It was noon on a Saturday. Out
of the many buildings of the great electrical manufacturing
plant at Schenectady poured employees by hundreds.
Thirty trolley-cars were run on special tracks to the
place and stood ready to receive the sea streaming
towards them. Massed motor-cars waited beyond
the trolleys for their owners, officials of the works.
The girl in blue serge, standing at a special door
of a special building counted, keeping watch meantime
of the crowd, the cars. A hundred and twenty-five
she made it; it came to her mind that State Street
in Albany on a day of some giant parade was not unlike
this, not less a throng. The girl, who was secretary
to an assistant manager, was used to the sight, but
it was an impressive sight and she was impressionable
and found each Saturday’s pageant a wonder.
The pageant was more interesting it may be because
it focussed always on one figure and here
he was.
“Did you wait, long?”
he asked as he came up, broad-shouldered and athletic
of build, boyish and honest of face, as good looking
a young American as one may see in any crowd.
“I was early.” She
smiled up at him as they swung off towards the trolleys;
her eyes flashed a glance which said frankly that she
found him satisfactory to look upon.
They sped past others, many others,
and made a trolley car and a seat together, which
was the goal. They always made it, every Saturday,
yet it was always a game. Exhilarated by the
winning of the game they settled into the scat for
the three-quarters of an hour run; it was quite a
worth-while world, the smiling glances said one to
the other.
The girl gazed, not seeing them particularly,
at the slower people filling the seats and the passage
of the car. Then: “Oh,” she spoke,
“what was it you were going to tell me?”
The man’s face grew sober, a
bit troubled. “Well,” he said, “I’ve
decided. I’m going to enlist.”
She was still for a second. Then:
“I think that’s splendid,” she brought
out. “Splendid. Of course, I knew you’d
do it. It’s the only thing that could be.
I’m glad.”
“Yes,” the man spoke slowly.
“It’s the only thing that could be.
There’s nothing to keep me. My mother’s
dead. My father’s husky and not old and
my sisters are with him. There’s nobody
to suffer by my going.”
“N-no,” the girl agreed.
“But it’s the fine thing to
do just the same. You’re thirty-two you
see, and couldn’t be drafted. That makes
it rather great of you to go.”
“Well,” the man answered,
“not so very great, I suppose, as it’s
what all young Americans are doing. I rather
think it’s one of those things, like spelling,
which are no particular credit if you do them, but
a disgrace if you don’t.”
“What a gray way of looking
at it!” the girl objected. “As if
all the country wasn’t glorying in the boys
who go! As if we didn’t all stand back
of you and crowd the side lines to watch you, bursting
with pride. You know we all love you.”
“Do you love me, Mary?
Enough to marry me before I go?” His voice was
low, but the girl missed no syllable. She had
heard those words or some like them in his voice before.
“Oh, Jim,” she begged,
“don’t ask me now. I’m not certain yet.
I I couldn’t get along very well
without you. I care a lot. But I’m
not just sure it’s the way I ought
to care to marry you.”
As alone in the packed car as in a
wood, the little drama went on and no one noticed.
“I’m sorry, Mary.” The tone
was dispirited. “I could go with a lot
lighter heart if we belonged to each other.”
“Don’t say that, Jim,”
she pleaded. “You make me out a
slacker. You don’t want me to marry you
as a duty?”
“Good Lord, no!”
“I know that. And I do
care. There’s nobody like you. I admire
you so for going but you’re not afraid
of anything. It’s easy for you, that part.
I suppose a good many are really afraid.
Of the guns and the horror all that.
You’re lucky, Jim. You don’t give
that a thought.”
The man flashed an odd look, and then
regarded his hands joined on his knee.
“I do appreciate your courage.
I admire that a lot. But somehow Jim there’s
a doubt that holds me back. I can’t be sure
I love you enough; that it’s the
right way for that.”
The man sighed. “Yes,”
he said. “I see. Maybe some time.
Heavens knows I wouldn’t want you unless it
was whole-hearted. I wouldn’t risk your
regretting it, not if I wanted you ten times more.
Which is impossible.” He put out his big
hand with a swift touch on hers. “Maybe
some time. Don’t worry,” he said.
“I’m yours.” And went on in
a commonplace tone, “I think I’ll show
up at the recruiting office this afternoon, and I’ll
come to your house in the evening as usual. Is
that all right?”
The car sped into Albany and the man
went to her door with the girl and left her with few
words more and those about commonplace subjects.
As he swung down the street he went over the episode
in his mind, and dissected it and dwelt on words and
phrases and glances, and drew conclusions as lovers
have done before, each detail, each conclusion mightily
important, outweighing weeks of conversation of the
rest of the world together. At last he shook
his head and set his lips.
“It’s not honest.”
He formed the words with his lips now, a summing up
of many thoughts in his brain. The brain went
on elaborating the text. “She thinks I’m
brave; she thinks it’s easy for me to face enlisting,
and the rest. She thinks I’m the makeup
which can meet horror and suffering light-heartedly.
And I’m not. She admires me for that she
said so. I’m not it. I’m fooling
her; it’s not honest. Yet” he
groaned aloud. “Yet I may lose her if I
tell her the truth. I’m afraid. I am.
I hate it. I can’t bear I can’t
bear to leave my job and my future, just when it’s
opening out. But I could do that. Only I’m Oh,
damnation I’m afraid. Horror
and danger, agony of men and horses, myself wounded
maybe, out on No Man’s Land left there hours.
To die like a dog. Oh, my God must
I? If I tell it will break the little hold I have
on her. Must I go to this devil’s dance
that I hate and give up her love besides?
But yet it isn’t honest to fool her.
Oh, God, what will I do?” People walking up
State Street, meeting a sober-faced young man, glanced
at him with no particular interest. A woman waiting
on a doorstep regarded him idly.
“Why isn’t he in uniform?”
she wondered as one does wonder in these days at a
strong chap in mufti. Then she rebuked her thought.
“Undoubtedly there’s a good reason; American
boys are not slackers.”
His slow steps carried him beyond
her vision and casual thought. The people in
the street and the woman on the doorstep did not think
or care that what they saw was a man fighting his
way through the crisis of his life, fighting alone
“per aspera ad astra ”
through thorns to the stars.
He lunched with a man at a club and
after that took his way to the building on Broadway
where were the recruiting headquarters. He had
told her that he was going to enlist. As he walked
he stared at the people in the streets as a man might
stare going to his execution. These people went
about their affairs, he considered, as if he who
was about to die did not, in passing their
friendly commonplace, salute them. He did salute
them. Out of his troubled soul he sent a silent
greeting to each ordinary American hurrying along,
each standing to him for pleasant and peaceful America,
America of all his days up to now. Was he to toss
away this comfortable comradeship, his life to be,
everything he cared for on earth, to go into hell,
and likely never come back? Why? Why must
he? There seemed to be plenty who wanted to fight why
not let them? It was the old slacker’s
argument; the man was ashamed as he caught himself
using it; he had the grace to see its selfishness and
cowardice. Yet his soul was in revolt as he drove
his body to the recruiting office, and the thoughts
that filled him were not of the joy of giving but of
the pain of giving up. With that he stood on
the steps of the building and here was Charlie Thurston
hurrying by on the sidewalk.
“Hello, Jim! Going in to
enlist? So long till you come back with one leg
and an eye out.”
It was Thurston’s idea of a
joke. He would have been startled if he had known
into what a trembling balance his sledge-hummer wit
cast its unlucky weight. The balance quivered
at the blow, shook back and forth an instant and fell
heavily. Jim Barlow wheeled, sprang down the stone
steps and bolted up the street, panting as one who
has escaped a wild beast. Thurston had said it.
That was what was due to happen. It was now three
o’clock; Barlow fled up State Street to the big
hotel and took a room and locked his door and threw
himself on the bed. What was he to do? After
weeks of hesitation he had come to the decision that
he would offer himself to his country. He saw none
plainer the reasons why it was fit and
right so to do. Other men were giving up homes
and careers and the whole bright and easy side of
life why not he? It was the greatest
cause to fight for in the world’s history should
he not fight for it? How, after the war, might
he meet friends, his own people, his children to come,
if he alone of his sort had no honorable record to
show? Such arguments, known to all, he repeated,
even aloud he repeated them, tossing miserably about
the bed in his hotel room. And his mind at once
accepted them, but that was all. His spirit failed
to spring to his mind’s support with the throb
of emotion which is the spark that makes the engine
go. The wheels went around over and over but the
connection was not made. The human mind is useful
machinery, but it is only the machine’s master,
the soul, which can use it. Over and over he got
to his feet and spoke aloud: “Now I will
go.” Over and over a repulsion seized him
so strongly that his knees gave way and he fell back
on the bed. If he had a mother, he thought, she
might have helped, but there was no one. Mary but
he could not risk Mary’s belief in his courage.
Only a mother would have understood entirely.
With that, sick at heart, the hideous
sea of counter arguments, arguments of a slacker,
surged upon him. What would it all matter a hundred
years from now? Wasn’t he more useful in
his place keeping up the industries of the nation?
Wasn’t he a bigger asset to America as an alive
engineer, an expert in his work, than as mere cannon
fodder, one of thousands to be shot into junk in a
morning’s “activity” just
one of them? Because the Germans were devils
why should he let them reach over here, away over
here, and drag him out of a decent and happy life and
throw him like dirt into the horrible mess they had
made, and leave him dead or worse mangled
and useless. Then, again there were
plenty of men mad to fight; why not let them?
Through a long afternoon he fought with the beasts,
and dinner-time came and he did not notice, and at
last he rose and, telephoning first to Mary a terse
message that he would not be able to come this evening,
he went out, hardly knowing what he did, and wandered
up town.
There was a humble church in a quiet
street where a service flag hung, thick with dark
stars, and the congregation were passing out from a
special service for its boys who were going off to
camp. The boys were there on the steps, surrounded
by people eager to touch their hands, a little group
of eight or ten with serious bright faces, and a look
in their eyes which stabbed into Barlow. One
may see that look any day in any town, meeting the
erect stalwart lads in khaki who are about our streets.
It is the look of those who have made a vital sacrifice
and know the price, and whose minds are at peace.
Barlow, lingering on the corner across the way, stared
hungrily. How had they got that look, that peace?
If only he might talk to one of them! Yet he knew
how dumb an animal is a boy, and how helpless these
would be to give him the master word.
The master-word, he needed that; he
needed it desperately. He must go; he must.
Life would be unendurable without self-respect; no
amount of explaining could cover the stain on his
soul if he failed in the answer to the call of honor.
That was it, it was in a nut-shell, the call.
Yet he could not hear it as his call. He wandered
unhappily away and left the church and its dissolving
congregation, and the boys, the pride of the church,
the boys who were now, they also, separating and going
back each to his home for the last evening perhaps,
to be loved and made much of. Barlow vaguely
pictured the scenes in those little homes eyes
bright with unshed tears, love and laughter and courage,
patriotism as fine as in any great house in America,
determination that in giving to America what was dearest
it should be given with high spirit that
the boys should have smiling faces to remember, over
there. And then again love and tender
words. He was missing all that. He, too,
might go back to his father’s house an enlisted
man, and meet his father’s eyes of pride and
see his sisters gaze at him with a new respect, feel
their new honor of him in the touch of arms about
his neck. All these things were for him too,
if he would but take them. With that there was
the sound of singing, shrill, fresh voices singing
down the street. He wheeled about. A company
of little girls were marching towards him and he smiled,
looking at them, thinking the sight as pretty as a
garden of flowers. They were from eight to ten
or eleven years old and in the bravery of fresh white
dresses; each had a big butterfly of pink or blue
or yellow or white ribbon perched on each little fair
or dark head, and each carried over her shoulder a
flag. Quite evidently they were coming from the
celebration at the church, where in some capacity they
had figured. Not millionaires children these;
the little sisters likely of the boys who were going
to be soldiers; just dear things that bloom all over
America, the flowering of the land, common to rich
and poor. As they sprang along two by two, in
unmartial ranks, they sang with all their might “The
Long, Long Trail.”
“There’s a long, long trail
that’s leading
To No Man’s Land in
France
Where the shrapnel shells are bursting
And we must advance.”
And then:
We’re going to show old Kaiser Bill
What our Yankee boys can do.
Jim Barlow, his hands in his pockets,
backed up against a house and listened to the clear,
high, little voices. “No Man’s Land
in France We must advance What
our Yankee boys can do.”
As if his throat were gripped by a
quick hand, a storm of emotion swept him. The
little girls little girls who were the joy,
each one, of some home! Such little things as
the Germans in Belgium “Oh,
my God!” The words burst aloud from his lips.
These were trusting innocent, ignorant to
“What our Yankee boys can do.” Without
that, without the Yankee boys, such as these would
be in the power of wild beasts. It was his affair.
Suddenly he felt that stab through him.
“God,” he prayed, whispering
it as the little girls passed on singing, “help
me to protect them; help me to forget myself.”
And the miracle that sends an answer sometimes, even
in this twentieth century, to true prayer happened
to Jim Barlow. Behold he had forgotten himself.
With his head up and peace in his breast, and the
look in his face already, though he did not know it,
that our soldier boys wear, he turned and started
at a great pace down the street to the recruiting office.
“Why, you did come.”
It was nine o’clock and he stood
with lighted face in the middle of the little library.
And she came in; it was an event to which he never
got used, Mary’s coming into a room. The
room changed always into such an astonishing place.
“Mary, I’ve done it.
I’m ” his voice choked a bit “I’m
a soldier.” He laughed at that. “Well
not so you’d notice it, yet. But I’ve
taken the first step.”
“I knew, Jim. You said
you were going to enlist. Why did you telephone
you couldn’t come?”
He stared down at her, holding her
hands yet. He felt, unphrased, strong, the overwhelming
conviction that she was the most desirable thing on
earth. And directly on top of that conviction
another, that he would be doing her desirableness,
her loveliness less than the highest honor if he posed
before her in false colors. At whatever cost to
himself he must be honest with her. Also he
was something more now than his own man; he was a
soldier of America, and inside and out he would be,
for America’s sake, the best that was in him
to be.
“Mary, I’ve got a thing to tell you.”
“Yes?” The sure way in
which she smiled up at him made the effort harder.
“I fooled you. You think
I’m a hero. And I’m not. I’m
a ” for the life of him he could
not get out the word “coward.” He
went on: “I’m a blamed baby.”
And he told her in a few words, yet plainly enough
what he had gone through in the long afternoon.
“It was the kiddies who clinched it, with their
flags and their hair ribbons and their Yankee
boys. I couldn’t stand for not
playing square with them.”
Suddenly he gripped her hands so that
it hurt. “Mary, God help me, I’ll
try to fight the devils over there so that kiddies
like that, and you, and all the blessed
people, the whole dear shooting-match will be safe
over here. I’m glad I’m
so glad I’m going to have a hand in it.
Mary, it’s queer, but I’m happier than
I’ve been in months. Only” his
brows drew anxiously. “Only I’m scared
stiff for fear you think me a coward.”
He had the word out now. Thee
taste wasn’t so bad after all; it seemed oddly
to have nothing to do with himself. “Mary,
dear, couldn’t you forget that in
time? When I’ve been over there and behaved
decently and I think I will. Somehow
I’m not afraid of being afraid now. It
feels like a thing that couldn’t be done by
a soldier of Uncle Sam’s. I’ll just
look at the other chaps all heroes, you
know and be so proud I’m with them
and so keen to finish our job that I know somehow
I know I’ll never think about my blooming
self at all. It’s queer to say it, Mary,
but the way it looks now I’m in it, it’s
not just country even. It’s religion.
See, Mary?”
There was no sound, no glance from
Mary. But he went on, unaware, so rapt was he
in his new illumination.
“And when I come back, Mary,
with a decent record just possibly with
a war-cross oh, my word! Think of
me! Then, couldn’t you forget this business
I’ve been telling you? Do you think you
could marry me then?”
What was the matter? Why did
she stand so still with her head bending lower and
lower, the color deepening on the bit of cheek that
his anxious eyes could see.
“Mary!”
Suddenly she was clutching his collar as if in deadly
fear.
“Mary, what’s the matter? I’m
such a fool, but oh, Mary, dear!”
With that Mary-dear straightened and,
slipping her clutch to the lapel of his old coat,
spoke. She looked into his eyes with a smile that
was sweeter oh, much sweeter! for
tears that dimmed it, and she choked most awfully
between words. “Jim” and
a choke. “Jim, I’m terrified to think
I nearly let you get away. You. And me not
worthy to lace your shoes ” ("Oh,
gracious, Mary don’t!”) “me the
idiot, backing and filling when I had the chance of
my life at at a hero. Oh, Jim!”
“Here! Mary, don’t
you understand? I’ve been telling you I
was scared blue. I hated to tell you Mary, and
it’s the devil to tell you twice ”
What was this? Did Heaven then
sometimes come down unawares on the head of an every-day
citizen with great lapses of character? Jim Barlow,
entranced, doubted his senses yet could not doubt the
touch of soft hands clasped in his neck. He held
his head back a little to be sure that they were real.
Yes, they were there, the hands Barlow’s
next remark was long, but untranslatable. Minutes
later. “Mary, tell me what you mean.
Not that I care much if if this.”
Language grows elliptical under stress. “But did
you get me? I’m a coward.”
A hand flashed across his mouth.
“Don’t you dare, Jim, you’re the
bravest bravest ”
The words died in a sharp break.
“Why, Jim it was a hundred thousand times pluckier
to be afraid and then go. Can’t you see
that, you big stupid?”
“But, Mary, you said you admired
it when when you thought I was a lion of
courage.”
“Of course. I admired you. Now I adore
you.”
“Well,” summed up, Barlow bewildered,
“if women aren’t the blamedest!”
And Mary squealed laughter. She
put hands each side of his face. “Jim listen.
I’ll try to explain because you have a right
to understand.”
“Well, yes,” agreed Jim.
“It’s like this.
I thought you’d enlist and I never dreamed you
were balky. I didn’t know you hated it
so. Why didn’t you tell me?”
“Go on,” urged Jim.
“I thought you were mad to be
going, like like these light-headed boys.
That you didn’t mind leaving me compared to the
adventure. That you didn’t care for danger.
But now now.” She covered his
eyes with her fingers, “Now Jim, you need me.
A woman can’t love a man her best unless she
can help him. Against everything sorrow,
mosquitoes, bad food drink any
old bother. That’s the alluring side of
tipplers. Women want to help them. So, now
I know you need me,” the soft, unsteady voice
wandered on, and Jim, anchored between, the hands,
drank in her look with his eyes and her tones with
his ears and prayed that the situation might last
a week. “You need me so, to tell you how
much finer you are than if you’d gone off without
a quiver.”
Barlow sighed in contentment.
“And me thinking I was the solitary ’fraid-cat
of America!”
“Solitary! Why, Jim, there
must be at least ten hundred thousand men going through
this same battle. All the ones old enough to think,
probably. Why Jim you’re only
one of them. In that speech the other night the
man said this war was giving men their souls.
I think it’s your kind he meant, the kind that
realizes the bad things over there and the good things
over here and goes just the same. The kind you
are.”
“I’m a hero from Hero-ville,”
murmured Barlow. “But little Mary, when
I come back mangled will you feel the same? Will
you marry me then, Mary?”
“I’ll marry you any minute,”
stated Mary, “and when you come back I’ll
love you one extra for every mangle.”
“Any minute,” repeated Barlow dramatically.
“Tomorrow?”
And summed up again the heaven that
he could not understand and did not want to, “Search
me,” he adjured the skies in good Americanese,
“if girls aren’t the blamedest.”