In a bare and spotless company-room
in headquarters in Regina eight uneasy troopers in
fatigue uniform were waiting. Down one side of
the room a row of tall windows looked out on the brown
parade-ground, and beyond the buildings on the other
side they could see a long Transcontinental train
slowly gathering way up the westward grade.
“Hey, boys!” cried one.
“How’d you like to be aboard her with your
shoulder-straps and spurs?”
They cast unfriendly glances at the speaker and snorted.
“Don’t try to be an ass,
Carter,” said one. “It doesn’t
require the effort.”
They evinced their nervousness in
characteristic ways. Several were polishing bits
of brass already dazzling; one sat voraciously chewing
gum and staring into vacancy; one paced up and down
like a caged animal; another tried to pick a quarrel
with his mates, and the eighth, Sergeant Stonor the
hero of Swan River they called him when they wished
to annoy him sat in a corner writing a
letter.
To the eight entered a hardened sergeant-major,
purpled-jowled and soldierly. All eight pairs
of eyes sprang to his face in a kind of agony of suspense.
He twirled his moustache and a wicked, dancing light
appeared in his little blue eyes.
“You’re a nice set of
duffers!” he rasped. “Blockheads all
eight of you. Why they ever sent you down beats
me. I’ve seen some rum lots, but never
your equal. Flunked, every man of you!”
The eight pairs of eyes were cast
down. Nobody said anything. Each was thinking:
“So that dream is over. I mustn’t
let anything on before the others”: those
who were polishing brass gave an extra twirl to the
chamois.
Stonor, suddenly suspicious, narrowly
searched the sergeant-major’s face. “Fellows,
he’s joshing!” he cried. “It
isn’t possible that every one of us has flunked!
It isn’t reasonable!”
The sergeant-major roared with laughter.
“Wonderful penetration, Sherlock! When
I saw your faces I couldn’t help it. You
were asking for it. All passed! That’s
straight. Congrats!” He passed on down the
corridor.
There was a silence in the company-room.
They looked shyly at each other to see how the news
was being taken. Each felt a sudden warmth of
heart towards all his mates. All of them displayed
an elaborate and perfectly transparent assumption
of indifference. Stonor added a postscript to
his letter, and sedately folded it.
Then speech came, at first softly.
“Damn old Huggins, anyway. Almost gave
me heart-failure!... Wot t’hell, Bill!
Poor old Hugs, it was his last chance. Sure,
we’ll have him where we want him now....
Think of being able to call Hugs down!... Lordy,
Lordy, am I awake!”
Suddenly the unnatural tension broke,
and a long-limbed trooper jumped to his feet with
his arms in the air. “Boys! Are you
dumb! We’ve passed! We’ve got
the straps! All together now, Mumbo-Jumbo!”
They marched around the room with
their hands on each other’s shoulders, singing:
“For I’ve got
rings on my fingers
And bells on my toes;
Elephants to ride upon ”
In a little house in Vancouver, embowered
in such greenery as only the mild, moist airs of Puget
Sound can produce, a young woman sat in her drawing-room
regarding a letter she had just read with a highly
dissatisfied air. It was a pretty little room,
not rich nor fussy, but expressing the charm of an
individual woman no less than the clothes she wore.
To the mistress entered the maid,
to wit, a matronly Indian woman with an intelligent
face. She looked from her mistress’ face
to the letter, and back to her mistress again.
When the latter made no offer to speak she said, for
she was a privileged person:
“You hear from Stonor?”
Clare nodded.
“He not pass his ’xamination, I guess?”
“Certainly he has passed!”
said Clare sharply. “If anybody can pass
their examinations he can.”
“Why you look so sorry then?”
“Oh nothing.
I didn’t expect him to write it. A five-word
postscript at the end of a matter-of-fact letter.”
“Maybe he couldn’t get leave.”
“He said he’d get leave if he passed.”
“Maybe he comin’ anyhow.”
“He never says a word about coming.”
“You ask him to come?”
“Of course not!”
“Don’t you want him come?”
“I don’t know whether I do or not.”
Mary looked perplexed.
Clare burst out, “I can’t
ask him. He’d feel obliged to come.
A man man like that anyway, would feel
after what we’ve been through together that
I had a claim on him. Well, I don’t want
him to come out of a sense of duty. Don’t
you understand?”
Mary shook her head. “If I want something
I ask for it.”
“It’s not so simple as all that!”
“Maybe he think he not wanted here.”
“A man’s supposed to take that chance.”
“Awful long way to come on a chance,”
said Mary. “Maybe I write to him.”
Clare jumped up. “Don’t
you dare!” she cried. “If I thought
for a moment if I thought he had been brought,
I should be perfectly hateful to him. I couldn’t
help myself Is that a motor at the gate?”
“Yes, Miss, a taxi-cab.”
“Stopping here?”
“Yes, Miss,” with absolute
calm: “Stonor is gettin’ out.”
“What! Oh, Mary! It can’t
be! It is!”
A bell rang.
“Oh, Mary! What shall I
do? Don’t go to the door! Let him wait
a minute. Let me think what I must do. Let
me get upstairs!”
Stonor got up and sat down, and got
up again. He walked to the window and back to
the door. He listened for sounds in the house,
and then went back to his chair again. He heard
a sound overhead and sprang to the door once more.
He saw her on the stairs, and retreated back into the
room. She came down with maddening deliberation,
step by step. She did not look through the door,
but paused a second to straighten a picture that hung
askew on the wall. Stonor’s heart was beating
like a trip-hammer.
She came into the room smiling in
friendly fashion with a little gush of speech but
her eyes did not quite meet his.
“Well, Martin! Congratulations!
I just got your letter this morning. I didn’t
expect you to follow so soon. So it’s Inspector
Stonor now, eh? Very becoming uniform, sir!
Was the examination difficult? You must tell
me all about it. I suppose you are just off the
train. What kind of a trip did you have?
Sit down.”
He was a little flabbergasted by her
easy flow of speech. “I don’t want
to sit down,” he muttered huskily. He was
staring at her from a white face.
She sat; glanced out of the window,
glanced here and there about the room, and rattled
on: “Haven’t we got a jolly little
place here? But I expect we’ll be ordered
on directly. Mary and I were talking about you
the moment you rang the bell. Mary is so good
to me, but her heart is already turning to Fort Enterprise
and her children, I’m afraid.”
He found his tongue at last.
“Clare, don’t!” he cried brokenly.
“I didn’t come eight hundred miles to
hear you make parlour conversation. What’s
the matter? What have I done? If you’ve
changed towards me tell me so plainly, and let me
get out. I can’t stand this!”
Panic seized her. “I must
see about lunch. Excuse me just a moment,”
she said, making for the door.
He caught her as she tried to pass.
“Damn lunch! Look me in the eye, woman!”
She relaxed. Her eyes crept imploringly
up to his. “Bear!” she whispered.
“You might at least have given me a moment’s
respite! Oh, I love you! I love you!
I love you!”