Still another expedition was destined
to start for Manila, and keen was the rivalry among
the regiments held to daily drill at San Francisco.
The rumor was current in the camps that the next review
was to decide the matter, and that the commands pronounced
to be foremost in discipline and efficiency would
be designated to embark. The transports that had
conveyed the earlier expeditions to the Philippines
began to reappear in the bay, and coaling and refitting
were hurried to the utmost. The man most eager
to get away was Stanley Armstrong; and if merit were
to decide the matter it was conceded among the volunteers
that in point of style and equipment the “Primeval
Dudes” “held over” all competitors,
even though every competitor believed itself more
than a match for the Dudes if actual campaigning and
fighting were in contemplation. Senators and
members from the States represented by the volunteers
at San Francisco led burdensome lives, for officers
and men were pulling every wire to secure the longed-for
orders for an immediate voyage to Manila, when, all
on a sudden, the hopes of all were crushed. Spain
had begged for peace. “No more men can
be sent to Manila,” said the officials consulted,
and Camp Merritt put on mourning forthwith.
But Armstrong had been studying the
situation and was not easily daunted. He was
a man whose opinion carried weight, and from the very
first he had maintained that while fifteen or twenty
thousand might be men enough to hold Manila, fifty
thousand might not be enough to subdue at once the
forces of Aguinaldo in case they should turn upon the
Americans, which said he, placidly, they will most
certainly do before we are a year older.
The Dudes, therefore, much to their
disgust, were kept steadily at work. Other regiments,
profiting by example, followed suit; but in others
still, a small proportion of their membership, believing
as they said, that the “jig was up,” took
to lawless and unhallowed expression of their disgust
and became thereby a nuisance to the neighborhood.
San Franciscans, who had wept copiously when others
sailed away, would have seen these patriots sent into
exile without shedding a tear.
“Every man of this command will
yet be needed and yet be sent,” said Armstrong.
So, too, did the veteran division commander, and the
brigade took heart accordingly. The last of the
regulars, with the recruit detachments for regiments
already in the Philippines, had been shipped to Honolulu,
there to await orders, and September seemed destined
to go by without a change for the better in the prospects
of the men still left in camp about the reservation.
The Primes, convinced at last that the boy they sought
was not to be found in California, had gone to Santa
Anita visiting their kindred, the Lawrences; and Armstrong,
buckling down to hard and constant work, was striving
to persuade himself that he did not care that the
mornings no longer brought with them the carriage and
the fair face of that gentle girl; the department
commander himself had gone to take a look at his new
responsibilities in Hawaii; little Mrs. Garrison still
held court, though with diminished retinue, at the
Presidio, when one day, just as October was ushered
in, there came a message from the adjutant-general
in town. Would Armstrong drop in at the office
at the first opportunity? A matter of some importance
had come up in the general’s first letter from
Honolulu, one on which Armstrong’s opinion was
desired; and the colonel, hoping for tidings of a chance
to move even that far to the front, made immediate
opportunity and took the first car for the Phelan
Building. The adjutant-general looked up from
a littered desk as Armstrong entered.
“It is good of you to come so
promptly,” said he. “I’m in
a stew, to tell the truth, and I want your advice.”
Then he tapped his bell. “Excuse me to
any one who comes for the next ten minutes,”
said he, to the attendant who entered. “I
have business with Colonel Armstrong.”
No sooner did the orderly vanish than
the man of the desk whirled full on the man of the
saddle. “Armstrong,” said he, “you
defended Gray and proved him innocent. What else
has Canker against him?”
“Nothing that I know of why?”
“Because he’s got him
in arrest again at Honolulu, and the chief is worked
up over something. Look here do you
suppose did you ever hear about certain
letters that were stolen from General Drayton’s
tent?”
“I heard yes.
Why?” And the look of disappointment which had
appeared in the grave face of the colonel gave way
to one of alert interest.
“Just read that,” said
the staff official, holding forth a letter. “Begin
there at ‘Later!’”
And Armstrong read, his forehead slowly
grooving into something very like a frown.
“Later. I may have to remain
here several days. Canker, with the teenth,
went ahead before news of the protocol could stop him;
but he leaves here a number of sick Lieutenant
Gray, charged with using threatening and insubordinate
language to his commanding officer, among them; and
Gray is down with brain fever. The doctors say
he is too ill to be disturbed, and his side of the
story is hard to get at, as the boy is too flighty
to talk sense. From Canker’s own admission
I learned that he accused Gray of having knowledge
of the whereabouts of that packet of letters stolen
from General Drayton’s tent, and the youngster’s
reply was furious. Canker had to place
him in arrest and prefer charges. When asked
if he were sure of his ground in making so serious
an accusation, he declared he had proof positive,
at least he would have the instant they reached Manila,
and his intention was to take the boy along with him
to be tried there by court-martial, where “no
meddling outsiders,” as he said, could buy off
witnesses. It was plain that he considered himself
out of my jurisdiction, and that he resented my staff
officer’s questions. But Dr. Morrow had
appealed to me in behalf of Gray. Said that if
compelled to continue a prisoner aboard that transport
under Canker’s tyrannical rule Gray might be
goaded into insanity. He was in a condition bordering
on brain fever when Morrow came to see me, and in another
day was raving. That settled it. I ordered
him taken off and placed in hospital here, and Canker
had to go without him. But I wish you would see
Armstrong and tell him about Gray, so that I may know
the whole situation as soon as I return. Canker
evidently intended not to let us know his proofs.
He probably believes that he will find a more credulous
and complaisant listener in Drayton; but his insinuations
pointed to Gray as at least an abettor in the theft,
and he went so far as to say that if Armstrong could
be brought before the court some very interesting
testimony could be dragged from him, and, finally,
that both Armstrong and Mrs. well, the
wife of a staff officer who is already well on the
way to Manila might be compelled to testify.
I cannot bring myself to repeat more that he said;
but he was in an ugly and almost defiant mood, and
I had to give him a dressing down. You may say
to Armstrong for me that I do not believe one word
of Canker’s calumny at his expense or that of
the lady in the case. But he declared his intention
of laying the whole matter before General Drayton
immediately on his arrival, and it is best that Armstrong
should be prepared. As for the lady, Canker said
she and Armstrong were very close friends when they
were at Fort Stanhope ten years ago, though they no
longer meet as such.
“And that brings me to another
matter. I declined positively to allow two or
three ladies, wives of officers, to go on to Manila
with Canker’s command; and they said that as
I had promised Mrs. Garrison a passage I had no right
to refuse them. Pressed for their authority, two
very estimable women told me that, at the Presidio
two days before we sailed, Mrs. Garrison openly boasted
of having my promise to send her on the very next
steamer. Now, who is really the fabricator?
I told her positively that, with my consent, she should
not go; and she laughed delightedly, and said she
only asked as a matter of form the whole
thing had already been settled. Just see to it
that if any more transports start before my return
no woman is permitted aboard except, of course, authorized
nurses. Gray is a very sick boy to-night, but
you might wire his father, saying nothing of the arrest,
that the doctors are confident of his recovery in
course of time.”
Armstrong read these pages twice over before he looked
up.
“How did this letter come?” he asked.
“By the Salvador yesterday.”
“And the next mail for Honolulu?”
queried Armstrong, rising from his chair and handing
back the folded letter.
“The next mail closed an hour
ago, man. The China sails at two. No other
boat for a week. Where are you going now?”
“To camp for ten minutes, then to the Presidio.”
“Oh, come over to the club and
have a bite first?” said the adjutant-general,
rising and wriggling out of his uniform coat as he
did so. “I won’t keep you half an
hour.”
“That half-hour may prove precious,”
answered Armstrong, already at the door. “Many
thanks all the same.”
“Well. Hold on. What
am I to say to the General as to Gray and those letters?”
asked the staff officer, intent upon the subject uppermost
in his mind at the moment.
“You can’t say anything
that will reach him before he returns. You have
just told me no other boat would start for a week.
By that time he’ll be coming home.”
And with that Armstrong let himself out and strode
to the elevator, leaving his friend to cogitate on
the question over his luncheon. It was decidedly
that officer’s opinion that Armstrong knew much
more than he would tell.
But Armstrong knew much less than
he himself believed. Hastening back to camp and
ordering his horse, he was soon speeding up the slope
to the wind-swept heights overlooking the Golden Gate.
The morning had opened fine as silk, but by noon the
sky was hidden in clouds and the breath of the sea
blew in salt and strong. The whitecaps were leaping
on the crest of the surges driving in through the
straits and the surf bursting high on the jagged rocks
at the base of the cliffs. A little coast steamer
from Santa Barbara way came pitching and plunging in
from sea, and one or two venturesome craft, heeling
far to leeward, tore through the billows and tossed
far astern a frothing wake. With manes and tails
streaming in the stiff gale, the troop horses of the
Fourth Cavalry were cropping at the scanty herbage
down the northward slope, and the herd guard nearest
the road lost his grip on his drab campaign hat as
he essayed a salute, and galloped off on a stern chase
down the long ravine to the east, as the colonel trotted
briskly by. One keen glance over the bay beyond
rocky Alcatraz had told him the China was not yet
away from her pier. He might have to send a dispatch
by that swift steamer, and even then it would be six
days getting to Hawaii. If the department commander
should by that time be on his homeward journey the
information would still be of interest to the general
commanding the new military district at “the
Cross Roads of the Pacific,” and of vast benefit,
possibly, to his late client, Mr. Gray. He wondered
what Canker’s grounds could be for saddling
so foul a suspicion on the boy’s good name.
He wondered how long that poor lad would have to struggle
with this attack of fever and remain, perhaps happily,
unconscious of this latest indignity. He wondered
if Amy Lawrence yet knew of that serious seizure,
and, if she did, what would be her sensations.
Down the winding, sloping road he urged his way, Glencoe,
his pet charger, marveling at the unusual gait.
The cape of the sentry’s overcoat whirled over
the sentry’s head and swished his cap off as
he presented arms to the tall soldier spurring past
the guardhouse. “I envy no one who has
to put to sea this day,” said Armstrong to himself,
as he turned to the right and reined up in front of
a little brown cottage peeping out from a mass of
vines and roses, shivering in the wet wind. Half
a dozen strides took him across the narrow walk and
up the wooden steps. With sharp emphasis he clanged
the little gong bell screwed to the back of the door
and waited impatient for the servant’s coming.
There was no answer. He rang again and still
again, and no one came. A glance at the windows
told that the white lace curtains hung there draped
as prettily as ever. Fresh flowers stood on the
window sill. A shawl and a pillow, the latter
indented as by a human head, lay in the lounging chair
on the little porch. Another chair stood but a
few feet away. There was even a fan, though fans
in a ’Frisco summer are less needed than furs;
but nowhere saw he other sign of the temporary mistress
of the house. He went round to a side window
and rapped. No answer. Then he turned to
the walk again, and, taking the reins, bade the orderly
inquire next door if Mrs. Garrison could be found.
Yes, was the answer; she went driving to Golden Gate
Park with Mrs. Stockman an hour ago, and Mrs. Stockman
was to leave for Los Angeles that night. Odd!
If Mrs. Garrison drove to Golden Gate Park the easiest
and best way was that along which he came, and he
had met no carriage. In fact, not since that night
at the Palace had he set eyes on Mrs. Garrison, or
until the coming of this sorrowful news about Gray
had he cared to. From all that he heard Mrs. Frank
was enjoying herself at the Presidio. Cherry
having gone one way and her devotee another, Mrs.
Frank speedily summoned a chum of old garrison days
to come and keep house with her for a while, and Mrs.
Stockman, whose lord had left her at the call to duty,
and gone to Manila with his men, right gladly accepted
and much enjoyed the fun and frolic that went on night
after night in Mrs. Frank’s cozy parlor, or the
mild flirtation, possibly, in the recesses of Mrs.
Frank’s embowered porch. The last expedition
had borne off almost all the “regular”
element at the post, but had not left it poor, for,
fast as camp grounds could be made ready for them,
vastly to the disgust of the saloon keepers and street-car
magnates who had reaped rich harvest from Camp Merritt,
regiment after regiment, the volunteers came marching
over from the malodorous sand lots and settled down
in sheltered nooks about the Presidio. So cavaliers
in plenty were still to be had, cavaliers whose wives
and sweethearts, as a rule, were far away; and Mrs.
Frank loved to console such as were so bereft.
The chafing dish and Scotch and soda were in nightly
request; and even women who didn’t at all fancy
Mrs. Frank, and spoke despitefully of her among themselves,
were not slow to come in “for just a minute,”
as they said, as the evenings wore on, and to stay
and chat with various visitors it was so
lonesome and poky over home with the children asleep
and nothing to do. Women there were who never
darkened Mrs. Garrison’s door after the first
formal calls; but they were of those who deeply felt
the separation from all they held most dear, and who,
forbidden themselves, heard with envy and even distress
her gay assertion that she would sail for Manila the
moment the Queen of the Fleet was ready. From
what source or circumstance did
she derive her influence?
But with the edict that no more troops
should be sent came comfort to the souls of these
bereaved ones. Transports would not go without
troops, and Mrs. Frank could not go without transports,
the journey was far too expensive. They wished
her no evil, of course; but, if they were themselves
forbidden how could they rejoice that she should be
permitted? They were actually beginning to feel
a bit charitable toward her when the Queen of the
Fleet herself came in from Honolulu with the latest
news. The fifth expedition had been halted there
and put in camp. The hospital held several officers.
Billy Gray was down with brain fever, and there had
been a furious scene between him and his peppery colonel
before the breakdown; and by that same steamer Mrs.
Garrison had got a letter that made her turn white
and tremble, as Mrs. Stockman saw and told, and then
shut herself up in her room an entire day. Now,
for nearly a fortnight, the lovely guest had been
daily hinting that she really must go home, “dear
Witchie” was surely tired of her; and Witchie
disclaimed and protested and vowed she could not live
without her devoted friend. But then had come
that letter and with it a change of tone and tactics.
Witchie ceased to remonstrate or reprove Mrs. Stockman,
and the latter felt that she must go, and Witchie
consented without demur.
In no pleasant mood Armstrong mounted
and trotted for the east gate. The road was lined
with camps and volunteers at drill. Vehicles were
frequently moving to and fro; but the sentry at the
entrance had kept track of them, and in response to
question answered promptly and positively Mrs. Garrison’s
carriage had not come that way. “But,”
said he, “the wagon with the lady’s baggage
did. I saw the name on the trunks.”
The colonel turned in saddle and coolly
surveyed him. “Do you mean Mrs. Stockman’s
name?” he asked in quiet tone. “How
many trunks were there?”
“Oh, some of them might have
had Mrs. Stockman’s name, sir; but the two or
three that I saw were marked M. G.”
This was unlooked-for news. To
her next-door neighbor Mrs. Garrison had said nothing
about going away with Mrs. Stockman, and Armstrong
had grave need to see her and to see her at once.
The train for Los Angeles did not leave until evening.
Possibly they were lunching somewhere spending
the afternoon with friends in town. He rode direct
to headquarters. Some of the staff might be able
to tell, was his theory; and one of them justified
it.
“Did I happen to meet Mrs. Garrison?
Yes, I just saw her aboard the China.”
“Aboard the China!” exclaimed
Armstrong, with sudden thrill of excitement.
“D’you mean she is going?”
“Didn’t ask her.
They were hustling everybody ashore, and I had only
time to give dispatches to Purser; but she was on
the deck with friends when I came away.”
People wondered that day at the speed
with which the tall officer, followed by his orderly,
clattered away down Market Street. In less than
ten minutes Armstrong was at the crowded pier and
pushing through the throng to the China’s stage.
Too late! Already it was swung aloft, the lines
were cast loose, and the huge black mass was just
beginning to back slowly from its moorings. The
rail of the promenade deck swarmed with faces, some
radiant, some tearful. Words of adieu, fluttering
kerchiefs, waving hands, tossing flowers were there
on every side. Two officers, Honolulu bound, shouted
Armstrong’s name, and a cheery good-by; but he
did not seem to hear. A gentle voice, the voice
of all others he most longed to hear, repeated the
name and strove to call attention to his gesticulating
comrades on the upper deck; but he was deaf to both.
Eagerly, anxiously, incredulously he was searching
along that crowded rail, and all on a sudden he saw
her. Yes, there she stood, all gayety, grace
and animation, stylishly gowned and fairly burdened
with roses; and it was right at him she was gazing,
nodding, smiling, all sweetness, all confiding, trusting
joy; with just a little of triumph, too, and a tinge
of sentimental sorrow in the parting. Apparently,
it was all for him; for her blue eyes never faltered
till they fixed his gaze, and then, kiss after kiss
she threw to him with the daintily gloved little hand,
and, leaning far down over the rail, lowering it toward
him as much as possible, she finally tossed to him,
standing there stern and spellbound, a bunch of beautiful
roses she had torn from her corsage. It fell
almost at his feet, for in his astonishment and rising
wrath he made no effort to catch it. A man, stooping
quickly, rescued and handed it to him. Mechanically
he said “Thank you,” and took it, a thorn
pricking deep into the flesh as he did so; and still
his eyes were fixed on that fairy form now surely,
swiftly gliding away, and over him swept the consciousness
of utter defeat, of exasperation, of dismay, even as
he strove to fathom her motives in thus singling him
out for such conspicuous even affectionate demonstration.
Triumph and delight he could have understood, but
not, not this semblance of confidential relations,
not at least until he felt his arm grasped by a cordial
hand, heard his name spoken by a friendly voice, and
Mr. Prime’s pleasant inquiry: “Have
you no greeting for other friends?” Then the
hot blood rushed to his face and showed even through
the bronze as, turning, his troubled eyes met full
the clear, placid gaze of Amy Lawrence.