When Bruce left the quiet peace of
The Place for the hell of the Western Front, it had
been stipulated by the Mistress and the Master that
if ever he were disabled, he should be shipped back
to The Place, at their expense.
It was a stipulation made rather to
soothe the Mistress’s sorrow at parting from
her loved pet than in any hope that it could be fulfilled;
for the average life of a courierdog on the battle-front
was tragically short. And his fate was more than
ordinarily certain. If the boche bullets
and shrapnel happened to miss him, there were countless
diseases-bred of trench and of hardship
and of abominable food-to kill him.
The Red Cross appeal raised countless
millions of dollars and brought rescue to innumerable
human warriors. But in caring for humans, the
generosity of most givers reached its limit; and the
Blue Cross-“for the relief of dogs
and horses injured in the service of the Allies”-was
forced to take what it could get. Yet many a man,
and many a body of men, owed life and safety to the
heroism of some war-dog, a dog which surely merited
special care when its own certain hour of agony struck.
Bruce’s warmest overseas friends
were to be found in the ranks of the mixed Franco-American
regiment, nicknamed the “Here-We-Comes.”
Right gallantly, in more than one tight place, had
Bruce been of use to the “Here-We-Comes.”
On his official visits to the regiment, he was always
received with a joyous welcome that would have turned
any head less steady than a thoroughbred collie’s.
Bruce enjoyed this treatment.
He enjoyed, too, the food-dainties wherewith the “Here-We-Comes”
plied him. But to no man in the army would he
give the adoring personal loyalty he had left at The
Place with the Mistress and the Master. Those
two were still his only gods. And he missed them
and his sweet life at The Place most bitterly.
Yet he was too good a soldier to mope.
For months the “Here-We-Comes”
had been quartered in a “quiet”-or
only occasionally tumultuous-sector, near
Chateau-Thierry. Then the comparative quiet all
at once turned to pandemonium.
A lanky and degenerate youth (who
before the war had been unlovingly known throughout
Europe as the “White Rabbit” and who now
was mentioned in dispatches as the “Crown Prince”)
had succeeded in leading some half-million fellow-Germans
into a “pocket” that had lately been merely
a salient.
From the three lower sides of the
pocket, the Allies ecstatically flung themselves upon
their trapped foes in a laudable effort to crush the
half-million boches and their rabbit-faced princeling
into surrender before the latter could get out of
the snare, and to the shelter of the high ground and
the reenforcements that lay behind it. The Germans
objected most strenuously to this crushing process.
And the three beleaguered edges of the pocket became
a triple-section of hell.
It was a period when no one’s
nerves were in any degree normal-least
of all the nerves of the eternally hammered Germans.
Even the fiercely advancing Franco-Americans, the
“Here-We-Comes,” had lost the grimly humorous
composure that had been theirs, and waxed sullen and
ferocious in their eagerness.
Thus it was that Bruce missed his
wontedly uproarious welcome as he cantered, at sunset
one July day, into a smashed farmstead where his friends,
the “Here-We-Comes,” were bivouacked for
the night. By instinct, the big dog seemed to
know where to find the temporary regimental headquarters.
He trotted past a sentry, into an
unroofed cattle-shed where the colonel was busily
scribbling a detailed report of the work done by the
“Here-We-Comes” during that day’s
drive.
Coming to a halt by the colonel’s
side, Bruce stood expectantly wagging his plumy tail
and waiting for the folded message from division headquarters
to be taken off his collar.
Usually, on such visits, the colonel
made much of the dog. To-day he merely glanced
up abstractedly from his writing, at sight of Bruce’s
silken head at his side. He unfastened the message,
read it, frowned and went on with his report.
Bruce continued to wag his tail and
to look up wistfully for the wonted petting and word
of commendation. But the colonel had forgotten
his existence. So presently the collie wearied
of waiting for a caress from a man whose caresses,
at best, he did not greatly value. He turned and
strolled out of the shed. His message delivered,
he knew he was at liberty to amuse himself as he might
choose to, until such time as he must carry back to
his general a reply to the dispatch he had brought.
From outside came the voices of tired
and lounging soldiers. A traveling kitchen had
just been set up near by. From it arose a blend
of smells that were mighty tempting to a healthily
hungry dog. Thither, at a decorous but expectant
pace, Bruce bent his steps.
Top-Sergeant Mahan was gazing with
solicitous interest upon the toil of the cooks at
the wheeled kitchen. Beside him, sharing his concern
in the supper preparations, was Mahan’s closest
crony, old Sergeant Vivier. The wizened little
Frenchman, as a boy, had been in the surrender of
Sedan. Nightly, ever since, he had besought the
saints to give him, some day, a tiny share in the
avenging of that black disgrace.
Mahan and Vivier were the warmest
of Bruce’s many admirers in the “Here-We-Comes.”
Ordinarily a dual whoop of joy from them would have
greeted his advent. This afternoon they merely
chirped abstractedly at him, and Mahan patted him
carelessly on the head before returning to the inspection
of the cooking food.
Since an hour before dawn, both men
had been in hot action. The command for the “Here-We-Comes”
to turn aside and bivouac for the night had been a
sharp disappointment to them, as well as to every unwounded
man in the regiment.
When a gambler is in the middle of
a winning streak, when an athlete feels he has the
race in his own hands, when a business man has all
but closed the deal that means fortune to him-at
such crises it is maddening to be halted at the very
verge of triumph. But to soldiers who, after
months of reverses, at last have their hated foe on
the run, such a check does odd things to temper and
to nerves.
In such plight were the men of the
“Here-We-Comes,” on this late afternoon.
Mahan and Vivier were too seasoned and too sane to
give way to the bursts of temper and the swirls of
blasphemy that swayed so many of their comrades.
Nevertheless they were glum and silent and had no
heart for jolly welcomings,-even to so dear
a friend as Bruce.
Experience told them that a square
meal would work miracles in the way of calming and
bracing them. Hence, apart from stark hunger,
their interest in the cooking of supper.
Bruce was too much a philosopher-and
not devoted enough to his soldier friends-to
be hurt at the lack of warmth in the greeting.
With the air of an epicure, he sniffed at the contents
of one of the kitchen’s bubbling kettles.
Then he walked off and curled himself comfortably on
a pile of bedding, there to rest until supper should
be ready.
Several times, as he lay there, soldiers
passed and repassed. One or two of them snapped
their fingers at the dog or even stooped, in passing,
to stroke his head. But on the faces of all of
them was unrest and a certain wolfish eagerness, which
precluded playing with pets at such a time. The
hot zest of the man-hunt was upon them. It was
gnawing in the veins of the newest recruit, ever,
as in the heart of the usually self-contained colonel
of the regiment.
The colonel, in fact, had been so
carried away by the joy of seeing his men drive the
hated graycoats before them that day that he had overstepped
the spirit of his own orders from the division commander.
In brief, he had made no effort to
“dress” his command, in the advance, upon
the regiments to either side of it. As a result,
when the signal to bivouac for the night was given,
the “Here-We-Comes” were something like
a mile ahead of the regiment which should have been
at their immediate right, and nearly two miles in
front of the brigade at their left.
In other words, the “Here-We-Comes”
now occupied a salient of their own, ahead of the
rest of the FrancoAmerican line. It was in rebuke
for this bit of good progress and bad tactics that
the division commander had written to the colonel,
in the dispatch which Bruce had brought.
German airmen, sailing far above,
and dodging as best they could the charges of the
Allied ’planes, had just noted that the “Here-We-Comes”
“salient” was really no salient at all.
So far had it advanced that, for the moment, it was
out of touch with the rest of the division. It
was, indeed, in an excellent position to be cut off
and demolished by a dashing nightattack. And
a report to this effect was delivered to a fumingly
distracted German major general, who yearned for a
chance to atone in some way for the day’s shameful
reverses.
“If they hadn’t halted
us and made us call it a day, just as we were getting
into our stride,” loudly grumbled one Yankee
private to another as the two clumped up to the kitchen,
“we’d have been in Fere-en-Tardenois by
now. What lazy guy is running this drive, anyhow?”
“The same lazy guy that will
stick you into the hoosgow for insubordination and
leave you to do your bit there while the rest of us
stroll on to Berlin!” snapped Top-Sergeant Mahan,
wheeling upon the grumbler. “Till you learn
how to obey orders without grouching, it isn’t
up to you to knock wiser men. Shut up!”
Though Mahan’s tone of reproof
was professionally harsh, his spirit was not in his
words. And the silenced private knew it.
He knew, too, that the top-sergeant was as savage
over the early halt as were the rest of the men.
Bruce, as a rule, when he honored
the “Here-We-Comes” with a visit, spent
the bulk of his time with Mahan and old Vivier.
But to-day neither of these friends was an inspiring
companion. Nor were the rest of Bruce’s
acquaintances disposed to friendliness. Wherefore,
as soon as supper was eaten, the dog returned to his
heap of bedding, for the hour or so of laziness which
Nature teaches all her children to demand, after a
full meal,-and which the so-called “dumb”
animals alone are intelligent enough to take.
Dusk had merged into night when Bruce
got to his feet again. Taps had just sounded.
The tired men gladly rolled themselves into their
blankets and fell into a dead sleep. A sentry-relief
set forth to replace the first batch of sentinels
with the second.
Mahan was of the party. Though
the top-sergeant had been a stupid comrade, thus far
to-day, he was now evidently going for a walk.
And even though it was a duty-walk, yet the idea of
it appealed to the dog after his long inaction.
So Bruce got up and followed.
As he came alongside the stiffly marching top-sergeant,
the collie so far subverted discipline as to thrust
his nose, in friendly greeting, into Mahan’s
slightly cupped palm. And the top-sergeant so
far abetted the breach of discipline as to give the
collie’s head a furtive pat. The night was
dim, as the moon had not risen; so the mutual contact
of good-fellowship was not visible to the marching
men on either side of Mahan and the dog. And discipline,
therefore, did not suffer much, after all.
At one post after another, a sentinel
was relieved and a fresh man took his place.
Farthest in front of the “Here-We-Comes”
lines-and nearest to the German-was
posted a lanky Missourian whom Bruce liked, a man
who had a way of discovering in his deep pockets stray
bits of food which he had hoarded there for the collie
and delighted to dole out to him. The Missourian
had a drawlingly soft voice the dog liked, and he
used to talk to Bruce as if the latter were another
human.
For all these reasons-and
because Mahan was too busy and too grumpy to bother
with him-Bruce elected to stay where he
was, for a while, and share the Missourian’s
vigil. So, when the rest of the party moved along
to the next sentry-go, the dog remained. The Missourian
was only too glad to have him do so. It is tedious
and stupid to pace a desolate beat, alone, at dead
of night, after a day of hard fighting. And the
man welcomed the companionship of the dog.
For a time, as the Missourian paced
his solitary stretch of broken and shrub-grown ground,
Bruce gravely paced to and fro at his side. But
presently this aimless promenade began to wax uninteresting.
And, as the two came to the far end of the beat, Bruce
yawned and lay down. It was pleasanter to lie
there and to watch the sentinel do the walking.
Stretched out, in a little grass-hollow,
the dog followed blinkingly with his soft brown eyes
the pendulumlike progress of his friend. And
always the dog’s plumed tail would beat rhythmic
welcome against the ground as the sentry approached
him.
Thus nearly an hour wore on.
A fat moon butted its lazy way through the smoke-mists
of the eastern skyline.
Then something happened-something
that Bruce could readily have forestalled if the wind
had been blowing from the other direction, and if
a dog’s eyes were not as nearsighted as his nose
is farsmelling.
The Missourian paused to run his hand
caressingly over the collie’s rough mane, and
moved on, down the lonely beat. Bruce watched
his receding figure, drowsily. At the end of
ninety yards or more, the Missourian passed by a bunch
of low bushes which grew at the near side of a stretch
of hilly and shellpocked ground. He moved past
the bushes, still watched by the somewhat bored dog.
It was then that Bruce saw a patch
of bushshadow detach itself from the rest, under the
glow of the rising moon. The shadow was humpy
and squat. Noiseless, it glided out from among
the bushes, close at the sentry’s heels, and
crept after him.
Bruce pricked his ears and started
to get up. His curiosity was roused. The
direction of the wind prevented him from smelling out
the nature of the mystery. It also kept his keen
hearing from supplying any clue. And the distance
would not permit him to see with any distinctness.
Still his curiosity was very mild.
Surely, if danger threatened, the sentinel would realize
it. For by this time the Shadow was a bare three
feet behind him near enough, by Bruce’s system
of logic, for the Missourian to have smelled and heard
the pursuer. So Bruce got up, in the most leisurely
fashion, preparatory to strolling across to investigate.
But at almost his first step he saw something that
changed his gracefully slouching walk into a charging
run.
The Shadow suddenly had merged with
the sentinel. For an instant, in stark silence,
the two seemed to cling together. Then the Shadow
fled, and the lanky Missourian slumped to the earth
in a sprawling heap, his throat cut.
The slayer had been a deft hand at
the job. No sound had escaped the Missourian,
from the moment the stranglingly tight left arm had
been thrown around his throat from behind until, a
second later, he fell bleeding and lifeless.
In twenty leaping strides, Bruce came
up to the slain sentinel and bent over him. Dog-instinct
told the collie his friend had been done to death.
And the dog’s power of scent told him it was
a German who had done the killing.
For many months, Bruce had been familiar
with the scent of German soldiers, so different from
that of the army in which he toiled. And he had
learned to hate it, even as a dog hates the vague “crushed
cucumber” smell of a pitviper. But while
every dog dreads the viper-smell as much as he loathes
it, Bruce had no fear at all of the boche odor.
Instead, it always awoke in him a blood-lust, as fierce
as any that had burned in his wolf-ancestors.
This same fury swept him now, as he
stood, quivering, above the body of the kindly man
who so lately had petted him; this and a craving to
revenge the murder of his human friend.
For the briefest time, Bruce stood
there, his dark eyes abrim with unhappiness and bewilderment,
as he gazed down on the huddled form in the wet grass.
Then an electric change came over him. The softness
fled from his eyes, leaving them bloodshot and blazing.
His great tawny ruff bristled like an angry cat’s.
The lazy gracefulness departed from his mighty body.
It became tense and terrible. In the growing moonlight
his teeth gleamed whitely from under his upcurled
lip.
In a flash he turned and set off at
a loping run, nose close to ground, his long stride
deceptively swift. The zest of the man-hunt had
obsessed him, as completely as, that day, it had spurred
the advance of the “Here-We-Comes.”
The trail of the slayer was fresh,
even over such broken ground. Fast as the German
had fled, Bruce was flying faster. Despite the
murderer’s long start, the dog speedily cut
down the distance between his quarry and himself.
Not trusting to sight, but solely to his unerring sense
of smell. Bruce sped on.
Then, in a moment or two, his hearing
re-enforced his scent. He could catch the pad-pad-pad
of running feet. And the increasing of the sound
told him he was gaining fast.
But in another bound his ears told
him something else-something he would have
heard much sooner, had not the night wind been setting
so strongly in the other direction. He heard
not only the pounding of his prey’s heavy-shod
feet, but the soft thud of hundreds-perhaps
thousands-of other army shoes. And
now, despite the adverse wind, the odor of innumerable
soldiers came to his fiercely sniffing nostrils.
Not only was it the scent of soldiers, but of German
soldiers.
For the first time, Bruce lifted his
head from the ground, as he ran, and peered in front
of him. The moon had risen above the low-lying
horizon vapors into a clear sky, and the reach of country
was sharply visible.
Bruce saw the man he was chasing,-saw
him plainly. The German was still running, but
not at all as one who flees from peril. He ran,
rather, as might the bearer of glad tidings. And
he was even now drawing up to a group of men who awaited
eagerly his coming. There must have been fifty
men in the group. Behind them-in open
formation and as far as the dog’s near-sighted
eyes could see-were more men, and more,
and more-thousands of them, all moving stealthily
forward.
Now, a collie (in brain, though never
in heart) is much more wolf than dog. A bullterrier,
or an Airedale, would have charged on at his foe,
and would have let himself be hacked to pieces before
loosing his hold on the man.
But-even as a wolf checks
his pursuit of a galloping sheep when the latter dashes
into the guarded fold-Bruce came to an abrupt
halt, at sight of these reenforcements. He stood
irresolute, still mad with vengeful anger, but not
foolish enough to assail a whole brigade of armed
men.
It is quite impossible (though Mahan
and Vivier used to swear it must be true) that Bruce
had the reasoning powers to figure out the whole situation
which confronted him. He could not have known
that a German brigade had been sent to take advantage
of the “Here-We-Comes” temporarily isolated
position-that three sentries had been killed
in silence and that their deaths had left a wide gap
through which the brigade hoped to creep unobserved
until they should be within striking distance of their
unsuspectingly slumbering victims.
Bruce could not have known this.
He could not have grasped the slightest fraction of
the idea, being only a real-life dog and not a fairytale
animal. But what he could and did realize was
that a mass of detested Germans was moving toward
him, and that he could not hope to attack them, single-handed;
also, that he was not minded to slink peacefully away
and leave his friend unavenged.
Thwarted rage dragged from his furry
throat a deep growl; a growl that resounded eerily
through that silent place of stealthy moves. And
he stepped majestically forth from the surrounding
long grass, into the full glare of moonlight.
The deceptive glow made him loom gigantic
and black, and tinged his snowy chest with the phosphorous
gleam of a snowfield. His eyes shone like a wild
beast’s.
Corporal Rudolph Freund, of the Konigin
Luise Regiment, had just finished his three-word report
to his superior. He had merely saluted and announced
“He is dead!”
Corporal Freund did not thrill, as
usual, to the colonel’s grunt of approval.
The Corporal was worried. He was a Black Forest
peasant; and, while iron military life had dulled
his native superstitions, it had not dispelled them.
The night was mystic, in its odd blend
of moon and shadows. However hardened one may
be, it is a nerve-strain to creep through long grass,
like a red Indian, to the murder of a hostile sentinel.
And every German in the “Pocket” had been
under frightful mental and physical stress, for the
past week.
Corporal Rudolph Freund was a brave
man and a brute. But that week had sapped his
nerve. And the work of this night had been the
climax. The desolate ground, over which he had
crawled to the killing, had suddenly seemed peopled
with evil gnomes and goblins, whose existence no true
Black Forest peasant can doubt. And, on the run
back, he had been certain he heard some unseen monster
tearing through the underbrush in hot pursuit of him.
So certain had he been, that he had redoubled his
speed.
There were no wolves or other large
wild animals in that region. When he had wriggled
toward the slow-pacing American sentinel, he had seen
and heard no creature of any sort. Yet he was
sure that on the way back he had been pursued by-by
Something! And into his scared memory, as he
ran, had flashed the ofttold Black Forest tale of the
Werewolf-the devil-beast that
is entered by the soul of a murdered man and which
tracks the murderer to his death.
Glad was the unnerved Corporal Freund
when his run ceased and he stood close to his grossly
solid and rank-scented fellowmen once more. Almost
he was inclined to laugh at his fears of the fabled
Werewolf-and especially at the idea that
he had been pursued. He drew a long breath of
relief. He drew the breath in. But he did
not at once expel it. For on his ears came the
sound of a hideous menacing growl.
Corporal Freund spun about, in the
direction of the mysterious threat. And there,
not thirty feet from him, in the ghostly moonlight,
stood the Werewolf!
This time there could be no question
of overstrained nerves and of imagination. The
Thing was there!
Horribly visible in every detail,
the Werewolf was glaring at him. He could see
the red glow of the gigantic devil-beast’s eyes,
the white flash of its teeth, the ghostly shimmering
of its snowy chest. The soul of the man he had
slain had taken this traditional form and was hunting
down the slayer! A thousand stories of Freund’s
childhood verified the frightful truth. And overwrought
human nature’s endurance went to pieces under
the shock.
A maniac howl of terror split the
midnight stillness. Shriek after shriek rent
the air. Freund tumbled convulsively to the ground
at his colonel’s feet, gripping the officer’s
booted knees and screeching for protection. The
colonel, raging that the surprise attack should be
imperiled by such a racket, beat the frantic man over
the mouth with his heavy fist, kicking ferociously
at his upturned writhing face, and snarling to him
to be silent.
The shower of blows brought Freund
back to sanity, to the extent of changing his craven
terror into Fear’s secondary phase-the
impulse to strike back at the thing that had caused
the fright. Rolling over and over on the ground,
under the impact of his superior’s fist blows
and kicks, Freund somehow regained his feet.
Reeling up to the nearest soldier,
the panic-crazed corporal snatched the private’s
rifle and fired three times, blindly, at Bruce.
Then, foaming at the mouth, Freund fell heavily to
earth again, chattering and twitching in a fit.
Bruce, at the second shot, leaped
high in the air, and collapsed, in an inert furry
heap, among the bushes. There he lay,-his
career as a courier-dog forever ended.
Corporal Rudolph Freund was perhaps
the best sniper in his regiment. Wildly though
he had fired, marksman-instinct had guided his bullets.
And at such close range there was no missing.
Bruce went to earth with one rifle ball through his
body, and another in his leg. A third had reached
his skull.
Now, the complete element of surprise
was all-needful for the attack the Germans had planned
against the “Here-We-Comes.” Deprived
of that advantage the expedition was doomed to utter
failure. For, given a chance to wake and to rally,
the regiment could not possibly be “rushed,”
in vivid moonlight, before the nearest Allied forces
could move up to its support. And those forces
were only a mile or so to the rear. There can
be no possible hope for a surprise attack upon a well-appointed
camp when the night’s stillness has been shattered
by a series of maniac screams and by three echoing
rifle-shots.
Already the guard was out. A
bugle was blowing. In another minute, the sentry-calls
would locate the gap made by the three murdered sentinels.
A swift guttural conference among
the leaders of the gray-clad marauders was followed
by the barking of equally guttural commands. And
the Germans withdrew as quietly and as rapidly as they
had come.
It was the mouthing and jabbering
of the fit-possessed Corporal Rudolph Freund that
drew to him the notice of a squad of Yankees led by
Top-Sergeant Mahan, ten minutes later. It was
the shudder-accompanied pointing of the
delirious man’s finger, toward the nearby clump
of undergrowth, that revealed to them the still warm
body of Bruce.
Back to camp, carried lovingly in
Mahan’s strong arms, went all that was left
of the great courier-dog. Back to camp, propelled
between two none-too-gentle soldiers, staggered the
fit-ridden Corporal Freund.
At the colonel’s quarters, a
compelling dose of stimulant cleared some of the mists
from the prisoner’s brain. His nerve and
his will-power still gone to smash, he babbled eagerly
enough of the night attack, of the killing of the
sentries and of his encounter with the Werewolf.
“I saw him fall!” he raved.
“But he is not dead. The Werewolf can be
killed only by a silver bullet, marked with a cross
and blessed by a priest. He will live to track
me down! Lock me where he cannot find me, for
the sake of sweet mercy!”
And in this way, the “Here-We-Comes”
learned of Bruce’s part in the night’s
averted disaster.
Old Vivier wept unashamed over the
body of the dog he had loved. Top-Sergeant Mahan-the
big tears splashing, unnoted, from his own red eyes-besought
the Frenchman to strive for better self-control and
not to set a cry-baby example to the men.
Then a group of grim-faced soldiers
dug a grave. And, carried by Mahan and Vivier,
the beautiful dog’s body was borne to its resting-place.
A throng of men in the gray dawn stood wordless around
the grave. Some one shamefacedly took off his
hat. With equal shamefacedness, everybody else
followed the example.
Mahan laid the dog’s body on
the ground, at the grave’s brink. Then,
looking about him, he cleared his throat noisily and
spoke.
“Boys,” he began, “when
a human dies for other humans, there’s a Christian
burial service read over him. I’d have asked
the chaplain to read one over Bruce, here, if I hadn’t
known he’d say no. But the Big Dog isn’t
going to rest without a word said over his grave, for
all that.”
Mahan cleared his throat noisily once
more, winked fast, then went on:-
“You can laugh at me, if any
of you feel like it. But there’s some of
you here who wouldn’t be alive to laugh, if Bruce
hadn’t done what he did last night. He
was only just a dog-with no soul, and with
no life after this one, I s’pose. So he
went ahead and did his work and took the risks, and
asked no pay.
“And by and by he died, still
doing his work and asking no pay.
“He didn’t work with the
idea of getting a cross or a ribbon or a promotion
or a pension or his name in the paper or to make the
crowd cheer him when he got back home, or to brag
to the homefolks about how he was a hero. He
just went ahead and was a hero. That’s
because he was only a dog, with no soul-and
not a man.
“All of us humans are working
for some reward, even if it’s only for our pay
or for the fun of doing our share. But Bruce was
a hero because he was just a dog, and because he didn’t
know enough to be anything else but a hero.
“I’ve heard about him,
before he joined up with us. I guess most of us
have. He lived up in Jersey, somewhere. With
folks that had bred him. I’ll bet a year’s
pay he was made a lot of by those folks; and that it
wrenched ’em to let him go. You could see
he’d been brought up that way. Life must
‘a’ been pretty happy for the old chap,
back there. Then he was picked up and slung into
the middle of this hell.
“So was the rest of us, says
you. But you’re wrong. Those of us
that waited for the draft had our choice of going
to the hoosgow, as ‘conscientious objectors,’
if we didn’t want to fight. And every mother’s
son of us knew we was fighting for the Right; and that
we was making the world a decenter and safer
place for our grandchildren and our womenfolks to
live in. We didn’t brag about God being
on our side, like the boches do. It was
enough for us to know we was on god’s
side and fighting His great fight for Him. We
had patriotism and religion and Right, behind us,
to give us strength.
“Brucie hadn’t a one of
those things. He didn’t know what he was
here for-and why he’d been pitched
out of his nice home, into all this. He didn’t
have a chance to say Yes or No. He didn’t
have any spellbinders to tell him he was making the
world safe for d’mocracy. He was made
to come.
“How would any of us humans
have acted, if a deal like that had been handed to
us? We’d ‘a’ grouched and slacked
and maybe deserted. That’s because we’re
lords of creation and have souls and brains and such.
What did Bruce do? He jumped into this game, with
bells on. He risked his life a hundred times;
and he was just as ready to risk it again the next
day.
“Yes, and he knew he was risking
it, too. There’s blame little he didn’t
know. He saw war-dogs, all around him, choking
to death from gas, or screaming their lives out, in
No Man’s Land, when a bit of shell had disemboweled
’em or a bullet had cracked their backbones.
He saw ’em starve to death. He saw ’em
one bloody mass of scars and sores. He saw ’em
die of pneumonia and mange and every rotten trench
disease. And he knew it might be his turn, any
time at all, to die as they were dying; and he knew
the humans was too busy nursing other humans, to have
time to spare on caring for tortured dogs. (Though
those same dogs were dying for the humans, if it comes
to that.)
“Yes, Bruce knew what the end
was bound to be. He knew it. And he kept
on, as gay and as brave as if he was on a day’s
romp. He never flinched. Not even that time
the K.O. sent him up the hill for reenforcements at
Rache, when every sharpshooter in the boche
trenches was laying for him, and when the machine
guns were trained on him, too. Bruce knew he
was running into death-, then and a dozen
other times. And he went at it like a white man.
“I’m-I’m
getting longwinded. And I’ll stop.
But-maybe if you boys will remember the
Big Dog-and what he did for us,-when
you get back home,-if you’ll remember
him and what he did and what thousands of other war-dogs
have done,-then maybe you’ll be men
enough to punch the jaw of any guy who gets to saying
that dogs are nuisances and that vivisection’s
a good thing, and all that. If you’ll just
do that much, then-well, then Bruce hasn’t
lived and died for nothing!
“Brucie, old boy,” bending
to lift the tawny body and lower it into the grave,
“it’s good-by. It’s good-by
to the cleanest, whitest pal that a poor dub of a
doughboy ever had. I-”
Mahan glowered across at the clump of silent men.
“If anybody thinks I’m
crying,” he continued thickly, “he’s
a liar. I got a cold, and-”
“Sacre bon Dieu!” yelled
old Vivier, insanely. “Regarde-donc!
Nom d’une pipe!”
He knelt quickly beside the body,
in an ecstasy of excitement. The others craned
their necks to see. Then from a hundred throats
went up a gasp of amazement.
Bruce, slowly and dazedly, was lifting
his magnificent head!
“Chase off for the surgeon!”
bellowed Mahan, plumping down on his knees beside
Vivier and examining the wound in the dog’s scalp.
“The bullet only creased his skull! It
didn’t go through! It’s just put him
out for a few hours, like I’ve seen it do to
men. Get the surgeon! If that bullet in
his body didn’t hit something vital, we’ll
pull him around, yet! Glory be!”
It was late summer again at The Place,
late opulent summer, with the peace of green earth
and blue sky, the heavy droning of bees and the promise
of harvest. The long shadows of late afternoon
stretched lovingly across the lawn, from the great
lakeside trees. Over everything brooded a dreamy
amber light. The war seemed a million miles away.
The Mistress and the Master came down
from the vine-shaded veranda for their sunset walk
through the grounds. At sound of their steps on
the gravel, a huge dark-brown-and-white collie emerged
from his resting-place under the wistaria-arbor.
He stretched himself lazily, fore
and aft, in collie-fashion. Then he trotted up
to his two deities and thrust his muzzle playfully
into the Mistress’s palm, as he fell into step
with the promenaders.
He walked with a stiffness in one
foreleg. His gait was not a limp. But the
leg’s strength could no longer be relied on for
a ten-mile gallop. Along his forehead was a new-healed
bullet-crease. And the fur on his sides had scarcely
yet grown over the mark of the high-powered ball which
had gone clear through him without touching a mortal
spot.
Truly, the regimental surgeon of the
“Here-We-Comes” had done a job worthy
of his own high fame! And the dog’s wonderful
condition had done the rest.
Apart from scars and stiffness, Bruce
was none the worse for his year on the battle-front.
He could serve no longer as a dashing courier.
But his life as a pet was in no way impaired.
“Here’s something that
came by the afternoon mail, Bruce,” the Master
greeted him, as the collie ranged alongside. “It
belongs to you. Take a look at it.”
The Master drew from his pocket a
leather box, and opened it. On the oblong of
white satin, within the cover, was pinned a very small
and very thin gold medal. But, light as it was,
it had represented much abstinence from estaminets
and tobacco-shops, on the part of its donors.
“Listen,” the Master said,
holding the medal in front of the collie. “Listen,
while I read you the inscription: ’To Bruce.
From some of the boys he saved from the boches.’”
Bruce was sniffing the thin gold lozenge
interestedly. The inscription meant nothing to
him. But-strong and vivid to his trained
nostrils-he scented on the medal the loving
finger-touch of his old friend and admirer, Top-Sergeant
Mahan.