a few steps.
+When he had thus tempered his elation, he grasped Lanstron's arm
+and, looking into his eyes with feverish resolution and hope, said:
+"Oh, don't fear! I'll pull it off. And then I shall have paid
+back&mdash;yes, paid back! I shall be a man who can look men in the
+face again. I need not slink to the other side of the street when I
+see an old friend coming for fear that he will recognize me. Yes, I
+could even dare to love a woman of my own world! And&mdash;and
+perhaps the uniform and the guns once more!"</p>
+<p>"You may be sure of that. Partow cannot refuse," said Lanstron,
+deeply affected. After a pause he added: "But I must tell you,
+Gustave, that Miss Galland, though she is willing that you remain
+as a gardener, has not yet consented to our plan. She will make no
+decision until war comes. Perhaps she will refuse. It is only fair
+that you should know this."</p>
+<p>For an instant Feller was downcast; then confidence returned at
+high pitch.</p>
+<p>"Trust me!" he said. "I shall persuade her!"</p>
+<p>"I hope you can. It is a chance that might turn the scales of
+victory&mdash;a chance that hangs in my mind stubbornly, as if
+there were some fate in it. Luck, old boy!"</p>
+<p>"Luck to you, Lanny! Luck and promotion!"</p>
+<p>They threw their arms about each other in a vigorous
+embrace.</p>
+<p>"And you will keep watch that Mrs. Galland and Marta are in no
+danger?"</p>
+<p>"Trust me for that, too!"</p>
+<p>"Then, good-by till I hear from you over the 'phone or I return
+to see you after the crisis is over!" concluded Lanstron as he
+hurried away.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XIII' id="XIII"></a>
+<h2>XIII</h2>
+<h3>BREAKING A PAPER-KNIFE</h3>
+<br>
+<p>Hedworth Westerling would have said twenty to one if he had been
+asked the odds against war when he was parting from Marta Galland
+in the hotel reception-room. Before he reached home he would have
+changed them to ten to one. A scare bulletin about the Bodlapoo
+affair compelling attention as his car halted to let the traffic of
+a cross street pass, he bought a newspaper thrust in at the car
+window that contained the answer of the government of the Browns to
+a despatch of the Grays about the dispute that had arisen in the
+distant African jungle. This he had already read two days
+previously, by courtesy of the premier. It was moderate in tone, as
+became a power that had three million soldiers against its
+opponent's five; nevertheless, it firmly pointed out that the
+territory of the Browns had been overtly invaded, on the pretext of
+securing a deserter who had escaped across the line, by Gray
+colonial troops who had raised the Gray flag in place of the Brown
+flag and remained defiantly in occupation of the outpost they had
+taken.</p>
+<p>As yet, the Browns had not attempted to repel the aggressor by
+arms for fear of complications, but were relying on the Gray
+government to order a withdrawal of the Gray force and the
+repudiation of a commander who had been guilty of so grave an
+international affront. The surprising and illuminating thing to
+Westerling was the inspired statement to the press from the Gray
+Foreign Office, adroitly appealing to Gray chauvinism and
+justifying the "intrepidity" of the Gray commander in response to
+so-called "pin-pricking" exasperations.</p>
+<p>At the door of his apartment, Fran&ccedil;ois, his valet and
+factotum, gave Westerling a letter.</p>
+<p>"Important, sir," said Fran&ccedil;ois.</p>
+<p>Westerling knew by a glance that it was, for it was addressed
+and marked "Personal" in the premier's own handwriting. A
+conference for ten that evening was requested in a manner that left
+no doubt of its urgency.</p>
+<p>"Let me see, do I dine at the Countess Zalinski's to-night?"
+asked Westerling. Both Fran&ccedil;ois and his personal aide kept a
+list of his appointments.</p>
+<p>"Not to-night, sir. To-night you&mdash;" said
+Fran&ccedil;ois.</p>
+<p>"Good!" thought Westerling. "No excuses will be necessary to
+Marie in order to be at the premier's by ten."</p>
+<p>Curiosity made him a little ahead of time, but he found the
+premier awaiting him in his study, free from interruption or
+eavesdropping.</p>
+<p>In the shadow of the table lamp the old premier looked his
+years. His definite features were easy material for the
+caricaturist, who does not deal in halftones. A near view of them
+was not attractive. They had the largeness which impresses the
+gallery from the floor of a parliamentary chamber, where delicate
+lines of sensibility and character lack the quality which the actor
+supplies with his make-up. As is often the case with elderly
+statesmen, his face seemed like that of the crowd done boldly as a
+single face, while his shrewd eyes in a bed of crow's-feet, when
+they lighted to their purpose in confidence, expressed his
+understanding of the crowd and its thoughts and how it may be
+led.</p>
+<p>From youth he had been in politics, ever a bold figure and a
+daring player, but now beginning to feel the pressure of younger
+men's elbows. Fonder even of power, which had become a habit, than
+in his twenties, he saw it slipping from his grasp at an age when
+the 'downfall of his government meant that he should never hold the
+reins again. He had been called an ambitious demagogue and a
+makeshift opportunist by his enemies, but the crowd liked him for
+his ready strategy, his genius for appealing phrases, and for the
+gambler's virtue which hitherto had made him a good loser.</p>
+<p>"You saw our <i>communiqu&eacute;</i> to-night that went with
+the publication of the Browns' despatch?" he remarked.</p>
+<p>"Yes, and I was glad that I had been careful to send a spirited
+commander to that region," Westerling replied.</p>
+<p>"So you guess my intention, I see." The premier smiled. He
+picked up a long, thin ivory paper-knife and softly patted the palm
+of his hand with it. "We have had many discussions, you and I,
+Westerling," he said. "But to-night I'm going to ask categorical
+questions. They may take us over old ground, but they are the
+questions of the nation to the army."</p>
+<p>"Certainly!" Westerling replied in his ready, confident
+manner.</p>
+<p>"We hear a great deal about the precision and power of modern
+arms as favoring the defensive," said the premier. "I have read
+somewhere that it will enable the Browns to hold us back, despite
+our advantage of numbers. Also, that they can completely man every
+part of their frontier and that their ability to move their
+reserves rapidly, thanks to modern facilities, makes a powerful
+flanking attack in surprise out of the question."</p>
+<p>"Some half-truths in that," answered Westerling. "One axiom,
+that must hold good through all time, is that the aggressive which
+keeps at it always wins. We take the aggressive. In the space where
+Napoleon deployed a division, we deploy a battalion to-day. The
+precision and power of modern arms require this. With such immense
+forces and present-day tactics, the line of battle will practically
+cover the length of the frontier. Along their range the Browns have
+a series of fortresses commanding natural openings for our attack.
+These are almost impregnable. But there are pregnable points
+between them. Here, our method will be the same that the Japanese
+followed and that they learned from European armies. We shall
+concentrate in masses and throw in wave after wave of attack until
+we have gained the positions we desire. Once we have a tenable
+foothold on the crest of the range the Brown army must fall back
+and the rest will be a matter of skilful pursuit."</p>
+<p>The premier, as he listened, rolled the paper-knife over and
+over, regarding its polished sides, which were like Westerling's
+manner of facile statement of a programme certain of
+fulfilment.</p>
+<p>"We can win, then? We can go to their capital, or far enough to
+force a great indemnity, the annexation of one of their provinces,
+perhaps, and the taking over of their African colonies, which we
+can develop so much better than they?"</p>
+<p>Westerling took care to show none of the eagerness which had set
+his pulses humming.</p>
+<p>"To their capital!" he declared decisively. "Nothing less. For
+that I have planned."</p>
+<p>"And the cost in lives?"</p>
+<p>"Five or six hundred thousand casualties, which means about a
+hundred thousand killed."</p>
+<p>"Ghastly! The population of a good-sized city!" exclaimed the
+premier.</p>
+<p>"A small percentage out of five million soldiers; a smaller out
+of eighty million population," Westerling returned.</p>
+<p>"And how long do you think the war would last? How long the
+strain on our finances, the suspense to the markets?"</p>
+<p>"About a month. We shall go swiftly. The completeness of modern
+preparation must make a war of to-day brief between two great
+powers. We must win with a rush, giving the defenders no breathing
+spell, pouring masses after masses upon the critical
+positions."</p>
+<p>"How long will it take to mobilize?"</p>
+<p>"Less than a week after the railroads are put entirely at our
+service, with three preceding days of scattered movements,"
+answered Westerling. "Deliberate mobilizations are all right for a
+diplomatic threat that creates a furore in the newspapers and a
+depression in the stock-market, but which is not to be carried out.
+When you mean war, all speed and the war fever at white heat."</p>
+<p>"Therefore, there would be little time for the public to hoard
+money or to provoke a panic. The government, knowing precisely what
+was before it, could take severe preventive measures."</p>
+<p>"But I may say that we should strike before mobilization is
+complete. A day will be required to take the La Tir tangent and
+other outlying positions. The 128th and other regiments who will do
+this work are already at the front. They were chosen because they
+came from distant provinces and we can count on their patriotic
+fervor for brilliant and speedy action, with resulting general
+enthusiasm for the whole army, which will be up in time for the
+assault on the Browns' permanent defences."</p>
+<p>"You would have made a good politician, Westerling," the premier
+remarked, with a twitching uplift of the brows and a knowing gleam
+in his shrewd old eyes.</p>
+<p>"Thank you," replied Westerling, appearing flattered, though
+secretly annoyed that any one should think that a chief of staff
+could care to change places with any man in the world. Governments
+might come and go, but the army was the rock in the midst of the
+play of minor forces, the ultimate head of order and power. "A man
+who is able to lead in anything must be something of a politician,"
+he said suavely.</p>
+<p>"Very true, indeed. Perhaps I had that partly in mind in making
+you vice-chief of staff," responded the premier enjoyably. "You
+spoke of the war fever at white heat," he went on, returning to his
+muttons, "and of the army's enthusiasm for its work. There we come
+to the kernel in the nut, eh?" he asked, as he prodded the
+paper-knife into the palm of his hand.</p>
+<p>"Drill, organization, discipline, and centralized authority and
+a high-spirited aristocracy of officers are most important," said
+Westerling. "But after that come morale and the psychology of the
+soldier." There he shrugged slightly, in indication of a resentment
+at the handicap of human nature in his work. "The business of a
+soldier is to risk death in the way he is told. The keener he is
+for his cause the better. An ideal soldier is he who does not think
+for himself, but observes every detail of training and will not
+stop until halted by orders or a bullet. Therefore we want the army
+hot with desire. The officers of a company cannot force their men
+forward. Without insubordination or mutiny the men may stop from
+lack of interest after only a very small percentage of loss."</p>
+<p>"Lack of interest!" mused the premier. But Westerling,
+preoccupied with the literal exposition of his subject, did not
+catch the flash of passing satire before the premier, his features
+growing hard and challenging, spoke in another strain: "Then it all
+goes back to the public&mdash;to that enormous body of humanity out
+there!" He swung the paper-knife around with outstretched arm
+toward the walls of the room. "To public opinion&mdash;as does
+everything else in this age&mdash;to the people! I have seen them
+pressing close, about to remove me from power, and I have started a
+diversion which made them forget the object of their displeasure. I
+have thought them won one day, and the next I realized that they
+were going against me. Thank Heaven for the brevity of their
+memory, or we leaders would be hung high by our own
+inconsistencies! He who leads sees which way they will go, rushes
+to the head of the procession, discovers them to themselves and
+turns a corner and they follow, thinking that they are going
+straight to the point. But always they are there, never older,
+never younger, never tiring&mdash;there, smiling or scowling or
+forgetting all about you, only to have a sudden fierce reminder
+overnight to surprise you&mdash;and our masters, yours and mine!
+For no man can stand against them when they say no or yes."</p>
+<p>"You know the keys to play on, though," remarked Westerling with
+a complimentary smile. "No one knows quite so well."</p>
+<p>"I ought to," replied the premier. "That was the purpose of the
+semi-official <i>communiqu&eacute;</i> about Bodlapoo, which, of
+course, we can repudiate later, if need be. I saw that the
+brilliant forced march of our commander had excited popular
+enthusiasm. It does not matter if he were in the wrong. Will race
+feeling rise to the pitch of war from this touchstone with the
+proper urging? Of course, the impulse must come from the people
+themselves. We must seem to resist it, the better to arouse it." He
+bent the paper-knife into a bow with fingers that were rigid.
+"Times are hard, factions are bitter, our cabinet is in danger,
+with economic and political chaos from overpopulation in sight," he
+continued. "We hunger for land, for fresh opportunities for
+development. An outburst of patriotism, concentrating every thought
+of the nation on war!&mdash;is that the way out?"</p>
+<p>Westerling had only answered questions so far. Here was his cue
+for argument.</p>
+<p>"We were never so ready," he said. "War must come some time. We
+should choose the moment, not leave it to chance. The nation needs
+war as a stimulant, as a corrective, as a physician. We grow stale;
+we think of our domestic troubles. The old racial passions are
+weakening and with them our virility. Victory will make room for
+millions in the place of the thousands who fall. The indemnity will
+bring prosperity. Because we have had no war, because the long
+peace has been abnormal, is the reason you have all this agitation
+and all these strikes. They will be at an end. Those who are fit to
+rule will be in power."</p>
+<p>"And you are sure&mdash;sure we can win?" the premier asked with
+a long, tense look at Westerling, who was steady under the
+scrutiny.</p>
+<p>"Absolutely!" he answered. "Five millions against three! It's
+mathematics, or our courage and skill are not equal to theirs
+Absolutely! We have the power, why not use it? We do not live in a
+dream age!"</p>
+<p>The premier sank deeper in his chair. He was silent, thinking.
+He who had carried off so many great coups with rare ease was on
+the threshold of one that made them all seem petty. He had heard
+random talk that some of the officers of the staff considered
+Westerling to be lath painted to look like steel. There was a
+reported remark by Turcas, his assistant, implying that the ability
+to achieve a position did not mean the ability to fill it.
+Jealousy, no doubt; the jealousy of rivals! The premier himself was
+used to having members of his own cabinet ever on the watch for the
+vulnerable spot in his back, which he had never allowed them to
+find. Yet, there was the case of Louis Napoleon. He had the ability
+to achieve a position; he had been the lath painted to look like
+steel. He had all the externals which the layman associates with
+victory until he went to the supreme test, which ripped him into
+slivers of rotten wood. The little Napoleon had been one of the
+premier's favorite bugaboo examples of stage realism tried out in
+real life. But it was ridiculous to compare him with the stalwart
+figure sitting across the table, who had spoken the language of
+materialism without illusion.</p>
+<p>Westerling's ambition on edge communicated itself to the
+premier, whose soft hands, long since divorced from any labor
+except official hand-shaking and the exercise of authority, were
+bending the paper-knife with unconscious vigor.</p>
+<p>"All the achievements of power form only a dull background for
+victory in war to a people's imagination!" he exclaimed. "Your name
+and mine to symbolize an age! What power for us! What power for the
+nation!"</p>
+<p>From a sudden, unwitting exertion of his strength the knife
+which had been the recipient of his emotions snapped in two. Rather
+carefully he laid the pieces on the table before he rose and turned
+to Westerling, his decision made.</p>
+<p>"If the people respond with the war fever, then it is war!" he
+said. "I take you at your word that you will win!"</p>
+<p>Westerling's chair creaked with the tense drawing of his muscles
+in the impulse of delight. He had gained the great purpose; but
+there was another and vital one on his programme.</p>
+<p>"A condition!" he announced. "From the moment war begins the
+army is master of all intelligence, all communication, all
+resources. Everything we require goes into the crucible!"</p>
+<p>"And the press&mdash;the mischievous, greedy, but very useful
+press?" asked the premier.</p>
+<p>"It also shall serve; also obey. No lists of killed and wounded
+shall be given out until I am ready. The public must know nothing
+except what I choose to tell. I act for the people and the
+nation."</p>
+<p>"That is agreed," said the premier. "For these terrible weeks
+every nerve and muscle of the nation is at your service to win for
+the nation. In three or four days I shall know if the public rises
+to the call. If not&mdash;" He shook his head.</p>
+<p>"While all the information given out is provocative to our
+people, you will declare your hope that war may be averted,"
+Westerling continued. "This will screen our purpose. Finally, on
+top of public enthusiasm will come the word that the Browns have
+fired the first shot&mdash;as they must when we cross the
+frontier&mdash;that they have been killing our soldiers. This will
+make the racial spirit of every man respond. Having decided for
+war, every plan is worthy that helps to victory."</p>
+<p>"It seems fiendish!" exclaimed the premier in answer to a
+thought eddying in the powerful current of his brain. "Fiendish
+with calculation, but merciful, as you say."</p>
+<p>"A fast, terrific campaign! A ready machine taking the road!"
+Westerling declared. "Less suffering than if we went to war
+carelessly for a long campaign&mdash;than if we allowed sentiment
+to interfere with intellect."</p>
+<p>"I like your energy, your will!" said the premier admiringly.
+"And about the declaration of war? We shall time that to your
+purpose."</p>
+<p>"Declarations of war before striking, by nations taking the
+aggressive, are a disadvantage," Westerling explained. "They are
+going out of practice. Witness the examples of Japan against Russia
+and the Balkan allies against Turkey. In these days declarations
+are not necessary as a warning of what is going to happen. They
+belong to the etiquette of fencers."</p>
+<p>"Yes, exactly. The declaration of war and the ambassador's
+passports will be prepared and the wire that fighting has begun
+will release them," agreed the premier. "Another thing," he added,
+"there is the question of the opinion of the world as represented
+by The Hague and the peace societies. This government has always
+expressed sympathy with their ideas."</p>
+<p>"Naturally," Westerling put in. "We shall use hand-grenades,
+explosives from dirigibles, every known power of destruction. So
+will the Browns, you may be sure. In such a cataclysm we shall have
+no time for niceties. The peace societies will have hardly
+formulated their protests to The Hague before the war is over. Our
+answer will be our victory&mdash;the power that goes with the
+prestige of unconquerable force. Victory, nothing but victory
+counts!"</p>
+<p>Westerling was speaking by the book, expressing the ideas that
+he had again and again rehearsed as a part of the preparation, the
+eternal preparation for the sudden emergency of war, which is the
+duty of the staff. So letter-perfect was he in his lines that a
+layman might have scouted his realization of the enormousness of
+his responsibility.</p>
+<p>"Yet if we did lose! If when I had given you all you ask your
+plans went wrong! If our army were broken to pieces on the frontier
+and then the nation, kept in ignorance of events, learned the
+truth"&mdash;the premier enunciated slowly and pointedly while he
+locked glances with Westerling&mdash;"that is the end for us both.
+You would hardly want to return to the capital to face public
+wrath!"</p>
+<p>"We must win though we lose a million men!" he answered. "I
+stake my life!" he cried hoarsely, striking his fist on the
+table.</p>
+<p>"You stake your life!" repeated the premier with slow
+emphasis.</p>
+<p>"Bravado hardly becomes a chief of staff. His place is not under
+fire," Westerling explained. "However, I mean to make my
+headquarters at La Tir, immediately we have taken it, for the
+effect of having the leader of the army promptly established on
+conquered territory."</p>
+<p>"I understand that," replied the premier. "But still you stake
+your life? That is the greatest thing a man has to stake. You stake
+your life on victory?" he demanded fiercely.</p>
+<p>"I do!" said Westerling. "Yes, my life. We cannot fail!"</p>
+<p>"Then it will be war, if the people want it!" said the premier.
+"I shall not resist their desire!" he added in his official manner,
+at peace with his conscience.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XIV' id="XIV"></a>
+<h2>XIV</h2>
+<h3>IN PARTOW'S OFFICE</h3>
+<br>
+<p>Partow was a great brain set on an enormous body. Partow's eyes
+had the fire of youth at sixty-five, but the pendulous flesh of his
+cheeks was pasty. Partow was picturesque; he was a personality with
+a dome forehead sweeping back nobly to scattered and contentious,
+short gray hairs. Jealousy and faction had endeavored for years to
+remove him from his position at the head of the army on account of
+age. New governments decided as they came in that he must go, and
+they went out with him still in the saddle. He worked fourteen
+hours a day, took no holidays and little exercise, violated the
+rules of health, and never appeared at gold-braid functions. The
+business of official display, as he said pungently, he delegated to
+that specialist, his handsome vice-chief of staff.</p>
+<p>He had set up no silhouette of a charging soldier peppered with
+bullet marks on the wall of his office, for this was a picture that
+he carried in his mind. Pertinent to his own taste, under the
+glance of the portraits of the old heroes, was a little statuette
+of a harvester called Toil on his desk.</p>
+<p>"That's the fellow we're defending," he would say, becoming
+almost rhapsodical. "I like to think back to him. He's the infantry
+before you put him in uniform."</p>
+<p>Let officers apply themselves with conspicuous energy and they
+heard from a genial Partow; let officers only keep step and free of
+courts martial, and they heard from a merciless taskmaster. Resign,
+please, if you like a leisurely life, he told the idlers; and he
+had a way of making them so uncomfortable that they would take the
+advice. Among the sons of rest who had retired to mourn over the
+world going to the devil he was referred to as not being a
+gentleman, which amused him; some said that he was crazy, which
+amused him even more.</p>
+<p>Peculiarly human, peculiarly dictatorial, dynamic, and
+inscrutable was Partow, who never asked any one under him to work
+harder than himself.</p>
+<p>Lanstron appeared in the presence of Jove shortly after eight
+o'clock the next morning after he left La Tir. Jove rolled his big
+head on his short neck in a nod and said:</p>
+<p>"Late!"</p>
+<p>"The train was late, sir!"</p>
+<p>"And you have disobeyed orders!" grumbled Partow.</p>
+<p>"Disobeyed orders? How, sir?"</p>
+<p>"And you look me in the eye as you always do! You think that
+excuses you, perhaps?"</p>
+<p>"No, sir. But I am bound to ask what orders?"</p>
+<p>"Well, not orders, but my instructions; at least, my desire.
+Flying yourself&mdash;directing a man[oe]uvre&mdash;racing the
+Grays!"</p>
+<p>"You heard about it?"</p>
+<p>"I hear about everything! I have told you not to risk your life.
+Lives are assets of various kinds in an army. It is my business to
+determine the relative value of those of my subordinates. You are
+not to sacrifice yours."</p>
+<p>"I haven't yet, sir. I have it with me this morning," Lanstron
+replied, "and I have some news about our thousandth chance."</p>
+<p>"Hm-m! What is it?" asked Partow. When Lanstron had told the
+story, Partow worked his lips in a way he had if he were struck by
+a passing reflection which might or might not have a connection
+with the subject in hand. "Strange about her when you consider who
+her parents were!" he said. "But you never know. His son," nodding
+to Toil, "might be a great painter or a snob. Miss Galland has an
+idea&mdash;that's something&mdash;and character and a brain making
+arrows so fast that she shoots them into the blue just for mental
+relief. She's quite a woman. If I were thirty, and single, I
+believe I'd fall in love with her. But don't you dare tell Mrs.
+Partow. I want the fun of telling her myself. Hm-m! Why don't you
+sit down, young man?"</p>
+<p>Partow turned his thick, white palm toward a chair, and his
+smile, now clearly showing that he was not deeply offended with
+Lanstron's insubordination, had a singular charm. The smile
+vanished as Lanstron seated himself and in its place came such a
+look as friend Toil had seen on very rare occasions.</p>
+<p>"The way that the Grays gave out our despatch convinces me of
+their intentions," Partow said. "Their people are rising to it and
+ours are rising in answer. The Grays have been transferring
+regiments from distant provinces to their frontier because they
+will fight better in an invasion. We are transferring home
+regiments to our frontier because they will fight for their own
+property. By Thursday you will find that open mobilization on both
+sides has begun."</p>
+<p>"My department is ready," said Lanstron, "all except your
+decision about press censorship."</p>
+<p>"A troublesome point," responded Partow. "I have procrastinated
+because two definite plans were fully worked out. It is a matter of
+choice between them: either publicity or complete secrecy. You know
+I am no believer in riding two horses at once. My mind is about
+made up; but let me hear your side again. Sometimes I get
+conviction by probing another mans."</p>
+<p>Lanstron was at his best, for his own conviction was
+intense.</p>
+<p>"Of course they will go in for secrecy; but our case is
+different," he began.</p>
+<p>Partow settled himself to listen with the gift of the organizer
+who draws from his informant the brevity of essentials.</p>
+<p>"I should take the people into our confidence," Lanstron
+proceeded. "I should make them feel that we were one family
+fighting for all we hold dear against the invader. If our losses
+are heavy, if we have a setback, then the inspiration of the
+heroism of those who have fallen and the danger of their own homes
+feeling the foot of the invader next will impel the living to
+greater sacrifices. For the Grays are in the wrong. The moral and
+the legal right is with us."</p>
+<p>"And the duty of men like you and me, chosen for the purpose,"
+said Partow, "is worthily to direct the courage that goes with
+moral right. The overt act of war must come from them by violating
+our frontier, not in the African jungle but here. Even when the
+burglar fingers the window-sash we shall not fire&mdash;no, not
+until he enters our house. When he does, you would have a message
+go out to our people that will set them quivering with
+indignation?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, and I would let the names of our soldiers who fall first
+be known and how they fell, their backs to their frontier homes and
+their faces to the foe."</p>
+<p>"Our very liberality in giving news will help us to cover the
+military secrets which we desire to preserve," Partow said, with
+slow emphasis. "We shall hold back what we please, confident of the
+people's trust. Good policy that, yes! But enough! Your orders are
+ready, in detail, I believe. You have nothing to add?"</p>
+<p>"No, sir, nothing; at least, not until war begins."</p>
+<p>"Very well. We shall have the orders issued at the proper
+moment," concluded Partow. "And Westerling is going to find," he
+proceeded after a thoughtful pause, "that a man is readier to die
+fighting to hold his own threshold than fighting to take another
+man's. War is not yet solely an affair of machinery and numbers.
+The human element is still uppermost. I know something, perhaps,
+that Westerling does not know. I have had an experience that he has
+not had and that few active officers of either army have
+had&mdash;I have been under fire."</p>
+<p>His eyes flashed with the memory of his charge, and visions of
+the day when Grandfather Fragini was a <i>beau sabreur</i> and
+Marta Galland's father toasted quick death and speedy promotion
+seemed to cluster around him.</p>
+<p>"Experience plus an old man's honest effort for a mind open to
+all suggestion and improvements!" he exclaimed. "An open mind that
+let you have your way in equipping more dirigibles and planes than
+Westerling guesses we have, eh? And, perhaps, a few more guns! And
+you, too, have been under fire," he added. "Give me your
+hand&mdash;no, not that one, not the one you shake hands
+with&mdash;the one wounded in action!"</p>
+<p>Partow enclosed the stiffened fingers in his own with something
+of the caress which an old bear that is in very good humor might
+give to a promising cub.</p>
+<p>"I have planned, planned, planned for this time," he said. "I
+have played politics with statesmen to hold my place in the belief
+that I was the man for the work which I have done. The world shall
+soon know, as the elements of it go into the crucible test, whether
+it is well done or not. I want to live to see the day when the last
+charge made against our trenches is beaten back. Then they may
+throw this old body onto the rubbish heap as soon as they
+please&mdash;it is a fat, unwieldy behemoth of an old body!"</p>
+<p>"No, no, it isn't!" Lanstron objected hotly. He was seeing only
+what most people saw after talking with Partow for a few minutes,
+his fine, intelligent eyes and beautiful forehead.</p>
+<p>"All that I wanted of the body was to feed my brain," Partow
+continued, heedless of the interruption. "I have watched my mind as
+a navigator watches a barometer. I have been ready at the first
+sign that it was losing its grip to give up. Yet I have felt that
+my body would go on feeding my brain and that to the last moment of
+consciousness, when suddenly the body collapses, I should have
+self-possession and energy of mind. Under the coming strain the
+shock may come, as a cord snaps. At that instant my successor will
+take up my work where I leave it off."</p>
+<p>"Goerwitz, you mean." Lanstron referred in unmistakable
+apprehension to the vice-chief of staff, whom all the army knew had
+no real ability or decision underneath his pleasing, confident
+exterior.</p>
+<p>"No, not Goerwitz," said Partow, with a shrug. "Some one who
+will go on with the weaving, not by knotting threads but with the
+same threads in a smooth fabric." Lanstron felt an increased
+pressure of the hand, a communicated tingling to his nerves. "I
+have chosen him. The old fogy who has aimed to join experience to
+youth chooses youth. You took your medicine without grumbling in
+the disagreeable but vitally important position of chief of
+intelligence. Now you&mdash;there, don't tremble with stage
+fright!" For Lanstron's hand was quivering in Partow's grasp, while
+his face was that of a man stunned.</p>
+<p>"But Goerwitz&mdash;what will he say?" he gasped.</p>
+<p>"Goerwitz goes to a division in reserve."</p>
+<p>"And the army! The government! What will they say at
+such&mdash;such a jump for a colonel?"</p>
+<p>"The government leaves all to me from the day war begins. I
+shall transfer others than Goerwitz&mdash;others who have had
+influence with the premier which it was not wise to deny in time of
+peace."</p>
+<p>"Very well, sir," answered Lanstron, with a subordinate's
+automatic consent to a superior's orders. His words sounded
+ridiculous in view of his feelings, yet they were more expressive
+than any florid speech.</p>
+<p>"You are to be at the right hand of this old body," continued
+Partow. "You are to go with me to the front; to sleep in the room
+next to mine; to be always at my side, and, finally, you are to
+promise that if ever the old body fails in its duty to the mind, if
+ever you see that I am not standing up to the strain, you are to
+say so to me and I give you my word that I shall let you take
+charge."</p>
+<p>Lanstron was too stunned to speak for a moment. The arrangement
+seemed a hideous joke: a refinement of cruelty inconceivable. It
+was expecting him to tell Atlas that he was old and to take the
+weight of the world off the giant's shoulders.</p>
+<p>"Have you lost your patriotism?" demanded Partow. "Are you
+afraid? Afraid to tell me the truth? Afraid of duty? Afraid in your
+youth of the burden that I bear in age?"</p>
+<p>His fingers closed in on Lanstron's with such force that the
+grip was painful.</p>
+<p>"Promise!" he commanded.</p>
+<p>"I promise!" Lanstron said with a throb.</p>
+<p>"That's it' That's the way! That's the kind of soldier I like,"
+Partow declared with change of tone, and he rose from his chair
+with a spring that was a delight to Lanstron in its proof of the
+physical vigor so stoutly denied. "We have a lot to say to each
+other to-day," he added; "but first I am going to show you the
+whole bag of tricks."</p>
+<p>His arm crooked in Lanstron's, they went along the main corridor
+of the staff office hung with portraits of generals who had beaten
+or held their own with the Grays. Passing through a door for which
+Partow held the key, they were in a dim, narrow passage with bare
+walls, lighted by two small gas flames. At the end was another, a
+heavy steel door, of the sort associated with the protection of
+bonds and securities, but in this case for the security of a
+nation's defence. Partow turned the knob of the combination back
+and forth and with the smooth swing of a great weight on noiseless
+hinges the door opened and they entered a vault having a single
+chair and a small table in the centre and lined by sections of
+numbered pigeonholes, each with a combination lock At the base of
+one section was a small safe. It was not the first time that
+Lanstron had been in this vault. He had the combination of two of
+the sections of pigeonholes, aerostatics and intelligence. The rest
+belonged to other divisions.</p>
+<p>"The safe is my own, as you know. No one opens it; no one knows
+what is in it but me," said Partow, taking from it an envelope and
+a manuscript, which he laid on the table. "There you have all that,
+is in my brain&mdash;the whole plan. The envelope contains the
+combinations of all the pigeonholes, if you wish to look up any
+details."</p>
+<p>"Thank you!" Lanstron half whispered. It was all he could think
+of to say.</p>
+<p>"And you will find that there is more than you thought, perhaps:
+the reason why I have fought hard to remain chief of staff;
+why&mdash;" Partow continued in a voice that had the sepulchral
+uncanniness of a threat long nursed now breaking free of the
+bondage of years within the sound-proof walls. "But&mdash;" he
+broke off suddenly as if he distrusted even the security of the
+vault. "Yes, it is all there&mdash;my life's work, my dream, my
+ambition, my plan!"</p>
+<p>Lanstron heard the lock slide in the door as Partow went out and
+he was alone with the army's secrets. As he read Partow's firm
+handwriting, many parts fell together, many moves on a chess-board
+grew clear. His breath came faster, he bent closer over the table,
+he turned back pages to go over them again. Every sentence dropped
+home in his mind like a bolt in a socket.</p>
+<p>When he had finished the manuscript the trance of his thoughts
+held him in the same attitude. "Five millions to our three!" a
+voice kept repeating to him. "In face of that this dream!" another
+voice was saying. Had it been right to intrust such responsibility
+to one man of Partow's age and right to transfer that
+responsibility to himself in an emergency? Yet how clear the plan
+in the confidence of its wisdom! Unconscious of the passage of
+time, he did not hear the door open or realize Partow's presence
+until he felt Partow's hand on his shoulder.</p>
+<p>"I see that you didn't look into any of the pigeonholes," the
+chief of staff observed.</p>
+<p>Lanstron pressed his finger-tips on the manuscript
+significantly.</p>
+<p>"No. It is all there!"</p>
+<p>"The thing being to carry it out!" said Partow. "God with us!"
+he added devoutly.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XV' id="XV"></a>
+<h2>XV</h2>
+<h3>CLOSE TO THE WHITE POSTS</h3>
+<br>
+<p>Have you forgotten Hugo Mallin, humorist of Company B of the
+128th Regiment of the Grays, whom we left in their barracks under
+orders for South La Tir on the afternoon that Westerling called on
+Marta Galland? Have you forgotten Eugene Aronson, the farmer's son,
+and Jacob Pilzer, the butcher's son, and pasty-faced little
+Peterkin, the valet's son, and the judge's son, and the other
+privates of the group that surrounded Hugo Mallin as he aired
+heresies that set them laughing?</p>
+<p>Through the press, an unconscious instrument of his purpose, the
+astute premier has inoculated them with the virus of militant
+patriotism. Day by day the crisis has become more acute; day by day
+the war fever has risen in their veins. Big Eugene Aronson believes
+everything he reads; his country can do no wrong. Jacob Pilzer is
+most bellicose; he chafes at inaction, while they all suffer the
+discomforts of an empty factory building in the rear of South La
+Tir which has become a temporary barracks.</p>
+<p>On Tuesday they hear of crowds around the Foreign Office
+demanding war, on Wednesday of panics on the stock exchanges, on
+Thursday of mobilization actually begun and a rigid press
+censorship established, and on Friday other regiments and guns and
+horses are detraining and departing right and left. Hurrying
+officers know nothing except what they have been told to do.</p>
+<p>"When do we start? What are we waiting for?" demanded Pilzer. "I
+want to be in the thick of the fighting and not trailing along with
+the reserves!" If any one in the 128th wins the bronze cross he
+means that it shall be he and not Eugene Aronson.</p>
+<p>"Never mind, you'll have a chance. There'll be war enough to go
+around, I am sure!" said Hugo Mallin.</p>
+<p>"More than you'll want!" Pilzer shot back, thrusting out his
+jaw.</p>
+<p>"I'm sure of that!" answered Hugo, the mask of his face drawn in
+quizzical solemnity. "I don't want any at all."</p>
+<p>This brought a tremendous laugh. All the laughs had been
+tremendous since mobilization had begun in earnest, and the
+atmosphere was like the suspense before a thunder-storm breaks.</p>
+<p>On Saturday evening the 128th was mustered in field
+accoutrements and a full supply of cartridges. In the darkness the
+first battalion marched out at right angles to the main road that
+ran through La Tir and South La Tir. At length Company B, deployed
+in line of skirmishers, lay down to sleep on its arms.</p>
+<p>"We wait here for the word," Fracasse, the captain, whispered to
+his senior lieutenant. "If it comes, our objective is the house and
+the old castle on the hill above the town."</p>
+<p>The tower of the church showed dimly when a pale moon broke
+through a cloud. By its light Hugo saw on his right Eugene's big
+features and massive shoulders and on his left the pinched and
+characterless features of Peterkin. A few yards ahead was a white
+stone post.</p>
+<p>"That's their side over there!" whispered the banker's son, who
+was next to Peterkin.</p>
+<p>"When we cross war begins," said the manufacturer's son.</p>
+<p>"I wonder if they are expecting us!" said the judge's son a
+trifle huskily, in an attempt at humor, though he was not given to
+humor.</p>
+<p>"Just waiting to throw bouquets!" whispered the laborer's son.
+He, too, was not given to humor and he, too, spoke a trifle
+huskily.</p>
+<p>"And we'll fix bayonets when we start and they will run at the
+sight of our steel!" said Eugene Aronson. He and Hugo alone, not
+excepting Pilzer, the butcher's son, spoke in their natural voices.
+The others were trying to make their voices sound natural, while
+Pilzer's voice had developed a certain ferocity, and the liver
+patch on his cheek twitched more frequently. "Why, Company B is in
+front! We have the post of honor, and maybe our company will win
+the most glory of any in the regiment!" Eugene added. "Oh, we'll
+beat them! The bullet is not made that will get me!"</p>
+<p>"Your service will be over in time for you to help with the
+spring planting, Eugene," whispered Hugo, who was apparently
+preoccupied with many detached thoughts.</p>
+<p>"And you to be at home sucking lollipops!" Pilzer growled to
+Hugo.</p>
+<p>"That would be better than murdering my fellowman to get his
+property," Hugo answered, so soberly that it did not seem to his
+comrades that he was joking this time. Pilzer's snarling
+exclamation of "White feather!" came in the midst of a chorus of
+indignation.</p>
+<p>Captain Fracasse, who had heard only the disturbance without
+knowing the cause, interfered in a low, sharp tone:</p>
+<p>"Silence! As I have told you before, silence! We don't want them
+to know that we are here. Go to sleep! You may get no rest
+to-morrow night!"</p>
+<p>But little Peterkin, the question in his mind breaking free of
+his lips, unwittingly asked:</p>
+<p>"Shall&mdash;shall we fight in the morning?"</p>
+<p>"I don't know. Nobody knows!" answered Fracasse. "We wait on
+orders, ready to do our duty. There may be no war. Don't let me
+hear another peep from you!"</p>
+<p>Now all closed their eyes. In front of them was vast silence
+which seemed to stretch from end to end of the frontier, while to
+the rear was the rumble of switching railway trains and the rumble
+of provision trains and artillery on the roads, and in the distance
+on the plain the headlight of a locomotive cut a swath in the black
+night. But the breathing of most of the men was not that of
+slumber, though Eugene and Pilzer slept soundly. Hours passed.
+Occasional restless movements told of efforts to force sleep by
+changing position.</p>
+<p>"It's the waiting that's sickening!" exploded the manufacturer's
+son under his breath, desperately.</p>
+<p>"So I say. I'd like to be at it and done with the suspense!"
+said the doctor's son.</p>
+<p>"They say if you are shot through the head you don't know what
+killed you, it's so quick. Think of that!" exclaimed Peterkin,
+huddling closer to Hugo and shivering.</p>
+<p>"Yes, very merciful," Hugo whispered, patting Peterkin's
+arm.</p>
+<p>"Sh-h-h! Silence, I tell you!" commanded Fracasse crossly. He
+was falling into a half doze at last.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XVI' id="XVI"></a>
+<h2>XVI</h2>
+<h3>DELLARME'S MEN GET A MASCOT</h3>
+<br>
+<p>And have you forgotten gigantic Private Stransky, born to the
+red, with the hedgerows of the world his home? Have you forgotten
+Tom Fragini and the sergeant and the others of Captain Dellarme's
+men of the 53d of the Browns, whom we left marching along the road
+to La Tir, with old Grandfather Fragini, veteran of the Hussars, in
+his faded uniform coat with his medal on his breast, keeping step,
+hep-hep-hep?</p>
+<p>Grandfather Fragini has attached himself to the regiment while
+it rests in barracks a few hours' march from the frontier. He is
+accepted as the mascot of the company in which both his grandson
+and Stransky are serving. But he never speaks to Stransky and
+refers to him in the third person as "that traitor," which makes
+Stransky grin sardonically. Each day's developments bring more
+color to his cheeks; his rheumatic old legs are limbering with the
+elixir of rising patriotism, though Tom and his comrades are
+singularly without enthusiasm, according to grandfather's idea.
+They lead the newspapers gluttonously and they welcome each item
+that promises a peaceful solution of the crisis.</p>
+<p>Inwardly, Grandfather Fragini is worried about the state of the
+army. Is his race becoming decadent? Or, as he puts it, are the
+younger generation without sand in their craws? When he came into
+the barracks yard swinging his cap aloft and shouting the news that
+mobilization had begun there was not even a cheer.</p>
+<p>"I suppose it means war," said Tom Fragini with a soberness that
+was in keeping with the grave faces of his fellows. Stransky
+sitting at one side by himself smiled.</p>
+<p>"Well, you'd think it was a funeral!" grandfather exclaimed in
+disgust.</p>
+<p>"There will be lots of funerals!" said Tom.</p>
+<p>"I s'pose there will be; but if you get that in your mind how
+can you fight?" grandfather demanded. "Why, if any Hussar had
+spoken of funerals we'd called him white-livered, that's what we
+would! We cheered till we was hoarse; we danced and hugged one
+another; we rattled our sabres in our scabbards; we sang
+rip-roaring death-or-glory songs. When you're going to war you want
+to sing and shout. That's the way to keep your spirits up."</p>
+<p>"Let's sing 'Ring-around-the-rosy' to please the old gentleman.
+Come on!" suggested Stransky.</p>
+<p>"I don't see that we are after either death or glory," said Tom.
+"We are going to do our duty."</p>
+<p>The impulse of enthusiasm seemed equally lacking in the others.
+Stransky grinned and his deep-set eyes turned inward with a squint
+of knowing satisfaction at the bony bridge of his nose.</p>
+<p>"I'm not wanting any traitor to start any songs for me!"
+declared grandfather.</p>
+<p>"Never mind. The fellows on the other side aren't any more
+enthusiastic than we are, grandfather," Stransky said soothingly,
+in his mocking way. "The fact is, we don't want to kill our
+brothers across the frontier and they don't want to kill us or be
+killed. It's only the ruling classes that want the proletariat
+to&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Fire away, Stransky! It's hours since you made a speech!"
+chirruped a voice.</p>
+<p>"Look out, Bert, the sergeant's coming!" another voice warned
+the orator.</p>
+<p>The state of mind of the 53d was that of all the regiments of
+the Browns with their faces toward the white posts, quiet,
+thoughtful, and grave; for they had not to arouse ardor for the
+aggressive. As they were to receive rather than give blows they
+might be more honest with themselves than the men of the Grays.</p>
+<p>In marching order, with cartridge-boxes full, on Saturday night
+the 53d marched out to the main pass road. When Grandfather Fragini
+found that he had been ordered to remain behind he sought the
+colonel.</p>
+<p>"I've got reasons! Let me come!" he pleaded.</p>
+<p>"No. It is no place for you."</p>
+<p>"I can keep up! I can keep up! I feel like a boy!"</p>
+<p>"But it is different these days, and this is the infantry. The
+bullets carry far. You will not know how to take cover," the
+colonel explained.</p>
+<p>"Well, if I am killed I won't be losing much time on this
+earth," grandfather observed with cool logic. "But that ain't it.
+I'm worried about Tom. I'm afraid he ain't going to fight!
+I&mdash;I want to stiffen him up!"</p>
+<p>"He will fight, all right. Sorry, but it is out of the
+question," said the colonel, turning away.</p>
+<p>Grandfather buried his face in his hands and shook with the sobs
+of second childhood until an idea occurred to him. Wasn't he a free
+man? Hadn't he as much right as anybody to use the public highway?
+Drying his eyes, he set out along the road in the wake of the
+regiment.</p>
+<p>One company after another left the road at a given point, bound
+for the position mapped in its instructions Dellarme's, however,
+went on until it was opposite the Galland house.</p>
+<p>"We are depending on you," the colonel said to Dellarme, giving
+his hand a grip. "You are not to draw off till you get the
+flag."</p>
+<p>"No, sir," Dellarme replied.</p>
+<p>"Mind the signal to the batteries&mdash;keep the men
+screened&mdash;warn them not to let their first baptism of shell
+fire shake their nerves!" the colonel added in a final repetition
+of instructions already indelibly impressed on the captain's
+mind.</p>
+<p>Moving cautiously through a cut, Dellarme's company came, about
+midnight, to a halt among the stubble of a wheat-field behind a
+knoll. After he had bidden the men to break ranks, he crept up the
+incline.</p>
+<p>"Yes, it's there!" he whispered when he returned. "On the crest
+of the knoll a cord is stretched from stake to stake," he said,
+explaining the reason for what was to be done, as was his custom.
+"The engineers placed it there after dusk and the frontier was
+closed, so that you would know just where to use your spades in the
+dark. Quietly as possible! No talking!" he kept cautioning as the
+men turned the soft earth, "and not higher than the cord, and lay
+the stubble side of the sods on the reverse so as to cover the
+fresh earth on the sky-line."</p>
+<p>When the work was done all returned behind the knoll except the
+sentries posted at intervals on the crest to watch. With the aid of
+a small electric flash, screened by his hands, Dellarme again
+examined a section of the staff map that outlined the contour of
+the knoll in relation to the other positions. After this he wrote
+in his diary the simple facts of the day's events, concluding with
+a sentiment of gratitude for the honor shown to his company and a
+prayer that he might keep a clear head and do his duty if war came
+on the morrow.</p>
+<p>"Now, every one get all the sleep he can!" he advised the
+men.</p>
+<p>Stransky slept, with his head on his arm, as soundly as Eugene
+Aronson, his antithesis in character; the others slept no better
+than the men of the 128th. The night passed without any alarm
+except that of their own thoughts, and they welcomed dawn as a
+relief from suspense. There was no hot coffee this morning, and
+they washed down their rations with water from their canteens. The
+old sergeant was lying beside Captain Dellarme on the crest, the
+sunrise in their faces. As the mist cleared from the plain it
+revealed the white dots of the frontier posts in the meadow and
+behind them many gray figures in skirmish order, scarcely visible
+except through the glasses.</p>
+<p>"It looks like business!" declared the old sergeant.</p>
+<p>"Yes, it begins the minute they cross the line!" said
+Dellarme.</p>
+<p>His glance sweeping to the rear to scan the landscape under the
+light of day, he recognized, with a sense of pride and awe, the
+tactical importance of his company's position in relation to that
+of the other companies. Easily he made out the regimental line by
+streaks of concealed trenches and groups of brown uniforms; and
+here and there were the oblong, cloth stretches of waiting hospital
+litters. On the reverse slope of another knoll was the farmhouse,
+marked X on his map as the regimental headquarters, where he was to
+watch for the signal to fall back from his first stand in delaying
+the enemy's advance. Directly to the rear was the cut through which
+the company had come from the main pass road, and beyond that the
+Galland house, which was to be the second stand.</p>
+<p>"Can you see them from up here?" chirped a voice in a jubilant,
+cackling laugh that drew Dellarme's attention to his immediate
+surroundings, and he saw Grandfather Fragini coming up to join him
+on the crest. He slid back on his stomach below the sky-line and
+held up an arresting hand.</p>
+<p>"Kept along after you," piped the old man; "and it's just as I
+thought&mdash;the glummest lot of funeral faces I ever seen!"</p>
+<p>"You must not remain! Follow that cut there and it will take you
+out to the road!" Dellarme told grandfather sharply.</p>
+<p>"Just got to stay. Too tired to take another step," and
+grandfather dropped in utter exhaustion. "Have to carry me if you
+want me to go."</p>
+<p>"That means two men out of the line," thought Dellarme.</p>
+<p>"You're an archaic old fire-eater!" Stransky remarked in cynical
+amusement to grandfather Fragini.</p>
+<p>"And you're a traitor!" answered grandfather with all the energy
+he could command.</p>
+<p>Now Dellarme disposed his men in line back of the ridge of fresh
+earth that they had dug in the night, ready to rush to their places
+when he blew the whistle that hung from his neck, but he did not
+allow them a glimpse over the crest.</p>
+<p>"I know you are curious, but powerful glasses are watching for
+you to show yourselves; and if a battery turned loose on us you'd
+understand," he explained.</p>
+<p>The men wanted to talk but did not know what to talk about, so
+they examined their rifles critically as if they were unfamiliar
+gifts which they had found in their stockings on Christmas morning.
+Some began to empty their magazines of cartridges for the pleasure
+or occupation of refilling them; but one of the lieutenants stopped
+this. It might mean delay when the whistle blew. Thus the hours
+wore on, and the church clock struck nine and ten.</p>
+<p>"Never a movement down there!" called the sergeant from the
+crest to Dellarme. "Maybe this is just their final bluff before
+they come to terms about Bodlapoo"&mdash;that stretch of African
+jungle that seemed very far away to them all.</p>
+<p>"Let us hope so!" said Dellarme seriously.</p>
+<p>"Hope there won't be any war! Just listen to that from an army
+officer, with the enemy right in front of him!" gasped
+grandfather.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XVII' id="XVII"></a>
+<h2>XVII</h2>
+<h3>A SUNDAY MORNING IN TOWN</h3>
+<br>
+<p>"You ought not to leave the house&mdash;not this morning,"
+protested Mrs. Galland when Marta was putting on her hat to start
+for the regular Sunday service of her school.</p>
+<p>"The children expect me," Marta explained.</p>
+<p>"Hardly, hardly this morning. They will take it for granted that
+you will not come."</p>
+<p>But Marta thrust her hatpin home decisively.</p>
+<p>"Jacky Werther will certainly be there. Though he were the only
+one to come, I would not disappoint him!" she said. "Heaven knows,
+mother, if there were ever a time for teaching peace it is to-day!
+And I can't remain inactive. Just to sit still and wait in a time
+like this&mdash;that is too terrible!"</p>
+<p>"As you will!" Mrs. Galland responded with gentle
+resignation.</p>
+<p>Garden and veranda were as peaceful as on any other Sunday
+morning, but it was a different kind of peace&mdash;a peace mocked
+by sounds beyond its boundaries which were to her like the rattling
+of the steel scales of a demon licking its jaws with its red tongue
+in voracious anticipation of a gorge and stretching out great steel
+claws in readiness to sink them into the flesh of its victims when
+Partow and Westerling gave the word. As Lanstron had said, this
+demon would feed on every resource and energy of the nation. It had
+no voice and no thought except kill, kill, kill! And man called
+this demon patriotism and love of country. Those who risked death
+in the demon's honor got iron crosses and bronze crosses, but any
+one who dared to call it by its true name, if a man, received the
+decoration of the white feather; if a woman, was regarded as a
+sentimentalist and merely a woman, and told that she did not
+understand practical human nature.</p>
+<p>Choosing to go to town by the castle road rather than down the
+terrace to the main pass road, Marta, as she emerged from the
+grounds, saw Feller, garden-shears in hand and in his workman's
+clothes instead of his Sunday black, a figure of stone watching the
+approach of some field-batteries. In the week of distracting and
+cumulative suspense that had elapsed since his secret had been
+revealed to her, their relations had continued as before. She
+studiously kept up the fiction of his deafness by writing her
+orders. The question of allowing him to undertake his part as a spy
+had drifted into the background of her mind under the distressing
+and ever-present pressure of the crisis. He was to remain until
+there was war, and thought about anything that implied that war was
+coming was the more hideous to her the nearer war approached.</p>
+<p>"It will be averted! It cannot be!" she was thinking. Her
+glimpse of him had no more interest for her at this moment of
+preoccupation than any other familiar object of the landscape.</p>
+<p>"The guns! The guns! How I love the guns!" he was thinking.</p>
+<p>She was almost past him before he realized her presence, which
+he acknowledged by a startled movement and a step forward as he
+took off his hat. She paused. His eyes were glowing like coals
+under a blower as he looked at her and again at the batteries,
+seeming to include her with the guns in the spell of his fervid
+abstraction. He was unconscious that he had ever been anything but
+a soldier. His throat was athirst for words and his words craved a
+listening ear for all the pictures of the machinery of war in
+motion that crowded his imagination. To him the demon was a fair,
+beckoning god in cloth of gold&mdash;a god of hope and fortune.</p>
+<p>"Frontier closed last night to prevent intelligence about our
+preparations leaking out&mdash;Lanny's plan all alive&mdash;the
+guns coming," he went on, his shoulders stiffening, his chin
+drawing in, his features resolute and beaming with the ardor of
+youth in action&mdash;"troops moving here and there to their
+places&mdash;engineers preparing the defences&mdash;automatics at
+critical points with the infantry&mdash;field-wires
+laid&mdash;field-telephones set up&mdash;the wireless
+spitting&mdash;the caissons full&mdash;planes and dirigibles
+ready&mdash;search-lights in position"</p>
+<p>There the torrent of his broken sentences was checked A shadow
+passed in front of him. He came out of his trance of imageries of
+activities, so vividly clear to his military mind, to realize that
+Marta was abruptly leaving.</p>
+<p>"Miss Galland!" he called urgently. "Firing may commence at any
+minute. You must not go into town!"</p>
+<p>"But I must!" she declared, speaking over her shoulder while she
+paused. It was clear that no warning would prevail against her
+determined mood.</p>
+<p>"Then I shall go with you!" he said, starting toward her with a
+light step, in keeping with the gallantry of a man even younger
+than his years. He spoke in a tone of protective masculine
+authority, as an officer might to a woman of whom he was fond when
+he saw her exposing herself to danger. He would escort her; he
+would see that no harm befell her. The impulse was spontaneous in
+an illusion free of the gardener's part. But he saw her lips
+tighten and a frown gather.</p>
+<p>"It is not necessary, thank you!" she answered, more coldly than
+she had ever spoken to him. This had a magically quick effect on
+his attitude.</p>
+<p>"I beg pardon! I forgot!" he explained in his old man's voice,
+his head sinking, his shoulders drooping in the humility of a
+servant who recognizes that he has been properly rebuked for
+presumption. "Not a gunner any more&mdash;I'm a spy!" he thought,
+as he shuffled off without looking toward the batteries again,
+though the music of wheels and hoofs was now close by. "I must turn
+my back on the guns, for they tempt me. And I must win her consent
+before I shall have even the dignity of a spy&mdash;and I will win
+it!" he added, brightening. "La, la, la! Trust me!"</p>
+<p>Marta had a glimpse, as she turned away, of an appealingly
+pathetic figure bent as under a wound to his spirits, which gave
+her a sense of personal cruelty in the midst of a wave of pity and
+regret.</p>
+<p>"He is what he is because of the army; a victim of a cult, a
+habit," she was thinking. "Had he been in any other calling his
+fine qualities might have been of service to the world and he would
+have been happy."</p>
+<p>Then her sympathy was drawn to another object of war's
+injustice&mdash;a man approaching under the guard of two soldiers.
+Suddenly the man planted his feet and refused to budge.</p>
+<p>"I tell you, it isn't fair!" he cried in rage and appeal. "I
+tell you, I was only visiting on this side and got caught! I'm a
+reservist of the first line. If I don't answer the call I'll be
+branded a shirker in my village, and I've got to live in that
+village all my life. You better kill me and have done with it!"</p>
+<p>"Sorry," said one of the soldiers, "but you were caught trying
+to sneak. We're acting under orders. No use of balking."</p>
+<p>"Who wouldn't sneak?" demanded the prisoner desperately. "Oh,
+say, be a little human! The worst of it is that I came over here to
+see my girl to say good-by to her. I'm going to marry her," he
+pleaded, "though my folks are against it because she's a Brown. It
+makes me so cheap&mdash;it&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"We were told to take you to the general. He'll let you off if
+there isn't any war, and he may, anyway. But he sure won't if you
+resist arrest." The soldiers seized his arms firmly. "Come along!"
+they said, and he went. Any one must go when a steel claw of the
+demon enforces the order.</p>
+<p>A company of infantry resting among their stacked rifles changed
+the color of the square in the distance from the gray of pavement
+to the brown of a mass of uniforms. In the middle of the main
+street a major of the brigade staff, with a number of junior
+officers and orderlies, was evidently waiting on some signal.
+Sentries were posted at regular intervals along the curb. The
+people in the houses and shops from time to time stopped packing up
+their effects long enough to go to the doors and look up and down
+apprehensively, asking bootless, nervous questions.</p>
+<p>"Are they coming yet?"</p>
+<p>"Do you think they will come?"</p>
+<p>"Are you sure it's going to be war?"</p>
+<p>"Will they shell the town?"</p>
+<p>"There'll be time enough for you to get away!" shouted the
+major. "All we know is what is written in our instructions, and we
+shall act on them when the thing starts. Then we are in command.
+Meanwhile, get ready!"</p>
+<p>A lieutenant of a detachment of engineers coming at the double
+from a cross street stopped to inquire:</p>
+<p>"This way to the knitting mills?"</p>
+<p>"Straight ahead! Can't go wrong!" the major answered.</p>
+<p>"We are going to loophole their walls for the infantry,"
+explained the lieutenant as he hurried on.</p>
+<p>"Then they're going to fight in the town!"</p>
+<p>"Blow our homes to pieces!"</p>
+<p>"Destroy our property!"</p>
+<p>After this fusillade from the people the major glared at the
+retreating back of the lieutenant as much as to say that some men
+would never learn to hold their tongues. Naturally, the duty of
+looking after refugees was not to his soldierly taste.</p>
+<p>"We are doing it all for you, for the country," he explained.
+"We are going to make them pay for every foot they take&mdash;the
+invaders!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, make them pay!" called a voice from the houses.</p>
+<p>"Make them pay!" other voices joined in.</p>
+<p>"It isn't the fellows just across the border that want to take
+our property," said an elderly man. "They're good friends enough.
+It's the Grays' politicians and the fire-eaters in the other
+provinces."</p>
+<p>"The robbers!" piped a woman's high-pitched note. "I've got a
+son in the army, and if ever he leaves that mountain range and goes
+down the other side with the Grays chasing him, he'll get worse
+from me than the Grays could give him!"</p>
+<p>"That's right! That's the way to talk!" came a chorus.</p>
+<p>Then the major became aware of a young woman who was going in
+the wrong direction. Her cheeks were flushed from her rapid walk,
+her lips were parted, showing firm, white teeth, and her black eyes
+were regarding him in a blaze of satire or amusement; an emotion,
+whatever it was, that thoroughly centred his attention.</p>
+<p>"Yes," she said, anger getting the better of her, "make them
+pay&mdash;and they make you pay&mdash;and you make them
+pay&mdash;and so on!"</p>
+<p>The major smiled. It seemed the safe thing to do. He did not
+know but the young woman might charge.</p>
+<p>"Mademoiselle, I am sorry, but unless you live in this
+direction," he said very politely, "you may not go any farther.
+Until we have other orders or they attack, every one is supposed to
+remain in his house or his place of business."</p>
+<p>"This is my place of business!" Marta answered, for she was
+already opposite a small, disused chapel which was her schoolroom,
+where a half dozen of the faithful children were gathered around
+the masculine importance of Jacky Werther, one of the older
+boys.</p>
+<p>"Then you are Miss Galland!" said the major, enlightened. His
+smile had an appreciation of the irony of her occupation at that
+moment. "Your children are very loyal. They would not tell me where
+they lived, so we had to let them stay there."</p>
+<p>"Those who have homes," she said, identifying each one of the
+faithful with a glance, "have so many brothers and sisters that
+they will hardly be missed from the flock. Others have no
+homes&mdash;at least, not much of a one"&mdash;here her temper rose
+again&mdash;"taxes being so high in order that you may organize
+murder and the destruction of property."</p>
+<p>"I&mdash;" gasped the major under the fire of those black
+eyes.</p>
+<p>But their flashes suddenly splintered into less threatening
+lights as she realized the fatuity of this personal allusion.</p>
+<p>"Oh, I'm not the town scold!" she explained with a nervous
+little laugh that helped her to recover poise.</p>
+<p>With the black eyes in this mood, the major was conscious only
+of a desire to please which conflicted with duty.</p>
+<p>"Now, really, Miss Galland," he began solicitously, "I have been
+assigned to move the civil population in case of attack. Your
+children ought&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"After school! You have your duty this morning and I have mine!"
+Marta interrupted pleasantly, and turned toward the chapel.</p>
+<p>"They are putting sharpshooters in the church tower to get the
+aeroplanes, and there are lots of the little guns that fire bullets
+so fast you can't count 'em&mdash;and little spring wagons with
+dynamite to blow things up&mdash;and&mdash;" Jacky Werther ran on
+in a series of vocal explosions as Marta opened the door to let the
+children go in.</p>
+<p>"Yet you came!" said Marta with a hand caressingly on his
+shoulder.</p>
+<p>"It looks pretty bad for peace, but we came," answered Jacky,
+round-eyed, in loyalty. "We'd come right through the bullets 'cause
+we said we would if we wasn't sick, and we wasn't sick."</p>
+<p>"My seven disciples&mdash;seven!" exclaimed Marta as she counted
+them. "And you need not sit on the regular seats, but around me on
+the platform. It will be more intimate."</p>
+<p>"That's grand!" came in chorus. They did not bother, about
+chairs, but seated themselves on the floor around Marta's
+skirts.</p>
+<p>"My, Miss Galland, but your eyes are bright!"</p>
+<p>"And your cheeks are all red!"</p>
+<p>"With little spots in the centre!"</p>
+<p>"You're very wonderful, Miss Galland!"</p>
+<p>The church clock boomed out its deliberate strokes through ten,
+the hour set for the lesson, and all counted
+them&mdash;one&mdash;two&mdash;three. Marta was thinking what a
+dismal little effort theirs was, and yet she was very happy,
+tremblingly happy in her distraction and excitement, that they had
+not waited for her at the door of the chapel in vain.</p>
+<p>She announced that there would be no talk this morning; they
+would only say their oath. Repeating in concert the pledge to the
+boys and girls of other lands, the childish voices peculiarly sweet
+and harmonious in contrast to the raucous and uneven sounds of
+foreboding from the street, they came in due course to the words of
+the concession that the oath made to militancy.</p>
+<p>"If an enemy tries to take my land&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Children&mdash;I&mdash;" Marta interrupted with a sense of
+wonder and shock. They paused and looked at her questioningly. "I
+had almost forgotten that part!" she breathed confusedly.</p>
+<p>"That's the part that makes all we're doing against the Grays
+right!" put in Jacky Werther promptly.</p>
+<p>"As I wrote it for you! 'I shall appeal to his sense of justice
+and reason with him&mdash;'"</p>
+<p>Jaws dropped and eyes bulged, for above the sounds of the street
+rose from the distance the unmistakable crackling of rifle-fire
+which, as they listened, spread and increased in volume.</p>
+<p>"Go on&mdash;on to the end of the oath! It will take only a
+moment," said Marta resolutely. "It isn't much, but it's the best
+we can do!"</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XVIII' id="XVIII"></a>
+<h2>XVIII</h2>
+<h3>THE BAPTISM OF FIRE</h3>
+<br>
+<p>After the morning sun commenced to tickle the back of his neck,
+Eugene Aronson, the giant of the 128th of the Grays, stretched his
+limbs as healthily as a cub bear.</p>
+<p>"No war yet!" he exclaimed, rubbing his eyes.</p>
+<p>"Oh, we'd have called you if there were!" said the
+manufacturer's son, trying to make a joke, which was hard work with
+his clothes dew-soaked after a sleepless night in the open.</p>
+<p>"Wouldn't want you to miss it after coming so far," added the
+laborer's son, aiming to show that he, too, was in a light-hearted
+mood.</p>
+<p>"And how did you sleep?" asked Eugene, cheerily, of his
+neighbors.</p>
+<p>"Fine!"</p>
+<p>"First rate!"</p>
+<p>"Like a stone!"</p>
+<p>Every man was too intent in forcing his own spontaneity to
+notice that that of the others was also forced.</p>
+<p>"Like a top!" chimed in pasty-faced Peterkin, the valet's son,
+to be in fashion.</p>
+<p>"I didn't sleep much myself; in fact, not at all," said Hugo
+Mallin.</p>
+<p>"Oh, ho!" groaned Pilzer, the butcher's son, with a broad grin
+that made a crease in the liver patch on his cheek.</p>
+<p>"You see, it's a new experience for me," Hugo explained in a
+drawl, his face drawn as a mask. "I'm not so used to war as you
+other fellows are. I'm not so brave!"</p>
+<p>There was a forced laugh because Hugo appeared droll, and when
+he appeared droll it was the proper thing to laugh. Besides, in the
+best humor there is a grain of truth, whether you see it or not.
+This time a number saw it quite clearly.</p>
+<p>"I was thinking how ridiculous we all are," Hugo went on without
+change of tone or expression, "grovelling here on our stomachs and
+pretending that we slept when we didn't and that we want to be
+killed when we don't!"</p>
+<p>"White feather again!" Pilzer exclaimed.</p>
+<p>"Oh, shut up!" snapped the doctor's son irritably. "Let Hugo
+talk. He's only gassing. It's so monotonous lying here that any
+kind of nonsense is better than growling."</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes!" the others agreed.</p>
+<p>Hugo's outburst of the previous evening was forgotten. They
+welcomed anything that broke the suspense. Let the regimental wag
+make a little fun any way that he could. As the officers had
+withdrawn somewhat to the rear for breakfast, there was no
+constraint.</p>
+<p>"I was thinking how I'd like to go out and shake hands with the
+Browns," said Hugo. "That's the way fencers and pugilists do before
+they set to. It seems polite and sportsmanlike, indicating that
+there's no prejudice."</p>
+<p>There was a ripple of half-hearted merriment punctuated by
+exclamations.</p>
+<p>"What a fool idea!"</p>
+<p>"How do all your notions get into your head, Hugo?"</p>
+<p>"Sometimes by squinting at the moonlight and counting odd
+numbers; sometimes by knowing that anything that's different is
+ridiculous; and sometimes by looking for tangent truths out of
+professorial ruts," Hugo observed with a sort of erudite
+discursiveness which was the rank dissimulation of a hypocrite to
+Pilzer and wholly confusing to Peterkin, not to say a draught on
+mental effort for many of the others. "For instance, I got a good
+one from two fellows of the Browns whom I met on the road the first
+day we arrived. They were reservists. We were soon talking together
+and so peaceably that I was sceptical if they were Browns at all.
+So I determined on a test. I told them I was from a distant
+province and hadn't travelled much and wouldn't they please take
+off their hats. They consented very good-naturedly."</p>
+<p>"Oh, good old Hugo! He got one on the Browns!"</p>
+<p>"I'd like to have been there to see it!"</p>
+<p>"And when they took off their hats, what then?"</p>
+<p>"Why, I said: 'This isn't convincing at all.'" Hugo's drawl
+paused for a second while interest developed. "'You haven't any
+horns! Haven't you any forked tails, either? Or are they curled up
+nicely inside your trousers' legs?'"</p>
+<p>"Whew! But they must have felt cheap to have been got in that
+way!"</p>
+<p>"And old Hugo looking so solemn!"</p>
+<p>"Just like he does now!"</p>
+<p>But the judge's son said under his breath, "Very pretty!" and
+the doctor's son, who was next him in the ranks, nodded
+understandingly.</p>
+<p>"It seems they had checked their horns and tails at the
+frontier," Hugo continued, "and, as I had left mine hanging in the
+rifle racks at the barracks, we got on together like real human
+beings. I found they could speak my language better than my
+lesson-book try at theirs&mdash;yes, as well as I can speak it
+myself&mdash;and that made it all the easier. After a while I
+mentioned the war. They were very amiable and they didn't begin to
+call me a swill-eating land-shark or any other of the pretty names
+I've heard they are so fond of using. 'We want to keep what is
+ours,' they said. 'Your side will have to start the fight by
+crossing the line. We shall not!"'</p>
+<p>"Because they know they'll be licked!" put in Pilzer hotly.</p>
+<p>"No, we may beat them in fighting," agreed Hugo, "but these two
+fellows had me beaten on the argument!"</p>
+<p>"They hauled down our flag! They insulted us in their
+despatches! They quibble! They're the perfidious Browns!" cried big
+Eugene Aronson, speaking the lesson taught him by the newspapers,
+which had it from the premier.</p>
+<p>"There, he's got you again, Gene!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, you funny old simpleton! You are almost too easy!"</p>
+<p>There was something of the vivacity of the barrack-room banter
+in the exclamations at Eugene's expense. Yet they were not the
+same. The look on no man's face was the same. The humorist was
+silent.</p>
+<p>"What next, Hugo?"</p>
+<p>He half stared at them, and his mask was not solemn but
+tragic.</p>
+<p>"I was thinking how men work their courage up, as if patriotism
+were a Moloch of which they were afraid," he said. "How in order to
+get killed we go out to kill others, when right is on their side!
+How you, Armand, or you, Eugene, might be dead before to-morrow!
+How&mdash;."</p>
+<p>"The bullet is not made that will get me!" exclaimed Eugene,
+with a swelling breath from his bellows-like lungs.</p>
+<p>"Take him home to mother!" groaned Pilzer.</p>
+<p>"That will do for you, Hugo Mallin!" came another interruption,
+a sharp one from Captain Fracasse, who had returned unobserved from
+the rear in time to overhear Hugo's remarks. "And that's the way to
+talk, Aronson and Pilzer. As for you, Mallin, I've a mind to put
+you under arrest and send you back for a coward! A coward&mdash;do
+you hear?"</p>
+<p>"Ah-h!" breathed Pilzer in a guttural of satisfaction.</p>
+<p>Hugo crimsoned at first in confusion, then he looked frankly and
+unflinchingly at the captain.</p>
+<p>"Very well, sir!" he said with a certain dignity which Fracasse,
+who was a good deal of a martinet, found very irritating.</p>
+<p>"No, that would suit you too well!" Fracasse declared. "You
+shall stay! You shall do the duty for which your country trained
+you and take your share of the chances."</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir!" answered Hugo. "But won't you," he asked
+persuasively and with the wondering inquiry of the suggestion that
+had sprung into his heretic brain, "won't you ask the men if there
+are not some here who really, in their hearts, the logic of their
+hearts&mdash;which is often better than brain logic&mdash;do not
+believe just as I do?"</p>
+<p>"Have you gone insane? There are none!" In the impulse of anger
+that swept his cheeks with a red wave Fracasse half drew his sword
+as if he would strike Hugo. "And, Mallin, you are a marked man. I
+shall watch you! I'll have the lieutenants and sergeants watch you.
+At the first sign of flunking I'll make an example of you!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir," answered Hugo, with the automatic deference of
+private to officer but with a reserved and studious inquiry that
+made the captain bite his lip.</p>
+<p>"I'll have Aronson and Pilzer watch you, too!" Fracasse
+added.</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir!" said Pilzer promptly.</p>
+<p>Then, under the restraint of the captain's presence, there was a
+silence that endured. The men were left to the sole resource of
+their thoughts and observation of their surroundings. They were
+lying in a pasture facing the line of white posts whose tops ran in
+an even row over level ground. On the other side of the boundary
+was a wheat-field. Here a farmer had commenced his fall ploughing.
+His plough was in the furrow where he had left it when he unhitched
+his team for the day, before an orderly had come to tell him that
+he must move out of his house overnight. The wheat stubble swept on
+up to a knoll in the distance.</p>
+<p>All the landscape in front of Fracasse's company seemed to have
+been deserted; no moving figures were anywhere in sight; no sign of
+the enemy's infantry. No trains came or went along the lines of
+steel into the mountain tunnel, which had been mined at a dozen
+points by the Browns. No vehicles and no foot-passengers dotted the
+highway into the town. Over the mountains and over the plain,
+planes and dirigibles moved in wide circles restively, watching for
+a signal as hawks watch for prey. Suspense this&mdash;suspense of
+such a swift vibration that it was like a taut G string of a violin
+under the bow!</p>
+<p>Faintly the town clock was heard striking the hour. From eight
+to nine and nine to ten Fracasse's men waited; waited until the
+machine was ready and Westerling should throw in the clutch; waited
+until the troops were in place for the first move before he hurled
+his battalions forward. Every pawn of flesh facing the white posts
+had a thousand thoughts whirling in such a medley that he could be
+said to have no thought at all, only an impression juggled by
+destiny. No one would have confessed what he felt, while physical
+inactivity gave free rein to mental activity. That thing of a
+nation's nightmare; that thing for which generations had drilled
+without its materializing; that thing of speculation, of hazard, of
+horror; that thing of quick action and long-enduring consequences
+was coming.</p>
+<p>They did not know how the captain at their back received his
+orders; they only heard the note of the whistle, with a command
+familiar to a trained instinct on the edge of anticipation. It
+released a spring in their nerve-centres. They responded as the
+wheels respond when the throttle is opened. Jumping to their feet
+they broke into a run, bodies bent, heads down, like the peppered
+silhouette that faced Westerling's desk. What they had done
+repeatedly in drills and man[oe]uvres they were now doing in war,
+mechanically as marionettes.</p>
+<p>"Come on! The bullet is not made that can get me! Come on!"
+cried the giant Eugene Aronson.</p>
+<p>He leaped over a white post and then over the plough, which was
+also in his path. Little Peterkin felt his legs trembling. They
+seemed to be detached from his will, and the company's and the
+captain's will, and churning in pantomime or not moving at all. If
+Hugo Mallin had been called a coward, what of himself? What of the
+stupid of the company, who would never learn even the manual of
+arms correctly, as the drill-sergeant often said? A new fear made
+him glance around. He would not have been surprised to find that he
+was already in the rear. But instead he found that he was keeping
+up, which was all that was necessary, as more than one other man
+assured his legs. After thirty or forty yards most of the legs, if
+not Peterkin's, had worked out their shiver and nearly all felt the
+exhilaration of movement in company. Then came the sound that
+generations had drilled for without hearing; the sound that summons
+the imagination of man in the thought of how he will feel and act
+when he hears it; the sound that is everywhere like the song
+snatches of bees driven whizzing through the air.</p>
+<p>"That's it! We're under fire! We're under fire!" flashed as
+crooked lightning recognition of the sound through every brain.</p>
+<p>There was no sign of any enemy; no telling where the bullets
+came from.</p>
+<p>"Such a lot of them, one must surely get me!" Peterkin
+thought.</p>
+<p>Whish-whish! Th-ipp-whing! The refrain gripped his imagination
+with an unseen hand. He seemed to be suffocating. He wanted to
+throw himself down and hold his hands in front of his head. While
+Pilzer and Aronson were not thinking, only running, Peterkin was
+thinking with the rapidity of a man falling from a high building.
+Worse! He did not know how far he had to go. He was certain only
+that he was bound to strike ground.</p>
+<p>"An inch is as good as a mile!" He recollected the captain's
+teaching. "Only one of a thousand bullets fired in war ever kills a
+man"&mdash;but he was certain that he had heard a million already.
+Then one passed very close, its swift breath brushing his cheek
+with a whistle like a s-s-st through the teeth. He dodged so hard
+that he might have dislocated his neck; he gasped and half
+stumbled, but realized that he had not been hit. And he must keep
+right on going, driven by one fear against another, in face of
+those ghastly whispers which the others, for the most part, in the
+excitement of a charge, had ceased to hear.</p>
+<p>Again he would be sure that his legs, which he was urging so
+frantically to their duty, were not playing pantomime. He looked
+around to find that he was still keeping up with Eugene and felt
+the thrill of the bravery of fellowship at sight of the giant's
+flushed, confident face revelling in the spirit of a charge. And
+then, just then, Eugene convulsively threw up his arms, dropped his
+rifle, and whirled on his heel. As he went down his hand clutched
+at his left breast and came away red and dripping. After one wild,
+backward glance, Peterkin plunged ahead.</p>
+<p>"Eugene!" Hugo Mallin had stopped and bent over Eugene in the
+supreme instinct of that terrible second, supporting his comrade's
+head.</p>
+<p>"The bullet is not&mdash;made&mdash;." Eugene whispered, the
+ruling passion strong to the last. A flicker of the eyelids, a
+gurgle in the throat, and he was dead.</p>
+<p>Fracasse had been right behind them. The sight of a man falling
+was something for which he was prepared; something inevitably a
+part of the game. A man down was a man out of the fight, service
+finished. A man up with a rifle in his hand was a man who ought to
+be in action.</p>
+<p>"Here, you are not going to get out this way!" he said in the
+irritation of haste, slapping Hugo with his sword. "Go on! That's
+hospital-corps work."</p>
+<p>Hugo had a glimpse of the captain's rigid features and a last
+one of Eugene's, white and still and yet as if he were about to
+speak his favorite boast; then he hurried on, his side glance
+showing other prostrate forms. One form a few yards away half rose
+to call "Hospital!" and fell back, struck mortally by a second
+bullet.</p>
+<p>"That's what you get if you forget instructions," said Fracasse
+with no sense of brutality, only professional exasperation, "Keep
+down, you wounded men!" he shouted at the top of his voice.</p>
+<p>The colonel of the 128th had not looked for immediate
+resistance. He had told Fracasse's men to occupy the knoll
+expeditiously. But by the common impulse of military training, no
+less than in answer to the whistle's call, in face of the withering
+fire they dropped to earth at the base of the knoll, where Hugo
+threw himself down at full length in his place in line next to
+Peterkin.</p>
+<p>"Fire pointblank at the crest in front of you! I saw a couple of
+men standing up there!" called Fracasse. "Fire fast! That's the way
+to keep down their fire&mdash;pointblank, I tell you! You're firing
+into the sky! I want to see more dust kicked up. Fire fast! We'll
+have them out of there soon! They're only an outpost."</p>
+<p>Hugo was firing vaguely, like a man in a dream, and thinking
+that maybe up there on the knoll were the two Browns he had met on
+the road and perhaps their comrades were as fond of them as he was
+of Eugene. It is a mistake for a soldier to think much, as
+Westerling had repeatedly said.</p>
+<p>Pilzer was shooting to kill. His eye had the steely gleam of his
+rifle sight and the liver patch on his cheek was a deeper hue as he
+sought to avenge Eugene's death. Drowned by the racket of their own
+fire, not even Peterkin was hearing the whish-whish of the bullets
+from Dellarme's company now. He did not know that the blacksmith's
+son, who was the fourth man from him, lay with his chin on his
+rifle stock and a tiny trickle of blood from a hole in his forehead
+running down the bridge of his nose.</p>
+<p>Fracasse, glancing along from rifle to rifle, as a weaver
+watches the threads of a machine loom, saw that Hugo was firing at
+too high an angle.</p>
+<p>"Mallin!" he called. Hugo did not hear because of the noise, and
+Fracasse had to creep nearer, which was anything but cooling to his
+temper. "You fool! You are shooting fifty feet above the top of the
+knoll! Look along your sight!" he yelled.</p>
+<p>Fracasse observed, with some surprise, that Hugo's hand was
+steady as he carefully drew a bead. Hugo saw a spurt of dust at the
+point slightly below the crest where he aimed; for he was the best
+shot in the company at target practice.</p>
+<p>"I'm not killing anybody!" he thought happily.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XIX' id="XIX"></a>
+<h2>XIX</h2>
+<h3>RECEIVING THE CHARGE</h3>
+<br>
+<p>What about Stransky of the Reds, who would not fight to please
+the ruling classes? What about Grandfather Fragini, who would fight
+on principle whenever a Gray was in sight? Now we leave the story
+of Fracasse's men at the foot of the knoll for that of the Browns
+on the crest.</p>
+<p>Young Dellarme, new to his captain's rank, with lips pressed
+tightly together, his delicately moulded, boyish features
+reflecting the confidence which it was his duty to inspire in his
+company, watching the plain through his glasses, saw the movement
+of mounted officers to the rear of the 128th as a reason for
+summoning his men.</p>
+<p>"Creep up! Don't show yourselves! Creep
+up&mdash;carefully&mdash;carefully!" he kept repeating as they
+crawled forward on their stomachs. "And no one is to fire until the
+command comes."</p>
+<p>Hugging the cover of the ridge of fresh earth which they had
+thrown up the previous night, they watched the white posts.
+Stransky, who had been ruminatively silent all the morning, was in
+his place, but he was not looking at the enemy. Cautiously, to
+avoid a reprimand, he raised his head to enable him to glance along
+the line. All the faces seemed drawn and clayish.</p>
+<p>"They don't want to fight! They're just here because they're
+ordered here and haven't the character to defy authority," he
+thought. "The leaven is working! My time is coming!"</p>
+<p>But Grandfather Fragini's cheeks had a hectic flush; his heart
+was beating with the exhilaration of an old war-horse. Looking over
+Tom's shoulder, he squinted into the distance, his underlip
+quivering against his toothless gums.</p>
+<p>"My eyesight's kind of uncertain," he said. "Can you see
+'em?"</p>
+<p>"There by the white posts&mdash;those lying figures!" said Tom.
+"They're almost the color of the stubble."</p>
+<p>"So I do, the land-sharks! Down on their bellies, too! No flag,
+either! But that ain't no reason why we shouldn't have a flag. It
+ought to be waving at 'em in defiance right over our heads!"</p>
+<p>"Flags draw fire. They let the enemy know where you are,' Tom
+explained.</p>
+<p>"The Hussars didn't bother about that. We let out a yell and
+went after 'em!" growled grandfather. "Appears to me the fighting
+these days is grovelling in the dirt and taking care nobody don't
+get hurt!"</p>
+<p>"Oh, there'll be enough hurt&mdash;don't you worry about that!"
+said a voice from the line.</p>
+<p>"Good thing an old fellow who's been under fire is along to
+stiffen you rookies!" replied grandfather tartly. "You'll be all
+right once you get going. You'll settle down to be real soldiers
+yet. And I'd like to hear a little more cussing. How the Hussars
+used to cuss! Too much reading and writing nowadays. It makes men
+too ladylike."</p>
+<p>By this time he had once more attracted the captain's
+attention.</p>
+<p>"Grandfather Fragini, you must drop back&mdash;you must! If you
+don't, I'll have you carried back!" called Dellarme, sparing the
+old man only a glance from his concentrated observation on the
+front.</p>
+<p>When he looked again at the enemy any thought of carrying out
+his threat vanished, for the minute had come when all his training
+was to be put to a test. The figures on the other side of the white
+posts were rising. He was to prove by the way he directed a company
+of infantry in action whether or not he was worthy of his captain's
+rank. He breathed one of those unspoken prayers that are made to
+the god of one's own efficient, conscientious responsibility to
+duty. The words of it were: "May I keep my head as if I were at
+drill!" Then he smiled cheerily. In order that he might watch how
+each man used his rifle, he drew back of the line, his slim body
+erect as he rested on one knee, his head level with the other heads
+while he fingered his whistle. His lieutenants followed his example
+even to the detail of his cheery smile. There was a slight stirring
+of heads and arms as eyes drew beads on human targets. The instant
+that Eugene Aronson sprang over the white post a blast from
+Dellarme's whistle began the war.</p>
+<p>It was a signal, too, for Stransky to play the part he had
+planned; to make the speech of his life. His six feet of stature
+shot to its feet with a Jack-in-the-box abruptness, under the
+impulse of a mighty and reckless passion.</p>
+<p>"Men, stop firing!" he cried thunderously. "Stop firing on your
+brothers! Like you, they are only the pawns of the ruling class,
+who keep us all pawns in order that they may have champagne and
+caviare. Comrades, I'll lead you! Comrades, we'll take a white flag
+and go down to meet our comrades and we'll find that they think as
+we do! I'll lead you!"</p>
+<p>Grandfather Fragini, impelled by the hysterical call of the
+Hussar spirit, also sprang up, waving his hat and trembling and
+swaying with the emotion that racked his old body.</p>
+<p>"Give it to 'em! Aim low! Give it to 'em&mdash;give it to 'em,
+horns and hoofs, sabre and carbine!" he shouted in a high, jumpy
+voice. "Give it to 'em! Make 'em weep! Make 'em whine! Make 'em
+bellow!"</p>
+<p>Both appeals were drowned in the cracking of the rifles working
+as regularly as punching-machines in a factory. Every soldier was
+seeing only his sight and the running figures under it.
+Mechanically and automatically, training had been projected into
+action, anticipation into realization. A spectator might as well
+have called to a man in a hundred-yard dash to stop running, to an
+oarsman in a race to jump out of his shell.</p>
+<p>So centred was Dellarme in watching his men and the effect of
+their fire that he did not notice the two silhouettes on the
+sky-line, making ridicule of all his care about keeping his company
+under cover, until the doctor, who alone had nothing to do as yet,
+touched him on the arm. At the moment he looked around, and before
+he could speak a command, a hospital-corps man who was near
+Grandfather Fragini threw himself in a low tackle and brought the
+old man to earth, while the company sergeant sprang for Stransky
+with an oath. But Stransky was in no mood to submit. He felled the
+sergeant with a blow and, recklessly defiant, stared at Dellarme,
+while the men, steadily firing, were still oblivious of the scene.
+The sergeant, stunned, rose to his knees and reached for his
+revolver. Dellarme, bent over to keep his head below the crest, had
+already drawn his as he hastened toward them.</p>
+<p>"Stransky," said Dellarme, "you have struck an officer under
+fire! You have refused to fight! Within the law I am warranted in
+shooting you dead!"</p>
+<p>"Well!" answered Stransky, throwing back his head, his face
+seeming all big, bony nose and heavy jaw and burning eyes.</p>
+<p>"Will you get down? Will you take your place with your rifle?"
+demanded Dellarme.</p>
+<p>Stransky laughed thunderously in scorn. He was handsome,
+titanic, and barbaric, with his huge shoulders stretching his
+blouse, which fell loosely around his narrow hips, while the fist
+that had felled the sergeant was still clenched.</p>
+<p>"No!" said Stransky. "You won't kill much if you kill me and
+you'd kill less if you shot yourself! God Almighty! Do you think
+I'm afraid? Me&mdash;afraid?"</p>
+<p>His eyes in a bloodshot glare, as uncompromising as those of a
+bull in an arena watching the next move of the red cape of the
+matador, regarded Dellarme, who hesitated in the revulsion of the
+horror of killing and in admiration of the picture of human force
+before him. But the old sergeant, smarting under the insult of the
+blow, his sandstone features mottled with red patches, had no
+compunctions of this order. He was ready to act as executioner.</p>
+<p>"If you don't want to shoot, I can! An example&mdash;the law!
+There's no other way of dealing with him! Give the word!" he said
+to Dellarme.</p>
+<p>Stransky laughed, now in strident cynicism. It was the laugh of
+the red, of bastardy, of blanketless nights in the hedgerows, and
+boot soles worn through to the macadam, with the dust of speeding
+automobiles blown in the gaunt face of hunger. Dellarme still
+hesitated, recollecting Lanstron's remark. He pictured Stransky in
+a last stand in a redoubt, and every soldier was as precious to him
+as a piece of gold to a miser.</p>
+<p>"One ought to be enough to kill me if you're going to do it to
+slow music," said Stransky. "You might as well kill me as the poor
+fools that your poor fools are trying to&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Another breath finished the speech; a breath released from a
+ball that seemed to have come straight from hell. The fire-control
+officer of a regiment of Gray artillery on the plain, scanning the
+landscape for the origin of the rifle-fire which was leaving many
+fallen in the wake of the charge of the Gray infantry, had seen two
+figures on the knoll. "How kind! Thank you!" his thought spoke
+faster than words. No need of range-finding! The range to every
+possible battery or infantry position around La Tir was already
+marked on his map. He passed the word to his guns.</p>
+<p>The burst of their first shrapnel-shell blinded all three actors
+in the scene on the crest of the knoll with its ear-splitting crack
+and the force of its concussion threw Stransky down beside the
+sergeant. Dellarme, as his vision cleared, had just time to see
+Stransky jerk his hand up to his temple, where there was a red
+spot, before another shell burst, a little to the rear. This was
+harmless, as a shrapnel's shower of fragments and bullets carry
+forward from the point of explosion. But the next burst in front of
+the line. The doctor's period of idleness was over. One man's rifle
+shot up as his spine was broken by a jagged piece of shrapnel
+jacket. Now there were too many shells to watch them
+individually.</p>
+<p>"It's all right&mdash;all right, men!" Dellarme called again,
+assuming his cheery smile. "It takes a lot of shrapnel to kill
+anybody. Our batteries will soon answer!"</p>
+<p>His voice was unheard, yet its spirit was felt. The men knew
+through their training that there was no use of dodging and that
+their best protection was an accurate fire of their own.</p>
+<p>"Shelling us, the &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;- &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;!"
+gasped Grandfather Fragini, who had experience, if he were weak in
+reading and writing. "All noise and smoke!"&mdash;as it was to a
+larger degree in his day.</p>
+<p>Stransky had half risen, a new kind of savagery dawning on his
+features as he regained his wits. With inverted eyes he regarded
+the red ends of his fingers, held in line with the bridge of his
+nose. He felt of the wound again, now that he was less dizzy. It
+was only a scratch and he had been knocked down like a beef in an
+abattoir by an unseen enemy, on whom he could not lay hands! He
+glared around as if in search of the hidden antagonist. The
+sergeant had crept forward to be a steadying influence to the men
+in their first trial, if need be, and the doctor and a
+hospital-corps man were dragging a wounded man out of fine without
+exposing their own shoulders above the crest. Stransky rolled his
+eyes in and out; the tendons of his neck swelled; his jaw worked as
+if crunching pebbles. Deafeningly, the shrapnel jackets continued
+to crack with "ukung-s-sh&mdash;ukung-s-sh" as the swift breath of
+the shrapnel missiles spread.</p>
+<p>"Give it to 'em! Give it to 'em!" Grandfather Fragini cried, his
+old voice a quavering bird note in the pandemonium. "My, but they
+do come fast!" he gasped.</p>
+<p>Yes, a trifle faster than in your day, grandfather, when a gun
+of the horse-artillery had to be relaid after the recoil, which is
+now taken up by an oil chamber, while the gunner on his seat behind
+the breech keeps the sight steady on the target. The guns of one
+battery of that Gray regiment of artillery, each firing six
+fourteen-pound shells a minute methodically, every shell loaded
+with nearly two hundred projectiles, were giving their undivided
+attention to the knoll.</p>
+<p>How long could his company endure this? Dellarme might well ask.
+He knew that he would not be expected to withdraw yet. With a sense
+of relief he saw Fracasse's men drop for cover at the base of the
+knoll and then, expectation fulfilled, he realized that rifle-fire
+now reinforced the enemy's shell fire. His duty was to remain while
+he could hold his men, and a feeling toward them such as he had
+never felt before, which was love, sprang full-fledged into his
+heart as he saw how steadily they kept up their fusillade.</p>
+<p>The sergeant, who now had time to think of Stransky, was seized
+with a spasm of retributive rage. He drew his revolver
+determinedly.</p>
+<p>"You brought this on! I'll do for you!" he cried, turning toward
+the spot where he had left Stransky, only to lower his revolver in
+amazement as he saw Stransky, eager in response to a new passion,
+spring forward into place and pick up his rifle.</p>
+<p>"If you will not have it my way, take it yours!" said the best
+shot in the company, as he began firing with resolute coolness.</p>
+<p>"They have a lot of men down," said Dellarme, his glasses
+showing the many prostrate figures on the wheat stubble. "Steady!
+steady! We have plenty of batteries back in the hills. One will be
+in action soon."</p>
+<p>But would one? He understood that with their smokeless powder
+the Gray guns could be located only by their flashes, which would
+not be visible unless the refraction of light were favorable. Then
+"thur-eesh&mdash;thur-eesh" above every other sound in a long wail!
+No man ever forgets the first crack of a shrapnel at close
+quarters, the first bullet breath on his cheek, or the first
+supporting shell from his side in flight that passes above him.</p>
+<p>"That is ours!" called Dellarme.</p>
+<p>"Ours!" shouted the sergeant.</p>
+<p>"Ours!" sang the thought of every one of the men.</p>
+<p>Over the Gray batteries on the plain an explosive ball of smoke
+hung in the still air; then another beside it.</p>
+<p>"Thur-eesh&mdash;thur-eesh&mdash;thur-eesh," the screaming overhead
+became a gale that built a cloud of blue smoke over the offending
+Gray batteries&mdash;beautiful, soft blue smoke from which a spray
+of steel descended. There was no spotting the flashes of the
+Browns' guns in order to reply to them, for they were under the
+cover of a hill, using indirect aim as nicely and accurately as In
+firing pointblank. The gunners of the Gray batteries could not go
+on with their work under such a hail-storm, they were checkmated.
+They stopped firing and began moving to a new position, where their
+commander hoped to remain undiscovered long enough to support the
+128th by loosing his lightnings against the defenders at the
+critical moment of the next charge, which would be made as soon as
+Fracasse's men had been reinforced.</p>
+<p>There was an end to the concussions and the thrashing of the air
+around Dellarme's men, and they had the relief of a breaking
+abscess in the ear. But they became more conscious of the spits of
+dust in front of their faces and the passing whistles of bullets.
+In return, they made the sections of Gray infantry in reserve
+rushing across the levels, leave many gray lumps behind. But
+Fracasse's men at the foot of the slope poured in a heavier and
+still heavier fire.</p>
+<p>"Down there's where we need the shells now!" spoke the thought
+of Dellarme's men, which he had anticipated by a word to the signal
+corporal, who waved his flag
+one&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;four&mdash;five times. Come on,
+now, with more of your special brand of death, fire-control
+officer! Your own head is above the sky-line, though your guns are
+hidden. Five hundred yards beyond the knoll is the range! Come
+on!</p>
+<p>He came with a burst of screams so low in flight that they
+seemed to brush the back of the men's necks with a hair broom at
+the rate of a thousand feet a second. Having watched the result,
+Dellarme turned with a confirmatory gesture, which the corporal
+translated into the wigwag of "Correct!" The shrapnel smoke hanging
+over Fracasse's men appeared a heavenly blue to Dellarme's men.</p>
+<p>"They are going to start for us soon! Oh, but we'll get a lot of
+them!" whispered Stransky gleefully to his rifle.</p>
+<p>Dellarme glanced again toward the colonel's station. No sign of
+the retiring flag. He was glad of that. He did not want to fall
+back in face of a charge; to have his men silhouetted in the valley
+as they retreated. And the Grays would not endure this shower-bath
+long without going one way or the other. He gave the order to fix
+bayonets, and hardly was it obeyed when he saw flashes of steel
+through the shrapnel smoke as the Grays fixed theirs. The Grays had
+five hundred yards to go; the Browns had the time that it takes
+running men to cover the distance in which to stop the Grays.</p>
+<p>"We'll spear any of them who has the luck to get this far!"
+whispered Stransky to his rifle. The sentence was spoken in the
+midst of a salvo of shrapnel cracks, which he did not hear. He
+heard nothing, thought nothing, except to kill.</p>
+<p>The Gray batteries on the plain, having taken up a new position
+and being reinforced, played on the crest at top speed instantly
+the Gray line rose and started up the slope at the run. With the
+purpose of confusing no less than killing, they used percussion,
+which burst on striking the ground, as well as shrapnel, which
+burst by a time-fuse in the air. Fountains of sod and dirt shot
+upward to meet descending sprays of bullets. The concussions of the
+earth shook the aim of Dellarme's men, blinded by smoke and dust,
+as they fired through a fog at bent figures whose legs were pumping
+fast in dim pantomime.</p>
+<p>But the guns of the Browns, also, have word that the charge has
+begun. The signal corporal is waiting for the gesture from Dellarme
+agreed upon as an announcement. The Brown artillery commander cuts
+his fuses two hundred and fifty yards shorter. He, too, uses
+percussion for moral effect.</p>
+<p>Half of the distance from the foot to the crest of the knoll
+Fracasse's men have gone in face of the hot, sizzling tornado of
+bullets, when there is a blast of explosions in their faces with
+all the chaotic and irresistible force of a volcanic eruption. Not
+only are they in the midst of the first lot of the Browns' shells
+at the shorter range, but one Gray battery has either made a
+mistake in cutting its fuses or struck a streak of powder below
+standard, and its shells burst among those whom it is aiming to
+assist.</p>
+<p>The ground seems rising under the feet of Fracasse's company;
+the air is split and racked and wrenched and torn with hideous
+screams of invisible demons. The men stop; they act on the
+uncontrollable instinct of self-preservation against an
+overwhelming force of nature. A few without the power of locomotion
+drop, faces pressed to the ground. The rest flee toward a shoulder
+of the slope through the instinct that leads a hunted man in a
+street into an alley. In a confusion of arms and legs, pressing one
+on the other, no longer soldiers, only a mob, they throw themselves
+behind the first protection that offers itself. Fracasse also runs.
+He runs from the flame of a furnace door suddenly thrown open.</p>
+<p>The Gray batteries have ceased firing; certain gunners' ears
+burn under the words of inquiry as to the cause of the mistake from
+an artillery commander. Dellarme's men are hugging the earth too
+close to cheer. A desire to spring up and yell may be in their
+hearts, but they know the danger of showing a single unnecessary
+inch of their craniums above the sky-line. The sounds that escape
+their throats are those of a winning team at a tug of war as
+diaphragms relax.</p>
+<p>With the smoke clearing, they see twenty or thirty Grays
+plastered on the slope at the point where the charge was checked.
+Every one of those prostrate forms is within fatal range. Not one
+moves a finger; even the living are feigning death in the hope of
+surviving. Among them is little Peterkin, so faithful in forcing
+his refractory legs to keep pace with his comrades. If he is always
+up with them they will never know what is in his heart and call him
+a coward. As he has been knocked unconscious, he has not been in
+the pell-mell retreat.</p>
+<p>His first stabbing thought on coming to was that he must be
+dead; but, no; he was opening his eyes sticky with dust. At least,
+he must be wounded! He had not power yet to move his hands in order
+to feel where, and when they grew alive enough to move, what he saw
+in front of him held them frigidly still. His nerves went searching
+from his head to his feet and&mdash;miracle of Heaven!&mdash;found
+no point of pain or spot soppy with blood. If he were really hit
+there was bound to be one or the other, he knew from reading.</p>
+<p>Between him and the faces of the Browns&mdash;yes, the actual,
+living, terrible Browns&mdash;above the glint of their rifle
+barrels, was no obstacle that could stop a bullet, though not more
+than three feet away was a crater made by a shell burst. The black
+circle of every muzzle on the crest seemed to be pointing at him.
+When were they going to shoot? When was he to be executed? Would he
+be shot in many places and die thus? Or would the very first bullet
+go through his head? Why didn't they fire? What were they waiting
+for? The suspense was unbearable. The desperation of overwhelming
+fear driving him in irresponsible impulse, he doubled up his legs
+and with a cat's leap sprang for the crater.</p>
+<p>A blood-curdling burst of whistles passed over his head as a
+dozen rifles cracked. This time he was surely killed! He was in
+some other world! Which was it, the good or the bad? The good, for
+he had a glimpse of blue sky. No, that could not be, for he had
+been alive when he leaped for the crater, and there he was pressed
+against the soft earth of its bottom. He burrowed deeper
+blissfully. He was the nearest to the enemy of any man of the
+128th, and he certainly had passed through a gamut of emotions in
+the half-hour since Eugene Aronson had leaped over a white
+post.</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>"Confound it! If we'd kept on we'd have got them! Now we have to
+do it all over again!" growled Fracasse distractedly as he looked
+around at the faces hugging the cover of the shoulder&mdash;faces
+asking, What next? each in its own way; faces blank and white;
+faces with lips working and eyes blinking; faces with the blood
+rushing back to cheeks in baffled anger. One, however, was half
+smiling&mdash;Hugo Mallin's.</p>
+<p>"You did your share of the running, I'll warrant, Mallin!" said
+Fracasse excitedly, venting his disgust on a particular object.</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir," answered Hugo. "It was very hard to maintain a
+semblance of dignity. Yes, sir, I kept near you all the time so you
+could watch me. Wasn't that what you wanted me to do, sir?"</p>
+<p>"Good old Hugo! The same old Hugo!" breathed the spirit of the
+company. Three or four men burst into a hysterical laugh as if
+something had broken in their throats. Everybody felt better for
+this touch of drollery except the captain. Yet, possibly, it may
+have helped him in recovering his poise. Sometimes even a pin-prick
+will have this effect.</p>
+<p>"Silence!" he said in his old manner. "I will give you something
+to joke about other than a little setback like this! Get up there
+with your rifles!"</p>
+<p>He formed the nucleus of a firing-line under cover of the
+shoulder, and then set the remainder of his company to work with
+their spades making a trench. The second battalion of the 128th,
+which faced the knoll, was also digging at the base of the slope,
+and another regiment in reserve was deploying on the plain. After
+the failure to rush the knoll the Gray commander had settled down
+to the business of a systematic approach.</p>
+<p>And what of those of Fracasse's men who had not run but had
+dropped in their tracks when the charge halted? They were between
+two lines of fire. There was no escape. Some of the wounded had a
+mercifully quick end, others suffered the consciousness of being
+hit again and again; the dead were bored through with bullet holes.
+In torture, the survivors prayed for death; for all had to die
+except Peterkin, the pasty-faced little valet's son.</p>
+<p>Peterkin was quite safe, hugging the bottom of the shell crater
+under a swarm of hornets. In a surprisingly short time he became
+accustomed to the situation and found himself ravenously hungry,
+for the strain of the last twelve hours had burned up tissue. He
+took a biscuit out of his knapsack and began nibbling it, as became
+a true rodent.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XX' id="XX"></a>
+<h2>XX</h2>
+<h3>MARTA'S FIRST GLIMPSE OF WAR</h3>
+<br>
+<p>As Marta and the children came to the door of the chapel after
+the recitation of the oath, she saw the civil population moving
+along the street in the direction of the range. Suddenly they
+paused in a common impulse and their heads turned as one head on
+the fulcrum of their necks, and their faces as one face in a set
+stare looked skyward.</p>
+<p>"Keep on moving! No danger!" called the major of the brigade
+staff. "Pass the word&mdash;no danger! It's not going to drop any
+bombs; it's only a scout plane trying to locate the positions of
+the defences we've thrown up overnight. No danger&mdash;keep
+moving!"</p>
+<p>He might as well have tried to distract the attention of the
+grand stand from the finish of a horse-race. More than the wizard's
+spell, years before, at the first sight of man in flight held them
+in suspense as they watched a plane approaching with the speed of
+an albatross down the wind straight on a line with the church tower
+where the sharpshooters were posted. The spread of the wings grew
+broader; the motor was making a circle of light as large as a man's
+hat-box, and the aviator was the size of some enormous insect when
+three or four sharp reports were audible from the church tower.</p>
+<p>Still the plane came on intact over the spire. The sharpshooters
+had only rimmed the target, without injury to braces or engine. But
+they had another chance from the windows on the nearer side of the
+tower; and the crowd saw there the glint of rifle barrels. This
+time they got the bull's-eye. The aviator reeled and dropped
+sidewise, a dead weight caught by the braces, with his arm
+dangling. A teetering dip of the plane and his body was shaken
+free. His face, as he neared the earth in his descent, bore the
+surprised look of a man thumped on the back unexpectedly.</p>
+<p>Marta pressed her fingers to her ears, but not soon enough to
+keep out the sound of a thud on the roof of the building across the
+street from the chapel.</p>
+<p>"I was a coward to do that! I shall see worse things!" she
+thought, and went to the major, who had turned to the affairs of
+the living directly he saw that neither the corpse of the aviator
+nor the wreck of the plane was to strike in the street. "I will
+look after these children," she said, "and we will care for as many
+of the old and sick as we can in our house."</p>
+<p>"The children will find their relatives or guardians in the
+procession there," he answered methodically. "If they do not, the
+government will look after them. It will not do for you to take
+them to your house. That would only complicate the matter of their
+safety." Here he was interrupted by a precipitate question from one
+of his lieutenants, who had come running up. "No! No matter what
+the excuse, no one can remain!" he answered. "The nation is not
+going to take the risk of letting spies get information to the
+enemy for the sake of gratifying individual interests. Every one
+must go!" Then he called to an able-bodied citizen of thirty years
+or so in the procession: "Here, you, if you're not in the reserve I
+have work for you!"</p>
+<p>"But I was excused from army service on account of heart
+trouble!" explained the able-bodied citizen.</p>
+<p>"We all have heart trouble to-day," remarked the major pithily.
+"Men are giving up their lives in defence of you and your property.
+Every man of your age must do his share when required. Go with this
+orderly!" was the final and tart conclusion of the argument. "And
+see that he is made useful," he added to the orderly.</p>
+<p>An explosion in the factory district made windows rattle and
+brought an hysterical outcry from some of the women.</p>
+<p>"It's nothing!" the major called, in the assurance of a shepherd
+to his sheep. "Blowing up some building that furnish cover for the
+enemy's approach in front of our infantry positions! You will hear
+more of it. Don't worry! Do as you're told! Keep moving! Keep
+moving!"</p>
+<p>Now he had time to conclude what he had to say to Marta.</p>
+<p>"As your house will soon be under fire, it will be not refuge
+for the children; and, in any event, we should net want to leave
+them to the care of the Grays with the parents on our side," he
+explained in a manner none the less final because of its
+politeness. "Every detail has been systematically arranged under
+government supervision. Private efforts will only bring confusion
+and hardship where we would have order and all possible mercy. As
+for the old, the sick, and the infirm&mdash;those who cannot bear
+being carried far are being moved to the hospital and barracks
+outside the town."</p>
+<p>In proof of his words, ambulances and requisitioned carriages
+filled with the sick and infirm were already proceeding up one of
+the side streets.</p>
+<p>"It's not human, though!" Marta exclaimed in the desperation of
+helplessness.</p>
+<p>"No, it is war, which has a habit of being inhuman," replied the
+major, turning to call to a woman: "Now, madame, if you leave that
+pillow behind you will not be dropping your other things and having
+to stop all the time to pick them up!"</p>
+<p>"But it's the finest goose feathers and last year's crop!" said
+the woman; and then gasped: "Oh, Lord! I left my silver jug on the
+mantel!"</p>
+<p>"As I've told you before&mdash;as the printed slips we
+distributed when we woke you at dawn told you," said the major with
+some asperity, "you were to take only light things easily portable,
+and after you had gone, wagons would get what you had packed and
+left ready at the door of your houses, with your names clearly
+marked, up to two hundred pounds. The rest we trust to the mercy of
+the Grays."</p>
+<p>There was nothing for Marta to do but start homeward. The
+thought that her mother was alone made her hasten at a pace much
+more rapid than the procession of people, whose talk and
+exclamations formed a monotone audible in its nearness, despite the
+continuous rifle-fire, now broken by the pounding of the guns.</p>
+<p>"I wish I had brought the clock&mdash;it was my
+great-grandfather's."</p>
+<p>"Johnny, you keep close to me!"</p>
+<p>"And they've taken my wife off to the hospital&mdash;separated
+us!"</p>
+<p>Some were excruciatingly alive to the situation; others were in
+a daze. But one cry always roused them from their complaints;
+always brought a flash to the dullest eye: Retribution!
+retribution! Taken from their peaceful pursuits arbitrarily by the
+final authority of physical force, which they could not dispute,
+their minds turned in primitive passion to revenge through physical
+force.</p>
+<p>"I hope our army makes them pay!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, make them pay! Make them pay!"</p>
+<p>"It's all done to beat the Grays, isn't it, Miss Galland? They
+are trying to take our land," said Jacky Werther as Marta parted
+from him.</p>
+<p>"Yes, it is done to beat the Grays," she answered. "Good luck,
+Jacky!"</p>
+<p>Yes, yes, to beat the Grays! The same, idea&mdash;the fighting
+nature, the brute nature of man&mdash;animated both sides. Had the
+Browns really tried for peace? Had they, in the spirit of her oath,
+appealed to justice and reason? Why hadn't their premier before all
+the world said to the premier of the Grays, as one honest, friendly
+neighbor to another over a matter of dispute:</p>
+<p>"We do not want war. We know you outnumber us, but we know you
+would not take advantage of that. If we are wrong we will make
+amends; if you are wrong we know that you will. Let us not play
+tricks in secret to gain points, we civilized nations, but be frank
+with each other. Let us not try to irritate each other or to
+influence our people, but to realize how much we have in common and
+that our only purpose is common progress and happiness."</p>
+<p>But no. This was against the precedent of Cain, who probably got
+Abel into a cul-de-sac, handed down to the keeping of the Roman
+aristocrat, the baron, the first Galland, and the fat, pompous
+little man. It would deprive armies of an occupation. It would make
+statesmanship too simple and na&iuml;ve to have the distinction of
+craft, which gave one man the right to lead another. Both sides had
+to act in the old fashion of mutual suspicion and chicanery.</p>
+<p>She was overwrought in the fervor of her principles; she was in
+an anguish of protest. Her spirit, in arms against an overwhelming
+fact that was wrong, sinful, ridiculous, demanded some expression
+in action. Now she was half running, both running away from horror
+and toward horror; in a shuttle of resolutions and emotions: a
+being at war with war. Passing the head of the procession, she soon
+had the castle road to herself, except for orderlies on
+motor-cycles and horseback, until a train of automobile wagons
+loaded with household goods roared by. The full orchestra of war
+was playing right and left: crashing, high-pitched gun-booms near
+at hand; low-pitched, reverberating gun-booms in the distance. At
+the turn of the road in front of the castle she saw the gunners of
+the batteries that Feller had watched approaching making an
+emplacement for their guns in a field of carrots that had not yet
+been harvested. The roots of golden yellow were mixed with the
+tossing spadefuls of earth.</p>
+<p>A shadow like a great cloud in mad flight shot over the earth,
+and with the gunners she looked up to see a Gray dirigible. Already
+it was turning homeward; already it had gained its object as a
+scout. On the fragile platform of the gondola was a man, seemingly
+a human mite aiming a tiny toy gun. His target was one of the Brown
+aeroplanes.</p>
+<p>"They're in danger of cutting their own envelope! They can't get
+the angle! The plane is too high!" exclaimed the artillery
+commander. Both he and his men forgot their work in watching the
+spectacle of aerial David against aerial Goliath. "If our man lands
+with his little bomb, oh, my!" he grinned. "That's why he is so
+high. He's been waiting up there."</p>
+<p>"Pray God he will!" exclaimed one of the gunners.</p>
+<p>"Look at him volplane&mdash;motor at full speed, too!"</p>
+<p>The pilot was young Etzel, who, as Lanstron had observed, would
+charge a church tower if he were bidden. He was taking no risks in
+missing. His ego had no cosmos except that huge, oblong gas-bag. He
+drove for it as a hawk goes for its prey. One life for a number of
+lives&mdash;the sacrifice of a single aeroplane for a costly
+dirigible&mdash;that was an exchange in favor of the Browns. And
+Etzel had taken an oath in his heart&mdash;not standing on a
+caf&eacute; table&mdash;that he would never let any dirigible that
+he attacked escape.</p>
+<p>"Into it! Making sure! Oh, splen&mdash;O!" cried the artillery
+commander.</p>
+<p>A ball of lightning shot forth sheets of flame. Dirigible and
+plane were hidden in an ugly swirl of yellowish smoke, rolling out
+into a purple cloud that spread into prismatic mist over the
+descent of cavorting human bodies and broken machinery and twisted
+braces, flying pieces of tattered or burning cloth. David has taken
+Goliath down with him in a death grip.</p>
+<p>An aeroplane following the dirigible as a screen, hoping to get
+home with information if the dirigible were lost, had escaped the
+sharpshooters in the church tower by flying around the town.
+However, it ran within range of the automatic and the sharpshooters
+on top of the castle tower. They failed of the bull's-eye, but
+their bullets, rimming the target, crippling the motor, and cutting
+braces, brought the crumpling wings about the helpless pilot. The
+watching gunners uttered "Ahs!" of horror and triumph as they saw
+him fall, gliding this way and that, in the agony of slow
+descent.</p>
+<p>"Come, now!" called the artillery commander. "We are wasting
+precious time."</p>
+<p>Entering the grounds of the Galland house, Marta had to pass to
+one side of the path, now blocked by army wagons and engineers'
+materials and tools. Soldiers carrying sand-bags were taking the
+shortest cut, trampling the flowers on their way.</p>
+<p>"Do you know whose property this is?" she demanded in a burst of
+anger.</p>
+<p>"Ours&mdash;the nation's!" answered one, perspiring freely at
+his work. "Sorry!" he added on second thought.</p>
+<p>Already parts of the first terrace were shoulder-high with
+sand-bags and one automatic had been set in place, Marta observed
+as she turned to the veranda. There her mother sat in her favorite
+chair, hands relaxed as they rested on its arms, while she looked
+out over the valley in the supertranquillity that comes to some
+women under a strain&mdash;as soldiers who have been on sieges can
+tell you&mdash;that some psychologists interpret one way and some
+another, none knowing even their own wives.</p>
+<p>"Marta, did any of the children come?" Mrs. Galland asked in her
+usual pleasant tone. So far as she was concerned, the activity on
+the terrace did not exist. She seemed oblivious of the fact of
+war.</p>
+<p>"Yes, seven."</p>
+<p>"And did you hold your session?"</p>
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+<p>Marta's monosyllables absently answering the questions were
+expressive of her wonder at her mother. Most girls do not know
+their mothers much better than psychologists know their wives.</p>
+<p>"I am glad of that, Marta. I am glad you went and sorry that I
+opposed your going, because, Marta, whatever happens one should go
+regularly about what he considers his duty," said Mrs. Galland.
+"They have been as considerate as they could, evidently by Colonel
+Lanstron's orders," she proceeded, nodding toward the industrious
+engineers. "And they've packed all the paintings and works of art
+and put them in the cellar, where they will be safe."</p>
+<p>The captain of engineers in command, seeing Marta, hurried
+toward her.</p>
+<p>"Miss Galland, isn't it?" he asked. "I have been waiting for
+you. I&mdash;I&mdash;well, I found that I could not make the
+situation clear to your mother."</p>
+<p>"He thinks me in my second childhood or out of my head," Mrs.
+Galland explained with a shade of tartness. "And he has been so
+polite in trying to conceal his opinion, too," she added with a
+comprehending smile.</p>
+<p>The captain flushed in embarrassment.</p>
+<p>"I&mdash;I can't speak too strongly," he declared when he had
+regained his composure. "Though everything seems safe here now, it
+may not be in an hour. You must go, all of you. This house will be
+in an inferno as soon as the 53d falls back, and I can't possibly
+get your mother to appreciate the fact, Miss Galland."</p>
+<p>"But I said that I did appreciate it and that the Gallands have
+been in infernos before&mdash;perhaps not as bad as the one that is
+coming&mdash;but, then, the Gallands must keep abreast of the
+times," replied Mrs. Galland. "I have asked Minna and she prefers
+to remain. I am glad of that. I am glad now that we kept her,
+Marta. She is as loyal as my old maid and the butler and the cook
+were to your grandmother in the last war. Ah, the Gallands had many
+servants then!"</p>
+<p>"This isn't like the old war. This place will be shelled,
+enfiladed! And you two&mdash;" the captain protested
+desperately.</p>
+<p>"I became a Galland when I married," said Mrs. Galland, "and the
+Galland women have always remained with their property in time of
+war. Naturally, I shall remain!"</p>
+<p>"Miss Galland, it was you&mdash;your influence I was counting on
+to&mdash;" The captain turned to Marta in a final appeal.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Galland was watching her daughter's face intently.</p>
+<p>"We stay!" replied Marta, and the captain saw in the depths of
+her eyes, a cold blue-black, that further argument was useless.</p>
+<p>With a shrug of his shoulders he was turning to go when his
+lieutenant, hurrying up and pointing to the row of lindens at the
+edge of the estate, exclaimed:</p>
+<p>"If we only had those trees out of the way! They cut the line of
+our fire! They form cover and protection for the enemy."</p>
+<p>"The orders are against it," replied the captain.</p>
+<p>"Lanstron may be a great soldier, but&mdash;" declared the
+lieutenant petulantly.</p>
+<p>"Cut the lindens if it will help the Browns!" called Mrs.
+Galland.</p>
+<p>"Cut the lindens, mother! Is everything to be
+destroyed&mdash;everything to satisfy the appetite of savagery?"
+exclaimed Marta. Then, in an abrupt change of mood, inexplicable to
+the captain and even to herself, she added: "My mother says to cut
+the lindens. And you will tell us when to go into the house?" Marta
+asked the captain.</p>
+<p>"Yes. There is no danger yet&mdash;none until we see the 53d
+falling back."</p>
+<p>What mockery, what uncanny staginess for either her mother or
+herself to be so calm! Yet, what else were they to do? Were they to
+scream? Or fall into each other's arms and sob? Marta found a
+strange pleasure in looking at her garden before it was spattered
+with blood, as it had been in the last war. It had never seemed
+more beautiful. There was a sublimity in nature's obliviousness to
+the thrashing of the air with shells in a gentle breeze that
+fluttered the petals of the hydrangeas.</p>
+<p>The sight of Feller coming along the path of the second terrace
+brought in sudden vividness to her mind that question which must
+soon be decided: whether or not she would allow him to remain to
+carry out his plan. He still had the garden-shears in hand. He was
+walking with the slow and soft step which was in keeping with the
+serenity of his occupation. Pausing before the chrysanthemum bed,
+he touched his hat, and as he awaited her approach he lifted one of
+the largest blooms that was drooping from its weight on the slender
+stem.</p>
+<p>"They look well, don't you think?" he asked cautiously; and he
+was very cool, while his eyes had a singular limpidity, speaking
+better than any words the sadness of his story and the dependence
+of his hope of regeneration upon her.</p>
+<p>"Yes, quite the best they ever have," she replied, inclined to
+look away from him, conscious of her sensitiveness to his appeal,
+and yet still looking at him, while she marvelled at him, at
+herself, at everything.</p>
+<p>"Thank you," he said. "You don't know how much that means, how
+pleased I am."</p>
+<p>Now came the sweep of a rising roar from the sky with the
+command to attention of the rush of a fast express-train past a
+country railway station. Two Gray dirigibles with their escort of
+aeroplanes&mdash;in formation like that which Mrs. Galland and
+Feller had seen race along the frontier&mdash;were bearing toward
+the pass over the pass road. One glimpse of the squadron was as a
+match to Feller's military passion. He swept off his old straw hat
+and with it all of the gardener's chrysalis. Feller the artillerist
+gazed aloft in feverish excitement.</p>
+<p>"Lanny has them guessing! They're bound to know his plans if it
+takes all the air craft in the shop!" he exclaimed. "And what are
+we doing? Yes, what are we doing?" he cried in alarm as his glance
+swept the sky in front of the squadron, already even with the
+terrace in its terrific speed.</p>
+<p>The automatic and the riflemen in the tower banged away to no
+purpose, for the aerostatic officers of the Grays had been apprised
+of the danger in that direction.</p>
+<p>"Minutes, seconds count! Where are our high-angle guns?" Feller
+went on. He was unconsciously gesticulating with all the fervor of
+hurrying a battery into place to cover an infantry retreat in a
+crisis. "And they're turning! What's the matter? What are
+high-angle guns for, anyway, with such targets naked over our
+lines? Ah-h! Beautiful!"</p>
+<p>The central sections of the envelope of the rear dirigible had
+been torn in shreds; it was buckling. Clouds of blue shrapnel smoke
+broke around its gondola. A number of field-guns joined forces with
+a battery of high-angle guns in a havoc that left a drifting
+derelict that had ceased to exist to Feller's mind immediately it
+was out of action; for he saw that the remainder of the squadron
+had completed its loop and was pointing toward the plain.</p>
+<p>"And they were low enough to see all they want to know and
+rising now&mdash;evidently already out of reach of our
+guns&mdash;and nothing against them!" he groaned as he saw a clear
+sky ahead of the big disk and its attending wings, while clenched
+fists pumping up and down with the movement of his forearms shook
+his whole body in a palpitation of angry disgust. "Lanny, what's
+the matter! Lanny, they've beaten you! Eh? What? What&mdash;" A
+long whistle broke from his lips. His body still, transfixed, he
+cupped his hands over his eyes. "So, that is it! That is your plan,
+Lanny, old boy!" he shouted. "But if one of their confounded little
+aviators gets back, he has the story!"</p>
+<p>From a great altitude, literally out of the blue of heaven, high
+over the Gray lines, Marta made out a Brown squadron of dirigibles
+and planes descending across the track of the Grays.</p>
+<p>"Catch them as they come back! Between them and
+home&mdash;between the badger and his hole!" Feller went on
+explosively; and then, while the two squadrons were approaching at
+countering angles, he breathed the thoughts that the spectacle
+aroused in his quick brain: "This is war&mdash;war! Talk about your
+old-fashioned, take-snuff-my-card-sir courage, pray-and-swear
+courage&mdash;what about this? What about old Lanny's chosen men of
+the air, without boasts or oaths, offering their lives in no wild
+charge, but coolly, hand on lever, concentratedly, scientifically,
+in sane, twentieth-century fashion, just to keep our positions
+secret! Now&mdash;now for it!"</p>
+<p>The Gray dirigibles, stern on, were little larger than umbrellas
+and the planes than swallows; the Brown dirigibles, side on, were
+big sausages and their planes specks. To the eye, this meeting was
+like that of two small flocks of soaring birds apparently unable to
+change their course. But imagination could picture the fearful
+crash of forces, whose wounded would find the succor of no hospital
+except impact on the earth below.</p>
+<p>Marta put her hands over her eyes for only a second, she
+thought, before she withdrew them in vexation&mdash;hadn't she
+promised herself not to be cowardly?&mdash;to see one Brown
+dirigible and two Brown aeroplanes ascending at a sharp angle above
+a cloud of smoke to escape the high-angle guns of the Grays.</p>
+<p>"We've got them all! No lips survive to tell what the eye saw!"
+exclaimed Feller, his words bubbling with the joy of water in the
+sunlight. "As I thought," he continued in professional enthusiasm
+and discrimination. "We are getting the theory of one feature of
+the new warfare in practice. It isn't like the popular dream of
+wiping out armies by dropping bombs as you sail overhead. The force
+of gravity is against the fliers. You have only to bring them to
+earth to put them out of action. Plane driven into plane dirigible
+into dirigible, and an end of bomb-dropping and scouting! War will
+still be won by the infantry and the guns. Yes, the guns&mdash;the
+new guns! They&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Feller recalled with a nervous shock flashing through his system
+that he was a gardener, a gentle old gardener. He put his hat back
+on a head already bent, while the shoulders, after a pathetic
+shrug, drew together in the accustomed stoop. His slim fingers
+slipped under the largest chrysanthemum blossom, his attitude the
+same as when he had held it up for Marta's inspection before they
+heard the roar of the Gray squadron's motors.</p>
+<p>"I think that we might cut them all now and fill the vases," he
+suggested, a musical, ingratiating note in his voice. "To-morrow we
+may not have a chance."</p>
+<p>"Yes," she agreed mechanically, her thoughts still dwelling on
+the collision of the squadrons.</p>
+<p>"And some of the finest ones for you to take now," he added,
+plying the shears as he made his selections. "I'll bring the rest,"
+he concluded when he had gathered a dozen choice blossoms.</p>
+<p>His fingers touched hers as the stems changed hands. In his
+eyes, showing just below the rim of his hat, was the light which
+she had seen first during the dramatic scene in his sitting-room
+and the appeal of deference, of suffering, and of the boyish hope
+of a cadet.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXI' id="XXI"></a>
+<h2>XXI</h2>
+<h3>SHE CHANGES HER MIND</h3>
+<br>
+<p>The indefatigable captain of engineers had turned spectator.
+With high-power binoculars glued to his eyes, he was watching to
+see if the faint brown line of Dellarme's men were going to hold or
+break. If it held, he might have hours in which to complete his
+task; if it broke, he had only minutes.</p>
+<p>Marta came up the terrace path from the chrysanthemum bed in
+time to watch the shroud of shrapnel smoke billowing over the
+knoll, to visualise another scene in place of the collision of the
+squadrons, and to note the captain's exultation over Fracasse's
+repulse.</p>
+<p>"How we must have punished them!" he exclaimed to his
+lieutenant. "How we must have mowed them down! Lanstron certainly
+knew what he was doing."</p>
+<p>"You mean that he knew how we should mow them down?" asked
+Marta.</p>
+<p>Not until she spoke did he realize that she was standing near
+him.</p>
+<p>"Why, naturally! If we hadn't mowed them down his plan would
+have failed. Mowing them down was the only way to hold them back,"
+he said; and seeing her horror made haste to add: "Miss Galland,
+now you know what a ghastly business war is. It will be worse here
+than there."</p>
+<p>"Yes," she said blankly. Her colorless cheeks, her drooping
+underlip convinced him that now, with a little show of masculine
+authority, he would gain his point.</p>
+<p>"You and your mother must go!" he said firmly.</p>
+<p>This was the very thing to whip her thoughts back from the
+knoll. He was thunderstruck at the transformation: hot color in her
+cheeks, eyes aflame, lips curving around a whirlwind of words.</p>
+<p>"You name the very reason why I wish to stay. Why do you want to
+save the women? Why shouldn't they bear their share? Why don't you
+want them to see men mowed down? Is it because you are ashamed of
+your profession? Why, I ask?"</p>
+<p>The problem of dealing with an angry woman breaking a shell fire
+of questions over his head had not been ready-solved in the
+captain's curriculum like other professional problems, nor was it
+mentioned in the official instructions about the defences of the
+Galland house. He aimed to smile soothingly in the helplessness of
+man in presence of feminine fury.</p>
+<p>"It is an old custom," he was saying, but she had turned
+away.</p>
+<p>"Picking flowers! What mockery! Lanny's plan&mdash;mow them
+down! mow them down! mow them down!" she went on, more to herself
+than to him, as she dropped the chrysanthemums on the veranda
+table.</p>
+<p>In a fire of resolution she hastened back down the terrace
+steps. The Grays and the Browns were fighting in their way for
+their causes; she must fight in her way for hers. Stopping before
+Feller, she seemed taller than her usual self and quivering with
+impatience.</p>
+<p>"Have you connected the wire to the telephone yet?" she asked
+abruptly.</p>
+<p>"No, not yet," he answered.</p>
+<p>"Then please come with me to the tower!"</p>
+<p>Whatever his fears, he held them within the serene bounds of the
+gardener's personality, while his covert glimpse of her warned him
+against the mistake of trying to dam the current of a passion
+running so strong.</p>
+<p>"Certainly, Miss Galland," he said agreeably, quite as if there
+were nothing unusual in her attitude. No word passed between them
+as he kept pace with her rapid gait along the path, but out of the
+corner of his eye he surveyed in measuring admiration and curiosity
+the straight line of nose and forehead under its heavy crown of
+hair, with a few detached and riotous tendrils.</p>
+<p>"Bring a lantern!" she said, as they entered his sitting-room,
+in a way that left no excuse for refusal.</p>
+<p>When he had brought the lantern she took it from his hand and
+led the way into the tunnel.</p>
+<p>"Please make the connection so that I can speak to Lanny!" she
+instructed him after she had pressed the button and the panel door
+of the telephone recess flew open.</p>
+<p>For an instant he hesitated; then curiosity and the unremitting
+authority of her tone had their way. He dropped to his knees, ran
+his fingers into an aperture between two stones and made a jointure
+of two wire ends.</p>
+<p>"All ready!" he said, and eagerly. What a delightfully spirited
+rage she was in! And what the devil was she going to do,
+anyway?</p>
+<p>As she took the receiver from the hook she heard an electric
+bell at the other end of the line, but no "Hello!"</p>
+<p>"The bell means that Lanny will be called if he is there. No one
+except him is to talk over this telephone," Feller explained
+softly.</p>
+<p>Marta waited for some time before she heard a familiar, calm
+voice, with a faint echo of irritation over being interrupted in
+the midst of pressing duties.</p>
+<p>"Well, Gustave, old boy, it can't be that you are in touch with
+Westerling yet?"</p>
+<p>"It is I&mdash;Marta!" and she came abruptly to the flaming
+interrogation that had brought her there. "I want to ask a
+question. I want a clear answer&mdash;I want everything clear! If
+Feller's plan succeeds it means that you will know where the Grays
+are going to attack?"</p>
+<p>"Yes; why, yes, Marta!"</p>
+<p>"So that you can mow them down?"</p>
+<p>"That is one way of putting it&mdash;yes."</p>
+<p>"If I keep your secret&mdash;if I let the telephone remain, I am
+an accomplice! I shall not be that&mdash;not to any kind of murder!
+I shall not let the telephone remain!"</p>
+<p>"As you will, Marta," he replied. "But anything that leads to
+victory means less slaughter in the end. For we have tested our
+army well enough to know that only when it is decimated will it
+ever retreat from its main line of defence."</p>
+<p>"The old argument!" she answered bitterly.</p>
+<p>"As you will, Marta! Only, Marta&mdash;I plead with
+you&mdash;please, please leave the house!" he begged
+passionately.</p>
+<p>Again that request, which was acid to the raw spot of her anger!
+Again that assumption that she must desert her own home because
+uninvited guests would make it the theatre of their quarrel! How
+clear and unassailable her reply in the purview of her distraught
+logic!</p>
+<p>"Why particularly care for one life when you deal in lives by
+the wholesale?" she demanded. "Why think of my life when you are
+taking other lives every minute?"</p>
+<p>"Because I am human, not just a machine! Because yours is the
+one life of all to me&mdash;because I love you!" Feller, getting
+only one side of the talk, cautiously watching her as he held up
+the lantern to throw her face more clearly in relief, saw her start
+and caught the sound of a quick indrawing of breath between her
+lips, while something electric quivered through her frame. Then, as
+one who has twinged from a pin-prick of distraction which she will
+not permit to waive her from a white-heat purpose, she exclaimed,
+in rapid, stabbing, desperate sentences:</p>
+<p>"That! That now! After what I said to you a week ago! That in
+the midst of your mowing! No, no, no!" She drove the receiver down
+on the hook and blazed out to Feller: "Now you will tear out the
+'phone'"</p>
+<p>He steadied himself against the wall, covering his face with his
+hands, and for the first time in her life she heard a man sob.</p>
+<p>"My one chance&mdash;my last chance&mdash;gone!" he said
+brokenly. "The chance for me to redeem myself, so that I might
+again look at the flag without shame, taken from me in the name of
+mercy, when, by helping to bring victory and shorten the war, I
+might have saved thousands of lives!" he proceeded dismally.</p>
+<p>"The old argument! Lanny has just used it!" said Marta. But
+coming from a man sobbing it sounded differently. His hands fell
+away from his face as if they were a dead weight. She saw him a
+wreck of a human being with only his eyes alive, regarding her in
+harrowing wonder and reproach.</p>
+<p>"When I was a gardener eating at the kitchen table, playing the
+part of a spy&mdash;I who was honor man at the military
+school&mdash;I who had a conscience that sent me back from the free
+life on the plains to try to atone&mdash;when I hoped to do this
+thing in order to prove that I was fit to die if not to
+live&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He was as a man pitting his last grain of strength against
+overwhelming odds. There were long, poignant pauses between his
+sentences as he seemed to strive for coherence.</p>
+<p>"&mdash;in order to prove it for my country, for Lanny, and for
+you who have been so kind to me!" he concluded, another dry sob
+shaking him.</p>
+<p>His chin dropped to his breast. Even the spark in his eyes
+flickered out. In the feeble lantern light that deepened the
+shadows of his face he was indescribably pitiful. She could not
+look away from him. There was something infectious about his misery
+that compelled her to feel with his nerves.</p>
+<p>"Please," he pleaded faintly&mdash;"please leave me to myself. I
+will tear out the telephone&mdash;trust me&mdash;only I wish to be
+alone. I am uncertain&mdash;I see only dark!"</p>
+<p>He sank lower against the wall, his head fell forward, though
+not so far but he could see her from under his eyebrows. She
+started as she had at the telephone, her breath came in the same
+sweep between her lips, and he looked for a passionate refusal; but
+it did not come. She seemed in some spell of recollection or
+projection of thought. A lustrous veil was over her eyes. She was
+not looking at him or at anything in the range of her vision. She
+shuddered and abruptly seized her left wrist with her right hand,
+as Lanstron had in the arbor, which had brought her cry of "I'm
+hurting you!" In this inscrutable attitude she was silent for a
+time.</p>
+<p>"Let it remain&mdash;it means so much to you!" she said wildly,
+and hurried past him still clasping her wrist.</p>
+<p>He stared into the darkness that closed around her. With the
+last sound of her footsteps he became another Gustave Feller, who,
+all mercurial vivacity, clucked his tongue against the roof of his
+mouth with a "La, la, la!" as his hand shot out for the receiver.
+There it paused, and still another idea animated still another
+Gustave Feller.</p>
+<p>"Why not tear out the telephone&mdash;why not?" he mused. "Why
+didn't I agree to her plan? Why can't I ever carry more than one
+thing in mind at once? I forgot that we were at war. I forget that
+I am already at the front. I have skill! God knows, I ought to have
+courage! Volunteers who have both are always welcome in war. Any
+number of gunners will be killed! When an artillery colonel saw
+what I could do he would take me on without further questioning.
+Then I should not be a spy, shuffling and whining, but
+bang-bang-bang on the target!"</p>
+<p>In imagination he now had a gun. His hand made a movement of
+manipulation, head bent, eye sighting.</p>
+<p>"How do you like that? You will like this one less! And here's
+another&mdash;but, no, no!" He dropped against the wall again; he
+drove his nails into his palms in a sort of castigation. "I am the
+same as a soldier now&mdash;a soldier assigned to a definite duty
+for my flag. I should break my word of honor&mdash;a soldier's word
+of honor! No, not that again!"</p>
+<p>He snatched down the receiver to make sure that temptation did
+not reappear in too luring a guise, and still another Gustave
+Feller was in the ascendant.</p>
+<p>"Didn't I say to trust it to me, Lanny?" he called merrily.
+"Miss Galland consents!"</p>
+<p>"She does? Good! Good for you, Gustave!"</p>
+<p>"Her second thought," Feller rejoined. "And, Lanny," he
+proceeded in boyish enthusiasm, using a slang word of military
+school days, "it was bulludgeous the way we brought down their
+planes and dirigibles! How I ache to be in it when the guns are so
+busy! With batteries back of the house and an automatic in the
+yard, things seem very homelike. I&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Gustave," interrupted Lanstron, "we all have our weaknesses,
+and perhaps yours is to play a part. So keep away from the fight
+and don't think of the guns!"</p>
+<p>"I will, I swear!" Feller answered fervently. "One thought, one
+duty! I'll 'phone you when the house is taken, and if you don't
+hear from me again, why, you'll know the plan has failed and I'm a
+prisoner. But, trust me, Lanny! Trust me&mdash;for my flag and my
+country against the invader!"</p>
+<p>"Against the invader&mdash;that justifies all! And get Miss
+Galland out of it. You seem to have influence with her. Get her out
+of it!"</p>
+<p>"Trust me!"</p>
+<p>"Bless you, and God with you!"</p>
+<p>"One thought, one duty!" repeated Feller with the devoutness of
+a monk trying to forget everything except his aves as he started
+toward the stairway. "I wonder if we still hold the knoll!" he
+mused, extinguishing the lantern. "We do! we do!" he cried when he
+was in the doorway. "Oh, this is life!" he added after a deep-drawn
+breath, watching the little clouds of shrapnel smoke here and there
+along the base of the range.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXII' id="XXII"></a>
+<h2>XXII</h2>
+<h3>FLOWERS FOR THE WOUNDED</h3>
+<br>
+<p>Was there nothing for Marta to do? Could she only look on in a
+fever of restlessness while action roared around her? On the way
+from the tower to the house the sight of several automobile
+ambulances in the road at the foot of the garden stilled the throbs
+of distraction in her temples with an answer. The wounded! They
+were already coming in from the field. She hurried down the terrace
+steps. The major surgeon in charge, surprised to find any woman in
+the vicinity, was about to tell her so automatically; then, in view
+of her intensity, he waited for her to speak.</p>
+<p>"You will let us do something for them?" Marta asked. "We will
+make them some hot soup."</p>
+<p>He was immediately businesslike. No less than Dellarme or
+Fracasse or Lanstron or Westerling, he had been preparing
+throughout his professional career for this hour. The detail of
+caring for the men who were down had been worked out no less
+systematically than that of wounding them.</p>
+<p>"Thank you, no! We don't want to waste time," he replied. "We
+must get them away with all speed so that the ambulances may return
+promptly. It's only a fifteen-minute run to the hospital, where
+every comfort and appliance are ready and where they will be given
+the right things to eat."</p>
+<p>"Then we will give them some wine!" Marta persisted.</p>
+<p>"Not if we can prevent it! Not to start hemorrhages! The field
+doctors have brandy for use when advisable, and there is brandy
+with all the ambulances."</p>
+<p>Clearly, volunteer service was not wanted. There was no room at
+the immediate front for Florence Nightingales in the modern machine
+of war.</p>
+<p>"Then water?"</p>
+<p>The major surgeon aimed to be patient to an earnest, attractive
+young woman.</p>
+<p>"We have sterilized water&mdash;we have everything," he
+explained. "If we hadn't at this early stage I ought to be serving
+an apprenticeship in a village apothecary shop. Anything that means
+confusion, delay, unnecessary excitement is bad and
+unmerciful."</p>
+<p>Marta was not yet at the end of her resources. The recollection
+of the dying private who had asked her mother for a rose in the
+last war flashed into mind.</p>
+<p>"You haven't flowers! They won't do any harm, even if they
+aren't sterilized. The wounded like flowers, don't they? Don't you
+like flowers? Look! We've millions!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, I do. They do. A good idea. Bring all the flowers you want
+to."</p>
+<p>The major surgeon's smile to Marta was not altogether on account
+of her suggestion. "It ought to help anybody who was ever wounded
+anywhere in the world to have you give him a flower!" he was
+thinking.</p>
+<p>She ran for an armful of blossoms and was back before the
+arrival of the first wounded man who preceded the stretchers on
+foot. He was holding up a hand bound in a white first-aid bandage
+which had a red spot in the centre. Those hit in hand or arm, if
+the surgeon's glance justified it, were sent on up the road to a
+point a mile distant, where transportation in requisitioned
+vehicles was provided. These men were triumphant in their
+cheerfulness. They were alive; they had done their duty, and they
+had the proof of it in the coming souvenirs of scars.</p>
+<p>Some of the forms on stretchers had peaceful faces in
+unconsciousness of their condition. Others had a look of wonder, of
+pain, of apprehension in their consciousness that death might be
+near. The single word "Shrapnel!" by a hospital-corps corporal told
+the story of crushed or lacerated features, in explanation of a
+white cloth covering a head with body uninjured.</p>
+<p>Feller, strolling out into the garden under the spell of
+watching shell bursts, saw what Marta was doing. With the same
+feeling of relief at opportunity for action that she had felt, he
+hastened to assist her, bringing flowers by the basketful and
+pausing to watch her distribute them&mdash;watching her rather than
+the wounded and enjoying incidental thrills at examples of the
+efficiency of artillery fire.</p>
+<p>"The guns&mdash;the guns are going to play a great part!" he
+thought. "These rapid-firers will recover all the artillery's
+prestige of Napoleon's time!"</p>
+<p>Many of the wounded themselves looked at Marta even more than at
+the flowers. It was good to see the face of a woman, her eyes
+limpid with sympathy, and it was not what she said but the way she
+spoke that brought smiles in response to hers. For she was no
+solemn ministering angel, but high-spirited, cheery, of the sort
+that the major surgeon would have chosen to distribute flowers to
+the men. Every remark of the victims of war made its distinct and
+indelible impression on the gelatine of her mind.</p>
+<p>"I like my blue aster better than that yellow weed of yours,
+Tom!"</p>
+<p>"You didn't know Ed Schmidt got it? Yes, he was right next me in
+the line."</p>
+<p>"Say, did you notice Dellarme's smile? It was wonderful."</p>
+<p>"And old Bert Stransky! I heard him whistling the wedding march
+as he fired."</p>
+<p>"Miss, I'll keep this flower forever!"</p>
+<p>"They say Billy Lister will live&mdash;his cheek was shot
+away!"</p>
+<p>"Once we got going I didn't mind. It seemed as if I'd been
+fighting for years!"</p>
+<p>"Hole no bigger than a lead-pencil. I'll be back in a week!"</p>
+<p>"Yes; don't these little bullets make neat little holes?"</p>
+<p>"We certainly gave them a surprise when they came up the hill! I
+wonder if we missed the fellow that jumped into the shell
+crater!"</p>
+<p>"Our company got it worst!"</p>
+<p>"Not any worse than ours, I'll wager!"</p>
+<p>"Oh&mdash;oh&mdash;can't you go easier? Oh-h-h&mdash;" the groan
+ending in a clenching of the teeth.</p>
+<p>"Hello, Jake! You here, too, and going in my automobile? And
+we've both got lower berths!"</p>
+<p>"Sh-h! That poor chap's dying!"</p>
+<p>Worst of all to Marta was the case of a shrapnel fracture of the
+cranium, with the resulting delirium, in which the sufferer's
+incoherence included memories of childhood scenes, moments on the
+firing-line, calls for his mother, and prayers to be put out of
+misery. A prod of the hypodermic from the major surgeon, and "On
+the operating-table in fifteen minutes" was the answer to Marta's
+question if the poor fellow would live.</p>
+<p>Until dark, in groups, at intervals, and again singly, the
+wounded were coming in from a brigade front in the region where the
+rifles were crackling and the shrapnel clouds were hanging prettily
+over the hills; and stretchers were being slipped into place in the
+ambulances, while Marta kept at her post.</p>
+<p>"We shan't have much more to do at this station," said the major
+surgeon when a plodding section of infantry in retreat arrived.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXIII' id="XXIII"></a>
+<h2>XXIII</h2>
+<h3>STRANSKY FIGHTS ALONE</h3>
+<br>
+<p>Every unit engrossed in his own work! Every man taught how a
+weak link may break a chain and realizing himself as a link and
+only a link! The captain of engineers forgot Marta's existence as
+an error of his subordinates caught his eye, and he went to caution
+the axemen to cut closer to the ground, as stumps gave cover for
+riflemen. For the time being he had no more interest in the knoll
+than in the wreckage of dirigibles which were down and out of the
+fight.</p>
+<p>After all, the knoll was only a single point on the vast staff
+map&mdash;only one of many points of a struggle whose progress was
+bulletined through the siftings of regimental, brigade, division,
+and corps headquarters in net results to the staff. Partow and
+Lanstron overlooked all. Their knowledge made the vast map live
+under their eyes. But our concern is with the story of two
+regiments, and particularly of two companies, and that is story
+enough. If you would grasp the whole, multiply the conflict on the
+knoll by ten thousand.</p>
+<p>There had been the engrossment of transcendent emotion in
+repelling the charge. What followed was like some grim and
+passionless trance with triggers ticking off the slow-passing
+minutes. Dellarme aimed to keep down the fusillade from Fracasse's
+trench and yet not to neglect the fair targets of the reserves
+advancing by rushes to the support of the 128th. Reinforced, the
+gray streak at the bottom of the slope poured in a heavier fire.
+Above the steady crackle of bullets sent and the whistle of bullets
+received rose the cry of "Doctor! Doctor!" which meant each time
+that another Brown rifle had been silenced. The litter bearers,
+hard pressed to remove the wounded, left the dead. Already death
+was a familiar sight&mdash;an article of exchange in which
+Dellarme's men dealt freely. The man at Stransky's side had been
+killed outright. He lay face down on his rifle stock. His cap had
+fallen off. Stransky put it back on the man's head, and the example
+was followed in other cases. It was a good idea to keep up a show
+of a full line of caps to the enemy.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, as by command, the fire from the base of the knoll
+ceased altogether. Dellarme understood at once what this
+meant&mdash;the next step in the course of a systematic,
+irresistible approach by superior numbers. It was to allow the
+ground scouts to advance. Individual gray spots detaching
+themselves from the gray streak began to crawl upward in search of
+dead spaces where the contour of the ground would furnish some
+protection from the blaze of bullets from the crest.</p>
+<p>"Over their heads! Don't try to hit them!" Dellarme passed the
+word.</p>
+<p>"That's it! Spare one to get a dozen!" said Stransky, grinning
+in ready comprehension. He seemed to be grinning every time that
+Dellarme looked in that direction. He was plainly enjoying himself.
+His restless nature had found sport to its taste.</p>
+<p>The creeping scouts must have signalled back good news, for
+groups began crawling slowly after them.</p>
+<p>"Over their heads! Encourage them!" Dellarme commanded.</p>
+<p>After they had advanced two or three hundred yards they stopped,
+shoulders and hands exposed in silhouette, and began to work
+feverishly with their spades.</p>
+<p>"Now let them have it!"</p>
+<p>"Oh, beautiful!" cried Stransky. "That baby captain of ours has
+some brains, after all! We'll get them now and we'll get them when
+they run!"</p>
+<p>But they did not run. Unfalteringly they took their punishment
+while they turned over the protecting sod in the midst of their own
+dead and wounded. In a few minutes they had dropped spades for
+rifles, and other sections either crawled or ran forward
+precipitately and fell to the task of joining the isolated
+beginnings into a single trench.</p>
+<p>Again Dellarme looked toward regimental headquarters, his fixed,
+cheery smile not wholly masking the appeal in his eyes. The Grays
+had only two or three hundred yards to go when they should make
+their next charge in order to reach the crest. But his men had
+fifteen hundred to go in the valley before they were out of range.
+After their brave resistance facing the enemy they would receive a
+hail of bullets in their backs. This was the time to withdraw if
+there were to be assurance of a safe retreat. But there was no
+signal. Until there was, he must remain.</p>
+<p>The trench grew; the day wore on. Two rifles to one were now
+playing against his devoted company, which had had neither food nor
+drink since early morning. As he scanned his thinning line he saw a
+look of bloodlessness and hopelessness gathering on the set faces
+of which he had grown so fond during this ordeal. Some of the men
+were crouching too much for effective aim.</p>
+<p>"See that you fire low! Keep your heads up!" he called. "For
+your homes, your country, and your God! Pass the word along!"</p>
+<p>Parched throat after parched throat repeated the message
+hoarsely and leaden shoulders raised a trifle and dust-matted
+eyelashes narrowed sharply on the sights.</p>
+<p>"For the man in us!" growled Stransky. "For the favor of nature
+at birth that gave us the right to wear trousers instead of skirts!
+For the joy of hell, give them hell!"</p>
+<p>"For our homes! For the man in us!" they repeated, swallowing
+the words as if they had the taste of a stimulant. But Dellarme
+knew that it would not take much to precipitate a break. He himself
+felt that he had been on that knoll half a lifetime. He looked at
+his watch and it was five o'clock. For seven hours they had held
+on. The Grays' trench was complete the breadth of the slope; more
+reserves were coming up. The brigade commander of the Grays was
+going to make sure that the next charge succeeded.</p>
+<p>At last Dellarme's glance toward regimental headquarters showed
+the flag that was the signal for withdrawal. Could he accomplish
+it? The first lieutenant, with a shattered arm, had gone on a
+litter. The old sergeant was dead, a victim of the colonial wars.
+Used to fighting savage enemies, he had been too eager in exposing
+himself to a civilized foe. He had been shot through the
+throat.</p>
+<p>"Men of the first section," Dellarme called, "you will slip out
+of line with the greatest care not to let the enemy know that you
+are going!"</p>
+<p>"Going&mdash;going! Careful! Men of the first section going!"
+the parched throats repeated in a thrilling whisper.</p>
+<p>"Those who remain keep increasing their fire!" called Dellarme
+again. "Cover the whole breadth of the trench!"</p>
+<p>Every fourth man wormed himself backward on his stomach until he
+was below the sky-line, when his stiffened limbs brought him to his
+feet and he started on a dead run down into the valley and toward a
+cut behind another knoll across the road from the Galland
+house.</p>
+<p>"Tom Fragini, with your corporal dead I put you in charge of the
+first section! What are you waiting for, Corporal Fragini?"</p>
+<p>Tom was bending over Grandfather Fragini, who had been forgotten
+by everybody in the ordeal. The old man was lying where he had
+fallen after the first burst of shrapnel.</p>
+<p>"Can't go! Got a game leg!" said grandfather, pointing to a
+swollen ankle that had been bruised by a piece of shrapnel jacket
+that had lost most of its velocity before striking him. "You do
+your duty and leave me alone. I ain't a fighting man any more. I
+done my work when I steadied you young fellows."</p>
+<p>"Yes, go on, Fragini," said Dellarme. "Attend to your men.
+Everybody in his place. We'll get the old man away on a
+litter."</p>
+<p>"Yes, you go or you ain't any grandson of mine!" shouted the old
+man in a high-pitched voice. "Just been promoted, too! You'll be up
+for insubordination in a minute, you young whelp!"</p>
+<p>Dellarme meant to look after grandfather, but his attention was
+engrossed in seeing that his men withdrew cautiously, for every
+minute that he was able to delay the enemy's charge was vital. He
+himself picked up a rifle in order to increase the volume of fire
+when the third section was starting. As the fourth and last section
+drew off he uttered his first cry of triumph of the day as his
+final look revealed the Grays still in place. But they would not
+wait long once all fire from the knoll had ceased. Stransky, who
+was in the fourth section, remained to give a parting shot.</p>
+<p>"Good-by, d&mdash;&mdash; you!" he called to the Grays. "You'll
+hear more from me later!"</p>
+<p>Then Dellarme saw that grandfather had not yet been carried away
+and no litters remained. What was to be done? Grandfather was
+prompt with his own view.</p>
+<p>"Just leave me behind. I've done my work, I tell you!" he
+declared.</p>
+<p>"Can't lose you, grandpop!" said Stransky.</p>
+<p>Quickly shifting his pack to the ground, he squatted with his
+back to the old man.</p>
+<p>"I ain't going to&mdash;and you're a traitor, anyway; that's
+what you are!"</p>
+<p>"No back talk! No politics in this!" Stransky replied. "Get up!
+You carry your skin and I'll carry your bones. Get up quick!"</p>
+<p>With Dellarme's authoritative assistance grandfather mounted.
+Then Dellarme put Stransky's pack on his own back.</p>
+<p>"Let me carry your rifle, too," he said to Stransky as they
+started.</p>
+<p>"Not much!" answered Stransky. "I was just married to that rifle
+this morning. We're on our honeymoon trip and getting fairly well
+acquainted, and expect shortly to settle down to a busy domestic
+life."</p>
+<p>He set off at a lope and gained the rear of the section in his
+first burst of speed. As the other men got their second wind,
+however, Stransky began to puff and they soon drew away from
+him.</p>
+<p>"Put me down! I ain't going to depend on any traitor that
+insulted the flag!" protested grandfather.</p>
+<p>"That's the way! Call out to me now and then so I'll know you're
+there," said Stransky. "You're so light I mightn't know it if you
+fell off."</p>
+<p>Dellarme did not think it right to expose the last section by
+asking it to delay. Shepherd of his flock and miser of his pieces
+of gold, now that their work was done the one thing he wanted in
+the world was that they should escape without further punishment.
+Already the van of the first section was disappearing into the cut
+in safety. But the fourth section, which had held to the last, had
+yet a thousand yards to go over a path bare of cover except a
+single small bush. At any moment he expected to hear a cheer from
+the knoll, and what would follow the cheer he knew only too well.
+Yet he tarried with Stransky out of one man's impulse not to desert
+another in danger. At the same time he was wroth with the old man
+for having made such a nuisance of himself.</p>
+<p>"What are you waiting for?" Stransky demanded of Dellarme.</p>
+<p>"I like good company," answered Dellarme cheerfully.</p>
+<p>"Compliment for you, grandfather!" said Stransky.</p>
+<p>"Put me down!" screamed grandfather.</p>
+<p>"Still there, eh? Thanks, grandpop!" said Stransky, turning on
+Dellarme. "Can't you run any faster than that, captain? Your place
+is with your men, sir. If you got wounded I'd have to carry you,
+too. Your company's gaining on you every minute. Hurry up!"</p>
+<p>From the peremptory way that he spoke, Dellarme might have been
+the private and Stransky the officer.</p>
+<p>"Right!" said Dellarme in face of such unanswerable military
+logic, and broke into a run.</p>
+<p>Stransky adapted himself to a pace which he thought he could
+maintain, and plodded on, eyes on the bush as a half-way point.
+After a while he heard a mighty hurrah, which was cut short
+abruptly; then spits of dust about their feet hastened the steps of
+the last section, which was near the cut. He saw men drop out of
+line to make a cradle of their arms for comrades who had been hit;
+and these finally passed out of danger with their burdens.</p>
+<p>"No flock in sight! It's the turn of the individual birds!"
+thought Stransky, and heard a familiar sound about his ears.</p>
+<p>"Bullets!" exclaimed grandfather. "Don't whistle like they used
+to. They kind of crack and sizzle now. Maybe if they hit me I'll
+stop 'em, and that'll save you."</p>
+<p>"That's so," replied Stransky glumly, realizing that he was
+running with a human shield on his back. "But they'll go right
+through him he's so thin," he thought in relief. The worst of it
+was that he had to receive without sending, which made him boil
+with rage. He wished that the bush had legs so it could run toward
+him; he half believed that it had and was retreating. "They're
+shooting right at us, and that's in our favor. It's hard to get the
+bull's-eye at that range," he assured grandfather.</p>
+<p>Whish-whish-whish! Enough pellets were singing by to have torn
+away the rim of the target, yet none got the centre before Stransky
+dropped behind the bush. Blessed bush! Back of it was a bowlder.
+Thrice-blessed bowlder! It protected grandfather as securely as the
+armor of a battleship.</p>
+<p>"We are having a noisy time," remarked Stransky as two or three
+of the leaves fell. "Intelligent thieves! How did you guess we were
+here?" and he put his big thumb to his big nose.</p>
+<p>"But they didn't know about the bowlder!" said the old man with
+a senile giggle. "Say, I didn't mean it when I called you a
+traitor&mdash;not after the fight! I just said that to make you mad
+so you'd put me down and we shouldn't lose a good fighting man
+trying to save an old bag of bones like me. You ain't no traitor!
+You're a patriot!"</p>
+<p>"More politics, when I'm simply full of cussedness!" grumbled
+Stransky. "Not having any home, I'm fighting to save the other
+fellows' homes, principally because I was married this morning by a
+shrapnel-shell to a lady that understands me perfectly. Say, shall
+we give them a few?" he asked with a squint down the bridge of his
+nose as he took up his rifle.</p>
+<p>"Yes, give 'em a few!" grandfather urged when they ought to have
+remained quiet, as the firing was dying down. It was not worth
+while to shoot at a bush, and after all the torrent of lead that
+they had poured into the bush the Grays had concluded that nothing
+behind it could remain alive.</p>
+<p>Stransky aimed at a head and shoulder on the sky-line, which he
+took for those of an officer, and was accurate enough to make the
+head and shoulders duck and to get a swarm of bullets in
+return.</p>
+<p>"Children, why will you waste your country's ammunition?" said
+Stransky, firing again.</p>
+<p>"That's the way to talk!" said grandfather approvingly. "Nothing
+like a little gayety and ginger in war."</p>
+<p>Now a Brown battery whose fire could be spared from other work
+dropped a few shells on the knoll and so occupied the attention of
+the 128th that it had no time to attend to occasional bullets from
+snipers.</p>
+<p>"Think we're no account! Shall we charge them now we've got the
+support of the guns?" chuckled Stransky.</p>
+<p>"You Hussar, you!" Grandfather gave Stransky a slap on the back.
+"With a thousand like you we could charge me whole army, if the
+general would let us!"</p>
+<p>"But he wouldn't let us," replied Stransky. "I could even tell
+you why."</p>
+<p>With the shadows gathering he slipped back to grandfather's
+side, and after it was quite dark he said that it was time for the
+old Hussar to mount his fiery steed. Grandfather's hands slipped
+from around Stransky's neck at the first trial; with the next,
+Stransky took the bony fingers in his grip and held them clasped on
+his chest with one hand, proceeding as quietly as he could, for he
+had an idea that the Grays were already moving down from the knoll
+under cover of night.</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir, I'm glad I came!" said grandfather faintly and
+meanderingly. "I wasn't sure about Tom&mdash;all this new-fangled
+education and these uniforms without any color in 'em. But I saw
+him firing away steady as a rock; yes, sir! I was in it, too, under
+fire! It made my heart thump-thump like the old days. And we're
+going to hold 'em&mdash;we're going to teach the
+land-sharks&mdash;I'm very happy&mdash;made my heart thump
+so&mdash;kind of tired me&mdash;"</p>
+<p>The old man's voice died away into silence. His knees weakened
+their grip and his legs swung pendulum-like with Stransky's
+steps.</p>
+<p>"What about me for a sleeping-car!" thought Stransky. "But he's
+certainly harder to carry."</p>
+<p>Yet it pleased Stransky not to waken his passenger until they
+reached the station his ticket called for. Entering the cut, he was
+halted by the challenging cry of "Who goes there?" in his own
+tongue.</p>
+<p>"Stransky of the Reds!" he roared back. "Stransky, private of
+the 53d&mdash;Stransky and his bride and grandfather!"</p>
+<p>"All right, Bert!" was the answer. "Hurrah for you! I'd know
+your old bull voice out of a thousand."</p>
+<p>Even this did not arouse grandfather. Stransky trudged on past
+the sentry, across a road and up three series of steps of a garden
+terrace, through a breach in a breastwork of sand-bags, and was
+again at home&mdash;the only home he knew&mdash;among the comrades
+of his company. Most of them had fallen asleep on the ground after
+finishing their rations, logs of men in animal exhaustion. Some of
+those awake were too weary to give more than a nod and smile and an
+exclamation of delight. They had witnessed too much horror that day
+to be excited over a soldier with an old man on his back. A few of
+the others, including Tom Fragini, gathered around the pair.</p>
+<p>"We've arrived, grandfather!" said Stransky, squatting. There
+was no answer. "He certainly sleeps sound. I wonder if&mdash;."</p>
+<p>"Yes," said Dellarme, who with Tom eased the fall of the limp
+body.</p>
+<p>The thumping of an old man's heart with the youth of a Hussar
+had been too much for it.</p>
+<p>"He was game!" said Stransky. "There isn't much in this world
+except to be game, I've concluded; and you can't be so old or so
+poor or so big-nosed and wall-eyed that you can't be game."</p>
+<p>Marta, coming out on the veranda, had not heard his remark, but
+she had seen a leonine sort of private bearing an old man on his
+back and had guessed that he had remained behind to save a life
+when every man in uniform had been engaged in taking life.</p>
+<p>"You are tired! You are hungry!" she said with urgent
+gentleness. "Come in!"</p>
+<p>He followed her into the house and dropped on a leather chair
+before a shining table in a room panelled with oak, wondering at
+her and at himself. No woman of Marta's world had ever spoken in
+that way to him. But it was good to sit down. Then a maid with a
+sad, winsome face and tender eyes brought him wine and bread and
+cold meat and jam. He gulped down a glassful of the wine; he ate
+with great mouthfuls in the ravenous call of healthy, exhausted
+tissues, while the maid stood by to cut more bread.</p>
+<p>"When it comes to eating after fighting&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He looked up when the first pangs of hunger were assuaged.
+Enormous, broad-shouldered, physical, his cheeks flushed with the
+wine, his eyes opened wide and brilliant with the fire that was in
+his nature&mdash;eyes that spoke the red business of anarchy and
+war.</p>
+<p>"Say, but you're pretty!"</p>
+<p>Springing up, he caught her hand and made to kiss her in the
+brashness of impulse. Minna struck him a stinging blow in the face.
+He received it as a mastiff would receive a bite from a pup, and
+she stood her ground, her eyes challenging his fearlessly.</p>
+<p>"So you are like that!" he said thoughtfully. "It was a good
+one, and you meant it, too."</p>
+<p>"Decidedly!" she answered. "There's more where that came
+from!"</p>
+<p>"As I was telling the Grays this afternoon! Good for you!" He
+sat down again composedly, while she glared at him. "I'm still
+hungry. I've had wine enough; but would you cut me another slice of
+bread?"</p>
+<p>She cut another slice and he covered it generously with jam.
+Then little Clarissa Eileen entered and pressed against her
+mother's skirts, subjecting Stransky to childhood's scrutiny. He
+waved a finger at her and grinned and drew his eyes together in a
+squint at the bridge of his nose, making a funny face that brought
+a laugh.</p>
+<p>"Your child?" Stransky asked Minna.</p>
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+<p>"Where's her father? Away fighting?"</p>
+<p>"I don't know where he is!"</p>
+<p>"Oh!" he mused. "Was that blow for him at the same time as for
+me?" he pursued thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>"Yes, for all of your kind."</p>
+<p>"M-m-m!" came from between his lips as he rose. "Would you mind
+holding out your hand?" he asked with a gentleness singularly out
+of keeping with his rough aspect.</p>
+<p>"Why?" she demanded.</p>
+<p>"I've never studied any books of etiquette of polite society,
+and I am a poor sort at making speeches, anyhow. But I want to kiss
+a good woman's hand by way of apology. I never kissed one in my
+life, but I'm getting a lot of new experiences to-day. Will
+you?"</p>
+<p>She held out her hand at arm's length and flushed slightly as he
+pressed his lips to it.</p>
+<p>"You certainly do cut thick slices of bread," he said, smiling.
+"And you certainly are pretty," he added, passing out of the door
+as jauntily as if he were ready for another fight and just in time
+to see the colonel of the regiment come around the house. He stood
+at the salute, half proudly, half defiantly, but in nowise
+humbly.</p>
+<p>"Well, Major Dellarme!" was the colonel's greeting of the
+company commander.</p>
+<p>"Major?" exclaimed Dellarme.</p>
+<p>"Yes. Partow has the power. Four of the aviators have iron
+crosses already and promotion, too; and you are a major. Company G
+got into a mess and the whole regiment would have been in one
+unless you held on. So I let you stay. It all came out right, as
+Lanstron planned&mdash;right so far. But your losses have been
+heavy and here you are in the thick of it again. Your company may
+change places with Company E, which has had a relatively easy
+time."</p>
+<p>"No, sir; we would prefer to stay," Dellarme answered
+quietly.</p>
+<p>"Good! Then you will take this battalion and I'll transfer
+Groller to Alvery's Bad loss, Alvery&mdash;shrapnel. The artillery
+has been doing ugly work, but that is all in favor of the
+defensive. If we can hold them on this line till to-morrow noon,
+it's all we want for the present," he concluded.</p>
+<p>"We'll hold them! Don't worry!" put in Stransky.</p>
+<p>If a private had spoken to a colonel in this fashion at drill,
+without being spoken to, it would have been a glaring breach of
+military etiquette. Now that they were at war it was different.
+Real comradeship between officer and man begins with war.</p>
+<p>"We shall, eh?" chuckled the colonel. "You look big enough to
+hold anything, young man! Here! Isn't this the fellow that Lanstron
+got off?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir," answered Dellarme.</p>
+<p>"Well, was Lanstron right?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+<p>"Wonderful man, Lanstron!"</p>
+<p>"He knows just' a little too much!" Stransky half growled.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXIV' id="XXIV"></a>
+<h2>XXIV</h2>
+<h3>THE MAKING OF A HERO</h3>
+<br>
+<p>A digression, this, about pale, little Peterkin, the valet's
+son, whom we left nibbling a biscuit in perfect security after his
+leap in mortal terror. When Fracasse's men rose from their trench
+for the final charge and found that the enemy had gone, Peterkin,
+hearing their cheer and the thunderous tread of their feet, dared
+to look above the edge of the shell crater. Here was his company
+coming and he not in the ranks where he belonged. Of course he
+ought to have gone back with them when they went; whatever they did
+he ought to do. This was the only safe way for one of his incurable
+stupidity, as the drill sergeant had told him repeatedly.</p>
+<p>He recognized the stocky butcher's son and other familiar
+figures among his comrades. Their legs, unlike his, had not been
+paralyzed with fright; they had been able to run. He was in an
+absolute minority of one, which he knew, from the experience of his
+twenty years of life and his inheritance as a valet's son, meant
+that he was utterly in the wrong. In a minute they would be
+sweeping down on him. They would be jeering him and calling him a
+rabbit or something worse for hiding in the ground.</p>
+<p>Fright prompted him to a fresh impulse. Picking up his rifle,
+which he had not touched since his leap, he faced toward the now
+unoccupied crest of the knoll and commenced firing. Meanwhile,
+Fracasse's men had reached the point where their first charge had
+broken, marked by a line of bodies, including that of the
+manufacturer's son, who had thought that war would be beneficial as
+a deterrent to strikes and an impetus to industry, lying with his
+head on his arm, his neck twisted, and the whites of his eyes idled
+skyward. In a spasm of sickening realization of how impossible it
+was for those who had not run back to survive between two lines of
+fire, they heard a shot from the ground at their feet and beheld
+the runt of the company in the act of making war single-handed. It
+was a miracle! It was like the dead coming to life!</p>
+<p>"Peterkin?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, Peterkin!"</p>
+<p>"With a whole skin!"</p>
+<p>Probably it was a great mistake for him to have a whole skin,
+thought Peterkin. He scrambled to his feet and kept pace with the
+others, hoping that he would be overlooked in the ranks.</p>
+<p>"I'm so glad! Dear little Peterkin!" said Hugo Mallin, who was
+at Peterkin's side.</p>
+<p>His knowledge of Hugo's gentle nature convinced Peterkin that
+Hugo was trying to soften the forthcoming reprimand.</p>
+<p>When their feet at last actually stood on the knoll which had
+dealt death to their ranks and they saw the brown figures of the
+enemy that had driven them back in full flight, the men of the
+128th felt the thrill of triumph won in the face of bullets. This
+is a thrill by itself, primitive and masculine, that calls the
+imagination of men to war for war's sake. Pilzer, the butcher's
+son, wanted to kill for the sheer joy and revenge of killing. He
+rejoiced in the dead and the blood spots that, as clearly as the
+trench itself, marked the line that Dellarme's men had occupied
+along the crest of the knoll. It pleased him to use one of the
+bodies as a rest for his rifle, while he laid his sight in ecstasy
+on the large target of two men of the last section who were
+bringing off one of the wounded, and he swore when they got
+away.</p>
+<p>"But there's another out there all alone!" he cried. "Better say
+your prayers, for I'm going to get you," he whispered; though, as
+we know, Stransky was not hit.</p>
+<p>Peterkin had been doing his best to make amends for past errors
+by present enthusiasm of application. He fired no less earnestly
+than the butcher's son. Now that Eugene Aronson was dead, Pilzer
+had become Peterkin's chief patron and guide. He would be doing
+right if he did what that brave Pilzer did, he was thinking, while
+he was conscious of Fracasse's eyes boring into his back. With the
+others, but no more expeditiously, however frightened, he fell back
+to cover from the burst of shell fire; and then, with the word to
+break ranks, he found himself the centre of a group including not
+only his captain but the colonel of the regiment. He could not
+quite make out the expressions on their faces, but he surmised that
+they were wondering how any man born under the flag of the Grays
+could be such a coward as he was. Probably he would be shot at
+sunrise.</p>
+<p>"How did it happen?" Fracasse asked.</p>
+<p>His tone was very pleasant, but Peterkin felt that this was only
+the calmness of a judge hearing the evidence of a culprit.
+Punishment would be, accordingly, the more drastic. He was too
+scared to tell the truth. He spoke softly, with the mealy tongue of
+a valet father who never explained why the wine was low in the
+decanter by any reference to a weakness of his own palate.</p>
+<p>"I didn't hear the whistle to fall back," he said, "so I
+stayed."</p>
+<p>"Didn't hear the whistle!" exclaimed the captain. He looked at
+the colonel and the colonel looked at him. The colonel stroked his
+mustache as if it were a nice mustache. "There wasn't any whistle,"
+said Fracasse with a wry grin.</p>
+<p>"Yes, my boy; and then?" asked the colonel, who had never before
+called any private in his regiment "my boy."</p>
+<p>A bright light broke on Peterkin. Inherited instinct did not
+permit him to show much emotion on his face, and he had, too, an
+inherited gift of invention. He rubbed his rifle stock with his
+palm and bowed much in the fashion of the parent washing his hands
+in gratitude for a compliment.</p>
+<p>"And I didn't want to run," he continued. "I wanted to take that
+hill. That was what we were told to do, wasn't it, sir?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes!" said the colonel. "Go on!"</p>
+<p>The light grew brighter, showing Peterkin's imagination the way
+to higher flights.</p>
+<p>"I jumped quick into the crater, knowing that if I jumped quick
+I would not be hit," he proceeded, his thin voice accentuating his
+deferential modesty. "My! but the bullets were thick, going both
+ways! But I remembered the lectures to recruits said that it took a
+thousand to kill a man. I found that I had cover from the bullets
+from our side and some cover from their side. I could not lie there
+doing nothing, I decided, after I had munched biscuits for a
+while&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Coolly munching biscuits!" exclaimed the colonel.</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir; so I began firing every time I had a chance and I
+picked off a number, I think, sir."</p>
+<p>"My boy," said the colonel, putting his hand on Peterkin's
+shoulder, "I am going to recommend you for the bronze cross."</p>
+<p>The bronze cross&mdash;desired of generals and
+privates&mdash;for Peterkin, when Pilzer had been so confident that
+he should win the first that came to the 128th now that Eugene
+Aronson was dead!</p>
+<p>"I&mdash;I&mdash;" stammered Peterkin.</p>
+<p>"And so modest about it!" added the colonel. "Remembered the
+lectures to recruits and acted on them faithfully!"</p>
+<p>The old spirit of the nation was not dead. Here it was
+reappearing in a valet's son, as it was bound to reappear in all
+classes! Yes, Peterkin had supplied the one shining incident of the
+costly day to the colonel, who found himself without his
+headquarters for the night at the Galland house as planned, waiting
+for orders on this confounded little knoll. He was wondering if his
+regiment would be out in reserve and given a rest on the morrow,
+when an officer of the brigade staff brought instructions:</p>
+<p>"The batteries are going to emplace here for your support in the
+morning. You will move as soon as your men have eaten and occupy
+positions B-31 to B-35. That gives you a narrow front for one
+battalion, with two battalions in reserve to drive home your
+attack. The chief of staff himself desires that we take the Galland
+house before noon. The enemy must not have the encouragement of any
+successes."</p>
+<p>"So easy for Westerling to say," thought the colonel; while
+aloud he acknowledged the message with proper spirit.</p>
+<p>Before the order to move was given the news of it passed from
+lip to lip among the men in tired whispers. Since dawn they had
+lived through the impressions of a whole war, and they had won.
+With victory they had not thought of the future, only of their
+hunger. After the nightmare of the charge, after hearing death
+whispering for hours intimately in their ears, they were too weary
+and too far thrown out of the adjustments of any natural habits of
+thought and feeling to realize the horror of eating their dinners
+in the company of the dead. Now they were to go through another
+hell, but many of them in their exhaustion were chiefly concerned
+as to whether or not they should get any sleep that night.</p>
+<p>Peterkin could hear his heart thumping and feel chills running
+down his spine. How should he ever live up to a bronze
+cross&mdash;the precious cross given for valor alone, which marked
+him as heroic for life&mdash;when all he wanted to do was to crawl
+away to some quiet, safe place and munch more biscuits? He had once
+been a buttons who looked down on scullery boys, but how gladly
+would he be a scullery boy forever if he could escape to the rear
+where he would hear no more bullets!</p>
+<p>His conscience smote him; he wanted a confessor. He had an
+impulse to tell the whole truth to Hugo Mallin, for Hugo was the
+one man in the company who would sympathetically understand the
+situation. Yet he did not find the words, because he was rather
+pleased with the r&eacute;clame of being a hero, which was an
+entirely new experience in a family that had been for generations
+in service.</p>
+<p>Hugo Mallin had fired when the others fired; advanced when the
+others advanced. He had done his mechanical part in a way that had
+not excited Fracasse's further acute displeasure, and he had no
+sense of physical fatigue, only of mental depression, of the
+elemental things that he had seen and felt this day in a whirling
+pressure on his brain.</p>
+<p>It seemed to him that all his comrades had changed. They could
+never be the same as before they had set out to kill another lot of
+men on the crest of the knoll. He could not keep a comparison out
+of mind: One of the dead Browns, lying in almost the same position,
+looked enough like the manufacturer's son to be his brother. He
+pictured Eugene Aronson's parents receiving the news of his
+death&mdash;the mother weeping, the father staring stonily. And he
+saw many mothers weeping and many fathers staring stonily.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXV' id="XXV"></a>
+<h2>XXV</h2>
+<h3>THE TERRIBLE NIGHT</h3>
+<br>
+<p>The satire of war makes the valet's son a hero; the chance of
+war kills the manufacturer's son and lets the day-laborer's son
+live; the sport of war gives the latent forces of a Stransky full
+play; the mercy of war grants Grandfather Fragini a happy death;
+the glory of war brings Dellarme quick promotion; the glamour and
+the spectacular folly of war turn the bolts of the lightnings which
+man has mastered against man. Perhaps the savage who learned that
+he could start a flame by rubbing two dry sticks together may have
+set fire to the virgin forest and wild grass in order to destroy an
+enemy&mdash;and naturally with disastrous results to himself if he
+mistook the direction of the wind.</p>
+<p>Marta Galland's thoughts at dusk when she returned up the steps
+to the house were much the same as Hugo Mallin's after Fracasse had
+taken the knoll. While he had felt the hot whirlwind of war in his
+face, she had witnessed the wreckage that it left. She also was
+seeing fathers staring and mothers weeping. Her experience with the
+wounded drawing deep on the wells of sympathy, heightened her
+loathing of war and of all who planned and ordered it and led its
+legions. A Stransky righting would have been repulsive to her, but
+a Stransky trying to save a life was noble.</p>
+<p>Except for the few minutes when she had gone out on the veranda
+and had seen Stransky bringing in the lifeless body of Grandfather
+Fragini, she had been engaged since dark in completing the work of
+moving valuable articles from the front to the rear rooms of the
+house, which had been begun early in the day by Minna and the
+coachman.</p>
+<p>Shortly after Stransky had finished his meal Minna came to say
+that Major Dellarme wished to speak to Miss Galland. Dellarme a
+major! This was his reward for his part in filling the ambulances
+with groans! In the days when he was at the La Tir garrison he had
+been a frequent caller. Now, in the perversity of her reasoning,
+out of the chaos of the tangent odds of her impressions since she
+had gone to hold the session of her school that morning, she
+thought of him as peculiarly one who gave to the profession of arms
+the attraction that had made it the vocation of the aristocrat.
+Waiting for her in the dismantled dining-room, despite all that he
+had passed through, his greeting had the diffident, boyish manner
+of her recollection; and despite a night on the ground his brown
+uniform was without creases, giving him a well-groomed, even
+debonair, appearance.</p>
+<p>"I scarcely thought that we should ever meet under these
+conditions," he said slightly constrained, a touch of color in his
+cheeks.</p>
+<p>She had no excuse for her reply unless, in truth, she were in
+training for the town scold. But he typified an idea. He gave to
+war the aspect of refinement.</p>
+<p>"If you did not expect it, why did you enter the army?" she
+asked.</p>
+<p>He saw that she was not quite herself. The strain of the day had
+unnerved her. Yet he answered her bootless question with simple
+directness.</p>
+<p>"I liked the idea of being a soldier. I was reared in the
+atmosphere of the army, and I hoped that I might do my duty if war
+came."</p>
+<p>Perhaps this was point one for him. Marta shrugged her
+shoulders.</p>
+<p>"I might have guessed beforehand what you would say," she
+replied. "You sent for me?"</p>
+<p>"Hardly that, please. I asked if I might see you. The captain of
+engineers tells me that you insist on staying and I came to beg you
+to keep in the back of the house. You will be safe there. Any shell
+that may enter will explode in the front rooms and the fragments
+will not go through the second wall."</p>
+<p>"Yes, we understand that. We have already removed our
+heirlooms," she replied indifferently.</p>
+<p>The fatalism of her attitude and his alarm lest she had gone a
+little out of her head aroused all the innate horror of a man at
+the thought of a woman under fire. He broke out desperately:</p>
+<p>"Miss Galland, this is no place for you! You do not
+realize&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He had made the same mistake as the captain of
+engineers&mdash;touched a spot of irritation as raw as it had been
+in the morning.</p>
+<p>"Why shouldn't I stay here? Why shouldn't every wife and mother
+be here in the fire zone? You soldiers die&mdash;it is very easy to
+die&mdash;and leave us to suffer. You destroy and leave us to build
+up. You go on a debauch of killing and come home to the women to
+nurse you. Why make us suffer the consequences without sharing the
+glory of the deed?"</p>
+<p>Such reasoning was not in the province of his training. He
+feared that she was about to become hysterical.</p>
+<p>"Really, Miss Galland, I&mdash;women and
+children&mdash;I&mdash;" he was stammering.</p>
+<p>"Better kill the children young than go to the expense of
+bringing them up before they are killed!" she went on, not
+hysterically, unless frozen intensity is hysteria. "Children
+clinging to your knees might stop you, but I suppose you would have
+a police force to tear the children away rather than miss the
+masculine privilege of murder."</p>
+<p>"Miss Galland, you are overwrought. I&mdash;"</p>
+<p>She interrupted him with half-breathed laughter.</p>
+<p>"Don't I look it&mdash;hysterical?" she exclaimed. "How awkward
+for you if I should fall on the floor and kick and scream!"</p>
+<p>With a peculiar uplifting of the brows which spoke a brittle
+humor, she looked at the floor as if selecting a place for the
+performance.</p>
+<p>"That is not your way," he managed to say. He was quite adrift
+in confusion at the recollection of quotations he had heard about
+woman's subtleties and inconsistencies and her charm. Resorting to
+the last weapon in his armory&mdash;which the captain of engineers
+had already used&mdash;his attitude changed to a soldierly
+sternness. "Miss Galland, I feel that it is my duty, as long as you
+are going to stay, to make sure that&mdash;"</p>
+<p>She killed the sentence on his lips with a gleam of mockery from
+her eyes. He understood that she had again anticipated what he was
+going to say.</p>
+<p>"There are times when you must be firm with a woman, aren't
+there? And the time has come for you to be firm!" The color in his
+cheeks deepened. He knew what to do with his men on the knoll, but
+not what to do in the present situation. "This is our home; our
+home is our country. Here we remain; but, naturally, we don't
+propose to stick our heads out of the windows in a shower of
+shrapnel bullets," she continued. "Even your soldiers are not so
+zealous for death but they fight behind sand-bags. They are not
+like Mohammedan fatalists who so love to die for their illusions
+that they bare their breasts to bullets. We have already arranged
+sleeping-quarters in the rear. Good night!"</p>
+<p>She held out her hand with a smile of conventional pleasantry.
+Had it not been for the sound of firing, which still continued, and
+for the walls denuded of pictures, they might have been parting at
+the head of the stairs at a house-party. She stopped half-way up in
+an impulse to call back happily:</p>
+<p>"You see, masculine firmness did calm feminine hysteria!"</p>
+<p>"Oh, Miss Galland!" he exclaimed. "Miss Galland, you are beyond
+me!"</p>
+<p>"What a pose! How foolish to break out in that way!" she thought
+angrily, as she hastened up the rest of the flight and along the
+corridor. "To him of all men! A pattern-plate of an officer, who
+never has had anything but a military thought! But everything is
+pose! Everything is abnormal! And sleep? Sleep is a pose, too. I
+feel as if my eyes would remain open forever. Oh, I wish they would
+begin the fighting and tear the house to pieces if they are going
+to! I wish&mdash;"</p>
+<p>She was at the door of her mother's room, which was like an
+antique shop. Old plates lay on top of old tables, with vases on
+the floor under the tables. Surrounded by her treasures, Mrs.
+Galland awaited the attack; not as a soldier awaits it, but as that
+venerable Roman senator of the story faced the barbarous
+Gauls&mdash;neither disputing the power of their spears nor
+yielding the self-respect of his own mind and soul. She had lain
+down in her wrapper for the night, and the light from a single
+candle&mdash;she still favored candles&mdash;revealed her features
+calm and philosophical among the pillows. Yet the magic of war,
+reaching deep into hidden emotions, had her also under its spell.
+Her voice was at once more tender and vital.</p>
+<p>"Marta, I see that you are all on wires!"</p>
+<p>"Yes; jangling wires, every one, jangling every second out of
+tune," Marta acquiesced.</p>
+<p>"Marta, my father"&mdash;her father had been a premier of the
+Browns&mdash;"always said that you may enjoy the luxury of fussing
+over little things, for they don't count much one way or another;
+but about big things you must never fuss or you will not be worthy
+of big things. Marta, you cannot stop a railroad train with your
+hands. This is not the first war on earth and we are not the first
+women who ever thought that war was wrong. Each of us has his work
+to do and you will have yours. It does no good to tire yourself out
+and fly to pieces, even if you do know so much and have been around
+the world."</p>
+<p>She smiled as a woman of sixty, who has a secret heart-break
+that she had never given her husband a son, may smile at a daughter
+who is both son and daughter to her, and her plump hand, all curves
+like her plump face and her plump body, spread open in appeal.</p>
+<p>Marta, who, in the breeding of her generation, felt sentiment as
+more or less of a lure from logic, dropped beside the bed in a
+sudden burst of sentiment and gathered the plump hand in hers and
+kissed it.</p>
+<p>"Mother, you are wonderful!" she said. "Mother, you are
+great!"</p>
+<p>"Tush, Marta!" said Mrs, Galland. "You shouldn't say that. Your
+grandfather was great&mdash;a very great man. He never quite got
+his deserts; no good man does in politics."</p>
+<p>"You are better than great," said Marta. "You soothe; you help;
+you have&mdash;what shall I call it?&mdash;the wisdom of mothers!
+Minna has it, too." She ran a tattoo of kisses along the velvety
+skin of Mrs. Galland's arm.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Galland was blushing, and out of the depths of her eyes
+bubbled a little fountain of stars.</p>
+<p>"Marta, you have kissed me often before," she said, "but you
+have been a little patronizing from your hilltop of youth and
+knowledge. Sometimes you have looked to me lonely up there on your
+hilltop and I know that I have been lonely sometimes in my valley
+of the years where knees are not good at climbing hills."</p>
+<p>"It was not my intention," Marta said rather miserably.</p>
+<p>"No, it is a businesslike age," answered Mrs. Galland.</p>
+<p>"I&mdash;you mean I was too detached? I was not human?"</p>
+<p>"You are now. You make me very happy," her mother replied. "But
+you must sleep," she insisted.</p>
+<p>After a time, her ear becoming as accustomed to the firing as a
+city dweller's to the distant roar of city traffic Mrs. Galland
+slept. But Marta could not follow her advice. If, transiently at
+least, she had found something of the peace of the confessional,
+the vigor of youth was in her arteries; and youth cannot help
+remaining awake under some conditions. She tiptoed across the hall
+into her own room and seated herself by the window, which had often
+spread the broadening vista of landscape with its lessening detail
+before her eyes.</p>
+<p>On other nights she had looked out into opaqueness with the
+drum-beat of rain on the roof; into the faint starlight when there
+was only the vagueness of heights and levels; into the harvest
+moonlight with its spectral unreality. Now the symbol of what the
+ear had heard the eye saw: war, working in tones of the landscape
+by day with smokeless powder; war, revealed by its tongues of flame
+at night. Ugly bursts of fire from the higher hills spread to the
+heavens like an aurora borealis and broke their messengers in
+sheets of flame over the lower hills&mdash;the batteries of the
+Browns sprinkling death about the heads of the gunners of the Grays
+emplacing their batteries. Staccato flashes from a single point
+counted so many bullets from an automatic, which, directed by the
+beams of the search-lights, found their targets in sections of
+advancing infantry. Hill crests, set off with flashes running back
+and forth, demarked infantry lines of the Browns assisting the
+automatics.</p>
+<p>There were lulls between the crashes of the small arms and the
+heavy, throaty speech of the guns; lulls that seemed to say that
+both sides had paused for a breathing spell; lulls that allowed the
+battle in the distance to be heard in its pervasive undertone. In
+one Of them, when even the undertone had ceased for a few seconds,
+Marta caught faintly the groans of a wounded man&mdash;one of the
+crew of a Gray dirigible burned by an explosion and brought in his
+agony softly to earth by a billowing piece of envelope which acted
+as a parachute.</p>
+<p>Fighting proceeded in La Tir in stages of ferocity and blank
+silence. The upper part of the town, which the Browns still held,
+was in darkness; the lower part, where the Grays were, was
+illuminated.</p>
+<p>"Another one of Lanny's plans!" thought Marta. "He would have
+them work in the light, while we fire out of obscurity!"</p>
+<p>Soon all the town was in darkness, for the Grays had cut the
+wire in the main conduit shortly after she had heard the groans of
+the wounded man. There the automatics broke out in a mad storm,
+voicing their feelings at getting a company in close order in a
+street for the space of a minute, before those who escaped could
+plaster themselves against doorways or find cover in alleys. Then
+silence from the automatics and a cheer from the Browns that rasped
+out its triumph like the rubbing together of steel files.</p>
+<p>From the line of defence, that included the first terrace of the
+Galland grounds as the angle of a redoubt, not a shot, not a sound;
+silence on the part of officers and men as profound as Mrs.
+Galland's slumber, while one of the Browns' search-lights, like
+some great witch's slow-turning eye in a narrow radius, covered the
+lower terraces and the road.</p>
+<p>Marta gave intermittent glances at the garden; the glances of a
+guardian. She happened to be looking in that direction when figures
+sprang across the road, crouching, running with the short, quick
+steps of no body movement accompanying that of the legs. The
+search-light caught them in merciless silhouette and the automatic
+and the rifles from behind the sand-bags on the first terrace let
+go. Some of the figures dropped and lay in the road and she knew
+that she had seen men hit for the first time. Others, she thought,
+got safely to the cover of the gutter on the garden side. Of those
+on the road, some were still and some she saw were moving slowly
+back on their stomachs to safety. Now the search-light laid its
+beam steadily on the road. Again silence. From the upper terrace
+came a great voice, like that of the guns, from a human throat:</p>
+<p>"Why didn't we level those terraces? They'll creep up from one
+to the other!" It was Stransky.</p>
+<p>In answer was another voice&mdash;Dellarme's.</p>
+<p>"Perhaps there wasn't time to do everything. And if this
+position is taken before we are ready to go, it will not be from
+that side, but from the side of the town."</p>
+<p>"We're making them pay for seeing our garden, but, anyhow, we
+won't let them pick any flowers," Stransky remarked pungently.</p>
+<p>"If they get as far as the first terrace&mdash;well, in case of
+a crisis, we have hand-grenades," Dellarme added in explanation.
+"But, God knows, I hope we shall not have to use them."</p>
+<p>After an interval, more figures made a rush across the road.
+They, too, in Stransky's words, paid a price for seeing the garden.
+But the flashes from the rifles and the automatic provided a target
+for a Gray battery. The blue spark that flies from an overhead
+trolley or a third rail, multiplied a hundredfold, broke in Marta's
+face. It was dazzling, blinding as a bolt of lightning a few feet
+distant, with the thunder crash at the same second, followed by the
+thrashing hum of bullets and fragments against the side of the
+house.</p>
+<p>"I knew that this must come!" something within her said. If she
+had not been prepared for it by the events of the last twelve hours
+she would have jumped to her feet with an exclamation of natural
+shock and horror. As it was, she felt a convulsive, nervous thrill
+without rising from her seat. A pause. The next shell burst in line
+with the first, out by the linden-trees; a third above the
+veranda.</p>
+<p>"We've got that range, all right!" thought the Gray battery
+commander, who had judged the distance by the staff map. This was
+all he wanted to know for the present. He would let loose at the
+proper time to support the infantry attack, when there were enough
+driblets across the road to make a charge. The driblets kept on
+coming, and, one by one, the number of dead on the road was
+augmented.</p>
+<p>Marta was diverted from this process of killing by piecemeal by
+a more theatric spectacle. A brigade commander of the Grays had
+ticked an order over the wires and it had gone from battery to
+battery. Not only many field-guns, which are the terriers of the
+artillery, but some guns of siege calibre, the mastiffs, in a
+sudden outburst started a havoc of tumbling walls and cornices in
+the upper part of the town.</p>
+<p>Then an explosion greater than any from the shells shot a
+hemisphere of light heavenward, revealing a shadowy body flying
+overhead, and an instant later the heavens were illuminated by a
+vast circle of flame as the dirigible that had dropped the dynamite
+received its death-blow. But already the Brown infantry was
+withdrawing from the town, destroying buildings that would give
+cover for the attack in the morning as they went. Two or three
+hours after midnight fell a silence which was to last until dawn.
+The combatants rested on their arms, Browns saying to Grays, "We
+shall be ready for the morrow!" and Grays replying: "So shall
+we!"</p>
+<p>Marta, at her window, her eyes following the movements of the
+display, now here, now there, found herself thinking of many
+things, as in the intermissions between the acts of a drama. She
+wondered if the groaning, wounded man were crying for water or if
+he were wishing that some one at home were near him. She thought of
+her talk with Lanstron over the telephone and how mad and feminine
+and feeble it must have sounded to a mind working in the inexorable
+processes of the clash of millions of men. She saw his left hand
+twitching in his pocket, his right hand gripping it to hold it
+still, on that afternoon when, for the first time, she had
+understood his injury in the aeroplane accident as the talisman of
+his feelings&mdash;his controlled feelings! Always his controlled
+feelings!</p>
+<p>She saw Feller leaning against the moist wall of the dank
+tunnel, suffering as it had never seemed to her that man could
+suffer, his agony an irresistible plea. She saw Westerling, so
+conscious of his strength, directing his chessmen in a death
+struggle against Partow. And he was coming to this house as his
+headquarters when the final test of the strength of the Titans was
+made.</p>
+<p>She hoped that her mother was still sleeping; and she had
+seconds when she was startled by her own calmness. Again, the faces
+of the children in her school were as clear as in life. She
+breathed her gratitude that the procession in which they moved to
+the rear was hours ago out of the theatre of danger. In the
+simplicity of big things, her duty was to teach them, a future
+generation, no less than Feller's duty was to the pursuing shadow
+of his conscience. She should see war, alive, naked, bloody, and
+she would tell her children what she had seen as a warning.</p>
+<p>Silence, except an occasional rifle-shot&mdash;silence and the
+darkness before dawn which would, she knew, concentrate the
+lightnings around the house. She glanced into her mother's room and
+marvelled as at a miracle to find her sleeping. Then she stole
+down-stairs and opened the outer door of the dining-room. A step or
+two brought her to the edge of the veranda. There she paused and
+leaned against one of the stone pillars. Dellarme himself was in a
+half-reclining position, his back to a tree. He seemed to be
+nodding. Except for a few on watch over the sand-bags, his men were
+stretched on the earth, moving restlessly at intervals, either in
+an effort to sleep or waking suddenly after a spell of harassed
+unconsciousness.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXVI' id="XXVI"></a>
+<h2>XXVI</h2>
+<h3>FELLER IS TEMPTED</h3>
+<br>
+<p>With the first sign of dawn there was a movement of shadowy
+forms taking position in answer to low-spoken commands. The
+search-light yielded its vigil to the wide-spread beam out of the
+east, and the detail of the setting where Marta was to watch the
+play of one of man's passions, which he dares not permit the tender
+flesh of woman to share, grew distinct. Bayonets were fixed on the
+rifles that lay along the parapet of sand-bags in front of the row
+of brown shoulders. Back of them in the yard was a section of
+infantry in reserve, also with bayonets fixed, ready to fill the
+place of any who fell out of line, a doctor and stretchers to care
+for the wounded, and a detachment of engineers to mend any breaches
+made in the breastwork by shell fire.</p>
+<p>The gunner of the automatic sighted his barrel, slightly
+adjusted its elevation, and swung it back and forth to make sure
+that it worked smoothly, while his assistant saw that the fresh
+belts of cartridges which were to feed it were within easy reach.
+Dellarme, walking behind his men, cautioning them not to expose
+their heads and at the same time to fire low, had his cheery smile
+in excellent working order.</p>
+<p>"We expect great things of you!" this smile said as he bent over
+the gunner with a pat on the shoulder.</p>
+<p>"I understand!" said the upward glance in reply.</p>
+<p>Marta could not deny that there was something fine about
+Dellarme's smile no less than in his bearing and his delicately,
+chiselled features. It had the assurance and self-possession of a
+surgeon about to perform a critical operation, the difference being
+that, unlike the surgeon, he shared in the risk, which was for the
+purpose of taking vigorous young lives rather than saving lives
+enfeebled by disease. Was it this that gave to war its
+halo&mdash;this offering of the most valuable thing man possesses
+to sudden destruction that made war heroic?</p>
+<p>But where was the romance of the last war forty years ago? Where
+the glad songs going into battle? The glitter of buttons and the
+pomp of showy uniforms? The general's staff watching the course of
+the action by the billows of black smoke? Gone where the railroad
+sent the stage-coach, electricity sent the candle and horse-drawn
+street-cars, serum sent diphtheria, the knife sent the appendix,
+and rifled cannon and explosive shells sent the wooden walls of old
+ships of the line.</p>
+<p>It occurred to none of the actors, and to Marta alone, in the
+tight, foreboding silence, to look aloft. There was a serene blue
+sky. The birds were tuning up for their morning songs when she
+heard the dull echo of distant guns, soon to be submerged in other
+thunders at nearer points along the frontier. With every faculty an
+alert wire strung in suspense, she was instantly aware of the
+appearance of a figure whose lack of uniform made it conspicuous on
+that stage.</p>
+<p>In straw hat and blue blouse, shuffling with his old man's walk,
+Feller came along the path from the gate. He was in retreat from
+the enticing picture of the regiment of field-guns in front of the
+castle that was ready for action. As the infantry had never
+interested him, he would be safe from temptation in the yard. He
+stopped back of the engineers, his glance roving down the line of
+brown shoulders until it rested on the automatic. This also was a
+gun, though it fired only bullets. His fingers began beating a
+tattoo on his trousers' seam; a hungry brilliance shone in his
+eyes. He took four or five steps forward as if drawn by an
+overpowering fascination.</p>
+<p>"This is no place for you!" said one of the engineers.</p>
+<p>"No, and don't waste any time, either, old man!" said another.
+"Back to your bulbs!"</p>
+<p>Feller did not even hear them. For the moment he was actually
+deaf.</p>
+<p>"Fire!" said Dellarme's whistle. "Thur-r-r!" went the automatic
+in soulless, mechanical repetition, its tape spinning through the
+cylinder, while the rifles spoke with the human irregularity of
+steel-tipped fingers pounding at random on a drumhead. All along
+the line facing La Tir the volume of fire spread until it was like
+the concert of a mighty loom.</p>
+<p>Marta could see nothing of the enemy, but she guessed that he
+was making a rush from the second to the third terrace and from the
+outskirts of the town. The engineer's repeated warning unheard
+above the din, he touched Feller on the leg. Feller looked around
+with a frown of querulous abstraction just as the breaking of a
+storm of shell fire obscured Marta's vision with dust and smoke.
+She felt her head jerk as if it would go free of her neck with each
+explosion, until she reinforced her nerves with the memory of an
+old soldier's warning about the folly of dodging missiles that were
+already past before you heard them. She knew that she was perfectly
+safe behind the pillar.</p>
+<p>The Gray batteries having tried out their range by the flashes
+of the automatic the previous evening were making the most of the
+occasion. "Uk-ung-n-ng!" the breaking jackets whipped out their
+grists. A crash on the roof brought a small avalanche of slate
+tumbling down. A concussion in the dining-room was followed by the
+tinkling of falling window-glass. The engineers had work
+immediately when two of the infantrymen and their rifles and the
+sand-bags on which they leaned were hurled together in a heap of
+sand and torn flesh. Other bags were placed in the breach; other
+men sprang forward and began firing. The reserves, the
+hospital-corps men and the engineers hugged the breastwork for
+cover. The leaves clipped from the trees by bullets were blown
+aside with the hurricane breaths of shrapnel bursts; bullets
+whistled so near Marta that she heard their shrillness above every
+other sound. She was amazed that the house still remained
+standing&mdash;that any one was alive. But she had a glimpse of
+Dellarme maintaining his set smile and another of Feller, who had
+crept up behind the automatic, making impatient "come-on! come-on!
+what-is-the-matter-with-you?" gestures in the direction of the
+batteries in front of the castle.</p>
+<p>"Thur-eesh&mdash;thur-eesh!" As the welcome note swept overhead
+he waved his hands up and down in mad rapture and then peeped over
+the breastwork to ascertain if the practice were good. The Brown
+batteries had been a little slow in coming into action, but they
+had the range from the Gray batteries' flashes the previous night
+and, undisturbed in the security of their own flashes screened by
+the trees, soon broke the precision of the opposing fire.</p>
+<p>Now shells coming infrequently fell short or went wide. The air
+cleared. Marta could again see distinctly, and she marvelled that
+the brown figures were proceeding with their knitting as if nothing
+had happened. She could not resist a thrill of grim admiration for
+their steadiness or an appreciative thrill as she saw Feller
+eagerly peering over the automatic gunner's shoulder to watch the
+effect of his fire. Suddenly, both the rifles and the automatic,
+which had been firing deliberately, began to fire with desperate
+rapidity. It was as if a boxer, sparring slowly, let out all his
+power in a rain of blows. She could see nothing of the Grays, but
+she understood that they were making a rush.</p>
+<p>Then a chance shell, striking at the one point which the man who
+fired it six thousand yards away would have chosen as his
+bull's-eye, obscured Feller and the automatic and its gunners in
+the havoc of explosion. Feller must have been killed. The dust
+settled; she saw Dellarme making frantic gestures as he looked at
+his men. They were keeping up their fusillade with unflinching
+rapidity. Through the breach left in the breastwork she had
+glimpses, as the dust was finally dissipated, of gray figures,
+bayonets fixed, pressing together as they came on fiercely toward
+the opening. The Browns let go the full blast of their magazines.
+Had that chance shell turned the scales? Would the Grays get into
+the breastwork?</p>
+<p>All Marta's faculties and emotions were frozen in her stare of
+suspense at the breach. Her heart seemed straining with the effort
+of the living, who heard nothing, thought nothing, in the crux of
+their effort. War's own mesmerism had made her forget Feller and
+everything except the gamble, the turn of the card, while the gray
+figures kept stumbling on over their fallen. Then her heart leaped,
+a cry in a gust of short breaths broke from her lips as the Browns
+let go a rasping, explosive, demoniacal cheer. The first attack had
+been checked!</p>
+<p>After triumph, terror, faintness, and a closing of her eyes, she
+opened them to see Feller, with his old straw hat&mdash;brim torn
+and crownless now&mdash;still on his head, rise from the
+d&eacute;bris and shake himself like a dog coming ashore from a
+swim. While the engineers hastened to repair the breach he assisted
+Stransky, who had also been knocked down by the concussion, to lift
+the overturned automatic off the gunner. The doctor, putting a hand
+on the gunner's heart, shook his head, and two hospital-corps men
+removed the body to make room for the engineers.</p>
+<p>Dellarme could now spare attention from the charge of the Gray
+infantry to observe the results of the shell fire. With the gunner
+dead, he looked for the gunner's assistant, who lay several feet
+distant. As Dellarme and the doctor hastened to him he raised
+himself to a sitting posture and looked around in dazed inquiry.
+The doctor poured a cup of brandy from his flask and held it to the
+assistant's lips, whereon he blinked and nodded his head in
+personal confirmation of the fact that he was still alive. But when
+he tried to raise his right arm the hand would not join in the
+movement. His wrist was broken.</p>
+<p>For once Dellarme's cheery smile deserted him. There was no one
+left to man the automatic, so vital in the defence, and even if
+somebody could be found the gun was probably out of commission. As
+he started toward it his smile, already summoned back, was shot
+with surprise at sight of the gun in place and a stranger in blue
+blouse, white hair showing through a crownless straw hat, trying
+out the mechanism with knowing fingers. Dellarme stared. Feller,
+unconscious of everything but the gun, righted the cartridge band,
+swung the barrel back and forth, and then fired a shot.</p>
+<p>"You&mdash;you seem to know rapid-firers!" Dellarme exclaimed in
+blank incomprehension.</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir!" Feller raised his finger, whether in salute as a
+soldier or as a gardener touching his hat it was hard to say.</p>
+<p>"But how&mdash;where?" gasped Dellarme.</p>
+<p>This time the movement of the finger was undoubtedly in salute,
+in perfect, swift, military salute, with head thrown back and
+shoulders stiff. Feller the gardener was dead and buried without
+ceremony.</p>
+<p>"Lanstron's class, school for officers, sir. Stood one in
+ballistics, prize medallist control of gun-fire. Yes, sir, I know
+something about rapid-firers," Feller replied, and fired a few more
+shots. "A little high, a little low&mdash;right, my lady,
+right!"</p>
+<p>Stransky was back in his place next to the automatic and firing
+whenever a head appeared. He rolled his eyes in a characteristic
+squint of scrutiny toward the new recruit.</p>
+<p>"Beats spraying rose-bushes for bugs, eh, old man?" he
+asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes, a lead solution is best for gray bugs!" Feller remarked
+pungently, and their glances meeting, they saw in each other's eyes
+the joy of hell.</p>
+<p>"A pair of anarchists!" exclaimed Stransky grinning, and tried a
+shot for another head.</p>
+<p>As if in answer to prayer, a gunner had come out of the earth.
+Sufficient to the need was the fact. It was not for Dellarme to ask
+questions of a prize-medallist graduate of the school for officers
+in a blue blouse and crownless straw hat. His expert survey assured
+him that before another rush the enemy had certain preparations to
+make. He might give his fighting smile a recess and permit himself
+a few minutes' relaxation. Looking around to ascertain what damage
+had been done to the house and grounds, he became aware of Marta's
+presence for the first time.</p>
+<p>"Miss Galland, you&mdash;you weren't there during the fighting?"
+he cried as he ran toward her.</p>
+<p>"Yes," she said rather faintly.</p>
+<p>"If I had known that I should have been scared to death!"</p>
+<p>"But I was safe behind the pillar," she explained. "Your company
+did its work splendidly," she added, looking at him with eyes dull
+and wondering.</p>
+<p>"Do you think so? They <i>are</i> splendid, my men! They make
+one try to be worthy of them. Thank you!" he said, blushing with
+pleasure. "But, Miss Galland, please&mdash;there's no firing now,
+but any minute&mdash;&mdash;."</p>
+<p>"Yes?"</p>
+<p>He did not attempt masculine firmness this time, only boyish
+pleading and a sort of younger-brother camaraderie.</p>
+<p>"Miss Galland, you're such a good soldier&mdash;please&mdash;and
+I'm sure you have not had your breakfast, and all good soldiers
+never neglect their rations, not at the beginning of a war! Miss
+Galland, please&mdash;." Yes, as he meant it, please be a good
+fellow.</p>
+<p>She could not resist smiling at the charming manner of his plea.
+She felt weak and strange&mdash;a little dizzy. Besides, her
+mother's voice now came from the doorway and then her mother's hand
+was pressing her arm.</p>
+<p>"Marta, if you remain out here, I shall!" announced Mrs.
+Galland.</p>
+<p>"I was just coming in," said Marta.</p>
+<p>Dellarme, his cap held before him in the jaunty fashion of
+officers, bowed, his face beaming his happiness at her
+decision.</p>
+<p>As they entered the dining-room Marta saw that the shell which
+had entered the window had burst just over the heavy mahogany table
+and a fragment of the jacket had cut a long scar in the rich fibre.
+She paused, her breath coming and going hotly. She felt the
+smarting pain of a file drawn over the skin. The table was very
+old; for generations it had been a family treasure. As a child she
+had loved its polished surface and revered its massive
+solidity.</p>
+<p>"Oh! Oh! Somebody ought to be made to pay for such wickedness!"
+she exclaimed wrathfully.</p>
+<p>"It will plane down and it is nothing we could help, Marta,"
+said Mrs. Galland. "Fortunately, all the portraits were out of the
+room."</p>
+<p>"Mother, you&mdash;you are just a little too philosophical!"
+complained Marta.</p>
+<p>"Come!" Mrs. Galland slipped her hand into Marta's. "Two women
+can't fight both armies. Come! I prescribe hot coffee It is
+waiting; and, do you know, I find a meal in the kitchen very
+cosey."</p>
+<p>Being human and not a heroine fed on lotos blossoms, and being
+exhausted and also hungry, when she was seated at table, with Minna
+adroitly urging her, Marta ate with the relish of little Peterkin
+in the shell crater munching biscuits from his haversack.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXVII' id="XXVII"></a>
+<h2>XXVII</h2>
+<h3>HAND TO HAND</h3>
+<br>
+<p>With Mrs. Galland on guard, insistent that wherever her daughter
+went she should go, Marta might not so easily expose herself again.
+For the time being she seemed hardly of a mind to. She sat staring
+at the kitchen clock on the wall in front of her, the only sign of
+any break in the funereal march of her thoughts being an occasional
+deep-drawn breath, or a shudder, or a clenching of the hands, or a
+bitter smile of irony.</p>
+<p>An hour or more of intermittent firing passed in the suspense of
+listening to a trickle of water undermining a dam. Then, with the
+roar of waters carrying away the dam, a cataract of shell fire
+broke and continued in far heavier volume than that of the first
+attack.</p>
+<p>"The last war was nothing like this!" murmured Mrs. Galland.</p>
+<p>At every concussion against the walls of the house, at every
+crash within the house, Marta pressed her nails tighter into her
+palms. Abruptly as the inferno of the guns had commenced, it
+ceased, and the steady, passionate, desperate blasts of the rifles,
+now uninterrupted, were more deadly and venomous if less shocking
+to the ear.</p>
+<p>The movement of the minute-hand on the clock-face became uncanny
+and merciless to her eye in its deliberate regularity. Dellarme had
+been told to hold on until noon, she knew. Was he still smiling?
+Was Feller still happy in playing a stream of lead from the
+automatic? Was the second charge of the Grays, which must have come
+to close quarters when the guns went silent, going to succeed?</p>
+<p>The rifle-fire died down suddenly and she heard a cheer like
+that of the morning, only wilder and fiercer and even less human.
+Could it be from the Browns celebrating a repulse? Or from the
+Grays after taking the position? What did it matter? If the Grays
+had won there was an end to the agony so far as her mother and
+herself were concerned&mdash;an end to murder on the lawn and
+devastation of their property. But, at length, the rifle-fire
+beginning again in a slow, irregular pulse told her that the Browns
+had held.</p>
+<p>Now another long intermission. The demon was wiping his brow and
+recovering his breath, Marta thought; he was repairing damaged
+joints in his armor and removing the flesh of victims from his
+claws. But he would not rest long, for the war was
+young&mdash;exactly one day old&mdash;and many battalions of
+victims remained unslain.</p>
+<p>How slowly the big hand of the clock kept hitching on from
+minute-mark to minute-mark! Yet no more slowly than the hands of
+clocks in distant provinces of the Browns or of the Grays, where
+this day was as quiet and peaceful as any other day.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Galland had settled down conscientiously to play solitaire,
+a favorite pastime of hers; but she failed to win, as she
+complained to Marta, because of her stupid way this morning of
+missing the combination cards.</p>
+<p>"I really believe I need new glasses," she declared.</p>
+<p>"Let me help you," said Marta. Welcome idea! Why hadn't she
+thought of it before? It was something to do.</p>
+<p>"But, Marta&mdash;there you are, covering up the jack of spades,
+the very card I need&mdash;though it will not help now. I've lost
+again!" exclaimed Mrs. Galland at length. "Why, Marta, you miss
+worse than I do!"</p>
+<p>"Do I? Do I?" asked Marta in blank surprise and irritation.
+"Please let me try once alone. I'll not miss this time. Correct me
+if I do."</p>
+<p>She played with the deliberation and accuracy of Feller should
+he have to make a little ammunition for his automatic go a long
+way, and Mrs. Galland did not observe a single error.</p>
+<p>"Hurrah! I won!" Marta cried triumphantly, with some of her old
+vivacity.</p>
+<p>Then she drew away from the table wearily. The strain of
+concentrating her mind had been worse than that of the battle; or,
+rather, it had merely added another strain to a tortured brain
+after a sleepless night. For her ears had been constantly alert.
+The demon had moved one of his claws to fresh ground; the inferno
+on the La Tir side of the frontier had shifted to a valley beyond
+the Galland estate, where the firing appeared to come from the
+Brown side. Breaking from the leash of silence, guns, automatics,
+rifles&mdash;each one straining for a speed record&mdash;roared and
+crashed and rattled in greedy chorus, while the clock ticked
+perhaps a hundred times. Thus famished savages might boll their
+food in a time limit. Thereafter, for a while, the battle was
+desultory.</p>
+<p>Then came another outburst from Dellarme's men, which she
+interpreted as the response to another rush by the Grays; and this
+yelping of the demon was not that of the hound after the hare, as
+in the valley, but of the hare with his back to the wall. When it
+was over there was no cheer. What did this mean? Oh, that slow
+minute-hand, resting so calmly between hitches of destiny, now
+pointing to a quarter after eleven! For half a century, it seemed
+to her, Marta had endured watching its snail pace. Now inaction was
+no longer bearable. Without warning to her mother she bolted out of
+the kitchen. Mrs. Galland sprang up to follow, but Minna barred the
+way.</p>
+<p>"One is enough!" she said firmly, and Mrs. Galland dropped back
+into her chair.</p>
+<p>In the front rooms Marta found havoc beyond her imagination. A
+portion of the ceiling had been blown out by a shell entering at an
+up-stairs window; the hardwood floors were littered with plaster
+and window-glass and ripped into splinters in places.</p>
+<p>"How can we ever afford repairs!" she thought.</p>
+<p>But she hurried on, impelled by she knew not what, through the
+dining-room, and, coming to the veranda, stopped short, with
+dilating eyes and a cry of grievous shock. Two of his men were
+carrying Dellarme back from the breastwork where they had caught
+him in their arms as he fell. They laid him gently on the sward
+with a knapsack under his head. His face grew whiter with the flow
+of blood from the red hole in the right breast of his blouse. Then
+he opened his lips and whispered to the doctor: "How is it?"
+Something in his eyes, in the tone of that faint question, required
+the grace of a soldier's truth in answer.</p>
+<p>"Bad!" said the doctor.</p>
+<p>"Then, good-by!" And his head fell to one side, his lips set in
+his cheery smile.</p>
+<p>Had ever any martyr shown a finer spirit dying for any cause?
+Marta wondered. She felt the sublimity of a great moment, an
+inexorable sadness. She knew that she should never forget that
+cheery smile or that white face. What was danger to anybody? What
+was death if you had seen how he had died?</p>
+<p>His company was a company with his smile out of its heart and in
+its place blank despair. Many of the men had stopped firing. Some
+had even run back to look at him and stood, caps off, backs to the
+enemy, miserable in their grief. Others leaned against the parapet,
+rifles out of hand, staring and dazed.</p>
+<p>"They have killed our captain!"</p>
+<p>"They've killed our captain!"&mdash;still a captain to them. A
+general's stars could not have raised him a cubit in their
+estimation.</p>
+<p>"And once we called him 'Baby Dellarme,' he was so young and
+bashful! Him a baby? He was a king!"</p>
+<p>"Men, get to your places!" cried the surviving lieutenant rather
+hopelessly, with no Dellarme to show him what to do; and Marta saw
+that few paid any attention to him.</p>
+<p>In that minute of demoralization the Grays had their chance, but
+only for a minute. A voice that seemed to speak some uncontrollable
+thought of her own broke in, and it rang with the authority and
+leadership of a mature officer's command, even though coming from a
+gardener in blue blouse and crownless straw hat.</p>
+<p>"Your rifles, your rifles, quick!" called Feller. "We're only
+beginning to fight!"</p>
+<p>And then another voice in a bull roar, Stransky's:</p>
+<p>"Avenge his death! They've got to kill the last man of us for
+killing him! Revenge! revenge!"</p>
+<p>That cry brought back to the company all the fighting spirit of
+the cheery smile and with it another spirit&mdash;for Dellarme's
+sake!&mdash;which he had never taught them.</p>
+<p>"Make them pay!"</p>
+<p>"He was told to stay till noon!"</p>
+<p>"They'll find us here at noon, alive or dead!"</p>
+<p>Stransky picked up one of several cylindrical objects that were
+lying at his feet.</p>
+<p>"He wouldn't use this&mdash;he was too soft-hearted&mdash;but I
+will!" he cried, and flung a hand-grenade, and then a second, over
+the breastwork. The explosions were followed by agonized groans
+from the Grays hugging the lower side of the terrace. For this they
+had crawled across the road in the night&mdash;to find themselves
+unable to move either way and directly under the flashes of the
+Browns' rifles.</p>
+<p>Feller's and Stransky's shouts rose together in a peculiar unity
+of direction and full of the fellowship they had found in their
+first exchange of glances.</p>
+<p>"You engineers, make ready!"</p>
+<p>"Hand-grenades to the men under the tree! That's where they're
+going to try for it&mdash;no wall to climb over there!"</p>
+<p>"You engineers, take your rifles&mdash;and bayonet into anything
+that wears gray!"</p>
+<p>"Get back, you men by the tree, to avoid their hand-grenades!
+Form up behind them, everybody!"</p>
+<p>"No matter if they do get in at first! Back, you men, from under
+the tree!"</p>
+<p>There was not a single rifle-shot. In a silence like that before
+the word to fire in a duel, all orders were heard and the more
+readily obeyed because Dellarme's foresight had impressed their
+sense upon the men in his quiet way.</p>
+<p>The sand-bags by the tree were blown up by the Grays. Then,
+before the dust had hardly settled, came a half score of
+hand-grenades thrown by the first men of a Gray wedge, scrambling
+as they were pushed through the breach by the pressure of the mass
+behind. In that final struggle of one set of men to gain and
+another to hold a position, guns or automatics or long-range
+bullets played no part. It was the grapple of cold steel with cold
+steel and muscle with muscle, in a billowing, twisting mob of
+wrestlers, with no sound from throats but straining breaths; with
+no quarter, no distinction of person, and bloodshot eyes and faces
+hot with the effort of brute strength striving, in primitive
+desperation, to kill in order not to be killed. The cloud of
+rocking, writhing arms and shoulders was neither going forward nor
+backward. Its movement was that of a vortex, while the gray stream
+kept on pouring through the breach as if it were only the first
+flood from some gray lake on the other side of the breastwork.</p>
+<p>Marta had come to the edge of the veranda, at once drawn and
+repelled, feeling the fearful suspense of the combat, the savage
+horror of it, and herself uttering sounds like the straining
+breaths of the men. What a place for her to be! But she did not
+think of that. She was there. The dreadful alchemy of war had made
+her a stranger to herself. She was mad; they were mad; all the
+world was mad!</p>
+<p>One minute&mdash;two, perhaps&mdash;not three&mdash;and the
+thing was over. She saw the Grays being crushed back and realized
+that the Browns had won, when a last detail of the lessening tumult
+fixed her attention with its gladiatorial simplicity. Here, indeed,
+it was a case of man to man with the weapons nature gave them.</p>
+<p>Standing higher than the others on the edge of the breach was
+that giant who had brought Grandfather Fragini in pickaback,
+looking a young god on an escarpment of rock on Olympus. His great
+nose showed in silhouette at intervals of wrestling lurches back
+and forth as he tugged at the rifle of a thick-set soldier of the
+Grays with a liver patch on the cheek that made his face hideous
+enough for an incarnation of war's savagery. At last Jacob Pilzer
+tumbled backward over the breastwork. Unlucky Pilzer! That bronze
+cross was further away than ever for him, while Stransky shook the
+trophy of a captured rifle aloft, a torn sleeve revealing the
+weaving muscles of his powerful arm.</p>
+<p>"I thought so!" cried Feller. "Attacks on frontal positions by
+daylight are going out of fashion!"</p>
+<p>It was he who mercifully arrested the shower of hand-grenades
+that followed the exit of the enemy. Two of the guns of the castle
+batteries, having changed their position, were making havoc enough
+at pointblank range, with a choice of targets between the Grays
+huddled on the other side of the breastwork and those in
+retreat.</p>
+<p>"We'll have peace for a few hours now," said Stransky, squinting
+down his nose. "And we'll have something to eat. I ought to have
+got that fellow with the beauty-spot on his physiognomy, but,
+confound him, he was an eel!"</p>
+<p>By this time the men had recovered their breath. It occurred to
+them by common impulse that a cheer was due, and for the first time
+they broke into a hurrah with wide-open throats.</p>
+<p>"Another&mdash;for Dellarme!" called Stransky, who seemed to
+think that he and not the callow lieutenant was in command.</p>
+<p>This they gave, standing instinctively at attention, with heads
+bared, for the leader whose spirit survived in them; a cheer with
+triumph in its roar, but a different sort of triumph from the first
+cheer.</p>
+<p>Listening to it were the wounded among the Grays who had fallen
+within the breastwork to be trampled by the Browns as they had
+pressed forward. The doctor, but a moment ago a fiend himself with
+features of rage, now, in the second nature of his calling, with a
+look of tender sympathy, was ministering without distinction of
+friend or foe. One of the Grays, his cheek bearing the mark of a
+boot heel, raised himself, and, in defiance and the satisfaction of
+the thought to his bruises and humiliation, pointing his finger at
+Feller, Marta heard him say:</p>
+<p>"You there, in your straw hat and blue blouse, they've seen
+you&mdash;a man fighting and not in uniform! If they catch you it
+will be a drumhead and a firing squad at dawn!"</p>
+<p>"That's so!" replied Feller gravely. "But they'll have to make a
+better job of it than you fellows did if they're going
+to&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He turned away abruptly but did not move far. His shoulders
+relaxed into the gardener's stoop, and he pulled his hat down over
+his eyes and lowered his head as if to hide his face. He was thus
+standing, inert, when a division staff-officer galloped into the
+grounds.</p>
+<p>"Splendid! Splendid! There's some iron crosses in this for you!"
+he was shouting before he brought his horse to a standstill. "The
+way you held on gained the day for Lanstron's plan. They tried to
+flank in the valley after their second attack on your position
+failed We drew them on and had them&mdash;a battalion in close
+order&mdash;under the guns for a couple of minutes. It was ghastly!
+Our losses have been heavy enough, but nothing to theirs&mdash;and
+how they are driving their men in! But where is Major
+Dellarme?"</p>
+<p>When he saw Dellarme's still body he dismounted and in a tide of
+feeling which, for the moment, submerged all thought of the
+machine, stood, head bowed and cap off, looking down at Dellarme's
+face.</p>
+<p>"I was very fond of him! He was at the school when I was
+teaching there. But a good death&mdash;a soldier's death!" he said.
+"I'll write to his mother myself." Then the voice of the machine
+spoke. "Who is in command?"</p>
+<p>"I am, sir!" said the callow lieutenant, coming up.</p>
+<p>Feller's fingers moved in a restless beat on his trousers' seam,
+his lips half parted as if he must speak, but the men of the
+company spoke for him.</p>
+<p>"Bert Stransky!" they roared.</p>
+<p>It was not according to military etiquette, but military
+etiquette meant nothing to them now. They were above it in veteran
+superiority.</p>
+<p>"And&mdash;" Stransky had started to point to Feller, whose name
+he did not know, when a forbidding gleam under the hat brim
+arrested him.</p>
+<p>"Where's Stransky?" demanded the staff-officer.</p>
+<p>"You're looking at him!" replied Stransky with a benign
+grin.</p>
+<p>Seeing that Stransky was only a private, the officer frowned at
+the anomaly when a lieutenant was present, then smiled in a way
+that accorded the company parliamentary rights, which he thought
+that they had fully earned.</p>
+<p>"Yes, and he gets one of those iron crosses!" put in Tom
+Fragini.</p>
+<p>"What for?" demanded Stransky in surprise. They were making a
+lot of fuss about him when he had not done anything except to work
+out his individual destiny.</p>
+<p>"Yes&mdash;the first cross for Bert of the Reds!"</p>
+<p>"And we'll let him make a dozen anarchist speeches a day!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes!" roared the company.</p>
+<p>"By all means&mdash;but not for this; for trying to save an old
+man's life!" put in Marta.</p>
+<p>After his survey of that amazing company the officer was the
+more amazed to hear a woman's voice in such surroundings.</p>
+<p>"The ays have it!" he announced cheerfully. He lifted his cap to
+Marta. With tender regard and grave reverence for that company, he
+took extreme care with his next remark lest a set of men of such
+dynamic spirit might repulse him as an invader. "The lieutenant is
+in command for the present, according to regulations," he
+proceeded. "You will retire immediately to positions 48 to 49 A-J
+by the castle road. You have done your part. To-night you sleep and
+to-morrow you rest."</p>
+<p>Sleep! Rest! Where had they heard those words before? Oh, yes,
+in a distant day before they went to war! Sleep and rest! Better
+far than an iron cross for every man in the company! They could go
+now with something warmer in their hearts than consciousness of
+duty well done; but this time they need not go until their dead as
+well as their wounded were removed.</p>
+<p>"You're not coming with us?" Stransky whispered to Feller.</p>
+<p>"Eh? eh?" Feller put his hand to his ear. "Quite deaf!" he
+quavered. "But I judge you ask if I am coming with you. No. I have
+to stay to look after my garden. It has been sadly damaged, I
+fear."</p>
+<p>"That's right&mdash;of course you're deaf!" agreed Stransky,
+well knowing the contrary. "I'll be lonely without you, pal. It was
+love at first sight with me!"</p>
+<p>"And with me!" Feller whispered. "You and I, with a brigade of
+infantry and guns&mdash;" he began, but remembering his part, as he
+often would in the middle of a sentence since the distraction of
+war was in his mind, he turned to go.</p>
+<p>"A cheer for the old gardener! We don't know who he is or was,
+and it's none of our business. He saved the day!" called
+Stransky.</p>
+<p>Feller started; he paused and looked back as he heard that
+stentorian chorus in his honor; and, irresistibly, he made a snappy
+officer's salute before starting on.</p>
+<p>"That was very sweet to me," he was thinking, and then: "A
+mistake! a mistake! One thought! One duty!"</p>
+<p>Making to pass around the corner of the house, he was confronted
+by Marta, who had come to the end of the veranda. There, within
+hearing of the soldiers, the dialogue that followed was low-toned,
+and it was swift and palpitant with repressed emotion.</p>
+<p>"Mr. Feller, I saw you at the automatic. I heard what the
+wounded private of the Grays said to you and realized how true it
+was."</p>
+<p>"He is a prisoner. He cannot tell."</p>
+<p>"Does he need to? You have been seen&mdash;the conspicuous
+figure of a man in gardener's garb fighting on the very terrace of
+his own garden! The Gray staff is bound to hear of such an
+extraordinary occurrence. It is one of those stories that travel of
+themselves. And Westerling will find that same gardener here when
+he comes! What hope have you for your ruse, then?"</p>
+<p>"I&mdash;I&mdash;no matter! I forgot myself, when Lanny had
+warned me not to go near the guns. My promise to him! My duty! I
+accept what I have prepared for myself&mdash;that is a soldier's
+code."</p>
+<p>"But I shall not let you risk your life in this fashion."</p>
+<p>"You&mdash;" A searching look&mdash;a look of fire&mdash;from
+his eyes into hers, which were bright with appeal.</p>
+<p>"I feel that I have no right to let you go to your death by a
+firing squad," she interrupted hurriedly, "and I shall not! For I
+decide now not to allow the telephone to remain!"</p>
+<p>"But my chance&mdash;my one chance to&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"You have it there&mdash;happiness in the work you like, the
+work for which you seem to have been born&mdash;at least, a better
+work than spying and deceit&mdash;the right that you have won this
+morning there with the gun!"</p>
+<p>"I"&mdash;he looked around at the automatic ravenously and
+fearsomely&mdash;"I&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"It is all simply arranged. There is time for me to use the
+telephone before the Grays arrive. I shall tell Lanny why you took
+charge of the gun and how you handled it, and I know he will want
+you to keep it."</p>
+<p>"And the uniform&mdash;the uniform again! Yes, the
+uniform&mdash;if only a gunner private's uniform!" he exclaimed in
+short, pulsating breaths of ecstasy.</p>
+<p>"Yes, count on that, too! And good-by!"</p>
+<p>"Good-by! I&mdash;" But she had already turned away. "I've
+changed my mind! Exit gardener! Enter gunner! I'm going with you!
+I'm going with you!" he cried in a jubilant voice that arrested the
+attention of every one on the grounds. They saw him throw his arms
+around Stransky and then rush to the automatic. "One thought! One
+duty! Oh, that is easy now!" he breathed, caressing the breech with
+a flutter of pats from both hands.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXVIII' id="XXVIII"></a>
+<h2>XXVIII</h2>
+<h3>AN APPEAL TO PARTOW</h3>
+<br>
+<p>"You, Marta&mdash;you are still there!" Lanstron exclaimed in
+alarm when he heard her voice over the tunnel telephone. "But
+safe!" he added in relief. "Thank God for that! It's a mighty load
+off my mind. And your mother?"</p>
+<p>"Safe, too."</p>
+<p>"And Minna and little Clarissa Eileen?"</p>
+<p>"All safe."</p>
+<p>"Well, you're through the worst of it. There won't be any more
+fighting around the house, and certainly Westerling will be
+courteous. But where is Gustave?"</p>
+<p>"Gone!"</p>
+<p>"Gone!" he repeated dismally.</p>
+<p>In a flash he had guessed another tragedy for poor Gustave, who
+must have once more failed to stick to his purpose, thus shattering
+the last hope that the thousandth chance would ever come to
+anything.</p>
+<p>"Wait until you hear how he went," Marta said. With all the
+vividness of her impressions, a partisan for the moment of him and
+Dellarme, she sketched Feller's part with the automatic.</p>
+<p>As he listened, Lanstron's spirit was twenty again, with the
+fever that Feller's "let's set things going!" could start
+rollicking in his veins. What did the thousandth chance matter?
+Only a wool-gatherer would ever have had any faith in it. Victory
+for Gustave! Victory for the friend in whom he believed when others
+had disbelieved! Victory for those gifts that had broken a career
+against army routine in peace, once they had full play in war!</p>
+<p>"I can see him," he said. "It was a full breath of fresh air to
+the lungs of a suffocating man. I&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Marta was off in interruption in the full tide of an appeal.</p>
+<p>"You must&mdash;I promised&mdash;you must let him have the
+uniform again!" she begged. "You must let him keep his automatic.
+To take it away would be like separating mother and child; like
+separating Minna from Clarissa Eileen."</p>
+<p>"Better than an automatic&mdash;a battery of guns!" replied
+Lanstron. "This is where I will use any influence I have with
+Partow for all it is worth. Now, let the red-tapists dare to point
+to his past when I ask anything for him and I'll overwhelm them
+with the living present! Yes, and he shall have the iron cross. It
+is for such deeds as his that the iron cross was meant."</p>
+<p>"Thank you," she said. "It's worth something to make a man as
+happy as you will make him. Yes, you are real flesh and blood to do
+this, Lanny."</p>
+<p>Her point won with surprising ease, when she had feared that
+military form and law could not be circumvented, she leaned against
+the wall in reaction. For twenty-four hours she had been without
+sleep. The interest of her appeal for Feller had kept up her
+strength after the excitement of the fight for the redoubt was
+over. Now there seemed nothing left to do.</p>
+<p>"No doctor who ever examined me for promotion has yet found that
+I wasn't flesh and blood," Lanstron remarked a little
+plaintively.</p>
+<p>"Then the doctor must have kept the truth from Partow," she told
+him with a faint return of the teasing spirit that he knew well.
+"He wants only men of steel, with nerves of copper wire run by an
+electric battery, on his staff, I'm sure."</p>
+<p>Lanstron laughed very humanly for an automaton.</p>
+<p>"I'll suggest the battery to him. It might prove a labor saver,"
+he said. "Being a little old-fashioned, he has depended on
+clockwork, which requires a special orderly to wind us when we fun
+down and nod at our desks." Then he turned solicitous. "The Gray
+staff will certainly give you an escort beyond the Gray lines,
+where you will find a place to establish yourselves
+comfortably."</p>
+<p>The suggestion brought her energy back with the snap of a
+whip.</p>
+<p>"No!" she declared. "We stay in our home. It's ours! No one else
+has any right there while our taxes are paid. Doesn't my children's
+oath say: 'I'll not let a burglar drive me out of my house'?"</p>
+<p>"Isn't that coming around to my view, Marta?" he asked. "Aren't
+we refusing to leave the nation's house because a burglar is trying
+to enter?"</p>
+<p>"Lanny, you, with all your intellect&mdash;when you know the
+oath as well as I&mdash;you pettifog like that! The oath says to
+appeal to justice and reason even after the first blow is struck.
+Why doesn't our premier appeal to the people of the Grays?"</p>
+<p>"They garbled his last despatch, as it was, to suit their
+purpose."</p>
+<p>"Their government garbled it. I meant to appeal not to their
+premier but to the people, as human beings to human beings. Over
+there they're human beings just as much as we are. Why didn't
+Partow speak, too, as chief of staff, if he is so fond of peace? He
+is the one&mdash;not the Fellers and the Dellarmes and the
+Stranskys, who merely act up to their faith and training as
+pawns&mdash;he in the security of his cabinet making war. Why
+didn't he say: 'We do not want war. We will not mobilize our army.
+We will do nothing to arouse the war passion?'"</p>
+<p>"Their government would only have been convinced of an easier
+conquest, and by this time they would have been up to the main line
+of defence. Marta, when the diplomatic history of the war is known
+it will be found that the Gray government struck as a matter of
+cold, deliberate intention. Bodlapoo was only an excuse to carry
+out a plan of conquest."</p>
+<p>"So Partow has taught the Browns," she answered stubbornly.
+"That is one partisan view. What is theirs? What is Westerling
+teaching the Grays?"</p>
+<p>"Marta&mdash;really, I&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"What a smashing argument <i>really</i> is! You see that you
+really are not for peace, but for war. But won't you ask Partow to
+do one thing, if he still insists that he is for peace? I wonder if
+he will chuckle or laugh at my suggestion, or will he grin or roar?
+Though you know that he will do them all, ask him to send out a
+flag of truce to the Grays and beg them to stay their operations
+while his appeal&mdash;an appeal with a little of the Christ spirit
+in it, from one Christian nation to another to stop the
+murder&mdash;is read to the Gray soldiers and ours; to those who
+have to suffer and die! Oh, I'd like to help write that appeal,
+telling the women what I have seen! Do you think if it were given
+to the world that the Grays would still come on? Ask him, Lanny,
+ask him to make that simple human appeal, as brother to brother, to
+the court of all humanity! Ask him, please, Lanny!"</p>
+<p>"I shall, Marta!" he replied seriously, in respect for her
+seriousness throbbing with the abandoned play of her vitality,
+though he knew how fruitless the request would be. He loved her the
+more for this outburst. He loved her for her quick sympathies with
+any one in trouble, whether Feller or Minna; for all of her
+inconsistencies which were so real to her; for her dreams, her
+visions, her impulses, because she tried to put them in action, and
+he envied Feller for having fought in defence of her house. How
+could he expect her to interest herself exclusively in him as one
+human being when all human beings interested her so profoundly? If
+the world were peopled with Martas and their disciples then her
+proposal would be practicable.</p>
+<p>"That's fine of you, Lanny!" she said. "You've taken it like a
+good stoic, this loss of your thousandth chance. You really
+believed in it, didn't you?"</p>
+<p>"Forgotten already, like the many other thousandth chances that
+have failed," he replied cheerfully. "One of the virtues of
+Partow's steel automatons is that, being tearless as well as
+passionless, they never cry over spilt milk. And now," he went on
+soberly, "we must be saying good-by."</p>
+<p>"Good-by, Lanny? Why, what do you mean?" She was startled.</p>
+<p>"Till the war is over," he said, "and longer than that, perhaps,
+if La Tir remains in Gray territory."</p>
+<p>"You speak as if you thought you were going to lose!"</p>
+<p>"Not while many of our soldiers are alive, if they continue to
+show the spirit that they have shown so far; not unless two men can
+crush one man in the automatic-gun-recoil age. But La Tir is in a
+tangent and already in the Grays' possession, while we act on the
+defensive. So I should hardly be flying over your garden
+again."</p>
+<p>"But there's the telephone, Lanny, and here we are talking over
+it this very minute!" she expostulated.</p>
+<p>"You must remove it," he said. "If the Grays should discover it
+they might form a suspicion that would put you in an unpleasant
+position."</p>
+<p>The telephone had become almost a familiar institution in her
+thoughts. Its secret had something of the fascination for her of
+magic.</p>
+<p>"Nonsense!" she exclaimed. "I am going to be very lonely. I want
+to learn how Feller is doing&mdash;I want to chat with you. So I
+decide not to let it be taken out. And, you see, I have the
+tactical situation, as you soldiers call it, all in my favor. The
+work of removal must be done at my end of the line. You're quite
+helpless to enforce your wishes. And, Lanny, if I ring the bell
+you'll answer, won't you?"</p>
+<p>"I couldn't help it!" he replied.</p>
+<p>"Until then! You've been fine about everything to-day!"</p>
+<p>"Until then!"</p>
+<p>When Marta left the tower she knew only that she was weary with
+the mind-weariness, the body-weariness, the nerve-weariness of a
+spectator who has shared the emotion of every actor in a drama of
+death and finds the excitement that has kept her tense no longer a
+sustaining force.</p>
+<p>As she went along the path, steps uncertain from sheer fatigue,
+her sensibilities livened again at the sight of a picture. War,
+personal war, in the form of the giant Stransky, was knocking at
+the kitchen door. His two-days-old beard was matted with dust and
+there were dried red spatters on his cheek. War's furnace flames
+seemed to have tanned him; war seemed to be breathing from his deep
+chest; his big nose was war's promontory. But the unexposed space
+of his forehead seemed singularly white when he took off his cap as
+Minna came in answer to his knock. Her yielding lips were parted,
+her eyes were bright with inquiry and suspicion, her chin was
+firmly set.</p>
+<p>"I came to see if you would let me kiss your hand again," said
+Stransky, squinting through his brows wistfully.</p>
+<p>"Would that do you any good?" Minna asked.</p>
+<p>"A lot&mdash;a big lot!" said Stransky. "But if it is easier for
+you, why, you can give me another blow in the face. I deserve it.
+It would show that you weren't quite indifferent; that you took
+some interest in me."</p>
+<p>"I see your nose has been broken once. You don't want it broken
+a second time. I'm stronger than you think!" Minna retorted, and
+held out her hand carelessly as if it pleased her to humor him.</p>
+<p>He was rather graceful, despite his size, as he touched his lips
+to her fingers. Just as he raised his head a burst of cheering rose
+from the yard.</p>
+<p>"So you've found that we have gone, you brilliant intellects!"
+he shouted, and glared at the wall of the house in the direction of
+the cheers.</p>
+<p>"Quick! You have no time to lose!" Minna warned him.</p>
+<p>"Quick! quick!" cried Marta.</p>
+<p>Stransky paid no attention to the urgings. He had something more
+to say to Minna.</p>
+<p>"I'm going to keep thinking of you and seeing your
+face&mdash;the face of a good woman&mdash;while I fight. And when
+the war is over, may I come to call?" he asked.</p>
+<p>His feet were so resolutely planted on the flags that apparently
+the only way to move them was to consent.</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes!" said Minna. "Now, hurry!"</p>
+<p>"Say, but you make me happy! Watch me poke it into the Grays for
+you!" he cried and bolted.</p>
+<p>"It seems to me that he is the biggest, most ridiculous man I
+ever saw!" said Minna, as she watched him out of sight. "I'm tired,
+just tired to death, aren't you?" she added to Marta.</p>
+<p>"Exactly!" agreed Marta. "I feel as if I had worked my way
+through hell to heaven and heaven was the chance to sleep."</p>
+<p>Within the kitchen Mrs. Galland was already slumbering soundly
+in her chair. Overhead Marta heard the exclamations of male voices
+and the tread of what was literally the heel of the
+conqueror&mdash;guests that had come without asking! Intruders that
+had entered without any process of law! Would they overrun the
+house, her mother's room, her own room?</p>
+<p>Indignation brought fresh strength as she started up the stairs.
+The head of the flight gave on to a dark part of the hall. There
+she paused, held by the scene that a score or more of Gray
+soldiers, who had riotously crowded into the dining-room, were
+enacting.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXIX' id="XXIX"></a>
+<h2>XXIX</h2>
+<h3>THROUGH THE VENEER</h3>
+<br>
+<p>These men in the dining-room were members of Fracasse's company
+of the Grays whom Marta had seen from her window the night before
+rushing across the road into the garden. It is time for their
+story&mdash;the story of their attack on the redoubt. One of those
+who remained motionless on the road was the doctor's son. If he had
+sprained his ankle at man[oe]uvres, the whole company would have
+gossiped about the accident. If he had died in the garrison
+hospital from pneumonia, the barracks would have been blue for a
+week. If he had fallen in the charge across the white posts, the
+day-laborer's son on his right and the judge's son on his left
+would have felt a spasm of horror.</p>
+<p>This is death, they would have thought; death that barely missed
+us; death that lays a man in the full tide of youth, as we are,
+silent and still forever.</p>
+<p>Twelve hours after the war had begun, when the judge's son
+missed the doctor's son from the ranks, he remarked:</p>
+<p>"Then they must have got him!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, I Saw him roll over on his side," said the laborer's
+son.</p>
+<p>There was no further comment. The lottery had drawn the doctor's
+son this time; it would get some one else with the next rush.
+Existence had resolved itself into a hazard; all perspective was
+merged into a brimstone-gray background. The men did not think of
+home and parents, as they had on the previous night while they
+waited for the war to begin, or of patriotism. Relatives were still
+dear and country was still dear, but the threads of these
+affections were no longer taut. They hung loose. Fatalism had taken
+the place of suspense. There is no occurrence that frequency will
+not make familiar, and they were already familiar with death.</p>
+<p>A man might even get used to falling from a great height. At
+first, in lightning rapidity of thought, all his life would pass in
+review before him and all his hopes for the future would crowd
+thick. But what if he were to go on descending for hours; yes, for
+days? Would not his sensations finally wear themselves down to a
+raw, quivering brain and the brain at length grow callous? Suppose,
+further, that a number of men had been thrown over a precipice at
+the same time as he and that the bottom of the abyss was the
+distance from star to star! Suppose that they fell at the same rate
+of speed! The first to be dashed against a shelf of rock would be a
+ghastly reminder to each man of his own approaching end. But,
+proceeding on horror's journey, he would become accustomed to such
+pictures. He would feel hunger and cold. Physical discomfort would
+overwhelm mental agony. If a biscuit shot out from the pocket of a
+corpse, wouldn't the living hand grab for it in brute
+greediness?</p>
+<p>The thinner the veneer of civilized habit, the more easily the
+animal, always waiting and craving war, breaks through. And the
+animal was strong in Jacob Pilzer, the butcher's son. He had a
+bull's heart and lacked the little tendrils of sensibility whose
+writhing would tire him. Hugo Mallin had these tendrils by the
+thousand. He had so many that they gave him a reserve physical
+endurance like a kind of intoxication. He felt as if he had been
+drinking some noxious, foamy wine which made his mind singularly
+keen to every impression. Therefore he and Pilzer alone of
+Fracasse's company were not utterly fatigued.</p>
+<p>The savagery of Pilzer's bitterness at seeing another get the
+bronze cross before he received one turned not on little Peterkin,
+the valet's son, but on Hugo. As he and Hugo moved, elbow to elbow,
+picking their way forward from the knoll, he eased his mind with
+rough sarcasm at Hugo's expense. He christened Hugo "White Liver."
+When Hugo stumbled over a stone he whispered:</p>
+<p>"White Liver, that comes from the shaking knees of a
+coward!"</p>
+<p>Hugo did not answer, nor did he after they had crossed the road
+and were under the cover of the fourth terrace wall, and Pilzer
+whispered:</p>
+<p>"Still with us, little White Liver? Cowards are lucky. But your
+time will come. You will die of fright."</p>
+<p>They worked their way ahead in the darkness to the third terrace
+and then to the second, without drawing fire. There they were told
+to unslip their packs "and sleep&mdash;sleep!"</p>
+<p>Fracasse passed the word, as if this were also an order which
+perforce must be obeyed. They dropped down in a row, their heads
+against the cold stone wall. So closely packed were their bodies
+that they could feel one another's breaths and heart-beats. Where
+last night they had thought of a multitude of things in vivid
+flashes, to-night nothing was vivid after the last explosion in the
+town and there was an end of firing. Spaces of consciousness and
+unconsciousness were woven together in a kind of patchwork chaos of
+mind. For the raw brains were not yet quite calloused; they
+quivered from the successive benumbing shocks of the day.</p>
+<p>Hugo would not even cheat himself by trying to close his eyes.
+He lay quite still looking at the quietly twinkling, kindly stars.
+Unlike his comrades, he had not to go to hell in order to know what
+hell was like. He had foreseen the nature of war's reality, so it
+had not come as a surprise. Sufficient universal projection of this
+kind of imagination might afford sufficient martial excitement
+without war.</p>
+<p>His mind was busy in the gestation of his impressions and
+observations since he had crossed the frontier. Definitely he knew
+that he was not afraid of bullets or shell fire, and in this fact
+he found no credit whatever. The lion and the tiger and the little
+wild pigs of South America who will charge a railroad train are
+brave. But it took some courage to bear Pilzer's abuse in silence,
+he was thinking, while he was conscious that out of all that he had
+seen and felt in the conflict of multitudinous angles of view was
+coming something definite, which would result in personal action,
+fearless of any consequences.</p>
+<p>The thing that held him back from a declaration of self was the
+pale faces around him; his comrades of the barracks and
+man[oe]uvres. He loved them; he thought, student fashion, that he
+understood them. He liked being their humorist; he liked to win
+their glances of affection. The fortitude to endure their contempt,
+their enmity, their ostracism would not save those dear to him in
+his distant provincial home from humiliation and heart-break. There
+was the rub: his father and mother and his sweetheart. He was an
+only son. His sweetheart was a goddess to his eyes. What purpose is
+there in the rebellion of a grain of sand on the seashore, in the
+insubordination of one of five million soldiers? Hadn't Westerling
+answered all doubts with the aphorism, "It is a mistake for a
+soldier to think too much"?</p>
+<p>Thus pondering, in the company of the stars, Hugo, who had so
+many thoughts of his own that he led a double life, awaited the
+dawn. When the church spire became outlined in the rosy, breaking
+light of the east, he thought how much it was like the church spire
+of his own town. He saw that he was in what had been a beautiful,
+tenderly cared-for old garden before soldiery had ruthlessly
+trampled its flowers.</p>
+<p>Raising his head to a level with the terrace wall&mdash;the
+second terrace was low&mdash;he could see the piles of sand-bags on
+the first terrace only twenty feet away and an old house that
+belonged to the garden. The location appealed to him as his glance
+swept over plain and mountains glistening with dew. It must be
+glorious to come down from the veranda at daybreak or day's end to
+look at the flowers at your feet and the horizon in the
+distance.</p>
+<p>"Could little White Liver sleep away from home and mamma? Did he
+long for mamma to tuck him among the goose feathers, with a sweet
+biscuit in his paddy?" inquired Pilzer awakening.</p>
+<p>Hugo looked around at Pilzer in his quizzical fashion.</p>
+<p>"Jake, you are unnecessarily uprooting an aster with the toe of
+your boot," he said.</p>
+<p>Pilzer had a torrent of abuse ready to his tongue's end when
+Fracasse interrupted with a hoarse, whispered warning:</p>
+<p>"Silence, Pilzer! You talk too much."</p>
+<p>Now the irascible Pilzer had a further grudge against Hugo for
+having made him the object of a reprimand.</p>
+<p>"You!" he whispered, when the captain's back was turned, calling
+Hugo a foul name.</p>
+<p>This cut through even Hugo's philosophy and the blood went in a
+hot rush to his cheeks; but he slipped on his pack, as the others
+were doing, and readjusted his cartridge-box. Word was passed to
+make ready for another rush, and soon the men knew that yesterday
+was not part of the hideous nightmare which had kept their legs
+quivering mechanically, as in the charge, while they slept, but
+that the nightmare was a continuing reality and the peace of
+morning a dream.</p>
+<p>Under cover of the rain of shell fire on Dellarme's position,
+already described, they mounted the wall of the second terrace and
+ran to the wall of the first terrace. They had expected to suffer
+terribly, but passed safely underneath a sheet of bullets that
+caught other sections of their regiment on the lower terraces. Over
+their heads were the muzzles of the Browns' rifles, blazing toward
+the road, while in the direction of the tower they saw the first
+charge of another regiment melting like snow under sprays of flame.
+They could not fire at Dellarme's men and Dellarme's men could not
+fire at them without leaning over the parapet. They could not go
+ahead. There was no room to their rear, for the reserves behind the
+third terrace had rushed up to the second terrace; those behind the
+fourth to the third; and still others across the road to the
+fourth, in successive waves.</p>
+<p>With a welter of slaughter around them, Fracasse's men were in
+something of the position that little Peterkin had enjoyed in the
+shell crater. They ate a breakfast of biscuits, washed down by
+water from their canteens. Trickles of sand from bullet holes
+sprinkled their shoulders and they had enough resiliency of spirit
+to grin when a stream of sand from a bag torn by a shell burst ran
+down the back of Pilzer's neck. It was rather amusing to hear Jake
+growling as he twisted in his blouse.</p>
+<p>Hugo caught the humor of it in another sense, for the same shell
+burst threw a piece of brown sleeve matted in a piece of flesh
+among the flowers. The next instant he saw a squad of Grays who
+sprang up to rush toward the linden stumps go down under the hose
+stream from the automatic with the precision of having been struck
+by an electric current. Not occupied, as he had been yesterday,
+with the business of keeping to his part as a physical cog in the
+machine, he was seeing war as a spectator&mdash;as Marta saw it, as
+only a privileged few ever see it. Society, he was thinking, took
+the trouble to bring boys through the whooping-cough and measles,
+pay for clothing and doctors' bills, and, while it complained about
+business losses and safe-guarded trees and harvests and buildings,
+destroyed the most valuable product of all with a spatter of
+bullets from a rapid-firer.</p>
+<p>The position of him and his comrades struck him as tragically
+ludicrous. Were they grown men? Had they reasoning minds? Were they
+of the great races that had given the world steam-power, electric
+power, an&aelig;sthesia, and antiseptics? Had they the religion of
+Christ? Had they an inheritance of great ages of art, literature,
+music, and philosophy? Did they guard the treasures of their
+libraries and galleries? Would they shudder in indignation if some
+one sent a bullet through the Sistine Madonna, or throw a bomb at
+the Venus de Milo, or struck a rare Chinese porcelain into
+fragments with an axe?</p>
+<p>Yes; oh, yes!</p>
+<p>Here were beings created in the likeness of their Maker, whose
+criterion of superiority over other animals was in these symbols
+and not in that of tooth, claw, or talon, disembowelling their
+fellow creatures. Here were beings huddled together like a lot of
+puppies or cubs on an island in the midst of carnage which was not
+a visitation of the Almighty, but of their own making. And suicide
+and homicide were against the law in the lands of both the Browns
+and the Grays!</p>
+<p>The whole business was monstrous, lunatic, inconceivable. Yet he
+himself was one of the actors, without the character or the courage
+to break free of the machine which was taking lives with the
+irresponsibility of a baby hammering at the jewels of a watch. The
+fact that he knew better made him far more culpable, he thought,
+than little Peterkin or any of his comrades. Yes, he was
+despicable; he was a coward!</p>
+<p>All were lulled into a sense of security except Captain
+Fracasse, who had a set frown of apprehension which came of a
+professional knowledge not theirs. Little Peterkin, warmed by the
+autumn sunlight, began to believe in his star. If there were to be
+a special dispensation providing shell craters and the reverse
+walls of redoubts for him, he might retain his reputation for
+heroism.</p>
+<p>The sand still working its way downward between Pilzer's bare
+skin and his undershirt irritated him to unusual restlessness of
+ambition for glory and bronze crosses. He was the strong man of his
+company, now that Eugene Aronson was dead. He must prove his
+importance. An inspiration made him leap to his feet. This brought
+his head within a foot of the top of the parapet, with an enemy's
+rifle barrel in easy reach. Fortunately, or unfortunately, he was
+the type who must precede action with a boast; a bite with a growl.
+Let all see that he was about to do a gallant, clever thing.</p>
+<p>"Watch me snatch that rifle!" he announced.</p>
+<p>"No, you don't! Get down!" snapped Fracasse. "We aren't inviting
+hand-grenades. It's a wonder that we have escaped so far."</p>
+<p>"Hand-grenades!" gasped Peterkin, going white.</p>
+<p>But nobody observed his pallor. Every one else was gasping,
+"Hand-grenades!" under his breath; or, if not, his thoughts were
+shrieking, "Hand-grenades!" There was a restless movement, a
+wistful look to the rear.</p>
+<p>"Keep quiet!" whispered Fracasse. "Let us hope it isn't known
+that we're here."</p>
+<p>They became as still as men of stone.</p>
+<p>"Well, if they are going to throw grenades then they will throw
+them!" exclaimed Peterkin with the bravery of fear. He must do or
+say something worthy of a hero, he thought, in order to prove that
+he was not as scared as he knew he had looked and still felt.</p>
+<p>"You have the right sort of <i>sang-froid</i>, Peter
+Kinderling!" whispered Fracasse. "And you, Pilzer, showed a proper
+spirit, too, if wrongly directed."</p>
+<p>Under cover of this favor, Peterkin drew a little out of line,
+making a great pretence of stretching his legs and
+yawning&mdash;yawning with a sincerely dropped jaw and a quivering
+lip. He pressed his chin against the ground and this stopped the
+quivering. Also, he was in a position to watch the parapet closely
+and to make a quick spring.</p>
+<p>Fatalism had become suspense&mdash;suspense without action to
+take their minds off the prospect, the suspense of death lurking in
+a cloud which might break in a lightning flash! They thought that
+they knew the full gamut of horrors; but nothing that they had yet
+gone through was any criterion for what they now had to endure. All
+understood the nature of a hand-grenade, which bursts like a
+Nihilist's bomb. It was as easy, they knew, to toss hand-grenades
+over the sand-bags into human flesh as apples into a basket. They
+felt themselves bound and gagged, waiting for an assassin to
+macerate them at his own sweet will.</p>
+<p>The second hour was worse than the first, the third worse than
+the second. In lulls they heard the voices of Dellarme and his men,
+which seemed more ominous than the crash of rifles or the scream
+and crack of shells. Finally there was a lull which they knew meant
+the supreme attempt to storm the position from the town side. They
+heard the commotion that followed Dellarme's death; the sharp,
+rallying commands of Feller and Stransky; and then, as Peterkin saw
+a black object fly free of a hand over the parapet he made a
+catlike spring, followed by another and another, and plunged face
+downward at the angle where the face of the redoubt bent toward the
+town.</p>
+<p>He thought that he was dead, and found, as he had in the shell
+crater, that he was not. After the two explosions he heard groans
+that chilled his blood, and looked around to see living faces like
+chalk, with glassy, beady, protruding eyes, and a dozen men killed
+and eviscerated and mangled in bleeding confusion.</p>
+<p>But Hugo and Pilzer and those of Peterkin's immediate group were
+alive. They were in their places, while he was alone and out of his
+place. He had bolted, while they held their ground; now he would be
+revealed in his true light. The bronze cross would be lost before
+it was pinned to his breast. From where he lay, however, he could
+see the other face of the redoubt and a wedge of men about to mount
+the sand-bags. His next act was born of the inspired cunning of his
+fear of being exposed, which was almost as compelling as his fear
+of death. He waved his hand excitedly to the others to come on.</p>
+<p>"Charge! Charge! This is the way!" shrieked Peterkin.</p>
+<p>His voice had the terror of a man floating toward a falls and
+calling for a rope, but not so to Fracasse, to whom it was the
+voice of a great chance. Why hadn't he thought of this before? Of
+course, he should move around under cover of the reverse wall of
+the redoubt to join in the attack on the weak point! The valet's
+son had shown him the way.</p>
+<p>"Come, men, come! Follow me and Peterkin!" cried Fracasse.</p>
+<p>Did they follow? Westerling or any expert in the psychology of
+war could understand how ripe was their mood. "It is the wait under
+right conditions that will make men fiends unleashed when the word
+to storm is given," an older authority had written. Under sentence
+of death for six hours, they welcomed any opportunity to get at
+grips with those who had held death suspended over their heads.</p>
+<p>You will use hand-grenades, will you? Snug behind sand-bags you
+will tear the flesh of our comrades to pieces, will you? They saw
+red, the red of raw fragments of flesh; the red of the gush from
+torn artery walls&mdash;all except Hugo and Peterkin, who might
+well begin to believe that there was a measure of art in heroism.
+Peterkin seemed to share leadership at the captain's side, but he
+slipped and fell&mdash;he had weak ankles, anyway&mdash;as
+Fracasse's men pressed the rear of the wedge forward with the
+strength of mass, only to be borne back by men, riddled with
+bullets, tumbling fairly into their faces.</p>
+<p>As we have seen, there was no getting through a breach under the
+concentrated blasts of a hundred rifles, and Pilzer, who, by using
+human shoulders for steps, had reached the parapet, turned a back
+somersault with out his rifle. However, he seized one from a dead
+man's hand before the captain had noticed the loss. Some of the
+company joined in the flight of the attackers from the town into
+the open, but Hugo and Pilzer and their friends remained under
+cover of the wall. They still saw red, the red of a darker
+anger&mdash;that of repulse.</p>
+<p>When, finally, they burst into the redoubt after it was found
+that the Browns had gone, all, even the judge's son, were the war
+demon's, own. The veneer had been warped and twisted and burned off
+down to the raw animal flesh. Their brains had the fever itch of
+callouses forming. Not a sign of brown there in the yard; not a
+sign of any tribute after all they had endured! They had not been
+able to lay hands on the murderous throwers of hand-grenades. Far
+away now was the barrack-room geniality of the forum around Hugo;
+in oblivion were the ethics of an inherited civilization taught by
+mothers, teachers, and church.</p>
+<p>But here was a house&mdash;a house of the Browns; a big, fine
+house! They would see what they had won&mdash;this was the
+privilege of baffled victory. What they had won was theirs! To the
+victor the spoils! Pell-mell they crowded into the dining-room,
+Hugo with the rest, feeling himself a straw on the crest of a wave,
+and Pilzer, most bitter, most ugly of all, his short, strong teeth
+and gums showing and his liver patch red, lumpy, and trembling. In
+crossing the threshold of privacy they committed the act that
+leaves the deepest wound of war's inheritance, to go on from
+generation to generation in the history of families.</p>
+<p>"A swell dining-room! I like the chandeliers!" roared
+Pilzer.</p>
+<p>With his bayonet he smashed the only globe left intact by the
+shell fire. There was a laugh as a shower of glass fell on the
+floor. Even the judge's son, the son of the tribune of law, joined
+in. Pilzer then ripped up the leather seat of a chair. This
+introductory havoc whetted his appetite for other worlds of
+conquest, as the self-chosen leader of the increasing crowd that
+poured through the doorway.</p>
+<p>"Maybe there's food!" he shouted. "Maybe there's wine!"</p>
+<p>"Food and wine!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, wine! We're thirsty!"</p>
+<p>"And maybe women! I'd like to kiss a pretty maid servant!"
+Pilzer added, starting toward the hall.</p>
+<p>"Stop!" cried Hugo, forcing his way in front of Pilzer.</p>
+<p>He was like no one of the Hugos of the many parts that his
+comrades had seen him play. His blue eyes had become an inflexible
+gray. He was standing half on tiptoe, his quivering muscles in tune
+with the quivering pitch of his voice: a Hugo in anger! This was a
+tremendous joke. He was about to regain his reputation as a
+humorist by a brilliant display in keeping with the new order of
+their existence.</p>
+<p>"We have no right in here! This is a private house!"</p>
+<p>But the fever of their savagery&mdash;the infectious savagery of
+the mob&mdash;wanted no humor of this kind.</p>
+<p>"Out of the way, you white-livered little rat!" cried Pilzer,
+"or I'll prick the tummy of mamma's darling!"</p>
+<p>What happened then was so sudden and unexpected in Hugo that all
+were vague about details. They saw him in a catapultic lunge,
+mesmeric in its swiftness, and they saw Pilzer go down, his leg
+twisted under him and his head banging the floor. Hugo stood, half
+ashamed, half frightened, yet ready for another encounter.</p>
+<p>Fracasse, entering at this moment, was too intent on his mission
+to consider the rights of a personal difference between two of his
+company, though he heard and noted Pilzer's growling complaint that
+he had been struck an unfair blow.</p>
+<p>"There's work to do! Out of here, quick! We are losing valuable
+time!" he announced, rounding his men toward the door with
+commanding gestures. "We are going in pursuit!"</p>
+<p>Marta, who had observed the latter part of the scene from the
+shadows of the hall, knew that she should never forget Hugo's face
+as he turned on Pilzer, while his voice of protest struck a singing
+chord in her jangling nerves. It was the voice of civilization, of
+one who could think out of the orbit of a whirlpool of passionate
+barbarism. She could see that he was about to spring and her prayer
+went with his leap. She gloried in the impact that felled the great
+brute with the liver patch on his cheek, which was like a birthmark
+of war.</p>
+<p>After the men were gone she regretted that she had not gone to
+Hugo and expressed her gratitude. She vaguely wondered if she
+should see him again and hoped that she might. The two faces,
+Hugo's and Pilzer's, in the instant of Hugo's protest and Pilzer's
+contempt, were as clear as in life before her eyes.</p>
+<p>Then a staff-officer appeared in the doorway. When he saw a
+woman enter the room he frowned. He had ridden from the town, which
+was empty of women, a fact that he regarded as a blessing. If she
+had been a maid servant he would have kept on his cap. Seeing that
+she was not, he removed it and found himself in want of words as
+their eyes met after she had made a gesture to the broken glass on
+the floor and the lacerated table top, which said too plainly:</p>
+<p>"Do you admire your work?"</p>
+<p>The fact that he was well groomed and freshly shaven did not in
+any wise dissipate in her feminine mind his connection with this
+destruction. He had never seen anything like the smile which went
+with the gesture. Her eyes were two continuing and challenging
+flames. Her chin was held high and steady, and the pallor of
+exhaustion, with the blackness of her hair-and eyes, made her
+strangely commanding. He understood that she was not waiting for
+him to speak, but to go.</p>
+<p>"I did not know that there was a woman here!" he said.</p>
+<p>"And I did not know that officers of the Grays were accustomed
+to enter private houses without invitations!" she replied.</p>
+<p>"This is a little different," he began.</p>
+<p>She interrupted him.</p>
+<p>"But the law of the Grays is that homes should be left
+undisturbed, isn't it? At least, it is the law of civilization. I
+believe you profess, too, to protect property, do you not?"</p>
+<p>"Why, yes!" he agreed. He wished that he could get a little
+respite from the steady fire of her eyes. It was embarrassing and
+as confusing as the white light of an impracticable logic.</p>
+<p>"In that case, please place a guard around our house lest some
+more of your soldiers get out of control," she went on.</p>
+<p>"I can do that, yes," he said. "But we are to make this a staff
+headquarters and must start at once to put the house in
+readiness."</p>
+<p>"General Westerling's headquarters?" she inquired.</p>
+<p>He parried the question with a frown. Staff-officers never give
+information. They receive information and transmit orders.</p>
+<p>"I know General Westerling. You will tell him that my mother,
+Mrs. Galland, and our maid and myself are very tired from the
+entertainment he has given us, unasked, and we need sleep to-night.
+So you will leave us until morning and that door, sir, is the one
+out into the grounds."</p>
+<p>The staff-officer bowed and went out by that door, glad to get
+away from Marta's eyes. His inspection of the premises with a view
+to plans for staff accommodation could wait. Westerling would not
+be here for two days at least.</p>
+<p>"Whew! What energy she has!" he thought. "I never had anybody
+make me feel so contemptibly unlike a gentleman in my life."</p>
+<p>Yet Marta, returning to the hall, had to steady herself in a
+dizzy moment against the wall. Complete reaction had come. She
+craved sleep as if it were the one true, real thing in the world.
+She craved sleep for the clarity of mind that comes with the
+morning light. In the haziness of fleecy thought, as slumber drew
+its soft clouds around her, her last conscious visions were the
+pleasant ones rising free of a background of horror: of Feller's
+smile when he went back to his automatic for good; of Dellarme's
+smile as he was dying; of Stransky's smile as Minna gave him hope;
+and of Hugo's face as he uttered his flute-like cry of protest. In
+her ears were the haunting calmness and contained force of
+Lanstron's voice over the telephone. She was pleased to think that
+she had not lost her temper in her talk with the staff-officer. No,
+she had not flared once in indignation. It was as if she had
+absorbed some of Lanny's own self-control. Lanny would approve of
+her in that scene with an officer of the Grays. And she realized
+that a change had come over her&mdash;a change inexplicable and
+telling&mdash;and she was tired&mdash;oh, so tired! It had been
+exhausting work, indeed, for one woman, though she had been around
+the world, making war on two armies.</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>Meanwhile, all too flushed with energy, the energy of movement,
+to think of the feud between Hugo and Pilzer, Fracasse's men had
+sped along the castle road. Little Peterkin easily kept pace. There
+was no danger in pursuit. In him was the same zest of the chase
+which Animated his comrades. They dropped down on a ledge without
+much regard to order. Before them, at close range, was a company
+breaking out of close order in a <i>sauve-qui-peut</i> rout up a
+reverse slope. It was not Dellarme's company, but some other that
+had mistaken its direction and retired too late and by the wrong
+road.</p>
+<p>You will throw hand-grenades, will you? thought Fracasse's men.
+You will mangle our fellows when they Can't strike back, will you?
+Now you'll pay! Now it is our turn! We have seen our blood flow and
+now yours will flow!</p>
+<p>The lust of the red slipped the cartridge clips into the
+magazines and held a true aim in the mad delight of slaughter. No
+one minded, for no one heard&mdash;not even little
+Peterkin&mdash;the scattering bullets in return. They had reached
+the stage where the objective thought of revenge wholly submerged
+the subjective thought of personal danger, which is the mood of the
+hungry tiger in the hunt. They were the veritable finished products
+of veteran experience in purpose and marksmanship. Hugo, too, was
+firing, but far over the head of every target; firing like a man in
+a trance who needs some deciding incident to bring him out of it
+into the part he was to play.</p>
+<p>Only occasional figures who had not escaped over the ridge were
+to be seen. The fewer the targets the greater the concentration. A
+whole company was firing on a dozen straggling figures. But
+one&mdash;that one in the pasture&mdash;seemed to have a charmed
+life. The ground around him was peppered with dust spots. He had
+only a few yards more to go to safety; yes his head&mdash;the
+exasperation of him!&mdash;was in line with the crest before he
+fell.</p>
+<p>Where was there any more prey? With ferret quickness eyes swept
+the range of vision. Out of an orchard into the stubble of a
+wheat-field broke a panicky mass; a score or more of men who had
+lost their officer and their heads presumably. They were the nail
+under the hammer, a brown blot, a target.</p>
+<p>"Ah!" a chorus of excited exclamations in greeting of the game
+flushed from cover ran along the line. Just the way you got our
+fellows with the hand-grenades, we will get you! This was the
+thought, this the prayer which they saw being fulfilled by the glad
+medley of their fire when Hugo Mallin sprang up and threw down his
+rifle as if it were something whose touch had become venomous. He
+threw it down with features transformed in the uplifting thought
+and the relief of a final resolution taken.</p>
+<p>"I am through!" he cried. "I will not murder my fellowman who
+has done me no wrong! I cannot, I will not kill!"</p>
+<p>Fracasse, who was near by, heard enough to understand the
+purport of the declaration, and his recollection of Hugo's heresy
+and all the prejudice that he had formed against Hugo and the
+abhorrence of Hugo's offence to the strict militarist brought a
+rush of anger to his brain as he leaped up and drawing his sword,
+struck at Hugo with the flat of it. He aimed for Hugo's back, but a
+bullet had hit Hugo in the calf of his leg and, his knees giving
+under him, he received the blow on the head and fell
+unconscious.</p>
+<p>When he came to it was with a twitch of pain in his ribs. He saw
+the glowering faces of his comrades above him and realized that
+Pilzer had given him a kick which expressed the general
+opinion.</p>
+<p>"Once ought to be enough of that," said the doctor, who was
+bandaging the leg, speaking to Pilzer.</p>
+<p>Yet in the doctor's eyes Hugo saw no favor, only the humanity of
+his occupation of mercy to criminal and king alike. But Hugo
+expected no favor and he was glad of what he had done as he swooned
+again. When he came to a second time, his head aching with throbs,
+it was with a sense of falling. He found that he was on a litter
+that had just been set down. Evidently this was by order of the
+colonel, who was standing over Hugo in the company of some
+officers. All were regarding him as if he were a species of
+reptile.</p>
+<p>"World anarchist ideas, which is another word for treason or
+white liver," observed the colonel. "To think that it happened in
+my regiment! But I'll not try to cover it for the regiment's good
+name. He will get the full measure of the law!"</p>
+<p>"The placard is a good idea," suggested an officer.</p>
+<p>"Yes, put on by one of his comrades!"</p>
+<p>"The punishment of public opinion. It shows how sound the army
+is at heart."</p>
+<p>Hugo, lowering his glance, was able to see a sheet of note-paper
+pinned to his blouse. It was lettered, but he could not make out
+the words. Then he heard the approach of a galloping horse, whose
+hoofs seemed to strike his head, and heard the horse stop and an
+orderly saying something about Company I having got too far forward
+into a mess and the need of litters.</p>
+<p>"We can spare this one," said the colonel.</p>
+<p>Hugo was rolled roughly onto the ground by the roadside and left
+alone. He managed to raise himself on his elbow and saw that the
+lettering of the placard was "Coward!" Officers and soldiers and
+hospital-corps men called attention to it as they passed. The sun
+was very hot and he was growing feverish. Painfully he dragged
+himself to the shelter of a tree, and then, looking around, saw
+that he was near the big house of the terraced garden.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXX' id="XXX"></a>
+<h2>XXX</h2>
+<h3>MARTA MEETS HUGO</h3>
+<br>
+<p>The general staff-officer of the Grays, who had tasted Marta's
+temper on his first call, when he returned the next morning did not
+enter unannounced. He rang the door-bell.</p>
+<p>"I have a message for you from General Westerling," he said to
+her. "The general expresses his deep regret at the unavoidable
+damage to your house and grounds and has directed that everything
+possible be done immediately in the way of repairs."</p>
+<p>In proof of this the officer called attention to a group of
+service-corps men who were removing the sand-bags from the first
+terrace. Others were at work in the garden setting uprooted plants
+back into the earth.</p>
+<p>"His Excellency says," continued the officer, "that, although
+the house is so admirably suited for staff purposes, we will find
+another if you desire."</p>
+<p>He was too polite and too considerate in his attitude for Marta
+not to meet him in the same spirit.</p>
+<p>"That is what we should naturally prefer," and Marta bowed her
+head in indecision.</p>
+<p>"We should have to begin installing the telegraph and telephone
+service on the lower floor at once," he remarked. "In fact, all
+arrangements must be made before the general's arrival."</p>
+<p>"He has been a guest here before," she said reminiscently and
+detachedly.</p>
+<p>Her head dropped lower, in apparent disregard of his presence,
+as she took counsel with herself. She was perfectly still, without
+even the movement of an eyelash. Other considerations than any he
+might suggest, he subtly understood, held her attention. They were
+the criterion by which she would at length assent or dissent, and
+nothing could hurry the Marta of to-day, who yesterday had been a
+creature of feverish impulse.</p>
+<p>It seemed a long time that he was watching that wonderful
+profile under the very black hair, soft with the softness of flesh,
+yet firmly carved. She lifted her head gradually, her eyes sweeping
+past the spot where Dellarme had lain dying, where Feller had
+manned the automatic, where Stransky had thrown Pilzer over the
+parapet. He saw the glance arrested and focussed on the flag of the
+Grays, which was floating from a staff on the outskirts of the
+town, and slowly, glowingly, the light rippling on its folds was
+reflected in her face.</p>
+<p>"She is for us! She is a Gray!" he thought triumphantly. The
+woman and the flag! The matter-of-fact staff-officer felt the
+thrill of sentiment.</p>
+<p>"I think we can arrange it," Marta announced with a rare smile
+of assent.</p>
+<p>"Then I'll go back to town and set the signal-corps men to
+work," he said.</p>
+<p>"And when you come you will find the house at your disposal,"
+she assured him.</p>
+<p>Except that he was raising his cap instead of saluting, he was
+conscious of withdrawing with the deference due to a superior.</p>
+<p>In place of the smile, after he had gone, came a frown and a
+look in her eyes as if at something revolting; then the smile
+returned, to be succeeded by the frown, which was followed by an
+indeterminate shaking of the head.</p>
+<p>The roar of battle kept up its steady refrain in the direction
+of the range. Marta had heard it when she fell asleep and heard it
+when she awakened. A battery of heavy guns of the Grays broke their
+flashes from a knoll this side of the one where Dellarme's men had
+made their first stand. At the foot of the garden, where yesterday
+she had distributed flowers to the wounded Browns, a regiment of
+Gray infantry was marching past a train of siege-guns. All the
+figures moving on the landscape, which yesterday had been brown,
+had changed to gray. The Grays were masters of the town and all the
+neighborhood.</p>
+<p>Marta stepped down from the veranda in response to the call of
+the open air to physical vigor renewed after sweet sleep. Rather
+than return directly to the kitchen, where breakfast was waiting,
+she would go around the house. She stopped before a Japanese maple
+which had been split by a shell striking in a crotch. Was there any
+hope of saving it? No. She turned white about the lips, with red
+spots on her cheeks, and at length nodded her head as if in answer
+to some inward question.</p>
+<p>Over the sward, cut by shell fragments, lay torn limbs and bits
+of bark, and in the shade of a tree near the road she had a glimpse
+of the shoulder of the gray uniform of a prostrate man. The rest of
+him was hidden by the low-hanging branches of one of the Norway
+spruces which bordered the estate at this point. Another step and
+she saw a circular red spot on a white leg bandage; another, and a
+white square of paper pinned to a blouse; another, and she
+identified the wounded man as her hero of the scene in the
+dining-room.</p>
+<p>Hugo's eyes were closed, his breaths slow, in restless sleep.
+His face, flushed with fever, was winningly boyish and frank. He
+who had had the courage to speak alone against the opinion of his
+fellows, to voice a belief that made every sympathetic chord in her
+own mind sing with praise and understanding, the courage to say
+that invasion was wrong even when made by his own people, had been
+labelled coward and left to die!</p>
+<p>The exaltation of his features when he had been the champion of
+her beliefs and her impulse against the barbarism of his comrades
+and the charm of their resignation now, the pitifulness of his
+condition&mdash;all had an appeal as she bent over him that called
+for an expression having the touch of the sublimely feminine. She
+took his hand in hers and pressed it gently. He awoke and brought
+himself jerkily to a sitting posture. The effort made a crash in
+his head that sent his senses swimming. She thought that he was
+going to swoon and slipped her arm behind him in support and, the
+Marta of impulse, pressed her lips to his brow. After the first
+racking throb of his temples he was able to steady himself, and as
+she drew away she saw his blue eyes starting in wonder at her
+act.</p>
+<p>"I&mdash;I had to do it to thank you for what you did in the
+dining-room!" she stammered.</p>
+<p>"Oh! Oh! It was very beautiful of you, but I couldn't help being
+surprised, for it was rather unusual&mdash;from a stranger." He
+smiled, and Hugo had a gift in smiles, as we know: smiles for
+laughter, smiles for reassurance, and smiles to cure embarrassment.
+"It was almost as refreshing as a drink of water," he concluded
+impersonally.</p>
+<p>"You are thirsty?"</p>
+<p>"This&mdash;this is morning, isn't it?" Hugo went on
+quizzically.</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes!"</p>
+<p>"Then it must be the next day," he pursued, still quizzically.
+"You see, I said I would not kill any more&mdash;and I will
+not&mdash;and I was shot and got tagged without even being shipped
+as freight. I was thirsty last night, very thirsty, and some
+one&mdash;I think it was Jake Pilzer&mdash;some one said to go to
+the fountain of hell for a drink, but I&mdash;I don't think that a
+very good place to get a drink, do you?"</p>
+<p>Weak and faint as he was, he put a touch of drollery into the
+question which made her laugh, her eyes sparkling through a moist
+haze.</p>
+<p>"You're real, aren't you?" he inquired in sudden perplexity.
+"I'm not dreaming?"</p>
+<p>"As real as the water I shall bring you."</p>
+<p>Soon Marta was back, holding a glass to his lips.</p>
+<p>"There's no doubt about it; you are real!" said Hugo.</p>
+<p>"I feel as if the chimney were still hot but that you had
+drenched the fire in the grate."</p>
+<p>"Who put this on you?" she asked as she unpinned the
+placard.</p>
+<p>"I've a vague idea, from a vague overhearing of the colonel's
+remarks, that it is public opinion," he replied, and seeing, that
+she was about to tear it up, he arrested her action. "No, I think
+I'd like to save it as a souvenir&mdash;the odds are so greatly
+against me&mdash;as a sort of souvenir to keep up my courage."</p>
+<p>His tone, the way he drew the muscles of his face, ironed out
+her frown of disgust at public opinion with a smile. For he made
+his kind of courage no less light-hearted and free of pose than
+Dellarme had made his.</p>
+<p>Directly the coachman, whom Marta had summoned when she went for
+the water, appeared with an improvised litter, and the two bore in
+at the kitchen door a guest for breakfast whose arrival gave Mrs.
+Galland a distinctly visible surprise. His uniform was gray, and in
+her heart of hearts she hated gray as the symbol of an enemy whom
+her husband had fought. But when Marta told the story of the part
+he had played in defence of the chandelier, personal partisanship
+abetted the motherly impulse that was already breaking down
+prejudice. She was busy with a dozen suggestions for his comfort,
+quite taking matters out of Marta's hands.</p>
+<p>"I know more about the care of the sick than you do!" she
+insisted. "One lump or two in your coffee, sir? There, there, you
+had better let me hold the cup for you. You are sure you can sit
+up? Then we must have a pillow."</p>
+<p>"I'll fetch one from the other room," put in Minna.</p>
+<p>"Two will be better!" Marta called after her.</p>
+<p>"It is delightful to have breakfast in your kitchen, madame,"
+said Hugo to Mrs. Galland in a way that ought to have justified her
+in thinking herself the most charming and useful person in the
+world.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXXI' id="XXXI"></a>
+<h2>XXXI</h2>
+<h3>UNTO C&AElig;SAR</h3>
+<br>
+<p>It was more irritating than ever for Mrs. Galland to keep pace
+with her daughter's inconsistencies. There was a Marta listening in
+partisan sympathy to Hugo's story of why he had refused to fight
+and telling the story of her school in return. There was a Marta
+seizing Hugo's hand in a quick, impulsive grasp as she exclaimed:
+"Your act personified what I taught my children!" There was a Marta
+planning how he should be secreted in the coachman's quarters over
+the stable, where he would be reasonably free from discovery until
+his strength was regained. Then here was another Marta, after Hugo
+had been carried away on the litter, saying coolly to her
+mother:</p>
+<p>"'Unto C&aelig;sar the things that are C&aelig;sar's!' We have
+our property, our home to protect. Perhaps the Grays have come to
+stay for good, so graciousness is our only weapon. We cannot fight
+a whole army single-handed."</p>
+<p>"You have found that out, Marta?" said Mrs. Galland.</p>
+<p>"We have four rooms in the baron's tower and a kitchen stove,"
+Marta proceeded. "With Minna we can make ourselves very comfortable
+and leave the house to the staff."</p>
+<p>"The Gallands in their gardener's quarters! The staff of the
+Grays in ours! Your father will turn in his grave!" Mrs. Galland
+exclaimed.</p>
+<p>"But, mother, it is not quite agreeable to think of three women
+living in the same house with a score of strange men!" Marta
+persisted.</p>
+<p>"I had not thought of that, Marta. Of course, it would be
+abominable!" agreed Mrs. Galland, promptly capitulating where a
+point of propriety was involved.</p>
+<p>When Marta informed the officer&mdash;the same one who had rung
+the door-bell on his second visit&mdash;of the family's decision he
+appeared shocked at the idea of eviction that was implied. But,
+secretly pleased at the turn of events, he hastened to apologize
+for war's brutal necessities, and Marta's complaisance led him to
+consider himself something of a diplomatist. Yes, more than ever he
+was convinced of the wisdom of an invader ringing door-bells.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, the service-corps men had continued their work until
+now there was no vestige of war in the grounds that labor could
+obliterate; and masons had come to repair the walls of the house
+itself and plasterers to renew the broken ceilings.</p>
+<p>All this Marta regarded in a kind of charmed wonder that an
+invader could be so considerate. Her manner with the officers in
+charge of preparations had the simplicity and ease which a woman of
+twenty-seven, who is not old-maidish because she is not afraid of a
+single future, may employ as a serene hostess. She frequently asked
+if there were good news.</p>
+<p>"Yes," was the uniform reply. An unexpected setback here or
+resistance there, but progress, nevertheless. But she learned, too,
+that the first two days' fighting along the frontier had cost the
+Grays fifty thousand casualties.</p>
+<p>"In order to make an omelet you must break eggs!" she
+remarked.</p>
+<p>"Spoken like a true soldier&mdash;like a member of the staff!"
+was the reply.</p>
+<p>In her constraint and detachment they realized her conscious
+appreciation of the fact that in earlier times her people had been
+for the Browns; but in her flashes of interest in the progress of
+the war, flashes from a woman's unmilitary mind, they judged that
+her heart was with the Grays. And why not? Was it not natural that
+a woman with more than her share of intellectual perception should
+be on the right side? From her associations it was not to be
+expected that she would make an outright declaration of apostasy.
+This would destroy the value and the attractiveness of her
+conversion Reverence for the past, for a father who had fought for
+the Browns, against her own convictions, made her attitude appear
+singularly and delicately correct.</p>
+<p>Though everything was ready for them, the staff delayed coming
+owing to the stubbornness of some heavy guns of the Browns, which,
+while they had directed no shells against the house, had shown that
+they had the range by unexpectedly playing havoc with infantry in
+close order on the pass road at the foot of the garden and with
+transportation on the castle road. But at last the battery was
+silenced and the mind of the army might establish itself in its
+offices on the ground floor and its quarters on the second floor
+without being in danger.</p>
+<p>The war was a week old&mdash;a week which had developed other
+tangents and traps than La Tir&mdash;on the morning that the first
+instalment of junior officers came to occupy the tables and desks.
+Where the family portraits had hung in the dining-room were now big
+maps dotted with brown and gray flags. Portable field cabinets with
+sectional maps on a large scale were arranged around the walls of
+the drawing-room. In what had been the lounging room of the old
+days of Galland prosperity, the refrain of half a dozen telegraph
+instruments made medley with the clicking of typewriters. Cooks and
+helpers were busy in the kitchen; for the staff were to live like
+gentlemen; they were to have their morning baths, their comfortable
+beds, and regular meals. No twinge of indigestion or of rheumatism
+from exposure was to interfere with the working of their precious
+intellectual processes. No detail of assistance would be lacking to
+save any bureaucratic head time and labor The bedrooms were
+apportioned according to rank&mdash;that of the master awaited the
+master; the best servant's bedroom awaited Fran&ccedil;ois, his
+valet.</p>
+<p>When Bouchard, the chief of intelligence, who fought the battle
+of wits and spies against Lanstron, came, two hours before
+Westerling was due, the last of the staff except Westerling and his
+personal aide had arrived Bouchard, with his iron-gray hair, bushy
+eyebrows, strong, aquiline nose, and hawk-like eyes, his mouth
+hidden by a bristly mustache, was lean and saturnine, and he was
+loyal. No jealous thought entered his mind at having to serve a man
+younger than himself. He did not serve a personality; he served a
+chief of staff and a profession. The score of words which escaped
+him as he looked over the arrangements were all of directing
+criticism and bitten off sharply, as if he regretted that he had to
+waste breath in communicating even a thought.</p>
+<p>"I tell nothing, but you tell me everything!" said Bouchard's
+hawk eyes. He was old-fashioned; he looked his part, which was one
+of the many points of difference between him and Lanstron as a
+chief of intelligence.</p>
+<p>After he had gone through the house he went for a flyspecking
+tour of the grounds, where he came upon a private of the Grays on
+crutches. With rest and good food the tiny hole in Hugo's leg from
+the merciful small-calibre bullet had healed rapidly. Confinement
+was irksome on a sunny day. He had grown strong enough in spirit to
+face his fate, whatever it might be, and in the absence of the
+watchful coachman he had risked the delight of a convalescent's
+adventure in the open, clad in his uniform, the only clothes he
+had. Bouchard saw instantly that this private did not wear the
+insignia of staff service.</p>
+<p>"What are you doing here?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"Getting well of a wound," answered Hugo, looking frankly into
+the hawk eyes.</p>
+<p>"Evidently!" said Bouchard, who was always irritated when told
+what he could see for himself. "Why aren't you at a hospital?"</p>
+<p>"I was not wanted there!" said Hugo.</p>
+<p>"What! what!" But Bouchard had wasted two words. "Your name and
+regiment?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"Hugo Mallin, of the 128th," replied Hugo.</p>
+<p>"Uh-h!" Bouchard's pigeonhole memory had retained the name.
+"Charge&mdash;mutiny under fire; anarchism!" he went on, chopping
+out the words as if they were chips from a piece of granite. "Well,
+you have not escaped trial by hiding."</p>
+<p>"I did not flatter myself that with one leg against a whole army
+I had much chance, sir!" Hugo replied respectfully.</p>
+<p>"Uh-h!" The hawk eyes flashed their disapproval of such
+controversial freedom of language from a private. Had he had his
+way he would have hanged Hugo to the nearest tree; for Bouchard had
+truly a medi&aelig;val soul.</p>
+<p>But Hugo's case was so extraordinary that it had reached
+Westerling's ears, and Bouchard knew that Westerling wished to see
+Hugo when he was apprehended. It was not for Bouchard to consider
+this desire of a chief of staff to deal with the case of a private
+in person as singular. No request of the chief of staff was
+singular to him. It became a matter of natural law. He called to
+one of the staff guards who was pacing back and forth near by.</p>
+<p>"Take this man in charge and watch him sharply until General
+Westerling sends for him!"</p>
+<p>"And you will get justice from General Westerling!" It was
+Marta's voice. In approaching she had unavoidably overheard part of
+the conversation. "Justice is his first characteristic!" she added
+as the hawk eyes turned their scrutiny into hers, which were calm
+and smiling.</p>
+<p>Hugo had not seen Marta since he had been carried to the
+coachman's quarters. Minna had visited him frequently, bearing
+inquiries from her mistress as well as custards. He had looked
+forward to a talk with Marta as a kindred spirit, yet it was
+difficult for him to reconcile the woman speaking now with the
+woman who had kissed him on the forehead. But he said nothing as he
+was marched away.</p>
+<p>"Miss Galland!" exclaimed Bouchard in a way that said he knew
+her story. "Yes, that little monkey can depend on more justice than
+he deserves. The unanswerable evidence is on the chief of staff's
+desk awaiting his arrival."</p>
+<p>Bouchard's hawk eyes probed hers for an instant longer and
+seemed to find nothing to call further curiosity; then he lifted
+his cap and proceeded with his tour of inspection.</p>
+<p>Marta smiled thoughtfully as she watched his receding figure,
+while her eyelashes narrowed and she inclined her head with a nod
+before she moved away in the direction of the tower. There was
+almost complete silence along the front. Since yesterday's action,
+which had checked the guns commanding the range of the house, there
+had been little firing. She guessed that the lull was only a recess
+of preparation for the grand attack on the first line of permanent
+defence, and that probably this would follow Westerling's arrival.
+He was due at four o'clock and he would be characteristically
+prompt to the minute.</p>
+<p>"It must not be! Hugo Mallin is too fine a spirit to be
+sacrificed. I'll go on my knees, if need be, to Westerling," Marta
+was thinking as she paced back and forth in her room. On her knees
+to him! She stopped short, struck in revolt with a memory of the
+way he had looked at her once as she sat across the tea-table from
+him in the hotel reception-room. "No, I could not endure that
+except as a last resort. If ever there were a time to use all my
+wits it is now&mdash;to save Hugo Mallin, the one soldier who acted
+out the principles which I taught my children!"</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXXII' id="XXXII"></a>
+<h2>XXXII</h2>
+<h3>TEA ON THE VERANDA AGAIN</h3>
+<br>
+<p>As it lacked one minute to four when Hedworth Westerling, chief
+of staff in name as well as power now, alighted from the gray
+automobile that turned in at the Galland drive, the chauffeur
+thought well enough of himself to forget the crush of supplies and
+ambulances that had delayed His Excellency's car for at least
+ninety seconds in the main street of the town. Though His
+Excellency had not occupied his new headquarters as soon as he
+expected, this could have no influence on results. If he had lost
+fifty thousand men on the first two days and two hundred thousand
+since the war had begun, should he allow this to disturb his
+well-being of body or mind? His well-being of body and mind meant
+the ultimate saving of lives.</p>
+<p>The Grays were winning; this alone counted in the present. They
+would continue to win; this alone counted in the future. They had
+won by crowding in reserves till the positions attacked yielded to
+superior strength. Thus they would continue to win until the last
+positions had yielded.</p>
+<p>Five million mothers' sons against three million mothers' sons!
+Five to three pounds of flesh! Five to three ounces of blood! With
+equal skill, superior strength must always tell. Westerling and his
+staff were responsible for the skill. If their minds would work
+better for it, the nation could well afford to feed them on
+nightingales' tongues.</p>
+<p>Confidence is the handmaiden of skill. Confidence is the edge on
+the sword; confidence brings the final charge that wins the
+redoubt. Confidence was reflected in Westerling's bearing and in
+his smile of command as he passed through the staff rooms, Turcas
+and Bouchard in his train, with tacit approval of the arrangements.
+Finally, Turcas, now vice-chief of staff, and the other chiefs
+awaited his pleasure in the library, which was to be his sanctum.
+On the massive seventeenth-century desk lay a number of reports and
+suggestions. Westerling ran through them with accustomed swiftness
+of sifting and then turned to his personal aide.</p>
+<p>"Tell Fran&ccedil;ois that I will have tea on the veranda."</p>
+<p>From the fact that he took with him the papers that he had laid
+aside, subordinate generals, with the gift of unspoken directions
+which is a part of their profession, understood that he meant to go
+over the subjects requiring special attention while he had tea.</p>
+<p>"Everything is going well&mdash;well!" he added in a way that
+said that everything must be if he said so and that he knew how to
+make everything go well. "And we shall be up pretty late to-night.
+Any one who feels the need had better take a nap"&mdash;the
+implication being that he did not.</p>
+<p>"Well!" ran the unspoken communication of confidence through the
+staff. So well that His Excellency was calmly taking tea on the
+veranda! For the indefatigable Turcas the detail; for Westerling
+the front of Jove.</p>
+<p>"Well!" The thrill of the word was with him in a flight of
+sentiment as he stood on that veranda where a certain prophecy had
+been made to a young colonel. Sight of the rippling folds of the
+flag of his country on the outskirts of the town prolonged the
+thrill. His eyes swept the pale horizon of the distances of plain
+and Mountain and lowered to the garden. Above the second terrace he
+saw a crown of woman's hair&mdash;hair of a jet abundance, radiant
+in the sunlight and shading a face that brought familiar
+completeness to the scene.</p>
+<p>He had told Marta only two weeks ago that he should see her
+again if war came; and war had come. With the inviting prospect of
+a few holiday moments in which to continue the interview that had
+been abruptly concluded in a hotel reception-room, he started down
+the terrace steps. Their glances met where the second terrace path
+ended at the second terrace flight; hers shot with a beam of
+restrained and questioning good humor that spoke at least a truce
+to the invader.</p>
+<p>"You called sooner than I expected," she said in a note of
+equivocal pleasantry.</p>
+<p>"Or I," he rejoined with a shade of triumph, the politest of
+triumph. He was a step above her, her head on a level with the
+pocket of his blouse. His square shoulders, commanding height, and
+military erectness were thus emphasized, as was her own feminine
+slightness.</p>
+<p>"I want to thank you," she said. "As becomes a soldier, your
+forethought was expressed in action. It was the promptness of the
+men you sent to look after the garden which saved the uprooted
+plants before they were past recovery."</p>
+<p>"I wished it for your sake and somewhat for my own sake to be
+the same that it was in the days when I used to call," he said
+graciously. "Tea was from four to five, do you remember? Will you
+join me? I have just ordered it."</p>
+<p>A generous, pleasant conqueror, this! No one knew better than
+Westerling how to be one when he chose. He was something of an
+actor. Leaders of men of his type usually are.</p>
+<p>"Why, yes. Very gladly!" she assented with no undue cordiality
+and no undue constraint, quite as if there were no war.</p>
+<p>"It was the Browns who cut the lindens?" he suggested
+significantly.</p>
+<p>"They said that it was necessary as part of the defence," she
+replied. "We shall plant new ones and have the pleasure of watching
+them grow."</p>
+<p>Neutrality could not be better impersonated he thought, than in
+the even cleaving of her lips over the words. They seemed to say
+that a storm had come and gone and a new set of masters had taken
+the place of the old. As they approached the veranda
+Fran&ccedil;ois was placing the tea things.</p>
+<p>"Quite the same! That was your chair, as I remember," said
+Westerling after indicating to Fran&ccedil;ois that he might go,
+"and this was mine."</p>
+<p>But the teapot was not Mrs. Galland's&mdash;it belonged to the
+staff.</p>
+<p>"This is different," observed Marta, touching her finger-tip to
+the coat of arms of the Grays on the side of a cup.</p>
+<p>"Yes, my own field kit," he answered, thinking that the novelty
+of tea from a soldier's service had appealed to her; for she was
+smiling.</p>
+<p>"So, you being the host and I the guest now, why, you pour!" she
+said. There was a touch of brittleness in her tone&mdash;of
+half-teasing, half-serious brittleness.</p>
+<p>"Oh, no, no!" he protested laughingly, and found her glance
+flashing through her brows holding him fast in an indefinable
+challenge.</p>
+<p>"I shall pour when you do us the honor to come to tea at the
+gardener's quarters in the tower," she said.</p>
+<p>"No, no!" he objected. "The tea conditions are the same as
+before."</p>
+<p>He was earnest for his point. It would please his masculine
+fancy to watch those firm, small fingers pausing over the cup
+before the plunge of a lump of sugar stirred the miniature ocean in
+waves; to watch the firm little hand in its grip of the handle of
+the pot.</p>
+<p>"Conditions the same as before?" She laughed softly. "How can
+they be in my thoughts or yours?" she asked with a sudden show of
+seriousness.</p>
+<p>"We did turn you out of house and home&mdash;I understand!" he
+exclaimed apologetically. "And that is the symbol of it to you!" He
+indicated the coat of arms.</p>
+<p>"The symbol of the conqueror, isn't it?" he asked playfully, for
+in the company of women it pleased him to be playful.</p>
+<p>"Conqueror? It's a big word!" she mused. "I hadn't thought of it
+in connection with pouring tea"&mdash;which might be another way of
+saying that she had just been thinking of it very hard and might be
+trying to find whether it had a pleasant or an unpleasant side.
+Clearly, here was a Marta different from any yet precipitated by
+the alchemy of war.</p>
+<p>The resourceful variety of her! Oh, it was like the old days! It
+made him feel young, as young as when he had been a colonel
+commanding the garrison on the other side of the white posts. She
+had intelligence, yet was at the same time distinctly feminine,
+with the gift of as much talk about who should pour tea as about
+how to storm a redoubt. She did not carry her mental wares on her
+sleeve. She flashed them in a way that prompted curiosity as to the
+next exhibit. He had sought primarily, selfishly, to be entertained
+at tea, and he was being entertained. To want to win was his
+nature. He understood, too, that she wanted to win. He liked that
+quality in her the more because it heightened the valve of victory
+for him.</p>
+<p>"Then, if you don't think of it in connection with pouring tea,
+let me tell you what I think of when I sit on this veranda. I think
+of you as hostess. You refuse to play the part!" he exclaimed with
+that persistence, softened a little, perhaps, yet suggestive of the
+quality characterized by the firm jaw and still eyes, which won his
+point at staff councils. Again he was conscious of one of her
+sweeping glances of appraisal, with just a glint of admiration and
+even approval tucked away in the recesses of her smile.</p>
+<p>"Suppose we compromise," she suggested thoughtfully, with the
+gravity of one making a great concession. "Suppose you do the heavy
+work, and pour, and I drop the sugar in the cups."</p>
+<p>But Westerling always used a half concession as a lever to gain
+a full concession.</p>
+<p>"I'd really better do it all&mdash;act out the host and the
+conqueror!" he declared. "One can't compromise principles."</p>
+<p>"Oh! Why?" She was distinctly interested, leaning nearer to him
+and playing a tattoo with one set of fingers on the back of the
+other hand.</p>
+<p>"Anything except your doing all the honors leaves me in the same
+invidious position," he answered. "It compounds my felony. It shows
+that you do think that we failed by our conduct to show respect for
+your property. It leaves me feeling that you think that I do not
+regard this as your veranda, your garden, your home, sacred by more
+than the laws of war&mdash;by an old friendship!"</p>
+<p>He made his appeal finely, as he well knew how to do. A certain
+magnetic eloquence that went well with his handsome face and sturdy
+bearing had been his most successful asset in making him chief of
+staff.</p>
+<p>The tattoo of her fingers died down while she listened to his
+final, serious reasons about a subject that became peculiarly
+significant; and her brows lifted, her eyes opened in the surprise
+of one who gets a sudden new angle of light.</p>
+<p>"You put it very well. In that case&mdash;" she said, and his
+glance and hers dropped, his to the capable hand on the handle of
+the teapot, hers into the cup. "With the honors of war and officers
+permitted to retain their side-arms?" she asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes; oh, yes!" he answered happily.</p>
+<p>She smiled her acknowledgment with just that self-respect of
+capitulation which flatters the victor with the thought that he has
+overcome no mean opponent&mdash;the highest form of compliment
+known to the guild of courtiers.</p>
+<p>He was susceptible to it and, in turn, to the curiosity about
+her that had remained unsatisfied at the end of their talk in the
+hotel. Her own veranda was the natural, familiar place to judge the
+work of time in those character-forming years from seventeen to
+twenty-seven. She was not like what she had been in the artificial
+surroundings of a fortnight ago. She filled the eye and the mind
+now in the well-knit suppleness of figure and the finished maturity
+of features which bore the mark of inner growth of knowledge of
+life. She was not a species of intellectual exotic, as he had
+feared, too baffling to allow the male intellect to feel
+comfortable, but very much, as he noted discriminatingly, a woman
+in all the physical freshness of a woman in her prime.</p>
+<p>"Just like the old days, isn't it?" he exclaimed with his first
+sip, convinced that the officers' commissary supplied excellent tea
+in the field.</p>
+<p>"Yes, for the moment&mdash;if we forget the war!" she replied,
+and looked away, preoccupied, toward the landscape.</p>
+<p>If we forget the war! She bore on the words rather grimly. The
+change that he had noted between the Marta of the hotel
+reception-room and the Marta of the moment was not altogether the
+work of ten years. It had developed since she was in the capital.
+In these three weeks war had been brought to her door. She had been
+under heavy fire. Yet this subject of the war was the one which he,
+as an invader, considered himself bound to avoid.</p>
+<p>"We do forget it at tea, don't we?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"At least we need not speak of it!" she replied.</p>
+<p>Safely, then, at first, their conversation ran not on the
+present but on an intimate past, free of any possible bumpers. The
+train of memories once started, she herself gave it speed if it
+stopped at a way station; cargo if it went empty. Prone to avoid
+recollections that made him feel old&mdash;to feel old was to be
+out of date in his profession&mdash;-he found these livening with
+the youth of thirty-two and gratifying as youth's dreams become
+reality. Feeling as young as a colonel, he had the consciousness of
+being chief of staff. This was enough to make any soldier enjoy the
+place and the company and to drink his tea slowly so as to prolong
+the recess from duty. His second cup growing cold, he was reminded
+of the value of time, and with a playfully reproachful look at
+Marta he put a warning finger of conscience on the papers that lay
+beside the bread plate.</p>
+<p>"There's work&mdash;always work for a chief!" he declared.
+"I&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Marta was quick to act on the hint. Her hands flew to the arms
+of her chair as she spoke.</p>
+<p>"There's always the garden for me! But first&mdash;" Yes, first
+there was poor Hugo.</p>
+<p>Westerling flushed guiltily that she should have taken his words
+as a hint, which was only half of his emotion. The other half shot
+out his hand in a restraining, companionable touch on her forearm,
+while his eyes&mdash;his calculating gray eyes&mdash;glinted a
+youthful entreaty.</p>
+<p>"Please! I didn't finish my sentence!" he begged. "You remember
+that often I used to wait after tea until the sunset&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"And reached your quarters late for dinner, I also remember!"
+she put in. But she remained in the same position, his finger-tips
+on her arm, her hands holding her body free of the chair. "That is,
+when you did not stay to dinner!" she added.</p>
+<p>"I am staying to-night. I was going to ask if you wouldn't
+remain on the veranda while I go over these papers. It&mdash;it
+would be very cosey and pleasant."</p>
+<p>One of these papers, she knew, must be the evidence against Hugo
+Mallin. She preferred not to make a direct appeal but to have
+Westerling bring up the subject himself. His smile and the look
+with which he regarded her spoke his appreciation of the picture
+she made and his fear of losing it. Very cosey and pleasant, yes,
+the company of a prophetess, with a ray of sunlight making her hair
+an aurora of flashing bronze overtopping a brown face, the eyes
+holding answers to an increasing number of unasked questions about
+the new forces that he had found in her.</p>
+<p>"Why, yes," she agreed with evident pleasure, for she was
+thinking of Hugo.</p>
+<p>Turcas now came, in answer to Westerling's ring. The orders and
+suggestions on the table seemed to be the product of this lath of a
+man, the vice-chief, but a lath of steel, not wood, who appeared a
+runner trained for a race of intellects in the scratch class. One
+by one, almost perfunctorily, Westerling gave his assent as he
+passed the papers to Turcas; while Turcas's dry voice, coming from
+between a narrow opening of the thin lips, gave his reasons with a
+rapid-firer's precision in answer to his chief's inquiries.</p>
+<p>With each order somewhere along that frontier some unit of a
+great organism would respond. The reserves from this position would
+be transferred to that; such a position would be felt out before
+dark by a reconnaissance in force, however costly; the rapid-firers
+of the 19th Division would be transferred to the 20th; despite the
+37th Brigade's losses, it would still form the advance; General
+So-and-So would be superseded after his failure of yesterday;
+Colonel So-and-So would take his place as acting major-general;
+more care must be exercised in recommendations for bronze crosses,
+lest their value so depreciate that officers and men would lack
+incentive to win them.</p>
+<p>Marta was having a look behind the scenes at the fountainhead of
+great events. Power! power! The absolute power of the soldier in
+the saddle, with premier and government and all the institutions of
+peace only a dim background for the processes of war! Opposite her
+was a man who could make and unmake not only generals but even the
+destinies of peoples. By every sign he enjoyed his power for its
+own sake. There must be a chief of the five millions, which were as
+a moving forest of destruction, and here was the chief, his
+strength reflected in the strong muscles of his short neck as he
+turned his head to listen to Turcas. Marta recalled the contrast
+between Westerling and Lanstron as they faced each other after the
+wreck of the aeroplane ten years ago: the iron invincibility of the
+elder's sturdy, mature figure and the alert, high-strung
+invincibility of the slighter figure of the younger man.</p>
+<p>"The evidence you asked for in that Mallin mutiny case," said
+Turcas, indicating the only remaining paper.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I want to go into that&mdash;it's a question of policy,"
+said Westerling.</p>
+<p>He had taken up the paper thoughtfully after Turcas withdrew,
+when he looked up to Marta in answer to a movement in her chair.
+She had bent forward in a pose that freed her figure from the
+chair-back in an outline of suppleness and firmness; her lips were
+parted, showing a faint line of the white of her teeth, and he
+caught her gazing at him in a kind of wondering admiration. But she
+dropped her eyelids instantly and said deliberately, less to him
+than to herself:</p>
+<p>"You have the gift!"</p>
+<p>No tea-table flattery that, he knew; only the reflection of a
+fact whose existence had been borne in on her by observation.</p>
+<p>"The gift? How?" he inquired, speaking to the fringe of hair
+that half hid her lowered face.</p>
+<p>She looked up, smiling brightly.</p>
+<p>"You don't know what gift! Not the pianist's! Not the poet's!"
+(Oh, to save Hugo! The method she had chosen to save him, alien to
+all her impulses, born of the war's stress on her mind, seemed the
+wise one in view of her knowledge of the man before her) "Why, of
+course, the supreme gift of command! The thing that made you chief
+of staff! And the war goes well for you, doesn't it?"</p>
+<p>Delicious morsel, this, to a connoisseur in compliments! He
+tasted it with the same self-satisfied smile that he had her first
+prophecy. To her who had then voiced a secret he had shared with no
+one, as his chest swelled with a full breath, he bared another in
+the delight of the impression he had made on her.</p>
+<p>"Yes, as you foresaw&mdash;as I planned!" he said. "Yes, I
+planned all, step by step, till I was chief of staff and ready. I
+convinced the premier that it was time to strike and I chose the
+hour to strike; for Bodlapoo was only a convenient excuse for the
+last of all the steps"</p>
+<p>The subjective enjoyment of the declaration kept him from any
+keen notice of the effect of his words. Lanny was right. It had
+been a war of deliberate conquest; a war to gratify personal
+ambition. All her life Marta would be able to live over again the
+feelings of this moment. It was as if she were frozen, all except
+brain and nerves, which were on fire, while the rigidity of ice
+kept her from springing from her chair in contempt and horror. She
+would always wonder how the bonds of her purpose to save Hugo held
+her tongue But still another purpose came on the wings of
+diabolical temptation which would pit the art of woman against the
+power of a man who set millions against millions in slaughter to
+gratify personal ambition. She was thankful that she was looking
+down as she spoke, for she could not bring herself to another
+compliment. Her throat was too chilled for that yet.</p>
+<p>"The one way to end the feud between the two nations was a war
+that would mean permanent peace," he explained, seeing how quiet
+she was and realizing, with a recollection of her children's oath,
+that he had gone a little too far. He wanted to retain her
+admiration. It had become as precious to him as a new delicacy to
+Lucullus.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I understand," she managed to murmur; then she was able to
+look up. "It's all so immense!" she added. "And you have yet
+another paper there?" she said with a little gesture that might
+have been taken as the expression of a hope that she was not
+overstaying her welcome.</p>
+<p>"This is very interesting," he said, watching her narrowly now,
+"the case of a private, one Hugo Mallin, who refused to fight
+because he was against war on principle. Four charges: assault on a
+fellow soldier, cowardice, treason, and insubordination under
+fire."</p>
+<p>"Enough, I should say!" said Marta in a low tone.</p>
+<p>"A question of which one to press&mdash;of an example,"
+continued Westerling, reading the full official statement for the
+first time.</p>
+<p>"What is the punishment?" she asked.</p>
+<p>"Why, of course, death!" he replied, somewhat absently, in
+preoccupation. "Extraordinary! And they have located him, it seems
+He is here at headquarters!"</p>
+<p>"Yes; certainly," Marta said. "We found him under a tree,
+deserted and wounded, labelled coward, and we cared for him."</p>
+<p>"Indeed!" exclaimed Westerling. "He must have appealed strongly
+to your sympathies."</p>
+<p>There was no sharpness in the words, but he had lapsed from the
+personal to the official manner.</p>
+<p>"To my sense of humanity!" Her reply was made in much the same
+tone as his remark, where he had expected emotion, even passion.
+More than ever was he certain that she had undergone some revealing
+experience since he had seen her in the capital. "Yes, to any one's
+sense of humanity&mdash;a wounded, thirsty man in a fever!" There
+came, with a swift and mellowing charm, the look of a fervent and
+exalted tenderness and the pulse-arresting quiver of intensity that
+had swept over her at her first sight of Hugo under the tree. "I
+know that he was not a coward in one sense," she added, "for I saw
+him make the assault named in the first charge."</p>
+<p>She proceeded with the story of what she had witnessed in the
+dining-room. There was no appeal on Hugo's account. Appraising the
+qualities of the Marta of the moment in contrast with the Marta of
+seventeen and the Marta of three weeks ago, Westerling was
+significantly conscious of her attitude of impartiality, free of
+any attempt at feminine influence, and of her evident desire to
+help him with the facts that she knew.</p>
+<p>"The charge of assault is only incidental," said Westerling.
+"But Mallin was in the right about his comrades entering the house;
+right about the destruction of property. It is our business to
+protect property, not only as a principle but as a matter of
+policy. We do not desire to make the population of the country we
+occupy unnecessarily hostile."</p>
+<p>"I judged that from your kindness in repairing the damage done
+to ours," she assured him, and added happily: "Though I don't
+suppose that you go so far in most cases as to set uprooted plants
+back in their beds."</p>
+<p>"No; that is a refinement, perhaps," he answered, laughing. She
+was not only more agreeable but also more sane than at the hotel.
+He liked the idea of continuing to despatch his work while
+retaining her company. "I must have a talk with Mallin," he said.
+"I must settle his case so that if similar cases arise subordinates
+will know what to do without consulting me. Would you mind if I
+sent for him?" He reached for the bell to call an orderly.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I should like to hear what he says to you and what you say
+to him," she confessed with unfeigned interest, which brought a
+suggestion that he was to be put on trial before her at the same
+time as Mallin was on trial before Westerling. His fingers paused
+on the bell head without pressure. "I told him that you were a just
+man," she remarked, "that any one would be certain of justice from
+you."</p>
+<p>He rang the bell; and after he had sent for Mallin, warming
+under the compliment of her last remark, he dared a reconnaissance
+along the line of inquiry which he had wanted to undertake from the
+first.</p>
+<p>"Mallin's ideas about war seem to be a great deal like your
+own," he hinted casually.</p>
+<p>"As I expressed them at the hotel, you mean!" she exclaimed.
+"That seems ages ago&mdash;ages!" The perplexity and indecision
+that, in a space of silence, brooded in the depths of her eyes came
+to the surface in wavering lights. "Yes, ages! ages!" The wavering
+lights grew dim with a kind of horror and she looked away fixedly
+at a given point.</p>
+<p>He was conscious of a thrill; the thrill that always presaged
+victory for him. He realized her evident distress; he guessed that
+terrible pictures were moving before her vision, and he changed the
+subject.</p>
+<p>"I know how revolting it must have been to have seen those
+soldiers wantonly smashing your chandelier and gloating over their
+mischief," he said. "Really, the Captain was to blame for letting
+his men get out of hand. He seems not to have been a competent man.
+We can train and train an officer, but when war comes&mdash;well,
+no amount of training will supply a certain quality that must be
+inborn&mdash;the quality of command."</p>
+<p>"Such as Dellarme had!" she exclaimed absently, under her
+breath.</p>
+<p>She had forgotten her part and Westerling's presence. The given
+point of her gaze was exactly where Dellarme lay when he died. She
+was unconsciously smiling in the way that he had smiled. But to
+Westerling it seemed that she was smiling at space. He was puzzled;
+his perception piqued.</p>
+<p>"Who was Dellarme?" he was bound to ask.</p>
+<p>"The officer in command of the company of infantry posted behind
+the sand-bags in the yard&mdash;he was killed!" she answered,
+turning her face toward Westerling without the smile, singularly
+expressionless.</p>
+<p>"Yes, he must have had the quality from the defence he made,"
+agreed Westerling, in the hearty tribute of a taxable soldier to a
+capable soldier. So very well had that one small position been held
+that every detail was graven on the mind of a chief of staff who
+was supposed to leave details to his brigade commanders. It was he
+himself who had ordered the final charge after the brigade
+commander had advised delaying another attack until the redoubt
+could be hammered to pieces by heavy guns brought up from the rear.
+"But he had to go!" Westerling exclaimed doggedly; for he could not
+resist this tribute, in turn, to his own success in making an
+example for timid brigade commanders in the future by driving in
+more reserves until the enemy yielded.</p>
+<p>"Yes!" she agreed without any change in the set face and moody
+eyes.</p>
+<p>"You saw something of the defence?"</p>
+<p>"Yes!" Marta replied in a way that aroused his imagination.</p>
+<p>This, he recalled, had always been her gift. The slow-drawn
+monosyllable was pregnant with revelations which his knowing mind
+could readily supply. She had been in the midst of the fury of the
+most tenacious fighting within a small space that the war had yet
+to chronicle. She had been an intimate of the splendid desperation
+of the Browns; known their thoughts and feelings. What a multitude
+of impressions were stored in her sensitive mind, impressions
+which, for the moment, seemed to benumb her! How she could make
+them speak from her eyes and quiver from her very finger-tips when
+she chose! He would yet hear her vivid account of all that she had
+seen. It would be informatory&mdash;a reflection of the spirit of
+the Browns. Her quietness itself was compelling in its latent
+strength, and strength was the thing he most admired. More and more
+questions winged themselves into his thoughts, while his next one
+served the purpose of passing the time until Hugo came.</p>
+<p>"There was a man out of uniform, in a gardener's garb, in charge
+of the automatic," he remarked. "It was so puzzling that I heard of
+it. You see, there is no limit to what a chief of staff may
+know."</p>
+<p>"Yes, our gardener," she replied.</p>
+<p>"Your gardener! Why, how was that? Wasn't he in the reserves if
+he were a Brown? Wasn't he called to the colors at the outbreak of
+the war?"</p>
+<p>In spite of himself the questions were somewhat sharp. They
+seemed to take Marta by surprise, which, however, was
+evanescent.</p>
+<p>"I wonder!" she said, as interested as Westerling in the
+suggestion. "Something a soldier would think of immediately and a
+woman wouldn't. I know that we lost our gardener."</p>
+<p>That was all. She did not attempt any further explanation or
+enlarge on the subject, but let it go as an inquiry unexplained in
+the course of conversation.</p>
+<p>Had Westerling been inclined to pursue it further he would have
+been interrupted by the arrival of a figure with a bandaged leg and
+head which came hobbling cheerfully around the corner of the house
+on crutches, escorted by an infantryman. The guard saluted and
+withdrew into the background. Hugo saluted and removed his cap and
+looked at Westerling with the faintest turn of a smile on his lips,
+which plainly spoke his quizzical appreciation of the fact that he
+was in the presence of dazzling heights for a private.</p>
+<p>Marta had a single glance from him&mdash;a glance of peculiar
+inquiry and astonishment, sweeping over the tea things fairly into
+her eyes. Then it was gone. He might have been the most dutiful and
+respectful soldier of the five millions as he waited on the head of
+the five millions to speak.</p>
+<p>Westerling read the four charges. Then he asked the stereotyped
+question:</p>
+<p>"What have you to say to them?"</p>
+<p>When he looked up from the paper he saw a face that was a mask,
+a gentle, pleasant mask, and blue eyes looking quite steadily into
+his own with a sort of well-established and dreamy fatalism.</p>
+<p>"Nothing, sir," said Hugo respectfully.</p>
+<p>Westerling frowned. Though a confession of guilt simplified
+everything, perhaps he frowned to find no embarrassment in his
+presence in the private; perhaps he apprehended impertinence in the
+soft blue eyes.</p>
+<p>"You know what that means&mdash;the charges sustained?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir!"</p>
+<p>"And you have nothing to say?" Westerling's frown deepened.
+There was an undercurrent of urgency in his tone. This mild
+culprit, waiting for the wheels of justice to roll over him without
+a protest, gave him no light as to a policy that should apply to
+other cases. He resented, too, any suggestion of readiness for
+martyrdom No man of power who is anything of a politician and not a
+fool likes to make martyrs. "Nothing?" he repeated. "Nothing at all
+in your own behalf?"</p>
+<p>A faint expression appeared on the mask. So insistently could
+Hugo's mask hold attention that Westerling noted even a slight,
+thoughtful drawing down of the brow and one corner of the mouth. He
+could not conceive that the laws of gravity could be upset or that
+a private would undertake to have fun at the expense of a chief of
+staff.</p>
+<p>"Nothing, sir, unless I should make a long speech," he said. "Do
+you want me to do that, sir?"</p>
+<p>Westerling held his irritation in control and looked around at
+Marta. He saw only wonder in her eyes as she intently regarded
+Hugo, which was his own feeling, he suddenly realized.</p>
+<p>"I have hardly time to listen to long speeches," he
+remarked.</p>
+<p>"I thought not, sir," replied Hugo, unmoved. "That is why I said
+I had nothing to say. And in want of a long speech the best that I
+could do to explain would be to ask you to read certain books."</p>
+<p>An explosion of his breath in astonishment saved Westerling from
+harsh expletives. For one thing, he was piqued. Though he would not
+admit it even to himself, he had, perhaps, fancied the idea of
+playing the gentle and patient dispenser of justice before Marta A
+private on trial for the greatest of military crimes seraphically
+advising a chief of staff to read books! There were not enough
+words in the dictionary to rebuke the insubordination of such
+conceit! The only way to look at the thing was as a kind of grim
+jest. He retrieved his vexation with a laugh as he turned to
+Marta.</p>
+<p>She was smiling irresistibly, in concert with his own mood, as
+she continued to regard Hugo. Hugo's mask was entirely for
+Westerling. He did not seem to see Marta now, and through his mask
+radiated the considerate understanding of one who can put himself
+in another's place&mdash;which was Hugo's besetting fault or
+virtue, as you choose. In short, the chief of staff had a feeling
+that this private knew exactly what he, the chief of staff, was
+thinking.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I was certain, sir," said Hugo, "that you were too busy
+either to listen to speeches or to read books. You have months of
+hard work before you, sir."</p>
+<p>His respectful "sirs" had the deference of youth to an elder;
+otherwise, he was an equal in conversation with an equal.
+Westerling still kept his temper, but the way that his under jaw
+closed indicated that he had made up his mind.</p>
+<p>"One charge is enough," he said in a businesslike fashion. "On
+the firing-line you threw down your rifle. You refused to fight any
+more. You said: 'Damn patriotism! I'm through!' Is that so?"</p>
+<p>A slight flush shot into Hugo's cheeks; he twisted his shoulder
+on his crutch as if he had a twinge of pain, but his face did not
+change its expression.</p>
+<p>"No, sir. I did not say: 'Damn patriotism!' I'm afraid Captain
+Fracasse was out of temper when he reported that. I didn't say,
+'Damn patriotism!' because I did not think that then and do not
+now. Would you care to have my recollection of what I said?"</p>
+<p>"Yes!" breathed Marta with so intent an emphasis that Westerling
+turned sharply, only to find her smiling at him. Her smile said
+that she thought that Hugo's story would be interesting.</p>
+<p>"Yes; go ahead!" said Westerling.</p>
+<p>"I think that I can recall my words very accurately, sir," Hugo
+proceeded. "They were important to me. I was the individual most
+affected in the matter. I said: 'I am through. I will not murder my
+fellowmen who have done me no wrong. I cannot, I will not
+kill!'"</p>
+<p>"That is all?" queried Westerling, again looking at Marta, this
+time covertly, while he played with a teaspoon.</p>
+<p>Brooding uncertainty had flooded the sparkle out of her eyes.
+She was statue-like in her stillness, her breaths impalpable in
+their softness. But the points of her knuckles were ghostly, sharp
+spots on her tightly clenched hands. All that Westerling could tell
+was that she was thinking, and thinking hard. There was a space of
+silence broken only by the movement of the teaspoon. Hugo was the
+first to speak.</p>
+<p>"I believe in patriotism, sir. That means love of country. I
+love my country," he said slowly.</p>
+<p>A preachment of patriotism from this nonchalant private was a
+straw too much for Westerling's patience. He made a nervous
+gesture&mdash;a distinctly nervous one as he dropped the teaspoon.
+He would have an end of nonsense.</p>
+<p>"You will answer questions!" he said. "First, you dropped your
+rifle?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+<p>"You refused to fight?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+<p>"You know the penalty for this?"</p>
+<p>Hugo inclined his head. He was silent.</p>
+<p>"Shot for treason&mdash;and immediately!" Westerling went on,
+irritated at the man's complaisance. Then he bit his lip. This was
+harsh talk before Marta. He expected to hear her utter some sort of
+protest against such cruelty, and instead saw that her face
+remained calm and that there was nothing but wonder in her eyes.
+She knew how to wait.</p>
+<p>"Then, sir," said Hugo, speaking, evidently, because he was
+expected to say something, "I suppose, of course, that I shall be
+shot. But"&mdash;he was smiling in the way that he would when he
+brought a "good one" to the head in the barracks&mdash;"but it will
+not be necessary to do it more than once, will it? To tell you the
+truth, I had not counted on being shot more than once."</p>
+<p>Westerling was like a man who had lunged a blow at an object and
+struck only air.</p>
+<p>"I said that he was not a coward," Marta remarked quietly. There
+was nothing in her manner to imply that she was defending Hugo. She
+seemed to be incidentally justifying a previous observation of her
+own.</p>
+<p>A smile in face of death! Westerling's prayer was for countless
+masses of infantry who would smile in face of death and do his
+bidding. He could not resist a soldier's admiration, which,
+however, he would not permit to take the form of words. The form
+which it took was a sharp thrust of his fist into the hollow of his
+hand. He had, too, a sense of defeat which was uppermost as he
+spoke&mdash;a defeat that he was bound to retrieve.</p>
+<p>"You have a home, a father, and a mother?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+<p>"And perhaps a sweetheart?" Westerling proceeded.</p>
+<p>Hugo unmistakably flushed.</p>
+<p>"I don't think sir, that official statistics require an answer
+to that question. I"&mdash;and again that confounded smile, as
+Westerling was beginning to regard it&mdash;"I trust, sir, that I
+shall not have to be shot more than once if we do not bring any one
+not yet officially of my family into the affair."</p>
+<p>"You do not seem to like life," Westerling observed.</p>
+<p>"I love life!" answered Hugo earnestly. "I try to get something
+out of every minute of it; if nothing particular, at least the
+miracle of living and breathing and thinking and
+seeing&mdash;seeing such beautiful scenes as this." He looked away
+toward the glorious landscape. It was the first time that he had
+lifted the steady gaze of those studious blue eyes from Westerling,
+but directly they were back on duty. "It is because I love life,"
+he continued, "and think that everybody else must love life, that I
+do not want to kill. Because I love my country I know that others
+love their country, and I want them to keep their country."</p>
+<p>Marta's glance had followed Hugo's into the distance. It still
+rested there intently. To Westerling she showed only a profile,
+with the shadow of the porch between them and the golden light of
+receding day in the background: a golden light on a silhouette of
+ivory, a silhouette that you might find without meaning or so full
+of meaning as to hold an observer in a quandary as to what she was
+thinking or whether or not she was thinking at all.</p>
+<p>Westerling had the baffled consciousness of fencing with a
+culprit at the bar who had turned adversary. It was the visionary's
+white logic of the blue dome against the soldier's material logic
+of <i>x</i> equals initial velocity. Here was an incomprehensible
+mortal who loved life and yet was ready to die for love of life.
+Here was love of country that refused to serve country.</p>
+<p>All a pose, a clever bit of acting to play on his feelings
+through the presence of a woman, Westerling concluded. And Marta
+was still looking at the landscape. Her mind seemed withdrawn from
+the veranda. Only her body remained. All the impulse of
+Westerling's military instinct and training, rebelling at an
+abstract ethical controversy with a private about book heresies
+that belonged under the censor's ban, called for the word of
+authority from the apex of the pyramid to put an end to talk with
+an atom at the base. But that profile&mdash;that serene ivory in
+the golden light, so unlike the Marta of the hotel
+reception-room&mdash;was compellingly present though her mind were
+absent. It suggested loss of temper as the supreme weakness. He had
+permitted a controversy. He must argue his man down; he must find
+his adversary's weak point.</p>
+<p>"Your province is one of the most patriotic," he said. "Its
+people are of the purest blood of our race. They have always been
+loyal. They have always fought determinedly. To no people would a
+traitor be so abhorrent. Do you want the distinction of being a
+traitor&mdash;one lone traitor in your loyal province?"</p>
+<p>Hugo was visibly affected. The twisted corner of his mouth
+quivered.</p>
+<p>"I had thought of that, too, sir," he said.</p>
+<p>"Suppose your father and mother knew that your comrades had
+labelled you a coward before the whole army; that they had thought
+you worthy only of kicks and to be left to die by the roadside.
+Suppose that your father and mother knew that the story of Hugo
+Mallin, coward and traitor, who threw down his rifle under fire is
+being told throughout the land&mdash;as I shall have it
+told&mdash;until your name is a symbol for cowardice and treason.
+How would your father and mother feel?"</p>
+<p>There was an unsteady movement of Hugo's body on his crutches.
+He swallowed hard, moistening dry lips; and the mobility of feature
+that could change the mask into the illumination of varied emotions
+spoke horror and asked for pity.</p>
+<p>"I&mdash;I&mdash;as a matter of mercy, when I have admitted the
+charge, I ask you not to bear on that, sir!" he stammered. Then the
+crutches creaked with a stronger grip of his hands and a stiffening
+of his body as he mastered his feelings. The mask recovered its
+own, even to the drawing down of the corner of the mouth. "I have
+reasoned that all out, sir," he went on. "It was the thing which
+kept me from throwing down my rifle before we made our first
+charge. I have written a letter to my father and mother."</p>
+<p>Marta had been so engrossed in the landscape that she seemed not
+to have been listening. It was her voice, come out of the distance,
+that asked, without any inflection except that of tense
+curiosity:</p>
+<p>"May we see the letter?"</p>
+<p>As she turned her eyes looked directly into Hugo's, their gaze
+locked, as it were: hers that of a simple request, his that of
+puzzled, unsatisfied scrutiny.</p>
+<p>"May we?" she repeated to Westerling, looking now frankly at
+him, "though I don't know as it is in keeping with the situation or
+with your wishes to grant the whim of a woman. But you see," she
+added smiling, "that is what comes of having a woman present."</p>
+<p>If she had any double meaning Westerling could not find it in
+her eyes.</p>
+<p>"I am willing," said Hugo. "Indeed, I shall be very glad to have
+my side heard."</p>
+<p>"Yes, let us see the letter," assented Westerling; for he, too,
+was curious.</p>
+<p>When Hugo had given it to Westerling and he saw that it was not
+very long, he began reading aloud:</p>
+<p>"'I've kept very well and cheerful and I'm cheerful now,'" the
+letter began. "'Please always think of me as cheerful. Everybody in
+our company has fought well; just as bravely as our forefathers did
+in the wars of their day.'"</p>
+<p>"Which hardly agrees with your ideas," observed Westerling.</p>
+<p>"Exactly, sir. Men should be brave for their convictions,"
+answered Hugo. "And, as you said, the men of our province are loyal
+to the old ideas. They believe they ought to fight the Browns."</p>
+<p>Then followed a brief, intimate, appealing story of how each of
+his dead comrades had fallen.</p>
+<p>"'You can read these to their folks at home, if you want to.
+They might like to know.'"</p>
+<p>Irresistibly there crept into Westerling's face at these
+recitals of soldierly courage the satisfaction of the commander
+with the spirit of his men. Here was proof of the valor of the
+units of his army.</p>
+<p>"'Now I have something to tell you which will hurt you very
+much,'" Westerling read on, "'but you must recollect that I was
+always regarded as a little queer. And I don't think people will
+hold you to blame on my account. I hope they will sympathize with
+you for having such a son. You will have heard the story from the
+men of the company, but I also want to tell it to you....'"</p>
+<p>After it was told the letter proceeded:</p>
+<p>"'I feel that I was a coward up to the moment that everybody
+else was calling me a coward. Then I felt free and happy, as if I
+had been true to myself. I felt that I had been just as much in the
+wrong as if we should break into our neighbor's house and take his
+property because we were stronger than he. How would you feel if a
+neighbor entered your house and made it his own? You would call in
+the police. But what if there were no police? Would that make it
+right?'"</p>
+<p>Marta's own opinions! The spirit of her children's prayer! Head
+bent, hands clasped, she was simply listening.</p>
+<p>"'Would it be cowardice if one of the neighbor's family said, "I
+will not take any further part in this robbery!" when he saw you,
+mother, weeping over you, father, as you lay dead after trying to
+defend your house? When I was asked to fire at those running men it
+was like standing on a neighbor's door-step and firing down the
+street at my neighbors in flight. I could not do it. I could not do
+it though twenty million men were doing the same thing. No, I could
+not do it any more than you could commit murder, father. That is
+all. Perhaps when those who survive from my company come home,
+after they have been beaten as they will be&mdash;'"</p>
+<p>"What!" Westerling exploded.</p>
+<p>All the force of his being had to take umbrage at this. Beaten!
+Marta saw the rigid, unyielding Westerling who had cried, "We shall
+win!" when she made her second prophecy. But the comparison did not
+occur to him. Nothing occurred to him but red anger, until the
+first dart of reason warned him, a chief of staff, that a private
+had made him completely lose his temper. He recovered his poise
+with a laugh and without even glancing at Marta.</p>
+<p>"Well, we might as well hear the reasons for your expert
+opinion," he said, his satire a trifle hoarse after the strain of
+his emotion.</p>
+<p>"Because the Browns fight for their homes!" answered Hugo "When
+the great crisis comes they have a reserve strength that we have
+not: conscience, the intelligent conscience of this age that cannot
+fool itself with false enthusiasm continually. They are fighting as
+I should pray that I might fight if the Browns invaded our country;
+as I might fight against a murderous burglar. For I will fight,
+sir, I will fight with my face to the white posts, but not with my
+back to them! The Browns have no more right to cross our frontier
+than we have to cross theirs!"</p>
+<p>There was a perceptible shudder on Marta's part, an abrupt,
+tossing elevation of her head. She stared at the spot where
+Dellarme had lain in the garden. Dellarme's smile was back on her
+lips; it seemed graven there. Her eyes, which Westerling could not
+see, were leaping flames.</p>
+<p>"I'm afraid you will not have the chance," Westerling observed,
+as he returned the letter to Hugo, its reading unfinished. "What if
+every man held your views? What would become of the army and the
+nation?" he demanded.</p>
+<p>"Why, I think I have made that plain," replied Hugo. He appeared
+no less weary than Westerling over continual beating of the air to
+no purpose. "We should retreat to our own soil, where we
+belong."</p>
+<p>"And you are ready to be shot for that principle?"</p>
+<p>The question was sharp and final.</p>
+<p>"Yes, if being shot for what I did is dying for it&mdash;though
+I prefer to live for it!" said Hugo, still without any pose. He
+refused to play for a chapter in the future book of martyrs to
+peace. This was the irritating thing about him to a soldier, who
+deprecated all kinds of personal bravado and show as against the
+efficiency of the modern military machine, when men were supposed
+to respond to duty in the face of death as automatically as in any
+business requiring team-work, with an every-day smile like Hugo's
+on their lips.</p>
+<p>"Then," Westerling began, and broke off abruptly. His eyes
+sought Marta.</p>
+<p>The affair seemed to have worn on her nerves also. There was a
+distinctly appreciable effort at self-control in the slow way that
+she turned her head. The flame in her eyes was suddenly suffused in
+a liquid glance which slowly brightened with a suggestion.</p>
+<p>"It is extraordinary!" she breathed. "Don't you think that the
+blow on his head and the fever afterward has something to do with
+it?"</p>
+<p>Hugo answered for himself.</p>
+<p>"My views are the same as they were before the blow and the act
+that brought the blow!" he said, with a slight cast of the eye
+toward Marta which intimated that he wanted no help from the
+deserter of the principles which she had professed to him
+previously.</p>
+<p>She shuddered as if hurt, but only momentarily.</p>
+<p>"Psychological, I suppose&mdash;psychological and irresponsible
+abnormality!" she murmured, avoiding Hugo's look and bending her
+own on Westerling persistently.</p>
+<p>"Long words!" said Hugo. "Insanity is shorter."</p>
+<p>But Westerling did not seem to hear. His thought was shaped by
+the superb misery and sensitiveness in Marta's face. He had done
+wrong to ask her to remain. Of course the scene had been painful to
+her. She would not be herself if she wanted to see a man tried for
+his life. He knew that views not unlike Hugo's were latent in many
+minds lacking Hugo's initiative that would respond to the right
+impulse. A way out occurred to him as inspiration, which pleased
+his sense of craft. The press, which the premier reported was
+irritated by his censorship&mdash;the press which must have
+sensation, the traffic of its trade&mdash;should have a detailed
+account of how one of our indomitable regiments placarded a private
+as coward, proving thereby that the army was a unit of aggressive
+zeal.</p>
+<p>"You are alone&mdash;one man in a million in your ideas!" he
+declared, with judicial gravity. "We shall postpone your trial and
+leave public opinion to punish you. Your story will be given to the
+press in full; your name will be a byword throughout the land, an
+example, and while you are convalescing you will remain a prisoner.
+When you are well we shall have another talk I may give you a
+chance, for the sake of your father and mother and your sweetheart
+and the good opinion of your neighbors, to redeem yourself."</p>
+<p>"I had to tell you what I felt, sir," said Hugo. "Thank you for
+letting me live, after you knew."</p>
+<p>He saluted and turned away. Marta and Westerling watched him as
+he hobbled around the corner of the house and in a heavy silence
+listened to the crunch of his crutch tips on the gravel growing
+fainter. Her lashes, those convenient curtains for hiding thought,
+dropped as Westerling looked around; but he saw that her lips had
+reddened and that she was drawing a long, deep, energizing breath.
+When the lashes lifted, there was still wonder in her
+eyes&mdash;wonder which had become definite tribute to him. The
+assurance he wanted was that he had borne himself well, and he had
+it.</p>
+<p>"You kept your patience beautifully," she told him. "It seems to
+me that you were both kind and wise."</p>
+<p>"How I was to be merciful against the facts puzzled me," he
+replied, "until you saved the day with your suggestion of
+psychological irresponsibility."</p>
+<p>"Then I helped? I really helped?"</p>
+<p>"You did, decidedly! You&mdash;" There he broke off, for he
+found himself speaking to her profile.</p>
+<p>She had looked away in a sudden flight of abstraction, very far
+away, where the lowering sun was stretching the shadows of the
+foot-hills toward the white posts. Capes and pillars and
+promontories of shadow there in the distance! Swinging, furry
+finger-points of shadow from the tall hollyhocks in the garden
+swaying with the breeze! The dark shade of the house's mass over
+the yard!</p>
+<p>It was time for him to be at his desk. But she seemed far from
+any suggestion of going. She seemed to expect him to wait;
+otherwise he might have concluded that she had forgotten his
+presence. Yet were he to rustle a paper he knew that she would hear
+it. Though she did not change her position in the chair, she
+appeared subtly active in every fibre.</p>
+<p>He found waiting easy, free as he was to watch the beauty of her
+profile in the glory of the sunset. The superb thing about her was
+that she always called for study. Her lips moved in sensitive
+turns; her breast rose in soft billows with her breaths; the long,
+flickering eyelashes ran outward from black to bronze and to
+feather tips of gold. In time measured by the regular standard of
+clock ticks, which in the brain may either race madly or drag
+mercilessly, she was not long silent. When she spoke she' did not
+look entirely around at first; he had no glimpse into her eyes.</p>
+<p>"It was another experience of war," she said moodily, returning
+to the subject of Hugo. "Yes, something like the final chapter of
+experience, the trial of this dreamer." Then a wave of restless
+impatience with her abstraction swept over her. Speaking of
+dreamers, she herself would stop dreaming. "For experience does
+make a great difference, doesn't it?" she exclaimed with a sad,
+knowing smile. After a perceptible pause her eyes suddenly glowed
+into his. All the commotion of her thought was galvanized into
+purpose in the look. "I have had a heart full and a mind full of
+experiences!" she said. "I have been close to war&mdash;closer than
+you! I have looked on while others fought!"</p>
+<p>The thing was coming! He should hear the story of the change
+that war had wrought in her. She appeared to regard him as the one
+listener whom she had sought; as a confidant who alone could
+understand her. His gift for listening was in full play as he
+relaxed and settled back in his chair, shading his eyes with his
+hand lest he should seem to stare. For in his eagerness he would
+not miss any one of her varied signals of emotion.</p>
+<p>She was as vivid as he knew that she would be, her narration
+flashes of impression in clear detail. Her being seemed transparent
+to its depths and her moods through the last week to run past him
+in review. He marvelled at times at her military knowledge; again
+at her impartiality. She was neither for the Browns nor the Grays;
+she was simply telling what she had seen. She passed by some
+horrors; on others she dwelt with fearless emphasis.</p>
+<p>"Then the hand-grenades were thrown!" She put her hands over her
+eyes. "As they fell"&mdash;she put her hands over her
+ears&mdash;"oh, the groans!"</p>
+<p>"It was the Browns who started it!" he interjected in defence.
+"I had hoped that we should escape that kind of warfare." He was
+too intent to recall what he had said to the premier about using
+every known method of destruction.</p>
+<p>"And this is only the beginning, isn't it?" she asked piteously,
+exhausted with her story.</p>
+<p>"Only the beginning!" he agreed.</p>
+<p>Again brooding wonder appeared in her eyes, while there was
+wonder in his eyes&mdash;wonder at her.</p>
+<p>"And you remain with your property!" he exclaimed in a burst of
+admiration.</p>
+<p>Once more she was looking away into the distance; once more he
+was studying her profile. He knew that she had gone through her
+experience without tears and without a scream. She had been
+subjected to his final test of all merit&mdash;war. Courage she
+had, feminine courage. And he had often asked himself what would
+happen if he, a great man, should ever meet a great woman. He was
+baffled by the resources of a mind that was held in detachment
+under her charm; baffled as to what she was thinking at that
+moment, only to find her smiling at him, the wonder in her eyes
+resolving itself into purpose.</p>
+<p>"You see, I have been very much stirred up," she said half
+apologetically. "There are some questions I want to ask&mdash;quite
+practical, selfish questions. You might call them questions of
+property and mercy. The longer the war lasts the greater will be
+the loss of life and the misery?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, for both sides; and the heavier the expense and the
+taxes."</p>
+<p>"If you win, then we shall be under your flag and pay taxes to
+you?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, naturally."</p>
+<p>"The Browns do not increase in population; the Grays do rapidly.
+They are a great, powerful, civilized race. They stand for
+civilization!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, facts and the world's opinion agree," he replied. Puzzled
+he might well be by this peculiar catechism. He could only continue
+to reply until he should see where she was leading.</p>
+<p>"And your victory will mean a new frontier, a new order of
+international relations and a long peace, you think? Peace&mdash;a
+long peace!"</p>
+<p>Was there ever a soldier who did not fight for peace? Was there
+ever a call for more army-corps or guns that was not made in the
+name of peace? He had his ready argument, spoken with the forcible
+conviction of an expert.</p>
+<p>"This war was made for peace&mdash;the only kind of peace that
+there can be," he said. "My ambition, if any glory comes to me out
+of this war, is to have later generations say: 'He brought
+peace!'"</p>
+<p>Though the premier, could he have heard this, might have smiled,
+even grinned, he would have understood Westerling's unconsciousness
+of inconsistency. The chief of staff had set himself a task in
+victory which had no military connection. Without knowing why, he
+wanted to win ascendancy over her mind.</p>
+<p>"The man of action!" exclaimed Marta, her eyes opening very
+wide, as they would to let in the light when she heard something
+new that pleased her or gave food for thought. "The man of action,
+who thinks of an ideal as a thing not of words but as the end of
+action!"</p>
+<p>"Exactly!" said Westerling, sensible of another of her gifts.
+She could get the essence of a thing in a few words. "When we have
+won and set another frontier, the power of our nation will be such
+in the world that the Browns can never afford to attack us," he
+went on. "Indeed, no two of the big nations of Europe can afford to
+make war without our consent. We shall be the arbiters of
+international dissensions. We shall command peace&mdash;yes, the
+peace of force, of fact! If it could be won in any other way I
+should not be here on this veranda in command of an army of
+invasion. That was my idea&mdash;for that I planned." He was making
+up for having overshot himself in his confession that he had
+brought on the war as a final step for his ambition.</p>
+<p>"You mean that you can gain peace by propaganda and education
+only when human nature has so changed that we can have law and
+order and houses are safe from burglary and pedestrians from
+pickpockets without policemen? Is that it?" she asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes! You have it! You have found the wheat in the
+chaff."</p>
+<p>"Perhaps because I have been seeing something of human
+nature&mdash;the human nature of both the Browns and the Grays at
+war. I have seen the Browns throwing hand-grenades and the Grays in
+wanton disorder in our dining-room directly they were out of touch
+with their officers!" she said sadly, as one who hates to accept
+disillusionment but must in the face of logic.</p>
+<p>Westerling made no reply except to nod, for a movement on her
+part preoccupied him. She leaned forward, as she had when she had
+told him he would become chief of staff, her hands clasped over her
+knee, her eyes burning with a question. It was the attitude of the
+prophecy. But with the prophecy she had been a little mystical; the
+fire in her eyes had precipitated an idea. Now it forged another
+question.</p>
+<p>"And you think that you will win?" she asked. "You think that
+you will win?" she repeated with the slow emphasis which demands a
+careful answer.</p>
+<p>The deliberateness of his reply was in keeping with her mood. He
+was detached; he was a referee.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I know that we shall. Numbers make it so, though there be
+no choice of skill between the two sides."</p>
+<p>His tone had the confidence of the flow of a mighty river in its
+destination on its way to the sea. There was nothing in it of
+prayer, of hope, of desperation, as there had been in Lanstron's
+"We shall win!" spoken to her in the arbor at their last interview.
+She drew forward slightly in her chair. Her eyes seemed much larger
+and nearer to him. They were sweeping him up and down as if she
+were seeing the slim figure of Lanstron in contrast to Westerling's
+sturdiness; as if she were measuring the might of the five millions
+behind him and the three millions behind Lanstron. She let go a
+half-whispered "Yes!" which seemed to reflect the conclusion gained
+from the power of his presence.</p>
+<p>"Then my mother's and my own interests are with you&mdash;the
+interests of peace are with you!" she declared.</p>
+<p>She did not appear to see the sudden, uncontrolled gleam of
+victory in his eyes; for now she was looking fixedly at the point
+where Hugo had stood. By this time it had become a habit for
+Westerling to wait silently for her to come out of her
+abstractions. To disturb one might make it unproductive.</p>
+<p>"Then if I want to help the cause of peace I should help the
+Grays!"</p>
+<p>The exclamation was more to herself than to him. He was silent.
+This girl in a veranda chair desiring to aid him and his five
+million bayonets and four thousand guns! Quixote and the
+windmills&mdash;but it was amazing; it was fine! The golden glow of
+the sunset was running in his veins in a paean of personal triumph.
+The profile turned ever so little. Now it was looking at the point
+where Dellarme had lain dying. Westerling noted the smile playing
+on the lips. It had the quality of a smile over a task
+completed&mdash;Dellarme's smile. She started; she was trembling
+all over in the resistance of some impulse&mdash;some impulse that
+gradually gained headway and at last broke its bonds.</p>
+<p>"For I can help&mdash;I can help!" she cried out, turning to him
+in wild indecision which seemed to plead for guidance. "It's so
+terrible&mdash;yet if it would hasten peace&mdash;I&mdash;I know
+much of the Browns' plan of defence! I know where they are strong
+in the first line and&mdash;and one place where they are weak
+there&mdash;and a place where they are weak in the main line!"</p>
+<p>"You do!" Westerling exploded. The plans of the enemy! The plans
+that neither Bouchard's saturnine cunning, nor bribes, nor spies
+could ascertain! It was like the bugle-call to the hunter. But he
+controlled himself. "Yes, yes!" He was thoughtful and guarded.</p>
+<p>"Do you think it is right to tell?" Marta gasped half
+inarticulately.</p>
+<p>"Right? Yes, to hasten the inevitable&mdash;to save lives!"
+declared Westerling with deliberate assurance.</p>
+<p>"I&mdash;I want to see an end of the killing! I&mdash;" She
+sprang to her feet as if about to break away tumultuously, but
+paused, swaying unsteadily, and passed her hand across her
+eyes.</p>
+<p>"We intend a general attack on the first line of defence
+to-night!" he exclaimed, his supreme thought leaping into
+words.</p>
+<p>"And you would want the information about the first line
+to-night if&mdash;if it is to be of service?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, to-night!"</p>
+<p>Marta brought her hands together in a tight clasp. Her gaze
+fluttered for a minute over the tea-table. When she looked up her
+eyes were calm.</p>
+<p>"It is a big thing, isn't it?" she said. "A thing not to be done
+in an impulse. I try never to do big things in an impulse. When I
+see that I am in danger of it I always say: 'Go by yourself and
+think for half an hour!' So I must now. In a little while I will
+let you know my decision."</p>
+<p>Without further formality she started across the lawn to the
+terrace steps. Westerling watched her sharply, passing along the
+path of the second terrace, pacing slowly, head bent, until she was
+out of sight. Then he stood for a time getting a grip on his own
+emotions before he went into the house.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXXIII' id="XXXIII"></a>
+<h2>XXXIII</h2>
+<h3>IN FELLER'S PLACE</h3>
+<br>
+<p>What am I? What have I done? What am I about to do? shot as
+forked shadows over the hot lava-flow of Malta's impulse. The
+vitality that Westerling had felt by suggestion from a still
+profile rejoiced in a quickening of pace directly she was out of
+sight of the veranda. All the thinking she had done that afternoon
+had been in pictures; some saying, some cry, some groan, or some
+smile went with every picture.</p>
+<p>Coming to the arbor she slowed down for a step or two, arrested
+by the recollection of her last meeting with Lanstron. There it was
+that she had scored him for making her an accomplice of trickery.
+She saw his twitching hand, and the misery in his eyes and the
+cadence of his words came as clearly as notes from a violin in a
+silent chamber to her ears. She nodded in affirmation; she shook
+her head in negation; she frowned; she laughed strangely, and
+hurried on.</p>
+<p>The sitting-room of the tower was empty to other eyes but not to
+hers. In imagination she saw Feller standing by the table in the
+dejection of his heart-break when he faced her and Lanstron, his
+secret disclosed; and the appeal was more potent in memory than it
+had been at the time. She went on into the bedroom, which had been
+formerly the tool-room. On the threshold of the steps into the
+darkness she glanced back, to see Feller's face transfixed as it
+had been when he discovered the presence of
+interlopers&mdash;transfixed in fighting rage.</p>
+<p>The lantern was in the corner at hand. Only yesterday, in want
+of occupation, as she thought, she had cleaned the chimney and
+trimmed the wick. It seemed as if Lanny's fingers were lighting it
+now; as if he were leading the way as he had on her first visit to
+the telephone. After her hastening steps had carried her along the
+tunnel to the telephone, she set down the lantern and pressed the
+spring that opened the panel door. Another moment and she would be
+embarked on her great adventure in the finality of action. That
+little ear-piece became a spectre of conscience. She drew back
+convulsively and her hands flew to her face; she was a rocking
+shadow in the thin, reddish light of the lantern.</p>
+<p>Conscious mind had torn off the mask from subconscious mind,
+revealing the true nature of the change that war had wrought in
+her. She who had resented Feller's part&mdash;what a part she had
+been playing! Every word, every shade of expression, every telling
+pause of abstraction after Westerling confessed that he had made
+war for his own ends had been subtly prompted by a purpose whose
+actuality terrified her.</p>
+<p>Her hypocrisy, she realized, was as black as the wall of
+darkness beyond the lantern's gleam. All her pictures became a
+whirling involution of extravaganza and all the speeches of the
+characters of the scenes a kind of wail. Then this demoralization
+passed, as a nightmare passes, with Westerling's boast again in her
+ears. She was seeing Hugo Mallin; hearing him announce his
+principles in sight of the spot where Dellarme had died:</p>
+<p>"I love my country.... But I know that other men love theirs....
+Men should be brave for their convictions.... The Browns are
+fighting for their homes.... They are fighting, as I should want to
+fight, against murder and burglary.... I will fight with my face to
+the white posts, but not with my back to them."</p>
+<p>She was seeing the faces of her children; she was hearing them
+repeat:</p>
+<p>"But I shall not let a burglar drive me from my house. If an
+enemy tries to take my land I shall appeal to his sense of justice
+and reason with him; but if he then persists I shall fight for my
+home."</p>
+<p>When war's principles, enacted by men, were based on sinister
+trickery called strategy and tactics, should not women, using such
+weapons as they had, also fight for their homes? Marta's hands
+swept down from her eyes; she was on fire with resolution.</p>
+<p>Forty miles away a bell in Lanstron's bedroom and at his desk
+rang simultaneously. At the time he and Partow were seated facing
+each other across a map on the table of the room where they worked
+together. No persuasion of the young vice-chief, no edict of the
+doctors, could make the old chief take exercise or shorten his
+hours.</p>
+<p>"I know. I know myself!" he said. "I know my duty. And you are
+learning, my boy, learning!"</p>
+<p>Every day the flabby cheeks grew pastier and the pouches under
+the eyebrows heavier. But there was no dimming of the eagle flashes
+of the eyes, no weakening of the will. Last night Lanstron had
+turned as white as chalk when Partow staggered on rising from the
+table, the veins on his temples knotted blue whip-cords. Yet after
+a few hours' sleep he reappeared with firm step, fresh for the
+fray.</p>
+<p>The paraphernalia around these two was the same as that around
+Westerling. Only the atmosphere of the staff was different. It had
+a quality of sober and buoyant alertness and fatality of
+determination rather than rigid confidence. Otherwise, there was
+the same medley of typewriters and telegraph instruments, the same
+types of busy officers and clerks that occupied the Galland house.
+To them, at least, war had brought no surprises. Its routine was as
+they had anticipated it there in the big division headquarters
+building, dissociated from the actual experience of the intimate
+emotions of the front. Each man was performing the part set for
+him. No man knew much of any other man's part. Partow alone knew
+all, and Lanstron was trying to grasp all and praying that Partow's
+old body should still feed his mind with energy. Lanstron was
+thinner and paler, a new and glittering intensity in his eyes.</p>
+<p>A messenger had just brought in two despatches from the
+telegraph room. One was from the taciturn press bureau of the Grays
+which flashed into the Browns' headquarters from a neutral country
+at the same time that it flashed around the world to illumine
+bulletin-boards in every language of civilization. Day after day
+the Grays had announced the occupation of fresh positions. This was
+the only news that they had permitted egress&mdash;the news which
+read like the march of victory to the eager world of the press,
+hastening to quick conclusions. To-day came the official word that
+Westerling had established his headquarters on conquered territory.
+Proof, this, that five could drive back three; that the weak could
+not resist the strong!</p>
+<p>"Hm-m&mdash;indeed!" exclaimed Partow, lifting his brow into
+massive, corrugated wrinkles. "It may affect the stock market, but
+not the result."</p>
+<p>The other despatch was also out of the land of the Grays, but
+not by Westerling's consent or knowledge. By devious ways it had
+broken through the censorship of the frontier in cunning cipher. It
+told of artillery concentrations three days old; it told only what
+the aeroplanes had already seen; it told what the Grays had done
+but nothing of what they intended to do.</p>
+<p>When word of Feller's defection came, Lanstron realized for the
+first time by Partow's manner that the old chief of staff, with all
+his deprecation of the telephone scheme as chimerical, had grounded
+a hope on it.</p>
+<p>"There was the chance that we might know&mdash;so vital to the
+defence&mdash;what they were going to do before and not after the
+attack," he said.</p>
+<p>Yet the story of how Feller yielded to the temptation of the
+automatic had made the nostrils of the old war-horse quiver with a
+dramatic breath, and instead of the command of a battery of guns,
+which Lanstron had promised, the chief made it a battalion. He had
+drawn down his brows when he heard that Marta had asked that the
+wire be left intact; he had shot a shrewd, questioning glance at
+Lanstron and then beat a tattoo on the table and half grinned as he
+grumbled under his breath:</p>
+<p>"She is afraid of being lonesome! No harm done!" A week had
+passed since the Grays had taken the Galland house, and still no
+word from Marta. The ring of the bell brought Lanstron to his feet
+with a startled, boyish bound.</p>
+<p>"Very springy, that tendon of Achilles!" muttered Partow. "And,
+my boy, take care, take care!" he called suddenly in his sonorous
+voice, as vast and billowy as his body. "Take care! She might
+unwittingly repeat something you said&mdash;and hold on!" He was
+amazingly light and vigorous on his feet as he rose and hurried
+after Lanstron with the quick, short steps of active adiposity.
+"She may have seen or heard something. Ask&mdash;ask what is the
+spirit of the staff, of the soldiers who have fought? What is the
+truth about their losses? What&mdash;" He broke off at the door of
+Lanstron's bedroom. Lanstron had flung aside a bathrobe that
+covered a panel door in the closet and already had the receiver in
+his hand. "But you know what to ask!" concluded Partow. A flush of
+embarrassment crept into the pasty cheeks and a sparkle into his
+fine old eyes as he withdrew to acquit himself of being an
+eavesdropper.</p>
+<p>It was Marta's voice and yet not Marta's, this voice that beat
+in nervous waves over the wire.</p>
+<p>"Lanny&mdash;yes, I, Lanny! You were right. Westerling planned
+to make war deliberately to satisfy his ambition. He told me so.
+The first general attack on the first line of defence is to-night.
+Westerling says so!" She had to pause for breath. "And, Lanny, I
+want to know some position of the Browns which is weak&mdash;not
+actually weak, maybe, but some position where the Grays expect
+terrible resistance and will not find it&mdash;where you will let
+them in!"</p>
+<p>"In the name of&mdash;Marta! Marta, what&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I am going to fight for the Browns&mdash;for my home!"</p>
+<p>In the sheer satisfaction of explaining herself to herself, of
+voicing her sentiments, she sent the pictures which had wrought the
+change moving across the screen before Lanstron's amazed vision.
+There was no room for interruption on his part, no question or need
+of one. The wire seemed to quiver with the militant tension of her
+spirit. It was Marta aflame who was talking at the other end; not
+aflame for him, but with a purpose that revealed all the latent
+strength of her personality and daring.</p>
+<p>"Yes, the only way is to fight for your home," she concluded.
+"Otherwise, the world would be to the bully and the heads of saints
+and philosophers and teachers would be egg-shells under his
+bludgeon."</p>
+<p>"It seems," said Lanstron, "that this is almost like my own
+view."</p>
+<p>He was sorry before the words were fairly out of his mouth that
+he had taken that tack. It was asking her to back down abruptly
+from her old principles, which only the weak proselyte will do
+readily; and she was not a proselyte at all, to her conception.</p>
+<p>"No, no!" She etched her reply into his mind with acid, "My
+profession is peace; it is not war. I am caught with my back to the
+wall. If the Browns lose, the Gray flag floats over my home. As
+Westerling says, everybody must take orders from the Grays then.
+Oh, the mockery of his repairing the damage done to our house and
+grounds! Let him repair the damage done to fathers and mothers by
+bringing their sons sacrificed to the ambition for conquest back to
+life! Oh, I got the whole of him reflected in the mirror of himself
+this afternoon when he was comfortably taking tea, and in no
+danger, and sending men to death!"</p>
+<p>There Lanstron winced over a characterization that might apply
+to him. He could think of only one thing that would ever heal the
+wound. Perhaps the chance for it would come some day.</p>
+<p>"Yes," she went on, "sitting there so comfortably and serenely
+and deciding that a man who was ready to die for his convictions
+must be shot for cowardice! My views are like Hugo Mallin's and my
+back is against the wall. But to the work, Lanny! I have a
+half-hour in which to make up my mind"&mdash;she laughed curiously
+as she repeated the phrase&mdash;"in which to make up my mind."
+Briefly she recounted what about: "I want to give him positive
+information of a weak point that can be taken easily."</p>
+<p>"But, Marta&mdash;Marta&mdash;have you considered what a
+terrible risk&mdash;what&mdash;" he protested, the chief of
+intelligence now submerged in the man.</p>
+<p>"No more than for Feller. I sent Feller away and I am taking his
+place. How is he? Did he get his guns?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, not a battery, but a battalion&mdash;a major's
+command&mdash;and the iron cross, too!"</p>
+<p>"Splendid! Oh, I'd like to see him in uniform directing their
+fire! How happy he must be! But, are you going to do your part? Are
+you going to give me the information?"</p>
+<p>"I shall have to ask Partow. It's a pretty big thing."</p>
+<p>"Yes&mdash;only that is not all my plan, my little plan. After
+they have taken the first line of defence&mdash;and they will get
+it, won't they?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, we shall yield in the end, yield rather than suffer too
+great losses there that will weaken the defence on the main
+line."</p>
+<p>"Then I want to know where it is that you want Westerling to
+attack on the main line, so that we can get him to attack there.
+That&mdash;that will help, won't it?"</p>
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+<p>"Of course, all the while I shall be getting news from
+him&mdash;when I have proven my loyalty and have his complete
+confidence&mdash;and I'll telephone it to you. I am sure I can get
+something worth while with you to direct me; don't you think so,
+Lanny?"</p>
+<p>She put the question as simply as if she were asking if she
+might sew on a button for him. It had the charm of an intimate
+fellowship of purpose. It appeared free of the least realization of
+the magnitude of her undertaking. Didn't Mrs. Galland believe that
+blood would tell? And hadn't the old premier, her grandfather,
+said: "You can afford to be fussed about little things but never
+about big things"?</p>
+<p>"I'll hold the wire, Lanny. Ask Partow!" she concluded. Of the
+two she was the steadier.</p>
+<p>"Well?" said Partow, looking up at the sound of Lanstron's step.
+Then he half raised himself from his chair at sight of a Lanstron
+with eyes in a daze of brilliancy; a Lanstron with his maimed hand
+twitching in an outstretched gesture; a Lanstron in the dilemma of
+being at the same time lover and chief of intelligence. Should he
+let her make the sacrifice of everything that he held to be sacred
+to a woman's delicacy? Should he not return to the telephone and
+tell her that he would not permit her to play such a part? Partow's
+voice cut in on his demoralization with the sharpness of a
+blade.</p>
+<p>"Well, what, man, what?" he demanded. He feared that the girl
+might be dead. Anything that could upset Lanstron in this fashion
+struck a chord of sympathy and apprehension.</p>
+<p>Lanstron advanced to the table, pressed his hands on the edge,
+and, now master of himself, began an account of Marta's offer.
+Partow's formless arms lay inert on the table, his soft, pudgy
+fingers outspread on the map and his bulk settled deep in the
+chair, while his eagle eyes were seeing through Lanstron, through a
+mountain range, into the eyes of a woman and a general on the
+veranda of an enemy's headquarters. The plan meant giving, giving
+in the hope of receiving much in return. Would he get the
+return?</p>
+<p>"A woman was the ideal one for the task we intrusted to Feller,"
+he mused, "a gentlewoman, big enough, adroit enough, with her soul
+in the work as no paid woman's could be! There seemed no such one
+in the world!"</p>
+<p>"But to let her do it!" gasped Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"It is her suggestion, not yours? She offers herself? She wants
+no persuasion?" Partow asked sharply.</p>
+<p>"Entirely her suggestion," said Lanstron. "She offers herself
+for her country&mdash;for the cause for which our soldiers will
+give their lives by the thousands. It is a time of sacrifice."</p>
+<p>Partow raised his arms. They were not formless as he brought
+them down with sledge-hammer force to the table.</p>
+<p>"Your tendon of Achilles? My boy, she is your sword-arm!" His
+sturdy forefinger ran along the line of frontier under his eye with
+little staccato leaps. "Eh?" he chuckled significantly, finger
+poised.</p>
+<p>"Let them up the Bordir road and on to redoubts 36 and 37, you
+mean?" asked Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"You have it! The position looks important, but so well do we
+command it that it is not really vital. Yes, the Bordir road is her
+bait for Westerling!" Partow waved his hand as if the affair were
+settled.</p>
+<p>"But," interjected Lanstron, "we have also to decide on the
+point of the main defence which she is to make Westerling think is
+weak."</p>
+<p>"Hm-m!" grumbled Partow. "That is not necessary to start with.
+We can give that to her later over the telephone, can't we,
+eh?"</p>
+<p>"She asked for it now."</p>
+<p>"Why?" demanded Partow with one of his shrewd, piercing
+looks.</p>
+<p>"She did not say, but I can guess," explained Lanstron. "She
+must put all her cards on the table; she must tell Westerling all
+she knows at once. If she tells him piecemeal it might lead to the
+supposition that she still had some means of communication with the
+Browns."</p>
+<p>"Of course, of course!" Partow spatted the flat of his hand
+resoundingly on the map. "As I decided the first time I met her,
+she has a head, and when a woman has a head for that sort of thing
+there is no beating her. Well&mdash;" he was looking straight into
+Lanstron's eyes, "well, I think we know the point where we could
+draw them in on the main line, eh?"</p>
+<p>"Up the apron of the approach from the Engadir valley. We yield
+the advance redoubts on either side."</p>
+<p>"Meanwhile, we have massed heavily behind the redoubt. We retake
+the advance redoubts in a counter-attack and&mdash;" Partow brought
+his fist into his palm with a smack.</p>
+<p>"Yes, if we could do that! If we could get them to expend their
+attack there!" put in Lanstron very excitedly for him.</p>
+<p>"We must! She shall help!" Partow was on his feet. He had
+reached across the table and seized Lanstron's shoulders in a
+powerful if flesh-padded grip. Then he turned Lanstron around
+toward the door of his bedroom and gave him a mighty slap of
+affection. "My boy, the brightest hope of victory we have is
+holding the wire for you. Tell her that a bearded old behemoth, who
+can kneel as gracefully as a rheumatic rhinoceros, is on both knees
+at her feet, kissing her hands and trying his best, in the name of
+mercy, to keep from breaking into verse of his own
+composition."</p>
+<p>Back at the telephone, Lanstron, in the fervor of the cheer and
+the enthusiasm that had transported his chief, gave Marta Partow's
+message.</p>
+<p>"You, Marta, are our brightest hope of victory!"</p>
+<p>"Yes?" The monosyllable was detached, dismal, labored. "A woman
+can be that!" she exclaimed in an uncertain tone, which grew into
+the distraction of clipped words and broken sentences. "A woman
+play-acting&mdash;a woman acting the most revolting
+hypocrisy&mdash;influences the issue between two nations! Her
+deceit deals in the lives of sons precious to fathers and mothers,
+the fate of frontiers, of institutions! Think of it! Think of
+machines costing countless millions&mdash;machines of flesh and
+blood, with their destinies shaped by one little bit of lying
+information! Think of the folly of any civilization that stakes its
+triumphs on such a gamble! Am I not right? Isn't it true? Isn't
+it?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes, Marta! But&mdash;I&mdash;" If she were weakening it
+was not his place to try to strengthen her purpose.</p>
+<p>"I was thinking, only thinking!" she murmured reflectively.
+"That's not the thing now!" she added with sudden force. "Partow
+gave you the positions?"</p>
+<p>He described the Bordir position. She repeated the description
+after him with a stoical matter-of-factness to make sure that she
+had it correctly.</p>
+<p>"I must actually know in order to be convincing," she said. "Now
+that of the main line."</p>
+<p>He did not include in the description of Engadir any reference
+to the Browns' plan of a crushing counter-attack. But as she was
+repeating this, her calm tone broke into an outcry of horror, as
+the nature of what he was inadvertently concealing flashed into her
+mind. She was seeing another picture of imagination, with all the
+hideous detail of realism drawn from her week's experiences.</p>
+<p>"That column of Grays will go forward cheering with victory, led
+on, tricked on&mdash;and then they will find themselves in a
+shambles. No going forward, no going back through the cross-fire!
+Is that it?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, something like that, though not exactly a
+cross-fire&mdash;not unless the enemy has poorer generals than we
+think."</p>
+<p>"But that will be the object and the effect&mdash;wholesale
+slaughter?"</p>
+<p>"Yes!" assented Lanstron honestly.</p>
+<p>"And a woman whose greatest happiness and pride was in teaching
+the righteousness and the beauty of peace to children&mdash;her lie
+will send them to death!" she moaned. "I shall be a party to
+murder!"</p>
+<p>"No more than Westerling! No more than any general! No&mdash;"
+But he paused in his argument. Conviction must come to her from
+within, not from without. He stood graven and wordless, while she
+was tortured in the hell of her mind's creation.</p>
+<p>She was hearing the cry in the night of the Gray soldier who had
+fallen from the dirigible in the first day's fighting; the agonized
+groans of the men under the wall of the terrace when the
+hand-grenades spattered human flesh as if it were jelly. But there
+was Dellarme smiling; there was Hugo Mallin saying that he would
+fight for his own home; there was Stransky, who had thrown the
+hand-grenade, bringing in an exhausted old man on his back from
+under fire; there was Feller as he rallied Dellarme's men;
+and&mdash;and there was Lanny waiting at the other end of the
+wire&mdash;and a burglar should not take her home.</p>
+<p>"Men must have the courage of their convictions!" Hugo had said.
+Hers were all for peace. But there was not peace. There could not
+be peace until the war demon had had his fill of killing and one
+side had to cry for mercy. Which side should that be? That was the
+only question.</p>
+<p>"It will the sooner end fighting, won't it, Lanny?" she asked in
+a small, tense voice.</p>
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+<p>"And the only real end that means real peace is to prove that
+the weak can hold back the strong from their threshold?"</p>
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+<p>Even now Westerling might be on the veranda, perhaps waiting for
+news that would enable him to crush the weak; to prove that the law
+of five pounds of human flesh against three, and five bayonets
+against three, is the law of civilization.</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes, yes!" The constriction was gone from her throat;
+there was a drum-beat in her soul. "Depend on me, Lanny!" It was
+Feller's favorite phrase spoken by the one who was to take his
+place. "Yes, I'm ready to make any sacrifice now. For what am I?
+What is one woman compared to such a purpose? I don't care what is
+said of me or what becomes of me if we can win! Good-by, Lanny,
+till I call you up again! And God with us!"</p>
+<p>"God with us!" as Partow had said, over and over The saying had
+come to be repeated by hard-headed, agnostic staff-officers, who
+believed that the deity had no relation to the efficiency of
+gun-fire. The Brown infantrymen even were beginning to mutter it in
+the midst of action.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXXIV' id="XXXIV"></a>
+<h2>XXXIV</h2>
+<h3>THREE VOICES</h3>
+<br>
+<p>Waiting on the path of the second terrace for Westerling to
+come, Marta realized the full meaning of her task. Day in and day
+out she was to have suspense at her elbow and the horror of
+hypocrisy on her conscience, the while keeping her wits nicely
+balanced. She must feel her part and at the same time she must be
+sufficiently conscious that she was placing a part not to let any
+impulse of aversion betray her. The tea-table scene had been a
+rehearsal; coming was a <i>premi&egrave;re</i> before the ghostly,
+still faces across the bent glare of the footlights. No ready-made
+lines, hers She must create them. Every word must be the right word
+and spoken in the right way, all for the deception of one man.</p>
+<p>When she saw Westerling appear on the veranda and start over the
+lawn she felt dizzy and uncertain of her capabilities. In the
+gathering dusk he seemed of giant stature, too masterful to be
+outwitted by any trickery she might devise. She wondered if she
+would be able to articulate a word; if she would not turn and
+flee.</p>
+<p>"I have considered all that you said for my guidance and I have
+decided," she began.</p>
+<p>Marta heard her own voice with the relief of a singer in a
+d&eacute;but who, with knees shaking, finds that her notes are
+true. She was looking directly at Westerling in profound
+seriousness. Though knees shook, lips and chin could aid eyes in
+revealing the painful fatigue of a battle that had raged in the
+mind of a woman who went away for half an hour to think for
+herself.</p>
+<p>"I have concluded," she went on, "that it is an occasion for the
+sacrifice of private ethics to a great purpose, the sooner to end
+the slaughter."</p>
+<p>"All true!" whispered an inner voice. Its tone was Lanny's, in
+the old days of their comradeship. It gave her strength. All
+true!</p>
+<p>"Yes, an end&mdash;a speedy end!" said Westerling with a fine,
+inflexible emphasis. "That is your prayer and mine and the prayer
+of all lovers of humanity."</p>
+<p>"He is not thinking of humanity, but of individual victory!"
+whispered another voice, which had the mellow tone of Hugo Mallin's
+deliberate wisdom.</p>
+<p>"It is little that I know, but such as it is you shall have it,"
+she began, conscious of his guarded scrutiny. When she told him of
+Bordir, the weak point in the first line of the Browns' defence,
+she noted no change in his steady look; but with the mention of
+Engadir in the main line she detected a gleam in his eyes that had
+the merciless delight of a cutting edge of steel. "I have made my
+sacrifice to some purpose? The information is worth something to
+you?" she asked wistfully.</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes! Yes, it promises that way," he replied
+thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>Quietly he began a considerate catechism. Soon she was subtly
+understanding that her answers lacked the convincing details that
+he sought. She longed to avert her eyes from his for an instant,
+but she knew that this would be fatal. She felt the force of him
+directed in professional channels, free of all personal relations,
+beating as a strong light on her bare statements. How could a woman
+ever have learned two such vital secrets? How could it happen that
+two such critical points as Bordir and Engadir should go
+undefended? No tactician, no engineer but would have realized their
+strategic importance. Did she know what she was saying? How did she
+get her knowledge? These, she understood, were the real questions
+that underlay Westerling's polite indirection.</p>
+<p>"Invention! Quick, quick! How did you find out? Quick and
+naturally and obviously&mdash;pure invention; no half-way
+business!" whispered still another voice, the voice of that most
+facile of story-builders, Feller, this time.</p>
+<p>"But I have not told you the sources of my information! Isn't
+that like a woman!" she exclaimed. "You see, it did not concern me
+at all at the time I heard it. I didn't even realize its importance
+and I didn't hear much," she proceeded, her introduction giving
+time for improvisation. "You see, Partow was inspecting the
+premises with Colonel Lanstron. My mother had known Partow in her
+younger days when my grandfather was premier. We had them both to
+luncheon."</p>
+<p>"Yes?" put in Westerling, betraying his eagerness. Partow and
+Lanstron! Then her source was one of authority, not the gossip of
+subalterns!</p>
+<p>"And it occurs to me now that, even while he was our guest," she
+interjected in sudden indignation&mdash;"that even while he was our
+guest Partow was planning to make our grounds a redoubt!"</p>
+<p>"Bully! Very feminine and convincing!" whispered the voice of
+Feller.</p>
+<p>"After luncheon I remember Partow saying, 'We are going to have
+a look at the crops,' and they went for a walk out to the knoll
+where the fighting began."</p>
+<p>"Yes! When was this?" Westerling asked keenly.</p>
+<p>"Only about six weeks ago," answered Marta.</p>
+<p>"That's it! That's splendid! If you'd said a year ago there
+would have been time enough in the meanwhile to fortify!" whispered
+the voice of Feller encouragingly. "You're going fine! Keep it
+up!"</p>
+<p>"Later, I came upon them unexpectedly after they had returned,"
+Marta went on. "They were sitting there on that seat concealed by
+the shrubbery. I was on the terrace steps unobserved and I couldn't
+help overhearing them. Their voices grew louder with the interest
+of their discussion. I caught something about appropriations and
+aeroplanes and Bordir and Engadir, and saw that Lanstron was
+pleading with his chief. He wanted a sum appropriated for
+fortifications to be applied to building planes and dirigibles.
+Finally, Partow consented, and I recall his exact words: 'They're
+shockingly archaically defended, especially Engadir,' he said, 'but
+they can wait until we get further appropriations in the fall.'"
+She was so far under the spell of her own invention that she
+believed the reality of her words, reflected in her wide-open eyes
+which seemed to have nothing to hide.</p>
+<p>"That is all," she exclaimed with a shudder&mdash;"all my
+eavesdropping, all my breach of confidence! If&mdash;if it&mdash;"
+and her voice trembled with the intensity of the one purpose that
+was shining with the light of truth through the murk of her
+deception&mdash;"it will only help to end the slaughter!" She held
+out her hand convulsively in parting as if she would leave the rest
+with him.</p>
+<p>"I think it will," he said soberly. "I think it will prove that
+you have done a great service," he repeated as he caught both her
+hands, which were cold from her ordeal. His own were warm with the
+strong beating of his heart stirred by the promise of what he had
+just heard. But he did not prolong the grasp. He was as eager to be
+away to his work as she to be alone. "I think it will. You will
+know in the morning," he added.</p>
+<p>His steps were sturdier than ever in the power of five against
+three as he started back to the house. When he reached the veranda,
+Bouchard, the saturnine chief of intelligence, appeared in the
+doorway of the dining-room: or, rather, reappeared, for he had been
+standing there throughout the interview of Westerling and Marta,
+whose heads were just visible, above the terrace wall, to his hawk
+eyes.</p>
+<p>"A little promenade in the open and my mind made up," said
+Westerling, clapping Bouchard on the shoulder.</p>
+<p>"Something about an attack to-night?" asked Bouchard.</p>
+<p>"You guess right. Call the others."</p>
+<p>Five minutes later he was seated at the head of the dining-room
+table with his chiefs around him waiting for their chairman to
+speak. He asked some categorical questions almost perfunctorily,
+and the answer to each was, "Ready!" with, in some instances, a
+qualification&mdash;the qualification made by regimental and
+brigade commanders that, though they could take the position in
+front of them, the cost would be heavy. Yes, all were willing and
+ready for the first general assault of the war, but they wanted to
+state the costs as a matter of professional self-defence.</p>
+<p>Westerling could pose when it served his purpose. Now he rose
+and, going to one of the wall maps, indicated a point with his
+forefinger.</p>
+<p>"If we get that we have the most vital position, haven't
+we?"</p>
+<p>Some uttered a word of assent; some only nodded. A glance or two
+of curiosity was exchanged. Why should the chief of staff ask so
+elementary a question? Westerling was not unconscious of the
+glances or of their meaning. They gave dramatic value to his next
+remark.</p>
+<p>"We are going to mass for our main attack in front at
+Bordir!"</p>
+<p>"But," exclaimed four or five officers at once, "that is the
+heart of the position! That is&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I believe it is weak&mdash;that it will fall, and
+to-night!"</p>
+<p>"You have information, then, information that I have not?" asked
+Bouchard.</p>
+<p>"No more than you," replied Westerling. "Not as much if you have
+anything new."</p>
+<p>"Nothing!" admitted Bouchard wryly. He lowered his head under
+Westerling's penetrating look in the consciousness of failure.</p>
+<p>"I am going on a conviction&mdash;on putting two and two
+together!" Westerling announced. "I am going on my experience as a
+soldier, as a chief of staff. If I am wrong, I take the
+responsibility. If I am right, Bordir will be ours before morning.
+It is settled!"</p>
+<p>"If you are right, then," exclaimed Turcas&mdash;"well, then
+it's genius or&mdash;" He did not finish the sentence. He had been
+about to say coincidence; while Westerling knew that if he were
+right all the rising scepticism in certain quarters, owing to the
+delay in his programme, would be silenced. His prestige would be
+unassailable.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXXV' id="XXXV"></a>
+<h2>XXXV</h2>
+<h3>MRS. GALLAND INSISTS</h3>
+<br>
+<p>"You have been in the tunnel again!" said Mrs. Galland with an
+emphasis on "again," when Marta came up the stairs, lantern in
+hand, after telling Lanstron of her interview with Westerling.</p>
+<p>"Again&mdash;yes!" Marta replied mechanically. Her mind was
+empty, burned out. She had thought herself through with deceit for
+the day.</p>
+<p>"What interests you so much down there?" Mrs. Galland pursued
+softly.</p>
+<p>Marta realized that she had to deal with a fresh dilemma. She
+could not be making frequent visits to the telephone without her
+mother's knowledge; and, as yet, Mrs. Galland knew nothing of the
+part originally planned for Feller, let alone any inkling of her
+daughter's part.</p>
+<p>"I didn't know but it would be a good place to hide our plate
+and other treasures," said Marta, offering rather methodically the
+first invention that came to mind as she threw open-the reflector
+of the lantern and turned down the wick. She was ashamed of the
+excuse. It warned her how easy it was becoming for her to
+lie&mdash;yes, lie was the word.</p>
+<p>"Don't blow out the light, please," said Mrs. Galland. "I should
+like to see for myself if the tunnel is a good hiding-place for the
+plate."</p>
+<p>"It's too damp for you down there&mdash;it's&mdash;" Marta blew
+out the flame with a sudden gust of breath and bolted across the
+room and into her chamber, closing the door and taking the lantern
+with her. In utter fatigue she dropped on the bed. Then came a
+gentle, prolonged knocking on the door.</p>
+<p>"You forgot to leave the lantern," called Mrs. Galland. "I have
+come to get it, if you please."</p>
+<p>Marta did not answer. Her head had sunk forward; her hands,
+bearing the weight of her body, were resting on her knees. All she
+could think was that one more lie would break the camel's back.</p>
+<p>"Marta, please mayn't I come in?" rose the gentle voice on the
+other side of the door. "Marta, don't you hear me? I asked if I
+might come in."</p>
+<p>"It's too childish and silly to remain silent any longer,"
+thought Marta. Tired nerves revived spasmodically under another
+call to action. "Yes, certainly, mother&mdash;yes, do!" she said in
+a forced, metallic tone.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Galland entered to find her daughter before the mirror
+brushing her hair with hectic vigor. She did not take up the
+lantern, which Marta had left in the middle of the floor, but
+seated herself. Her nice deliberation in smoothing out a wrinkle of
+her skirt over her knees indicated that she meant to stay a while.
+She folded her plump, white hands; a faint touch of color came into
+her round, pink cheeks; a trace of a smile knitted itself into the
+corners of her mouth. She was as she had been&mdash;<i>J'y suis!
+J'y reste</i>!&mdash;when the captain of engineers had pleaded with
+her at the outset of the war to leave the house. In the reflection
+of the mirror Marta's glance caught hers, which was without
+reproach or complaint, but very resolute.</p>
+<p>"Do you like best to keep it all to yourself, Marta?" Mrs.
+Galland inquired solicitously.</p>
+<p>"What? Keep what?" asked Marta crossly.</p>
+<p>"Even if you have been all the way around the world, it might be
+easier if you allowed me to help you a little," pursued Mrs.
+Galland.</p>
+<p>"Help! Help about what?" said Marta.</p>
+<p>That reply, as Marta knew now as an expert in deceit, was a
+mistake. She was hedging and petulant when she ought to have
+whirled around gayly and kissed her mother on the cheek, while
+laughing at such solemnity over a trip of exploration through the
+tunnel. Mrs. Galland had caught her prevaricating. Not since Marta
+was a little girl of seven had she "fibbed" to her mother; and on
+that memorable and ethically instructive occasion her mother had
+regarded her in this same calm fashion.</p>
+<p>"At all events," said Mrs. Galland, "I could help you a little
+if you would let me comb your hair. You are combing in a most
+unsystematic way, I must say. Systematic, gentle combing is very
+good for headaches and&mdash;"</p>
+<p>There was a twinkle in Mrs. Galland's eye that was not exactly
+humor; a persistent twinkle that seemed to shine out of every part
+of the mirror. Her curiosity had come to stay; there was no
+escaping it. Marta brought her brush down with a bang on the
+bureau, only to be disgusted with this show of temper which the
+persistent twinkle had not missed. Her next impulse, unanalyzed
+because it was one of the oldest and simplest of impulses, made her
+spin round and drop on her knees at her mother's feet, which was
+just what had happened when she had started to brave out the last
+lie&mdash;the childhood lie.</p>
+<p>Her head buried in her mother's lap, she was sobbing. It was
+many years since Mrs. Galland had known Marta to sob and she was
+glad that Marta had not forgotten how. She believed in the value of
+the law of overflow. When Marta looked up with eyes still moist, it
+was with the joyous satisfaction that begins a confession. Not once
+during the recital did the smile fade from Mrs. Galland's lips. She
+was too well fortified for any kind of a shock to exhibit
+surprise.</p>
+<p>"You see, I could not tell you&mdash;I&mdash;" Marta concluded,
+still uncertain what conclusion lay behind her mother's
+attitude.</p>
+<p>"Of course you could not," said Mrs. Galland. "As
+grandfather&mdash;my father, the premier&mdash;said; a man action
+cannot stop to explain everything he does. He must strike while the
+iron is hot. If you had stopped to discuss every step you would not
+have gone far&mdash;Yes, I should have argued and protested. It was
+best that I, being as I am&mdash;that I should not have been
+told&mdash;not until now."</p>
+<p>"And I must go on!" added Marta.</p>
+<p>"Of course you must!" replied Mrs. Galland. "You must for the
+sake of the Browns&mdash;the flag your father and grandfather
+served. They would not have approved of petty deceit, but anything
+for the cause, any sacrifices, any immolation of self and personal
+sensibilities. Yes, your father would have been happy, though he
+had no son, to know that his daughter might do such a service. And
+we must tell Minna," she added.</p>
+<p>"Minna! You think so? Every added link may mean weakness."</p>
+<p>"But Minna will see you going and coming from the tunnel, too.
+She is for the Browns with all her heart. They are her people and,
+besides," Mrs. Galland smiled rather broadly, "that giant Stransky
+is with the Browns!" So Minna was told.</p>
+<p>"I'd like to kiss your skirt, Miss Galland!" exclaimed Minna in
+admiration.</p>
+<p>"Better kiss me!" said Marta, throwing her arms around the girl.
+"We must stand together and think together in any emergency."</p>
+<p>Soon after dark the attack began. Flashes of bursting shells and
+flashes from gun mouths and glowing sheets of flame from rifles
+made ugly revelry, while the beams of search-lights swept hither
+and thither. This kept up till shortly after midnight, when it died
+down and, where hell's concert had raged, silent darkness shrouded
+the hills. Marta knew that Bordir was taken without having to ask
+Lanstron or wait for confirmation from Westerling.</p>
+<p>She was seated in the recess of the arbor the next morning, when
+she heard the approach of those regular, powerful steps whose
+character had become as distinct to her as those of a member of her
+own family. Five Against three! five against three! they were
+saying to her; while down the pass road and the castle road ran the
+stream of wounded from last night's slaughter.</p>
+<p>Posted in the drawing-room of the Galland house were the
+congratulations of the premier to Westerling, who had come from the
+atmosphere of a staff that accorded to him a military insight far
+above the analysis of ordinary standards. But he was too clever a
+man to vaunt his triumph. He knew how to carry his honors. He
+accepted success as his due, in a matter-of-course manner that must
+inspire confidence in further success.</p>
+<p>"You were right," he said to Marta easily, pleasantly. "We did
+it&mdash;we did it&mdash;we took Bordir with a loss of only twenty
+thousand men!"</p>
+<p><i>Only</i> twenty thousand! Her revulsion at the bald statement
+was relieved by the memory of Lanny's word over the telephone after
+breakfast that the Browns had lost only five thousand. Four to one
+was a wide ratio, she was thinking.</p>
+<p>"Then the end&mdash;then peace is so much the nearer?" she
+asked.</p>
+<p>"Very much nearer!" he answered earnestly, as he dropped on the
+bench beside her.</p>
+<p>He stretched his arms out on the back of the seat and the
+relaxed attitude, unusual with him, brought into relief a new trait
+of which she had been hitherto oblivious. The conqueror had become
+simply a companionable man. Though he was not sitting close to her,
+yet, as his eyes met hers, she had a desire to move away which she
+knew would be unwise to gratify. She was conscious of a certain
+softening charm, a magnetism that she had sometimes felt in the
+days when she first knew him. She realized, too, that then the
+charm had not been mixed with the indescribable, intimate quality
+that it held now.</p>
+<p>"In the midst of congratulations after the position was taken
+last night," he declared, "I confess that I was thinking less of
+success than of its source." He bent on her a look that was warm
+with gratitude.</p>
+<p>She lowered her lashes before it; before gratitude that made her
+part appear in a fresh angle of misery.</p>
+<p>"There seems to be a kind of fatality about our relations," he
+went on. "I lay awake pondering it last night." His tone held more
+than gratitude. It had the elation of discovery.</p>
+<p>"Look out! Look out, now!" Not only the voices of Lanny and
+Feller and Hugo warned her, but also those of her mother and
+Minna.</p>
+<p>"He is going to make it harder than I ever guessed!" echoed her
+own thought, in a flutter of confusion.</p>
+<p>"Yes, it was strange our meeting on the frontier in peace and
+then in war!" she exclaimed at random. The sound of the remark
+struck her as too subdued; as expectant, when her purpose was one
+of careless deprecation.</p>
+<p>"I have met a great many women, as you may have imagined," he
+proceeded. "They passed in review. They were simply women, witty
+and frail or dull and beautiful, and one meant no more to me than
+another. Nothing meant anything to me except my profession. But I
+never forgot you. You planted something in mind: a memory of real
+companionship."</p>
+<p>"Yes, I made the prophecy that came true!" she put in. This
+ought to bring him back to himself and his ambitions, she
+thought.</p>
+<p>"Yes!" he exclaimed, his body stiffening free of the back of the
+seat. "You realized what was in me. You foresaw the power which was
+to be mine. The fate that first brought us together made me look
+you up in the capital. Now it brings us together here on this bench
+after all that has passed in the last twenty-four hours."</p>
+<p>She realized that he had drawn perceptibly nearer. She wanted to
+rise and cry out: "Don't do this! Be the chief of staff, the
+conqueror, crushing the earth with the tread of five against
+three!" It was the conqueror whom she wanted to trick, not a man
+whose earnestness was painting her deceit blacker. Far from rising,
+she made no movement at all; only looked at her hands and allowed
+him to go on, conscious of the force of a personality that mastered
+men and armies now warm and appealing in the full tide of another
+purpose.</p>
+<p>"The victory that I was thinking of last night was not the
+taking of Bordir. It was finer than any victory in war. It was
+selfish&mdash;not for army and country, but born of a human
+weakness triumphant; a human weakness of which my career had robbed
+me," he continued. "It gave me a joy that even the occupation of
+the Browns' capital could not give. I had come as an invader and I
+had won your confidence."</p>
+<p>"In a cause!" she interrupted hurriedly, wildly, to stop him
+from going further, only to find that her intonation was such that
+it was drawing him on.</p>
+<p>"That fatality seemed to be working itself out to the soldier so
+much older than yourself in renewed youth, in another form of
+ambition. I hoped that there was more than the cause that led you
+to trust me. I hoped&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Was he testing her? Was he playing a part of his own to make
+certain that she was not playing one? She looked up swiftly for
+answer. There was no gainsaying what she saw in his eyes. It was
+beating into hers with the power of an overwhelming masculine
+passion and a maturity of intellect as his egoism admitted a
+comrade to its throne. Such is ever the way of the man in the
+forties when the clock strikes for him. But who could know better
+the craft of courtship than one of Westerling's experience? He was
+fighting for victory; to gratify a desire.</p>
+<p>"I did not expect this&mdash;I&mdash;" The words escaped
+tumultuously and chokingly.</p>
+<p>She heard all the voices in chorus: "Look out! Look out!" And
+then the voice of Feller alone, insinuating, with a sinister
+mischievousness: "What more could you ask? Now that you have him,
+hold him! For God and country&mdash;for our dear Brown land!"</p>
+<p>Hold a man who was making love to her by the tricks of the
+courtesan! But what kind of love? He was bending so close to her
+that she felt his breath on her cheek burning hot, and she was
+sickeningly conscious that he was looking her over in that
+point-by-point manner which she had felt across the tea-table at
+the hotel. This horrible thing in his glance she had sometimes seen
+in strangers on her travels, and it had made her think that she was
+wise to carry a little revolver. She wanted to strike him.</p>
+<p>"Confess! Confess!" called all her own self-respect. "Make an
+end to your abasement!"</p>
+<p>"Confession, after the Browns have given up Bordir! Confession
+that makes Lanny, not Westerling, your dupe!" came the reply, which
+might have been telegraphed into her mind from the high, white
+forehead of Partow bending over his maps. "Confession, betraying
+the cause of the right against the wrong; the three to the
+conquering five! No! You are in the things. You may not retreat
+now."</p>
+<p>For a few seconds only the duel of argument thundered in her
+temples&mdash;seconds in which her lips were parted and quivering
+and her eyes dilated with an agitation which the man at her side
+could interpret as he pleased. A prompting devil&mdash;a devil
+roused by that thing in his eyes&mdash;urging a finesse in
+double-dealing which only devils understand, made her lips
+hypnotically turn in a smile, her eyes soften, and sent her hand
+out to Westerling in a trance-like gesture. For an instant it
+rested on his arm with telling pressure, though she felt it burn
+with shame at the point of contact.</p>
+<p>"We must not think of that now," she said. "We must think of
+nothing personal; of nothing but your work until your work is
+done!"</p>
+<p>The prompting devil had not permitted a false note in her voice.
+Her very pallor, in fixity of idea, served her purpose. Westerling
+drew a deep breath that seemed to expand his whole being with
+greater appreciation of her. Yet that harried hunger, the hunger of
+a beast, was still in his glance.</p>
+<p>"This is like you&mdash;like what I want you to be!" he said.
+"You are right." He caught her hand, enclosing it entirely in his
+grip, and she was sensible, in a kind of dazed horror, of the
+thrill of his strength. "Nothing can stop us! Numbers will win!
+Hard fighting in the mercy of a quick end!" he declared with his
+old rigidity of five against three which was welcome to her.
+"Then," he added&mdash;"and then&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Then!" she repeated, averting her glance. "Then&mdash;" There
+the devil ended the sentence and she withdrew her hand and felt the
+relief of one escaping suffocation, to find that he had realized
+that anything further during that interview would be banality and
+was rising to go.</p>
+<p>"I don't feel decent!" she thought. "Society turned on Minna for
+a human weakness&mdash;but I&mdash;I'm not a human being! I am one
+of the pawns of the machine of war!"</p>
+<p>Walking slowly with lowered head as she left the arbor, she
+almost ran into Bouchard, who apologized with the single word
+"Pardon!" as he lifted his cap in overdone courtesy, which his
+stolid brevity made the more conspicuous.</p>
+<p>"Miss Galland, you seem lost in abstraction," he said in sudden
+loquacity. "I am almost on the point of accusing you of being a
+poet."</p>
+<p>"Accusing!" she replied. "Then you must think that I would write
+bad poetry."</p>
+<p>"On the contrary, I should say excellent&mdash;using the sonnet
+form," he returned.</p>
+<p>"I might make a counter accusation, only that yours would be the
+epic form," answered Marta. "For you, too, seem fond of
+rambling."</p>
+<p>There was a veiled challenge in the hawk eyes, which she met
+with commonplace politeness in hers, before he again lifted his cap
+and proceeded on his way.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXXVI' id="XXXVI"></a>
+<h2>XXXVI</h2>
+<h3>MARKING TIME</h3>
+<br>
+<p>For the next two weeks Marta's r&ocirc;le resolved itself into a
+kind of routine. Their cramped quarters became spacious to the
+three women in the intimacy of the common secret shared by them
+under the very nose of the staff. With little Clarissa Eileen, they
+formed the only feminine society in the neighborhood. On sunshiny
+days Mrs. Galland was usually to be found in her favorite chair
+outside the tower door; and here Minna set the urn on a table at
+four-thirty as in the old days.</p>
+<p>No member of the staff was more frequently present at Marta's
+teas than Bouchard, who was developing his social instinct late in
+life by sitting in the background and allowing others to do the
+talking while he watched and listened. In his hearing, Marta's
+attitude toward the progress of the war was sympathetic but never
+interrogatory, while she shared attention with Clarissa Eileen, who
+was in danger of becoming spoiled by officers who had children of
+their own at home. After the reports of killed and wounded, which
+came with such appalling regularity, it was a relief to hear of the
+day's casualties among Clarissa's dolls. The chief of
+transportation and supply rode her on his shoulder; the chief of
+tactics played hide-and-seek with her; the chief engineer built her
+a doll house of stones with his own hands; and the chief medical
+officer was as concerned when she caught a cold as if the health of
+the army were at stake.</p>
+<p>"We mustn't get too set up over all this attention, Clarissa
+Eileen, my rival," said Marta to the child. "You are the only
+little girl and I am the only big girl within reach. If there were
+lots of others it would be different."</p>
+<p>She had occasional glimpses of Hugo Mallin on his crutches,
+keeping in the vicinity of the shrubbery that screened the stable
+from the house. How Marta longed to talk with him! But he was
+always attended by a soldier, and under the rigorous discipline
+that held all her impulses subservient to her purpose she passed by
+him without a word lest she compromise her position.</p>
+<p>Bouchard was losing flesh; his eyes were sinking deeper under a
+heavier frown. His duty being to get information, he was gaining
+none. His duty being to keep the Grays' secrets, there was a leak
+somewhere in his own department. He quizzed subordinates; he made
+abrupt transfers, to no avail.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, the Grays were taking the approaches to the main line
+of defence, which had been thought relatively immaterial but had
+been found shrewdly placed and their vulnerability overestimated.
+The thunders of batteries hammering them became a routine of
+existence, like the passing of trains to one living near a
+railroad. The guns went on while tea was being served; they ushered
+in dawn and darkness; they were going when sleep came to those whom
+they later awakened with a start. Fights as desperate as the one
+around the house became features of this period, which was only a
+warming-up practice for the war demon before the orgy of the
+impending assault on the main line.</p>
+<p>Marta began to realize the immensity of the chess-board and of
+the forces engaged in more than the bare statement of numbers and
+distances. If a first attack on a position failed, the wires from
+the Galland house repeated their orders to concentrate more guns
+and attack again. In the end the Browns always yielded, but
+grudgingly, calculatingly, never being taken by surprise. The few
+of them who fell prisoners said, "God with us! We shall win in the
+end!" and answered no questions. Gradually the Gray army began to
+feel that it was battling with a mystery which was fighting under
+cover, falling back under cover&mdash;a tenacious, watchful mystery
+that sent sprays of death into every finger of flesh that the Grays
+thrust forward in assault.</p>
+<p>"Another position taken. Our advance continues," was the only
+news that Westerling gave to the army, his people, and the world,
+which forgot its sports and murders and divorce cases in following
+the progress of the first great European war for two generations.
+He made no mention of the costs; his casualty lists were secret.
+The Gray hosts were sweeping forward as a slow, irresistible tide;
+this by Partow's own admission. He announced the loss of a position
+as promptly as the Grays its taking. He published a daily list of
+casualties so meagre in contrast to their own that the Grays
+thought it false; he made known the names of the killed and wounded
+to their relatives. Yet the seeming candor of his press bureau
+included no straw of information of military value to the
+enemy.</p>
+<p>Westerling never went to tea at the Gallands' with the other
+officers, for it was part of his cultivation of greatness to keep
+aloof from his subordinates. His meetings with Marta happened
+casually when he went out into the garden. Only once had he made
+any reference to the "And then" of their interview in the
+arbor.</p>
+<p>"I am winning battles for <i>you</i>!" he had exclaimed with
+that thing in his eyes which she loathed.</p>
+<p>To her it was equivalent to saying that she had tricked him into
+sending men to be killed in order to please her. She despised
+herself for the way he confided in her; yet she had to go on
+keeping his confidence, returning a tender glance with one that
+held out hope. She learned not to shudder when he spoke of a loss
+of "only ten thousand." In order to rally herself when she grew
+faint-hearted to her task, she learned to picture the lines of his
+face hard-set with five-against-three brutality, while in comfort
+he ordered multitudes to death, and, in contrast, to recall the
+smile of Dellarme, who asked his soldiers to undergo no risk that
+he would not share. And after every success he would remark that he
+was so much nearer Engadir, that position of the main line of
+defence whose weakness she had revealed.</p>
+<p>"Your Engadir!" he came to say. "Then we shall again profit by
+your information; that is, unless they have fortified since you
+received it."</p>
+<p>"They haven't. They had already fortified!" she thought. She was
+always seeing the mockery of his words in the light of her own
+knowledge and her own part, which never quite escaped her
+consciousness. One chamber of her mind was acting for him; a second
+chamber was perfectly aware that the other was acting.</p>
+<p>"One position more&mdash;the Twin Boulder Redoubt, it is
+called," he announced at last. "We shall not press hard in front.
+We shall drive in masses on either side and storm the flanks."</p>
+<p>This she was telephoning to Lanstron a few minutes later and
+having, in return, all the news of the Browns. The sheer
+fascination of knowing what both sides were doing exerted its spell
+in keeping her to her part.</p>
+<p>"They've lost four hundred thousand men now, Lanny," she
+said.</p>
+<p>"And we only a hundred thousand. We're whittling them down,"
+answered Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"Whittling them down! What a ghastly expression!" she gasped.
+"You are as bad as Westerling and I am worse than either of you!
+I&mdash;I announced the four hundred thousand as if they were a
+score&mdash;a score in a game in our favor. I am helping, Lanny?
+All my sacrifice isn't for nothing?" she asked for the hundredth
+time.</p>
+<p>"Immeasurably. You have saved us many lives!" he replied.</p>
+<p>"And cost them many?" she asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes, Marta, no doubt," he admitted; "but no more than they
+would have lost in the end. It is only the mounting up of their
+casualties that can end the war. Thus the lesson must be
+taught."</p>
+<p>"And I can be of most help when the attack on the main defence
+is begun?"</p>
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+<p>"And when Westerling finds that my information is false about
+Engadir&mdash;then&mdash;"</p>
+<p>She had never put the question to him in this way before. What
+would Westerling do if he found her out?</p>
+<p>"My God, Marta!" he exclaimed. "If I'd had any sense I would
+have thought of that in the beginning and torn out the 'phone! I've
+been mad, mad with the one thought of the nation&mdash;inhuman in
+my greedy patriotism. I will not let you go any further!"</p>
+<p>It was a new thing for her to be rallying him; yet this she did
+as the strange effect of his protest on the abnormal sensibilities
+that her acting had developed.</p>
+<p>"Thinking of me&mdash;little me!" she called back. "Of one
+person's comfort when hundreds of thousands of other women are in
+terror; when the destiny of millions is at stake! Lanny, you are in
+a blue funk!" and she was laughing forcedly and hectically. "I'm
+going on&mdash;going on like one in a trance who can't stop if he
+would. It's all right, Lanny. I undertook the task myself. I must
+see it through!"</p>
+<p>After she had hung up the receiver her buoyancy vanished. She
+leaned against the wall of the tunnel weakly. Yes, what if she were
+found out? She was thinking of the possibility seriously for the
+first time. Yet, for only a moment did she dwell upon it before she
+dismissed it in sudden reaction.</p>
+<p>"No matter what they do to me or what becomes of me!" she
+thought. "I'm a lost soul, anyway. The thing is to serve as long as
+I can&mdash;and then I don't care!"</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXXVII' id="XXXVII"></a>
+<h2>XXXVII</h2>
+<h3>THUMBS DOWN FOR BOUCHARD</h3>
+<br>
+<p>Haggard and at bay, Bouchard faced the circle of frowns around
+the polished expanse of that precious heirloom, the dining-room
+table of the Gallands. The dreaded reckoning of the apprehensions
+which kept him restlessly awake at night had come at the next staff
+council after the fall of the Twin Boulder Redoubt. With the last
+approach to the main line of defence cleared, one chapter of the
+war was finished. But the officers did not manifest the elation
+that the occasion called for, which is not saying that they were
+discouraged. They had no doubt that eventually the Grays would
+dictate peace in the Browns' capital. Exactly stated, their mood
+was one of repressed professional irritation. Not until the third
+attempt was Twin Boulder Redoubt taken. As far as results were
+concerned, the nicely planned first assault might have been a
+stroke of strategy by the Browns to drive the Grays into an
+impassable fire zone.</p>
+<p>"The trouble is we are not informed!" exclaimed Turcas, opening
+his thin lips even less than usual, but twisting them in a
+significant manner as he gave his words a rasping emphasis. The
+others hastened to follow his lead with equal candor.</p>
+<p>"Exactly. We have no reports of their artillery strength, which
+we had greatly underestimated," said the chief of artillery.</p>
+<p>"Our maps of their forts could not be less correct if revealed
+to us for purposes of deceit. Again and again we have thought that
+we had them surprised, only to be surprised ourselves. In short,
+they know what we are doing and we don't know what they are doing!"
+said the tactical expert.</p>
+<p>There the chief of the aerostatic division took the
+defensive.</p>
+<p>"They certainly don't learn our plans with their planes and
+dirigibles!" he declared energetically.</p>
+<p>"Hardly, when we never see them over our lines."</p>
+<p>"The Browns are acting on the defensive in the air as well as on
+the earth!"</p>
+<p>"But our own planes and dirigibles bring little news," said
+Turcas. "I mean, those that return," he added pungently.</p>
+<p>"And few do return. My men are not wanting in courage!" replied
+the chief aerostatic officer. "Immediately we get over the Brown
+lines the Browns, who keep cruising to and fro, are on us like
+hawks. They risk anything to bring us down. When we descend low we
+strike the fire of their high-angle guns, which are distributed the
+length of the frontier. I believe both their aerial fleet and their
+high-angle artillery were greatly underestimated. Finally, I cannot
+reduce my force too much in scouting or they might rake the
+offensive."</p>
+<p>"Another case of not being informed!" concluded Turcas,
+returning grimly to his point.</p>
+<p>He looked at Bouchard, and every one began looking at Bouchard.
+If the Gray tacticians had been outplayed by their opponents, if
+their losses for the ground gained exceeded calculations, then it
+was good to have a scapegoat for their professional mistakes.
+Bouchard was Westerling's choice for chief of intelligence. His
+blind loyalty was pleasing to his superior, who, hitherto, had
+promptly silenced any suggestion of criticism by repeating that the
+defensive always appeared to the offensive to be better informed
+than itself. But this time Westerling let the conversation run on
+without a word of excuse for his favorite.</p>
+<p>Each fresh reproach from the staff, whose opinion was the only
+god he knew, was a dagger thrust to Bouchard. At night he had lain
+awake worrying about the leak; by day he had sought to trace it,
+only to find every clew leading back to the staff. Now he was as
+confused in his shame as a sensitive schoolboy. Vaguely, in his
+distress, he heard Westerling asking a question, while he saw all
+those eyes staring at him.</p>
+<p>"What information have we about Engadir?"</p>
+<p>"I believe it to be strongly fortified!" stammered Bouchard.</p>
+<p>"You believe! You have no information?" pursued Westerling.</p>
+<p>"No, sir," replied Bouchard. "Nothing&mdash;nothing new!"</p>
+<p>"We do seem to get little information," said Westerling, looking
+hard and long at Bouchard in silence&mdash;the combined silence of
+the whole staff.</p>
+<p>This public reproof could have but one meaning. He should soon
+receive a note which would thank him politely for his services, in
+the stereotyped phrases always used for the purpose, before
+announcing his transfer to a less responsible post.</p>
+<p>"Very little, sir!" Bouchard replied doggedly.</p>
+<p>"There is that we had from one of our aviators whose machine
+came down in a smash just as he got over our infantry positions on
+his return," said the chief aerostatic officer. "He was in a dying
+condition when we picked him up, and, as he was speaking with the
+last breaths in his body, naturally his account of what he had seen
+was somewhat incoherent. It would be of use, however, if we had
+plans of the forts that would enable us to check off his report
+intelligently."</p>
+<p>"Yet, what evidence have we that Partow or Lanstron has done
+more than to make a fortunate guess or show military insight?"
+Westerling asked. "There is the case of my own belief that Bordir
+was weak, which proved correct."</p>
+<p>"Last night we got a written telegraphic staff message from the
+body of a dead officer of the Browns found in the Twin Boulder
+Redoubt," said the vice-chief, "which showed that in an hour after
+our plans were transmitted to our own troops for the first attack
+they were known to the enemy."</p>
+<p>"That looks like a leak!" exclaimed Westerling, "a leak,
+Bouchard, do you hear?" He was frowning and his lips were drawn and
+his cheeks mottled with red in a way not pleasant to see.</p>
+<p>Stiffening in his chair, a flash of desperation in his eye,
+Bouchard's bony, long hand gripped the table edge. Every one felt
+that a sensation was coming.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I have known that there was a leak!" he said with hoarse,
+painful deliberation. "I have sent out every possible tracer. I
+have followed up every sort of clew I have transferred a dozen men.
+I have left nothing undone!"</p>
+<p>"With no result?" persisted Westerling impatiently</p>
+<p>"Yes, always the same result: That the leak is here in this
+house&mdash;here in the grand headquarters of the army under our
+very noses. I know it is not the telegraphers or the clerks. It is
+a member of the staff!"</p>
+<p>"Have you gone out of your head?" demanded Westerling. "What
+staff-officer? How does he get the information to the enemy? Name
+the persons you suspect here and now! Explain, if you want to be
+considered sane!"</p>
+<p>Here was the blackest accusation that could be made against an
+officer! The chosen men of the staff, tested through many grades
+before they reached the inner circle of cabinet secrecy, lost the
+composure of a council. All were leaning forward toward Bouchard
+breathless for his answer.</p>
+<p>"There are three women on the grounds," said Bouchard. "I have
+been against their staying from the first. I&mdash;&mdash;."</p>
+<p>He got no further. His words were drowned by the outburst of one
+of the younger members of the staff, who had either to laugh or
+choke at the picture of this deep-eyed, spectral sort of man, known
+as a woman-hater, in his revelation of the farcical source of his
+suspicions.</p>
+<p>"Why not include Clarissa Eileen?" some one asked, Starting a
+chorus of satirical exclamations.</p>
+<p>"How do they get through the line?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, past a wall of bayonets?"</p>
+<p>"When not even a soldier in uniform is allowed to move away from
+his command without a pass?"</p>
+<p>"By wireless?"</p>
+<p>"Perhaps by telepathy!"</p>
+<p>"Unless," said the chief of the aerostatic division, grinning,
+"Bouchard lends them the use of our own wires through the capital
+and around by the neutral countries across the Brown frontier!"</p>
+<p>"But the correct plans and location of their forts and the
+numbers of their heavy guns and of their planes and
+dirigibles&mdash;your failure to have this information is not the
+result of any leak from our staff since the war began," said Turcas
+in his dry, penetrating voice, clearing the air of the smoke of
+scattered explosions.</p>
+<p>All were staring at Bouchard again. What answer had he to this?
+He was in the box, the evidence stated by the prosecutor. Let him
+speak!</p>
+<p>He was fairly beside himself in a paroxysm of rage and struck at
+the air with his clenched fist.</p>
+<p>"&mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash; Lanstron!" he cried.</p>
+<p>"There's no purpose in that. He can't hear you!" said Turcas,
+dryly as ever.</p>
+<p>"He might, through the leak," said the chief aerostatic officer,
+who considered that many of his gallant subordinates had lost their
+lives through Bouchard's inefficiency. "Perhaps Clarissa Eileen has
+already telepathically wigwagged it to him."</p>
+<p>To lose your temper at a staff council is most unbecoming.
+Turcas would have kept his if hit in the back by a fool
+automobilist. Westerling had now recovered his. He was again the
+superman in command.</p>
+<p>"It is for you and not for us to locate the leak; yes, for you!"
+he said. "That is all on the subject for the present," he added in
+a tone of mixed pity and contempt, which left Bouchard freed from
+the stare of his colleagues and in the miserable company of his
+humiliation.</p>
+<p>All on the subject for the present! When it was taken up again
+his successor would be in charge. He, the indefatigable, the
+over-intense, with his medi&aelig;val partisan fervor, who loathed
+in secret machines like Turcas, was the first man of the staff to
+go for incompetency.</p>
+<p>"And Engadir is the key-point," Westerling was saying.</p>
+<p>"Yes," agreed Turcas.</p>
+<p>"So we concentrate to break through there," Westerling
+continued, "while we engage the whole line fiercely enough to make
+the enemy uncertain where the crucial attack is to be made."</p>
+<p>"But, general, if there is any place that is naturally strong,
+that&mdash;" Turcas began.</p>
+<p>"The one place where they are confident that we won't attack!"
+Westerling interrupted. He resented the staff's professional
+respect for Turcas. After a silence and a survey of the faces
+around, he added with sententious effect: "And I was right about
+Bordir!"</p>
+<p>To this argument there could be no answer. The one stroke of
+generalship by the Grays, who, otherwise, had succeeded alone
+through repeated mass attacks, had been Westerling's hypothesis
+that had gained Bordir in a single assault.</p>
+<p>"Engadir it is, then!" said Turcas with the loyalty of the
+subordinate who makes a superior's conviction his own, the better
+to carry it out.</p>
+<p>Hazily, Bouchard had heard the talk, while he was looking at
+Westerling and seeing him, not at the head of the council table,
+but in the arbor in eager appeal to Marta.</p>
+<p>"I shall find out! I shall find out!" was drumming in his
+temples when the council rose; and, without a word or a backward
+glance, he was the first to leave the room.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXXVIII' id="XXXVIII"></a>
+<h2>XXXVIII</h2>
+<h3>HUNTING GHOSTS</h3>
+<br>
+<p>In his search for the medium of the leak to the enemy Bouchard
+had studied every detail of the Galland premises and also of the
+ruins of the castle, with the exception of one feature mentioned in
+the regular staff records, prepared before the war, in the course
+of their minute description of the architecture of buildings which
+were accessible to the spies of the Grays. The tunnel to the
+dungeons could be reached only through the private quarters of the
+Gallands.</p>
+<p>When he came out onto the veranda from the staff council a
+glimpse of Mrs. Galland walking in the garden told him that one of
+the guardians who stood between him and the satisfaction of his
+desperate curiosity was absent. He started for the tower and found
+the door open and the sitting-room empty. In his impatience he had
+one foot across the threshold before a prompting sense of respect
+for form made him pause. After all, this was a private residence.
+There being no bell, he rapped, and was glad that it was Minna and
+not Marta who appeared. He watched her intently for the effect of
+his abrupt announcement as he exclaimed:</p>
+<p>"I want to go into the tunnel under the castle!"</p>
+<p>There was no mistaking her shock and alarm. Her lips remained
+parted in a letter O as a sweep of breath escaped. Yet, in the very
+process of recovering her scattered faculties, her feminine
+quickness noted a triumphant gleam in his eye. She knew that her
+manner had given conviction to his suspicions. She knew that she
+alone stood between him and his finding Marta talking to Brown
+headquarters. As she was in a state of astonishment, why,
+astonishment was her cue. She appeared positively speechless from
+it except for the emission of another horrified gasp. Time! time!
+She must hold him until Marta left the telephone.</p>
+<p>"What an idea! That musty, horrible, damp tunnel!" she
+exclaimed, shuddering. "I never think of it without thinking of
+ghosts!"</p>
+<p>"I am looking for ghosts," replied Bouchard with saturnine
+emphasis.</p>
+<p>"Oh, don't say that!" cried Minna distractedly. "Sometimes at
+night I hear their chains clanking and their groans and cries for
+water," she continued, playing the superstitious and stupid maid
+servant. "That is, I think I do. Miss Galland says I don't."</p>
+<p>"Does she go into the tunnel?" asked Bouchard.</p>
+<p>"Yes, she's been in to show me that there were no ghosts,"
+replied Minna. "But not the whole way&mdash;not into the dungeons.
+I believe she got frightened herself, though she wouldn't admit it.
+I know there are ghosts! She needn't tell me! Don't you believe
+there are?" she asked solemnly, with dropped jaw.</p>
+<p>"I'm going to find out!" he said, taking a step forward.</p>
+<p>But Minna, just inside the doorway, did not move to allow him to
+enter.</p>
+<p>"Oh, I'm so glad!" she exclaimed. "Then we'll know the truth.
+But no!" and she turned wild with protest. "No, no! I know there
+are! It's dangerous, sir! You'd never come out alive! Unseen hands
+would seize you and draw you down and strangle you&mdash;those
+terrible spirits of the dark ages!"</p>
+<p>Her hands uplifted, fingers stretched apart in terror, lace
+white with fear, Minna's distress was real&mdash;very real,
+indeed!&mdash;while she listened impatiently for Marta's step in
+the adjoining room.</p>
+<p>"Good heavens!" exclaimed Bouchard in disgust. "I didn't know
+such superstition existed in this day."</p>
+<p>"I didn't, sir, until the groans and the clanking of the chains
+kept me awake," replied Minna.</p>
+<p>"Have you a lantern?" asked Bouchard in exasperation.</p>
+<p>"A lantern?" repeated Minna blankly. Time! time! She must gain
+time!</p>
+<p>"Yes, you gawk, a lantern!"</p>
+<p>"Certainly; you'll need one," said Minna&mdash;"a big one! Go
+and fetch a big army one&mdash;and some soldiers to fight the
+ghosts. But what are soldiers against ghosts? Oh, sir, I don't like
+to think of you going at all. Please, sir, don't, for the sake of
+your life!"</p>
+<p>There Bouchard frowned heavily and his hawk eyes flashed in
+command and decision.</p>
+<p>"Enough of this farce! A lamp, a candle will do. Come, get me
+one immediately!"</p>
+<p>Just as she was at her wits' end and it seemed as if there were
+nothing left to do but to scream and fall in a faint in front of
+Bouchard, her ear caught the welcome sound which told her that
+Marta had returned from the tunnel.</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir. Won't you come in, sir? Of course, sir," she said,
+standing aside. "Won't you be seated, sir?"</p>
+<p>"Good day, Colonel Bouchard!" called Marta, appearing in the
+doorway.</p>
+<p>"He wants to go into the dungeons to see the ghosts!" Minna
+exclaimed in a return of horror before Bouchard had time to say a
+word, while she screwed up the side of her face away from him
+suggestively to Marta. "Those terrible ghosts! I'm afraid for him.
+Like a man, he may go right into the dungeons, even if you didn't
+dare to, Miss Galland."</p>
+<p>"I wish he would!" Marta joined in eagerly. "That might cure you
+of your silly imaginings, Minna. She actually thinks, Colonel
+Bouchard, that she hears them groan and moan and even shriek.
+Didn't you say they shrieked as well as groaned and moaned once
+about 3 A.M.?" she asked jocularly.</p>
+<p>"A ghost must be hard put to it when he shrieks," observed
+Bouchard, glaring from one to the other.</p>
+<p>"It's all very well for you to make fun of me because you have
+the advantage of an education," said Minna to Marta, "but you
+yourself&mdash;you&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Yes, I did hear what sounded like moaning voices," admitted
+Marta rather sheepishly. "But of course it was imagination. Now we
+have a man with nerve enough to go into the dungeons, we'll lay
+this ridiculous psychological bugaboo at once; that is, if you have
+the nerve!" She arched her brows in challenging scrutiny of
+Bouchard, while her eyes twinkled at the prospect of adventure. "I
+thought I had, myself, but before I got to the dungeons the clammy
+air wilted it and I was rubbing my eyes to keep from seeing all
+kinds of apparitions."</p>
+<p>She puzzled Bouchard, she was so facile, so ready, so
+many-sided. But the more she puzzled him the stronger became his
+conviction of her guilt. He guessed that all this talk was only a
+prelude to some trick to keep him out of the tunnel. Poor at speech
+at best, slightly fussed by her candid good humor and teasing, he
+hesitated as to his next remark. He was going to be short with her
+in stating that he would go into the tunnel immediately, when she
+took the words out of his mouth.</p>
+<p>"This way, please. I'm all impatience. I only wish that you had
+suggested it before."</p>
+<p>As they passed out of the room Minna leaned against the wall,
+exhausted and wonder-struck.</p>
+<p>"Miss Galland is beyond me!" she thought. "Does she think those
+hawk eyes will miss that little button of the panel door?"</p>
+<p>"We'll need a lantern," said Marta as she took up the one she
+had been using from a corner of the tool room; while Bouchard,
+slowly turning his head like some automaton, was examining every
+detail of floor and wall, spades, hoes, and weeders, for a hidden
+significance. The lantern was still hot, and Marta's finger smarted
+with a burn, but she did not twitch. She was so keyed up that she
+felt capable of walking over red-hot coals, while she joked about
+ghosts. "There!" she exclaimed, after the lantern was lighted.
+"This is going to be great sport. Ghost hunting&mdash;think of
+that! We might have made a ghost party Too bad we didn't think of
+it in time. Yes, it's a pity to be so exclusive about it. Even now
+we might send for General Westerling and some of the other
+staff-officers."</p>
+<p>She paused and looked at Bouchard questioningly, perhaps
+challengingly; at least, he thought challengingly. He had half a
+mind to concur. Could anything be better than to have Westerling
+present if suspicions proved correct? But no. She wanted Westerling
+and that was the best reason why he should not be present. Yet
+there was no sign of chicane in the brimming fun of her eyes that
+went with the suggestion. Bouchard's search for the proper words of
+dissent left him rather confused and at a disadvantage. With
+sympathetic quickness she seemed to guess his thoughts, and in a
+way that he found all the more exasperating.</p>
+<p>"No, no! We're too impatient! We can't wait, can we?" she
+exclaimed. "Let's go. Let's get the ghosts single-handed, you and
+I. If we win we'll demand a specially large bronze cross to be
+struck for us."</p>
+<p>"Yes," he agreed with an affectation of humor that made him feel
+ludicrous. He always felt ludicrous when he tried to be
+humorous.</p>
+<p>"Come on!" said Marta, going to the stairway.</p>
+<p>He extended his hand to take the lantern with an "If you
+please!"</p>
+<p>"No. When we approach the enemy I'll let you lead," she replied,
+refusing the offer. "I'll be only too glad then; but these stairs
+are very tricky if you don't know them. Keep watch!" she warned him
+as she started to descend, picking her way slowly.</p>
+<p>Once in the tunnel she held the lantern a little back of her in
+her right hand, which threw a shadow to the left on the side of the
+panel door. She was walking very fast, too fast to please Bouchard.
+In the swinging rays he could not fly-speck the surroundings with
+the care that he desired. Yet how could he ask her to slacken her
+pace? This she did of her own accord before they had gone far.</p>
+<p>"Isn't it damp and deathlike? Think of it!" she exclaimed. "No
+ray of sunlight has been in here since the tunnel was dug&mdash;no,
+not even then; for probably it was dug after the castle was built.
+Think of the stories these walls could tell after the silence of
+centuries! Think of the prisoners driven along at the point of the
+halberd to slow death in the dungeons! You feel their spirits in
+the cold, clammy air." Her elocution was excellent, as her voice
+sank to an awed whisper, impressing even Bouchard with a certain
+uncanniness. Her steps became slow, as with effort, while he was
+not missing a square inch of the top, bottom, or sides of the
+tunnel. "But I'll not&mdash;I'll not this time, when I have a
+soldier with me. For once I'll go to the end!" she cried with
+forced courage, suddenly starting forward at a half run that sent
+the lantern's rays lurching and dancing in a way that confused the
+hawk eyes. Then her burst of strength seemed to give out in
+collapse and she dropped against the wall for support, her back
+covering the panel door.</p>
+<p>"I can't! I'm just foolishly, weakly feminine!" she whispered
+brokenly. "According to reason there aren't any ghosts, I know. But
+it gets on my nerves too much-my imaginings!" She held out the
+lantern with a trembling hand. "I will wait here. You go on in!"
+she begged. "Please do and show me what a fool I am! Show that it
+is all a woman's hysteria&mdash;for we are all hysterical, aren't
+we? Go into every dungeon, please!"</p>
+<p>She did seem on the verge of hysteria, quivering as die was from
+head to foot. But Bouchard, holding the lantern and staring at her,
+his eyes unearthly lustrous in the yellow rays, hesitated to agree
+to the request because it was hers. Marta was not so near hysteria
+that she did not divine his thought.</p>
+<p>"Has it got on your nerves, too?" she inquired. "Are you, too,
+afraid?"</p>
+<p>"No, I'm not afraid!" replied Bouchard irritably. "But aren't
+you afraid to be left alone in the dark? I'll take you back to the
+sitting-room and you can wait there," he added with a show of
+gallantry, which she improved on with a flattering if scared
+smile.</p>
+<p>"I'm not afraid with you between me and the dungeons," she said.
+"I'll hold my ground. Don't think me altogether a craven."</p>
+<p>"Very well," was all that he could say. "I came to see the
+dungeons, and I'll see them!"</p>
+<p>After the lantern flame grew fainter and finally disappeared
+around a bend, Marta emitted a peculiar, squeaky little laugh. It
+sounded to her as if her own ghost&mdash;the ghost of her former
+self&mdash;were laughing in satire. There was a devilish,
+mischievous joy in battling to outwit Bouchard more than in her
+deceit of Westerling. Satire, yes&mdash;needle-pointed,
+acid-tipped! Melodrama done in burlesque, too. In the name of the
+noble art of war, a bit of fooling about ghosts in a tunnel might
+influence the fate of armies that were the last word in modern
+equipment. And men played at killing with a grand front of martial
+dignity, when such a little thing could turn the balance of
+slaughter! The ghosts in the dungeons seemed about as real as
+anything, except the childishness of adult humanity in organized
+mass. She laughed again, this time very softly, as she moved away
+from the panel door a few steps farther along the wall toward the
+entrance and again leaned back for support.</p>
+<p>She had to wait a half-hour before she saw a yellow flame
+reappear and heard the dully echoing steps of Bouchard approaching.
+That tiny push-button on the panel, of the color of stone, was in
+the shadow of her figure against the lantern's rays, which gave a
+glazed and haunted effect to Bouchard's eyes, rolling as he studied
+the walls and ceiling and floor of the tunnel in final baffled and
+desperate inquiry.</p>
+<p>"Did you see anything? Did you go into all the dungeons?" Marta
+called to him.</p>
+<p>Bouchard did not answer. Perhaps he was too full of disgust for
+words. Marta, however, had plenty of words in her impatience for
+knowledge.</p>
+<p>"If there were you must have caught them with a quick
+strangle-hold. Or, did you see one and not dare to go on? Tell me!
+tell me!" she insisted when he stopped before her, his expression a
+strange mixture of defiance and dissatisfaction while he was
+searching the wall around her figure. Before his eye had any
+inclination to look as far away from her as the button she stepped
+free of the wall and laid her hand on Bouchard's arm. "I can't
+wait! I've nearly perished of suspense!" she cried. "I'm just dying
+to know what you found. Please tell me!"</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, she was looking into his eyes, which were eagerly
+devouring the spot that her figure had hidden. He saw nothing but
+bare stone. Marta slipped her hand behind her and began brushing
+her back.</p>
+<p>"My gown must be a sight!" she exclaimed. "But I do believe you
+saw a ghost and that he struck you speechless!"</p>
+<p>"No!" exploded Bouchard. "No, I saw nothing!"</p>
+<p>"Nothing!" she repeated. She half turned to go. He passed by her
+with the lantern, while she kept to the side of the wall which held
+the button, covering it with her shadow successfully. "Nothing! No
+bones, no skulls&mdash;not even any anklets fastened by chains to
+the clammy, wet stones?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, just an ordinary set of Middle Age dungeons and some
+staples in the walls!" he grumbled.</p>
+<p>This was no news to her as, with Minna for company, she had
+explored all the underground passages.</p>
+<p>"Wonderful! I suppose a little courage will always lay ghosts!"
+She even found it difficult to conceal a note of triumph in her
+tone, for the button was now well behind them. "It's all right,
+Minna; there aren't any ghosts!" she called as they entered the
+sitting-room. And Minna, in the kitchen, covered her mouth lest she
+should scream for joy.</p>
+<p>"Thank you!" said Bouchard grudgingly as Marta saw him to the
+door.</p>
+<p>"On the contrary, thank you! It was such fun&mdash;if I hadn't
+been so scared," replied Marta, and their gaze held each other fast
+in a challenge, hers beaming good nature and his saturnine in its
+rebuff and a hound-like tenacity of purpose, saying plainly that
+his suspicions were not yet laid.</p>
+<p>When Bouchard returned to his desk he guessed the contents of
+the note awaiting him, but he took a long time to read its
+stereotyped expressions in transferring him to perfunctory duty
+well to the rear of the army. Then he pulled himself together and,
+leaden-hearted, settled down to arrange routine details for his
+departure, while the rest of the staff was immersed in the activity
+of the preparations for the attack on Engadir. He knew that he
+could not sleep if he lay down. So he spent the night at work. In
+the morning his successor, a young man whom he himself had chosen
+and trained, Colonel Bellini, appeared, and the fallen man received
+the rising man with forced official courtesy.</p>
+<p>"In my own defence and for your aid," he said, "I show you a
+copy of what I have just written to General Westerling."</p>
+<p>A brief note it was, in farewell, beginning with conventional
+thanks for Westerling's confidence in the past.</p>
+<p>"I am punished for being right," it concluded. "It is my belief
+that Miss Galland sends news to the enemy and that she draws it
+from you without your consciousness of the fact. I tell you
+honestly. Do what you will with me."</p>
+<p>It took more courage than any act of his life for the loyal
+Bouchard to dare such candor to a superior. Seeing the patchy,
+yellow, bloodless face drawn in stiff lines and the abysmal stare
+of the deep-set eyes in their bony recesses, Bellini was swept with
+a wave of sympathy.</p>
+<p>"Thank you, Bouchard. You've been very fine!" said Bellini as he
+grasped Bouchard's hand, which was icy cold.</p>
+<p>"My duty&mdash;my duty, in the hope that we shall kill two
+Browns for every Gray who has fallen&mdash;that we shall yet see
+them starved and besieged and crying for mercy in their capital,"
+replied Bouchard. He saluted with a dismal, urgent formality and
+stalked out of the room with the tread of the ghost of Hamlet's
+father.</p>
+<p>The strange impression that this farewell left with Bellini
+still lingered when, a few moments later, Westerling summoned him.
+Not alone the diffidence of a new member of the staff going into
+the Presence accounted for the stir in his temples, as he waited
+till some papers were signed before he had Westerling's attention.
+Then Westerling picked up Bouchard's note and shook his head
+sadly.</p>
+<p>"Poor Bouchard! You can see for yourself," and he handed the
+note to Bellini. "I should have realized earlier that it was a case
+for the doctor and not for reprimand. Mad! Poor Bouchard! He hadn't
+the ability or the resiliency of mind for his task, as I hope you
+have, colonel."</p>
+<p>"I hope so, sir," replied Bellini.</p>
+<p>"I've no doubt you have," said Westerling. "You are my
+choice!"</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XXXIX' id="XXXIX"></a>
+<h2>XXXIX</h2>
+<h3>A CHANGE OF PLAN</h3>
+<br>
+<p>That day and the next Westerling had no time fix strolling in
+the garden. His only exercise was a few periods of pacing on the
+veranda. Turcas, as tirelessly industrious as ever, developed an
+increasingly quiet insistence to leave the responsibility of
+decisions about everything of importance to a chief who was
+becoming increasingly arbitrary. The attack on Engadir being the
+jewel of Westerling's own planning, he was disinclined to risk
+success by delegating authority, which also meant sharing the glory
+of victory.</p>
+<p>Bouchard's note, though officially dismissed as a matter of
+pathology, would not accept dismissal privately. In flashes of
+distinctness it recurred to him between reports of the progress of
+preparations and directions as to dispositions. At dusk of the
+second day, when all the guns and troops had their places for the
+final movement under cover of darkness and he rose from his desk,
+the thing that had edged its way into a crowded mind took
+possession of the premises that strategy and tactics had vacated.
+It passed under the same analysis as his work. His overweening
+pride, so sensitive to the suspicion of a conviction that he had
+been fooled, put his relations with Marta in logical review.</p>
+<p>He had fallen in love in the midst of war. This fact was
+something that his egoism must resent. Any woman who had struck
+such a response in him as she had must have great depths. Had she
+depths that he had not fathomed? He recalled her sudden change of
+attitude toward war, her conversion to the cause of the Grays, and
+her charm in this as in all their relations.</p>
+<p>Was it conceivable that the change was not due to a personal
+feeling for him? Was her charm a charm with a purpose? Had he, the
+chief of staff, been beguiled into making a woman his confidant in
+military secrets? Just what had he told her? He could not recollect
+anything definite and recollection was the more difficult because
+he could not call to mind a single pertinent military question that
+she had ever asked him. Such information as he might have imparted
+had been incidental to their talks.</p>
+<p>He had enveloped her in glamour; his most preciously trained
+mental qualities lapsed in her presence. It was time that she was
+regarded impersonally, as a woman, by the critical eye of the chief
+of staff. A cool and intense impatience possessed him to study her
+in the light Of his new scepticism, when, turning the path of the
+first terrace, he saw her watching the sunset over the crest of the
+range.</p>
+<p>She was standing quite still, a slim, soft shadow between him
+and the light, which gilded her figure and quarter profile. Did she
+expect him? he wondered. Was she posing at that instant for his
+benefit? And the answer, could he have searched her secret brain,
+was, Yes&mdash;yes, if the conscious and the subconscious mind are
+to be considered as one responsible intelligence. He usually came
+at that hour. But he had not come last night. They had not met
+since Bouchard's ghost hunt.</p>
+<p>There was no firing near by; only desultory artillery practice
+in the distance. She heard the familiar crunch of five against
+three on the gravel. She knew that he had stopped at the turn of
+the path, and she was certain that he was looking at her! But she
+did not make the slightest movement. The golden light continued to
+caress her profile. Then, crunch, crunch, rather slowly, the five
+against three drew nearer. The delay had been welcome; it had been
+to her a moment's respite to get her breath before entering the
+lists. When she turned, her face in the shadow, the glow of the
+sunset seemed to remain in her eyes, otherwise without expression,
+yet able to detect something unusual under externals as they
+exchanged commonplaces of greeting.</p>
+<p>"Well, there's a change in our official family. We have lost
+Bouchard&mdash;transferred to another post!" said Westerling.</p>
+<p>Marta noted that, though he gave the news a casual turn, his
+scrutiny sharpened.</p>
+<p>"Is that so? I can't say that my mother and I shall be sorry,"
+she remarked. "He was always glaring at us as if he wished us out
+of his sight. Indeed, if he had his way, I think he would have made
+us prisoners of war. Wasn't he a woman-hater?" she concluded, half
+in irritation, half in amusement.</p>
+<p>"He had that reputation," said Westerling. "What do you think
+led to his departure?" he continued.</p>
+<p>"I confess I cannot guess!" said Marta, with a look at the
+sunset glow as if she resented the loss of a minute of it.</p>
+<p>"There has been a leak of information to the Browns!" he
+announced.</p>
+<p>"There has! And he was intelligence officer, wasn't he?" she
+asked, turning to Westerling, her curiosity apparently roused as a
+matter of courtesy to his own interest in the subject.</p>
+<p>"Who do you think he accused? Why, <i>you</i>," he added, with a
+peculiar laugh.</p>
+<p>She noted the peculiarity of the laugh discriminatingly.</p>
+<p>"Oh!" Her eyes opened wide in wonder&mdash;only wonder, at
+first. Then, as comprehension took the place of wonder, they grew
+sympathetic. "That explains!" she exclaimed. "His hateful glances
+were those of delusion. He was going mad, you mean?"</p>
+<p>"Yes," said Westerling, "that&mdash;that would explain it!"</p>
+<p>"I have been told that when people go mad they always ascribe
+every injury done to them to the person who happens to have excited
+their dislike," she mused.</p>
+<p>"Which seems to have been the case here," Westerling assented.
+He did not know what else to say.</p>
+<p>"It was the strain of war, wasn't it?" Marta proceeded
+thoughtfully. "I notice that all the staff-officers are showing it;
+that is," she added on second thought, quite literally, as she
+regarded him for an instant of silence, "all except you. You remain
+the same, calm and decisive." There she looked away with a flutter
+of her lashes, as if she were shamed at having allowed herself to
+be caught in open admiration of him. "Look! The last effulgence of
+rose!" she went on hurriedly about the sunset. "Why shouldn't we
+think of the sky as heaven, as Nirvana? What better immortality
+than to be absorbed into that?"</p>
+<p>"None!" he agreed, but he was looking at her rather than at the
+sky. His pride was recovering its natural confidence in the
+infallibility of his judgment of human beings. He was seeing his
+suspicions as ridiculous enough to convict him of a brain as
+disordered as Bouchard's.</p>
+<p>Marta was thinking that she had been skating on very thin ice
+and that she must go on skating till she broke through. There was
+an exhilaration about it that she could not resist: the
+exhilaration of risk and the control of her faculties, prompted by
+a purpose hypnotically compelling. Both were silent, she watching
+the sky, he in anticipation and suspense. The rose went violet and
+the shadows over the range deepened.</p>
+<p>"The guns and the troops wait. With darkness the music begins!"
+he said slowly, with a sort of stern fervor.</p>
+<p>"The music&mdash;the music! He calls it music!" ran through
+Marta's mind mockingly, but she did not open her lips.</p>
+<p>"According to my plan&mdash;and your plan!" he added.</p>
+<p>"My plan&mdash;my plan!" she thought. Her plan that was to send
+men into a shambles!</p>
+<p>"They wait, ready, every detail arranged," he continued
+proudly.</p>
+<p>The violet melted into an inky blue; silence, vast, heavy,
+prevailed&mdash;silence where the millions lay on their arms. Even
+the guns in the distance had ceased their echoing rumble. He felt
+the power of her presence and of the moment. It was she who had
+given the information that had enabled him to confound the
+scepticism of the staff by the easy taking of Bordir. Through her
+he might repeat Bordir in a larger way at Engadir, proving his
+theories of frontal attack. His courage of initiative would shine
+out against the background of his staff's scepticism as a light to
+the world's imagination. The first great man in forty years; the
+genius of the new system of tactics to meet the demands of a new
+age as Napoleon had met those of his, Grant of his, and Von Moltke
+of his! Engadir taken, and his place on Valhalla would be
+secure.</p>
+<p>The very silence with its taut expectancy was of his planning.
+Alone with her he waited for the thunders of his planning that were
+to break it. The sky merged into the shadows of the landscape that
+spread and thickened into blackness. Out of the drawn curtains of
+night broke an ugly flash and farther up the slope spread the
+explosive circle of light of a bursting shell.</p>
+<p>"The signal!" he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>Right and left the blasts spread along the Gray lines and right
+and left, on the instant, the Browns sent their blasts in reply.
+Countless tongues of flame seemed to burst from countless craters,
+and the range to rock in a torment of crashes. In the intervening
+space between the ugly, savage gusts from the Gray gun mouths,
+which sent their shells from the midst of exploding Brown shells,
+swept the beams of the Brown search-lights, their rays lost like
+sunlight in the vortex of an open furnace door.</p>
+<p>"Splendid! splendid!" exclaimed Westerling, in a sweep of
+emotion at the sight that had been born of his command. "Five
+thousand guns on our side alone! The world has never seen the equal
+of this!"</p>
+<p>"Five thousand guns!" Marta was thinking. What wouldn't their
+cost have bought in books, in gardens, and in playgrounds! Every
+shot the price of a year's schooling for a child!</p>
+<p>"You see, we are pounding them along the whole frontier quite
+impartially, so they shall not know where we are going to press
+home the attack!" he continued.</p>
+<p>"But they do know! I've told them!" shot the burning arrow of
+mockery through Marta's brain.</p>
+<p>"Their search-lights are watching for the infantry&mdash;and we
+shall press the infantry forward, too," he added; "everywhere we
+make a show of fight!"</p>
+<p>Then it occurred vividly to her, as a sudden discovery in the
+midst of the blinding display, that this was not a kind of chaos
+like that of the beginning of the world, not nature's own elemental
+debauch, but men firing guns and men waiting for the charge under
+that spray of death-dealing missiles.</p>
+<p>"Splendid! splendid!" he repeated.</p>
+<p>Marta looked away from the range to his face, very distinct in
+the garish illumination. It was the face of a maestro of war seeing
+all his rehearsals and all his labors come true in symphonic
+gratification to the eye and ear; the face of a man of trained
+mind, the product of civilization, with the elation of a party
+leader on the floor of a parliament in a crisis.</p>
+<p>"Soon, now!" said Westerling, and looked at his watch.</p>
+<p>Shortly, in the direction of Engadir, to the rear of the steady
+flashes broke forth line after line of flashes as the long-range
+batteries, which so far had been silent, joined their mightier
+voices to the chorus, making a continuous leaping burst of
+explosions over the Brown positions, which were the real object of
+the attack.</p>
+<p>"The moment I've lived for!" exclaimed Westerling. "Our infantry
+is starting up the apron of Engadir! We held back the fire of the
+heavy guns concentrated for the purpose of supporting the men with
+an outburst. Three hundred heavy guns pouring in their shells on a
+space of two acres! We're tearing their redoubts to pieces! They
+can't see to fire! They can't live under it! They're in the crater
+of a volcano! When our infantry is on the edge of the wreckage the
+guns cease. Our infantry crowd in&mdash;crowd into the house that
+Partow built. He'll find that numbers count; that the power of
+modern gun-fire will open the way for infantry in masses to take
+and hold vital tactical positions! And&mdash;no&mdash;no, their
+fire in reply is not as strong as I expected."</p>
+<p>"Because they are letting you in! It will be strong enough in
+due season!" thought Marta in the uncontrollable triumph of
+antagonism. Five against three was in his tone and in every line of
+his features.</p>
+<p>"It's hard for a soldier to leave a sight like this, but the
+real news will be awaiting me at my desk," he concluded, adding, as
+he turned away: "It's fireworks worth seeing, and if you remain
+here I will return to tell you the results."</p>
+<p>She had no thought of going. That arc of dreadful lightnings
+held her with ghastly fascination. Suddenly all the guns ceased.
+Faintly in the distance she heard a tumult of human voices in the
+high notes of a savage cheer; the rattling din of rifles; the
+purring of automatics; and then, except for the firefly flashes of
+scattered shots around Engadir, silence and darkness. But she knew
+that chaos would soon be loosed again&mdash;chaos and murder, which
+were the product of her own chicanery. The Grays would find
+themselves in the trap of Partow's and Lanny's planning.</p>
+<p>Turning her back to the range for the moment, she saw the
+twinkle of the lights of the town and the threads of light of the
+wagon-trains and the sweep of the lights of the railroad trains on
+the plain; while in the foreground every window of the house was
+ablaze, like some factory on a busy night shift. She could hear the
+click of the telegraph instruments already reporting the details of
+the action as cheerfully as Brobdingnagian crickets in their
+peaceful surroundings. Then out of the shadows Westerling
+reappeared.</p>
+<p>"The apron of Engadir is ours!" he called. "Thanks to you!" he
+added with pointed emphasis. Back in the house he had received
+congratulations with a nod, as if success were a matter of course.
+Before her, exultation unbent stiffness, and he was hoarsely
+triumphant and eager. "It's plain sailing now," he went on. "A
+break in the main line! We have only to drive home the wedge, and
+then&mdash;and then!" he concluded.</p>
+<p>She felt him close, his breath on her cheek.</p>
+<p>"Peace!" she hastened to say, drawing back instinctively.</p>
+<p>And then! The irony of the words in the light of her knowledge
+was pointed by a terrific renewal of the thunders and the flashes
+far up on the range, and she could not resist rejoicing in her
+heart.</p>
+<p>"That's the Browns!" exclaimed Westerling in surprise.</p>
+<p>The volume of fire increased. With the rest of the frontier in
+darkness, the Engadir section was an isolated blaze. In its light
+she saw his features, without alarm but hardening in dogged
+intensity.</p>
+<p>"They've awakened to what they have lost! They have been rushing
+up reserves and are making a counter-attack. We must hold what we
+have gained, no matter what the cost!"</p>
+<p>His last sentence was spoken over his shoulder as he started for
+the house.</p>
+<p>Thus more fire called for more fire; more murder for more
+murder, she thought. Her mind was projected into the thick of the
+battle. She saw a panic of Grays caught in their triumph; of
+wounded men writhing and crawling over their dead comrades, their
+position shown to the marksmen by a search-light's glare. The dead
+grew thicker; their glassy eyes were staring at her in reproach.
+She heard the hoarse and straining voices of the Browns in their
+"God with us!" through the din of automatics. Men snuggled for
+cover amidst torn flesh and red-tinged mud in the trenches, and
+other men trampled them in fiendish risk of life to take more
+lives.</p>
+<p>Without changing her position, hardly turning her head, she
+watched until the firing began to lessen rapidly. Then she
+breathed, "Engadir must be ours again!" and realized that she was
+weak and faint. Suspense had sapped her strength. She sought a seat
+in the arbor, where the nervous force of other thoughts revived
+her. What would Westerling say when he found that her information
+had led his men into a trap&mdash;when staff scepticism was proven
+right and he a false prophet?</p>
+<p>From the house came the confused sound of voices in puzzling
+chorus. It was not a cheer. It had the quality of a rapid fire of
+jubilant exclamation as a piece of news was passed from lip to lip.
+Then she heard that step which she knew so well. Sensitive ears
+noted that it touched the gravel with unusual energy and quickness,
+which she thought must be due to vexation over the repulse. She
+rose to face him, summoning back the spirit of the actress.</p>
+<p>"This is better yet! I came to tell you that the counter-attack
+failed!" he said as he saw her appear from the shelter of the
+arbor.</p>
+<p>She wondered if she were going to fall. But the post of the
+trellis was within reach. She caught hold of it to steady herself.
+Failed! All her acting had served only to make such a trap for the
+Browns as Lanny had planned for the Grays! She was grateful for the
+darkness that hid her face, which was incapable of any expression
+now but blank despair. Westerling's figure loomed very large to her
+as she regained her self-possession&mdash;large, dominant,
+unconquerable in the suggestion of five against three. And
+felicitations were due! She drew away from the post, swaying and
+trembling, nerves and body not yet under command of mind. She could
+not force her tongue to so false a sentiment as congratulation.</p>
+<p>"The killing&mdash;it must have been terrible!" her mind at last
+made her exclaim to cover her tardiness of response to his
+mood.</p>
+<p>"You thought of that&mdash;as you should&mdash;as I do!" he
+said.</p>
+<p>He took her hands in his, pulsing warm with the flowing red of
+his strength. She let them remain lifelessly, as if she had not the
+will to take them away, the instinct of her part again dominant. To
+him this was another victory, and it was discovery&mdash;the
+discovery of melting weakness in her for the first time, which
+magnified his sense of masculine power. He tightened his grip
+slightly and she shuddered.</p>
+<p>"You are tired!" he said, and it hurt her that he could be so
+considerate.</p>
+<p>"The killing&mdash;to end that! It's that I want!" she breathed
+miserably.</p>
+<p>"And the end is near!" he said. "Yes, now, thanks to you!"</p>
+<p>Thanks to her! And she must listen and submit to his touch!</p>
+<p>"The engineers and material were ready to go in," he continued.
+"Before morning, as I had planned, we shall be so well fortified in
+the position that nothing can budge us. This success so strengthens
+my power with the staff and the premier that I need not wait on
+Fabian tactics. I am supreme. I shall make the most of the
+demoralization of this blow to the enemy. I shall not wait on slow
+approaches in the hope of saving life. To-morrow I shall attack and
+keep on attacking till all the main line is ours."</p>
+<p>"Now you are playing your real part, the conqueror!" she thought
+gladly. "Your kind of peace is the ruin of another people; the
+peace of a helpless enemy. That is better"&mdash;better for her
+conscience. Unwittingly, she allowed her hands to remain in his. In
+the paralysis of despair she was unconscious that she had hands.
+She felt that she could endure anything to retrieve the error into
+which she had been the means of leading the Browns. And the
+killing&mdash;it would not stop, she knew. No, the Browns would not
+yield until they were decimated.</p>
+<p>"We have the numbers to spare. Numbers shall press
+home&mdash;home to terms in their capital!" Westerling's voice grew
+husky as he proceeded, harsh as orders to soldiers who hesitated in
+face of fire. "After that&mdash;after that"&mdash;the tone changed
+from harshness to desire, which was still the desire of
+possession&mdash;"the fruits of peace, a triumph that I want you to
+share!" He was drawing her toward him with an impulse of the force
+of this desire, when she broke free with an abrupt, struggling
+pull.</p>
+<p>"Not that! Not that! Your work is not yet done!" she cried.</p>
+<p>He made a move as if to persist, then fell back with a gesture
+of understanding.</p>
+<p>"Right! Hold me to it!" he exclaimed resolutely. "Hold me to the
+bargain! So a woman worth while should hold a man worth while."</p>
+<p>"Yes!" she managed to say, and turned to go in a sudden impetus
+of energy. His egoism might ascribe her precipitancy to a fear of
+succumbing to the tenderness which he thought that she felt for
+him, when her one wish was to be free of him; her one rallying and
+tempestuous purpose of the moment to reach the telephone.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Galland and Minna saw her ghostlike as she passed through
+the living-room, their startled questions unheeded. Could it be
+true that she had betrayed every decent attribute of a woman in
+vain? Why had the counter-attack failed? Because Westerling had
+been too strong, too clever, for old Partow? Because God was still
+with the heaviest battalions? Half running, half stumbling, the
+light of the lantern bobbing and trembling weirdly, she hastened
+through the tunnel. Usually the time from taking the receiver down
+till Lanny replied was only a half minute. Now she waited what
+seemed many minutes without response. Had the connection been
+broken? To make sure that her impatience was not tricking her she
+began to count off the seconds. Then she heard Lanstron's voice,
+broken and hoarse:</p>
+<p>"Marta, Marta, he is dead! Partow is dead!"</p>
+<p>Recovering himself, Lanstron told the story of Partow's going,
+which was in keeping with his life and his prayers. As the doctor
+put it, the light of his mind, turned on full voltage to the last,
+went out without a flicker. Through the day he had attended to the
+dispositions for receiving the Grays' attack, enlivening routine as
+usual with flashes of humor and reflection ranging beyond the
+details in hand. An hour or so before dark he had reached across
+the table and laid his big, soft palm on the back of Lanstron's
+hand. He was thinking aloud, a habit of his, in Lanstron's company,
+when an idea requiring gestation came to him.</p>
+<p>"My boy, it is not fatal if we lose the apron of Engadir. The
+defences behind it are very strong."</p>
+<p>"No, not fatal," Lanstron agreed. "But it's very important."</p>
+<p>"And Westerling will think it fatal. Yes, I understand his
+character. Yes&mdash;yes; and if our counter-attack should fail,
+then Miss Galland's position would be secure. Hm-m-m&mdash;those
+whom the gods would destroy&mdash;hm-m-m. Westerling will be
+convinced that repeated, overwhelming attacks will gain our main
+line. Instead of using engineering approaches, he will throw his
+battalions, masses upon masses, against our works until his
+strength is spent. It would be baiting the bull. A risk&mdash;a
+risk&mdash;but, my boy, I am going to&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Partow's head, which was bent in thought, dropped with a jerk. A
+convulsion shook him and he fell forward onto the map, his brave
+old heart in its last flutter, and Lanstron was alone in the silent
+room with the dead and his responsibility.</p>
+<p>"The order that I knew he was about to speak, Marta, I gave for
+him," Lanstron concluded. "It seemed to me an inspiration&mdash;his
+last inspiration&mdash;to make the counter-attack a feint."</p>
+<p>"And you're acting chief of staff, Lanny? You against
+Westerling?"</p>
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XL' id="XL"></a>
+<h2>XL</h2>
+<h3>WITH FRACASSE'S MEN</h3>
+<br>
+<p>We have heard nothing of Jacob Pilzer, the butcher's son, and
+Peterkin, the valet's son, and others of Fracasse's company of the
+128th of the Grays since Hugo Mallin threw down his rifle when they
+were firing on scattered Brown soldiers in retreat.</p>
+<p>It was in one of the minor actions of the step-by-step advance
+after the taking of the Galland house that the judge's son received
+official notice of a holiday in the form of a nickel pellet from
+the Browns which made a clean, straight hole the size of a lead
+pencil through his flesh and then went singing on its way without
+deflection, as if it liked to give respites from travail to tired
+soldiers.</p>
+<p>"Grazed the ribs&mdash;no arteries!" remarked the examining
+surgeon. "You'll be well in a month."</p>
+<p>"We'll hold the war for you!" called the banker's son cheerily
+after the still figure on the stretcher.</p>
+<p>"And you'll get gruel and custards, maybe," said the barber's
+son. "I like custards."</p>
+<p>Once the judge's son had thought that nothing could be so grand
+as to be wounded fighting for one's country. He had in mind then,
+as the object of his boyish admiration, a young officer returned
+from a little campaign against the blacks in Africa, when, the
+casualties being few and the scene distant and picturesque, all
+heroes with scars had an aspect of romantic exclusiveness. But
+there was no more distinction now in being wounded than in catching
+cold. Truly, colonial wars were the only satisfactory kind.</p>
+<p>The judge's son found himself one of many men on cots in long
+rows in the former barracks of the Browns near La Tir. Daily
+bulletins told the patients the names of the positions taken and
+daily they heard of fresh batches of wounded arriving, which were
+not mentioned on the bulletin-board.</p>
+<p>"We continue to win," said the doctors and nurses invariably in
+answer to all questions. "General Westerling announces that
+everything is going as planned."</p>
+<p>"You must know that speech well!" observed the judge's son to
+the nurse of his section.</p>
+<p>Her lips twitched in a kind of smile.</p>
+<p>"Letter-perfect!" she replied "It's official."</p>
+<p>In two weeks, so fast had the puncture from the aseptic little
+pellet of civilized warfare healed under civilization's medical
+treatment, the judge's son was up and about, though very weak. But
+the rules strictly confined his promenades to the barracks yard.
+There might be news coming down the traffic-gorged castle road out
+of the region where the guns sounded that convalescents were not
+intended to hear. For news could travel in other ways than by
+bulletin-boards; and the judge's son, merely watching the faces of
+medical officers, guessed that it was depressing. But after the
+first attack on Engadir their faces lighted. The very thrill of
+victory seemed to be in the air.</p>
+<p>"It's in the main line of defence!" called the doctor on his
+morning rounds of the cots. "They've made Westerling a
+field-marshal. He's outwitted the Browns! In a few days now we'll
+have the range!"</p>
+<p>How staggering was the cost he was not to realize till later,
+when the ambulance stewards kept repeating:</p>
+<p>"More to come!"</p>
+<p>A newcomer, who took the place of a man who had died on the cot
+next to the judge's son, had been in the fight. He was still
+ether-sick and weak from the amputation of his right arm, with a
+dazed, glassy, and far-away look in his eyes, as if everything in
+the world was strange and uncertain.</p>
+<p>"The fearful flashes&mdash;the explosions&mdash;the gusts of
+steel in the air!" he whispered.</p>
+<p>The next night Westerling followed up his supposed advantage at
+Engadir as he had planned, and there was no sleep for the thunders
+and the light of the explosions through the barracks-room
+windows.</p>
+<p>"I can see what is happening and feel&mdash;and feel!" said the
+man who had been at Engadir.</p>
+<p>In the morning the bulletin announced that more positions were
+taken, with very heavy losses&mdash;to the enemy. But the news that
+travelled unofficially from tongue to tongue down the castle road
+and spoke in the faces of doctors and nurses said, "And to us!"
+plainly enough, even if the judge's son had not heard a doctor
+remark:</p>
+<p>"It's awful&mdash;inconceivable! Not a hospital tent in this
+division is unoccupied. Most of the houses in town are full, and
+we're preparing for another grand attack!"</p>
+<p>Now for two days the guns kept up their roar.</p>
+<p>"Making ready for the infantry to go in," ran the talk around
+the barracks yard.</p>
+<p>After the infantry had gone in and the result was known, the
+doctor on his morning round said to the judge's son:</p>
+<p>"You're pretty pale yet, but you'll do. We must make room for a
+big crowd that is coming and the orders are to get every man who is
+in any condition to fight to the front."</p>
+<p>"And if I get another hole in me you'll patch me up again?"</p>
+<p>"Get any number and we'll patch you up if they're in the right
+place," was the answer. "But be careful about that detail."</p>
+<p>Soon the judge's son was with a score of convalescents who were
+marched down to the town, where they formed in column with other
+detachments.</p>
+<p>"Not with that cough!" exclaimed a doctor as they were about to
+start, ordering a man out of line. "You'd never get to the front.
+You'd only have to be brought back in an ambulance."</p>
+<p>An enlightening march this for the judge's son from hospital to
+trenches, moving with a tide of loaded commissariat wagons and
+empty ambulances and passing a tide of loaded ambulances and empty
+commissariat wagons. A like scene was on every road to the front; a
+like scene on every vista of landscape along any part of the
+frontier. All trees and bushes and walls and buildings that would
+give cover to the enemy the Browns had razed. On every point of
+rising ground were the trenches and redoubts that the Browns had
+yielded after their purpose of making the Grays earn their way by
+trenches of their own had been served. The fields were trampled by
+the feet of infantry, cut by gun wheels, ploughed by shells, and
+sown with the conical nickel pellets from rifles and the round lead
+bullets of shrapnel. An escarpment of rock, where the road-bed was
+slashed into a hillside in a sharp turn, struck by the concentrated
+fire of automatics, appeared to have been beaten by thousands of
+sharp-headed hammers, leaving a pile of chips and dust.</p>
+<p>The traffic of the main roads spread into branch roads which
+ended in the ganglia of supply depots, all kept in touch by the
+network of wires focussing through different headquarters to
+Westerling. In this conquered territory with its face of desolation
+there were no fighting men except reserves or convalescents on
+their way to the front. All the rest were wounded or dead or
+occupied in the routine of supply and intelligence. The
+organization which had been drilled through two generations of
+peace for this emergency exhibited the signs of pressure.</p>
+<p>Eyes that met when commands were given and received were dull
+from want of sleep or hectically bright as a hypochondriac's.
+Voices spoke in a grim, tired monotone, broken by sudden flashes of
+irritation or eruptions of anger. Features were drawn like those of
+rowers against a tide. The very proportions of the ghastly harvest
+after the last, the heaviest of all, of the attacks brought spasms
+of nausea to men already hardened to blood and death. If the
+officers of the staffs in their official conspiracy of silence
+would not talk, the privates and the wounded would. The judge's
+son, observing, listening, thinking, was gathering a story to tell
+his comrades of Company B of the 128th.</p>
+<p>That night he and his comrade convalescents slept in the open.
+Their bodies were huddled close together under their blankets for
+warmth, while aching limbs twitched from the fatigue of the march.
+The morning showed that others had coughs which should have kept
+them from the front.</p>
+<p>"Four or five cases of pneumonia due in that lot!" a doctor
+remarked to a hospital-corps sergeant. "Put them in empties right
+away."</p>
+<p>After this announcement other coughs developed. Amusing, these
+sudden, purposeful efforts should one happen to think of them in
+that way. But no one did.</p>
+<p>"No you don't, you malingerers!" said the doctor sharply. "I've
+been at this business long enough to know a real cough."</p>
+<p>Now the judge's son and a dozen others were separated from the
+rest of their companions and started over a hill. From the top they
+had a broad view. Across a strip of valley lay the main rise to the
+heights of the range. Along the summit nothing warlike was visible
+except the irregular landscape against the horizon. There the enemy
+rested in his fortifications. The slopes, as far as the judge's son
+could see on either hand, were like the warrens of an overpopulated
+rabbit world in hiding. Here was the army of the Grays in its
+redoubts and trenches A thousand times as many men as were ever at
+work on the Panama Canal had been digging their way
+forward&mdash;digging regardless of union hours; digging to save
+their own lives and to take lives. And the nearer they came to the
+top of the range the deeper they had to dig and the slower their
+progress.</p>
+<p>As the little group of convalescents descended into a valley a
+bursting shell from the Browns scattered its fragments over the
+earth near by.</p>
+<p>"They drop one occasionally, though they don't expect to get
+more than a man or two by chance, which is hardly worth the cost of
+the charge," some one explained. "You see that they must know just
+what our positions are from their understanding of our army's
+organization, and the purpose is to bother us about bringing up
+supplies and reserves. Start a commissariat train or a company in
+close order across, and&mdash;whew! The air screams!"</p>
+<p>Once on the other side of the valley, and the maze of zigzags
+and parallels leading into the warrens was simplified by signs
+indicating the location of regiments. At length the judge's son
+found himself in the home cave of his own tribe. His comrades were
+resting at the noon-hour, their backs against the wall of their
+shell-proof. In the faint light their faces were as gray as the
+dust on the dirty uniforms that hung on their gaunt bodies. Dust
+was caked in the seams around their eyes; their cheeks were covered
+with dusty beards. Their greeting of the returned absentee was that
+of men who had passed through a strain that left existence
+untouched by the spring of average sensations.</p>
+<p>"Did you get the custards?" asked the barber's son in a squeaky
+voice.</p>
+<p>"No, but I got a jelly once&mdash;only once!"</p>
+<p>"Snob!" said the barber's son.</p>
+<p>"Jelly! I could eat a hogshead of jelly and still be empty! What
+I want is fresh meat!" growled Pilzer, the butcher's son.</p>
+<p>"A hogshead of jelly might be good to bathe in!" said the
+banker's son. "I haven't had a bath for a month."</p>
+<p>"I have. I turned my underclothes inside out!" said the barber's
+son. He was aiming to take Hugo's place as humorist, in the
+confidence of one sprung from a talkative family.</p>
+<p>Scanning the faces, the judge's son found many new
+ones&mdash;those of the older reservists&mdash;while many of the
+faces of barrack days were missing.</p>
+<p>"Whom have we lost?" he asked.</p>
+<p>The answer, given with dull matter-of-factness, revealed that,
+of the group that had talked so light-heartedly of war six weeks
+before, only little Peterkin, the valet's son, and Pilzer, the
+butcher's son, and the barber's and the banker's sons survived.
+They were sitting in a row, from the instinct that makes old
+associates keep together even though they continually quarrel. The
+striking thing was that Peterkin looked the most cheerful and
+well-kept of the four. As the proud possessor of a pair of
+scissors, he had trimmed a surprisingly heavy beard Van Dyck
+fashion, which emphasized his peaked features and a certain
+consciousness of superiority; while the barber's son sported only a
+few scraggly hairs. The scant, reddish product of Pilzer's cheeks,
+leaving bare the liver patch, only accentuated its repulsiveness
+and a savagery in his voice and look which was no longer latent
+under the conventional discipline of every-day existence. The
+company had not been in the first Engadir assault, but, being near
+the Engadir position, had suffered heavily in support.</p>
+<p>"You were in the big attack night before last?" asked the
+judge's son.</p>
+<p>"We started in," said Peterkin, "but Captain Fracasse brought us
+back," he added in a way that implied that only orders had kept him
+from going on.</p>
+<p>Peterkin, the trembling little Peterkin of the baptismal charge
+across the line of white posts, had been the first out of the
+redoubt on to the glacis in that abortive effort, living up to the
+bronze cross on his breast. He was one of the half dozen out of the
+score that had started to return alive. The psychology of war had
+transformed his gallantry; it had passed from simulation to
+reality, thanks to his established conviction that he led a charmed
+life. Little Peterkin, always pale but never getting paler, was
+ready to lead any forlorn hope. A superstitious nature, which, at
+the outset of the war, had convinced him that he must be killed in
+the first charge, now, as the result of his survival, gave him all
+the faith of Eugene Aronson that the bullet would never be made
+that could kill him.</p>
+<p>"Was the attack general all along the front?" some one asked.
+"We couldn't tell. All we knew was the hell around us."</p>
+<p>"Yes," answered the judge's son.</p>
+<p>"Did we accomplish anything?"</p>
+<p>"A few minor positions, I believe."</p>
+<p>"But we will win!" said Peterkin. "The colonel said so."</p>
+<p>"And the news&mdash;what is the news?" demanded the barber's
+son. "You needn't be afraid," he added. "The officers are on the
+other side of the redoubt. They get sick of the sight of us and we
+of them and this is their recess and ours from the eternal
+digging."</p>
+<p>"Yes, the news from home!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, from home! We don't even get letters any more. They've
+shut off all the mails."</p>
+<p>"I met a man from our town," said the judge's son. "He said that
+after that story was published in the press about Hugo's damning
+patriotism and hurrahing for the Browns&mdash;it was fearfully
+exaggerated&mdash;his old father and mother shut themselves up in
+the house and would not show their faces for shame. But his
+sweetheart, however much her parents stormed, refused to renounce
+him. She held her head high and said that the more they abused him
+the more she loved him, and she knew he could do nothing
+wrong."</p>
+<p>"Hugo was not a patriot. It takes red blood to make a patriot!"
+said Peterkin. In the pride of heroism and prestige, he was
+becoming an oracular enunciator of commonplaces from the lips of
+his superiors.</p>
+<p>"The absence of any word from the front only increases the
+suspense of the people. They do not know whether their sons and
+brothers and husbands are living or dead," continued the judge's
+son.</p>
+<p>"Up to a week ago they let us write," said Pilzer, "though they
+wouldn't let us say anything except that we were well."</p>
+<p>"That was because it might give information to the enemy," said
+Peterkin.</p>
+<p>"As if I didn't know that!" grumbled Pilzer. "The enemy seems to
+be always ready for us, anyway," he added.</p>
+<p>"The chief of staff stopped the letters because he said that
+mothers who received none took it for granted that their sons were
+dead," explained the judge's son. "Besides, he asserts that
+casualties are not heavy and asks for patience in the name of
+patriotism."</p>
+<p>"The&mdash;!" exclaimed Pilzer, referring to Westerling. He who
+had set out to be an officers' favorite had become bitter against
+all officers, high and low.</p>
+<p>Peterkin was speechlessly aghast. The others said nothing. They
+were used to Pilzer's oaths and obscenity, with a growing
+inclination to profanity on their own part. Besides, they rather
+agreed with his view of the chief of staff.</p>
+<p>"Did you see many dead and wounded?" asked a very tired voice,
+that of one of the older reservists who was emaciated, with a
+complexion like blue mould.</p>
+<p>"How can I tell you what I saw? Ought I to tell you?"</p>
+<p>"When you've had to wipe a piece of brains out of your eye, as I
+have&mdash;it was warm and jelly-like," said Pilzer, "you ain't as
+squeamish as Hugo Mallin. I wonder they don't give him a bronze
+cross!"</p>
+<p>"Bronze crosses are given for bravery in action," said Peterkin
+in his new-fashioned parrot way since he had become great. "You
+should not do anything to affect the spirit of corps."</p>
+<p>"The boy wonder from the butler's pantry! Our dear, natty little
+buttons! Bullets glide off him!" snarled Pilzer, who had set out to
+win a bronze cross, only to see it won by a pygmy.</p>
+<p>"Did you see many dead and wounded?" persisted the very tired
+voice of the old reservist.</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes&mdash;and every kind of destruction!" answered the
+judge's son. "And&mdash;I kept thinking of Hugo Mallin."</p>
+<p>"I'm glad they didn't shoot Hugo," said the very tired voice.
+"I'm sorry for his old father and mother. I'm a father myself."</p>
+<p>"I certainly had a good farewell kick at him!" declared Pilzer.
+"Lean on yourself!" he added, giving a shove to the old reservist
+who was next him.</p>
+<p>"I saw men who had ceased to be human. That reminds me, Pilzer,"
+the judge's son went on, "I saw one wounded man, lying beside
+another, turn and strike him, and he said: 'I had to hit somebody
+or something!' And I heard a wounded man who was waiting in line
+before the surgeon's table say: 'There's others hurt worse than me.
+I can wait.' I heard men begging the doctors to put them out of
+their misery. I saw two dead men with their hands clasped as they
+were when they died. Then there were the men who went mad. One had
+to be held by force. He kept crying with demoniacal laughs: 'I want
+to go back and kill&mdash;kill! Let's all kill, kill, kill!'
+Another insisted on dancing, despite a bandaged leg. 'Look, look at
+the little red spots!' he was saying. 'You must step on one every
+time; if you don't, the automatic will get you!' Another declared
+that he had been through hell and insisted that he would live
+forever now. Another was an artist, a landscape-painter, who had
+lost his eyesight. He was seeing beautiful landscapes, and the
+nurses had to strap him to his cot to keep him from struggling to
+his feet and trying to use an imaginary brush on imaginary
+canvases. He died seeing beautiful landscapes.</p>
+<p>"A pretty dreary sight, too, was the field of the dead, as I
+called it. As the bodies were brought in they were laid in long
+rows, until there was no more room without moving a supply depot.
+So there was nothing to do but begin to pile them two deep. A
+service-corps man took off each man's metal identification tag and
+tossed it into an ammunition box. One box was already full and a
+second half full. Chink-chink-chink&mdash;tags of the rich man's
+son and the poor man's son, the doctor of philosophy and the
+illiterate; chink-chink-chink&mdash;a life each time. They'll take
+the tags to the staff office and tired clerks will find the names
+that go with the numbers."</p>
+<p>"You cannot make an omelet without breaking eggs," said
+Peterkin, quoting high authority. "Some have to be killed."</p>
+<p>"The last I heard from home my wife and one of the children were
+sick and my employer had gone bankrupt," broke in the very tired
+voice rather irrelevantly.</p>
+<p>"Yes, my father's last letter was pretty blue about business,"
+said the banker's son. He was looking at his dirty hands. The odor
+of clothes unlaundered for weeks, in which the men had slept,
+tortured his sensitive nostrils. "A millionaire and filthy as swine
+in a sty!" he exclaimed. "Digging like a navvy in order to get
+admission to the abattoir!"</p>
+<p>"Were there any reserves coming our way?" asked the barber's
+son.</p>
+<p>"Yes, masses."</p>
+<p>"Perhaps they will relieve us and we'll go into the reserves for
+a while," suggested the very tired voice.</p>
+<p>"No fear!" growled Pilzer.</p>
+<p>"They have called out the old men, the fellows of forty-five to
+fifty, who were supposed to be out of it for good," said the
+judge's son. "Westerling says they are to guard prisoners and
+property when we cross the range and start on the march to the
+Browns' capital. Then all the other men can be on the firing-line
+and force the war to a mercifully quick end with a minimum loss. I
+saw numbers of them just arriving at La Tir, footsore and
+limping."</p>
+<p>"I know. Mine's been indoor work, making paints," said the very
+tired voice. "When you've had long hours in the shop and had to sit
+up late with sick babies, you aren't fit for marching. And I think
+I've got lead-poisoning."</p>
+<p>"Whew!" The judge's son put his hand over his nose as a breeze
+sprang up from the direction of the Brown lines.</p>
+<p>"I thought we got them all," said the barber's son.</p>
+<p>"Must have missed one that was buried by a shell and another
+shell must have dug him up!" muttered Pilzer, glaring at the
+barber's son. "It's not nice on people with ladylike nostrils.
+James, get the <i>eau de cologne</i> and draw his bath for our
+plutocrat!"</p>
+<p>"You see, something had to be done about the dead between the
+redoubts," explained the barber's son, "though the officers on both
+sides were against it."</p>
+<p>"Naturally. It afforded opportunities for observation," put in
+Peterkin, repeating the colonel's words.</p>
+<p>"But finally it was agreed to let a dozen from either side go
+out without arms," the barber's son concluded.</p>
+<p>"I heard there was great complaint from the women," went on the
+judge's son. "Women aren't like what they were in the last war.
+They want to know what has become of their men-folk. They have been
+gathering in crowds and making trouble for the police. One of the
+old reservists was telling me of talk of an army of women marching
+to the front to learn the truth of the situation."</p>
+<p>"If you don't stop leaning on me I'll give you a punch you'll
+remember!" exclaimed Pilzer as he rammed his elbow into the old
+reservist's ribs.</p>
+<p>"I beg pardon! It was because I am tired and sort of
+blank-minded," the old reservist explained.</p>
+<p>"You brute!" snapped the banker's son to Pilzer.</p>
+<p>"Mallin thrashed you once and I've done it once. On my word,
+I've a mind to again!"</p>
+<p>"No, you don't! No, you can't! And this time your boxing tricks
+will do you no good. I'll finish you!"</p>
+<p>The two had sprung to their feet with hectic energy: Pilzer's
+liver patch a mottled purple in the midst of his curly red beard,
+his head lowered in front of his short, thick neck as before a
+spring, and the banker's son, lighter and quicker, awaiting the
+attack. Some of the others half rose, while the rest looked on in
+curiosity mixed with indifference.</p>
+<p>"I'll call the captain!" piped Peterkin.</p>
+<p>The judge's son stopped Peterkin and put a hand on either of the
+adversaries' shoulders.</p>
+<p>"Can't we get enough fighting from the Browns without fighting
+each other?" he asked.</p>
+<p>The banker's son and Pilzer dropped back in their places, in the
+reaction of men who had spent their strength in defiance.</p>
+<p>"The thick of it last night, I heard, was still at Engadir,
+where Westerling is determined to break through," the judge's son
+proceeded. "At one point they sent in a regiment with a regiment
+covering it from the rear, and the fellows ahead were told that
+they wouldn't be allowed to come back alive&mdash;just what
+occurred at Port Arthur, you know&mdash;so they had better take the
+position."</p>
+<p>"What happened?" asked the very tired voice.</p>
+<p>"Those who reached the enemy's works alive were taken
+prisoner."</p>
+<p>Further talk was interrupted by a volume of voices singing,
+which seemed to issue from a cellar not far away. It had the swell
+of a hymn of resolute purpose.</p>
+<p>"The Browns' song&mdash;something new since you were with us,"
+explained the barber's son to the judge's son.</p>
+<p>"Yes, their whole line sung it in the silence of dawn following
+last night's repulse," said the banker's son. "Notice the hammer
+beat to it and then the earth rumble, like pounding nails in a
+coffin box and rattling the earth on top of the box after it is
+lowered."</p>
+<p>"Yes, and I get the words," said the judge's son, who knew the
+language of the Browns: "'God with us, not to take what is theirs,
+but to keep what is ours! God with us!'"</p>
+<p>"They say some private&mdash;Stransky, I believe his name
+is&mdash;composed the words from a saying of Partow, their chief of
+staff, and it spread," put in the very tired voice.</p>
+<p>"As it would at a time of high pressure like this, when all
+humanity's nerves form an electric circuit," said the judge's son.
+"'God with us!' What a power they put into that!"</p>
+<p>"But God is with us, not with them!" put in Peterkin earnestly.
+"Let's have our song to answer them," he added, striking up the
+tune.</p>
+<p>So they sung the song they had sung as they started off to the
+war&mdash;a song about camping in the squares of the Browns'
+capital and dining in the Browns' government palace; a hurrahing,
+marchy song, but without exactly the snap in keeping with its
+character.</p>
+<p>"The trouble is that they lie at the mouths of their burrows and
+get us naked to their fire," said the banker's son. "We have to
+take their positions&mdash;they don't try to take ours."</p>
+<p>"But we must go on! We can't give up now!" said the barber's
+son.</p>
+<p>"Yes, we must go on!" agreed some of the others stubbornly.</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes," came faintly from the very tired voice.</p>
+<p>"We shall win! The aggressive always wins!" declared
+Peterkin.</p>
+<p>Then the redoubt shook with an explosion and their eyes were
+blinded with dust.</p>
+<p>"I thought it was about time!" said the barber's son.</p>
+<p>"Yes, the&mdash;!" snarled Pilzer.</p>
+<p>The shell had struck some distance away from where they sat, and
+as the dust settled they heard the news of the result:</p>
+<p>"One fellow had his arm broken and another had his head
+crushed."</p>
+<p>"It'll keep us from working on the mine while we mend the
+breach," said the barber's son.</p>
+<p>While the judge's son was telling the news, the colonel of the
+128th and Captain Fracasse were eating their biscuits together and
+making occasional remarks rather than holding a conversation.</p>
+<p>"Well, Westerling is a field-marshal," said the colonel.</p>
+<p>"Yes, he's got something out of it!"</p>
+<p>"The men seem to be losing their spirit&mdash;there's no doubt
+of it!" exclaimed the colonel, more aloud to himself than to
+Fracasse, after a while.</p>
+<p>"No wonder!" replied Fracasse. Martinet though he was, he spoke
+in grumbling loyalty to his soldiers. "What kind of spirit is there
+in doing the work of navvies? Spirit! No soldiers ever fought
+better&mdash;in invasion, at least. Look at our losses! Spirit!
+Westerling drives us in. He thinks we can climb Niagara Falls!
+He&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Stop! You're talking like an anarchist!" snapped the colonel.
+"How can the men have spirit when you feel that way?"</p>
+<p>"I shall continue to obey orders and do my duty, sir!" replied
+Fracasse. "And they will, too, or I'll know the reason why."</p>
+<p>There was a silence, but at length the colonel exploded:</p>
+<p>"I suppose Westerling knows what he is doing!"</p>
+<p>"Still, we must go on! We must win!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, the offensive always wins in the end. We must go on!"</p>
+<p>"And once we have the range&mdash;yes, once we've won one vital
+position&mdash;the men will recover their enthusiasm and be crying:
+'On to the capital!'"</p>
+<p>"Right! We were forgetting history. We were forgetting the
+volatility of human nature."</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XLI' id="XLI"></a>
+<h2>XLI</h2>
+<h3>WITH FELLER AND STRANSKY</h3>
+<br>
+<p>Far up on a peak among the birds and aeroplanes, in a roofed,
+shell-proof chamber, with a telephone orderly at his side, a
+powerful pair of field-glasses and range-finders at his elbow, and
+a telescope before his eye, Gustave Feller, one-time gardener and
+now acting colonel of artillery, watched the burst of shells over
+the enemy's lines. While other men had grown lean on war, he had
+taken on enough flesh to fill out the wrinkles around eyes that
+shone with an artist's enjoyment of his work. Down under cover of
+the ridge were his guns, the keys of the instrument that he played
+by calls over the wire. Their barking was a symphony to his ears;
+errors of orchestration were errors in aim. He talked as he
+watched, his lively features reflective of his impressions.</p>
+<p>"Oh, pretty! Right into their tummies! Right in the nose! La,
+la, la! But that's off&mdash;and so's that! Tell Battery C they're
+fifty yards over. Oh, beady-eyed gods and shiny little
+fishes&mdash;two smacks in the same spot! Humph! Tell Battery C
+that the trouble with that gun is worn rifling; that's why it's
+going short. Elevate it for another hundred yards&mdash;but it
+ought not to wear out so soon. I'd like to kick the maker or the
+inspector. The fellows in B 21 will accuse us of inattention. It's
+time to drop a shell on them to show we're perfectly impartial in
+our favors. La, la, la! Oh, what a pretty smack!
+Congratulations!"</p>
+<p>B 21 was the position of Fracasse's company and the pretty smack
+the one that broke one man's arm and crushed another's head.</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>The "God with us!" song was singularly suited to the great, bull
+voice of its composer, born to the red and become Captain Stransky
+in the red business of war. It was he who led the thunder of its
+verses not far from where Peterkin led the song of the Grays.</p>
+<p>"I certainly like that song," said Stransky. Well he might. It
+had made him famous throughout the nation. "There's Jehovah and
+brimstone in it. Now we'll have our own."</p>
+<p>"Our own" was also of Stransky's composition and about Dellarme;
+for Stransky, child of the highways and byways, of dark, tragic
+alleys and sunny fields, had music in him, the music of the people.
+The skin on his high cheek-bones was drawn tighter than before,
+further exaggerating the size of his nose, and the deeper set of
+his eyes gave their cross a more marked character. He carried on
+the spirit of Dellarme in the company in his own fashion. The
+survivors among his men were as lean and dirty as Fracasse's, but,
+never having expected to reach the enemy's capital, war had brought
+few illusions. They had known sleepless vigils, but not much
+digging since they had fallen back on the main line into the
+fortifications which, with all resources at command, the engineers
+had built before the war. And the Browns still held the range! The
+principal fortifications of Engadir and every other vital point of
+the main line was theirs. All that the enemy had gained in his
+latest attack were a few minor positions.</p>
+<p>"But we're always losing positions!" complained one of the men.
+"Little by little they are getting possession."</p>
+<p>"They say the offensive always wins," said another.</p>
+<p>"Five against three! They count on numbers," said Lieutenant Tom
+Fragini.</p>
+<p>"There you go, Tom! Any other pessimists or anarchists want to
+be heard?" called out Stransky. "Just how long, at the present
+rate, will it take them to get the whole range? There's a limit to
+the number of even five millions."</p>
+<p>"Yes, but if they ever break through in one place and get their
+guns up&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"As you've said before, Tom!"</p>
+<p>"As we want to keep saying&mdash;as we want to keep fighting our
+damnedest to make sure they won't," Tom explained.</p>
+<p>"Yes, that's it!" declared a chorus.</p>
+<p>"That's it, no matter what we pay!" declared Stransky. "We're
+not going back there except in hearses!" He swung his hand in a
+semicircle toward the distant hills, gold and purple in their dying
+foliage under the autumn sunlight.</p>
+<p>Then the telephone in the redoubt brought some news. The staff
+begged to inform the army that the enemy's casualties in the last
+three days had been two hundred thousand! Immediately everybody was
+talking at once in Stransky's parliament, as he sometimes called
+that company of which he was, in the final analysis, unlimited
+monarch.</p>
+<p>"How do they know?"</p>
+<p>"Do you think it's fake?"</p>
+<p>"That sums up to pretty near a million!"</p>
+<p>"My God! Think of it&mdash;a million!"</p>
+<p>"We're whittling them down!"</p>
+<p>"It doesn't make any difference whether Partow or Lanstron is
+chief of staff!"</p>
+<p>"They're paying!"</p>
+<p>"Paying for our fellows that they've killed! Paying for being in
+the wrong!"</p>
+<p>"Let's have the song again! Come on!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, the song! The song!"</p>
+<p>"No; hold on!" cried Tom. "Not because men are killed!"</p>
+<p>"That's right, that's right!" said Stransky. "After all, they're
+our brothers." It was the first time since he had undergone the
+transformation which the war had wrought in him that he had
+mentioned any of his world-brotherhood ideas. "I still believe in
+that. We're fighting for that!" he concluded.</p>
+<p>With the ready change of subject of soldiers who have been long
+in company, they were soon talking about other things&mdash;things
+that concerned the living.</p>
+<p>"Say, wouldn't I like a real bath&mdash;an altogether!"</p>
+<p>"And plenty of soap all over!"</p>
+<p>"A welter of lather from head to foot and blowing bubbles from
+between my lips!"</p>
+<p>"And to shave off this beard!"</p>
+<p>"Think of the beards that are going when the war is over!"</p>
+<p>"Not if you can't grow any more than John!"</p>
+<p>"I'm not fighting out of ambush like you!" replied John. "I
+haven't got a place for the birds to nest!"</p>
+<p>"I'm going to trim mine down gradually," said another; "first an
+imperial and mustache with mutton choppers; then mow my cheeks;
+then a great, sweeping mustache; then a dandy little mustache;
+then&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Mow is the word! Don't inflict a barber!"</p>
+<p>"And, after the bath, clean underclothes, and, oh, me!&mdash;a
+home dinner!"</p>
+<p>"Stop with your home dinners! That's barred. Army biscuits!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, we all prefer army biscuits!"</p>
+<p>"We wouldn't touch a home dinner!"</p>
+<p>Stransky, his eyes drawing inward in their characteristic slant,
+was well pleased with his company, and the scattered exclamatory
+badinage kept on until it was interrupted by the arrival of the
+mail. Partow and Lanstron, understanding their machine as human in
+its elements, had chosen that the army should hear from home.</p>
+<p>"How's this!" exclaimed one man, reading from a newspaper.
+"They're going to put up a statue of Partow in the capital! It's to
+show him as he died, dropped forward on the map, and in front of
+his desk a field of bayonets. On one face of the base will be his
+name. Two of the other faces will have 'God with us!' and 'Not for
+theirs, but for ours!' The legend on the fourth face the war is to
+decide."</p>
+<p>"Victory! Victory!" cried those who had listened to the
+announcement.</p>
+<p>"My mother says just what yours says, Tom. I needn't come home
+unless we win."</p>
+<p>"The girl I'm going to marry said that, too!"</p>
+<p>"If we go back with the Gray army at our heels we shall strike a
+worse fire than if we stick!"</p>
+<p>Stransky was thinking that they had to do more than hold the
+Grays. Before he should see his girl they had to take back the lost
+territory. He carried two pictures of Minna in his mind: one when
+she had struck him in the face as he had tried to kiss her and the
+other as he said good-by at the kitchen door. There was not much
+encouragement in either.</p>
+<p>"But when she gets better acquainted with me there's no
+telling!" he kept thinking. "I was fighting out of cussedness at
+first. Now I'm fighting for her and to keep what is ours!"</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XLII' id="XLII"></a>
+<h2>XLII</h2>
+<h3>THE RAM</h3>
+<br>
+<p>"I've learned that the greatest, most desperate attack of all is
+coming," Marta told Lanstron. "But I don't know at what point. I
+see Westerling only when he comes into the garden, and he does not
+come so frequently of late."</p>
+<p>Very sweet and very harrowing to him was the intimacy of their
+conspiracy over that underground wire. With the prolongation of the
+strain, he feared for her. He understood how she suffered.
+Sometimes he felt that the Marta of their holiday comradeship was
+dead and it was the impersonal spirit of a great purpose that
+brought him information and inspiration. Her voice was taut,
+without inflection, as if in pain, occasionally breaking into a dry
+sob, only to become even more taut after a silence.</p>
+<p>"I don't&mdash;I can't urge you to any further sacrifice,"
+Lanstron replied. "You have endured enough."</p>
+<p>"But it will help? It will be of vital service?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, tremendously vital."</p>
+<p>"I will try to learn more when I see him," she continued. "But
+it cannot be done by questioning. A single question might be fatal.
+The thing must come in a burst of confidence. That's the horrible
+part of it, the&mdash;" There was a dry sob over the wire as the
+voice broke and then went on steadily: "But I'm game! I'm
+game!"</p>
+<p>In the closet off the Galland library, where the long-distance
+telephone was installed, Westerling was talking with the premier in
+the Gray capital.</p>
+<p>"Your total casualties are eight hundred thousand! That is
+terrific, Westerling!" the premier was saying.</p>
+<p>"Only two hundred thousand of those are dead!" replied
+Westerling. "Many with only slight wounds are already returning to
+the front. Terrific, do you say? Two hundred thousand in five
+millions is one man out of every twenty-five. That wouldn't have
+worried Frederick the Great or Napoleon much. Eight hundred
+thousand is one out of six. The trouble is that such vast armies
+have never been engaged before. You must consider the percentages,
+not the totals."</p>
+<p>"Yet, eight hundred thousand! If the public knew!" exclaimed the
+premier.</p>
+<p>"The public does not know!" said Westerling.</p>
+<p>"They guess. They realize that we stopped the soldiers' letters
+because they told bad news. The situation is serious."</p>
+<p>"Why not give the public something else to think about?"
+Westerling demanded.</p>
+<p>"I've tried. It doesn't work. The murmurs increase. I repeat, my
+fears of a rising of the women are well grounded. There is mutiny
+in the air. I feel it through the columns of the press, though they
+are censored. I&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Then, soon I'll give the public something to think about,
+myself!" Westerling broke in. "The dead will be forgotten. The
+wounded will be proud of their wounds and their fathers and mothers
+triumphant when our army descends the other side of the range and
+starts on its march to the Browns' capital."</p>
+<p>"But you have not yet taken a single fortress!" persisted the
+premier. "And the Browns report that they have lost only three
+hundred thousand men."</p>
+<p>"Lanstron is lying!" retorted Westerling hotly. "But no matter.
+We have taken positions with every attack and kept crowding in
+closer. I ask nothing better than that the Browns remain on the
+defensive, leaving initiative to us. We have developed their weak
+points. The resolute offensive always wins. I know where I am going
+to attack; they do not. I shall not give them time to reinforce the
+defence at our chosen point. I have still plenty of live soldiers
+left. I shall go in with men enough this time to win and to
+hold."</p>
+<p>"The army is yours, Westerling," concluded the premier. "I
+admire your stolidity of purpose. You have my confidence. I shall
+wait and hold the situation at home the best I can. We go into the
+hall of fame or into the gutter together, you and I!"</p>
+<p>For a while after he had hung up the receiver Westerling's head
+drooped, his muscles relaxed, giving mind and body a release from
+tension. But his spine was as stiff as ever as he left the closet,
+and he was even smiling to give the impression that the news from
+the capital was favorable. When the telegraphers' jaws had dropped
+as the reports of casualties came in, when discouragement
+lengthened the faces around him and whispered in the very breezes
+from the fields of the dead, he had automatically maintained his
+confident mien. Any sign of weakening would be ruinous in its
+effect on his subordinates. The citadel of his egoism must remain
+unassailable. He must be the optimist, the front of Jove, for
+all.</p>
+<p>When he called his chiefs of divisions it was hardly for a staff
+council. Stunned by the losses and repulses, loyally industrious,
+their opinions unasked, they listened to his whirlwind of orders
+without comment&mdash;all except Turcas.</p>
+<p>"If they are apprised of our plan and are able to concentrate
+more artillery than our guns can silence, the losses will be
+demoralizing," he observed.</p>
+<p>Westerling threw up his head, frowning down the objection.</p>
+<p>"Suppose they amount to half the forces that we send in!" he
+exclaimed. "Isn't the position, which means the pass and the range,
+worth it?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, if we both take and hold it; not if we fail," replied
+Turcas, quite unaffected by Westerling's manner.</p>
+<p>"Failure is not in my lexicon!" Westerling shot back. "For great
+gains there must be great risks."</p>
+<p>"We prepare for the movement, Your Excellency," answered
+Turcas.</p>
+<p>It was a steel harness of his own will that Westerling wore,
+without admitting that it galled him, and he laid it off only in
+Marta's presence. With her, his growing sense of isolation had the
+relief of companionship. She became a kind of mirror of his egoism
+and ambitions. He liked to have her think of him as a great man
+unruffled among weaker men. In the quiet and seclusion of the
+garden, involuntarily as one who has no confidant speaks to
+himself, reserving fortitude for his part before the staff, while
+she, under the spell of her purpose, silently, with serene and
+wistfully listening eyes, played hers, he outlined how the final
+and telling blow was to be struck.</p>
+<p>"We must and we shall win!" he kept repeating.</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>Through a rubber disk held to his ear in the closet of his
+bedroom a voice, tremulous with nervous fatigue, was giving
+Lanstron news that all his aircraft and cavalry and spies could not
+have gained; news worth more than a score of regiments; news fresh
+from the lips of the chief of staff of the enemy. The attack was to
+be made at the right of Engadir, its centre breaking from the
+redoubt manned by Fracasse's men.</p>
+<p>"Marta, you genius!" Lanstron cried. "You are the real general!
+You&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Not that, please!" she broke in. "I'm as foul and depraved as a
+dealer in subtle poisons in the Middle Ages! Oh, the shame of it,
+while I look into his eyes and feign admiration, feign everything
+which will draw out his plans! I can never forget the sight of him
+as he told me how two or three or four hundred thousand men were to
+be crowded into a ram, as he called it&mdash;a ram of human
+flesh!&mdash;and guns enough in support, he said, to tear any
+redoubts to pieces; guns enough to make their shells as thick as
+the bullets from an automatic!"</p>
+<p>"We'll meet ram with ram! We'll have some guns, too!" exclaimed
+Lanstron. "We'll send as heavy a shell fire at their infantry as
+they send into our redoubts."</p>
+<p>"Yes; oh, yes!" she replied. "Westerling couldn't say it any
+better! What difference is there between you? Each at his desk is
+saying: 'This regiment will die here; that regiment will die
+there!' I bring you word of one human ram going to destruction in
+order that you may send another to destroy and be destroyed! And
+I'm worse than you. I am the go-between in the conspiracy of
+universal murder, sleeping in a good bed every night, in no
+danger&mdash;when I can sleep; but I can't. I go mad from thinking
+of my part, keying myself up deliriously to each fresh deceit!"</p>
+<p>With every sentence her voice broke and it seemed that she would
+not be able to utter another. Yet she kept on in the alternation of
+taut, pitiful monotone and dry, coughing sobs.</p>
+<p>"How have I ever been able to go as far as I have? How did I get
+through this last scene? When it seems as if I were about to
+collapse, something supports me. When the thing grows too horrible
+and I am about to cry out to Westerling that I am false, I hear his
+boast that he made the war as a last step in his ambition. And
+there is Dellarme's smile rising before me. He died so finely in
+defence of our garden! When my brain goes numb and I can't think
+what to say, can't act, Feller appears, prompting with ready word
+and facile change of expression, and I have my wits again. I go on!
+I go on!"</p>
+<p>A racking sob, now, and silence; then, in the sudden effort of
+one who must change the subject to hold his sanity, she asked:</p>
+<p>"How is Feller? Is he doing well?"</p>
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+<p>"At least I have brought him happiness. Sometimes I think that
+is about all the good I have accomplished&mdash;I, his successor in
+carrying out your plans! Oh, I'm burned out, Lanny! I'm ashes. It
+doesn't seem that I can ever be sane or clean and human again. In
+order to forget I should have to find a new life, like Feller. Each
+morning when I look in the mirror I expect to see my hair turned
+white, like his."</p>
+<p>Lanstron felt her suffering as if it were his own. He had let
+his patriotic passion overwhelm every other consideration. He had
+allowed her to be a spy; he had sacrificed her sensibilities along
+with the battalions he had sent into battle. She was right: he was
+only the inhuman head of a machine. And she and Feller&mdash;they
+were human. Destiny playing in the crux of war's inconsistencies
+had formed a bond between them.</p>
+<p>"But, go on, Lanny. Play your part as you see it&mdash;as
+Westerling sees his and Feller his and I mine," she said. "That is
+the only logic clear to me; only I can't play any more. I haven't
+the strength."</p>
+<p>"Yes, I shall go on, Marta," he replied, "but you must not. Your
+work is over, and perhaps this last service may bring a quick end
+and save countless lives."</p>
+<p>"Don't. It's too like Westerling! It has become too trite!" she
+protested. "The end! If I really were helping toward that and to
+save lives and our country to its people, what would my private
+feelings matter' My honor, my soul&mdash;what would anything
+matter? For that, any sacrifice. I'm only one human being&mdash;a
+weak, lunatic sort of one, just now!"</p>
+<p>"Marta, don't suffer so! You are overwrought. You&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I can say all that for you, Lanny," she interrupted with the
+faintest laugh. "I've said it so many times to myself. Perhaps when
+I call you up again I shall not be so hysterical. Tell Feller how I
+have played his part, and, in the midst of all your
+responsibilities, remember to give him a chance."</p>
+<p>Lanstron was not thinking of war or war's combination when he
+hung up the receiver.</p>
+<p>"Yes, it is Gustave!" he thought. "I understand!" It was some
+moments before he returned to the staff room, and then he had
+mastered his emotion. He was the soldier again.</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>"They are clearing the wires for the chief of staff to speak to
+you, sir," announced the telephone aide in Feller's eyrie artillery
+lookout.</p>
+<p>Feller received the word with his clucking "La, la, la!" and
+hummed a tune while the connection was being made. He had not
+spoken with Lanny since his own promotion to a colonelcy and
+Partow's death.</p>
+<p>"My ear-drums split for joy at hearing your voice again!" Feller
+cried. "A regiment of guns for yours truly! You've made me the
+happiest man in the world. And haven't I smacked the Grays in the
+tummy, not to mention in the nose and on the shins! Well, I should
+say so! La, la, la!"</p>
+<p>"You certainly have, you bully old boy!" said Lanstron. "Miss
+Galland sends her congratulations and regards."</p>
+<p>"Eh, what? Her regards to me! The telephone still continues to
+work? Our own original trunk-tunnel private line? Eh? Tell me; tell
+me, quick!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, she has performed the greatest service of the
+war&mdash;better than you could have done it, Gustave!"</p>
+<p>"Whee-ee! Why not? Of course! I'm not surprised. She's the
+greatest woman in the world, I tell you, and I know! And she sends
+her regards to her old gardener? Think of that! If trouble never
+comes singly, why shouldn't joys come in a pour? Oh, it she could
+see me now, so cosey up here among the birds, chucking shells about
+as cheerily as if I were tossing roses to the ladies in a
+ballroom!"</p>
+<p>"She wants you to have every chance," said Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"She asks that for me!"</p>
+<p>The peculiar intimate fervor of the exclamation sprang from a
+Feller in an officer's uniform who could now move in Marta's world.
+Lanstron hurried on to explain the nature of the next attack.</p>
+<p>"If we repulse them we are going to throw in a ram of our own,"
+he said. "We're going to take the aggressive for the moment. It is
+the only sure policy for successful defence."</p>
+<p>"Right! Now you're talking. We learned that principle at school,
+didn't we?"</p>
+<p>"And that means a bigger chance for you, Gustave. We are
+bringing up reserve artillery and making new dispositions. I am
+going to give you charge of the field-guns. But the chief of
+artillery will tell you about your work."</p>
+<p>"This is heaven, Lanny! How am I ever going to&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"There, no thanks, Gustave. You are the man. It is a time when
+only efficiency must be considered."</p>
+<p>"Then I have made good! Then I've been worthy of my opportunity!
+I'd rather be a good gunner than a king. I'll eat this new work and
+smack my lips for more. Tell Miss Galland that every shell that
+hits the mark is a thought from the old gardener for her. Six weeks
+ago trimming rose-bushes and now&mdash;this is life! La, la, la!
+There's been romance and destiny in the whole business for us both,
+Lanny. And you&mdash;you are acting chief of staff! I forgot to
+congratulate you, Your Excellency. Your Excellency! Think of that!
+But it's no surprise to me. Didn't we go to school together? How
+could any one ever go to school with me and not be a great man? And
+I'm wearing a flower in my buttonhole! La, la, la!"</p>
+<p>All that night and day before the night set for the attack,
+while the guns were being emplaced and the infantry formed in a
+gray carpet behind the slopes, a chill, misty rain fell, which the
+devout of the Grays might say proved that God was with them rather
+than with the Browns; for it screened their movements from the
+Brown lookouts. The judge's son and Peterkin and others of
+Fracasse's company had finished their mine; the fuses were laid.
+There was no dry place for a seat in their flooded redoubt and they
+had to stand, eating cold rations and shivering in their filthy,
+wet clothes. The whole army was drenched; the whole army
+shivered.</p>
+<p>If only the air did not clear when darkness fell! The last thing
+the staff of the Grays wanted was to see a star in the sky. Had
+they believed in prayer they would have gone on their knees for a
+black fog, unaware that all that they would hide had been made
+known to the Browns through Marta almost from the hour that the
+preparations for the attack were begun.</p>
+<p>With darkness, the rain ceased; but the mist remained a thick
+mantle over the landscape, impenetrable to the watchful
+search-lights of the Browns, which never stopped playing from
+sunset to dawn. The gray carpet of the reserves that were to form
+Westerling's ram moved over the slopes, dipping and rising with the
+convolutions of the earth, with no word spoken except the repeated
+whispered warnings of silence from the officers. Sweeping on up
+toward the redoubts, it found that parallels and trenches had been
+filled to give footing for the swifter impulse of the tide, once it
+was started for the heights.</p>
+<p>A flash from Fracasse's pocket lamp showed faces pasty white and
+eyes of staring glassiness. Fracasse's face and the colonel's were
+also white&mdash;white with the rigidity of carved marble, carved
+with a set frown of determination. Fracasse was going in with his
+company and the colonel with his regiment. It was their duty. Both
+realized the nature of the risk; and, worse, each knew that the men
+realized it. In another age, when education was not so common and
+unthinking, unforeseeing passion could be aroused in ignorant
+minds, a stimulant on an empty stomach might have made them
+animals, oblivious to danger. They were about to offer their lives
+to pave the way for others to reach the works that none of them,
+probably, would ever reach. For the like of this, in gathering the
+enemy's spears to his breast, a saga had risen around one national
+hero. But Fracasse's veterans were only the shivering units of the
+millions; the part of the machine that happened to be the first to
+strike another machine in collision. Such was the end of all the
+training, the marching, the drilling in the gallant business of
+arms, with no more romance or glory than beeves going to the
+slaughter.</p>
+<p>"You'll be the first out into the glacis, the first into the
+enemy's redoubt," said the colonel, forcing a tone of good,
+old-fashioned "up-guards-and-at-'em" vigor, as he touched the
+bronze cross on Peterkin's breast with his forefinger.</p>
+<p>Little Peterkin, always pale but not so pale now as his
+comrades, flushed at the distinction.</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir!" and he saluted.</p>
+<p>In his eyes was the exaltation of his simple-minded faith. He
+did not think too much. What more could kings and conquerors ask
+than such a soldier as the valet's son, secure in the belief that
+his charmed life would bring him through the assault unharmed?</p>
+<p>"My God! I can't!" exclaimed the banker's son. "I've suffered
+enough. There's life and wealth and all that it gives waiting for
+me at home! I'm young&mdash;I can't!"</p>
+<p>There was a rustle of bodies in a restless movement of drawn
+breaths at common thought taking form, desperately fraught with
+alarm to Fracasse.</p>
+<p>"You will!" Fracasse said, thrusting his revolver muzzle against
+the ribs of the banker's son. "If you don't, I'll shoot you dead,
+or you'll be trampled to death by the rush from the rear!"</p>
+<p>The wedge point may not strike back at the hammer that drives
+it. Close packed behind Fracasse's company was a seemingly
+limitless mass of soldiery, palpitant with their short breaths, a
+steamy, sickening odor rising from their water-soaked clothes. Here
+were men so wet, so tired, so nerve-worn that they did not care
+when death came; men who wanted to curse and strike out against
+their fate; men who wanted to turn in flight, their natural impulse
+held down by the bonds of discipline and that pride of fellowship
+which is shamed to confess to a shiver along the spine. Some saw
+pictures of home, of sweethearts; some saw nothing. Some were in a
+coma of merciless suspense that grew more and more unendurable,
+until it seemed that anything to break it would be welcome.</p>
+<p>Occasionally came a sob from a man gone hysterical under the
+strain, a moan of mental misery; and once a laugh, a strange,
+hiccoughy, delirious laugh, a strident attempt at the wit that
+keeps up courage; and from Pilzer, the butcher's son, a string of
+oaths mixed with brimstone and obscenity. After each outbreak an
+automatic, irritable whisper for silence came from an officer. Legs
+and arms, bodies and souls and brains in a nauseating press!
+Humanity reckoned by the pound, high-priced from breeding and
+rearing and training; yet very cheap.</p>
+<p>Hearts thumped and watches ticked off the time, until suddenly
+the heavens were racked by the prologue of the guns. Child's play
+that baptism of shell fire in the first charge of the war beside
+later thunders; and these, in turn, mild beside this terrific
+outburst, with all the artillery concentrated to support the ram in
+a sudden blast. The passing projectiles formed the continuous
+scream and roar of some many-toned siren that penetrated the flesh
+as well as the ears with its sound. Orders could not have been
+heard if given. There was no need for orders. Fracasse, counting
+off the minutes between him and eternity on his watch face by his
+flash-light, saw that ten had passed. Then his finger that pressed
+a button, his brain that spoke to his hand, were those of an
+automaton acting by time release. He exploded the mine. This was
+the signal for the charge; for all the legs of the ram to move.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XLIII' id="XLIII"></a>
+<h2>XLIII</h2>
+<h3>JOVE'S ISOLATION</h3>
+<br>
+<p>An hour or so before the attack the telegraph instruments in the
+Galland house had become pregnantly silent. There were no more
+orders to give; no more reports to come from the troops in position
+until the assault was made. Officers of supply ceased to transmit
+routine matters over the wire, while they strained their eyes
+toward the range. Officers of the staff moved about restlessly,
+glancing at their watches and going to the windows frequently to
+see if the mist still held.</p>
+<p>No one entered the library where Westerling was seated alone
+with nothing to do. His suspense was that of the mothers who longed
+for news of their sons at the front; his helplessness that of a man
+in a hospital lobby waiting on the result of an operation whose
+success or failure will save or wreck his career. The physical
+desire of movement, the conflict with something in his own mind,
+drove him out of doors.</p>
+<p>"I want to blow my lungs in the fresh air! Call me if I am
+needed. I shall be in the garden," he told his aide; and he thought
+that his voice sounded calm and natural, as became Jove in a crisis
+that unnerved lesser men. "Though I fancy it is the other chief of
+staff who will have the work to do this evening, eh?" he added,
+forcing one of the smiles which had been the magnetic servant of
+his personal force in his rise to power.</p>
+<p>"Yes, Your Excellency," said the aide.</p>
+<p>Westerling was rather pleased with the fact that he could still
+smile; pleased with the loyalty of this young officer when, day by
+day, the rest of the staff had grown colder and more mechanical in
+the attitude that completed his isolation. Walking vigorously along
+the path toward the tower, the exercise of his muscles, the feel of
+the cool, moist air on his face, brought back some of the buoyancy
+of spirit that he craved. A woman's figure, with a cape thrown over
+the shoulders and the head bare, loomed out of the mist.</p>
+<p>"I couldn't stay in&mdash;not to-night," Marta said, as
+Westerling drew near. "I had to see. It's only a quarter of an hour
+now, isn't it?"</p>
+<p>"The Browns may sing 'God with us,' but He seems to have been
+with the Grays," Westerling answered. "Our whole movement was
+perfectly screened by the heavy weather."</p>
+<p>"But they know&mdash;they know every detail that you have told
+me!" ran her mocking, scarifying thought. "And this will be the
+most terrible attack of all?" she asked faintly.</p>
+<p>"Yes, such a concentration of men and guns as never were driven
+against any position&mdash;an irresistible force," he said.
+"Irresistible!" he repeated with a heavy emphasis.</p>
+<p>"But if the Browns did know where you were going to attack?" she
+asked absently and still more faintly. "The sacrifice of lives then
+would be all the greater?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, we should have to pay a higher price, but still we should
+be irresistible&mdash;irresistible!" he answered.</p>
+<p>Ghastly faces were staring at her, their lips moving in death to
+excoriate her. It was not too late to tell him the truth; not too
+late to stop the attack. Her head had sunk; she trembled and swayed
+and a kind of moan escaped her. She seemed utterly frail and so
+distraught that Westerling, in an impulse of protection, laid his
+hands on her relaxed shoulders. She could feel the pressure of each
+finger growing firmer in its power, while a certain eloquence
+possessed him in defiance of his apprehensions.</p>
+<p>"Our cause is at stake to-night," he declared, "yours and mine!
+We must win, you and I! It is our destiny!"</p>
+<p>"You and I!" repeated Marta. "Why you and I?"</p>
+<p>It seemed very strange to be thinking of any two persons when
+hundreds of thousands were awaiting the signal for the death
+prepared by him. He mistook the character of her thought in the
+obsession of his egoism.</p>
+<p>"What do lives mean?" he cried with a sudden desperation, his
+grip of her shoulders tightening. "It is the law of nature for man
+to fight. Unless he fights he goes to seed. One trouble with our
+army is that it was soft from the want of war. It is the law of
+nature for the fittest to survive! Other sons will be born to take
+the place of those who die to-night. There will be all the more
+room for those who live. Victory will create new opportunities.
+What is a million out of the billions on the face of the earth?
+Those who lead alone count&mdash;those who dwell in the atmosphere
+of the peaks, as we do!" The pressure of his strong hands in the
+unconscious emphasis of his passion became painful; but she did not
+protest or try to draw away, thinking of his hold in no personal
+sense but as a part of his self-revelation. "All&mdash;all is at
+stake there!" he continued, staring toward the range. "It's the
+Rubicon! I have put my career on to-night's cast! Victory means
+that the world will be at our feet&mdash;honor, position, power
+greater than that of any other two human beings! Do you realize
+what that means&mdash;the honor and the power that will be ours? I
+shall have directed the greatest army the world has ever known to
+victory!"</p>
+<p>"And defeat means&mdash;what does defeat mean?" she asked
+narrowly, calmly; and the pointed question released her shoulders
+from the vise.</p>
+<p>What had been a shadow in his thoughts became a live monster,
+striking him with the force of a blow. He forgot Marta. Yes, what
+would defeat mean to <i>him</i>? Sheer human nature broke through
+the bonds of mental discipline weakened by sleepless nights.
+Convulsively his head dropped as he covered his face.</p>
+<p>"Defeat! Fail! That I should fail!" he moaned.</p>
+<p>Then it was that she saw him in the reality of his littleness,
+which she had divined; this would-be conqueror. She saw him as his
+intimates often see the great man without his front of Jove. Don't
+we know that Napoleon had moments of privacy when he whined and
+threatened suicide? She wondered if Lanny, too, were like
+that&mdash;if it were not the nature of all conquerors who could
+not have their way. It seemed to her that Westerling was beneath
+the humblest private in his army&mdash;beneath even that fellow
+with the liver patch on his cheek who had broken the chandelier in
+the sport of brutal passion. All sense of her own part was
+submerged in the sight of a chief of staff exhibiting no more
+stoicism than a petulant, spoiled schoolboy.</p>
+<p>While his head was still bent the artillery began its crashing
+thunders and the sky became light with flashes. His hands stretched
+out toward the range, clenched and pulsing with defiance and
+command.</p>
+<p>"Go in! Go in, as I told you!" he cried. "Stay in, alive or
+dead! Stay till I tell you to come out! Stay! I can't do any more!
+You must do it now!"</p>
+<p>"Then this may be truly the end," thought Marta, "if the assault
+fails."</p>
+<p>And silently she prayed that it would fail; while the flashes
+lighted Westerling's set features, imploring success.</p>
+<p>No commander was a more prodigal employer of spies than
+Napoleon. Did he or any other conqueror ever acknowledge a success
+due to the despised outcasts who brought him information? No. The
+brilliance of combinations, the stroke of genius of the swift march
+and the decisive blow in flank, the splendid charges&mdash;these
+always win in the historian's narrative and public imagination.
+Think of any place in the frieze of the statue of the great leader
+for that hypocrite, that poor devil in disguise, whose news made
+the victory possible!</p>
+<p>"Good generalship is easy if you know what the enemy is going to
+do," Lanstron remarked to a member of the staff council who said
+something complimentary to him. Compliments from subordinates to
+superiors had not received Partow's favor and, therefore, not
+Lanstron's. Eccentric old Partow had once disparaged the Napoleonic
+idea as a fetich which had nothing to do with modern military
+efficiency, and he had added that if Napoleon were alive to-day
+nobody would be so prompt to see it as Napoleon himself. If he did
+not, and tried to incarnate the idea of the time by making himself
+the supreme genius of war, he would fail, because ability was too
+nearly universal and the age too big for another Colossus.</p>
+<p>Through Marta's information every detail of Westerling's plan
+outlined itself to the trained minds of the Brown staff. Amazement
+at their dependence on an underground wire and a woman's word for
+shaping vast affairs was not reflected in any scepticism or
+hesitation as to the method of meeting the assault.</p>
+<p>The fortifications that had sheltered the Brown infantry,
+including Stransky's men of the 53d, would be the object of the
+artillery fire which was to support the Gray charge. Well Lanstron
+knew that no fortifications could withstand the gusts of shells to
+be concentrated on such a small target. The defenders could not see
+to fire for the dust. Their rifles would be knocked out of their
+hands by the concussions. They must be crushed or imprisoned by the
+destruction of the very walls that had been their protection. So
+they were withdrawn to other redoubts in the rear, where a line of
+automatics placed under their rifles were in pointblank range of
+their old position which the Grays' shells would tear to
+pieces.</p>
+<p>Back of them was a brown carpet of waiting soldiery of as close
+a pile as Westerling's carpet of gray. The rain-drenched Brown
+engineers dug as fast as the enemy's. Lanstron massed artillery
+against massed artillery. For every Gray gun he had more than one
+Brown gun. The Grays might excel by ratio of five to three in human
+avoirdupois, but a willing Brown government had been generous with
+funds. Money will buy guns and skill will man them. Battery back of
+battery in literal tiers, small calibres in front and heavy
+calibres in the rear, with ranges fixed to given points&mdash;more
+guns than ever fired on a single position before&mdash;were to pour
+their exploding projectiles not into redoubts but into the human
+wedge.</p>
+<p>In the Browns' headquarters, as in the Grays', telegraph
+instruments were silent after the preparations were over. Here,
+also, officers walked about restlessly, glancing at their watches.
+They, too, were glad that the mist continued. It meant no wind.
+When the telegraph did speak it was with another message from some
+aerostatic officer, saying, "Still favorable," which was taken at
+once to Lanstron, who was with the staff chiefs around the big
+table. They nodded at the news and smiled to one another; and some
+who had been pacing sat down and others rose to begin pacing
+afresh.</p>
+<p>"We could have emplaced two lines of automatics, one above the
+other!" exclaimed the chief of artillery.</p>
+<p>"But that would have given too much of a climb for the infantry
+in going in&mdash;delayed the rush," said Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"If they should stick&mdash;if we couldn't drive them back!"
+exclaimed the vice-chief of staff.</p>
+<p>"I don't think they will!" said Lanstron.</p>
+<p>To the others he seemed as cool as ever, even when his maimed
+hand was twitching in his pocket. But now, suddenly, his eyes
+starting as at a horror, he trembled passionately, his head
+dropping forward, as if he would collapse.</p>
+<p>"Oh, the murder of it&mdash;the murder!" he breathed.</p>
+<p>"But they brought it on! Not for theirs, but for ours!" said the
+vice-chief of staff, laying his hand on Lanstron's shoulder.</p>
+<p>"And we sit here while they go in!" Lanstron added. "There's a
+kind of injustice about that which I can't get over. Not one of us
+here has been under fire!"</p>
+<p>Even the minute of the attack they knew; and just before
+midnight they were standing at the window looking out into the
+night, while the vice-chief held his watch in hand. In the hush the
+faint sound of a dirigible's propeller high up in the heavens,
+muffled by the fog, was drowned by the Gray guns opening fire.</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>Before the mine exploded, by the light of the shell bursts
+breaking their vast prisms from central spheres of flame for miles,
+with the quick sequence of a moving-picture flicker, Fracasse's men
+could see one another's faces, spectral and stiff and pasty white,
+with teeth gleaming where jaws had dropped, some eyes half closed
+by the blinding flashes and some opened wide as if the lids were
+paralyzed. Faces and faces! A sea of faces stretching away down the
+slope&mdash;faces in a trance.</p>
+<p>Up over the breastworks, over rocks and splintered timbers,
+Peterkin and the judge's son and their comrades clambered. When
+they moved they were as a myriad-legged creature, brain numbed,
+without any sensation except that of rapids going over a fall.
+Those in front could not falter, being pushed on by the pressure of
+those in the rear. For a few steps they were under no fire. The
+scream of their own shells breaking in infernal pandemonium in
+front seemed to be a power as irresistible as the rear of the wedge
+in driving them on.</p>
+<p>Then sounds more hideous than the flight of projectiles broke
+about them with the abruptness of lightnings held in the hollow of
+the Almighty's hand and suddenly released. The Browns' guns had
+opened fire. Explosions were even swifter in sequence than the
+flashes that revealed the stark faces. Dust and stones and flying
+fragments of flesh filled the air. Men went down in positive
+paralysis of faculties by the terrific crashes. Sections of the ram
+were blown to pieces by the burst of a shrapnel shoulder high;
+other sections were lifted heavenward by a shell burst in the
+earth.</p>
+<p>Peterkin fell with a piece of jagged steel embedded in his
+brain. He had gone from the quick to the dead so swiftly that he
+never knew that his charm had failed. The same explosion got
+Fracasse, sword in hand, and another buried him where he lay. The
+banker's son went a little farther; the barber's son still farther.
+Men who were alive hardly realized life, so mixed were life and
+death. Infernal imagination goes faint; its wildest similes grow
+feeble and banal before such a consummation of hell.</p>
+<p>But the tide keeps on; the torn gaps of the ram are filled by
+the rushing legs from the rear. Officers urge and lead. Such are
+the orders; such is the duty prescribed; such is human bravery even
+in these days when life is sweeter to more men in the joys of mind
+and body than ever before. Precision, organization, solidarity in
+this charge such as the days of the "death-or-glory" boys never
+knew! Over the bodies of Peterkin and the barber's and the banker's
+sons, plunging through shell craters, stumbling, staggering, cut by
+swaths and torn by eddies of red destruction in their ranks, the
+tide proceeded, until its hosts were oftener treading on flesh than
+on soil. And all they knew was to keep on&mdash;keep on, bayonet in
+hand, till they reached the redoubt, and there they were to stay,
+alive or dead.</p>
+<p>In that pulsating, fierce light, while the ground under their
+feet trembled with the concussions, Westerling's face was as clear
+to Marta as if he were staring in at a furnace door. The lines of
+breeding and of restrained authority which gave it distinction had
+faded. It had the eager ferocity of the hunt. His short, tense
+exclamations explained the stages of progress of the attack as
+revealed to his sight.</p>
+<p>"It cannot fail! No! Impossible! Look at the speed of our
+gun-fire! But I judge that we have not been able to silence as many
+of their guns as we ought to&mdash;they're using shell into our
+close order. But all the guns in creation shall not stop us! I have
+men enough this time&mdash;enough, enough, enough! There! Our
+shorter-range guns have ceased firing! That shows we are in the
+redoubts. The longer-range guns continue. They are firing beyond
+the redoubt against any counter-attack, if the Browns try to
+recover what they have lost. But every minute brings another
+battalion into place. Engineers and guns will follow. The war is as
+good as won!"</p>
+<p>He caught at Marta's hand, but she drew away; and her start of
+revulsion at his touch was almost coincident with a start on his
+part for another reason. A huge shadow shot at railway-train speed
+over their heads. Something very like fear flashed into his
+expression.</p>
+<p>"One of our dirigibles!" he exclaimed. "I confess it came so
+near that it gave me a sort of shock, too."</p>
+<p>"Only a shadow with no death in it," she said. "And there is
+death in every flash there on the range. General Westerling, have
+you ever been under fire?" she asked suddenly.</p>
+<p>He had scarcely heard the question. He took a step forward, with
+head raised and shading his eyes.</p>
+<p>"Not ours! One of theirs!" he exclaimed. "Theirs&mdash;and any
+number of theirs!"</p>
+<p>Driving toward the volcano's centre were many Brown dirigibles,
+slowing down as they approached. Greater eruptions than any from
+shells rose from the earth as they passed.</p>
+<p>"So that's what they've had their dirigibles in reserve
+for&mdash;for the last desperate defence!" he said. "The defence
+that can never win! Not their dirigibles&mdash;not any power known
+to man can stop my men. I have sent in so many that enough must
+survive. But where are <i>our</i> dirigibles? A few are
+up&mdash;why don't they close in? And our guns&mdash;why don't they
+fire at a target before their eyes as big as a house? There they
+go, and they got one!"&mdash;as a circle of flame brighter than the
+illumination of other explosions broke in the sky. "And one of ours
+is closing in! Look, both have blown up as they collided! That
+shows that two can play at the game! But what a swarm they
+have&mdash;more than we knew! Bouchard's intelligence at fault
+again! However, if they try to stop our fortifying the redoubt our
+guns will care for them. That clever trick of Lanstron's may have
+cost us a few extra casualties, but it will not change the result.
+It's time we had details over the wire," he concluded, turning back
+to the house rather precipitately. "Then there may be work for
+me."</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>"After hell, more hell, and then still more hell!" was the way
+that Stransky expressed his thought when the engineers had taken
+the place of the 53d of the Browns in the redoubt. They put their
+mines and connections deep enough not to be disturbed by shell
+fire. After the survivors in the van of the Grays' charge, spent of
+breath, reached their goal and threw themselves down, the earth
+under them, as the mine exploded, split and heaved heavenward. But
+those in the rear, slapped in the face by the concussion, kept on,
+driven by the pressure of the mass at their backs, and, in turn,
+plunged forward on their stomachs in the seams and furrows of the
+mine's havoc. The mass thickened as the flood of bodies and legs
+banked up, in keeping with Westerling's plan to have "enough to
+hold."</p>
+<p>Now the automatics and the rifles from the redoubt to which the
+Browns had fallen back opened fire. So close together were these
+bullet-machines that the orbit of each one's swing made a spray of
+only a few yards' breadth over the old redoubt, where the Browns'
+gun-fire had not for a moment ceased its persistent shelling, with
+increasingly large and solid targets of flesh for their practice.
+The thing for these targets to do, they knew, was to intrench and
+begin to return the infantry and automatics' fire. Desperately,
+with the last effort of courage, they rose in the
+attempt&mdash;rose into playing hose streams of bullets whose close
+hiss was a steady undertone between shell bursts. In the garish,
+jumping light brave officers impulsively stood up to hearten their
+commands in their work, and dropped with half-uttered urgings,
+threats, and oaths on their lips.</p>
+<p>The bullets from the automatics missing one mark were certain to
+find another, perhaps four or five in a row, such was their
+velocity and power of penetration. Where shells made gaps and tore
+holes in the human mass, the automatics cut with the regularity of
+the driven teeth of a comb. The men who escaped all the forms of
+slaughter and staggered on to the ruins of the redoubt, pressed
+their weight on top of those in the craters or hugged behind the
+pyramids of d&eacute;bris, and even made breastworks from the
+bodies of the dead. The more that banked up, the more fruitless the
+efforts of the officers to restore order in the frantic medley of
+shell screams and explosions at a time when a minute seemed an
+age.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, between them&mdash;this banked-up force at the
+charge's end&mdash;and the Brown redoubt with its automatics, the
+Gray gunners were making a zone of shell bursts in order to give
+the soldiers time to make their hold of the ground they had gained
+secure. Through this zone Stransky and his men were to lead the
+Browns in a counter-attack.</p>
+<p>At the very height of the Gray charge, when all the reserves
+were in, dark objects fell out of the heavens, and where they
+dropped earth and flesh were mingled in the maceration. Like some
+giant reptile with its vertebr&aelig; breaking, gouged and torn and
+pinioned, the charge stopped, in writhing, throbbing confusion.
+Those on the outer circle of explosions were thrown against their
+fellows, who surged back in another direction from an explosion in
+the opposite quarter. From the rear the pressure weakened; the
+human hammer was no longer driving the ram. Blinded by the
+lightnings and dust, dizzy from concussions and noise, too blank of
+mind to be sane or insane, the atoms of the bulk of the charge in
+natural instinct turned from their goal and toward the place whence
+they had come, with death from all sides still buffeting them.
+Staggeringly, at first, they went, for want of initiative in their
+paralysis; then rapidly, as the law of self-preservation asserted
+itself in wild impulse.</p>
+<p>As sheep driven over a precipice they had advanced; as men they
+fled. There was no longer any command, no longer any cohesion,
+except of legs struggling in and out over the uneven footing of
+dead and wounded, while they felt another pressure, that of the
+mass of the Browns in pursuit. Of all those of Fracasse's company
+whom we know, only the judge's son and Jacob Pilzer were alive.
+Stained with blood and dust, his teeth showing in a grimace of
+mocking hate of all humankind, Pilzer's savagery ran free of the
+restraint of discipline and civilized convention. Striking right
+and left, he forced his way out of the region of shell fire and
+still kept on. Clubbing his rifle, he struck down one officer who
+tried to detain him; but another officer, quicker than he, put a
+revolver bullet through his head.</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>Westerling, who had buried his face in his hands in Marta's
+presence at the thought of failure, must keep the pose of his
+position before the staff. With chin drawn in and shoulders squared
+in a sort of petrified military habit, he received the feverish
+news that grew worse with each brief bulletin. He, the chief of
+staff; he, Hedworth Westerling, the superman, must be a rock in the
+flood of alarm. When he heard that his human ram was in recoil he
+declared that the repulse had been exaggerated&mdash;repulses
+always were. With word that a heavy counter-attack was turning the
+retreat into an ungovernable rout, he broke into a storm. He was
+not beaten; he could not be beaten.</p>
+<p>"Let our guns cut a few swaths in the mob!" he cried. "That will
+stop them from running and bring them back to a sense of duty to
+their country."</p>
+<p>The irritating titter of the bell in the closet off the library
+only increased his defiance of facts beyond control. He went to the
+long distance with a reply to the premier's inquiry ready to his
+lips.</p>
+<p>"We got into the enemy's works but had to fall back
+temporarily," he said.</p>
+<p>"Temporarily! What do you mean?" demanded the premier.</p>
+<p>"I mean that we have only begun to attack!" declared Westerling.
+He liked that sentence. It sounded like the shibboleth of a great
+leader in a crisis. "I shall assault again to-morrow night."</p>
+<p>"Then your losses were not heavy?"</p>
+<p>"No, not relatively. To-morrow night we press home the advantage
+we gained to-night."</p>
+<p>"But you have been so confident each time. You still think
+that&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"That I mean to win! There is no stopping half-way."</p>
+<p>"Well, I'll still try to hold the situation here," replied the
+premier. "But keep me informed."</p>
+<p>Drugged by his desperate stubbornness, Westerling was believing
+in his star again when he returned to the library. All the greater
+his success for being won against scepticism and fears! He summoned
+his chiefs of divisions, who came with the news that the Browns had
+taken the very redoubt from which the head of the Gray charge had
+started; but there they had stopped.</p>
+<p>"Of course! Of course they stopped!" exclaimed Westerling. "They
+are not mad. A few are not going to throw themselves against
+superior numbers&mdash;our superior numbers beaten by our own
+panic! Lanstron is not a fool. You'll find the Browns back in their
+old position, working like beavers to make new defences in the
+morning. Meanwhile, we'll get that mob of ours into shape and find
+out what made them lose their nerve. To-morrow night we shall have
+as many more behind them. We are going to attack again!"</p>
+<p>The staff exchanged glances of amazement, and Turcas, his dry
+voice crackling like parchment, exclaimed:</p>
+<p>"Attack again? At the same point?"</p>
+<p>"Yes&mdash;the one place to attack!" said Westerling. "The rest
+of our line has abundant reserves; a needless number for anything
+but the offensive. We'll leave enough to hold and draw off the rest
+to Engadir at once."</p>
+<p>"But their dirigibles! A surprising number of them are over our
+lines," Bellini, the chief of intelligence, had the temerity to
+say.</p>
+<p>"You will send our planes and dirigibles to bring down theirs!"
+Westerling commanded.</p>
+<p>"I have&mdash;every last one; but they outnumber us!" persisted
+Bellini. "Even in retreat they can see. The air has cleared so that
+considerable bodies of troops in motion will be readily discernible
+from high altitudes. The reason for our failure last night was that
+they knew our plan of attack."</p>
+<p>"They knew! They knew, after all our precautions! There is still
+a leak! You&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Westerling raised his clenched hand threateningly at the chief
+of intelligence, his cheeks purple with rage, his eyes bloodshot.
+But Bellini, with his boyish, small face and round head set close
+to his shoulders, remained undisturbedly exact.</p>
+<p>"Yes, there is a leak, and from the staff," he answered. "Until
+I have found it this army ought to suspend any
+aggressive&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I was not asking advice!" interrupted Westerling.</p>
+<p>"But, I repeat, the leak is not necessary to disclose this new
+movement that you plan. Their air craft will disclose it," Bellini
+concluded. He had done his duty and had nothing more to say.</p>
+<p>"Dirigibles do not win battles!" Westerling announced. "They are
+won by getting infantry in possession of positions and holding
+them. No matter if we don't surprise the enemy. Haven't the Browns
+held their line with inferior numbers? If they have, we can hold
+the rest of ours. That gives us overwhelming forces at
+Engadir."</p>
+<p>"You take all responsibility?" asked Turcas.</p>
+<p>"I do!" said Westerling firmly. "And we will waste no more time.
+The premier supports me. I have decided. We will set the troops in
+motion."</p>
+<p>With fierce energy he set to work detaching units of artillery
+and infantry from every part of the line and starting them toward
+Engadir.</p>
+<p>"This means an improvised organization; it breaks up the
+machine," said the tactical expert to Turcas when they were
+alone.</p>
+<p>"Yes," replied Turcas. "He wanted no advice from us when he was
+taking counsel of desperation. If he succeeds, success will
+retrieve all the rest of his errors. We may have a stroke of luck
+in our favor."</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>In the headquarters of the Browns, junior officers and clerks
+reported the words of each bulletin with the relief of men who
+breathed freely again. The chiefs of divisions who were with
+Lanstron alternately sat down and paced the floor, their
+restlessness now that of a happiness too deeply thrilling to be
+expressed by hilarity. Each fresh detail only confirmed the
+completeness of the repulse as that memorable night in the affairs
+of the two nations slowly wore on. Shortly before three, when the
+firing had died down after the Brown pursuit had stopped, a
+wireless from a dirigible flying over the frontier came, telling of
+bodies of Gray troops and guns on the march. Soon planes and other
+dirigibles flying over other positions were sending in word of the
+same tenor. The chiefs drew around the table and looked into one
+another's eyes in the significance of a common thought.</p>
+<p>"It cannot be a retreat!" said the vice-chief.</p>
+<p>"Hardly. That is inconceivable of Westerling at this time,"
+Lanstron replied. "The bull charges when wounded. It is clear that
+he means to make another attack. These troops on the march across
+country are isolated from any immediate service."</p>
+<p>It was Lanstron's way to be suggestive; to let ideas develop in
+council and orders follow as out of council.</p>
+<p>"The chance!" exclaimed some one.</p>
+<p>"The chance!" others said in the same breath. "The God-given
+chance for a quick blow! The chance! We attack! We attack!"</p>
+<p>It was the most natural conception to a military tactician,
+though any man who made it his own might have builded a reputation
+on it if he knew how to get the ear of the press. Their faces were
+close to Lanstron as they leaned toward him eagerly. He seemed not
+to see them but to be looking at Partow's chair. In imagination
+Partow was there in the life&mdash;Partow with the dome forehead,
+the pendulous cheeks, the shrewd, kindly eyes. A daring risk, this!
+What would Partow say? Lanstron always asked himself this in a
+crisis: What would Partow say?</p>
+<p>"Well, my boy, why are you hesitating?" Partow demanded. "I
+don't know that I'd have taken my long holiday and left you in
+charge if I'd thought you'd be losing your nerve as you are this
+minute. Wasn't it part of my plan&mdash;my dream&mdash;that plan I
+gave you to read in the vaults, to strike if a chance, this very
+chance, were to come? Hurry up! Seconds count!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, a chance to end the killing for good and all!" said
+Lanstron, coming abruptly out of his silence. "We'll take it and
+strike hard."</p>
+<p>The staff bent over the map, Lanstron's finger flying from point
+to point, while ready expert answers to his questions were at his
+elbow and the wires sang out directions that made a drenched and
+shivering soldiery Who had been yielding and holding and never
+advancing grow warm with the thought of springing from the mire of
+trenches to charge the enemy. And one, Gustave Feller, in command
+of a brigade of field-guns&mdash;the mobile guns that could go
+forward rumbling to the horses' trot&mdash;saw his dearly beloved
+batteries swing into a road in the moonlight.</p>
+<p>"La, la, la! The worm will turn!" he clucked. "It's a merry,
+gambling old world and I'm right fond of it&mdash;so full of the
+unexpected for the Grays! That lead horse is a little lame, but
+he'll last the night through. Lots of lame things will! Who knows?
+Maybe we'll be cleaning the mud off our boots on the white posts of
+the frontier to-morrow! A whole brigade mine! I live! You old
+brick, Lanny! This time we are going to spank the enemy on the part
+of his anatomy where spanks are conventionally given. La, la,
+la!"</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>If not his own pain, the moans, the gasps, the appeals for
+water, the convulsive shivers from cold, and the demoniacal giggles
+from a soldier gone insane in medley around him would have kept the
+judge's son awake. After he had fallen, struck by he knew not what,
+and consciousness had returned, came the surging charge of the
+Browns in the counter-attack, with throaty cries and threshing
+tread. He was able to turn over on his face and cover the back of
+his head with his hands, as a slight protection from steps that
+found footing on his body instead of on the earth. After that he
+had understood vaguely that a newcomer on the field of the fallen
+needed help with a first aid, and he had found his knife and slit a
+sleeve and applied a bandage to check the bleeding of an artery.
+Before dawn broke the sky was all alight again with a far-reaching
+gun-fire&mdash;that of the Brown advance&mdash;throwing the scene
+of slaughter into spectral relief, which became more real and
+terrible in the undramatic light of day.</p>
+<p>Thick, ghastly thick, the dead and wounded; and the
+faces&mdash;faces half buried, faces black with congealed blood,
+faces staring straight up at the sky, faces with eyes popping where
+necks had been twisted! Near by was the distorted metal work of a
+dirigible, with the bodies of its crew burned beyond recognition,
+and farther away were other dirigible wrecks. A wounded Gray, who
+had not the strength to do it himself, begged some one to lift a
+corpse off his body. A Gray and a Brown were locked in a wrestling
+embrace in which a shrapnel burst had surprised them. Piles of dead
+and wounded had been scattered and torn by a shell which found only
+dead and wounded for destruction at the point of its explosion. The
+living were crawling out from under the shields they had made of
+corpses in shell craters, and searching for water in the canteens
+and biscuits in the haversacks of the dead. One Gray who was
+completely entombed except his head remarked that he was all right
+if some one would dig him out. At his side showed the legs of a man
+who had been buried face downward. Ribs of the wounded broken in;
+features of the dead mashed by the heels of the Brown
+countercharge! With every turn of his glance his surroundings grew
+more intimate in details of horror to the judge's son. On the
+earth, saturated with rivulets and little lakes of blood, gleamed
+the lead shrapnel bullets and the brighter, nickelled rifle-bullets
+and the barrels of rifles dropped from the hands of the fallen.</p>
+<p>"I'd have bled to death if you hadn't put on that bandage. You
+saved my life!" whispered the man next to the judge's son, who was
+Tom Fragini.</p>
+<p>"Did I? Did I?" exclaimed the judge's son. "Well, that's
+something."</p>
+<p>"It certainly is to me," replied Tom, holding out his hand, and
+thus they shook hands, this Gray and this Brown. "Maybe some time,
+when the war's over, I can thank you in more than words."</p>
+<p>"More than words! Perhaps you can do that now. You&mdash;you
+haven't a cigarette, old fellow?" asked the judge's son. "I haven't
+smoked for three days."</p>
+<p>"Yes, only I roll mine," said Tom.</p>
+<p>"So do I mine," said the judge's son.</p>
+<p>"But with a game hand I&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Oh, I've the hands. It's my leg that's been mashed up," said
+the judge's son. "Labor and capital!" he added cheerily as he
+dropped the cosmopolitan tobacco on the cosmopolitan wafer of
+rice-paper.</p>
+<p>They smoked and smiled at each other in the glow of that better
+passion when wounds have let out the poison of conflict, while the
+doctors and the hospital-corps men began their attention to the
+critical cases and on down the slopes the mills of war were
+grinding out more dead and wounded.</p>
+<p>"At the hospital where I was interne before the war we were
+trying to save a crippled boy the use of his leg," remarked a
+reserve surgeon. "Half a dozen surgeons held consultations over
+that boy&mdash;yes, just for one leg. And now look at this!"</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XLIV' id="XLIV"></a>
+<h2>XLIV</h2>
+<h3>TURNING THE TABLES</h3>
+<br>
+<p>"I shall take a little nap. There will be plenty to do later,"
+said Westerling, after the last telegram detaching the reserves for
+concentration had gone.</p>
+<p>Yes, he would rest while the troops were in motion. The staff
+should see that he was still the same self-contained commander
+whose every faculty was the trained servant of his will. His
+efforts at sleep resulted in a numbing brain torture, which so
+desensitized it to outward impressions that his faithful personal
+aide entering the room at dawn had to touch him on the shoulder to
+arouse attention.</p>
+<p>"There's nothing like being able to order yourself to sleep,
+whatever the crisis," he said. But suddenly he winced as if a blast
+of bullets had crashed through a window-pane and buried themselves
+in the wall beside his bed. "What is that?" he gasped "What?" With
+appalling distinctness he heard a cannonade that seemed as
+wide-spread as the horizon.</p>
+<p>"I was to tell you that the enemy has been attacking along the
+whole front," the aide explained.</p>
+<p>"Attacking! The Browns attacking!" Westerling exclaimed as he
+gathered his wits. "Well, so much the worse for them. I rather
+expected they would," he added.</p>
+<p>Then through the door which the aide had left open the division
+chiefs, led by Turcas, filed in. To Westerling they seemed like a
+procession of ghosts. The features of one were the features of all,
+graven with the weariness of the machine's treadmill. Their harness
+held them up. A moving platform under their feet kept their legs
+moving. They grouped around the great man's desk silently, Turcas,
+his lips a half-opened seam, his voice that of crinkling parchment,
+acting as spokesman.</p>
+<p>"The enemy seized his advantage," he said, "when he found that
+our reserves were on the march, out of touch with the wire to
+headquarters."</p>
+<p>Westerling forced a smile which he wanted to be a knowing
+smile.</p>
+<p>"Exactly! Of course their guns are making a lot of noise," he
+said. "It seems strange to you, no doubt, that they and not we
+should be attacking. Excellent! Let them have a turn at paying the
+costs of the offensive. Let them thrash their battalions to pieces.
+We want them exhausted when we go in to-night."</p>
+<p>"However, we had not prepared our positions for the defensive,"
+continued that very literal parchment voice. "They began an assault
+on our left flank first and we've just had word that they have
+turned it."</p>
+<p>"Probably a false report. Probably they have taken an outpost.
+Order a counter-attack!" exclaimed Westerling.</p>
+<p>"Nor is that the worst of it," said the vice-chief. "They are
+pressing at other well-chosen points. They threaten to pierce our
+centre."</p>
+<p>"Our centre!" gibed Westerling. "You do need rest. Our centre,
+where we have the column of last night's attack still concentrated!
+If anything would convince me that I have to fight this
+war-alone&mdash;I&mdash;" Westerling choked in irritation.</p>
+<p>"Yes. The ground is such that it is a tactically safe and
+advantageous move for Lanstron to make. He strikes at the vitals of
+our machine."</p>
+<p>"But what about the remainder of the force that made the charge?
+What about all our guns concentrated in front of Engadir?"</p>
+<p>"I was coming to that. The rout of the assaulting column was
+much worse than we had supposed. Those who are strong enough cannot
+be got to reform. Many were so exhausted that they dropped in their
+tracks. Our guns are at this moment in retreat&mdash;or being
+captured by the rush of the Browns' infantry. Your Excellency, the
+crisis is sudden, incredible."</p>
+<p>"Our wire service has broken down. We cannot communicate with
+many of our division commanders," put in Bellini, the chief of
+intelligence.</p>
+<p>"Yes, our organization, so dependent on communication, is in
+danger of disruption," concluded Turcas. "To avoid disorder, we
+think it best to retreat across the plain to our own range."</p>
+<p>At the word "retreat" Westerling sprang to his feet, his cheeks
+purple, the veins of his neck and temples sculptured as he took a
+threatening step toward the group, which fell back before the
+physical rage of the man, all except the vice-chief, his mouth a
+thin, ashy line, who held his own.</p>
+<p>"You cowards!" Westerling thundered. "Retreat when we have five
+millions to their three!"</p>
+<p>"We have not that odds now," replied the parchment voice. "All
+their men are engaged. They have caught us at a disadvantage,
+unable to use our numbers except in detail in trying to hold on in
+face of&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I tell you we cannot retreat!" Westerling interrupted. "That is
+the end. I know what you do not know. I am in touch with the
+government. Yes, I know&mdash;"</p>
+<p>This brought fresh alarm into faces which had become set in grim
+stoicism by many alarms. If the people were in ignorance of the
+losses and the army in ignorance of the nation's feeling, the
+officers of the staff were no less in ignorance of what passed over
+the long-distance wire between the chief of staff and the
+premier.</p>
+<p>"I know what is best&mdash;I alone!" Westerling continued,
+driving home his point. "Tell our commanders to hold. Neither
+general nor man is to budge. They are to stick to the death. Any
+one who does not I shall hold up to public shame as a poltroon. Who
+knows but Lanstron's attack may be a council of desperation? The
+Browns may be worse off than we are. Hold, hold! If are are tired,
+they are tired. Frequently it takes only an ounce more of
+resolution to turn the tide of battle. Hold, hold! To-morrow will
+tell a different story! We are going to win yet! Yes, we are going
+to win!"</p>
+<p>"It is for you to decide, Your Excellency," said Turcas, slowly
+and precisely. "You take the responsibility."</p>
+<p>"I take the responsibility. I am in command!" replied Westerling
+in unflinching pose.</p>
+<p>"Yes, Your Excellency."</p>
+<p>And they filed out of the room, leaving him to his
+isolation.</p>
+<p>A little later, when Fran&ccedil;ois came in unannounced,
+bringing coffee, he found his master with face buried in hands.
+Westerling was on the point of striking the valet in anger at the
+discovery, but instead attempted a yawn to deceive him.</p>
+<p>"I fell asleep; there's so little to worry about,
+Fran&ccedil;ois," he explained.</p>
+<p>"Yes, Your Excellency. There is no need of worrying as long as
+you are in command," said Fran&ccedil;ois; and Westerling gulped at
+the coffee and chewed at a piece of roll, which was so dry in his
+mouth and so hard to swallow that he gave up the attempt.</p>
+<p>After Marta had learned, over the telephone, from Lanstron of
+the certain repulse of the Gray assault, fatigue&mdash;sheer
+physical fatigue such as made soldiers drop dead in slumber on the
+earth, their packs still on their backs&mdash;overcame her. Her
+work was done. The demands of nature overwhelmed her faculties. She
+slept with a nervous twitching of her muscles, a restless tossing
+of her lithe body, until hammers began beating on her temples,
+beating, beating with the sound of shell bursts, as if to warn her
+that punishment for her share in the killing was to be the eternal
+concussion of battle in her ears. At length she realized that the
+cannonading was real.</p>
+<p>Hastening out-of-doors, as her glance swept toward the range she
+saw bursts of shrapnel smoke from the guns of the Browns nearer
+than since the fighting had begun on the main line, and these were
+directed at bodies of infantry that were in confused retreat down
+the slopes, while all traffic on the pass road was moving toward
+the rear. Impelled by a new apprehension she hurried to the tunnel.
+Lanstron answered her promptly in a voice that had a ring of relief
+and joy in place of the tension that had characterized it since the
+outbreak of the war.</p>
+<p>"Thanks to you, Marta!" he cried. "Everything goes back to
+you&mdash;thanks to you came this chance to attack, and we are
+succeeding at every point! You are the general, you the maker of
+victories!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, the general of still more killing!" she cried in
+indignation. "Why have you gone on with the slaughter? I did not
+help you for this. Why?"</p>
+<p>No reply came. She poured out more questions, and still no
+reply. She pressed the button and tried again, but she might as
+well have been talking over a dead wire.</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>Though the morning was chill, Mrs. Galland, in a heavy coat, was
+seated outside the tower door, beatifically calm and smiling; for
+she would miss rejoicing over no detail of the spectacle. The
+battle's sounds were sweet music&mdash;symphony of retribution. Oh,
+if her husband and her father could only be with her to see the
+ancient enemy in flight! Her cheeks were rosy with the happy
+thrumming of her heart; a delirious beat was in her temples. She
+wanted to sing and cheer and give thanks to the Almighty. The
+advancing bursts of billowy shrapnel down the slopes were a
+heavenly nimbus to her eyes. She breathed a silent blessing on a
+man[oe]uvring Brown dirigible. They were coming! The soldiers of
+her people were coming to take back their own from the robber hosts
+and restore her hearth to her. Soon she would be seated on the
+veranda watching the folds of her flag floating over La Tir.</p>
+<p>"Isn't it wonderful? Isn't it like some good story?" she said to
+Marta. "Yes, like a miracle&mdash;and there has been a Galland in
+every war of the Browns and you were in this!"</p>
+<p>Having no son, she had given her daughter in sacrifice on the
+altar of her country's gods, who had answered with victory. Her
+old-fashioned patriotism, true to the "all-is-fair-in-war" precept,
+delighted in the hour of success in every trick of Marta's
+double-dealing, though in private life she could have been guilty
+of no deceit.</p>
+<p>"Marta, Marta, I shall never tease you again about your advanced
+ideas or about journeying all the way around the world without a
+chaperon. Your father and my father would have approved!" She
+squeezed Marta's hands and pressed them to her cheek. Marta smiled
+absently.</p>
+<p>"Yes, mother," she said, but in such a fashion that Mrs. Galland
+was reminded again that Marta had always been peculiar. Probably it
+was because she was peculiar that she had been able to outwit the
+head of an army.</p>
+<p>"Oh, that mighty Westerling who was going to conquer the whole
+world! How does he feel now?" mused Mrs. Galland "Westerling and
+his boasted power of five against three!"</p>
+<p>For the Grays were barbarians to her and the Browns a people of
+a superior civilization, a superior aristocracy, a superior
+professional and farming and laboring class. There was nothing
+about the Browns to Mrs. Galland that was not superior. War, that
+ancient popular test of superiority in art, civilization, morals,
+scholarship, the grace of woman and the manliness of man, had
+proved her point in the high court, permitting of no appeal.</p>
+<p>One man alone against the tide&mdash;rather, the man who has
+seen a tide rise at his orders now finding all its sweep against
+him&mdash;Westerling, accustomed to have millions of men move at
+his command, found himself, one man out of the millions, still and
+helpless while they moved of their own impulses.</p>
+<p>As news of positions lost came in, he could only grimly repeat,
+"Hold! Tell them to hold!" fruitlessly, like adjurations to the
+wind to cease blowing. The bell of the long distance kept ringing
+unheeded, until at last his aide came to say that the premier must
+speak either to him or to the vice-chief. Westerling staggered to
+his feet and with lurching steps went into the closet. There he
+sank down on the chair in a heap, staring at the telephone
+mouthpiece. Again the bell rang. Clenching his hands in a rocking
+effort, he was able to stiffen his spine once more as he took down
+the receiver. To admit defeat to the premier&mdash;no, he was not
+ready for that yet.</p>
+<p>"The truth is out!" said the premier without any break in his
+voice and with the fatalism of one who never allows himself to
+blink a fact. "Telegraphers at the front who got out of touch with
+the staff were still in touch with the capital. Once the reports
+began to come, they poured in&mdash;decimation of the attacking
+column, panic and retreat in other portions of the
+line&mdash;chaos!"</p>
+<p>"It's a lie!" Westerling declared vehemently.</p>
+<p>"The news has reached the press," the premier proceeded.
+"Editions are already in the streets."</p>
+<p>"What! Where is your censorship?" gasped Westerling.</p>
+<p>"It is helpless, a straw protesting against a current," the
+premier replied. "A censorship goes back to physical force, as
+every law does in the end&mdash;to the police and the army; and
+all, these days, finally to public opinion. After weeks of secrecy,
+of reported successes, when nobody really knew what was happening,
+this sudden disillusioning announcement of the truth has sent the
+public mad."</p>
+<p>"It is your business to control the public!" complained
+Westerling.</p>
+<p>"With what, now? With a speech or a lullaby? As well could you
+stop the retreat with your naked hands. My business to control the
+public, yes, but not unless you win victories. I gave you the
+soldiers. We have nothing but police here, and I tell you that the
+public is in a mob rage&mdash;the whole public, bankers and
+business and professional men included. I have just ordered the
+stock exchange and all banks closed."</p>
+<p>"There's a cure for mobs!" cried Westerling. "Let the police
+fire a few volleys and they'll behave."</p>
+<p>"Would that stop the retreat of the army? We must sue for
+peace."</p>
+<p>"Sue for peace! Sue for peace when we have five millions against
+their three!"</p>
+<p>"It seems so, as the three millions are winning!" said the
+premier.</p>
+<p>"Sue for peace because women go hysterical? Do you suppose that
+the Browns will listen now when they think they have the advantage?
+Leave peace to me! Give me forty-eight hours more! I have told our
+troops to hold and they will hold. I don't mistake cowardly
+telegraphers' rumors for facts&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Pardon me a moment," the premier interrupted. "I must answer a
+local call." So astute a man of affairs as he knew that
+Westerling's voice, storming, breaking, tightening with effort at
+control, confirmed all reports of disaster. "In fact, the crockery
+is broken&mdash;for you and for me!" said the premier when he spoke
+again. His life had been a gamble and the gamble had turned against
+him in playing for a great prize. There was an admirable stoicism
+in the way he announced the news he had received from the local
+call: "The chief of police calls me up to say that the uprising is
+too vast for him to hold. There isn't any mutiny, but his men
+simply have become a part of public opinion. A mob of women and
+children is starting for the palace to ask me what I have done with
+their husbands, brothers, sons, and fathers. They won't have to
+break in to find me. I'm very tired. I'm ready. I shall face them
+from the balcony. Yes, Westerling, you and I have achieved a place
+in history, and they're far more bitter toward you than me.
+However, you don't have to come back."</p>
+<p>"No, I don't have to go back! No, I was not to go back if I
+failed!" said Westerling dizzily.</p>
+<p>Again defiance rose strong as the one tangible thought, born of
+his ruling passion. It was inconceivable that so vast an ambition
+should fail. Failure! He defied it! He burst into the main staff
+room, where the tired officers regarded him with a glare, or
+momentary, weary wonder, and continued packing up their papers for
+departure. He went on into the telegraphers' room. Some of the
+operators were packing their instruments.</p>
+<p>"The news? What is the news?" Westerling asked hoarsely.</p>
+<p>An operator who was still at the key, without even half rising
+let alone saluting, glanced up from the cavernous sockets of eyes
+unawed by the chief of staff's presence.</p>
+<p>"All that comes in is bad," he said. "Where we get none because
+the wires are down we know it's worse. We've been licked."</p>
+<p>He went on sending a message, wholly oblivious of Westerling,
+who stumbled back into the staff room and paused inarticulate
+before Turcas.</p>
+<p>"The army is going&mdash;resisting by units, but going. It has
+made its own orders!" Turcas said. The other division chiefs nodded
+in agreement. "Your Excellency, we are doing our best," added the
+vice-chief, holding the door for Westerling to return to his own
+office. "The nation is not beaten. Given breathing time for
+reorganization, the army will settle down to the defensive on our
+own range. There the enemy may try our costly tactics against the
+precision and power of modern arms, if they choose. No, the nation
+is not beaten."</p>
+<p>The nation! Westerling was not thinking of the nation.</p>
+<p>"You&mdash;" he began, looking around from face to face.</p>
+<p>Not one showed any sign of softening or deference, and, his mind
+a blank, he withdrew, driven back to his isolation by an inflexible
+ostracism. The world had come to an end. Public opinion was
+master&mdash;master of his own staff. He sank down before his desk,
+staring, just staring; hearing the roar of battle which was drawing
+nearer; staring at the staff orderlies, who came in to take down
+the wall maps, and at his aide packing up the papers and leaving
+him in a room bare of all the appurtenances of his position, with
+little idea in his coma of despair of the hour or even that time
+was passing. Finally, some one touched him on the shoulder. He
+looked up to see his aide at his elbow saluting and
+Fran&ccedil;ois, his valet, standing by with an overcoat.</p>
+<p>"We must go, Your Excellency," said the aide.</p>
+<p>"Go?" asked Westerling dazedly.</p>
+<p>"Yes, the staff has already gone to a new headquarters."</p>
+<p>The announcement was the needle prick that once more aroused him
+to a sense of his situation. He rose and struck his fist on the
+desk in a pulsing outbreak of energy and stubbornness.</p>
+<p>"But I stay! I stay!" he cried. "The enemy is not near. He can't
+be!"</p>
+<p>"Very near, general. You can see for yourself, said the
+aide.</p>
+<p>"I will!" Westerling replied. "I will see how the conspiracy of
+the staff has made ruin of my plans!"</p>
+<p>Again something of his old manner returned; something of the
+stoic's fatalism flashed in his eye. He shook his head to
+Fran&ccedil;ois, refusing to slip his arms into the sleeves of the
+coat which Fran&ccedil;ois dropped on to his shoulders.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I will see for myself!" he repeated, as he led the way out
+to the veranda. "I'll see what goblin scared my pusillanimous staff
+and robbed me of victory!"</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>Every cry of triumph in war is paid for by a cry of pain. On one
+side, anguish of heart; on the other, inexpressible ecstasy. The
+Gray staff were oblivious of fatigue in the glum, overpowering
+necessity of restoring the organization of the Gray army for a
+second stand. The Brown staff were oblivious of fatigue in the
+exhilaration of victory.</p>
+<p>Had a picture of the sight which the judge's son had witnessed
+at dawn in the path of the attack and the counter-attack been
+thrown on the wall of the big lobby room of the Brown headquarters,
+there might have been less exultation on the part of the junior
+officers of the staff gathered there. They were not seeing or
+thinking of the dead. They were seeing only brown-headed pins
+pushing gray-headed pins out of the way on the map, as the symbol
+of an attack become a pursuit and of better than their dreams come
+true&mdash;the symbol of security for altar fires and race and
+nation. They were of the living, in the mightiest thrill that a
+soldier may know.</p>
+<p>No doubt now! No more suspense! Labor and sacrifice rewarded!
+Fervent thanks to the Almighty were mingled with whistled snatches
+of wedding marches and popular songs. An aide taking a message to
+the wire preferred leaping over a chair to going around it. A
+subaltern and a colonel danced together. Victory, victory, victory
+out of the burr of automatics, the pounding of artillery, the
+popping roar of rifles! Victory out of the mire of trenches after
+brain-aching strain! Victory for you and for me and for sweethearts
+and wives and children! Aren't we all Browns, orderly and captain,
+boyish lieutenant and gray-haired general? A taciturn martinet of a
+major hugged a telegrapher to whom he had never spoken a single
+unofficial word. Hadn't the telegraphers, those silent men who were
+the tongue of the army, received the good news and passed it on?
+Some officers who could be spared from duty went to their quarters,
+where they dropped like falling logs on their beds. To them, after
+their spell of rejoicing, victory meant sleep for the first time in
+weeks without forked lightnings of apprehension stabbing their
+sub-consciousness.</p>
+<p>Fellowship was in the victory, the fellowship which, developed
+under Partow, who believed that Napoleons and Colossi and gods in
+the car and all such gentlemen belonged to an archaic farce-comedy,
+had grown under Lanstron. "The staff reports," began the messages
+that awakened a world, retiring with the idea that the Browns were
+grimly holding the defensive, to the news that three millions had
+outgeneralled and defeated five.</p>
+<p>In the inner room, whose opening door gave glimpses of Lanstron
+and the division chiefs, a magic of secret council which the
+juniors could not quite understand had wrought the wonder. Lanstron
+had not forgotten the dead. He could see them; he could see
+everything that happened. Had not Partow said to him: "Don't just
+read reports. Visualize men and events. Be the artillery, be the
+infantry, be the wounded&mdash;live and think in their places. In
+this way only can you really know your work!"</p>
+<p>His elation when he saw his plans going right was that of the
+instrument of Partow's training and Marta's service. He pressed the
+hands of the men around him; his voice caught in his gratitude and
+his breaths were very short at times, like those of a spent, happy
+runner at the goal. Feeding on victory and growing greedy of more,
+his division chiefs were discussing how to press the war till the
+Grays sued for peace; and he was silent in the midst of their talk,
+which was interrupted by the ringing of the tunnel telephone. When
+he came out of his bedroom, Lanstron's distress was so evident that
+those who were seated arose and the others drew near in inquiry and
+sympathy. It seemed to them that the chief of staff, the head of
+the machine, who had left the room had returned an individual.</p>
+<p>"The connection was broken while we were speaking!" he said
+blankly. "That means it must have been cut by the enemy&mdash;that
+the enemy knows of its existence!"</p>
+<p>"Perhaps not. Perhaps an accident&mdash;a chance shot," said the
+vice-chief.</p>
+<p>"No, I'm sure not," Lanstron replied. "I am sure that it was cut
+deliberately and not by her."</p>
+<p>"The 53d Regiment is going forward in that direction&mdash;the
+same regiment that defended the house&mdash;and it can't go any
+faster than it is going," the vice-chief continued, rather
+incoherently. He and the others no less felt the news as a personal
+blow. Though absent in person, Marta had become in spirit an
+intimate of their hopes and councils.</p>
+<p>"She is helpless&mdash;in their power!" Lanstron said. "There is
+no telling what they might do to her in the rage of their
+discovery. I must go to her! I am going to the front!"</p>
+<p>The announcement started a storm of protest.</p>
+<p>"But you are the chief of staff! You cannot leave the
+staff!"</p>
+<p>"You've no right to expose yourself!"</p>
+<p>"A chance shell or bullet&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"You do not seem to realize what this victory means to you. You
+might be killed at the very moment of triumph."</p>
+<p>"I haven't had any triumph. But if I had, could there be a
+better time?" Lanstron asked with a half-bantering smile.</p>
+<p>"You couldn't reach there before the 53d Regiment anyway!"
+declared the vice-chief, having in mind the fact that the staff was
+fifteen miles to the rear, where it could be at the wire focus.
+"You will find the roads blocked with the advance. You'll have to
+ride, you can't go all the way in a car."</p>
+<p>"Terrible hardship!" replied Lanstron. "Still, I'm going. Things
+are well in hand. I can keep in touch by the wire as I proceed. If
+I get out of touch then you," with a nod to the vice-chief, "know
+as well as I how to meet any sudden emergency. Yes, you all know
+how to act&mdash;we're so used to working together. The staff will
+follow as soon as the Galland house is taken. We shall make our
+headquarters there. I'm free now. I can be my own man for a little
+while&mdash;I can be human!"</p>
+<p>A certain awe of him and of his position, born of the prestige
+of victory, hushed further protest. Who if not he had the right to
+go where he pleased in the Brown lines now? They noted the
+eagerness in his eyes, the eagerness of one off the leash, shot
+with a suspense which was not for the fate of the army, as he left
+headquarters.</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>A young officer of the Grays who was with a signal-corps
+section, trying to keep a brigade headquarters in touch with the
+staff during the retreat, two or three miles from the Galland
+house, had seen what looked like an insulated telephone wire at the
+bottom of a crater in the earth made by the explosion of a heavy
+shell. The instructions to all subordinates from the chief of
+intelligence to look for the source of the leak in information to
+the Browns made him quick to see a clew in anything unusual. He
+jumped down into the crater and not only found his pains rewarded,
+but that the wire was intact and ran underground in either
+direction. Who had laid it? Not the Grays. Why was it there? He
+called for one of his men to bring a buzzer, and it was the work of
+little more than a minute to cut the wire and make an attachment.
+Then he heard a woman's voice talking to "Lanny." Who was Lanny? He
+waited till he had heard enough to know that it was none other than
+Lanstron, the chief of staff of the Browns, and the woman must be a
+spy. An orderly despatched to the chief of intelligence with the
+news returned with the order:</p>
+<p>"Drop everything and report to me in person at once."</p>
+<p>"For this I have made my sacrifice!" Marta thought. "The killing
+goes on by Lanny's orders, not by Westerling's, this time."</p>
+<p>Leaving her mother to enjoy the prospect, a slow-moving figure,
+trance-like, she went along the first terrace path to a point near
+the veranda where the whole sweep of landscape with its panorama of
+retreat magnetized her senses. Like the gray of lava, the Gray
+soldiery was erupting from the range; in columns, still under the
+control of officers, keeping to the defiles; in swarms and batches,
+under the control of nothing but their own emotions. Mostly they
+were hugging cover, from instinct if not from direction, but some
+relied on straight lines of flight and speed of foot for escape.
+Coursing aeroplanes were playing a new part. Their wireless was
+informing the Brown gunners where the masses were thickest. This
+way and that the Brown artillery fire drove retreating bodies,
+prodding them in the back with the fearful shepherdry of their
+shells. Officers' swords flashed in the faces of the bolters or in
+holding rear-guards to their work. Officers and orderlies were
+galloping hither and thither with messages, in want of wires.
+Commanders had been told to hold, but how and where to hold? They
+saw neighboring regiments and brigades going and they had to go.
+The machine, the complicated modern war machine, was broken; the
+machine, with its nerves of intelligence cut, became a thing of
+disconnected parts, each part working out its own salvation.
+Authority ceased to be that of the bureau and army lists. It was
+that of units racked by hardship, acting on the hour's demand.</p>
+<p>Gorged was the pass road, overflowing with the struggling tumult
+of men and vehicles. Self-preservation breaking the bonds of
+discipline was in the ascendant, and it sought the highway, even as
+water keeps to the river bed. Like specks on the laboring tide was
+the white of bandages. An ambulance trying to cut out to one side
+was overturned. The frantic chauffeur and hospital-corps orderly
+were working to extricate the wounded from their painful position.
+A gun was overturned against the ambulance. A m&ecirc;l&eacute;e of
+horses and men was forming at the foot of the garden gate in front
+of the narrowing bounds of the road into the town, as a stream
+banks up before a jam of driftwood. The struggle for right of way
+became increasingly wild; the dam of men, horses, and wagons grew.
+A Brown dirigible was descending toward the great target; but on
+closer view its commander forbore, the humane impulse outweighing
+the desire for retribution for colleagues in camp and mess who had
+gone down in a holocaust in the aerial battles of the night.</p>
+<p>Thus far the flight had seemed in the face of an unseen pursuer,
+like that of an army fleeing from some power visible to itself but
+not to Marta. Now she began to observe the flashes of rifles from
+the crests that the rear-guards of the Grays were deserting; then
+the rush of the Brown skirmish line to close quarters. Her glance
+pausing long on no detail, so active the landscape with its swarms
+and tumult, returned to the scene in front of the house. A Gray
+field-battery, cutting out to one side of the road, knocking over
+flimsier vehicles and wounded who got in the way, careening, its
+drivers cursing and officers shouting, galloped out in the open
+field and unlimbered to support a regiment of infantry that was
+hastily intrenching as a point to steady the retreating masses on
+its front and protect them in their flight when they had
+passed.</p>
+<p>Marta saw how desperately the gunners worked; she could feel
+their fatigue. Nature had sunk in her heart a partisanship for the
+under dog. She who had stood for the three against five, now stood
+for the shaken, bewildered five in the cockpit under the fire of
+the three. Her sympathies went out to every beaten, weary Gray
+soldier. What was the difference between a Gray and a Brown?
+Weren't they both made of flesh and bone and blood and nerves?</p>
+<p>Under the awful spell of the panorama, she did not see
+Westerling, who had stopped only a few feet distant with his aide
+and his valet, nor did he notice her as the tumult glazed his eyes.
+He was as an artist who looks on the ribbons of the canvas of his
+painting, or the sculptor on the fragments of his statue. Worse
+still, with no faith to give him fortitude except the
+materialistic, he saw the altar of his god of military efficiency
+in ruins. He who had not allowed the word retreat to enter his
+lexicon now saw a rout. He had laughed at reserve armies in last
+night's feverish defiance, at Turcas's advocacy of a slower and
+surer method of attack. In those hours of smiting at a wall with
+his fists and forehead, in denial of all the truth so clear to
+average military logic, if he had only given a few conventional
+directions all this disorder would have been avoided. His army
+could have fallen back in orderly fashion to their own range. The
+machine out of order, he had attempted no repair; he had allowed it
+to thrash itself to pieces.</p>
+<p>The splinters of its d&eacute;bris&mdash;steel
+splinters&mdash;were lacerating his brain. He had a sense that
+madness was coming and some instinct of self-preservation made the
+whole scene grow misty, as he tried to resolve it out of existence
+in the desire for some one object which was not his guns and his
+men in demoralization. A bit of pink caught his eye&mdash;the pink
+of a dress, a little girl's dress, down there at the edge of the
+garden by the road, at the same moment that some guns of the
+Browns, in a new position, opened on an inviting target. Over her
+head was a crack and a blue tongue of smoke whipped out of nothing;
+while a shower of shrapnel bullets made spurts of dust around her.
+She started to run toward the terrace steps and another burst made
+her run in the opposite direction, while she looked about in a
+paralysis of fear and then threw herself on her face.</p>
+<p>"My God! That little girl&mdash;there&mdash;there!" Westerling
+exclaimed distractedly.</p>
+<p>"Clarissa! Clarissa!" cried Marta, seeing the child for the
+first time.</p>
+<p>She started precipitately to the rescue, but a hand on her arm
+arrested her and she turned to see Hugo Mallin bound past her down
+the slope. Still remaining on the premises under guard while
+Westerling had neglected to dispose of the case, he had the run of
+the grounds that morning while the staff was feverishly preparing
+for departure.</p>
+<p>Marta watched him leaping from terrace to terrace. Before he had
+reached Clarissa worse than shrapnel bursts happened. The spatter
+of the fragments and bullets falling on either side of the road
+whipped the edges of the struggling human jam inward. In the midst
+of this a percussion shell struck, bursting on contact with the
+road and spreading its own grist of death and the stones of the
+road in a fan-shaped, mowing swath. Legs and bodies were thrown out
+as if driven centrifugally by a powerful breath, with Hugo lost in
+the smoke and dust of the weaving mass. He came out of it bearing
+Clarissa in his arms, up the terrace steps. To Marta, this was an
+isolated deed of saving life, of mercy in the midst of merciless
+slaughter; a parallel to that of Stransky bringing in Grandfather
+Fragini pickaback.</p>
+<p>"Big fireworks!" said Clarissa Eileen as Hugo set her down in
+front of Marta, whose heart was in her eyes speaking its
+gratitude.</p>
+<p>The artillery's maceration of the human jam suddenly ceased;
+perhaps because the gunners had seen the Red Cross flag which a
+doctor had the presence of mind to wave. Westerling turned from a
+sight worse to him than the killing&mdash;that of the flowing
+retreat along the road pressing frantically over the dead and
+wounded in growing disorder for the cover of the town, and found
+himself face to face with the mask-like features of that malingerer
+who had told him on the veranda that the Grays could not win. Gall
+flooded his brain. In Hugo he recognized something kindred to the
+spirit that had set his army at flight, something tangible and
+personified; and through a mist of rage he saw Hugo
+smiling&mdash;smiling as he had at times at the veranda
+court&mdash;and saluting him as a superior officer.</p>
+<p>"Now I am going to fight," said Hugo, "if they try to cross the
+white posts; to fight with all the skill and courage I can command.
+But not till then. They are still in their own country and we are
+not in ours. Then they, in the wrong, will attack and we, in the
+right, will defend&mdash;and, God with us, we shall win."</p>
+<p>Thus a second time he had given to the prayer of Marta's
+children the life of action. She could imagine how steadfastly and
+exaltedly he would face the invader.</p>
+<p>"Thank you, Miss Galland," he said. "And say good-by to your
+mother and Minna for me."</p>
+<p>He was gone, without waiting for any reply, this stranger whom
+her part had not permitted to know well. A thousand words striving
+for utterance choked her as she watched him pass out of sight.
+Westerling was regarding her with a stare which fixed itself first
+on one thing and then on another in dull misery. Near by were
+Bellini, the chief of intelligence, and a subaltern who had arrived
+only a minute before. The subaltern was dust-covered. He seemed to
+have come in from a hard ride. Both were watching Marta, as if
+waiting for her to speak. She met Westerling's look steadily, her
+eyes dark and still and in his the reflection of the vague
+realization of more than he had guessed in her relations with
+Hugo.</p>
+<p>"Well," she breathed to Westerling, "the war goes on!"</p>
+<p>"That's it! That's the voice!" exclaimed the subaltern in an
+explosion of recognition.</p>
+<p>A short, sharp laugh of irony broke from Bellini; the laugh of
+one whose suspicions are confirmed in the mixture of the sublime
+and the ridiculous. Marta looked around at the interruption, alert,
+on guard.</p>
+<p>"You seem amused," she remarked curiously.</p>
+<p>"No, but you must have been," replied Bellini hoarsely. "Early
+this morning, not far from the castle, this young officer found in
+the crater made by a ten-inch shell a wire that ran in a conduit
+underground. The wire was intact. He tapped it. He heard a voice
+thanking some one for her part in the victory, and it seems that
+the woman's voice that answered is yours, Miss Galland. So, General
+Westerling, the leak in information was over this wire from our
+staff into the Browns' headquarters, as Bouchard believed and as I
+came to believe."</p>
+<p>So long had Marta expected this moment of exposure that it
+brought no shock. Her spirit had undergone many subtle rehearsals
+for the occasion.</p>
+<p>"Yes, that is true," she heard herself saying, a little
+distantly, but very quietly and naturally.</p>
+<p>Westerling fell back as from a blow in the face. His breath came
+hard at first, like one being strangled. Then it sank deep in his
+chest and his eyes were bloodshot, as a bull's in his final effort
+against the matador. He raised a quivering, clenched fist and took
+a step nearer her.</p>
+<p>But far from flinching, Marta seemed to be greeting the blow, as
+if she admitted his right to strike. She was without any sign of
+triumph and with every sign of relief. Lying was at an end. She
+could be truthful.</p>
+<p>"Do you recall what I said in the reception-room at the hotel?"
+she asked.</p>
+<p>The question sent a flash into a hidden chamber of his mind. Now
+the only thing he could remember of that interview was the one
+remark which hitherto he had never included in his recollection of
+it.</p>
+<p>"You said I could not win." He drew out the words painfully.</p>
+<p>"And I pleaded with your selfishness&mdash;the only appeal to be
+made to you," she continued, "to prevent war, which you could have
+done. When you said that you brought on this war to gratify your
+ambition, I chose to be one of the weapons of war; I chose, when
+driven to the wall, to be true to that part of my children's oath
+that made an exception of the burglar, the highwayman, and the
+invader. In war you use deceit and treachery, under the pleasanter
+names of tactics and strategy, to draw men to their death in traps,
+in order to increase the amount of your killing. It was strategy,
+tactics, man[oe]uvres&mdash;give it any fine word you
+please&mdash;that hideous and shameless part which I played. With
+fire I fought fire. I fought for civilization, for my home, with
+the only means I had against the wickedness of a victory of
+conquest&mdash;the precedent of it in this age&mdash;a victory
+which should glorify such trickery as you practised on your
+people."</p>
+<p>"I should like to shoot you dead!" cried Bellini.</p>
+<p>"No doubt. I like your honesty in saying so," said Marta. "Why
+not? The business of war is murder; and as I have engaged in it I
+can claim no exception. And why shouldn't women engage in it? Why
+should they be excepted from the sport when they pay so many of the
+costs? It's easy to die and easy to kill. The part you force on
+women is much harder. By killing me you admit me to full
+equality."</p>
+<p>"You&mdash;you&mdash;" But Bellini had no adequate word for her,
+and his anger softened into a kind of admiration of her, of envy,
+perhaps, that he had had no such adjutant. It hardened again as he
+looked Westerling up and down, before turning to leave without a
+salute or even a direct word.</p>
+<p>"And you let me make love to you!" Westerling said in a dazed,
+groping monotone to Marta.</p>
+<p>Such a wreck was he of his former self that she found it amazing
+that she could not pity him. Yet she might have pitied him had he
+plunged into the fight; had he tried to rally one of the broken
+regiments; had he been able to forget himself.</p>
+<p>"Rather, you made love to yourself through me," she answered,
+not harshly, not even emphatically, but merely as a statement of
+passionless fact. "If you dared to endure what you ordered others
+to endure for the sake of your ambition; if&mdash;"</p>
+<p>She was interrupted by a sharp zip in the air. Westerling dodged
+and looked about wildly.</p>
+<p>"What is that?" he asked. "What?"</p>
+<p>Five or six zips followed like a charge of wasps flying at a
+speed that made them invisible. Marta felt a brush of air past her
+cheek and Westerling went chalky white. It was the first time he
+had been under fire. But these bullets were only strays. No more
+came.</p>
+<p>"Come, general, let us be going!" urged the aide, touching his
+chief on the arm.</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes!" said Westerling hurriedly.</p>
+<p>Fran&ccedil;ois, who had picked up the coat that had fallen from
+Westerling's shoulders with his start at the buzzing, held it while
+his master thrust his hands through the sleeves.</p>
+<p>"And this is wiser," said the aide, unfastening the detachable
+insignia of rank from the shoulders of the greatcoat. "It's wiser,
+too, that we walk," he added.</p>
+<p>"Walk? But my car!" exclaimed Westerling petulantly.</p>
+<p>"I'm afraid that the car could not get through the press in the
+town," was the reply. "Walking is safer."</p>
+<p>The absence in him of that quality which is the soldier's real
+glory, the picture of this deserted leader, this god of a machine
+who had been crushed by his machine, his very lack of stoicism or
+courage&mdash;all this suddenly appealed to Marta's quick
+sympathies. They had once drunk tea together.</p>
+<p>"Oh, it was not personal! I did not think of myself as a person
+or of you as one&mdash;only of principles and of thousands of
+others&mdash;to end the killing&mdash;to save our country to its
+people! Oh, I'm sorry and, personally, I'm
+horrible&mdash;horrible!" she called after him in a broken,
+quavering gust of words which he heard confusedly in tragic
+mockery.</p>
+<p>He made no answer; he did not even look around. Head bowed and
+hardly seeing the path, he permitted the aide to choose the way,
+which lay across the boundary of the Galland estate.</p>
+<p>They had passed the stumps of the linden-trees and were in the
+vacant lot on the other side, when something white fluttered toward
+him, rustled by the breeze that carried it, and lay still almost at
+his feet. He saw his own picture on the front page of a newspaper,
+with the caption, "His Excellency, Field-Marshal Hedworth
+Westerling, Chief of Staff of Our Victorious Army." He stared at
+the picture and the picture stared at him as if they knew not each
+other. A racking shudder swept through him. He turned his face with
+a kind of resolution, appealing in its starkness, toward the battle
+and his glance rested on the battery and the shattered regiment of
+infantry in the fields opposite the Galland gate, under a canopy of
+shrapnel smoke, bravely holding their ground.</p>
+<p>"I should be there. That is the place for me!" he exclaimed with
+a trace of his old forcefulness.</p>
+<p>The aide's lips parted as if to speak in protest, but they
+closed in silence, while a glance of deep human understanding,
+dissolving the barriers of caste, passed between him and the valet,
+eloquent of their approval and their loyal readiness to share the
+fate of their fallen chief.</p>
+<p>The canopy of shrapnel smoke grew thicker; the infantry began to
+break.</p>
+<p>"But, no!" said Westerling. "The place for a chief of staff is
+at his headquarters."</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XLV' id="XLV"></a>
+<h2>XLV</h2>
+<h3>THE RETREAT</h3>
+<br>
+<p>Marta remained where Westerling had left her, rooted to the
+ground by the monstrous spell of the developing panorama of
+seemingly limitless movement. With each passing minute there must
+be a hundred acts of heroism which, if isolated in the glare of a
+day's news, would make the public thrill. At the outset of the war
+she had seen the Browns, as part of a preconceived plan, in
+cohesive rear-guard resistance, with every detail of personal
+bravery a utilized factor of organized purpose. Now she saw
+defence, inchoate and fragmentary, each part acting for itself, all
+deeds of personal bravery lost in a swirl of disorganization. That
+was the pity of it, the helplessness of engineers and of levers
+when the machine was broken; the warning of it to those who
+undertake war lightly.</p>
+<p>The Browns' rifle flashes kept on steadily weaving their way
+down the slopes, their reserves pressing close on the heels of the
+skirmishers in greedy swarms. A heavy column of Brown infantry was
+swinging in toward the myriad-legged, writhing gray caterpillar on
+the pass road and many field-batteries were trotting along a
+parallel road. Their plan developed suddenly when a swath of
+gun-fire was laid across the pass road at the mouth of the defile,
+as much as to say: "Here we make a gate of death!" At the same time
+the head of the Brown infantry column flashed its bayonets over the
+crest of a hill toward the point where the shells were bursting.
+These men minded not the desperate, scattered rifle-fire into their
+ranks. Before their eyes was the prize of a panic that grew with
+their approach. Kinks were out of legs stiffened by long watches.
+The hot breath of pursuit was in their nostrils, the fever of
+victory in their blood.</p>
+<p>In the defile, the impulse of one Gray straggler, who shook a
+handkerchief aloft in fatalistic submission to the inevitable,
+became the impulse of all. Soon a thousand white signals of
+surrender were blossoming. As the firing abruptly ceased, Marta
+heard the faint roar of the mighty huzzas of the hunters over the
+size of their bag.</p>
+<p>In the area visible to Marta was the strife of forces larger
+than the largest that Napoleon ever led in battle; as large as
+fought the decisive battle in the last war of the Grays. But here
+was only a section of the raging whole from frontier end to
+frontier end. The immensity of it! All the young manhood of a
+nation employed! Marta ceased to see any particular incident of the
+scene. All was confused in a red mist&mdash;red as blood. She, the
+one being in that landscape who was a detached observer, felt
+herself condemned to watch the war go on forever.</p>
+<p>An edge of the curtain of mist lifted. Sight and mind and soul
+concentrated on the nearest horror. She saw the whirlpool at the
+foot of the garden, horses and men in a straggle among dead and
+wounded, which had grown fiercer now that the portion of the
+retreat that had not been cut off in the defile pressed forward the
+more madly. She had thought of herself as ashes; as an immovable
+creature of flayed nerves, incapable of raising her hand to change
+the march of events. But the misery that she saw intimately, almost
+within stone's throw of her door, broke the spell with its appeal.
+The hectic energy of battle speeded her steps in the blessed
+oblivion of action.</p>
+<p>Some doctors of different regiments thrown together in the havoc
+of remnants of many organizations, with the help of hospital-corps
+men, were trying to extricate the wounded from among the dead. They
+heard a woman's voice and saw a woman's face. They did not wonder
+at her presence, for there was nothing left in the world for them
+to wonder at. Had an imp from hell or an angel from heaven
+appeared, or a shower of diamonds fallen from the sky, they would
+not have been surprised. Their duty was clear; there was work of
+their kind to do, endless work. Units of the broken machine, in the
+instinct of their calling they struggled with the duty nearest at
+hand.</p>
+<p>"What do you need? What can I do?" Marta asked.</p>
+<p>"Rest, shelter, safety for these poor fellows," answered one of
+the doctors.</p>
+<p>"There is the house&mdash;our house!" said Marta.</p>
+<p>"My God! Aren't you men?" bellowed an officer. "Get away from
+the road! Come out here! Form line! You&mdash;you; I mean you!"</p>
+<p>"You who can walk&mdash;you who aren't hurt, you cowards, give
+us a hand with the wounded!" shouted another doctor.</p>
+<p>The soldiers were deaf to commands, but they heard a feminine
+voice above the oaths and groans and heavy breathing and rustle of
+pressing bodies and thrusting arms; a feminine voice, clear and
+steadying in that orgy of male ferocity. It was like a chemical
+precipitate clearing muddy water. Their wild glances saw a woman's
+features in exaltation and in her eyes something as definite as the
+fire of command. She was shaming them for their unmanliness;
+shaming their panic&mdash;the foolish panic at a theatre
+exit&mdash;and giving orders as if that were her part and theirs
+was to obey; a woman to soldiers, the weak sex to the strong. They
+did obey, under the spell of the amazing fact of her presence, in
+the relief of having some simple human purpose to cling to.</p>
+<p>After the work was begun they needed no urging to carry the
+wounded up the terrace steps; and men who had knocked down and
+trampled on the wounded were gentle with them now, under the
+guidance of better impulses. How could they falter directed by a
+woman unmindful of occasional shells and bullet whistles? They
+begged her to go back to the house; this was no place for her.</p>
+<p>But Marta did not want safety. Danger was sweet; it was
+expiation. She was helping, actually helping; that was enough. She
+envied the peaceful dead&mdash;they had no nightmares&mdash;as she
+aided the doctors in separating the bodies that were still
+breathing from those that were not; and she steeled herself against
+every ghastly sight save one, that of a man lying with his legs
+pinned under a wagon body. His jaw had been shot away. Slowly he
+was bleeding to death, but he did not realize it. He realized
+nothing in his delirium except the nature of his wound. He was
+dipping his finger in the cavity and, dab by dab, writing "Kill
+me!" on the wagon body. It sent reeling waves of red before her
+eyes. Then a shell burst near her and a doctor cried out:</p>
+<p>"She's hit!"</p>
+<p>But Marta did not hear him. She heard only the dreadful crack of
+the splitting shrapnel jacket. She had a sense of falling, and that
+was all.</p>
+<p>The next that she knew she was in a long chair on the veranda
+and the vague shadows bending over her gradually identified
+themselves as her mother and Minna.</p>
+<p>"I remember when you were telling of the last war that you
+didn't swoon at the sight of the wounded, mother," Marta
+whispered.</p>
+<p>"But I was not wounded," replied Mrs Galland.</p>
+<p>Marta ceased to be only a consciousness swimming in a haze. With
+the return of her faculties, she noticed that both her mother and
+Minna were looking significantly at her forearm; so she looked at
+it, too. It was bandaged.</p>
+<p>"A cut from a shrapnel fragment," said a doctor. "Not deep," he
+added.</p>
+<p>"Do I get an iron cross?" she asked, smiling faintly. It was
+rather pleasant to be alive.</p>
+<p>"All the crosses&mdash;iron and bronze and silver and gold!" he
+replied.</p>
+<p>"You forgot platinum," she said almost playfully, as she found
+nerves, muscles, and bones intact after that drop over a precipice
+into a black chasm. It was like the Marta of the days before she
+had undertaken to reform all creation, her mother was thinking.
+"Did I help any?" she asked seriously.</p>
+<p>"Well, I should say so!" declared the doctor. "I should say so!"
+he repeated. "You did the whole business down there by the
+gate."</p>
+<p>"Yes, the whole business! I brought it all on&mdash;all!
+I&mdash;" She flung a wild gesture at the landscape and then buried
+her face in her hands. "Yes, I did the whole business I&mdash;I
+played, smiled, lied! That awful sight&mdash;and he might not have
+been writing 'kill me' if I&mdash;"</p>
+<p>The doctor grasped her shoulders to keep her from rising. He
+spoke the first soothing words that came to mind. There was another
+shudder, an effort at control, and her hands dropped and she was
+looking up with a dull steadiness.</p>
+<p>"I'm not going mad!" she exclaimed. "What happened to&mdash;to
+that man who was pleading for death? Did any one who had been
+engaged in killing men who wanted to live kill the one who wanted
+to die?"</p>
+<p>"The shell burst that wounded you finished him," said the
+doctor.</p>
+<p>"Which, of course, was quite according to the tenets of
+civilization, which wouldn't have allowed it to be done as an open
+act of mercy!" said Marta. "But that is only satire. It is of no
+service," she added, rising to a sitting posture to look
+around.</p>
+<p>The struggle by the gate was over. All the uninjured had made
+good their escape. A Red Cross flag floated above the wounded and
+the d&eacute;bris of overturned wagons. Brown skirmishers were
+descending the near-by slopes and crossing the path of the cavalry
+charge. Signal-corps men were spinning out their wires. A regiment
+of guns were being emplaced behind a foot-hill. A returning Brown
+dirigible swept over the town. All firing except occasional
+scattered shots had ceased in the immediate vicinity, though in the
+distance could be heard the snarl of the firmer resistance that the
+Grays were making at some other point. The Galland house, for the
+time being, was isolated&mdash;in possession of neither side.</p>
+<p>"Isn't there something else I can do to help with the wounded?"
+Marta asked. She longed for action in order to escape her
+thoughts.</p>
+<p>"You've had a terrible shock&mdash;when you are stronger," said
+the doctor.</p>
+<p>"When you have had something to eat and drink," observed the
+practical Minna authoritatively.</p>
+<p>Marta would not have the food brought to her. She insisted that
+she was strong enough to accompany Minna to the tower. While Minna
+urged mouthfuls down Marta's dry throat as she sat outside the door
+of the sitting-room with her mother a number of weary,
+dust-streaked faces, with feverish energy in their eyes, peered
+over the hedge that bounded the garden on the side toward the pass.
+These scout skirmishers of Stransky's men of the 53d Regiment of
+the Browns made beckoning gestures as to a crowd, before they
+sprang over the hedge and ran swiftly, watchfully, toward the
+linden stumps, closely followed by their comrades. Soon the whole
+garden was overrun by the lean, businesslike fellows, their glances
+all ferret-like to the front.</p>
+<p>"Look, Minna!" exclaimed Marta. "The giant who carried the old
+man in pickaback the first night of the war!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, the bold impudence of him!" said Minna. "As if there was
+nothing that could stand in his way and what he wanted he would
+have!"</p>
+<p>But Minna was flushing as she spoke. The flush dissipated and
+she drew up her chin when Stransky, looking around, recognized her
+with a merry, confident wave of his hand.</p>
+<p>"See, he's a captain and he wears an iron cross!" said Marta as
+Stransky hastened toward them.</p>
+<p>"He acts like it!" assented Minna grudgingly.</p>
+<p>Eager, leviathan, his cap doffed with a sweeping gesture as he
+made a low bow, Stransky was the very spirit of retributive victory
+returning to claim the ground that he had lost.</p>
+<p>"Well, this is like getting home again!" he cried.</p>
+<p>"So I see!" said Minna equivocally.</p>
+<p>Stransky drew his eyes together, sighting them on the bridge of
+his nose thoughtfully at this dubious reception.</p>
+<p>"I came back for the chance to kiss a good woman's hand," he
+observed with a profound awkwardness and looking at Minna's hand.
+"Your hand!" he added, the cast in his eyes straightening as he
+looked directly at her appealingly.</p>
+<p>She extended her finger-tips and he pressed his lips to them.
+Then she drew back a step, a trifle pale, her eyes sad and
+questioning, more than ever Madonna-like, and curled her arm around
+little Clarissa Eileen, who had stolen to her mother's side.</p>
+<p>"What is that?" asked Clarissa Eileen, pointing to the cross on
+Stransky's breast.</p>
+<p>"That," observed Stransky deliberately, "is a little piece of
+metal that I got for an inspiration of manhood. It doesn't cost the
+price of a day's rations, but it's one of the things which money
+can't buy&mdash;not yet&mdash;in this commercial age. One of those
+institutions of barbarism that we anarchists call government gave
+it to me, and I'll never part with it!"</p>
+<p>"Because he was a brave soldier, Clarissa," explained Marta in
+simpler terms. "Because he was ready to die for his country."</p>
+<p>"And for your mother!" put in Stransky, seizing Clarissa in his
+great hands and lifting her lightly to the level of his face. "Oh,
+I've got stories," he said to her, "a soldier-man's stories, to
+tell you, young lady, one of these days&mdash;and such
+stories!"</p>
+<p>He crossed his eyes over his big nose in a fashion that made
+Clarissa clap her hands and burst into a peal of laughter.</p>
+<p>"You're an awfully funny man!" she declared as Stransky set her
+down.</p>
+<p>"So your mother thinks," said Stransky, blinking at Minna, who
+had indulged in a smile which his remark promptly ironed out.</p>
+<p>This irrepressible soldier, given so much as an inch, would be
+demanding a province. But erasing a smile is not destroying the
+fact of it. Stransky took heart for the charge on seeing a breach
+in the enemy's lines.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I was fighting for you!" he burst out to Minna. "When the
+other fellows were reading letters from their sweethearts I was
+imagining letters from you. I even wrote out some and posted them
+from one pocket to another, in place of the regular mails."</p>
+<p>"What did you say in those letters?" asked Marta.</p>
+<p>"Why, you're big and awkward and cross-eyed, Stransky, but
+you've a way with you, and maybe&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Humph!" sniffed Minna.</p>
+<p>"I kept seeing the way you looked when you belted me one in the
+face," he went on unabashed to Minna, "and knocked any anarchism
+out of me that was left after the shell burst. I kept seeing your
+face in my last glimpse when the Grays made me run for it from your
+kitchen door before I had half a chance for the oration crying for
+voice. You were in my dreams! You were in battle with me!"</p>
+<p>"This sounds like a disordered mind," observed Minna. "I've
+heard men talk that way before."</p>
+<p>"Oh, I have talked that way to other women myself!" said
+Stransky.</p>
+<p>"Yes," said Minna bitterly. His candor was rather
+unexpected.</p>
+<p>"I have talked to others in passing on the high road," he
+continued. "But never after a woman had struck me in the face. That
+blow sank deep&mdash;deep&mdash;deep as what Lanstron said when I
+revolted on the march. I say it to you with this"&mdash;he touched
+the cross&mdash;"on my breast. And I'm not going to give you up.
+It's a big world. There's room in it for a place for you after the
+war is over and I'm going to make the place. Yes, I've found
+myself. I've found how to lead men. My home isn't to be in the
+hedgerows any more. It's to be where you are. You and I, whom
+society gave a kick, will make society give us a place!" He was
+eloquent in his strength; eloquent in the fire of resolution
+blazing from his eyes. "And I'll be back again," he concluded. "You
+can't shake me. I'll camp on your door-step. But now I've got to
+look after my company. Good-by till I'm back&mdash;back to stay!
+Good-by, little daughter!" he added with a wave of his hand to
+Clarissa as he turned to go. "Maybe we shall have our own
+automobile some day. It's no stranger than what's been happening to
+me since the war began."</p>
+<p>"If you don't marry him, Minna, I'll&mdash;I'll&mdash;" Mrs.
+Galland could not find words for the fearful thing that she would
+do.</p>
+<p>"Marry him! I have only met him three times for about three
+minutes each time!" protested Minna. She was as rosy as a girl and
+in her confusion she busied herself retying the ribbon on Clarissa
+Eileen's hair. "He called you little daughter!" she said softly to
+the child as she withdrew into the tower.</p>
+<p>"I am glad we didn't send Minna away when misfortune befell
+her," said Mrs. Galland. "You were right about that, Marta, with
+your new ideas. What a treasure she has been!"</p>
+<p>Marta was scarcely hearing her mother; certainly not finding any
+credit for herself in the remark. She was thinking what a simple,
+what a glorious thing was a love such as Stransky's and Minna's:
+the mating of a man and a woman whose brains were not
+oversensitized by too complicated mentality; of a man and a woman
+direct and sincere, primarily and clearly a man and a woman. Such
+happiness could never be for her now; for her who had let a man
+make love to her for his own undoing.</p>
+<p>The skirmishers having halted beyond the linden stumps, the
+reserves were stacking their rifles and dropping to rest in the
+garden. The sight of the uniforms of the deliverers, of her own
+people, stirred Mrs. Galland to unwonted activity. She moved here
+and there among them with smiles of mothering pride. She told them
+how brave they were; how her husband had been a colonel of Hussars
+in the last war. They must be tired and hungry. She hurried in to
+Minna, and together they emptied the larder of everything, even to
+the lumps of sugar, which were impartially bestowed.</p>
+<p>But Marta remained in the chair by the doorway of the tower,
+weak and listless. She was weary of the sight of uniforms and
+bayonets. In the dreary opaqueness of her mind flickered one tiny,
+bright light as through a blanket; that she herself had been in
+danger. She had been under fire. She had not merely sent men to
+death; she had been in death's company.</p>
+<p>Now her lashes were closed; again they opened slightly as her
+gaze roved the semicircle of the horizon. A mounted officer and his
+orderly galloping across the fields to the pass road caught her
+desultory attention and held it, for they formed the most impetuous
+object on the landscape. When the officer alighted at the foot of
+the garden and tossed his reins to the orderly, she detected
+something familiar about him. He leaped the garden wall at a bound
+and, half running, came toward the tower. Not until he lifted his
+cap and waved it did she associate this lithe, dapper artillerist
+with a stooped old gardener in blue blouse and torn straw hat who
+had once shuffled among the flowers at her service.</p>
+<p>"Hello! Hello!" he shouted in clarion greeting at sight of her.
+"Hello, my successor!"</p>
+<p>Only in the whiteness of his hair was he like the old Feller.
+His tone, the boyish sparkle of his black eyes, those full,
+expressive lips playing over the brilliant teeth, his easy grace,
+his quick and telling gestures&mdash;they were of the Feller of
+cadet days. Something in his look as he stopped in front of her
+startled Marta. Suddenly he bent over and drew down his face, with
+dropping underlip.</p>
+<p>"I'm deaf&mdash;stone deaf, if you please!" he wheezed in senile
+fashion.</p>
+<p>She had to laugh and he laughed, too, with the ringing tone of
+youth that made him seem younger than his years.</p>
+<p>"Not a gardener&mdash;a colonel of artillery, in the uniform,
+under the flag again, thanks to you!" he cried. "An officer once
+more!"</p>
+<p>"I'm glad!" she exclaimed. Here was one thing more to the credit
+of war.</p>
+<p>"Thanks to you, instead of being shot as a spy&mdash;thanks to
+you!" More than the emotion of the brimming gratitude of his heart
+shone through his mobile features.</p>
+<p>"It was your choice; you improved it. You fulfilled a faith that
+I had in you," she said.</p>
+<p>"Faith in me! That is the finest tribute of all&mdash;better
+than this, better than this!" He touched the iron cross on his coat
+as Stransky had to Minna.</p>
+<p>"And I took your place," said Marta with a dull, slow
+emphasis.</p>
+<p>Yes, he did owe much to her, she was thinking. In his place she
+had lied; his part she had played in shame and no future act, she
+felt, could ever expiate it. The teacher of peace, she had become
+the partisan of war in wicked cunning.</p>
+<p>He guessed nothing of what lay behind her words. He had
+forgotten her children's school.</p>
+<p>"And did my work better than I could! You are wonderful,
+wonderful!" He was aglow with admiration, with awe, with
+adoration.</p>
+<p>She smiled faintly, bitterly, while he burst into a flood of
+talk.</p>
+<p>"I was back with the guns you had given me when I heard that you
+were taking my place. Then I thought, can I be worthy of
+this&mdash;of what you have done for me, giving me back my own
+world, your world? I vowed I would be worthy&mdash;worthy of you.
+Heavens! How I made the guns play&mdash;bang-bang-bang!" He cupped
+his bands over his eyes as an imaginary range-finder, sweeping the
+field. "Oh, they are beautiful guns, these new models! With a
+battalion I won a regiment. I asked Lanny to tell you; did he?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, and also of the iron cross."</p>
+<p>"A fine bit of metal, the cross, and they have not been giving
+them too promiscuously, either," said Feller. "But they're not
+gun-metal! That is the real metal. It was my guns that closed the
+gate to the pass," he went on, swept by the flood of enthusiasm. "I
+didn't open fire till I could concentrate so as to make a solidly
+locked gate. I tell you, the guns are the thing! You ought to have
+seen that retreat curl up on itself. And where the shells struck on
+the hard road&mdash;phew! They lifted the Grays upward to meet
+shrapnel pounding them from the sky! We could have torn the whole
+Column to pieces if they hadn't surrendered. What a bag of rifles
+and guns and stores is going to our capital! Oh, our friends the
+Grays were a little too fast! They didn't know what the guns meant
+in defence. The guns&mdash;they are back to their old place of
+glory! They rule!"</p>
+<p>"Was it your guns that fired into the m&ecirc;l&eacute;e there
+by the gate?" Marta asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes. I saw that soft target early. They put up a Red Cross flag
+at first, but I soon realized that it wasn't any dressing station;
+only stragglers; only the kind that run away without orders. So I
+let them have it, for that's the law of war, and the way they would
+give it to us and did, more than once. But I took care that no
+shots were fired at the house, though if it had not been your house
+I'd have sent a shell or two on the chance that some of the Gray
+staff might still be there. Then, after the surrender, I kept
+spanking that lot with intermittent shells till I was sure the Red
+Cross flag was justified."</p>
+<p>"The fire was very accurate, as I happen to know, for it wounded
+me," said Marta.</p>
+<p>So intent had he been in talking to his audience, to her eyes,
+that now for the first time he noticed the bandage on her forearm.
+His impressionable features were as struck with alarm and horror at
+sight of the tiny red spot as if she had been in danger of
+immediate death.</p>
+<p>"You&mdash;you were down by the road?" he gasped. "My guns were
+firing at you? Why&mdash;how?"</p>
+<p>"Helping with the wounded."</p>
+<p>"The Gray wounded?"</p>
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+<p>"Of course, you would&mdash;with any wounded!" he cried.
+"Splendid! Like you! It is not bad? It does not pain you?"</p>
+<p>He bent over the red spot, his lips very near it and twitching,
+all his volatile force melting into solicitude and his voice taut,
+as if he himself were suffering the anguish of a dozen wounds.</p>
+<p>"Only a scratch. Don't worry about it!" she assured him
+soothingly, with a peculiar smile.</p>
+<p>Now he made a gesture of amazement, catching at another thought
+that darted as a shooting star across his mind.</p>
+<p>"Wonderful&mdash;wounded! Wonderful! Was there ever such a
+woman?" he cried. "No, I knew from the first there never was. The
+minute the way was clear and I could be spared from my guns I came
+to you&mdash;to you! This time I come not as a deaf, cringing,
+watery-eyed old gardener"&mdash;for an instant he was the
+gardener&mdash;"but as one of your world, to which I was bred," and
+his shoulders, rising, filled out his uniform in the grace of the
+commander of men in action. "Destiny has played with us. It sent a
+spy to your garden. It put you in my place. A strange service,
+ours&mdash;yes, destiny is in it!"</p>
+<p>"Yes," she breathed painfully, his suggestion striking deep.</p>
+<p>She was staring at the ground, her face very still. Yes, it was
+he who had started the train of circumstances that had left her
+with a memory more tragic than the one that had whitened his hair.
+His memory was already erased. What could ever erase hers? He had
+begun anew. How could she ever begin anew? The fact of this man
+talking of everything as destiny&mdash;of the slaughter, the
+misery, as destiny&mdash;was the worst mockery of all. Yet he was
+true to himself. His enjoyed facility of fervid expression, his
+boyishness, his gift of making the lived moment the greatest of his
+life, was the very gift she had craved to make her forget her
+yesterdays. Only faintly did she hear his next outburst, until he
+came to the end.</p>
+<p>"I come with the question which I had sealed in my lonely
+heart," he was saying, "while I lived a lie and trimmed rose-bushes
+and hung on your words. You saved me. I fought for you. You were in
+my eyes, in my angers, in my brain as I directed the fire of my
+guns. 'She will be pleased to hear that I am a colonel!' I kept
+thinking. I love you! I love you!"</p>
+<p>Marta started up from her chair, her eyes moist and open wide,
+amazed, but growing kind and troubled. Had she been guilty of
+giving him hope? Was there something in her that had led him on, a
+shame that came natural to her since she had let Westerling proceed
+with his love? Her guilt in Feller's case was worse than in
+Westerling's. A thousand Westerlings were not worth one Feller. And
+he had been near her, near as a comrade, in imagination, with his
+ready suggestions of how to play her part in its most exacting
+moments! While he stood, the picture of the eager, impatient lover
+trembling for an answer that seemed to mean heaven or perdition for
+him, the kindness that went with the trouble in her eyes warmed to
+fondness, as she laid her fingers on his shoulder.</p>
+<p>"You would want me to love you, wouldn't you?" she asked gently.
+"And if I cannot? Yes, if I can neither act nor play at love, so
+real must love be to me?"</p>
+<p>He turned miserable, with eyes seeming to sink into his head,
+and body to wilt in the dejection of that pitiful, hopeless
+attitude when his secret had been discovered in the tower
+sitting-room.</p>
+<p>"Act! Act!" he murmured.</p>
+<p>"Yes." Her fingers exercised the faintest pressure on his
+shoulder. "Your true love, your one enduring love, is the guns. All
+other loves come and go. To-morrow, if not, next day, in this big,
+throbbing world, with your future assured, as you lived other great
+moments you would look back on this moment as another part that you
+had acted&mdash;and so beautifully acted."</p>
+<p>"Act! Act!" he repeated, like one who is coming to grip with
+facts.</p>
+<p>For a period he stared at the ground before he reached for the
+hand on his shoulder, which he pressed in both of his, looking
+soberly into her eyes. He smiled; smiled apparently at a memory,
+let her hand drop, and raised his own hands, palms out, in a
+gesture of good-humored comprehension.</p>
+<p>"You know me!" he exclaimed. "But I did it well, didn't I?" he
+asked, after a pause.</p>
+<p>"Beautifully. I repeat, it was convincingly real," she replied,
+laughing in relief.</p>
+<p>"If I hadn't, it would have been most disappointing after all my
+rehearsals," he went on. "Yes, you know me! Why, I might have been
+wanting to break the engagement in a week because I was beginning
+other rehearsals!" He laughed, too, as if relishing the prospect.
+"Yes, I act&mdash;act always, except with the guns. They alone are
+real!" he burst out in joyous fury. "We are going on, I and my
+guns, on to the best yet&mdash;on in the pursuit! Nothing can stop
+us! We shall hit the Grays so fast and hard that they can never get
+their machine in order again. God bless you! Everything that is
+fine in me will always think finely of you! You and Lanny&mdash;two
+fixed stars for me!"</p>
+<p>"Truly!" She was radiant. "Truly?" she asked wistfully.</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes&mdash;a yes as real as the guns!"</p>
+<p>"Then it helps! Oh, how it helps!" she murmured almost
+inaudibly.</p>
+<p>"Good-by! God bless you!" he cried as he started to go, adding
+over his shoulder merrily: "I'll send you a picture post-card from
+the Grays' capital of my guns parked in the palace square."</p>
+<p>She watched him leap the garden wall as lightly as he had come
+and gallop away, an impersonation of the gay, adventurous spirit of
+war, counting death and wounds and hardship as the delights of the
+gamble. Yes, he would follow the Grays, throwing shells in the
+irresponsible joy of tossing confetti in a carnival. Pursuit! Was
+Feller's the sentiment of the army? Were the Browns not to stop at
+the frontier? Were they to change their song to, "Now we have ours
+we shall take some of theirs"? The thought was fresh fuel to the
+live coals that still remained under the ashes.</p>
+<p>A brigade commander and some of his staff-officers near by
+formed a group with faces intent around an operator who was
+attaching his instrument to a field-wire that had just been reeled
+over the hedge. Marta moved toward them, but paused on hearing an
+outburst of jubilant exclamations:</p>
+<p>"A hundred thousand prisoners!"</p>
+<p>"And five hundred guns!"</p>
+<p>"We're closing in on their frontier all along the line!"</p>
+<p>"It's incredible!"</p>
+<p>"But the word is official&mdash;it's right!"</p>
+<p>From mouth to mouth&mdash;a hundred thousand prisoners, five
+hundred guns&mdash;the news was passed in the garden. Eyes dull
+with fatigue began flashing as the soldiers broke into a cheer that
+was not led, a cheer unlike any Marta had heard before. It had the
+high notes of men who were weary, of a terrible exultation, of
+spirit stronger than tired legs and as yet unsatisfied. Other
+exclamations from both officers and men expressed a hunger whetted
+by the taste of one day's victory.</p>
+<p>"We'll go on!"</p>
+<p>"We'll make peace in their capital!"</p>
+<p>"And with an indemnity that will stagger the world!"</p>
+<p>"Nothing is impossible with Lanstron. How he has worked it
+out&mdash;baited them to their own destruction!"</p>
+<p>"A frontier of our own choosing!"</p>
+<p>"On the next range. We will keep all that stretch of plain
+there!"</p>
+<p>"And the river, too!"</p>
+<p>"They shall pay&mdash;pay for attacking us!"</p>
+<p>Pay, pay for the drudgery, the sleepless nights, the dead and
+the wounded&mdash;for our dead and wounded! No matter about theirs!
+The officers were too intent in their elation to observe a young
+woman, standing quite still, her lips a thin line and a deep blaze
+in her eyes as she looked this way and that at the field of faces,
+seeking some dissentient, some partisan of the right. She was
+seeing the truth now; the cold truth, the old truth to which she
+had been untrue when she took Feller's place. There could be no
+choice of sides in war unless you believed in war. One who fought
+for peace must take up arms against all armies. Her part as a spy
+appeared to her clad in a new kind of shame: the desertion of her
+principles.</p>
+<p>Nor did the officers observe a man of thirty-five, wearing the
+cords of the staff and a general's stars, coming around the corner
+of the house. Marta's feverish, roving glance had noted him
+directly he was in sight. His face seemed to be in keeping with the
+other faces, in the ardor of a hunt unfinished; hand in blouse
+pocket, his bearing a little too easy to be conventionally
+military&mdash;the same Lanny.</p>
+<p>She was dimly conscious of surprise not to find him changed,
+perhaps because he was unaccompanied by a retinue or any other
+symbol of his power. He might have been coming to call on a Sunday
+afternoon. In that first glimpse it was difficult to think of him
+as the commander of an army. But that he was, she must not forget.
+She was shaken and trembling; and a mist rose before her, so that
+she did not see him clearly when, with a gesture of relief, he saw
+her.</p>
+<p>"Lanstron!" exclaimed an officer in the first explosive breath
+of amazement on recognizing him; then added: "His Excellency, the
+chief of staff!"</p>
+<p>But the one word, Lanstron, had been enough to thrill all the
+officers into silence and ramrod salutes. Marta noted the deference
+of their glances as they covertly looked him over. On what meat had
+our C&aelig;sar fed that he had grown so great? This was the man
+who had pleaded with her to allow a spy in her garden; for whom she
+herself had turned spy. To-morrow his name would be in the
+head-lines of every newspaper in the world. His portrait would
+become as familiar to the eyes of the world as that of the
+best-advertised of kings. He was the conqueror whose commonplace
+sayings would be the sparks of genius because the gamble of war had
+gone his way. He had grown so great by sending shells into the
+stricken eddy at the foot of the garden and driving punishing
+columns against the retreating masses in the defile. The god in the
+car and of the machine, with his quiet manner, his intellectual
+features; this one-time friend, more subtle in pursuit of the same
+ambitions than the blind egoism of Westerling! These officers and
+men and all officers and men and herself were pawns of his plans
+and his will. Yes, even herself. Had he stopped with the repulse of
+the enemy? No. Would he stop now? No. Her disillusion was complete.
+She knew the truth; she felt it as steel stiffening against him and
+against every softer impulse of her own.</p>
+<p>"I wanted a glimpse of the front as well as the rear," Lanstron
+remarked in explanation of his presence to the general of brigade
+as he passed on toward Marta, who was thinking that she, at least,
+was not in awe of him; she, at least, saw clearly and truly his
+part.</p>
+<p>"Marta! Marta!"</p>
+<p>Lanstron's voice was tremulous, as if he were in awe of her,
+while he drank in the fact that she was there before him at arms'
+length, safe, alive. She did not offer her hand in greeting. She
+was incapable of any movement, such was her emotion; and he, too,
+was held in a spell, as the reality of her, after all that had
+passed, filled his eyes. He waited for her to speak, but she was
+silent.</p>
+<p>"Marta&mdash;that bandage! You have been hurt?" he
+exclaimed.</p>
+<p>Unlike Feller, he had not been so obsessed with a purpose as to
+be blind to externals. Her hostile mood was quick to recall that no
+smallest detail of anything under his sight ever escaped him. This
+was his kind of strength&mdash;the strength that had wrecked
+Westerling as a fine, intellectual process. He could act, too. In
+the tone of the question, "You've been hurt?" without tragic
+emphasis, was a twitching, throbbing undercurrent of horror, which
+set the hand hidden in the pocket of his blouse quivering. Why care
+if she were hurt? Why not think about the hundreds of thousands of
+others who were wounded. Why not care for that poor fellow whose
+ghastly wound kept staring at her as he wrote "Kill me!" on the
+wagon body?</p>
+<p>"It's the fashion to be wounded," she said, eyebrows lifted and
+lashes lowered, with a nervous smile. "I played Florence
+Nightingale, the natural woman's part, I believe. We should never
+protest; only nurse the victims of war. After helping to send men
+to death I went under fire myself, and&mdash;and that helped."</p>
+<p>She could be kind to Feller but not to Lanstron. He was not a
+child. He was Lanny, who, as she thought of him now, did nothing
+except by calculation.</p>
+<p>"Yes, that would help," he agreed, wincing as from a knife
+thrust.</p>
+<p>Her old taunt: sending men to death and taking no risk himself!
+She saw that he winced; she realized that she had stayed words that
+were about to come in a flood. Then she seemed to see him through
+new lenses. He appeared drawn and pale and old, as if he, too, had
+become ashes; anything but the conqueror. Her feelings grew
+contradictory. Why all this fencing? How weak, how silly! She had
+much to say to him&mdash;a last appeal to make. Her throat held a
+dry lump. She was marshalling her thoughts to begin when the
+brittle silence was broken by a rumbling of voices, a stirring of
+feet, and a cheer.</p>
+<p>"Lanstron! Lanstron! Hurrah for Lanstron!"</p>
+<p>The soldiers in the garden did not bother with any "Your
+Excellency, the chief of staff" formula when word had been passed
+of his presence. Marta looked around to see their tempestuous
+enthusiasm as they tossed their caps in the air and sent up their
+spontaneous tribute from the depths of their lungs. Conqueror and
+hero to the living, but the dead could not speak, whispered some
+fiend in her heart.</p>
+<p>Lanstron uncovered to the demonstration impulsively, when the
+conventional military acknowledgment would have been a salute. He
+always looked more like the real Lanny to her with his forehead
+bare. It completed the ensemble of his sensitive features. She saw
+that he was blinking almost boyishly at the compliment and noted
+the little deprecatory shake of his head, as much as to say that
+they were making a mistake.</p>
+<p>"Thank you!" he called, and the cheeriness of his voice, she
+thought, expressed his real self; the delight of victory and the
+glowing anticipation of further victories.</p>
+<p>"Thank <i>you</i>!" called a private with a big voice.</p>
+<p>"Yes, thank <i>you</i>!" repeated some of the officers in quick
+appreciation of a compliment as real as human courage.</p>
+<p>"We're going to put your headquarters in the Grays' capital!"
+cried the soldier with the big voice.</p>
+<p>Another cheer rose at the suggestion.</p>
+<p>"You will follow the staff?" Lanstron called in sudden
+intensity.</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes, yes!" they shouted. "Yes, yes; follow you!"</p>
+<p>"You think our staff led you wisely?" he continued distinctly,
+slowly, and very soberly. "You think we can continue to do so? You
+trust us? You trust our judgment?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes, yes!"</p>
+<p>"Thank you!" he said with a long-drawn, happy breath.</p>
+<p>"Thank <i>you</i>!" they shouted.</p>
+<p>He stood smiling for a moment in reply to their smiles; then,
+still smiling, but in a different way, he said to Marta:</p>
+<p>"As you say, that helps!" with a nod toward the bandage on her
+forearm and hurriedly turned away.</p>
+<p>She saw him involuntarily clutch the wrist above the pocket of
+his blouse to still the twitching; but beyond that there was no
+further sign of emotion as he went to the telephone. She had been
+about to cry out her protest against the continuance of the war in
+the name of humanity, of justice, of every bit of regard he had
+ever had for her. When he was through talking she should go to him
+in appeal&mdash;yes, on her knees, if need be, before all the
+officers and soldiers&mdash;to stop the killing; but instantly he
+was through he started toward the pass road, not by the path to the
+steps, but by leaping from terrace to terrace and waving his hand
+gayly to the soldiers as he went. The officers stared at the sight
+of a chief of staff breaking away from his communications in this
+unceremonious fashion. They saw him secure a horse from a group of
+cavalry officers on the road and gallop away.</p>
+<p>Marta having been the object of Lanstron's attention now became
+the object of theirs. It was good to see a woman, a woman of the
+Browns, after their period of separation from feminine society. She
+found herself holding an impromptu reception. She heard some other
+self answering their polite questions; while a fear, a new kind of
+fear, was taking hold of her real self; a fear inexplicable,
+insidiously growing. Lanstron was still in the officers' minds
+after his strange appearance and stranger departure. They began to
+talk of him, and Marta listened.</p>
+<p>"He said something about being a free man now!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, he looked as eager as a terrier after rats."</p>
+<p>"He knows what he is doing. He sees so far ahead of what we are
+thinking that it's useless to guess his object. We'll understand
+when it's done."</p>
+<p>"How little side he has! So perfectly simple. He hardly seems to
+realize the immensity of his success. In fact, none of us realizes
+it; it's too enormous, overwhelming, sudden!"</p>
+<p>"And no nerves!"</p>
+<p>"No nerves, did you say? There you are wrong. Did you see that
+hand twitching in his pocket? Of course, you've heard about the
+hand? Why, he's a bundle of nerve-wires held in control; a man of
+the age; master of his own machine, therefore, able to master the
+machine of an army."</p>
+<p>Of course, they guessed nothing of Marta's part in his success.
+The very things they were saying about him built up a figure of the
+type whose character she had keenly resented a few minutes
+before.</p>
+<p>"But, Miss Galland, you seem to know him far better than we.
+This is not news to you," remarked the brigade commander.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I saw the accident of his first flight when his hand was
+injured," she said, and winced with horror. Never had the picture
+of him as he rose from the wreck appeared so distinct. She could
+see every detail of his looks; feel his twinges of pain while he
+smiled. Was the revelation the more vivid because it had not once
+occurred to her since the war began? It shut out the presence of
+the officers; she no longer heard what they were saying. Black fear
+was enveloping her. Vaguely she understood that they were looking
+away at something. She heard the roar of artillery not far distant
+and followed their gaze toward the knoll where Dellarme's men had
+received their baptism of fire, now under a canopy of shrapnel
+smoke.</p>
+<p>"That's about their last stand in the tangent, their last snarl
+on our soil," remarked the brigade commander.</p>
+<p>"And we're raining shells on it!" said his aide. "With our
+glasses we'll be able to watch the infantry go in."</p>
+<p>"Yes, very well."</p>
+<p>"We're all used to how it feels, now we'll see how it looks at a
+distance," piped one of the soldiers.</p>
+<p>Not until he had shouted to them did they notice a division
+staff-officer who had come up from the road. He had a piece of
+astounding news to impart before he mentioned official
+business.</p>
+<p>"What do you think of this?" he cried. "Nothing could stop him!
+Lanstron&mdash;yes, Lanstron has gone into that charge with the
+African Braves!"</p>
+<p>In these days, when units of a vast army in the same uniform,
+drilled in the same way, had become interchangeable parts of a
+machine, the African Braves still kept regimental fame. They had
+guarded the stretches of hot sand in one of the desert African
+colonies of the Browns; and they had served in the jungle in the
+region of Bodlapoo, which, by the way, was nominally the cause of
+the war. They had fought Mohammedan fanatics and black savages. It
+did not matter much to them when they died; now as well as ever. If
+they had mothers or sisters they were the secrets of each man's
+heart. The scapegrace youth, the stranded man of thirty who would
+forget his past, the born adventurer, the renegade come a cropper,
+the gentleman who had gambled, the remittance man whose remittance
+had stopped, the peasant's son who had run away from home,
+criminals and dreamers, some minor poets, some fairly good actors,
+scholarly fellows who chanted the "Odyssey," and both oath-ripping
+and taciturn, quiet-mannered fellows who could neither read nor
+write found a home in the African Braves' muster-roll. Their spirit
+of corps had a dervish fatalism. They had begged to have a share in
+the war and Partow had consented. In the night after their long
+journey, while Westerling's ram was getting its death-blow, they
+had detrained and started for the front. But the Grays were going
+as fast as the Braves, and they had been unable to get into
+action.</p>
+<p>"Wait for us! We want to be in it!" cried their impatience.
+"We'll show you how they fight in Africa! Way for us!"</p>
+<p>"Give them a chance!" said Lanstron.</p>
+<p>This order a general of corps repeated to a general of division,
+who repeated it to a general of brigade.</p>
+<p>"Give them a chance! Give them a chance!"</p>
+<p>Reserves along the route of their advance knew them at a glance
+by their uniform, their Indian tan, and their jaunty swagger and
+gave a cheer as they passed. They touched the chord of romance in
+the hearts of officers, who regarded them as an archaic survival
+which sentiment permitted in an isolated instance in Africa, where
+it excellently served. And officers looked at one another and shook
+their heads knowingly, out of the drear, hard experience in spade
+approaches, when they thought of that brilliant uniform as a target
+and of frontier tactics against massed infantry and gun-fire.</p>
+<p>"Once will be enough," said the cynical. "There won't be many
+left to tell the tale!"</p>
+<p>And the African Braves knew how the army felt. They had a
+reputation out of Africa to sustain, this band of exotics among the
+millions of home-trained comrades. They didn't quite believe in all
+this machine business. Down the slopes with their veteran stride,
+loose-limbed and rhythmic, they went, past the line of the Galland
+house, with no fighting in sight. What if they had to return to
+Africa without firing a shot? The lugubrious prospect saddened
+them. They felt that a battle should be ordered on their
+account.</p>
+<p>"You will take that regiment's place and it will fall back for
+support, while you storm the knoll beyond!" said the brigade
+commander, a twinkle in his eye.</p>
+<p>"Is it much of a job, do you think?" asked the colonel of the
+Braves.</p>
+<p>He had two fingers' length of service colors on his blouse. Lean
+he was and bony-jawed, with deep-set eyes. He loved every mother's
+son of the Braves, from illiterate to the chanter of the "Odyssey";
+from peasant's son to penniless nobleman, and thought any one of
+his privates rather superior to a home brigade commander.</p>
+<p>"A pretty good deal. I think the Grays'll make a snappy
+resistance," said the brigade commander honestly. "The way we feel
+them out, they're getting back their wind, and for the first time
+we'll be fighting them up-hill. Yes, there's a sting in a
+retreating army's tail when it gets over its demoralization."</p>
+<p>"Good!" observed the colonel as if he had a sweet taste in his
+mouth.</p>
+<p>"And if you find it too stiff," the brigade commander went on,
+"why, I've seasoned veterans back of you who will press in to your
+support."</p>
+<p>"Veterans, you say, and seasoned? I have some of my own, too!
+Thank you! Thank you most kindly!" said the colonel, saluting
+stiffly, with a twist to the corner of his mouth. "When we need
+their help it will be to bury our dead," he added. "Can we do it
+alone? Will we?"</p>
+<p>He passed these inquiries along the line, which rose to the
+suggestion with different kinds of oaths and jests and grins and
+grim whistles. The scholar suddenly transferred his affections from
+the Greeks' phalanx to the Roman legions and began with the first
+verse of Virgil's "&AElig;neid." He always made the change when
+action was near. "The Greeks for poetry and the Romans for war!" he
+declared, and could argue his company to sleep if anybody disputed
+him.</p>
+<p>"I want to be in one fight. I haven't been under fire in the
+whole war," Lanstron explained to the colonel, who understood
+precisely the feeling.</p>
+<p>"Lanstron is with us! The chief of staff is watching us!" ran
+the whisper from flank to flank of the Braves. It was not wonderful
+to them that he should be there. This complicated business of
+running a war over a telephone was not in the ken of their
+calculations. The colonel was with them, so all the generals ought
+to be. "We'll show Lanstron!" determined the Braves. "We'll show
+him how we fight in Africa!"</p>
+<p>"With the first rush you go to the bottom of the valley; with
+the second, take the knoll!" Such were the colonel's simple
+tactics. "But stop on the top of the knoll. Though we'd like to
+take the capital this afternoon, it's against orders."</p>
+<p>Lanstron, dropping into place in the line, felt as if he were
+about to renew his youth. He had the elation of his early aeroplane
+flights, when he was likely to be hung on a church steeple. Now he
+was not sending men to death; he was having his personal fling. It
+was all very simple beside sitting at a desk with battle raging in
+the distance. He dodged at the first bullet that whistled near his
+head and looked rather sheepishly at the man next him, who was
+grinning.</p>
+<p>"Lots of fellows do that with the first one, no matter how many
+times they've been under fire," said the comrade. "But if they do
+it with the second one&mdash;" He dropped the corners of his mouth
+with a significance that required no further comment to express his
+views on that kind of a soldier.</p>
+<p>"I shan't!" said Lanstron; and he kept his word.</p>
+<p>"I knew by the cut of your jib you wouldn't!" observed the
+Brave, speaking not to the chief of staff but to the man. What were
+chiefs of staff to him? Everybody on the firing-line was simply
+another Brave.</p>
+<p>Lanstron liked the compliment. It pleased him better than those
+endowing him with military genius. It was free of rank and
+etiquette and selfishness.</p>
+<p>Of such stuff were the Braves as C&aelig;sar's veterans who
+walloped the Belg&aelig;, the adventurous ruffians of Cortez, the
+swashbucklers who fought in Flanders, the followers of Bonnie
+Prince Charlie, and the regulars of the American Indian campaigns.
+When they rose to the charge with a yell, in a wave of scarlet and
+blue, flashing with brass buttons, their silken flag rippling in
+the front rank, they made a picture to please the romantic taste.
+Here on the brown background of the commonplace three millions of
+moderns was a patch of the color and glamour that story-tellers,
+poets, artists, and moving-picture men would choose as the theme of
+real military glory.</p>
+<p>Intoxication of all the senses, of muscles and nerves, with the
+mesmerism of movement and burning desire which calls the
+imagination of youth to arms! The supreme moment of fury and
+splendid rush, which becomes the recollection to the survivor to be
+told from the knee to future generations in a way to make small
+boys love to play with soldiers! These men knew nothing except that
+they had legs and that ahead was a goal. Oaths and laughter were
+mingled in their souls; the energy of a delirium sped their steps.
+They were so many human missiles fired by an impulse, with too much
+initial velocity to stop at the bottom of the valley as the colonel
+had directed. Lord, no! Let's have the thing over with, bit in
+teeth! The common instinct of the living, who neither saw nor
+thought of those who fell, swept them up the slope. Every man who
+survived was the whole regiment in himself; its pride, its
+gallantry, its inheritance in his keeping.</p>
+<p>"Fiends of hell and angels of heaven! We're here and we did it
+alone!" gasped the winded, ragged line that reached the crest.</p>
+<p>"I thought they would!" said the brigade commander, who had
+watched the charge through his glasses from an eminence. "But at
+what a cost! It was lucky for them that it was only a rear-guard
+resistance. However, it certainly thrills the imagination and it
+will be a good thing for Brown prestige in Africa."</p>
+<p>"Why?" Marta heard the officers around her asking after their
+exclamations of amazement at the news that Lanstron was going in
+the charge. "Why should the chief of staff risk his life in this
+fashion?"</p>
+<p>Marta knew. All her taunts about sending others to death from
+his office chair, uttered as the fugitive sarcasm of a mood,
+recurred in the merciless hammer-beat of recollection. For a moment
+she was aghast, speechless. Then the officers, occupied with the
+startling news, heard a voice, wrenched from a dry throat in
+anguish, saying:</p>
+<p>"The telephone! Try to reach him! Tell him he must not!"</p>
+<p>"We can hardly say 'must not' to a chief of staff," said the
+general automatically.</p>
+<p>"Tell him I ask him not to! Try to reach him&mdash;try&mdash;you
+can try!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes! Certainly!" exclaimed the general, turning to the
+telephone operator.</p>
+<p>He had seen now what the younger men had seen at a glance. They
+were recalling Lanstron's relief at seeing her; how he had passed
+them by to speak to her; the intensity of the two in their almost
+wordless meeting. Her bloodless lips, the imploring passion in her
+eyes, her quivering impatience told the rest.</p>
+<p>"Division headquarters!" called the operator. "They're getting
+brigade headquarters," he added while he waited in silence.
+"Brigade headquarters says the Braves have no wire. It's too late.
+The charge is starting."</p>
+<p>"So it is!" cried one of the subalterns. "Look! Look!"</p>
+<p>Marta looked toward the rising ground this side of the knoll in
+time to see bayonets flash in the waning afternoon sunlight and
+disappear as they descended the slope.</p>
+<p>"There! They're up on the other slope without stopping!"
+exclaimed the general. "Quick! Don't you want to see?" He offered
+his glasses to Marta.</p>
+<p>"No, I can see well enough," she murmured, though the landscape
+was moving before her eyes in giddy waves.</p>
+<p>"The madness of it! The whole slope is peppered with the
+fallen!"</p>
+<p>"What a cost! Magnificent, but not war. Carrying their flag in
+the good old way, right at the front!"</p>
+<p>"Heavens! I hope they do it!"</p>
+<p>"The flag's down!"</p>
+<p>"Another man has it&mdash;it's up!"</p>
+<p>"Now&mdash;now&mdash;splendid! They're in!"</p>
+<p>"So they are! And the flag, too!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, what's left are in!"</p>
+<p>"And Lanstron was there&mdash;in that!"</p>
+<p>"What if&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Yes, the chief of staff, the head of the army, in an affair
+like that!"</p>
+<p>"The mind of the army&mdash;the mind that was to direct our
+advance!"</p>
+<p>"When all the honors of the world are his!"</p>
+<p>Their words were acid-tipped needles knitting back and forth
+through Marta's brain. Was Lanny one of those black specks that
+peppered the slope? Was he? Was he?</p>
+<p>"Telephone and&mdash;and see if Lanny is&mdash;is killed!" she
+begged.</p>
+<p>She knew not how she uttered that monstrous word killed. But
+utter it she did in its naked terror. Now she knew a simpler
+feeling than that of the grand sympathy of the dreamer with the
+horrors of war as a whole. She knew the dumb, helpless suspense of
+the womenfolk remaining at home watching for the casualty lists
+that Westerling had suppressed. What mattered policies of statesmen
+and generals, propagandas and tactics, to them? The concern of each
+wife or sweetheart was with one&mdash;one of the millions who was
+greater to the wife or the sweetheart than all the millions. Marta
+was not thinking of sending thousands to death. Had she sent
+<i>him</i> to death? The agony of waiting, waiting there among
+these strangers, waiting for that little instrument at the end of a
+wire to say whether or not he were alive, became insupportable.</p>
+<p>"I'll go&mdash;I'll go out there where he is!" she said
+incoherently, still looking toward the knoll with glazed eyes. She
+thought she was walking fast as she started for the garden gate,
+but really she was going slowly, stumblingly.</p>
+<p>"I think you had better stop her if you can," said the general
+to his aide.</p>
+<p>The aide overtook her at the gate.</p>
+<p>"We shall know about His Excellency before you can find out for
+yourself," he said; and, young himself, he could put the sympathy
+of youth with romance into his tone. "You might miss the road, even
+miss him, when he was without a scratch, and be for hours in
+ignorance," he explained. "In a few minutes we ought to have
+word."</p>
+<p>Marta sank down weakly on the tongue of a wagon, overturned
+against the garden wall in the m&ecirc;l&eacute;e of the retreat,
+and leaned her shoulder on the wheel for support.</p>
+<p>"If the women of the Grays waited four weeks," she said with an
+effort at stoicism, "then I ought to be able to wait a few
+minutes."</p>
+<p>"Depend on me. I'll bring news as soon as there is any," the
+aide concluded, and, seeing that she wished to be alone, he left
+her.</p>
+<p>For the first time she had real oblivion from the memory of her
+deceit of Westerling, the oblivion of drear, heart-pulling
+suspense. All the good times, the sweetly companionable times, she
+and Lanny had had together; all his flashes of courtship, his
+outburst in their last interview in the arbor, when she had told
+him that if she found that she wanted to come to him she would come
+in a flame, passed in review under the hard light of her petty
+ironies and sarcasms, which had the false ring of coquetry to her
+now, genuine as they had been at the time. Through her varying
+moods she had really loved him, and the thing that had slumbered in
+her became the drier fuel for the flame&mdash;perhaps too late.</p>
+<p>Her thought, her feeling was as if he were not chief of staff,
+but a private soldier, and she were not a woman who had girdled the
+world and puckered her brow over the solution of problems, but a
+provincial girl who had never been outside her village&mdash;his
+sweetheart. All questions of the army following up its victory, of
+his responsibilities and her fears that he would go on with
+conquest, faded into the fact of life&mdash;his life, as the most
+precious thing in the world to her. For him, yes, for him she had
+played the spy, as that village girl would for her lover, thinking
+of warm embraces; for him she had kept steady under the strain.</p>
+<p>Without him&mdash;what then? It seemed that the fatality that
+had let him escape miraculously from the aeroplane accident, made
+him chief of staff, and brought him victory, might well choose to
+ring down the curtain of destiny for him in the charge that drove
+the last foot of the invader off the soil of the Browns.... A voice
+was calling.... She heard it hazily, with a sudden access of giddy
+fear, before it became a cheerful, clarion cry that seemed to be
+repeating a message that had already been spoken without her
+understanding it.</p>
+<p>"He's safe, safe, safe, Miss Galland! He was not hit! He is on
+his way back and ought to be here very soon!"</p>
+<p>She heard herself saying "Thank you!" But that was not for some
+time. The aide was already gone. He had had his thanks in the
+effect of the news, which made him think that a chief of staff
+should not receive congratulations for victory alone.</p>
+<p>Lanny would return through the garden. She remained leaning
+against the wagon body, still faint from happiness, waiting for
+him. She was drawing deeper and longer breaths that were velvety
+with the glow of sunshine. A flame, the flame that Lanny had
+desired, of many gentle yet passionate tongues, leaping hither and
+thither in glad freedom, was in possession of her being. When his
+figure appeared out of the darkness the flame swept her to her feet
+and toward him. Though he might reject her he should know that she
+loved him; this glad thing, after all the shame she had endured,
+she could confess triumphantly.</p>
+<p>But she stopped short under the whip of conscience. Where was
+her courage? Where her sense of duty? What right had she, who had
+played such a horrible part, to think of self? There were other
+sweethearts with lovers alive who might be dead on the morrow if
+war continued. The flame sank to a live coal in her secret heart.
+Another passion possessed her as she seized Lanstron's hand in both
+her own.</p>
+<p>"Lanny, listen! Not the sound of a shot&mdash;for the first time
+since the war began! Oh, the blessed silence! It's peace,
+peace&mdash;isn't it to be peace?" As they ascended the steps she
+was pouring out a flood of broken, feverish sentences which
+permitted of no interruption. "You kept on fighting to-day, but you
+won't to-morrow, will you? It isn't I who plead&mdash;it's the
+women, more women than there are men in the army, who want you to
+stop now! Can't you hear them? Can't you see them?"</p>
+<p>In the fervor of appeal, before she realized his purpose, they
+were on the veranda and at the door of the dining-room, where the
+Brown staff was gathered around the table.</p>
+<p>"I still rely on you to help me, Marta!" he whispered as he
+stood to one side for her to enter.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XLVI' id="XLVI"></a>
+<h2>XLVI</h2>
+<h3>THE LAST SHOT</h3>
+<br>
+<p>"Miss Galland!"</p>
+<p>Blinking as she came out of the darkness into the bright light,
+with a lock of her dew-sprinkled dark hair free and brushing her
+flushed cheek, Marta saw the division chiefs of the Browns, after
+their start when Lanstron spoke her name, all stand at the salute,
+looking at her rather than at him. The reality in the flesh of the
+woman who had been a comrade in service, sacrificing her
+sensibilities for their cause, appealed to them as a true likeness
+of their conceptions of her. In their eyes she might read the
+finest thing that can pass from man's to woman's or from man's to
+man's. These were the strong men of her people who had driven the
+burglar from her house with the sword of justice. Their tribute had
+the steadfast loyalty of soldiers who were craving to do anything
+in the world that she might ask, whether to go on their knees to
+her or to kill dragons for her.</p>
+<p>"I may come in?" she asked.</p>
+<p>"Who if not you is entitled to the privilege of the staff
+council?" exclaimed the vice-chief.</p>
+<p>The others did not propose to let him do all the honors. Each
+murmured words of welcome on his own account.</p>
+<p>"We are here, thanks to you!"</p>
+<p>"And, thanks to you, our flag will float over the Gray
+range!"</p>
+<p>She must be tired, was their next thought. Four or five of them
+hurried to place a chair for her, the vice-chief winning over his
+rivals, more through the exercise of the rights of rank than by any
+superior alacrity.</p>
+<p>"You are appointed actual chief of staff and a field-marshal!"
+said the vice-chief to Lanstron. "The premier says that every honor
+the nation can bestow is yours. The capital is mad. The crowds are
+crying: 'On to the Gray capital!' To-morrow is to be a public
+holiday and they are calling it Lanstron Day. The thing was so
+sudden that the speculators who depressed our securities in the
+world's markets have got their due&mdash;ruin! And we ought to get
+an indemnity that will pay the cost of the war."</p>
+<p>Seated at one side, Marta could watch all that passed, herself
+unobserved. She noted a touch of color come to Lanstron's cheeks as
+he made a little shrug of protest.</p>
+<p>"It never rains but it pours!" he said. "We were all just as
+able and loyal yesterday as to-day when we find ourselves heroic.
+We owe our victory to Partow's plans, to the staff's industry, the
+spirit of the people and the army, and&mdash;" He threw a happy
+smile toward Marta.</p>
+<p>"Perhaps it ought to be Galland Day rather than Lanstron Day,"
+remarked the vice-chief. "The crowds at the capital when they know
+her part might cheer her more frenziedly than you, general."</p>
+<p>"No, no&mdash;please, no!" Marta was hectic in alarm and
+protest.</p>
+<p>"Your secret is ours! It's in the family!" the vice-chief
+hastened to assure her. Where could a secret be safe if not in the
+keeping of an army staff?</p>
+<p>"That was almost like teasing!" she exclaimed with a laugh of
+relief.</p>
+<p>"We're all in pretty good humor," remarked the vice-chief. He
+seemed to have a pleasant taste in his mouth that would last him
+for life.</p>
+<p>Then Marta saw their faces grow businesslike and keen, as they
+gathered around the table, with Lanstron at the head. They were
+oblivious of her presence, immured in a man's world of war.</p>
+<p>"Your orders were obeyed. We have not passed a single white post
+yet!" said the vice-chief impatiently. "As the Grays never expected
+to take the defensive, their fortresses are inferior. Every hour we
+wait means more time for them to fortify, more time to recover from
+their demoralization. Our dirigibles having command of the
+air&mdash;we had a wireless from one reporting all clear half-way
+to the Gray capital&mdash;why, we shall know their concentrations
+while they are ignorant of ours. It's the nation's great
+opportunity to gain enough provinces to even the balance of
+population with the Grays. With the unremitting offensive, blow on
+blow, using the spirit of our men to drive in mass attacks at the
+right points, the Gray range is ours!"</p>
+<p>Marta scanned the faces of the staff for some sign of dissent
+only to find nothing but the ardor of victory calling for more
+victory, which reflected the feeling of the coursing crowds in the
+capital. Though Lanny wished to stop the war, he was only a chip on
+the crest of a wave. Public opinion, which had made him an idol,
+would discard him as soon as he ceased to be a hero in the likeness
+of its desires. She saw him aloof as the others, in preoccupation,
+bent over the map outlining the plan of attack that they had worked
+out while awaiting their chief's return from the charge. He was
+taking a paper from his pocket and looking from one to another of
+his colleagues studiously; and she was conscious of that
+determination in his smile which she had first seen when he rose
+from the wreck of his plane.</p>
+<p>"This is from Partow: a message for you and the nation!" he
+announced, as he spread a few thin, typewritten pages out on the
+table. "I was under promise never to reveal its contents unless our
+army drove the Grays back across the frontier. The original is in
+the staff vaults. I have carried this copy with me."</p>
+<p>At the mention in an arresting tone of that name of the dead
+chief, to which the day's events had given the prestige of one of
+the heroes of old, there was grave attention.</p>
+<p>"I think we have practically agreed that the two individuals who
+were invaluable to our cause were Partow and Miss Galland,"
+Lanstron remarked tentatively. He waited for a reply. It was
+apparent that he was laying a foundation before he went any
+further.</p>
+<p>"Certainly!" said the vice-chief.</p>
+<p>"And you!" put in another officer, which brought a chorus of
+assent.</p>
+<p>"No, not I&mdash;only these two!" Lanstron replied. "Or, I, too,
+if you prefer. It little matters. The thing is that I am under a
+promise to both, which I shall respect. He organized and labored
+for the same purpose that she played the spy. When we sent the
+troops forward in a counter-attack and pursuit to clear our soil of
+the Grays; when I stopped them at the frontier&mdash;both were
+according to Partow's plan. He had a plan and a dream, this
+wonderful old man who made us all seem primary pupils in the art of
+war."</p>
+<p>Could this be that terrible Partow, a stroke of whose pencil had
+made the Galland house an inferno? Marta wondered as Lanstron read
+his message&mdash;the message out of the real heart of the man,
+throbbing with the power of his great brain. His plan was to hold
+the Grays to stalemate; to force them to desist after they had
+battered their battalions to pieces against the Brown
+fortifications. His dream was the thing that had
+happened&mdash;that an opportunity would come to pursue a broken
+machine in a bold stroke of the offensive.</p>
+<p>"I would want to be a hero of our people for only one aim, to be
+able to stop our army at the frontier," he had written. "Then they
+might drive me forth heaped with obloquy, if they chose. I should
+like to see the Grays demoralized, beaten, ready to sue for peace,
+the better to prove my point that we should ask only for what is
+ours and that our strength was only for the purpose of holding what
+is ours. Then we should lay up no legacy of revenge in their
+hearts. They could never have cause to attack again. Civilization
+would have advanced another step."</p>
+<p>Lanstron continued to read to the amazed staff, for Partow's
+message had looked far into the future. Then there was a P.S.,
+written after the war had begun, on the evening of the day that
+Marta had gone from tea on the veranda with Westerling to the
+telephone, in the impulse of her new purpose.</p>
+<p>"I begin to believe in that dream," he wrote. "I begin to
+believe that the chance for the offensive will come, now that my
+colleague, Miss Galland, in the name of peace has turned practical.
+There is nothing like mixing a little practice in your dreams while
+the world is still well this side of Utopia, as the head on my old
+behemoth of a body well knows. She had the right idea with her
+school. The oath so completely expressed my ideas&mdash;the result
+of all my thinking&mdash;that I had a twinge of literary jealousy.
+My boy, if you do reach the frontier, in pursuit of a broken army,
+and you do not keep faith with my dream and with her ideals, then
+you will get a lesson that will last you forever at the foot of the
+Gray range. But I do not think so badly as that of you or of my
+judgment of men."</p>
+<p>"Lanny! Lanny!"</p>
+<p>The dignity of a staff council could not restrain Marta. Her
+emotion must have action. She sprang to his side and seized his
+hand, her exultation mixed with penitence over the why she had
+wronged him and Partow. Their self-contained purpose had been the
+same as hers and they had worked with a soldier's fortitude, while
+she had worked with whims and impulses. She bent over him with
+gratitude and praise and a plea for forgiveness in her eyes,
+submerging the thing which he sought in them. He flushed boyishly
+in happy embarrassment, incapable of words for an instant; and
+silently the staff looked on.</p>
+<p>"And I agree with Partow," Lanstron went on, "that we cannot
+take the range. The Grays still have numbers equal to ours. It is
+they, now, who will be singing 'God with us!' with their backs
+against the wall. With Partow's goes my own appeal to the army and
+the nation; and I shall keep faith with Partow, with Miss Galland,
+and with my own ideas, if the government orders the army to
+advance, by resigning as chief of staff&mdash;my work
+finished."</p>
+<p>Westerling and his aide and valet, inquiring their way as
+strangers, found the new staff headquarters of the Grays
+established in an army building, where Bouchard had been assigned
+to trivial duties, back of the Gray range. As their former chief
+entered a room in the disorder of maps and packing-cases, the
+staff-officers rose from their work to stand at salute like stone
+images, in respect to a field-marshal's rank. There was no word of
+greeting but a telling silence before Turcas spoke. His voice had
+lost its parchment crinkle and become natural. The blue veins on
+his bulging temples were a little more pronounced, his thin
+features a little more pinched, but otherwise he was unchanged and
+he seemed equal to another strain as heavy as the one he had
+undergone.</p>
+<p>"We have a new government, a new premier," he said. "The old
+premier was killed by a shot from a crowd that he was addressing
+from the balcony of the palace. After this, the capital became
+quieter. As we get in touch with the divisions, we find the army in
+better shape than we had feared it would be. There is a recovery of
+spirit, owing to our being on our own soil."</p>
+<p>"Yes," replied Westerling, drowning in their stares and grasping
+at a straw. "Only a panic, as I said. If&mdash;" his voice rising
+hoarsely and catching in rage.</p>
+<p>"We have a new government, a new premier!" Turcas repeated, with
+firm, methodical politeness. Westerling looking from one face to
+another with filmy eyes, lowered them before Bouchard. "There's a
+room ready for Your Excellency up-stairs," Turcas continued. "The
+orderly will show you the way."</p>
+<p>Now Westerling grasped the fact that he was no longer chief of
+staff. He drew himself up in a desperate attempt at dignity; the
+staff saluted again, and, uncertainly, he followed the orderly,
+with the aide and valet still in loyal attendance.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, the aerial scouts of the Grays were puzzled by a
+moving cloud on the landscape several miles away. It filled the
+highway and overflowed into the fields, without military form:
+women and men of every age except the fighting age, marching
+together in a sinister militancy of purpose.</p>
+<p>"Bring the children, too!" cried the leaders. "They've more
+right to be heard than any of us."</p>
+<p>From such a nucleus it seemed that the whole population of the
+land might be set in motion by a common passion. Neither the coming
+of darkness nor a chill rain kept recruits from village and
+farmhouse from dropping their tasks and leaving meals unfinished to
+swell the ranks. What Westerling had called the bovine public with
+a parrot's head had become a lion.</p>
+<p>"There's no use of giving any orders, to stop this flood," said
+an officer who had ridden fast to warn the Gray staff. "The police
+simply watch it go by. Soldiers ready to lay down their lives to
+hold the range give it Godspeed when they learn what it wants. Both
+are citizens before they are soldiers or policemen. The thing is as
+elemental as an earthquake or a tidal wave."</p>
+<p>"Public opinion! Unanimous public opinion! Nothing can stop
+that!" exclaimed Turcas in dry fatalism. "You will inform His
+Excellency," he said to Westerling's aide, "that they are coming
+for him&mdash;all the people are coming, and we are powerless.
+And&mdash;" Even Turcas's calmness failed him and his voice caught
+in a convulsive swallow.</p>
+<p>"I&mdash;I understand!" the aide said thickly, and went
+up-stairs.</p>
+<p>He had suffered worse than in seeing his chief beaten; but even
+in disillusion he was loyal. He was back immediately, and paused at
+the foot of the stairs stonily, in the attitude of one who listens
+for something; while the tramp of thousands of feet came pressing
+in upon all sides.</p>
+<p>As one great, high-pitched voice, the crowd shouted its
+merciless demand; and eyes eager with the hunt as those of soldiers
+in pursuit gleamed through the windows out of the darkness.
+Bouchard, hawk-eyed, stern, was standing by the street door. His
+medi&aelig;val spirit revolted at the thought of any kind of a mob.
+For such demonstrations he had a single simple
+prescription&mdash;cold lead.</p>
+<p>"We cannot strike the overwhelming spirit which we would forge
+into the nation's defence," said Turcas.</p>
+<p>The door was flung open and Bouchard drew back abruptly at the
+sight; he drew back in fear of his own nature. If any one should so
+much as lay hands on him when he was in uniform, a sword thrust
+would resent the insult to his officer's honor; and even he did not
+want to strike grandfathers and children and mothers.</p>
+<p>Two figures were in the doorway: a heavy-set market woman with a
+fringe of down on her lip and a cadaverous, tidily dressed old man,
+who might have been a superannuated schoolmaster, with a bronze
+cross won in the war of forty years ago on his breast and his eyes
+burning with the youthful fire of Grandfather Fragini's.</p>
+<p>"They got the premier in the capital. We've come for Westerling!
+We want to know what he did with our sons! We want to know why he
+was beaten!" cried the market woman.</p>
+<p>"Yes," said the veteran. "We want him to explain his lies. Why
+did he keep the truth from us? We were ready to fight, but not to
+be treated like babies. This is the twentieth century!"</p>
+<p>"We want Westerling! Tell Westerling to come out!" rose the
+impatient shouts behind the two figures in the doorway.</p>
+<p>"You are sure that he has one?" whispered Turcas to Westerling's
+aide.</p>
+<p>"Yes," was the choking answer&mdash;"yes. It is better than
+that"&mdash;with a glance toward the mob. "I left my own on the
+table."</p>
+<p>"We can't save him! We shall have to let them&mdash;"</p>
+<p>Turcas's voice was drowned by a great roar of cries, with no
+word except "Westerling" distinguishable, that pierced every crack
+of the house. A wave of movement starting from the rear drove the
+veteran and the market woman and a dozen others through the doorway
+toward the stairs. Then the sound of a shot was heard overhead.</p>
+<p>"The man you seek is dead!" said Turcas, stepping in front of
+the crowd, his features unrelenting in authority. "Now, go back to
+your work and leave us to ours."</p>
+<p>"I understand, sir," said the veteran. "We've no argument with
+you."</p>
+<p>"Yes!" agreed the market woman. "But if you ever leave this
+range alive we shall have one. So, you stay!"</p>
+<p>Looking at the bronze cross on the veteran's faded coat, the
+staff saluted; for the cross, though it were hung on rag's,
+wherever it went was entitled by custom to the salute of officers
+and "present arms" by sentries.</p>
+<p>As news of the shot travelled among the people the cries dropped
+into long-drawn breaths of thirst satiated. Their mission was
+fulfilled. The tramp of their feet as they dispersed homeward
+mingled with the urging of officers to weary men and the rumbling
+of wagons and guns and the sound of pick and spade on the range,
+where torches flickered over the heads of the working parties. But
+no other shot after the one heard from Westerling's room was fired.
+The Grays were at grip with the fact of disaster. An angry, wounded
+animal that had failed of its kill was facing around at the mouth
+of its lair for its own life.</p>
+<p>"We're tired&mdash;we're all tired; but keep up&mdash;keep up!"
+urged the officers. "We have a new chief of staff and there will be
+no more purposeless sacrifices. It's their turn at the charge; ours
+to hold. We'll give them some of the medicine they've been giving
+us. God with us! Our backs against the wall!"</p>
+<p>After Lanstron's announcement to the Brown staff of his decision
+not to cross the frontier, there was a restless movement in the
+chairs around the table, and the grimaces on most of the faces were
+those with which a practical man regards a Utopian proposal. The
+vice-chief was drumming on the table edge and looking steadily at a
+point in front of his fingers. If Lanstron resigned he became
+chief.</p>
+<p>"Partow might have this dream before he won, but would he now?"
+asked the vice-chief. "No. He would go on!"</p>
+<p>"Yes," said another officer. "The world will ridicule the
+suggestion; our people will overwhelm us with their anger. The
+Grays will take it for a sign of weakness."</p>
+<p>"Not if we put the situation rightly to them," answered
+Lanstron. "Not if we go to them as brave adversary to brave
+adversary, in a fair spirit."</p>
+<p>"We can&mdash;we shall take the range!" the vice-chief went on
+in a burst of rigid conviction when he saw that opinion was with
+him. "Nothing can stop this army now!" He struck the table edge
+with his fist, his shoulders stiffening.</p>
+<p>"Please&mdash;please, don't!" implored Marta softly. "It sounds
+so like Westerling!"</p>
+<p>The vice-chief started as if he had received a sharp pin-prick.
+His shoulders unconsciously relaxed. He began a fresh study of a
+certain point on the table top. Lanstron, looking first at one and
+then at another, spoke again, his words as measured as they ever
+had been in military discussion and eloquent. He began outlining
+his own message which would go with Partow's to the premier, to the
+nation, to every regiment of the Browns, to the Grays, to the
+world. He set forth why the Browns, after tasting the courage of
+the Grays, should realize that they could not take their range.
+Partow had not taught him to put himself in other men's places in
+vain. The boy who had kept up his friendship with engine-drivers
+after he was an officer knew how to sink the plummet into human
+emotions. He reminded the Brown soldiers that there had been a
+providential answer to the call of "God with us!" he reminded the
+people of the lives that would be lost to no end but to engender
+hatred; he begged the army and the people not to break faith with
+that principle of "Not for theirs, but for ours," which had been
+their strength.</p>
+<p>"I should like you all to sign it&mdash;to make it simply the
+old form of 'the staff has the honor to report,'" he said
+finally.</p>
+<p>There was a hush as he finished&mdash;the hush of a deep
+impression when one man waits for another to speak. All were
+looking at him except the vice-chief, who was still staring at the
+table as if he had heard nothing. Yet every word was etched on his
+mind. The man whose name was the symbol of victory to the soldiers,
+who would be more than ever a hero as the news of his charge with
+the African Braves travelled along the lines, would go on record to
+his soldiers as saying that they could not take the Gray range.
+This was a handicap that the vice-chief did not care to accept; and
+he knew how to turn a phrase as well as to make a soldierly
+decision. He looked up smilingly to Marta.</p>
+<p>"I have decided that I had rather not be a Westerling, Miss
+Galland," he said. "We'll make it unanimous. And you," he burst out
+to Lanstron&mdash;"you legatee of old Partow; I've always said that
+he was the biggest man of our time. He has proved it by catching
+the spirit of our time and incarnating it."</p>
+<p>Vaguely, in the whirl of her joy, Marta heard the chorus of
+assent as the officers sprang to their feet in the elation of being
+at one with their chief again. Lanstron caught her arm, fearing
+that she was going to fall, but a burning question rose in her mind
+to steady her.</p>
+<p>"Then my shame&mdash;my sending men to slaughter&mdash;my
+sacrifice was not in vain?" she exclaimed.</p>
+<p>Misery crept into her eyes; she seemed to be seeing some horror
+that would always haunt her. These businesslike men of the council
+were touched by a fresh understanding of her and of the reason for
+her success, which had demanded something more than human
+art&mdash;something pure and fine and fearless underneath art. They
+sought to win one more victory that should kill her memory of what
+she had done.</p>
+<p>"Miss Galland," said the vice-chief, "Westerling's fate,
+whatever it is, would have been the same. He could never have taken
+our range. He would have only more lives to answer for, and
+Partow's dream could not have come true."</p>
+<p>"You think that&mdash;you&mdash;all of you?" she asked.</p>
+<p>"All! All!" they said together.</p>
+<p>"Yes, but for you the losses on both sides would have been
+greater&mdash;hundreds of thousands greater," concluded the
+vice-chief. "And to-night I think you helped me to see right; you
+struck a light in my mind when I was about to forget the law of
+service."</p>
+<p>"You see, then, you did hasten the end, Marta," said
+Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I do see, Lanny!" she whispered. She was weak now, with no
+spur to her energy except her happiness as she leaned on his arm.
+Then he felt an impulsive pressure as she looked up at him. "The
+law of service, as you say!" she said, turning to the vice-chief.
+"Isn't that the finest law of all? Couldn't I help you with the
+appeal? Perhaps I might put in it a thought to reach the women.
+They are a part of public opinion"</p>
+<p>"I was going to suggest it, but you seemed so weary that I
+hadn't the heart," said Lanstron.</p>
+<p>"Just the thing&mdash;the mothers, wives, and sweethearts!"
+declared the vice-chief.</p>
+<p>"I'm not a bit tired now!" Marta assured them brightly. "I'm
+fresh for the fight again."</p>
+<p>"Another thing," added Lanstron, "we ought to have the backing
+of the corps and division commanders."</p>
+<p>"Precisely," agreed the vice-chief. "We want to make sure of
+this thing. We'd look silly if the old premier ordered the army on
+and left us high and dry; and it would mean certain disaster. Shall
+I get them on the telephone?"</p>
+<p>"Yes," said Lanstron.</p>
+<p>It was long after midnight when the collaborative composition of
+that famous despatch was finished.</p>
+<p>"Now I'm really tired, Lanny," said Marta as she arose from the
+table. "I can think only of prayers&mdash;joyful little prayers of
+thanks rising to the stars."</p>
+<p>She slipped her arm through his. As they moved toward the door
+the chiefs of divisions, keeping to the etiquette that best
+expressed their soldierly respect, saluted her.</p>
+<p>"If this were told, few would believe it; nor would they believe
+many other things in the inner history of armies which are forever
+held secret," thought the vice-chief.</p>
+<p>Outside, the stars were twinkling to acknowledge those little
+prayers of thanks, and the night was sweet and peaceful, while the
+army slept.</p>
+<hr style='width: 65%;'>
+<a name='XLVII' id="XLVII"></a>
+<h2>XLVII</h2>
+<h3>THE PEACE OF WISDOM</h3>
+<br>
+<p>The sea of people packed in the great square of the Brown
+capital made a roar like the thunder of waves against a breakwater
+at sight of a white spot on a background of gray stone, which was
+the head of an eminent statesman.</p>
+<p>"It looks as if our government would last the week out," the
+premier chuckled as he returned to his colleagues at the cabinet
+table.</p>
+<p>As yet only the brief bulletins whose publication in the
+newspapers had aroused the public to a frenzy had been received.
+The cabinet, as eager for details as the press, had remained up,
+awaiting a fuller official account.</p>
+<p>"We have a long communication in preparation," the staff had
+telegraphed. "Meanwhile, the following is submitted."</p>
+<p>"Good Heavens! It's not from the army! It's from the grave!"
+exclaimed the premier as he read the first paragraphs of Partow's
+message. "Of all the concealed dynamite ever!" he gasped as he
+grasped the full meaning of the document, that piece of news, as
+staggering as the victory itself, that had lain in the staff vaults
+for years. "Well, we needn't give it out to the press; at least,
+not until after mature consideration," he declared when they had
+reached the end of Partow's appeal. "Now we'll hear what the staff
+has to say for itself after gratifying the wish of a dead man," he
+added as a messenger gave him another sheet.</p>
+<p>"The staff, in loyalty to its dead leader who made victory
+possible, and in loyalty to the principles of defence for which the
+army fought, begs to say to the nation&mdash;"</p>
+<p>It was four o'clock in the morning when this despatch concluded
+with "We heartily agree with the foregoing," and the cabinet read
+the names of all the general staff and the corps and division
+commanders. Coursing crowds in the streets were still shouting
+hoarsely and sometimes drunkenly: "On to the Gray capital! Nothing
+can stop us now!" The premier tried to imagine what a sea of faces
+in the great square would look like in a rage. He was between the
+people in a passion for retribution and a headless army that was
+supposed to charge across the frontier at dawn.</p>
+<p>"The thing is sheer madness!" he cried. "It's insubordination!
+I'll have it suppressed! The army must go on to gratify public
+demand. I'll show the staff that they are not in the saddle.
+They'll obey orders!"</p>
+<p>He tried to get Lanstron on the long distance.</p>
+<p>"Sorry, but the chief has retired," answered the officer on duty
+sleepily. "In fact, all the rest of the staff have, with orders
+that they are not to be disturbed before ten."</p>
+<p>"Tell them that the premier, the head of the government, their
+commander, is speaking!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, sir. But the staff were up all last night and most of
+to-night, not to mention a pretty busy day. When they had finished
+their report to you, sir, they were utterly done up. Yes, the
+orders not to disturb them are quite positive, and as a junior I
+could not do so except by their orders as superiors. The chief,
+before retiring, however, repeated to me, in case any inquiry came
+from you, sir, that there was nothing he could add to the staff's
+message to the nation and the army. It is to be given to the
+soldiers the first thing in the morning, and he will let you know
+how they regard it."</p>
+<p>"Confound these machine minds that spring their surprises as
+fully executed plans!" exclaimed the premier.</p>
+<p>"It's true&mdash;Par tow and the staff have covered
+everything&mdash;met every argument. There is nothing more for them
+to say," said the foreign minister.</p>
+<p>"But what about the indemnity?" demanded the finance minister.
+He was thinking of victory in the form of piles of gold in the
+treasury.</p>
+<p>This question, too, was answered.</p>
+<p>"War has never brought prosperity," Partow had written. "Its
+purpose is to destroy, and destruction can never be construction.
+The conclusion of a war has often assured a period of peace; and
+peace gave the impetus of prosperity attributed to war. A man is
+strong in what he achieves, not through the gifts he receives or
+the goods he steals. Indemnity will not raise another blade of
+wheat in our land. To take it from a beaten man will foster in him
+the desire to beat his adversary in turn and recover the amount and
+more. Then we shall have the apprehension of war always in the air,
+and soon another war and more destruction. Remove the danger of a
+European cataclysm, and any sum extorted from the Grays becomes
+paltry beside the wealth that peace will create. An indemnity makes
+the purpose of the courage of the Grays in their assaults and of
+the Browns in their resistance that of the burglar and the looter.
+There is no money value to a human life when it is your own; and
+our soldiers gave their lives. Do not cheapen their service."</p>
+<p>"Considering the part that we played at The Hague," observed the
+foreign minister, "it would be rather inconsistent for us not
+to&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"There is only one thing to do. Lanstron has got us!" replied
+the premier. "We must jump in at the head of the procession and
+receive the mud or the bouquets, as it happens."</p>
+<p>With Partow's and the staff's appeals went an equally earnest
+one from the premier and his cabinet. Naturally, the noisy element
+of the cities was the first to find words. It shouted in rising
+anger that Lanstron had betrayed the nation. Army officers whom
+Partow had retired for leisurely habits said that he and Lanstron
+had struck at their own calling. But the average man and woman, in
+a daze from the shock of the appeals after a night's celebration,
+were reading and wondering and asking their neighbors' opinions. If
+not in Partow's then in the staff's message they found the mirror
+that set their own ethical professions staring at them.</p>
+<p>Before they had made up their minds the correspondents at the
+front had set the wires singing to the evening editions; for
+Lanstron had directed that they be given the ran of the army's
+lines at daybreak. They told of soldiers awakening after the
+debauch of yesterday's fighting, normal and rested, glowing with
+the security of possession of the frontier and responding to their
+leaders' sentiment; of officers of the type favored by Partow who
+would bring the industry that commands respect to any calling,
+taking Lanstron's views as worthy of their profession; of that
+irrepressible poet laureate of the soldiers, Captain Stransky, I.C.
+(iron cross), breaking forth in a new song to an old tune,
+expressing his brotherhood ideas in a
+"We-have-ours-let-them-keep-theirs" chorus that was spreading from
+regiment to regiment.</p>
+<p>This left the retired officers to grumble in their coiners that
+war was no longer a gentleman's vocation, and silenced the protests
+of their natural ally in the business of making war, the noisy
+element, which promptly adapted itself to a new fashion in the
+relation of nations. Again the great square was packed and again a
+wave-like roar of cheers greeted the white speck of an eminent
+statesman's head. All the ideas that had been fomenting in the
+minds of a people for a generation became a living force of action
+to break through the precedents born of provincial passion with a
+new precedent; for the power of public opinion can be as swift in
+its revolutions as decisive victories at arms. The world at large,
+after rubbing its forehead and readjusting its eye-glasses and
+clearing its throat, exclaimed:</p>
+<p>"Why not? Isn't that what we have all been thinking and
+desiring? Only nobody knew how or where to begin."</p>
+<p>The premier of the Browns found himself talking over the long
+distance to the premier of the Grays in as neighborly a fashion as
+if they had adjoining estates and were arranging a matter of
+community interest.</p>
+<p>"You have been so fine in waiving an indemnity," said the
+premier of the Grays, "that Turcas suggests we pay for all the
+damage done to property on your side by our invasion. I'm sure our
+people will rise to the suggestion. Their mood has overwhelmed
+every preconceived notion of mine. In place of the old suspicion
+that a Brown could do nothing except with a selfish motive is the
+desire to be as fair as the Browns. And the practical way the
+people look at it makes me think that it will be enduring."</p>
+<p>"I think so, for the same reason," responded the premier of the
+Browns. "They say it is good business. It means prosperity and
+progress for both countries."</p>
+<p>"After all, a soldier comes out the hero of the great peace
+movement," concluded the premier of the Grays. "A soldier took the
+tricks with our own cards. Old Partow was the greatest statesman of
+us all."</p>
+<p>"No doubt of that!" agreed the premier of the Browns. "It's a
+sentiment to which every premier of ours who ever tried to down him
+would have readily subscribed!"</p>
+<p>The every-day statesman smiles when he sees the people smile and
+grows angry when they grow angry. Now and then appears an
+inscrutable genius who finds out what is brewing in their brains
+and brings it to a head. He is the epoch maker. Such an one was
+that little Corsican, who gave a stagnant pool the storm it needed,
+until he became overfed and mistook his ambition for a continuation
+of his youthful prescience.</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>Marta had yet to bear the shock of Westerling's death. After
+learning the manner of it she went to her room, where she spent a
+haunted, sleepless night. The morning found her still tortured by
+her visualization of the picture of him, irresolute as the mob
+pressed around the Gray headquarters.</p>
+<p>"It is as if I had murdered him!" she said. "I let him make love
+to me&mdash;I let my hand remain in his once&mdash;but that was
+all, Lanny. I&mdash;I couldn't have borne any more. Yet that was
+enough&mdash;enough!"</p>
+<p>"But we know now, Marta," Lanstron pleaded, "that the premier of
+the Grays held Westerling to a compact that he should not return
+alive if he lost. He could not have won, even though you had not
+helped us against him. He would only have lost more lives and
+brought still greater indignation on his head. His fate was
+inevitable&mdash;and he was a soldier."</p>
+<p>But his reasoning only racked her with a shudder.</p>
+<p>"If he had only died fighting!" Marta replied. "He died like a
+rat in a trap and I&mdash;I set the trap!"</p>
+<p>"No, destiny set it!" put in Mrs. Galland.</p>
+<p>Lanstron dropped down beside Marta's chair.</p>
+<p>"Yes, destiny set it," he said, imploringly.</p>
+<p>"Just as it set your part for you. And, Marta," Mrs. Galland
+went on gently, with what Marta had once called the wisdom of
+mothers, "Lanny lives and lives for you. Your destiny is life and
+to make the most of life, as you always have. Isn't it, Marta?"</p>
+<p>"Yes," she breathed after a pause, in conviction, as she pressed
+her mother's hands. "Yes, you have a gift of making things simple
+and clear."</p>
+<p>Then she looked up to Lanstron and the flame in her eyes, whose
+leaping, spontaneous passion he already knew, held something of the
+eternal, as her arms crept around his neck.</p>
+<p>"You are life, Lanny! You are the destiny of to-day and
+to-morrow!"</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>Though it was very late autumn now, such was the warmth of the
+sun that, with a wrap, Mrs. Galland was sitting on the veranda. She
+was content&mdash;too content to go to town. As she had said to
+Marta, no doubt it would be a wonderful sight, but she had never
+cared for public celebrations since she had lost her husband. She
+could get all the joys of peace she wanted looking at the garden
+and the landscape; and it did not matter at all now if Marta were
+twenty-seven, or even if she were thirty or thirty odd.</p>
+<p>For the last week the people of La Tir had been returning to
+their homes, and with the early morning those from the country
+districts had come swarming in for the great day. Faintly she heard
+the cheers of the crowds pouring toward the frontier&mdash;cheers
+for the Gray premier and cheers for Lanstron and for Turcas as they
+gathered for a purpose which looked further ahead than the mere
+ratification of the very simple terms of peace that left the white
+posts where they were before the war.</p>
+<p>"I would rather meet you here than on your range," said Lanstron
+to Turcas.</p>
+<p>"You certainly find me in a more genial frame of mind than you
+would have if you had met me there. And I am very delighted that
+things have turned out as they have," replied Turcas. As soldiers
+of a common type of efficiency, who understood each other, they
+might exchange ideas.</p>
+<p>Marta in the family carriage, surrounded by her children, looked
+on. Hugo Mallin, who had suggested getting acquainted with the
+Browns in a common man[oe]uvre, witnessed his dream come true in
+miniature. His sturdy sweetheart had become a heroine of the home
+town since the newspapers had published the whole story of her
+lover's insubordination, and how he had stood at the white posts
+rallying stragglers, which appealed to the sentiment of the moment.
+People pointed her out as an example of the loyalty of conviction.
+His father and mother, far from hiding their faces in shame,
+carried their heads high in parental distinction.</p>
+<p>There was nothing unfamiliar to the student of human nature in
+campaigns, which many historians overlook, so keen are they to get
+their dates and circumstantial details correct, in the way that the
+Gray and the Brown veterans fraternized in groups, crossing and
+recrossing the frontier line as they labored with each other's
+tongues. This frequently comes with peace, when the adversaries
+have been of the same metal and standards of civilization. The new
+thing was the theme of their talk. They had little to say of the
+campaign itself. They drew the curtain on the horrors for purposes
+of personal glory and raised it only to point a lesson that should
+prevent another war. No, they would never try killing again. That
+sort of business was buried as securely as Westerling's ambition.
+Partow's name kept recurring; one of the paragraphs of his message,
+showing how clearly he had foreseen the effect on sentiment, was
+frequently quoted:</p>
+<p>"We have had war's test; who wants it repeated? We have kept
+peace with force between these two brave, high-spirited peoples;
+why not have the peace of wisdom? Former sacrifices of blood have
+been for the glory of victory of one country over another. Why not
+consider this one a sacrifice in common for the glory of a victory
+in common? If the leaders of the great nations that boast their
+civilization cannot find a way to a permanent understanding among
+themselves, while they stand for the peace of the world, then the
+very civilization which produced the resolute, intelligent courage
+and the arms and organization that we have seen in being is a
+failure. Surely, the brains that directed these great armies ought
+to be equal to some practical plan. Meet the conditions of
+international distrust, if you will, by establishing a neutral zone
+ten miles broad along the frontier free of all defences. Let the
+Grays guard five miles of it on the Brown side and the Browns five
+miles on the Gray side, as insurance against surprise or the
+ambitions of demagogues. What an example for those other nations
+beyond Europe, as yet lacking your organization and progress, whom
+you must aid and direct! What a return to you in both moral and
+commercial profit! Keep armed, in reason; keep strong, but only as
+an international police force."</p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;'>
+<p>The keen air had given Mrs. Galland the best appetite she had
+had for months. She was beginning to fear a late luncheon, when
+Marta appeared at the garden gate with the man whose legions had
+followed in the footsteps of other winning armies through the pass.
+He was happier than the old baron, when plundering was at its best,
+or the Roman commander with Rome cheering him. Mrs. Galland's smile
+had the bliss of family paradise regained as she watched them in a
+swinging hand-clasp coming up the terrace steps. The picture they
+made might have seemed effeminate to the baron. Yet we are not so
+sure of that. Marta had always insisted that he was perfectly
+human, too, according to his lights. Possibly the Roman commander
+swung hands with a Roman girl as soon as he could get away from the
+crowd around his triumphal car.</p>
+<p>"Mother, it's a shame that you missed it!" Marta called. "Why,
+there are so many great things in the air that it makes me feel a
+conservative! They're actually discussing disarmament and an
+international peace pact for twenty years," she continued, "that
+nothing can break. Partow's statue in our capital is to have not
+victory, but peace on the fourth face of the plinth. They're even
+talking of putting up a statue to him in the Gray capital. Why not?
+The Grays have a statue of one of our great poets and we of one of
+their great scientists. And, to be as polite as they, we propose to
+honor one of their old generals who was almost as generous in
+victory as Partow. What a session of the school next Sunday! We're
+going to have the children from both La Tir and South La Tir!...
+The only trouble is that if Lanny keeps on giving Partow all the
+credit for the good work he will succeed in making everybody think
+that every time he winked after Partow's death it was according to
+Partow's directions for the conduct of the war!"</p>
+<p>"Then I shall have the more time for you," replied Lanstron,
+who, being a real soldier of his time, did not care for hero
+worship. It was entirely contrary to Partow's teachings.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13738 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>