The review that morning had drawn
a crowd to the drill grounds that baffled the efforts
of the guards. Carriages from camps and carriages
from town, carts from the suburbs, equestrians from
the parks and pedestrians from everywhere had gradually
encroached within kicking distance of the heels of
the cavalry escorting the general commanding the department,
and that official noted with unerring eye that the
populace was coming up on his flanks, so to speak,
at the moment when the etiquette of the service required
that he should be gazing only to his immediate front
and responding to the salutes of the marching column.
Back of him, ranged in long, single rank, was drawn
up what the newspapers unanimously described as a
“brilliant” staff, despite the fact that
all were in sombre campaign uniform and several had
never been so rated before. In their rear, in
turn, was the line of mounted orderlies and farther
still the silent rank of the escorting troop.
Sentries had been posted to keep the throng at proper
distance, but double their force could have accomplished
nothing the omniscient corporal could not
help them, and after asking one or two stray officers
what they would do about it, the sentries gave way
and the crowd swarmed in. It was just as the
head of the long tramping column came opposite the
reviewing point, and the brigade commander and his
staff, turning out after saluting, found their allotted
station on the right of the reviewing party completely
taken up by the mass of eager spectators. A minute
or so was required before the trouble could be remedied,
for, just as the officers and orderlies were endeavoring
to induce the populace to give way a thing
the American always resists with a gay good humor that
is peculiarly his own a nervous hack driver
on the outskirts backed his bulky trap with unexpected
force, and penned between it and the wheels of a newly-arrived
and much more presentable equipage a fair equestrian
who shrieked with fright and clung to her pommel as
her excited “mount” lashed out with his
heels and made splinters of the hack’s rearmost
spokes and felloes. Down went the hack on its
axle point. Out sprang a tall officer from the
open carriage, and in a second, it seemed, transferred
the panic-stricken horsewoman from the seismatic saddle
to the safety of his own seat and the ministrations
of the two young women and the gray haired civilian
who were the latest arrivals. This done, and
after one quick glance at the lady’s helpless
escort, a young officer from the Presidio, he shouldered
his way through the crowd and stood, presently, on
its inner edge, an unperturbed and most interested
spectator. Battalion after battalion, in heavy
marching order, in the dark-blue service dress, with
campaign hats and leggings, with ranks well closed
and long, well-aligned fronts, with accurate trace
of the guides and well-judged distance, the great
regiments came striding down the gentle slope, conscious,
every officer and man, of the admiration they commanded.
Armstrong, himself commander of a fine regiment of
volunteers in another brigade, looked upon them with
a soldier’s eye, and looked approvingly.
Then, as the rearmost company passed the reviewing
point and gentlemen with two stars on each shoulder
extended their congratulations to the reviewed commander
with one, Armstrong also made his way among the mounted
officers in his calm, deliberate fashion, heedless
of threatening heels and crowding forehands, until
he, too, could say his word of cordial greeting.
He had to wait a few minutes, for the general officers
were grouped and talking earnestly. He heard
a few words and knew well enough what was meant that
quantities of stores intended for the soldiers even
dainties contributed by the Red Cross Society had
been stolen from time to time and spirited off in the
dead of night, and doubtless sold in town for the benefit
of a pack of unknown scoundrels enlisted for no better
purpose. In his own regiment his system had been
so strict that no loss was discoverable, but in certain
others the deficit was great. Complaints were
loud, and the camp commander, stung possibly by comments
from the city, had urged his officers to unusual effort,
and had promised punishment to the extent of the law
on the guilty parties whenever or wherever found.
Even as he was exchanging a word with
the brigadier, Armstrong heard the exclamation:
“By Jove they’ve caught another!”
for with a grim smile of gratification the camp commander
had read and turned over to his adjutant-general a
brief dispatch just handed him by a mounted orderly
who had galloped part.
“One of your irreproachables,
Armstrong,” said one of the staff, with something
half-sneer, half-taunt as he too read and then passed
the paper to the judge-advocate of the division.
Armstrong turned with his usual deliberation.
There was ever about him a quiet dignity of manner
that was the delight of his friends and despair of
his foes.
“What is his name?” he calmly asked.
“One of those society swells of whom you have
so many,” was the reply.
“That does not give his name nor
identify him as one of my men,” said Armstrong
coolly.
“Oh, well, I didn’t say
he belonged to your command,” was the staff
officer’s response, “but one of the kid-glove
crowd that’s got into the ranks.”
“If you mean the recruits in
the teenth Infantry, I should be slow to
suspect them of any crime,” said Armstrong, with
something almost like a drawl, so slow and deliberate
was his manner, and now the steel-gray eyes and the
fair, clear-cut face were turned straight upon the
snapping eyes and dark features of the other.
There was no love lost there. One could
tell without so much as seeing.
“You’re off, then!
That commissary-sergeant caught one of ’em in
the act he got wind of it and skipped,
and to-day came back in handcuffs.”
“All of which may be as you
say,” answered Armstrong, “and still not
warrant your reference to him as one of my irreproachables.”
By this time much of the crowd and
most of the vehicles had driven away. The generals
still sat in saddle chatting earnestly together, while
their staff officers listened in some impatience to
the conversation just recorded. Everybody knew
the fault was not Armstrong’s, but it was jarring
to have to sit and hearken to the controversy.
“Don’t ever twit or try funny business
with Armstrong,” once said a regimental sage.
“He has no sense of humor of that
kind.” Those who best knew him knew that
Armstrong never tolerated unjust accusations, great
or small. In his desire to say an irritating
thing to a man he both envied and respected, the staff
officer had not confined himself to facts, and it proved
a boomerang.
And now, Armstrong’s eyes had
lighted for an instant on the alleged culprit.
Seated opposite Miss Lawrence as the carriage whirled
across Point Lobos Avenue, and watching her unobtrusively,
he saw the sudden light of alarm and excitement in
her expressive face, heard the faint exclamation as
her gloved hand grasped the rail of the seat, felt
the quick sway of the vehicle as the horses shied
in fright at some object beyond his vision. Then
as they dashed on he had seen the running guard and,
just vanishing within the portals of the corner building,
the slim figure of the escaping prisoner. He
saw the quivering hands tearing at their fastenings.
He turned to the driver and bade him stop a minute,
but it took fifty yards of effort before the spirited
horses could be calmed and brought to a halt at the
curb. To the startled inquiries of Mr. Prime
and his daughter as to the cause of the excitement
and the running and shouting he answered simply:
“A prisoner escaped, I think,” and sent
a passing corporal to inquire the result. The
man came back in a minute.
“They got him easy, sir.
He had no show. His hands were tied behind his
back and he couldn’t climb,” was the brief
report.
“They have not hurt him, I hope,” said
Armstrong.
“No, sir. He hurt them one
of ’em, at least, before he’d surrender
when they nabbed him in town. This time he submitted
all right said he only ran in for a glass
of beer, and was laughing-like when I got there.”
“Very well. That’ll
do. Go on, driver. We haven’t a minute
to lose if we are to see the review,” he continued,
as he stepped lightly to his seat.
“I saw nothing of this affair,”
said Miss Prime. “What was it all about?”
“Nor could I see,” added
her father. “I heard shouts and after we
passed saw the guard, but no fugitive.”
“It is just as well indeed
I’m glad you didn’t, uncle,” answered
Miss Lawrence, turning even as she spoke and gazing
wistfully back. “He looked so young, and
seemed so desperate, and had such a I don’t
know hunted look on his face poor
fellow.”
And then the carriage reached the
entrance to the reservation and the subject, and the
second object of Miss Lawrence’s sympathies,
evoked that day, were for the time forgotten.
Possibly Mrs. Garrison was partly responsible for
this for, hardly had they rounded the bend in the road
that brought them in full view, from the left, or southern
flank, of the long line of masses in which the brigade
was formed, than there came cantering up to them,
all gay good humor, all smiles and saucy coquetry,
their hostess of the evening at the General’s
tent. She was mounted on a sorry-looking horse,
but the “habit” was a triumph of art, and
it well became her slender, rounded figure.
No one who really analyzed Mrs. Frank
Garrison’s features could say that she was a
pretty woman. No one who looked merely at the
general effect when she was out for conquest could
deny it. Colonel Armstrong, placidly observant
as usual, was quick to note the glances that shot between
the cousins on the rear seat as the little lady came
blithely alongside. He knew her, and saw that
they were beginning to be as wise as he, for the smiles
with which they greeted her were but wintry reflections
of those that beamed upon her radiant face. Prime,
paterfamilias, bent cordially forward in welcome,
but her quick eyes had recognized the fourth occupant
by this time, and there was a little less of assurance
in her manner from that instant. “How perfectly
delicious!” she cried. “I feared from
what you said yesterday you weren’t coming,
and so I never ordered the carriage, but came out
in saddle I can’t say on horseback
with such a wreck as this, but every decent horse
in the Presidio had to go out with the generals and
staffs, you know, and I had to take what I could get both
horse and escort,” she added, in confidential
tone. “Oh! May I present Mr.
Ellis? He knows you all by name already.”
The youth in attendance and a McClellan tree two sizes
too big for him, lifted his cap and strove to smile;
he had ridden nothing harder than a park hack before
that day. “Frank says I talk of nothing
else. But where’s Mr. Gray?
Surely I thought he would be with you.”
This for Armstrong’s benefit in case he were
in the least interested in either damsel.
“Mr. Gray was detained by some
duties in camp,” explained Miss Prime, with
just a trace of reserve that was lost upon neither
their new companion nor the colonel. It settled
a matter the placid officer was revolving in his mind.
“Pardon us, Mrs. Garrison,”
he said briefly. “We must hurry. Go
on, driver.”
“Oh, I can keep up,”
was the indomitable answer, “even on this creature.”
And Mrs. Garrison proved her words by whipping her
steed into a lunging canter and, sitting him admirably,
rode gallantly alongside, and just where Mr. Prime
could not but see and admire since Colonel Armstrong
would not look at all. He had entered into an
explanation of the ceremony by that time well under
way, and Miss Lawrence’s great soft brown eyes
were fixed upon him attentively when, perhaps, she
should have been gazing at the maneuvers. Like
those latter, possibly, her thoughts were “changing
direction.”
Not ten minutes later occurred the
collision between the hack and the heels that resulted
in the demolition of one and “demoralization”
of the rider of the victor. While the latter
was led away by the obedient Mr. Ellis lest the sight
of him should bring on another nervous attack, Mrs.
Garrison was suffering herself to be comforted.
Her nerves were gone, but she had not lost her head.
Lots of Presidio dames and damsels were up on
the heights that day in such vehicles as the post afforded.
None appeared in anything so stylish and elegant as
the carriage of the Prime party. She was a new
and comparative stranger there, and it would vastly
enhance her social prestige, she argued, to
be seen in such “swell” surroundings.
With a little tact and management she might even arrange
matters so that, willy nilly, her friends would drive
her home instead of taking Colonel Armstrong back
to camp. That would be a stroke worth playing.
She owed Stanley Armstrong a bitter grudge, and had
nursed it long. She had known him ten years and
hated him nine of them. Where they met and when
it really matters not. In the army people meet
and part in a hundred places when they never expected
to meet again. She had married Frank Garrison
in a hand gallop, said the garrison chronicles, “before
she had known him two months,” said the men,
“before he knew her at all,” said the
women. She was four years his senior, if the chaplain
could be believed and five months his junior if she
could. Whatever might have been the discrepancy
in their ages at the time of the ceremony no one would
suspect the truth who saw them now. It was he
who looked aged and careworn and harassed, and she
who preserved her youthful bloom and vivacity.
And now, as she reclined as though
still too weak and shaken to leave the carriage and
return to saddle, her quick wits were planning the
scheme that should result in her retaining,
and his losing the coveted seat. There was little
time to lose. Most of the crowd had scattered,
and she well knew that he was only waiting for her
to leave before he would return. Almost at the
instant her opportunity came. A covered wagon
reined suddenly alongside and kind and sympathetic
voices hailed her: “Do let us drive you
home, Mrs. Garrison; you must have been terribly shaken.”
She recognized at once the wife and daughter of a prominent
officer of the post.
“Oh, how kind you are!”
she cried. “I was hoping some one would
come. Indeed, I did get a little wrench.”
And then, as she moved, with a sudden gasp of pain,
she clasped Miss Lawrence’s extended hand.
“Indeed, you must not stir,
Mrs. Garrison,” said that young lady. “We
will drive you home at once.” Miss Prime
and her father were adding their pleas. She looked
up, smiling faintly.
“I fear I must trouble you,”
she faltered. “Oh, how stupid of me!
But about Stanley Armstrong I haven’t
even thanked him. Ah, well he
knows. We’ve been such good friends
for years dear old fellow!”