One of Colonel Frost’s consuming
ambitions was to be the head of his department, with
the rank of brigadier-general, but he had strong rivals,
and knew it. Wealth he had in abundance.
It was rank and power that he craved. Four men all
with better war records and more experience stood
between him and that coveted star, and two of the four
were popular and beloved men. Frost was cold,
selfish, intensely self-willed, indomitably persevering,
and though “close-fisted,” to the scale
of a Scotch landlord as a rule, he would loose his
purse strings and pay well for services he considered
essential. When Frost had a consuming desire he
let no money consideration stand in the way, and for
Nita Terriss he stood ready to spend a small fortune.
Everybody knew Mrs. Frank Garrison could never dress
and adorn herself as she did on poor Frank Garrison’s
pay, and when she appeared with a dazzling necklace
and a superb new gown at the garrison ball not long
after Frost and his shrinking bride left for their
honeymoon, people looked at her and then at each other.
Nita Terris was sold to “Jack” Frost was
the verdict, and her shrewd elder sister was the dealer.
Mrs. Frank knew what people were thinking and saying
just as well as though they had said it to her, yet
smiled sweetness and bliss on every side. Frankly
she looked up into the faces of her sisters in arms:
“I know you like my necklace. Isn’t
it lovely? Colonel Frost’s wedding
present, you know. He said I shouldn’t give
Nita away without some recompense, and this is it.”
But that could have been only a part
of it, said the garrison. An honorarium in solid
cash, it was believed, was far the greater portion
of the consideration which the elder sister accepted
for having successfully borne Nita away from the dangers
and fascinations of the Point having guarded
her, drooping and languid, against the advances of
good-looking soldier lads at headquarters, and finally
having, by dint of hours of argument, persuasion and
skill, delivered her into the arms of the elderly
but well-preserved groom. All he demanded to know
was that she was fancy free that there
was no previous attachment, and on this point Mrs.
Frank had solemnly averred there was none. The
child had had a foolish fancy for a cadet beau, but
it amounted to absolutely nothing. There had
been no vows, no pledge, no promise of any kind, and
she was actually free as air. So Frost was satisfied.
They made an odd-looking pair.
Frost was “pony built” but sturdy, and
Nita seemed like a fairy indeed as unsubstantial
as a wisp of vapor, as she came down the aisle on
his arm. They were so far to the south on this
honeymoon trip as almost to feel the shock and concussion
when the Maine was blown to a mass of wreckage.
They were in Washington when Congress determined on
full satisfaction from Spain, and Colonel Frost was
told his leave was cut short that he must
return to his station at once. Going first to
the Arlington and hurriedly entering the room, he almost
stumbled over the body of his wife, lying close to
the door in a swoon from which it took some time and
the efforts of the house physician and the maids to
restore her. Questioned later as to the cause
she wept hysterically and wrung her hands. She
didn’t know. She had gone to the door to
answer a knock, and got dizzy and remembered nothing
more. What became of the knocker? She didn’t
know. Frost inquired at the office. A bellboy
was found who said he had taken up a card in an envelope
given him by a young feller who “seemed kind
o’ sick. Mrs. Frost took it and flopped,”
and a chambermaid ran in to her, and then hurried for
the doctor. “What became of the letter
or note or card?” asked Frost, with suspicion
and jealousy in his heart. Two women, mistress
and maid, and the bellboy swore they didn’t
know, but the maid did know. With the quick intuition
of her sex and class she had seen that there was or
had been a young lover, and sympathy for Nita and
a dislike for Frost, who gave no tips, prompted her
to hide it until she could slip it safely into Nita’s
hand; Nita who read, shuddered, tore it into minute
scraps, and wept more, face downward on the bed.
They had reached their winter station before the cable
flashed the stirring tidings of Dewey’s great
victory in Manila Bay, and within half a week came
telegraphic orders for Colonel Frost to proceed at
once to San Francisco, there to await instructions.
The first expedition was organizing when he arrived,
his pallid little wife by his side, and there were
his instructions to proceed to Manila as chief of
his department an independent position,
and yet it was a horrid blow. But there was no
recourse. Nita begged that she might stay with
her sister. She could not bear the idea of going.
Frost knew that no women could accompany the expedition,
and, shipping his chest and desks by the transport,
he had secured passage for himself and wife to Hongkong
on one of the splendid steamers of the English line
from Vancouver, and so informed her. It dashed
Nita’s last hope. They were occupying fine
rooms at the Palace Hotel. The city was thronged
with officers and rapidly arriving troops. Other
army women, eager to accompany their husbands, were
railing at the fate that separated them, and Nita had
been forced to conceal the joy with which she heard
their lamentations. But she had yet to learn
how exacting Frost could be. It had never occurred
to her that he could obtain permission to go except
by transport. It had not seemed possible that
he would take her with him. “You should
have known,” said he, “that even if I
had had to go by transport, you would have gone by
the Empress of India. It is only sixty hours from
Manila to Hongkong, and I could have joined you soon
after your arrival. As it is I shall see you
safely established there I have letters
to certain prominent English people then
shall go over to join the fleet when it arrives in
Manila Bay.”
That night she wrote long and desperately
to Margaret. “He swore he would follow
me wherever we went until I granted him the interview.
You know how he dogged me in Washington, followed
me to Denver, and any moment he may address me here.
F. will not let me return to you. He insists on
my going to Hongkong, where he can occasionally join
me. But Rollin holds those letters over me like
a whip, and declares that he will give them into Frost’s
hands unless I see him whenever he presents himself.
You made me swear to Frost I never cared a straw for
my darling that was. O God, how I loved him!
and if these letters ever reach the man to whom you
have sold me, he would treat me as he would a dog,
even if he doesn’t kill me. Meg Meg you
must help me for I live in terror.”
And that she lived in terror was true,
some women were quick to see. Never would she
go anywhere, even along the corridor, alone. If
the colonel could not come to luncheon she was served
in their rooms. If she had to go calling or shopping
it was in a carriage and always with some army woman
whom she could persuade to go with her.
One day, just before their intended
departure, she drove out paying parting calls.
It was quite late when the carriage drew up at the
Market Street entrance, the nearest to their elevator.
The door boy sprang across the sidewalk to open the
carriage, and as she stepped wearily out, a tall young
man, erect and slender, dressed in a dark traveling
suit, fairly confronted her, raised his derby, and
said: “You can give me ten minutes now,
Mrs. Frost. Be good enough to take my arm.”
Bowing her head she strove to dodge
by, but it was useless. Again he confronted her.
Piteously she looked up into his pale, stern face and
clasped her hands. “Oh, Rollin,” she
cried, “give me my letters. I dare not see
you. Have mercy ” and down again
she went in a senseless heap upon the stone.
Colonel and Mrs. Frost did not sail with the Empress
of India. Brain fever set in and for three weeks
the patient never left the hotel. Frost made
his wife’s dangerous illness the basis of an
application to be relieved from the Manila detail,
but, knowing well it would be late summer before the
troops could be assembled there in sufficient force
to occupy the city, and that his clerks and books
had gone by transport with the second expedition in
June, the War Department compromised on a permission
to delay. By the time the fourth expedition was
ready to start there was no further excuse; moreover,
the doctors declared the sea voyage was just what
Mrs. Frost needed, and again their stateroom was engaged
by the Empress line, and, though weak and languid,
Mrs. Frost was able to appear in the dining-room.
Meanwhile a vast amount of work was saddled on the
department to which Frost was attached, and daily he
was called upon to aid the local officials or be in
consultation with the commanding general. This
would have left Mrs. Frost to the ministrations of
her nurse alone, but for the loving kindness of army
women in the hotel. They hovered about her room,
taking turns in spending the afternoon with her, or
the evening, for it was speedily apparent that she
had a nervous dread of being left by herself, “or
even with her husband,” said the most observing.
Already it had been whispered that despite his assiduous
care and devotion during her illness, something serious
was amiss. Everybody had heard of the adventure
which had preceded her alarming illness. Everybody
knew that she had been accosted and confronted by a
strange young man, at sight of whom she had pleaded
piteously a minute and then fainted dead away.
By this time, too, there were or had been nearly a
dozen of the graduating class in town classmates
of Rollin Latrobe their much-loved “Pat” and
speedily the story was told of his devotion to her
when she was Nita Terriss, of their correspondence,
of their engagement to be married on his graduation,
which in strict confidence he had imparted to his
roommate, who kept it inviolate until after her sudden
union with Colonel Frost and poor “Pat’s”
equally sudden disappearance. Everybody, Frost
included, knew that the young man who had accosted
her must be Latrobe, and Frost by this time knew that
it must have been he who caused her shock at the Arlington.
He raged in his jealous heart. He employed detectives
to find the fellow, swearing he would have him arrested.
He became morose and gloomy, for all the arts by which
Mrs. Garrison persuaded him that Nita looked up to
him with admiration and reverence that would speedily
develop into wifely love were now proved to be machinations.
He knew that Nita feared him, shrank from him and was
very far from loving him, and he believed that despite
her denials and fears and protestations she loved
young Latrobe. He wrote angrily, reproachfully
to Margaret, who, now that her fish was hooked, did
not greatly exert herself to soothe or reassure him.
That he could ever use violence to one so sweet and
fragile as Nita she would not believe for an instant.
Then the nurse, still retained, heard bitter words
from the colonel as one morning she came to the door
with Mrs. Frost’s breakfast, and while she paused,
uncertain about entering at such a time, he rushed
angrily forth and nearly collided with her. Mrs.
Frost was in tears when the nurse finally entered,
and the breakfast was left untouched.
Late that afternoon, just after the
various trunks and boxes of the Frosts that were to
go by the transport were packed and ready, and Mrs.
Frost, looking stronger at last, though still fragile,
almost ethereal, was returning from a drive with one
of her friends, the attention of the two ladies was
drawn to a crowd gathering rapidly on the sidewalk
not far from the Baldwin Hotel. There was no
shouting, no commotion, nothing but the idle curiosity
of men and boys, for a young soldier, a handsome,
slender, dark-eyed, dark-complexioned fellow of twenty-one
or two, had been arrested by a patrol and there they
stood, the sergeant and his two soldiers fully armed
and equipped, the hapless captive with his arms half
filled with bundles, and over the heads of the little
throng the ladies could see that he was pleading earnestly
with his captors, and that the sergeant, though looking
sympathetic and far from unkind, was shaking his head.
Mrs. Frost, listless and a little fatigued, had witnessed
too many such scenes in former days of garrison life
to take any interest in the proceeding. “How
stupid these people are!” she irritably exclaimed.
“Running like mad and blocking the streets to
see a soldier arrested for absence from camp without
a pass. Shan’t we drive on?”
“Oh just one moment,
please, Mrs. Frost. He has such a nice face a
gentleman’s face, and he seems so troubled.
Do look at it!”
Languidly and with something very
like a pout, Mrs. Frost turned her face again toward
the sidewalk, but by this time the sergeant had linked
an arm in that of the young soldier and had led him
a pace or two away, so that his back was now toward
the carriage. He was still pleading, and the
crowd had begun to back him up, and was expostulating,
too.
“Awe, take him where he says,
sergeant, and let him prove it.”
“Don’t be hard on him,
man. If he’s taking care of a sick friend
give ’m a chance.”
Then the sergeant tried to explain
matters. “I can’t help myself, gentlemen,”
said he; “orders are orders, and mine are to
find this recruit and fetch him back to camp.
He’s two days over time now.”
“Oh, I wish I knew what it meant!”
anxiously exclaimed Mrs. Frost’s companion.
“I’m sure he needs help.” Then
with sudden joy in her eyes “Oh,
good! There goes Colonel Crosby. He’ll
see what’s amiss,” and as she spoke a
tall man in the fatigue uniform of an officer of infantry
shouldered his way through the crowd, and reached the
blue-coated quartette in the center. Up went
the hands to the shouldered rifles in salute, and
the young soldier, the cause of all the gathering which
the police were now trying to disperse, whirled quickly,
and with something suspiciously like tears in his
fine dark eyes, was seen to be eagerly speaking to
the veteran officer. There was a brief colloquy,
and then the colonel said something to the sergeant
at which the crowd set up a cheer. The sergeant
looked pleased, the young soldier most grateful, and
away went the four along the sidewalk, many of the
throng following.
And then the colonel caught sight
of the ladies in the carriage, saw that one was signaling
eagerly, and heard his name called. Hastening
to their side, he raised his cap and smiled a cordial
greeting.
“Oh, I’m so glad you came,
colonel, we are so interested in that young soldier.
Do tell us what it all means. Oh! I beg your
pardon, Mrs. Frost, I surely thought you had met Colonel
Crosby let me pre Why, Nita!
What’s Are you ill? Here, take
my salts, quick!”
“No no go
on I I want to hear! Where
are they taking him?” faintly murmured Mrs.
Frost.
“Try to control yourself,”
said her companion. “I’ll tell you
in one moment.” Meantime from without the
carriage the colonel continued, addressing Nita’s
companion:
“He tells a perfectly straight
story. He says he has an old friend who is here
so desperately ill and out of money that he got a doctor
for him and had been nursing him himself. Those
things he carried are medicines and wine that the
doctor bade him buy. All he asks is to take them
to his friend’s room and get a nurse, then he
is ready to go to camp and stand his trial, so I told
the sergeant I’d be responsible.”
“Oh, thank you so much!
Do see that the poor fellow isn’t punished.
We’ll drive right round. Perhaps we can
do something. It is Red Cross business, you know.
Good-afternoon, colonel. Please tell our
driver to follow them.”
But, to her consternation, no sooner
had they started than she felt Nita’s trembling
hand grasping her wrist, and turning quickly saw that
she was in almost hysterical condition.
“My poor child, I had forgotten
you were so worn out. I’ll take you home
at once but then we’ll miss them entirely.
Oh, could you bear ”
“Oh! No! No!”
moaned Nita, wringing her little hands. “Take
me anywhere. No! Take me home take
me home! and promise me not to not to tell
my husband what we saw.”