Mid October. The Queen of the
Fleet, the finest transport of the Pacific service,
thronged with boys in blue at last ordered on to Manila,
lay at the wharf at Honolulu, awaiting her commander’s
orders to cast loose. In strong force, and with
stentorian voices, the Primeval Dudes joined in rollicking
chorus to the crashing accompaniment of their band
and, when they could take time to rest, the crowd
ashore set up a cheer. The Hawaiian National
Band, in spotless white, forming a huge and melodious
circle on the wharf, vied with the musicians from the
States in the spirit and swing of their stirring airs.
“Aloha Oe! Aloha Oe!” chorused
the surging throng, afloat and ashore, as wreaths and
garlands the leis of the islanders were
twined or hung about some favorite officer or favored
man. The troops still held to service in Hawaii
shouted good will and good-by to those ordered on
to the Philippines. The Dudes of the Queen, and
the lads from the prairies and the mountains on other
transports anchored in the deep but narrow harbor,
yelled soldierly condolence to those condemned to
stay. The steam of the ’scape pipe roared
loudly and belched dense white clouds on high, swelling
the uproar. Dusky little Kanaka boys, diving
for nickels and paddling tireless about the ship,
added their shrill cries to the clamor. The captain,
in his natty uniform of blue and gold, stepped forth
upon the bridge to take command, and raised his banded
cap in recognition of the constant cheer from the
host ashore and the throng of blue shirts on the forecastle
head. Then arose another shout, as a veteran officer,
in the undress uniform of a general, appeared upon
that sacred bound, and, bowing to the crowd, was escorted
by the captain to the end overlooking the animated
scene below; and then the signal was given, the heavy
lines were cast off and hauled swiftly in, the massive
screw began slowly to churn the waters at the stern,
and gently, almost imperceptibly at first, the Queen
slid noiselessly along the edge of the dock, to the
accompaniment of a little volley of flowers and garlands
tossed from eager hands, and a cheer of godspeed from
the swarm of upturned faces. And then there uprose
another shout, a shout of mingled merriment, surprise
and applause; for all on a sudden there darted up the
stairway from the crowded promenade deck to the sacred
perch above, defiant of the lettered warning, “Passengers
are not allowed upon the Bridge,” a dainty vision
in filmy white, and all in the next moment there appeared
at the General’s side, smiling, bowing, blowing
kisses, waving adieux, all sparkle, animation, radiance
and rejoicing, a bewitching little figure in the airiest,
loveliest of summer toilets. The Red Cross nurses
on the deck below looked at one another and gasped.
Two brave army girls, wives of wounded officers in
the Philippines, who, by special dispensation, were
making the voyage on the Queen, glanced quickly at
each other and said nothing audible.
The General, lifting his cap, but looking both deprecation
and embarrassment, fell back and gave his place at
the white rail to the new arrival, and colored high
when she suddenly turned and took his arm. The
captain, trying not to see her or to appear conscious
of this infraction of a stringent rule and invasion
of his dignity, grew redder as he shouted rapid orders
and swung his big, beautiful ship well out into the
stream. The guns of the Bennington boomed a deafening
salute as the Queen turned her sharp nose toward the
open sea; and almost the last thing Honolulu saw of
her human freight was the tiny, dainty, winsome little
figure in white, waving a spotless kerchief as in fond
farewell. Once clear of the narrow entrance the
big troop ship headed westward toward the setting
sun, shook free the reins, as it were, and, followed
by less favored craft, sped swiftly on her way, Witchie
Garrison, the latest addition to the passenger list,
entirely at home, if not actually in command.
Leaning on the General’s arm
an hour later and deftly piloting that bewildered
veteran up and down the breezy deck, she came, just
as she had planned to come, face to face once more
with Stanley Armstrong. Well she knew that under
the escort of that exalted rank she was safe from any
possibility of cross question or interference.
Well she knew that had he heard of her sudden determination
to go to Honolulu she could not have escaped stern
interrogation, possibly something worse; and her heart
failed her when she realized that the man who had gauged
her shallow nature years before, now held a lash over
her head in the shape of the paper that mad vanity
had prompted her to write and send to the officer
of the guard the day that Stewart sailed. What
madness it was, indeed, yet how could she have dreamed
it would fall into the hands of the man of all others
she feared and respected the one man who,
had he but cared, could years ago have had her love,
the man who, because he cared not, had won her hate!
And, now that he held or had held this paper nothing
less than a forged order in her husband’s name
as aide-de-camp to General Drayton, she could have
cowered at his feet in her terror of him, yet braved
him with smiles, sweetness and gayety, with arch merriment
and joyous words, quitting for the moment the General’s
arm that she might extend to him both her little white-gloved
hands. Gravely he took the left in his left while
with the right he raised his forage cap in combined
salute to the woman and to his superior officer.
Gravely and almost instantly he released it, and listened
in helpless patience to her torrent of playful words;
but his eyes were on the General’s face as though
he would ask could he, the General, know the true character
of the woman he had honored above all her sisterhood
on board, in thus taking her to the bridge whereon
neither officer nor man nor nurse nor army wife had
presumed to set foot on all the six days’ run
from San Francisco, as though he would ask if the
General knew just what she was, this blithe, dainty,
winsome little thing that nestled so confidingly indeed,
so snugly close to his battered side, and
who had virtually taken possession of him in the face
of an envious and not too silent circle of her own
sex. Truth to tell, the Chief would rather have
escaped. He was but an indifferent sailor, and
the Queen’s long, lazy roll over the ocean surges
was exciting in his inner consciousness a longing for
cracked ice and champagne. He had known her but
the few days the Queen remained in port, coaling and
preparing for the onward voyage across the broad Pacific;
but a great functionary of the general government had
told him a pathetic tale the very day of his first
peep at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel, had given him a
capital dinner at that famous hostelry, whereat she
appeared in charming attire, and in a flow of spirits
simply irresistible. Her sallies of wit had made
him roar with delight; her mimicry of one or two conscientious
but acidulated dames who had come over on the
Queen, bound as nurses for Manila, had tickled him
to the verge of apoplexy; but when later she backed
him into the coolest corner of the “lanai”
with the plash of fountain close at hand, and the sweet
music of Berger’s famous band floating softly
on the evening air, and told him how her father had
loved to talk of his, the General’s, dash and
daring in the great days of the great war, and led
him on to tell of his campaigns in the Shenandoah
and the West, listening with dilated eyes and parted
lips, the campaigner himself was captivated, and she
had her will. A great senator had told him how
she had come thither to nurse a gallant young officer
in her husband’s regiment, how she had pulled
the boy through the perils of brain fever until he
was now convalescent and going on to rejoin his comrades
in Manila, and she, she was pining to reach her husband
now serving on General Drayton’s staff.
Other women were aboard the Queen; could not General
Crabb find room for her? It is hard for a soldier
to refuse a pretty woman or a prominent
member of the committee on military affairs.
There was not a vacant stateroom on the ship.
Officers were sleeping three or four in a room, so
were the Red Cross nurses; and the two army wives
already aboard had been assigned a little cubby-hole
of a cabin in which only one could dress at a time.
There were only two apartments on the big craft that
were not filled to their capacity the room
occupied by that sea monarch, the captain, and that
which, from having been the “Ladies’ Boudoir,”
had been fitted up for the accommodation of the General.
The piano had been wheeled out on deck, the writing
table stowed away, and a fine new wide brass bedstead,
with dainty white curtains and mosquito bar, a large
bureau and a washstand had been moved in, and these,
with easy-chairs, electric fans, electric lights and
abundant air, made it the most desirable room on the
ship. Even Armstrong, colonel commanding the
troops aboard, was compelled to share his little cabin
with his adjutant, and the General’s aides were
bundled into a “skimpy” box between decks.
There really seemed no place for Mrs. Garrison aboard,
especially when it was found that the passenger list
was to be increased by three, a surgeon and two officers
going forward from Honolulu; and one of these was
our old friend and once light-hearted Billy Gray,
now nearly convalescent, but weak and, as all could
see, feverishly eager to get on to Manila.
All this was explained to the senator.
It was even suggested that there was room for Mrs.
Garrison on the Louisiana, a safe old tub, if she was
slow; but Mrs. Frank looked so pathetic and resigned
when this arrangement was suggested that no one had
the hardihood to actually dwell upon it, and the senator
said it was a shame to think of it. With whom
of her own sex could she associate on that long, hot
voyage ahead of them? Why not transfer some of
the Red Cross nurses to the Louisiana? Mrs. Garrison
had no objections, but they had; and the surgeon in
charge made prompt and vigorous protest. He knew
Mrs. Frank, and she knew him and did not in the least
despair. She still had a plan. There was
a cozy dinner one evening just the evening
before the departure of the Queen, and the gallant
captain of the ship, the veteran General, the quartermaster
in charge of transportation, the member of the senate
military committee, some charming girls, but
none so charming as Mrs. Garrison, were
of the party. There was some sentiment and much
champagne, as a result of which, at one A.M., the
big-hearted sea monarch aforementioned swore by the
bones of his ancestors in the slimy grasp of Davy Jones
that that sweet little woman shouldn’t have
to go a-begging for accommodations on his ship.
If the General would condescend to move into his room,
by thunder, he’d sleep up in his foul-weather
den next the chart room, and Mrs. Garrison God
bless her! could take the General’s
room, and be queen of the ship queen of
the Queen queen of queens by
Jupiter! and here’s her health with all honor!
A soldier, of course, could be no less gallant than
a sailor, especially as the captain’s room was
a bit better than the “Boudoir,” and had
an ice chest and contents that the veteran campaigner
was bidden to consider his own. The agreement
was clinched that very night before the party broke
up; and little Mrs. Frank shed tears of gratitude
upon the General’s coat sleeve and threw kiss
after kiss to the handsome sailor as she hung over
the balusters of the broad veranda and waved them
away in their swift-running cabs, and then danced off
to her room and threw herself on the bed after a mad
pirouette about the spacious apartment, and laughed
and laughed until real tears trickled from her eyes,
and then gave orders to be called at seven o’clock.
She meant to be up and aboard that ship with all her
luggage before sense and repentance could come with
the morning sun before either soldier or
sailor could change his mind.
To the amaze of the women already
aboard, to the grave annoyance of Colonel Armstrong,
to the joy of poor Billy Gray, and the mischievous
merriment of several youngsters on the commissioned
list, Mrs. Frank Garrison, the latest arrival, became
sole occupant of the finest room on the ship; and
it was a bower of lilies and tropical fruit and flowers
the breezy day she sailed away from the bay of Honolulu.
No time need be wasted in telling
the effect of this “assignment to quarters.”
Prolific a source of squabble as is the custom ashore
it becomes intensified afloat, and, when coupled with
it, came a shaking up and rearrangement of seats at
table, all hope of harmony vanished on the instant.
The two brave young army girls still retained their
seats at the captain’s table; but two most estimable
young women, Red Cross nurses, were dropped therefrom
and transferred to that of the second officer on the
port side, much to the comfort of a rather large percentage
of their sisterhood who had regarded their previous
elevation with feelings of not unmixed gratification.
Then officers who had been seated with the General’s
staff had to vacate in favor of Mrs. Frank and Dr.
Prober and Lieutenant Billy Gray, whose father and
the chief were long-time chums, and the Red Cross
nurses who had been at the first officer’s table
fell back to that of the third. It was every
bit as good as the other, but it didn’t sound
so, and they couldn’t see it; and there were
faces sour as the product of the ship’s baker
when that evening all hands went down to dinner, and
the silence maintained, or the ominously subdued tone
of the talk, at the other tables, was in marked contrast
with the hilarity that prevailed where sat the gray-haired,
ruddy-cheeked old chief and the laughing coterie that
listened to the fun that fell from the lips of Witchie
Garrison. Armstrong, silent and somber, at the
captain’s right, looking forward from time to
time, saw only one face at the General’s table
that was not lighted up with merriment; it was the
face of the boy he envied, if envy of this kind ever
entered into his heart, and he wondered as he looked
at Billy’s curly head what could have come over
that glad young life to leave so deep a shadow on his
handsome face.
One night, just one week later, Armstrong’s
eyes were opened. More than once in the meanwhile
he had invited the young officer’s confidence,
and Billy, who three months earlier had been all gratitude
and frankness, protested there was nothing on his
mind. He had been very ill, that was all.
As to Canker’s charges they were simply rot.
He hadn’t the faintest inkling what had become
of the purloined letters any more than he had of the
whereabouts of his Delta Sig friend, young Morton,
now officially proclaimed a deserter. But Armstrong
heard more tales of Witchie’s devotions to him
in his illness, and the slow convalescence that ensued,
noted how the boy’s eyes followed her about the
deck, and how many a time he would seek her side,
even when other men were reading, walking or chatting
with her. Armstrong looked with wonderment that
was close allied to incredulity and pain. Was
it possible that this blithe lad, who had won such
a warm interest in the heart of such a girl as Amy
Lawrence, could be forgetful of her, faithless to
her, and fascinated now by this selfish and shallow
butterfly? It was incredible!
But was it? The days had grown
hotter, the nights closer, and the air between decks
was stifling when the sea rolled high and closed the
ports. Officers had taken to snoozing up on deck
in steamer chairs. By an unwritten law the port
side of the promenade deck was given up to them after
eleven at night; but the women folk had the run of
the starboard side at any hour when the crew were
not washing down decks. Armstrong had been far
forward about two o’clock one breathless night
to see for himself the condition of things in the
hospital under the forecastle. The main deck
was crowded with sleeping forms of soldiers who found
it impossible to stand the heat below; so on his return,
instead of continuing along the gangway, he decided
to climb the iron ladder from the main to the promenade
deck. It would land him at the forward end on
the starboard side. There he could smoke a cigar
in peace and quiet. It was high time everybody
was asleep.
But as his head and eyes reached the
level of the deck he became suddenly aware of a couple
huddled close together in the shelter of a canvas
screen, and under the steps leading aloft to the bridge.
He knew Gray’s voice at once, and Gray was pleading.
He knew her tones of old, and she was imperative,
and listening with obvious impatience, for, almost
at the instant of his arrival, she spoke, low, yet
distinctly. “Do as I say; do as I beg
you when we reach Manila, and then come and
see how I can reward.”