One week from that night, twenty-seven
other men assembled in the strange eyrie of Niss’rosh,
nearly a thousand feet above the city’s turmoil.
They came singly or in pairs, their arrival spaced
in such a manner as not to make the gathering obvious
to anyone in the building below.
Rrisa, the silent and discreet, brought
them up in the private elevator from the forty-first
floor to the Master’s apartment on the top story
of the building, then up the stairway to the observatory,
and thus ushered them into the presence of the Master
and Bohannan. Each man was personally known to
one or the other, who vouched absolutely for his secrecy,
valor, and good faith.
This story would resolve itself into
a catalogue were each man to be named, with his title,
his war-exploits, his decorations. We shall have
to touch but lightly on this matter of personnel.
Six of the men were Americans eight, including
the Master and Bohannan; four English; five French;
two Serbian; three Italian; and the others represented
New Zealand, Canada, Russia, Cuba, Poland, Montenegro,
and Japan.
Not one of these men but bore a wound
or more, from the Great Conflict. This matter
of having a scar had been made one prime requisite
for admission to the Legion. Each had anywhere
from one to half a dozen decorations, whether the
Congressional Medal, the V.C., the Croix de
Guerre, the Order of the Rising Sun, or what-not.
Not one was in uniform. That
would have made their arrival far too conspicuous.
Dressed as they were, in mufti, even had anyone noted
their coming, it could not have been interpreted as
anything but an ordinary social affair.
Twenty-nine men, all told, gathered
in the observatory, clearly illuminated by the hidden
lights. All were true blue, all loyal to the
core, all rusting with ennui, all drawn thither by
the lure of the word that had been passed them in
club and office, on the golf links, in the street.
All had been pledged, whether they went further or
not, to keep this matter secret as the grave.
Some were already known to each other.
Some needed introduction. Such introduction consumed
a few minutes, even after the last had come and been
checked off on the Master’s list, in cipher code.
The brightly lighted room, behind its impenetrable
curtains, blued with tobacco-smoke; but no drop of
wine or spirits was visible.
The Master, at the head of the table,
sat with his list and took account of the gathering.
Each man, as his name was called, gave that name in
full, briefly stated his service and mentioned his
wound.
All spoke English, though some rather
mangled it. At any rate, this was to be the official
language of the expedition, and no other was to be
allowed. The ability to understand and obey orders
given in English had, of course, to be one essential
requisite for this adventurous band of Legionaries.
When all the credentials had been
proved satisfactory, the Master rapped for order.
Silence fell. The men settled down to listen,
in tense expectancy. Some took chairs, others
occupied the divan, still others for whom
there were no seats stood along the walls.
Informal though the meeting still
was, an air of military restraint and discipline already
half possessed it. The bright air seemed to quiver
with the eagerness of these fighting-men once more
to thrust out into the currents of activity, to feel
the tightening of authority, the lure and tang of
the unknown.
Facing them from the end of the table,
the Master stood and spoke to them, with Bohannan
seated at his right. His face reflected quite
another humor from that of the night, a week before,
when first this inspiration had come upon him.
He seemed refreshed, buoyant, rejuvenated.
His eyes showed fire. His brows, that had frowned,
now had smoothed themselves. His lips smiled,
though gravely. His color had deepened. His
whole personality, that had been sad and tired, now
had become inspired with a profound and soul-felt
happiness.
“Gentlemen all, soldiers and
good men,” said he, slowly. “In a
general way you know the purpose of this meeting.
I am not given to oratory. I do not intend making
any speech to you.
“We are all ex-fighters.
Life, once filled with daring and adventure, has become
stale, flat, and unprofitable. The dull routine
of business and of social life is Dead Sea fruit to
our lips dust and ashes. It cannot
hold or entertain us.
“By this I do not mean that
war is good, or peace bad. For the vast majority
of men, peace is normal and right. But there must
be always a small minority that cannot tolerate ennui;
that must seek risks and daring exploits; that would
rather lay down their lives, today, in some man-sized
exploit, than live twenty-five years longer in the
dull security of a humdrum rut.
“Such men have always existed
and probably always will. We are all, I believe,
of that type. Therefore you will all understand
me. I will understand you. And each of you
will understand the rest.
“Major Bohannan and I have chosen
you and have invited you here because we believe every
man in this room is precisely the kind of man I have
been defining. We believe you are like ourselves,
dying of boredom, eager for adventure; and willing
to undergo military discipline, swear secrecy, pledge
honor and risk life itself, provided the adventure
be daring enough, the reward promising enough.
If there is anyone here present who is unwilling to
subscribe to what I have said, so far, let him withdraw.”
No one stirred. But a murmur arose, eager, delighted:
“Go on! Go on tell us more!”
“Absolute obedience to me is
to be the first rule,” continued the Master.
“The second is to be sobriety. There shall
be no drinking, carousing, or gambling. This
is not to be a vulgar, swashbuckling, privateering
revel, but ”
A slight disturbance at the door interrupted
him. He frowned, and rapped on the table, for
silence. The disturbance, however, continued.
Someone was trying to enter there against Rrisa’s
protests.
“I did not bring you up, sir,”
the Arab was saying, in broken English. “You
cannot come in! How did you get here?”
“I’m not in the habit
of giving explanations to subordinates, or of bandying
words with them,” replied the man, in a clear,
rather high-pitched but very determined voice.
The company, gazing at him, saw a slight, well-knit
figure of middle height or a little less, in aviator’s
togs. “I’m here to see your master,
my good fellow, not you!”
The man at the head of the table raised
a finger to his lips, in signal of silence from them
all, and beckoned the Arab.
“Let him come in!” he ordered, in Rrisa’s
vernacular.
“A, M’alme”
submitted the desert man, standing aside and bowing
as the stranger entered. The Master added, in
English:
“If he comes as a friend and
helper, uninvited though he be, we welcome him.
If as an enemy, traitor, or spy, we can deal justice
to him in short order. Sir, advance!”
The stranger came to the foot of the
table. Men made way for him. He stood there
a moment in silence, dropped his gauntlets on the table
and seemed peering at the Master. Then all at
once he drew himself up, sharply, and saluted.
The Master returned the salute.
A moment’s silence followed. No man was
looking elsewhere than at this interloper.
Not much could be seen of him, so
swaddled was he in sheepskin jacket, aviator’s
helmet, and goggles. Leather trousers and leggings
completed his costume. The collar of the jacket,
turned up, met the helmet. Of his face, only
the chin and lower part of the cheeks remained visible.
The silence tautened, stretched to
the breaking-point. All at once the master of
Niss’rosh demanded, incisively:
“Your name, sir?”
“Captain Alfred Alden, of the R.A.F.”
“Royal Air Force man, eh? Are you prepared
to prove that?”
“I am.”
“If you’re not, well this
won’t be exactly a salubrious altitude for you.”
“I have my papers, my licenses, my commission.”
“With you here?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Very well,” answered
the Master, “I will examine them in due time.
English, American, or ?”
“I am a Canadian.” answered
the aviator. “I have seen nearly two years’
active service. I rank as an ace. I bear
three wounds and have been cited several times.
I have the Distinguished Service Cross. What
more need I tell you, sir?”
His voice was steady and rang true.
The Master nodded approval, that seemed to echo round
the room in a buzz of acceptance. But there were
still other questions to be asked. The next one
was:
“How did you come here?
It’s obvious my man didn’t bring you up.”
“I came in my own plane, sir,”
the stranger answered, in a dead hush of stillness.
“It just now landed on the roof of this building.
If you will draw the curtains, there behind you, I
believe you can see it for yourself.”
“I heard no engine.”
“I volplaned in. I don’t
say this to boast sir, but I can handle the average
plane as accurately as most men handle their own fingers.”
“Were you invited to attend
this meeting by either Major Bohannan or by me?”
“No, sir, I was not.”
“Then, why are you here?”
“Why am I here? For exactly
the same reason that all the rest are here, sir!”
The aviator swept his arm comprehensively at the ranks
of eagerly listening men. “To resume active
service. To get back to duty. To live, again!
In short, to join this expedition and to share all
its adventures!”
“Hm! Either that, or to interfere
with us.”
“Not the latter, sir! I swear that!”
“How did you know there was
going to be an expedition, at all?” demanded
the Master, his brows tensed, lips hard, eyes very
keen. The aviator seemed smiling, as he answered:
“I know many things. Some
may be useful to you all. I am offering you my
skill and knowledge, such as they may be, without any
thought or hope of reward.”
“Why?”
“Because I am tired of life.
Because I want must have the
freedom of the open roads, the inspiration of some
great adventure! Surely, you understand.”
“Yes, if what you say is true,
and you are not a spy. Show us your face, sir!”
The aviator loosened his helmet and
removed it, disclosing a mass of dark hair, a well-shaped
head and a vigorous neck. Then he took off his
goggles.
A kind of communal whisper of astonishment
and hostility ran round the apartment. The man’s
whole face save for eyeholes through which
dark pupils looked strangely out was covered
by a close-fitting, flesh-colored celluloid mask.
This mask reached from the roots of
his hair to his mouth. It sloped away down the
left jaw, and somewhat up the cheekbone of the right
side. The mask was firmly strapped in place around
the head and neck.
“What does all this mean, sir?”
demanded the Master, sharply. “Why the
mask?”
“Is that a necessary question,
sir?” replied the aviator, while a buzz of curiosity
and suspicion rose. “You have seen many
such during the war and since its close.”
“Badly disfigured, are you?”
“That word, ‘disfigured,’
does not describe it, sir. Others have wounds,
but my whole face is nothing but a wound. No,
let me put it more accurately there is,
practically speaking, no face at all. The gaping
cavity that exists under this mask would certainly
sicken the strongest men among you, and turn you against
me.
“We can’t tolerate what
disgusts, even if its qualities be excellent.
In exposing myself to you, sir, I should certainly
be insuring my rejection. But what you cannot
see, what you can only imagine, will not make you
refuse me.”
The Master pondered a moment, then nodded and asked:
“Is it so very bad, sir?”
“It’s a thing of horror,
incredible, awful, unreal! In the hospital at
Rouen, they called me ‘The Kaiser’s Masterpiece.’
Some of the most hardened surgeons couldn’t
look at me, or dress my wound, let us call
it without a shudder. Ordinary men
would find me intolerable, if they could see me.
“Unmasked, I bear no resemblance
whatever to a man, but rather to some ghastly, drug-inspired
dream or nightmare of an Oriental Dante. The
fact that I have sacrificed my human appearance in
the Great Cause cannot overcome the shrinking aversion
that normal men would feel, if they could see me.
I say only this, that my mutilation is indescribable.
As the officer and gentleman I know you to be, you
won’t ask me to expose this horror!”