THE RIBBONS THAT STUCK IN HIS COAT
The little group was gathered in the
cellar of Pervyse. An occasional shell was heard
in the middle distance, as artillery beyond the Yser
threw a lazy feeler over to the railway station.
The three women were entertaining a distinguished
guest at the evening meal of tinned rabbit and dates.
Their visitor was none other than F. Ainslie-Barkleigh,
the famous English war-correspondent. He was
dressed for the part. He wore high top-boots,
whose red leather shone richly even in the dim yellow
of the lantern that lit them to their feast.
About his neck was swung a heavy black strap from
which hung a pair of very elegant field-glasses, ready
for service at a moment’s call. He could
sweep a battle-field with them, or expose a hidden
battery, or rake a road. From the belt that made
his jacket shapely about his person, there depended
a map of the district, with heavy inked red lines
for the position of friend or foe. He was a tall
man, with an immense head, on which were stuck, like
afterthoughts, very tiny features a nose
easily overlooked, a thin slit of a mouth, and small
inset eyes. All the upper part of him was overhanging
and alarming, till you chanced on those diminutive
features. It was as if his growth had been terminated
before it reached the expressive parts. He had
an elaborate manner a reticence, a drawl,
and a chronic irony. Across half of his chest
there streaked a rainbow of color; gay little ribbons
of decoration, orange and crimson and purple and white.
Mrs. Bracher, sturdy, iron-jawed,
and Scotch, her pretty young assistant, sat opposite
him at table. Hilda did the honors by sitting
next him, and passing him tins of provender, as required.
“What pretty ribbons you wear,”
said Hilda. “Where did you get them?”
“Oh, different wars,” returned Barkleigh
carelessly.
“That’s modest, but it’s
vague,” urged Hilda. “If I had such
pretty ribbons, I should have the case letter and
the exhibit number printed on each. Now this
one, for instance. What happened to set this fluttering?”
“Oh, that one,” he said,
nearly twisting his eyes out of their sockets to see
which one her fingers had lighted on. “That’s
one the Japs gave me.”
“Thank you for not calling them
the little brown people,” returned Hilda; “that
alone would merit decoration at their hands. And
this gay thing, what principality gave you this?”
“That came from somewhere in
the Balkans. I always did get those states muddled
up.”
“Incredible haziness,”
responded Hilda. “You probably know the
exact hour when the King and his Chief of Staff called
you out on the Town-hall steps. You must either
be a very brave man or else write very nice articles
about the ruling powers.”
“The latter, of course,” returned he,
a little nettled.
“Vain as a peacock,” whispered Scotch
to the ever-watchful Mrs. Bracher.
“I don’t understand you
women,” said Ainslie-Barkleigh, clearing his
throat for action. But Hilda was too quick for
him.
“I know you don’t,”
she cut in, “and that is no fault in you.
But what you really mean is that you don’t like
us, and that, I submit, is your own fault.”
“But let me explain,” urged he.
“Go ahead,” said Hilda.
“Well, what I mean is this,”
he explained. “Here I find you three women
out at the very edge of the battle-front. Here
you are in a cellar, sleeping in bags on the straw,
living on bully-beef and canned stuff. Now, you
could just as well be twenty miles back, nursing in
a hospital.”
“Is there any shortage of nurses
for the hospitals?” interposed Hilda. “When
I went to the Red Cross at Pall Mall in London, they
had over three thousand nurses on the waiting list.”
“That’s true enough,”
assented Barkleigh. “But what I mean is,
this is reckless; you are in danger, without really
knowing it.”
“So are the men in danger,”
returned Hilda. “The soldiers come in here,
hungry, and we have hot soup for them. They come
from the trenches, with a gunshot wound in the hand,
or a piece of shell in a leg, and we fix them up.
That’s better than travelling seven or eight
miles before getting attention. Why it was only
a week ago that Mrs. Bracher here
“Now none of that,” broke in the nurse
sternly.
“Hush,” said Hilda, “it
isn’t polite to interrupt when a gentleman is
asking for information.”
She turned back to the correspondent.
“Last week,” she took
up her story, “a young Belgian private came in
here with his lower lip swollen out to twice its proper
size. It had got gangrene in it. A silly
old military doctor had clapped a treatment over it,
when the wound was fresh and dirty, without first cleaning
it out. Mrs. Bracher treated it every two hours
for six days. The boy used to come right in here
from the trenches. And would you believe it, that
lip is looking almost right. If it hadn’t
been for her, he would have been disfigured for life.”
“Very good,” admitted
the correspondent, “but it doesn’t quite
satisfy me. Wait till you get some real hot shell
fire out here, then you’ll make for your happy
home.”
“Why,” began Scotch, rising
slowly but powerfully to utterance.
“It’s all right, Scotch,”
interposed Hilda, at a gallop, “save the surprise.
It will keep.”
Scotch subsided into a rich silence.
She somehow never quite got into the conversation,
though she was always in the action. She was one
of those silent, comfortable persons, without whom
no group is complete. Into her ample placidity
fell the high-pitched clamor of noisier people, like
pebbles into a mountain lake.
“Now, what do you women think
you are doing?” persisted the correspondent.
“Why are you here?”
“You really want to know?” queried Hilda.
“I really want to know,” he repeated.
“I’ll answer you to-morrow,”
said Hilda. “Come out here to-morrow afternoon
and we’ll go to Nieuport. We promised to
go over and visit the dressing-station there, and
on the way I’ll tell you why we are here.”
Next day was grey and chilly.
A low rumble came out of the north. The women
had a busy morning, for the night had been full of
snipers perched on trees. The faithful three
spread aseptics and bandaged and sewed, and generally
cheered the stream of callers from the Ninth and Twelfth
Regiments, Army of the King of the Belgians. In
the early afternoon, the buzz of motors penetrated
to the stuffy cellar, and it needed no yelping horn,
squeezed by the firm hand of Smith, to bring Hilda
to the surface, alert for the expedition. Two
motor ambulances were puffing their lungs out, in
the roadway. Pale-faced Smith sat in one at the
steering-gear Smith, the slight London boy
who would drive a car anywhere. Beside him sat
F. Ainslie-Barkleigh, bent over upon his war map,
studying the afternoon’s campaign. In the
second ambulance were Tom, the Cockney driver, and
the leader of the Ambulance Corps, Dr. Neil McDonnell.
“Jump in,” called he, “we’re
off for Nieuport.”
She jumped into the first ambulance,
and they turned to the north and took the straight
road that leads all the way from Dixmude to the sea.
Barkleigh was much too busy with his glasses and his
map to give her any of his attention for the first
quarter hour. They speeded by sentinel after
sentinel, who smiled and murmured, “Les Anglais.”
Corporals, captains, commandants, gazed in amazement
and awe at the massive figure of the war-correspondent,
as he challenged the horizon with his binoculars and
then dipped to his map for consultation. Only
once did the party have to yield up the pass-word,
which for that afternoon was “Charleroi.”
Finally Barkleigh turned to the girl.
“We had a discussion last evening,”
he began, “and you promised to answer my question.
Why are you out here? Why isn’t a hospital
good enough for you, back in Furnes or Dunkirk?”
“I remember,” returned
Hilda. “I’ll tell you. I could
answer you by saying that we’re out to help,
and that would be true, too. But it wouldn’t
be quite the whole truth, for there’s a tang
of adventure in Pervyse, where we can see the outposts
of the other fellows, that there isn’t in the
Carnegie Library in Pittsburg, let us say. Yes,
we’re out to help. But we’re out
for another reason, too. For generations now,
you men have had a monopoly of physical courage.
You have faced storms at sea, and charged up hills,
and pulled out drowning children, and footed it up
fire-ladders, till you think that bravery is a male
characteristic. You’ve always handed out
the passive suffering act to us. We had any amount
of compliments as long as we stuck to silent suffering.
But now we want to see what shells look like.
As long as sons and brothers have to stand up to them,
why, we’re going to be there, too.”
“But you haven’t been
in the thick of it,” objected Barkleigh.
“When the danger is so close you can see it,
a woman’s nerve isn’t as good as a man’s.
It can’t be. She isn’t built that
way.”
“That’s the very point,”
retorted Hilda, “we’re going to show you.”
“Damn quick,” muttered Smith.
In the pleasant heat of their discussion,
they hadn’t been noticing the roadway.
It was full of soldiers, trudging south. The rumble
had become a series of reports. The look of the
peaceful day was changing. Barkleigh turned from
his concentration on the girl, and glanced up the
road.
“These troops are all turning,” he said.
“You are right,” Hilda admitted.
“Can’t you see,”
he urged, “they’re all marching back.
That means they’ve given the place up.”
“Oh, hardly that,” corrected
Hilda; “it simply means that Nieuport is hot
for the present moment.”
“You’re not going in?”
continued Barkleigh. “It is foolish to go
into the town, when the troops are coming out of it.”
“True enough,” assented
Hilda, “but it’s a curious fact that the
wounded can’t retreat as fast as the other men,
so I’m afraid we shall have to look them up.
Of course, it would be a lot pleasanter if they could
come to meet us half-way.”
Smith let out his motor, and turned
up his coat collar, a habit of his when he anticipated
a breezy time. They pounded down the road, and
into the choice old town.
They had chanced on the afternoon
when the enemy’s guns were reducing it from
an inhabited place into a rubbish heap. They could
not well have chosen a brisker hour for the promised
visit. The shells were coming in three and four
to the minute. There was a sound of falling masonry.
The blur of red brick-dust in the air, and the fires
from a half dozen blazing houses, filled the eyes
with hot prickles. The street was a mess over
which the motor veered and tossed like a careening
boat in a heavy seawash. In the other car, their
leader, brave, perky little Dr. McDonnell, sat with
his blue eyes dreaming away at the ruin in front of
him. The man was a mystic and burrowed down into
his sub-consciousness when under fire. This made
him calm, slow, and very absent-minded, during the
moments when he passed in under the guns.
They steamed up to the big yellow
Hotel de Ville. This was the target of the concentrated
artillery fire, for here troops had been sheltering.
Here, too, in the cellar, was the dressing-station
for the wounded. A small, spent, but accurately
directed obus, came in a parabola from over behind
the roofs, and floated by the ambulance and thudded
against the yellow brick of the stately hall.
“Ah, it’s got whiskers
on it,” shouted Hilda in glee. “I
didn’t know they got tired like that, and came
so slow you could see them, did you, Mr. Barkleigh?”
“No, no, of course not,”
he muttered, “they don’t. What’s
that?”
The clear, cold tinkle of breaking
and spilling glass had seized his attention.
The sound came out from the Hotel de Ville.
“The window had a pane,” said Hilda.
“The town is doomed,” said Barkleigh.
“Can’t we get out of this?” he insisted.
“This is no place to be.”
“No place for a woman, is it?” laughed
Hilda.
“Don’t let me keep you,” she added
politely, “if you feel you must go.”
“Listen,” said the war-correspondent.
About a stone’s throw to their left, a wall
was crumpling up.
Dr. McDonnell had slowly crawled down
from his perch on the ambulance. His legs were
stiff from the long ride, so he carefully shook them
one after the other, and spoke pleasantly to a dog
that was wandering about the Grand Place in a forlorn
panic. Then he remembered why he had come to
the place. There were wounded downstairs in the
Town-hall.
“Come on, boys,” he said
to Tom and Smith, “bring one stretcher, and
we’ll clear the place out. Hilda, you stay
by the cars. We shan’t be but a minute.”
They disappeared inside the battered
building. Barkleigh walked up and down the Grand
Place, felt of the machinery of each of the two ambulances,
lit a cigarette, threw it away and chewed at an unlighted
cigar.
“It’s hot,” he said; “this
is hot.”
“And yet you are shaking as if you were chilly,”
observed Hilda.
“We should never have come,”
went on Barkleigh. “I said so, away back
there on the road. You remember I said so.”
“Yes, the first experience under
fire is trying,” assented Hilda. “I
think the shells are the most annoying, don’t
you, Mr. Barkleigh? Now shrapnel seems more friendly quite
like a hail-storm in Iowa. I come from Iowa,
you know. I don’t believe you do know that
I come from Iowa.”
“They’re slow,”
said Barkleigh, looking toward the Town-hall.
“Why can’t they hurry them out?”
“You see,” explained Hilda,
“there are only three of them actively at work,
and it’s quite a handful for them.”
In a few moments Smith and Tom appeared,
carrying a man with a bandaged leg on their stretcher.
Dr. McDonnell was leading two others, who were able
to walk with a little direction. One more trip
in and out and the ambulances were loaded.
“Back to Pervyse,” ordered Dr. McDonnell.
At Pervyse, Scotch and Mrs. Bracher
were ready for them. So was an English Tommy,
who singled out Ainslie-Barkleigh.
“Orders from Kitchener, sir,”
said the orderly. “You must return to Dunkirk
at once. No correspondent is allowed at the front.”
Barkleigh listened attentively, and
assented with a nod of his head. He walked up
to the three ladies.
“Very sorry,” explained
he. “I had hoped to stay with you, and go
out again. Very interesting and all that.
But K. is strict, you know, so I must leave you.”
He bowed himself away.
“Oh, welcome intervention,” breathed Mrs.
Bracher.
A few weeks had passed with their
angry weather, and now all was green again and sunny.
Seldom had the central square of Poperinghe looked
gayer than on this afternoon, when soldiers were lined
up in the middle, and on all the sides the people
were standing by the tens and hundreds. High
overhead from every window and on every pole, flags
were streaming in the spring wind. Why shouldn’t
the populace rejoice, for had not this town of theirs
held out through all the cruel winter: refuge
and rest for their weary troops, and citadel of their
King? And was not that their King, standing over
yonder on the pavement, higher than the generals and
statesmen on the steps of the Town-hall back of him?
Tall and slender, crowned with youth and beauty, did
he not hold in his hand the hearts of all his people?
And to-day he was passing on merit to two English
dames, and the people were glad of this, for the
two English dames had been kind to their soldiers
in sickness, and had undergone no little peril to
carry them comfort and healing. Yes, they were
glad to shout and clap hands, when, as Chevaliers
of the Order of Leopold, the ribbon and star pendant
were pinned on the breast of the sturdy Mrs. Bracher,
and the silent, charming Scotch. The band bashed
the cymbals and beat the drum, and the wind instruments
roared approval. And the modest young King saluted
the two brave ladies.
In a shop door, a couple of hundred
yards from the ceremony, Hilda was standing quietly
watching the joyous crowds and their King. Pushing
through the throng that hemmed her in, a massive man
came and stood by her.
“Ah, Mr. Barkleigh,” said Hilda, “this
is a surprise.”
“It’s a shame,” he began.
“What’s a shame?” asked Hilda.
“Why aren’t they decorating you?
You’re the bravest of the lot.”
“By no means,” said Hilda;
“those two women deserve all that is coming
to them. I am glad they are getting their pretty
ribbon.”
With a sudden nervous gesture, Barkleigh
unfastened the bright decorations on his chest, and
placed them in Hilda’s hand.
“Take them and wear them,”
he said, “I have no heart for them any more.
They are yours.”
“I didn’t win them, so
I can’t wear them,” she answered, and started
to hand them back.
“No, I won’t take them
back,” he said harshly, brushing her hand from
him, “if you won’t wear them, keep them.
Hide them, throw them away. I’m done with
them. I can’t wear them any more since that
afternoon in Nieuport.”
Hilda pinned the ribbons upon his coat.
“I decorate you,” she said, “for,
verily, you are now worthy.”