Opinion was divided at Camp Merritt
as to whether Billy Gray should or should not stand
trial. Confident as were his friends of his innocence
of all complicity in Morton’s escape, there
remained the fact that he had telephoned for a carriage,
that a carriage had come and that a carriage with
four men, apparently soldiers, had driven rapidly townward
along Point Lobos Avenue. It was seen by half
a dozen policemen as it shot under electric light
or gas lamp. Then there was the bundle inside
his rolled overcoat that Gray had personally handed
Morton when a prisoner. Everybody agreed he should
have sent it by orderly everybody, that
is, except some scores of young soldiers in the ranks
who could see no harm in it having been done that
way, especially two “Delta Sigs” in the
teenth. Then there were the long conferences
in the dark. What did they mean? All things
considered the older and wiser heads saw that, as the
lieutenant could or would make no satisfactory explanation
of these to his colonel, he must to a court or
take the consequences.
“You’ve made a mess of
the thing and an ass of yourself, Billy,” was
Gordon’s comprehensive if not consolatory summary
of the matter, “and as Canker has been rapped
for one thing or another by camp, division and brigade
commanders, one after another, he feels that
he’s got to prove that he isn’t the only
fool in the business. You’d better employ
good counsel and prepare for a fight.”
“Can’t afford it,”
said Billy briefly, “and I’m blowed if
I’ll ask my dear old dad to come to the rescue.
He’s had to cough up (shame on your slang, Billy)
far too much already. I tell you, Gordon, I’m
so fixed that I can’t explain these things unless
I’m actually brought to trial. It’s it’s well you
have no secret societies at the Point as we do at
college, so you can’t fathom it. I’m
no more afraid of standing trial than I am of Squeers and
be d d to him!”
“Good Lawd, youngster you you
aren’t quite such an ass as to suppose a court
is going to regard any schoolboy obligation as paramount
to that which your oath of office demands. Look
hyuh, Billy, your head’s just addled! I
can’t work on you, but somebody must!”
And Gordon went away very low in his
mind. He liked that boy. He loved a keen,
alert, snappy soldier on drill, and Billy had no superior
in the battalion when it came to handling squad or
company. The adjutant plainly saw the peril of
his position, and further consultation with his brother-officers
confirmed him in his fears. Schuyler, the brigade
commissary, being much with the teenth messing
with them, in fact, when he was not dancing attendance
on Miss Prime heard all this camp talk
and told her. Thus it happened that the very next
day when he drove with the cousins (Mr. Prime being
the while in conference with the detectives still
scouring the city for the young deserter, who the father
now felt confident was his missing boy), Miss Lawrence
looked the captain full in the face with her clear,
searching eyes and plumped at him the point-blank
question:
“Captain Schuyler, do Mr. Gray’s
brother-officers really consider him in danger of
dismissal?”
“Miss Lawrence, I grieve to
say that not one has any other opinion now.”
There could be no doubt of it.
Amy Lawrence turned very pale and her beautiful eyes
filled.
“It is a shame!” she said,
after a moment’s struggle to conquer the trembling
of her lips. “Has is there no
one influential enough or with
brains enough” (this with returning color) “to
take up his case and clear him?”
They were whirling through the beautiful
drive of the Golden Gate Park, passing company after
company at drill. Even as Amy spoke Schuyler lifted
his cap and Miss Prime bowed and smiled. A group
of regimental officers, four in number, stood, apparently
supervising the work, and as Miss Lawrence quickly
turned to see who they might be, her eyes met those
of Colonel Armstrong. Five minutes later, the
carriage returning drew up as though by some order
from its occupants, at that very spot. Armstrong
and his adjutant were still there and promptly joined
them.
Long weeks afterward that morning
lived in Stanley Armstrong’s memory. It
was one of those rare August days when the wind blew
from the southeast, beat back the drenching Pacific
fogs, and let the warm sun pour upon the brilliant
verdure of that wonderful park. Earth and air,
distant sea and dazzling sky, all seemed glorifying
their Creator. Bright-hued birds flashed through
the foliage and thrilled the ear with their caroling.
The plash of fountain fell softly on the breeze, mingled
with the rustling of the luxuriant growth of leaf
and flower close at hand. It was not chance that
brought the stalwart soldier instantly to Amy’s
side. Her gaze was upon him before the carriage
stopped, and irresistibly drew him. The man of
mature years, the hero of sharp combats and stirring
campaigns with a fierce and savage foe, the commander
of hundreds of eager and gallant men, obeyed without
thought of demur the unspoken summons of a girl yet
in her teens. There was a new light in her clear
and beautiful eyes, a flush upon her soft and rounded
cheek, a little flutter, possibly, in her kind and
loyal heart. Heaven knows his beat high with an
emotion he could not subdue, though his bearing was
grave and courteous as ever, but about that sweet
and flushing face there shone the halo of a woman’s
brave determination, and no sooner had be reached
the carriage side than, bending toward him, she spoke.
Mildred Prime could not repress a little gasp of amaze.
“Colonel Armstrong, will you
kindly open the carriage door? I want to talk
with you a moment.”
Without a word he wrenched the handle
and threw wide the door. Light as a bird she
sprang to the ground, her fingers just touching the
extended hand. Side by side they strolled away
across the sunlit lawn, he so strong, virile, erect,
she so lissome and graceful. Full of her purpose,
yet fearful that with delay might come timidity, she
looked up in his face:
“Colonel Armstrong, I have heard
only to-day that Mr. Gray is in really serious danger.
Will you tell me the truth?”
Just what Armstrong expected it might
be hard to say. The light that had leaped to
his eyes faded slowly and his face lost something of
the flush of robust health. There was a brief
pause before he spoke as though he wished time to
weigh his words.
“I fear it is true,” he
gravely said. Then in a moment: “Miss
Lawrence, will you not take my arm?” And he
felt her hand tremble as she placed it there.
It was a moment before she began again.
“They tell me he should have
counsel, but will not heed. I have not seen him
to-day. There is no one in his battalion, it seems,
whom he really looks up to. He is headstrong
and self-confident. Do you think he should that
he needs one?” And anxiously the brave eyes sought
the strong, soldierly face.
“It would seem so, Miss Lawrence.”
She drew a long breath. She seemed
to cling a little closer to his arm. Then straight
came the next question:
“Colonel Armstrong, will you
do me a great favor? Will you be his counsel?”
He was looking directly to the front
as she spoke. Something told him what was coming,
yet he could not answer all at once. What did
it mean, after all, but just what he had been thinking
for a week, that the girl’s fresh young heart
had gone out to this merry, handsome, soldierly lad,
whom he, too, had often marked with keen appreciation
when in command of his big company at drill.
What possible thought of hers could he, “more
than twice her years,” have ever hoped to win.
She had come to him in her sore trouble and
her lover’s as she would have gone
to her father had he been a soldier schooled in such
affairs. Armstrong pulled himself together with
quick, stern self-command.
Looking down, he saw that her eyes
were filling, her lips paling, and a rush of tenderness
overcame him as he simply and gently answered:
“Yes, and there is no time to be lost.”
All these last days, it will be remembered,
Mrs. Frank Garrison with pretty “Cherry Ripe”
had found shelter at the Presidio. The Palace
was no place for a poor soldier’s wife, and
there was no longer a grateful nabob as a possible
source of income. It is doubtful indeed whether
that mine could be further tapped, for the effusive
brother-in-law of the winter gone by had found disillusion
in more ways than one. Garrison, busy day and
night with his staff duties, had plainly to tell his
capricious wife that she had come without his knowledge
or consent, and that he could not think of meeting
the expense of even a two weeks’ stay in town.
He could not account for her coming at all. He
had left her with his own people where at least she
would be in comfort while he took the field. He
desired that she should return thither at once.
She determined to remain and gayly tapped his cheek
and bade him have no concern. She could readily
find quarters, and so she did. The regular garrison
of the Presidio was long since afield, but the families
of many of its officers still remained there, while
the houses of two or three, completely furnished so
far as army furnishings go, were there in charge of
the post quartermaster. From being the temporary
guests of some old friends, Mrs. Frank and her pretty
companion suddenly opened housekeeping in one of these
vacated homes, and all her witchery was called into
play to make it the most popular resort of the younger
element at the post. Money she might lack, but
no woman could eclipse her in the dazzle of her dainty
toilets. The Presidio was practically at her feet
before she had been established forty-eight hours.
Other peoples’ vehicles trundled her over to
camp whenever she would drive. Other peoples’
horses stood saddled at her door when she would ride.
Other peoples’ servants flew to do her bidding.
Women might whisper and frown, but for the present,
at least, she had the men at her beck and call.
Morn, noon and night she was on the go, the mornings
being given over, as a rule, to a gallop over the breezy
heights where the brigade or regimental drills were
going on, the afternoons to calls, wherein it is ever
more blessed to give than to receive and
the evenings to hops at the assembly room, or to entertaining charmingly
entertaining the little swarm of officers with occasional
angels of her own sex, sure to drop in and spend an
hour. Cherry played and sang and “made
eyes” at the boys. Mrs. Frank was winsome
and genial and joyous to everybody, and when Garrison
himself arrived from camp, generally late in the evening,
looking worn and jaded from long hours at the desk,
she had ever a comforting supper and smiling, playful
welcome for her lord, making much of him before the
assembled company, to the end that more than one callow
sub was heard to say that there would be some sense
in marrying, by George, if a fellow could pick up
a wife like Mrs. Frank. All the same the post
soon learned that the supposedly blest aide-de-camp
breakfasted solus on what he could forage for
himself before he mounted and rode over to his long
day’s labor at Camp Merritt. Another thing
was speedily apparent, the entente cordial
between her radiant self and the Primes was at an end,
if indeed it ever existed. She, to be sure,
was sunshine itself when they chanced to meet at camp.
The clouds were on the faces of the father and daughter,
while Miss Lawrence maintained a serene neutrality.
They were lingering in ’Frisco,
still hopefully, were the Primes. The detectives
on duty at the landing stage the evening Stewart’s
regiment embarked swore that no one answering the
description of either of the two young men had slipped
aboard. Those in the employ of the sad old man
were persistent in the statement that they had clues were
on the scent, etc. He was a sheep worth
the shearing, and so, while Mr. Prime spent many hours
in consultation with certain of these so-called sleuth-hounds,
the young ladies took their daily drive through the
park, generally picking up the smiling Schuyler somewhere
along the way, and rarely omitting a call, with creature
comforts in the way of baskets of fruit, upon the
happy Billy, whose limits were no longer restricted
to his tent, as during the first week of his arrest,
but whose court was ordered to sit in judgment on
him the first of the coming week. Already it began
to be whispered that Armstrong had a mine to spring
in behalf of the defense, but he was so reserved that
no one, even Gordon, sought to question.
“Armstrong is a trump!”
said Billy to Miss Lawrence, one fair morning.
“He’ll knock those charges silly though
I dare say I could have wormed through all right;
only, you see, I couldn’t get out to find people
to give evidence for me.”
“Do you see him often?” she
asked, somewhat vaguely.
“Armstrong!” exclaimed
Billy, in open-eyed amaze. “Why, he’s
here with me every day.”
“But never,” thought Miss
Lawrence, “in the morning when we
are.”
The eventful Monday was duly ushered
in, but not the court. That case never came to
trial. Like the crack of a whip an order snapped
in by wire on the Thursday previous three
regiments, the teenth regulars and the
“Primeval Dudes,” Armstrong’s splendid
regiment among them to prepare for sea
voyage forthwith. More than that, General Drayton
and staff were directed to proceed to Manila at once.
Two-thirds of the members of the court were from these
regiments. A new detail would be necessary.
The General sent for Armstrong.
“Can’t we try that case here and now?”
he asked.
“Certainly,” said Armstrong,
“if you’ll send for Canker that he
may be satisfied.”
And Canker came and listened.
It was admitted that Gray had had a long talk with
the prisoner, took him his overcoat, newspapers, etc.,
but, in extenuation, they were members of the same
college society and their social standing was, outside
the army, on the same plane. Gray deserved reprimand
and caution nothing more. As to the
carriage, he had nothing to do with the one that drove
to camp that night. A man in the uniform of a
commissary sergeant giving the name of Foley (how Canker
winced) had ordered it at the stable and taught the
driver “Killarney.” Gray had ’phoned
for a carriage for himself, hoping to get the officer-of-the-day’s
permission to be absent two hours to tell his story
in person to the General, who was dining with the
department commander. He never got the permission,
and the carriage went to the wrong camp. Lieutenant
W. F. Gray was released from arrest and returned to
duty.
“I shall never be able to thank
you enough,” said he, sentimentally, to Miss
Lawrence, at the Palace that evening. They were
strolling up and down the corridor, waiting, as was
Schuyler, for Mildred to come down for the theater.
Gray’s curly head was inclined toward the dark
locks of his fair partner. His eyes were fastened
on her faintly flushing face. They made a very
pretty picture, said people who looked on knowingly,
and so thought the officer in the uniform of a colonel
of infantry, who, while talking calmly to Mr. Prime
full thirty yards away, watched them with eyes that
were full of sadness. How could he see
at that distance that her eyes, clear and radiant,
were seldom uplifted to the ardent gaze of her escort,
and were at the moment looking straight at him?
How could he hear at that distance the prompt response,
given with an inclination of the bonny head to indicate
her meaning?
“There’s where your thanks are due, Mr.
Gray.”
Quite a gathering of army folk was
at the Palace that night. So many wives or sweethearts
were going home, so many soldiers abroad, and Mrs.
Frank Garrison, gay and gracious, passed them time
and again, leaning on the arm of Captain McDonald,
a new devotee, while poor Cherry, with an enamored
swain from the Presidio, languished in a dim, secluded
corner. She had been recalled by parental authority
and was to start for Denver under a matronly wing
on the morrow. Mrs. Frank had been bidden, and
expected, to go at the same time, but that authority
was merely marital. Up to this time not one army
wife had been permitted to accompany her husband on
any of the transports to Manila, though one heroine
managed to get carried away and to share her liege
lord’s stateroom as far as Honolulu. The
General and his staff, with a big regiment of volunteers,
were to sail on the morrow, the other regiments as
fast as transports could be coaled and made ready.
Something in Mrs. Garrison’s
gay, triumphant manner prompted a sore-hearted woman,
suffering herself at the coming parting, to turn and
say: “Well, Mrs. Garrison, I suppose that
after your husband sails you’ll have to follow
the rest of us into grass-widowhood.”
One thing that made women hate Margaret
Garrison was that she “could never be taken
down,” and the answer came cuttingly, as it was
meant to go, even though a merry laugh went with it.
“Not I! When the ship I want is ready,
I go with it!”
But as she turned triumphantly away,
the color suddenly left her cheek and there was an
instant’s falter. As though he had heard
her words, Stanley Armstrong too had suddenly turned
and stood looking sternly into her eyes.