CHAPTER I
A long train of crowded cars, the
passengers all of the same sex, almost of the same
age, all dressed and hatted alike, was slowly steaming
through the green sea-meadows late on a summer afternoon.
In the cars, incessant stretching of cramped legs,
shifting of shoulders, striking of matches, passing
of cigarettes, groans of boredom; occasionally concerted
laughter about nothing. Suddenly the train stops
short. Clipped heads and tanned faces pop out
at every window. The boys begin to moan and shout;
what is the matter now?
The conductor goes through the cars,
saying something about a freight wreck on ahead; he
has orders to wait here for half an hour. Nobody
pays any attention to him. A murmur of astonishment
rises from one side of the train. The boys crowd
over to the south windows. At last there is something
to look at, though what they see is so
strangely quiet that their own exclamations are not
very loud.
Their train is lying beside an arm
of the sea that reaches far into the green shore.
At the edge of the still water stand the hulls of
four wooden ships, in the process of building.
There is no town, there are no smoke-stacks very
few workmen. Piles of lumber lie about on the
grass. A gasoline engine under a temporary shelter
is operating a long crane that reaches down among
the piles of boards and beams, lifts a load, silently
and deliberately swings it over to one of the skeleton
vessels, and lowers it somewhere into the body of
the motionless thing. Along the sides of the
clean hulls a few riveters are at work; they sit on
suspended planks, lowering and raising themselves with
pulleys, like house painters. Only by listening
very closely can one hear the tap of their hammers.
No orders are shouted, no thud of heavy machinery
or scream of iron drills tears the air. These
strange boats seem to be building themselves.
Some of the men got out of the cars
and ran along the tracks, asking each other how boats
could be built off in the grass like this. Lieutenant
Claude Wheeler stretched his legs upon the opposite
seat and sat still at his window, looking down on this
strange scene. Shipbuilding, he had supposed,
meant noise and forges and engines and hosts of men.
This was like a dream. Nothing but green meadows,
soft grey water, a floating haze of mist a little
rosy from the sinking sun, spectre-like seagulls,
flying slowly, with the red glow tinging their wings and
those four hulls lying in their braces, facing the
sea, deliberating by the sea.
Claude knew nothing of ships or shipbuilding,
but these craft did not seem to be nailed together, they
seemed all of a piece, like sculpture. They reminded
him of the houses not made with hands; they were like
simple and great thoughts, like purposes forming slowly
here in the silence beside an unruffled arm of the
Atlantic. He knew nothing about ships, but he
didn’t have to; the shape of those hulls their
strong, inevitable lines told their story,
was their story; told the whole adventure of man
with the sea.
Wooden ships! When great passions
and great aspirations stirred a country, shapes like
these formed along its shores to be the sheath of
its valour. Nothing Claude had ever seen or heard
or read or thought had made it all so clear as these
untried wooden bottoms. They were the very impulse,
they were the potential act, they were the “going
over,” the drawn arrow, the great unuttered
cry, they were Fate, they were tomorrow!...
The locomotive screeched to her scattered
passengers, like an old turkey-hen calling her brood.
The soldier boys came running back along the embankment
and leaped aboard the train. The conductor shouted
they would be in Hoboken in time for supper.
CHAPTER II
It was midnight when the men had got
their supper and began unrolling their blankets to
sleep on the floor of the long dock waiting-rooms, which
in other days had been thronged by people who came
to welcome home-coming friends, or to bid them God-speed
to foreign shores. Claude and some of his men
had tried to look about them; but there was little
to be seen. The bow of a boat, painted in distracting
patterns of black and white, rose at one end of the
shed, but the water itself was not visible. Down
in the cobble-paved street below they watched for
awhile the long line of drays and motor trucks that
bumped all night into a vast cavern lit by electricity,
where crates and barrels and merchandise of all kinds
were piled, marked American Expeditionary Forces;
cases of electrical machinery from some factory in
Ohio, parts of automobiles, gun-carriages, bath-tubs,
hospital supplies, bales of cotton, cases of canned
food, grey metal tanks full of chemical fluids.
Claude went back to the waiting room, lay down and
fell asleep with the glare of an arc-light shining
full in his face.
He was called at four in the morning
and told where to report to headquarters. Captain
Maxey, stationed at a desk on one of the landings,
explained to his lieutenants that their company was
to sail at eight o’clock on the Anchises.
It was an English boat, an old liner pulled off the
Australian trade, that could carry only twenty-five
hundred men. The crew was English, but part of
the stores, the meat and fresh fruit and
vegetables, were furnished by the United
States Government. The Captain had been over the
boat during the night, and didn’t like it very
well. He had expected to be scheduled for one
of the fine big Hamburg-American liners, with dining-rooms
finished in rosewood, and ventilation plants and cooling
plants, and elevators running from top to bottom like
a New York office building. “However,”
he said, “we’ll have to make the best
of it. They’re using everything that’s
got a bottom now.”
The company formed for roll-call at
one end of the shed, with their packs and rifles.
Breakfast was served to them while they waited.
After an hour’s standing on the concrete, they
saw encouraging signs. Two gangplanks were lowered
from the vessel at the end of the slip, and up each
of them began to stream a close brown line of men
in smart service caps. They recognized a company
of Kansas Infantry, and began to grumble because their
own service caps hadn’t yet been given to them;
they would have to sail in their old Stetsons.
Soon they were drawn into one of the brown lines that
went continuously up the gangways, like belting running
over machinery. On the deck one steward directed
the men down to the hold, and another conducted the
officers to their cabins. Claude was shown to
a four-berth state-room. One of his cabin mates,
Lieutenant Fanning, of his own company, was already
there, putting his slender luggage in order. The
steward told them the officers were breakfasting in
the dining saloon.
By seven o’clock all the troops
were aboard, and the men were allowed on deck.
For the first time Claude saw the profile of New York
City, rising thin and gray against an opal-coloured
morning sky. The day had come on hot and misty.
The sun, though it was now high, was a red ball, streaked
across with purple clouds. The tall buildings,
of which he had heard so much, looked unsubstantial
and illusionary, mere shadows of grey and
pink and blue that might dissolve with the mist and
fade away in it. The boys were disappointed.
They were Western men, accustomed to the hard light
of high altitudes, and they wanted to see the city
clearly; they couldn’t make anything of these
uneven towers that rose dimly through the vapour.
Everybody was asking questions. Which of those
pale giants was the Singer Building? Which the
Woolworth? What was the gold dome, dully glinting
through the fog? Nobody knew. They agreed
it was a shame they could not have had a day in New
York before they sailed away from it, and that they
would feel foolish in Paris when they had to admit
they had never so much as walked up Broadway.
Tugs and ferry boats and coal barges were moving up
and down the oily river, all novel sights to the men.
Over in the Canard and French docks they saw the first
examples of the “camouflage” they had heard
so much about; big vessels daubed over in crazy patterns
that made the eyes ache, some in black and white,
some in soft rainbow colours.
A tug steamed up alongside and fastened.
A few moments later a man appeared on the bridge and
began to talk to the captain. Young Fanning,
who had stuck to Claude’s side, told him this
was the pilot, and that his arrival meant they were
going to start. They could see the shiny instruments
of a band assembling in the bow.
“Let’s get on the other
side, near the rail if we can,” said Fanning.
“The fellows are bunching up over here because
they want to look at the Goddess of Liberty as we
go out. They don’t even know this boat
turns around the minute she gets into the river.
They think she’s going over stern first!”
It was not easy to cross the deck;
every inch was covered by a boot. The whole superstructure
was coated with brown uniforms; they clung to the
boat davits, the winches, the railings and ventilators,
like bees in a swarm. Just as the vessel was backing
out, a breeze sprang up and cleared the air. Blue
sky broke overhead, and the pale silhouette of buildings
on the long island grew sharp and hard. Windows
flashed flame-coloured in their grey sides, the gold
and bronze tops of towers began to gleam where the
sunlight struggled through. The transport was
sliding down toward the point, and to the left the
eye caught the silver cobweb of bridges, seen confusingly
against each other.
“There she is!” “Hello,
old girl!” “Good-bye, sweetheart!”
The swarm surged to starboard.
They shouted and gesticulated to the image they were
all looking for, so much nearer than they
had expected to see her, clad in green folds, with
the mist streaming up like smoke behind. For
nearly every one of those twenty-five hundred boys,
as for Claude, it was their first glimpse of the Bartholdi
statue. Though she was such a definite image
in their minds, they had not imagined her in her setting
of sea and sky, with the shipping of the world coming
and going at her feet, and the moving cloud masses
behind her. Post-card pictures had given them
no idea of the energy of her large gesture, or how
her heaviness becomes light among the vapourish elements.
“France gave her to us,” they kept saying,
as they saluted her. Before Claude had got over
his first thrill, the Kansas band in the bow began
playing “Over There.” Two thousand
voices took it up, booming out over the water the gay,
indomitable resolution of that jaunty air.
A Staten Island ferry-boat passed
close under the bow of the transport. The passengers
were office-going people, on their way to work, and
when they looked up and saw these hundreds of faces,
all young, all bronzed and grinning, they began to
shout and wave their handkerchiefs. One of the
passengers was an old clergyman, a famous speaker
in his day, now retired, who went over to the City
every morning to write editorials for a church paper.
He closed the book he was reading, stood by the rail,
and taking off his hat began solemnly to quote from
a poet who in his time was still popular. “Sail
on,” he quavered,
“Thou, too, sail on, O Ship of State,
Humanity, with all its fears,
With all its hopes of future years,
Is hanging breathless on thy fate.”
As the troop ship glided down the
sea lane, the old man still watched it from the turtle-back.
That howling swarm of brown arms and hats and faces
looked like nothing, but a crowd of American boys
going to a football game somewhere. But the scene
was ageless; youths were sailing away to die for an
idea, a sentiment, for the mere sound of a phrase...
and on their departure they were making vows to a
bronze image in the sea.
CHAPTER III
All the first morning Tod Fanning
showed Claude over the boat, not that Fanning
had ever been on anything bigger than a Lake Michigan
steamer, but he knew a good deal about machinery,
and did not hesitate to ask the deck stewards to explain
anything he didn’t know. The stewards,
indeed all the crew, struck the boys as an unusually
good-natured and obliging set of men.
The fourth occupant of number 96,
Claude’s cabin, had not turned up by noon, nor
had any of his belongings, so the three who had settled
their few effects there began to hope they would have
the place to themselves. It would be crowded
enough, at that. The third bunk was assigned
to an officer from the Kansas regiment, Lieutenant
Bird, a Virginian, who had been working in his uncle’s
bank in Topeka when he enlisted. He and Claude
sat together at mess. When they were at lunch,
the Virginian said in his very gentle voice:
“Lieutenant, I wish you’d
explain Lieutenant Fanning to me. He seems very
immature. He’s been telling me about a submarine
destroyer he’s invented, but it looks to me like
foolishness.”
Claude laughed. “Don’t
try to understand Fanning. Just let him sink
in, and you’ll come to like him. I used
to wonder how he ever got a commission. You never
can tell what crazy thing he’ll do.”
Fanning had, for instance, brought
on board a pair of white flannel pants, his first
and only tailor-made trousers, because he had a premonition
that the boat would make a port and that he would
be asked to a garden party! He had a way of using
big words in the wrong place, not because he tried
to show off, but because all words sounded alike to
him. In the first days of their acquaintance
in camp he told Claude that this was a failing he
couldn’t help, and that it was called “anæsthesia.”
Sometimes this failing was confusing; when Fanning
sententiously declared that he would like to be on
hand when the Crown Prince settled his little account
with Plato, Claude was perplexed until subsequent
witticisms revealed that the boy meant Pluto.
At three o’clock there was a
band concert on deck. Claude fell into talk with
the bandmaster, and was delighted to find that he
came from Hillport, Kansas, a town where Claude had
once been with his father to buy cattle, and that
all his fourteen men came from Hillport. They
were the town band, had enlisted in a body, had gone
into training together, and had never been separated.
One was a printer who helped to get out the Hillport
Argus every week, another clerked in a grocery store,
another was the son of a German watch repairer, one
was still in High School, one worked in an automobile
livery. After supper Claude found them all together,
very much interested in their first evening at sea,
and arguing as to whether the sunset on the water
was as fine as those they saw every night in Hillport.
They hung together in a quiet, determined way, and
if you began to talk to one, you soon found that all
the others were there.
When Claude and Fanning and Lieutenant
Bird were undressing in their narrow quarters that
night, the fourth berth was still unclaimed.
They were in their bunks and almost asleep, when the
missing man came in and unceremoniously turned on the
light. They were astonished to see that he wore
the uniform of the Royal Flying Corps and carried
a cane. He seemed very young, but the three who
peeped out at him felt that he must be a person of
consequence. He took off his coat with the spread
wings on the collar, wound his watch, and brushed
his teeth with an air of special personal importance.
Soon after he had turned out the light and climbed
into the berth over Lieutenant Bird, a heavy smell
of rum spread in the close air.
Fanning, who slept under Claude, kicked
the sagging mattress above him and stuck his head
out. “Hullo, Wheeler! What have you
got up there?”
“Nothing.”
“Nothing smells pretty good
to me. I’ll have some with anybody that
asks me.”
No response from any quarter.
Bird, the Virginian, murmured, “Don’t
make a row,” and they went to sleep.
In the morning, when the bath steward
came, he edged his way into the narrow cabin and poked
his head into the berth over Bird’s. “I’m
sorry, sir, I’ve made careful search for your
luggage, and it’s not to be found, sir.”
“I tell you it must be found,”
fumed a petulant voice overhead. “I brought
it over from the St. Regis myself in a taxi. I
saw it standing on the pier with the officers’
luggage, a black cabin trunk with V.M.
lettered on both ends. Get after it.”
The steward smiled discreetly.
He probably knew that the aviator had come on board
in a state which precluded any very accurate observation
on his part. “Very well, sir. Is there
anything I can get you for the present?”
“You can take this shirt out
and have it laundered and bring it back to me tonight.
I’ve no linen in my bag.”
“Yes, sir.”
Claude and Fanning got on deck as
quickly as possible and found scores of their comrades
already there, pointing to dark smudges of smoke along
the clear horizon. They knew that these vessels
had come from unknown ports, some of them far away,
steaming thither under orders known only to their
commanders. They would all arrive within a few
hours of each other at a given spot on the surface
of the ocean. There they would fall into place,
flanked by their destroyers, and would proceed in orderly
formation, without changing their relative positions.
Their escort would not leave them until they were
joined by gunboats and destroyers off whatever coast
they were bound for, what that coast was,
not even their own officers knew as yet.
Later in the morning this meeting
was actually accomplished. There were ten troop
ships, some of them very large boats, and six destroyers.
The men stood about the whole morning, gazing spellbound
at their sister transports, trying to find out their
names, guessing at their capacity. Tanned as they
already were, their lips and noses began to blister
under the fiery sunlight. After long months of
intensive training, the sudden drop into an idle,
soothing existence was grateful to them. Though
their pasts were neither long or varied, most of them,
like Claude Wheeler, felt a sense of relief at being
rid of all they had ever been before and facing something
absolutely new. Said Tod Fanning, as he lounged
against the rail, “Whoever likes it can run for
a train every morning, and grind his days out in a
Westinghouse works; but not for me any more!”
The Virginian joined them. “That
Englishman ain’t got out of bed yet. I
reckon he’s been liquouring up pretty steady.
The place smells like a bar. The room steward
was just coming out, and he winked at me. He
was slipping something in his pocket, looked like
a banknote.”
Claude was curious, and went down
to the cabin. As he entered, the air-man, lying
half-dressed in his upper berth, raised himself on
one elbow and looked down at him. His blue eyes
were contracted and hard, his curly hair disordered,
but his cheeks were as pink as a girl’s, and
the little yellow humming-bird moustache on his upper
lip was twisted sharp.
“You’re missing fine weather,” said
Claude affably.
“Oh, there’ll be a great
deal of weather before we get over, and damned little
of anything else!” He drew a bottle from under
his pillow. “Have a nip?”
“I don’t mind if I do,” Claude put
out his hand.
The other laughed and sank back on
his pillow, drawling lazily, “Brave boy!
Go ahead; drink to the Kaiser.”
“Why to him in particular?”
“It’s not particular.
Drink to Hindenburg, or the High Command, or anything
else that got you out of the cornfield. That’s
where they did get you, didn’t they?”
“Well, it’s a good guess,
anyhow. Where did they get you?”
“Crystal Lake, Iowa. I
think that was the place.” He yawned and
folded his hands over his stomach.
“Why, we thought you were an Englishman.”
“Not quite. I’ve served in His Majesty’s
army two years, though.”
“Have you been flying in France?”
“Yes. I’ve been back
and forth all the time, England and France. Now
I’ve wasted two months at Fort Worth. Instructor.
That’s not my line. I may have been sent
over as a reprimand. You can’t tell about
my Colonel, though; may have been his way of getting
me out of danger.”
Claude glanced up at him, shocked at such an idea.
The young man in the berth smiled
with listless compassion. “Oh, I don’t
mean Bosch planes! There are dangers and dangers.
You’ll find you got bloody little information
about this war, where they trained you. They
don’t communicate any details of importance.
Going?”
Claude hadn’t intended to, but
at this suggestion he pulled back the door.
“One moment,” called the
aviator. “Can’t you keep that long-legged
ass who bunks under you quiet?”
“Fanning? He’s a
good kid. What’s the matter with him?”
“His general ignorance and his
insufferably familiar tone,” snapped the other
as he turned over.
Claude found Fanning and the Virginian
playing checkers, and told them that the mysterious
air-man was a fellow countryman. Both seemed
disappointed.
“Pshaw!” exclaimed Lieutenant Bird.
“He can’t put on airs
with me, after that,” Fanning declared.
“Crystal Lake! Why it’s no town at
all!”
All the same, Claude wanted to find
out how a youth from Crystal Lake ever became a member
of the Royal Flying Corps. Already, from among
the hundreds of strangers, half-a-dozen stood out as
men he was determined to know better. Taking them
altogether the men were a fine sight as they lounged
about the decks in the sunlight, the petty rivalries
and jealousies of camp days forgotten. Their
youth seemed to flow together, like their brown uniforms.
Seen in the mass like this, Claude thought, they were
rather noble looking fellows. In so many of the
faces there was a look of fine candour, an expression
of cheerful expectancy and confident goodwill.
There was on board a solitary Marine,
with the stripes of Border service on his coat.
He had been sick in the Navy Hospital in Brooklyn
when his regiment sailed, and was now going over to
join it. He was a young fellow, rather pale from
his recent illness, but he was exactly Claude’s
idea of what a soldier ought to look like. His
eye followed the Marine about all day.
The young man’s name was Albert
Usher, and he came from a little town up in the Wind
River mountains, in Wyoming, where he had worked in
a logging camp. He told Claude these facts when
they found themselves standing side by side that evening,
watching the broad purple sun go down into a violet
coloured sea.
It was the hour when the farmers at
home drive their teams in after the day’s work.
Claude was thinking how his mother would be standing
at the west window every evening now, watching the
sun go down and following him in her mind. When
the young Marine came up and joined him, he confessed
to a pang of homesickness.
“That’s a kind of sickness
I don’t have to wrastle with,” said Albert
Usher. “I was left an orphan on a lonesome
ranch, when I was nine, and I’ve looked out
for myself ever since.”
Claude glanced sidewise at the boy’s
handsome head, that came up from his neck with clean,
strong lines, and thought he had done a pretty good
job for himself. He could not have said exactly
what it was he liked about young Usher’s face,
but it seemed to him a face that had gone through
things, that had been trained down like
his body, and had developed a definite character.
What Claude thought due to a manly, adventurous life,
was really due to well-shaped bones; Usher’s
face was more “modelled” than most of
the healthy countenances about him.
When questioned, the Marine went on
to say that though he had no home of his own, he had
always happened to fall on his feet, among kind people.
He could go back to any house in Pinedale or Du Bois
and be welcomed like a son.
“I suppose there are kind women
everywhere,” he said, “but in that respect
Wyoming’s got the rest of the world beat.
I never felt the lack of a home. Now the U. S.
Marines are my family. Wherever they are, I’m
at home.”
“Were you at Vera Cruz?” Claude asked.
“I guess! We thought that
was quite a little party at the time, but I suppose
it will seem small potatoes when we get over there.
I’m figuring on seeing some first-rate scrapping.
How long have you been in the army?”
“Year ago last April. I’ve
had hard luck about getting over. They kept me
jumping about to train men.”
“Then yours is all to come.
Are you a college graduate?”
“No. I went away to school, but I didn’t
finish.”
Usher frowned at the gilded path on
the water where the sun lay half submerged, like a
big, watchful eye, closing. “I always wanted
to go to college, but I never managed it. A man
in Laramie offered to stake me to a course in the
University there, but I was too restless. I guess
I was ashamed of my handwriting.” He paused
as if he had run against some old regret. A moment
later he said suddenly, “Can you parlez-vous?”
“No. I know a few words,
but I can’t put them together.”
“Same here. I expect to
pick up some. I pinched quite a little Spanish
down on the Border.”
By this time the sun had disappeared,
and all over the west the yellow sky came down evenly,
like a gold curtain, on the still sea that seemed
to have solidified into a slab of dark blue stone, not
a twinkle on its immobile surface. Across its
dusky smoothness were two long smears of pale green,
like a robin’s egg.
“Do you like the water?”
Usher asked, in the tone of a polite host. “When
I first shipped on a cruiser I was crazy about it.
I still am. But, you know, I like them old bald
mountains back in Wyoming, too. There’s
waterfalls you can see twenty miles off from the plains;
they look like white sheets or something, hanging
up there on the cliffs. And down in the pine woods,
in the cold streams, there’s trout as long as
my fore-arm.”
That evening Claude was on deck, almost
alone; there was a concert down in the ward room.
To the west heavy clouds had come up, moving so low
that they flapped over the water like a black washing
hanging on the line.
The music sounded well from below.
Four Swedish boys from the Scandinavian settlement
at Lindsborg, Kansas, were singing “Long, Long
Ago.” Claude listened from a sheltered spot
in the stern. What were they, and what was he,
doing here on the Atlantic? Two years ago he
had seemed a fellow for whom life was over; driven
into the ground like a post, or like those Chinese
criminals who are planted upright in the earth, with
only their heads left out for birds to peck at and
insects to sting. All his comrades had been tucked
away in prairie towns, with their little jobs and
their little plans. Yet here they were, attended
by unknown ships called in from the four quarters
of the earth. How had they come to be worth the
watchfulness and devotion of so many men and machines,
this extravagant consumption of fuel and energy?
Taken one by one, they were ordinary fellows like
himself. Yet here they were. And in this
massing and movement of men there was nothing mean
or common; he was sure of that. It was, from first
to last, unforeseen, almost incredible. Four years
ago, when the French were holding the Marne, the wisest
men in the world had not conceived of this as possible;
they had reckoned with every fortuity but this.
“Out of these stones can my Father raise up
seed unto Abraham.”
Downstairs the men began singing “Annie
Laurie.” Where were those summer evenings
when he used to sit dumb by the windmill, wondering
what to do with his life?
CHAPTER IV
The morning of the third day; Claude
and the Virginian and the Marine were up very early,
standing in the bow, watching the Anchises mount the
fresh blowing hills of water, her prow, as it rose
and fell, always a dull triangle against the glitter.
Their escorts looked like dream ships, soft and iridescent
as shell in the pearl-coloured tints of the morning.
Only the dark smudges of smoke told that they were
mechanical realities with stokers and engines.
While the three stood there, a sergeant
brought Claude word that two of his men would have
to report at sick-call. Corporal Tannhauser had
had such an attack of nose-bleed during the night
that the sergeant thought he might die before they
got it stopped. Tannhauser was up now, and in
the breakfast line, but the sergeant was sure he ought
not to be. This Fritz Tannhauser was the tallest
man in the company, a German-American boy who, when
asked his name, usually said that his name was Dennis
and that he was of Irish descent. Even this morning
he tried to joke, and pointing to his big red face
told Claude he thought he had measles. “Only
they ain’t German measles, Lieutenant,”
he insisted.
Medical inspection took a long while
that morning. There seemed to be an outbreak
of sickness on board. When Claude brought his
two men up to the Doctor, he told them to go below
and get into bed. As they left he turned to Claude.
“Give them hot tea, and pile
army blankets on them. Make them sweat if you
can.” Claude remarked that the hold wasn’t
a very cheerful place for sick men.
“I know that, Lieutenant, but
there are a number of sick men this morning, and the
only other physician on board is the sickest of the
lot. There’s the ship’s doctor, of
course, but he’s only responsible for the crew,
and so far he doesn’t seem interested.
I’ve got to overhaul the hospital and the medical
stores this morning.”
“Is there an epidemic of some sort?”
“Well, I hope not. But
I’ll have plenty to do today, so I count on
you to look after those two.” The doctor
was a New Englander who had joined them at Hoboken.
He was a brisk, trim man, with piercing eyes, clean-cut
features, and grey hair just the colour of his pale
face. Claude felt at once that he knew his business,
and he went below to carry out instructions as well
as he could.
When he came up from the hold, he
saw the aviator whose name, he had learned,
was Victor Morse smoking by the rail.
This cabin-mate still piqued his curiosity.
“First time you’ve been up, isn’t
it?”
The aviator was looking at the distant
smoke plumes over the quivering, bright water.
“Time enough. I wish I knew where we are
heading for. It will be awfully awkward for me
if we make a French port.”
“I thought you said you were to report in France.”
“I am. But I want to report
in London first.” He continued to gaze
off at the painted ships. Claude noticed that
in standing he held his chin very high. His eyes,
now that he was quite sober, were brilliantly young
and daring; they seemed scornful of things about him.
He held himself conspicuously apart, as if he were
not among his own kind.
Claude had seen a captured crane,
tied by its leg to a hencoop, behave exactly like
that among Mahailey’s chickens; hold its wings
to its sides, and move its head about quickly and glare.
“I suppose you have friends in London?”
he asked.
“Rather!” the aviator replied with feeling.
“Do you like it better than Paris?”
“I shouldn’t imagine anything
was much better than London. I’ve not been
in Paris; always went home when I was on leave.
They work us pretty hard. In the infantry and
artillery our men get only a fortnight off in twelve
months. I understand the Americans have leased
the Riviera, recuperate at Nice and Monte
Carlo. The only Cook’s tour we had was
Gallipoli,” he added grimly.
Victor had gone a good way toward
acquiring an English accent, the boys thought.
At least he said ‘necess’ry’ and
‘dysent’ry’ and called his suspenders
‘braces’. He offered Claude a cigarette,
remarking that his cigars were in his lost trunk.
“Take one of mine. My brother
sent me two boxes just before we sailed. I’ll
put a box in your bunk next time I go down. They’re
good ones.”
The young man turned and looked him
over with surprise. “I say, that’s
very decent of you! Yes, thank you, I will.”
Claude had tried yesterday, when he
lent Victor some shirts, to make him talk about his
aerial adventures, but upon that subject he was as
close as a clam. He admitted that the long red
scar on his upper arm had been drilled by a sharpshooter
from a German Fokker, but added hurriedly that it
was of no consequence, as he had made a good landing.
Now, on the strength of the cigars, Claude thought
he would probe a little further. He asked whether
there was anything in the lost trunk that couldn’t
be replaced, anything “valuable.”
“There’s one thing that’s
positively invaluable; a Zeiss lens, in perfect condition.
I’ve got several good photographic outfits from
time to time, but the lenses are always cracked by
heat, the things usually come down on fire.
This one I got out of a plane I brought down up at
Bar-lé-Duc, and there’s not a scratch
on it; simply a miracle.”
“You get all the loot when you
bring down a machine, do you?” Claude asked
encouragingly.
“Of course. I’ve
a good collection; altimeters and compasses and glasses.
This lens I always carry with me, because I’m
afraid to leave it anywhere.”
“I suppose it makes a fellow
feel pretty fine to bring down one of those German
planes.”
“Sometimes. I brought down
one too many, though; it was very unpleasant.”
Victor paused, frowning. But Claude’s open,
credulous face was too much for his reserve. “I
brought down a woman once. She was a plucky devil,
flew a scouting machine and had bothered us a bit,
going over our lines. Naturally, we didn’t
know it was a woman until she came down. She was
crushed underneath things. She lived a few hours
and dictated a letter to her people. I went out
and dropped it inside their lines. It was nasty
business. I was quite knocked out. I got
a fortnight’s leave in London, though.
Wheeler,” he broke out suddenly, “I wish
I knew we were going there now!”
“I’d like it well enough if we were.”
Victor shrugged. “I should
hope so!” He turned his chin in Claude’s
direction. “See here, if you like, I’ll
show you London! It’s a promise. Americans
never see it, you know. They sit in a Y. hut
and write to their Pollyannas, or they go round hunting
for the Tower. I’ll show you a city that’s
alive; that is, unless you’ve a preference for
museums.”
His listener laughed. “No,
I want to see life, as they say.”
“Umph! I’d like to
set you down in some places I can think of. Very
well, I invite you to dine with me at the Savoy, the
first night we’re in London. The curtain
will rise on this world for you. Nobody admitted
who isn’t in evening dress. The jewels will
dazzle you. Actresses, duchesses, all the handsomest
women in Europe.”
“But I thought London was dark
and gloomy since the war.”
Victor smiled and teased his small
straw-coloured moustache with his thumb and middle
finger. “There are a few bright spots left,
thank you!” He began to explain to a novice what
life at the front was really like. Nobody who
had seen service talked about the war, or thought
about it; it was merely a condition under which they
lived. Men talked about the particular regiment
they were jealous of, or the favoured division that
was put in for all the show fighting. Everybody
thought about his own game, his personal life that
he managed to keep going in spite of discipline; his
next leave, how to get champagne without paying for
it, dodging the guard, getting into scrapes with women
and getting out again. “Are you quick with
your French?” he asked.
Claude grinned. “Not especially.”
“You’d better brush up
on it if you want to do anything with French girls.
I hear your M.P.’s are very strict. You
must be able to toss the word the minute you see a
skirt, and make your date before the guard gets onto
you.”
“I suppose French girls haven’t
any scruples?” Claude remarked carelessly.
Victor shrugged his narrow shoulders.
“I haven’t found that girls have many,
anywhere. When we Canadians were training in England,
we all had our week-end wives. I believe the girls
in Crystal Lake used to be more or less fussy, but
that’s long ago and far away. You won’t
have any difficulty.”
When Victor was in the middle of a
tale of amorous adventure, a little different from
any Claude had ever heard, Tod Fanning joined them.
The aviator did not acknowledge the presence of a
new listener, but when he had finished his story, walked
away with his special swagger, his eyes fixed upon
the distance.
Fanning looked after him with disgust.
“Do you believe him? I don’t think
he’s any such heart-smasher. I like his
nerve, calling you `Leftenant’! When he
speaks to me he’ll have to say Lootenant, or
I’ll spoil his beauty.”
That day the men remembered long afterward,
for it was the end of the fine weather, and of those
first long, carefree days at sea. In the afternoon
Claude and the young Marine, the Virginian and Fanning,
sat together in the sun watching the water scoop itself
out in hollows and pile itself up in blue, rolling
hills. Usher was telling his companions a long
story about the landing of the Marines at Vera Cruz.
“It’s a great old town,”
he concluded. “One thing there I’ll
never forget. Some of the natives took a few of
us out to the old prison that stands on a rock in
the sea. We put in the whole day there, and it
wasn’t any tourist show, believe me! We
went down into dungeons underneath the water where
they used to keep State prisoners, kept them buried
alive for years. We saw all the old instruments
of torture; rusty iron cages where a man couldn’t
lie down or stand up, but had to sit bent over till
he grew crooked. It made you feel queer when
you came up, to think how people had been left to
rot away down there, when there was so much sun and
water outside. Seems like something used to be
the matter with the world.” He said no
more, but Claude thought from his serious look that
he believed he and his countrymen who were pouring
overseas would help to change all that.
CHAPTER V
That night the Virginian, who berthed
under Victor Morse, had an alarming attack of nose-bleed,
and by morning he was so weak that he had to be carried
to the hospital. The Doctor said they might as
well face the facts; a scourge of influenza had broken
out on board, of a peculiarly bloody and malignant
type. Everybody was a little frightened. Some
of the officers shut themselves up in the smoking-room,
and drank whiskey and soda and played poker all day,
as if they could keep contagion out.
The actual outbreak of influenza
on transports carrying United States troops is here
anticipated by several months.
Lieutenant Bird died late in the afternoon
and was buried at sunrise the next day, sewed up in
a tarpaulin, with an eighteen pound shell at his feet.
The morning broke brilliantly clear and bitter cold.
The sea was rolling blue walls of water, and the boat
was raked by a wind as sharp as ice. Excepting
those who were sick, the boys turned out to a man.
It was the first burial at sea they had ever witnessed,
and they couldn’t help finding it interesting.
The Chaplain read the burial service while they stood
with uncovered heads. The Kansas band played a
solemn march, the Swedish quartette sang a hymn.
Many a man turned his face away when that brown sack
was lowered into the cold, leaping indigo ridges that
seemed so destitute of anything friendly to human
kind. In a moment it was done, and they steamed
on without him.
The glittering walls of water kept
rolling in, indigo, purple, more brilliant than on
the days of mild weather. The blinding sunlight
did not temper the cold, which cut the face and made
the lungs ache. Landsmen began to have that miserable
sense of being where they were never meant to be.
The boys lay in heaps on the deck, trying to keep
warm by hugging each other close. Everybody was
seasick. Fanning went to bed with his clothes
on, so sick he couldn’t take off his boots.
Claude lay in the crowded stern, too cold, too faint
to move. The sun poured over them like flame,
without any comfort in it. The strong, curling,
foam-crested waves threw off the light like millions
of mirrors, and their colour was almost more than
the eye could bear. The water seemed denser than
before, heavy like melted glass, and the foam on the
edges of each blue ridge looked sharp as crystals.
If a man should fall into them, he would be cut to
pieces.
The whole ocean seemed suddenly to
have come to life, the waves had a malignant, graceful,
muscular energy, were animated by a kind of mocking
cruelty. Only a few hours ago a gentle boy had
been thrown into that freezing water and forgotten.
Yes, already forgotten; every one had his own miseries
to think about.
Late in the afternoon the wind fell,
and there was a sinister sunset. Across the red
west a small, ragged black cloud hurried, then
another, and another. They came up out of the
sea, wild, witchlike shapes that travelled
fast and met in the west as if summoned for an evil
conclave. They hung there against the afterglow,
distinct black shapes, drawing together, devising
something. The few men who were left on deck felt
that no good could come out of a sky like that.
They wished they were at home, in France, anywhere
but here.
CHAPTER VI
The next morning Doctor Trueman asked
Claude to help him at sick call. “I’ve
got a bunch of sergeants taking temperatures, but
it’s too much for one man to oversee. I
don’t want to ask anything of those dude officers
who sit in there playing poker all the time.
Either they’ve got no conscience, or they’re
not awake to the gravity of the situation.”
The Doctor stood on deck in his raincoat,
his foot on the rail to keep his equilibrium, writing
on his knee as the long string of men came up to him.
There were more than seventy in the line that morning,
and some of them looked as if they ought to be in a
drier place. Rain beat down on the sea like lead
bullets. The old Anchises floundered from one
grey ridge to another, quite alone. Fog cut off
the cheering sight of the sister ships. The doctor
had to leave his post from time to time, when seasickness
got the better of his will. Claude, at his elbow,
was noting down names and temperatures. In the
middle of his work he told the sergeants to manage
without him for a few minutes. Down near the end
of the line he had seen one of his own men misconducting
himself, snivelling and crying like a baby, a
fine husky boy of eighteen who had never given any
trouble. Claude made a dash for him and clapped
him on the shoulder.
“If you can’t stop that,
Bert Fuller, get where you won’t be seen.
I don’t want all these English stewards standing
around to watch an American soldier cry. I never
heard of such a thing!”
“I can’t help it, Lieutenant,”
the boy blubbered. “I’ve kept it
back just as long as I can. I can’t hold
in any longer!”
“What’s the matter with
you? Come over here and sit down on this box
and tell me.”
Private Fuller willingly let himself
be led, and dropped on the box. “I’m
so sick, Lieutenant!”
“I’ll see how sick you
are.” Claude stuck a thermometer into his
mouth, and while he waited, sent the deck steward to
bring a cup of tea. “Just as I thought,
Fuller. You’ve not half a degree of fever.
You’re scared, and that’s all. Now
drink this tea. I expect you didn’t eat
any breakfast.”
“No, sir. I can’t eat the awful stuff
on this boat.”
“It is pretty bad. Where are you from?”
“I’m from P-P-Pleasantville,
up on the P-P-Platte,” the boy gulped, and his
tears began to flow afresh.
“Well, now, what would they
think of you, back there? I suppose they got
the band out and made a fuss over you when you went
away, and thought they were sending off a fine soldier.
And I’ve always thought you’d be a first
rate soldier. I guess we’ll forget about
this. You feel better already, don’t you?”
“Yes, sir. This tastes
awful good. I’ve been so sick to my stomach,
and last night I got pains in my chest. All my
crowd is sick, and you took big Tannhauser, I mean
Corporal, away to the hospital. It looks like
we’re all going to die out here.”
“I know it’s a little
gloomy. But don’t you shame me before these
English stewards.”
“I won’t do it again, sir,” he promised.
When the medical inspection was over,
Claude took the Doctor down to see Fanning, who had
been coughing and wheezing all night and hadn’t
got out of his berth. The examination was short.
The Doctor knew what was the matter before he put
the stethoscope on him. “It’s pneumonia,
both lungs,” he said when they came out into
the corridor. “I have one case in the hospital
that will die before morning.”
“What can you do for him, Doctor?”
“You see how I’m fixed;
close onto two hundred men sick, and one doctor.
The medical supplies are wholly inadequate. There’s
not castor oil enough on this boat to keep the men
clean inside. I’m using my own drugs, but
they won’t last through an epidemic like this.
I can’t do much for Lieutenant Fanning.
You can, though, if you’ll give him the time.
You can take better care of him right here than he
could get in the hospital. We haven’t an
empty bed there.”
Claude found Victor Morse and told
him he had better get a berth in one of the other
staterooms. When Victor left with his belongings,
Fanning stared after him. “Is he going?”
“Yes. It’s too crowded
in here, if you’ve got to stay in bed.”
“Glad of it. His stories
are too raw for me. I’m no sissy, but that
fellow’s a regular Don Quixote.”
Claude laughed. “You mustn’t
talk. It makes you cough.”
“Where’s the Virginian?”
“Who, Bird?” Claude asked
in astonishment, Fanning had stood beside
him at Bird’s funeral. “Oh, he’s
gone, too. You sleep if you can.”
After dinner Doctor Trueman came in
and showed Claude how to give his patient an alcohol
bath. “It’s simply a question of whether
you can keep up his strength. Don’t try
any of this greasy food they serve here. Give
him a raw egg beaten up in the juice of an orange
every two hours, night and day. Waken him out
of his sleep when it’s time, don’t miss
a single two-hour period. I’ll write an
order to your table steward, and you can beat the eggs
up here in your cabin. Now I must go to the hospital.
It’s wonderful what those band boys are doing
there. I begin to take some pride in the place.
That big German has been asking for you. He’s
in a very bad way.”
As there were no nurses on board,
the Kansas band had taken over the hospital.
They had been trained for stretcher and first aid
work, and when they realized what was happening on
the Anchises, the bandmaster came to the Doctor and
offered the services of his men. He chose nurses
and orderlies, divided them into night and day shifts.
When Claude went to see his Corporal,
big Tannhauser did not recognize him. He was
quite out of his head and was conversing with his
own family in the language of his early childhood.
The Kansas boys had singled him out for special attention.
The mere fact that he kept talking in a tongue forbidden
on the surface of the seas, made him seem more friendless
and alone than the others.
From the hospital Claude went down
into the hold where half-a-dozen of his company were
lying ill. The hold was damp and musty as an
old cellar, so steeped in the smells and leakage of
innumerable dirty cargoes that it could not be made
or kept clean. There was almost no ventilation,
and the air was fetid with sickness and sweat and
vomit. Two of the band boys were working in the
stench and dirt, helping the stewards. Claude
stayed to lend a hand until it was time to give Fanning
his nourishment. He began to see that the wrist
watch, which he had hitherto despised as effeminate
and had carried in his pocket, might be a very useful
article. After he had made Fanning swallow his
egg, he piled all the available blankets on him and
opened the port to give the cabin an airing.
While the fresh wind blew in, he sat down on the edge
of his berth and tried to collect his wits. What
had become of those first days of golden weather,
leisure and good-comradeship? The band concerts,
the Lindsborg Quartette, the first excitement and
novelty of being at sea: all that had gone by
like a dream.
That night when the Doctor came in
to see Fanning, he threw his stethoscope on the bed
and said wearily, “It’s a wonder that
instrument doesn’t take root in my ears and grow
there.” He sat down and sucked his thermometer
for a few minutes, then held it out for inspection.
Claude looked at it and told him he ought to go to
bed.
“Then who’s to be up and
around? No bed for me, tonight. But I will
have a hot bath by and by.”
Claude asked why the ship’s
doctor didn’t do anything and added that he
must be as little as he looked.
“Chessup? No, he’s
not half bad when you get to know him. He’s
given me a lot of help about preparing medicines, and
it’s a great assistance to talk the cases over
with him. He’ll do anything for me except
directly handle the patients. He doesn’t
want to exceed his authority. It seems the English
marine is very particular about such things.
He’s a Canadian, and he graduated first in his
class at Edinburgh. I gather he was frozen out
in private practice. You see, his appearance
is against him. It’s an awful handicap
to look like a kid and be as shy as he is.”
The Doctor rose, shored up his shoulders
and took his bag. “You’re looking
fine yourself, Lieutenant,” he remarked.
“Parents both living? Were
they quite young when you were born? Well, then
their parents were, probably. I’m a crank
about that. Yes, I’ll get my bath pretty
soon, and I will lie down for an hour or two.
With those splendid band boys running the hospital,
I get a little lee-way.”
Claude wondered how the Doctor kept
going. He knew he hadn’t had more than
four hours sleep out of the last forty-eight, and he
was not a man of rugged constitution. His bath
steward was, as he said, his comfort. Hawkins
was an old fellow who had held better positions on
better boats, yes, in better times, too.
He had first gone to sea as a bath steward, and now,
through the fortunes of war, he had come back where
he began, not a good place for an old man.
His back was bent meekly, and he shuffled along with
broken arches. He looked after the comfort of
all the officers, and attended the doctor like a valet;
got out his clean linen, persuaded him to lie down
and have a hot drink after his bath, stood on guard
at his door to take messages for him in the short
hours when he was resting. Hawkins had lost two
sons in the war and he seemed to find a solemn consolation
in being of service to soldiers. “Take
it a bit easy now, sir. You’ll ’ave
it ’ard enough over there,” he used to
say to one and another.
At eleven o’clock one of the
Kansas men came to tell Claude that his Corporal was
going fast. Big Tannhauser’s fever had left
him, but so had everything else. He lay in a
stupor. His congested eyeballs were rolled back
in his head and only the yellowish whites were visible.
His mouth was open and his tongue hung out at one
side. From the end of the corridor Claude had
heard the frightful sounds that came from his throat,
sounds like violent vomiting, or the choking rattle
of a man in strangulation, and, indeed,
he was being strangled. One of the band boys brought
Claude a camp chair, and said kindly, “He doesn’t
suffer. It’s mechanical now. He’d
go easier if he hadn’t so much vitality.
The Doctor says he may have a few moments of consciousness
just at the last, if you want to stay.”
“I’ll go down and give
my private patient his egg, and then I’ll come
back.” Claude went away and returned, and
sat dozing by the bed. After three o’clock
the noise of struggle ceased; instantly the huge figure
on the bed became again his good-natured corporal.
The mouth closed, the glassy jellies were once more
seeing, intelligent human eyes. The face lost
its swollen, brutish look and was again the face of
a friend. It was almost unbelievable that anything
so far gone could come back. He looked up wistfully
at his Lieutenant as if to ask him something.
His eyes filled with tears, and he turned his head
away a little.
“Mein’ arme Mutter!” he whispered
distinctly.
A few moments later he died in perfect
dignity, not struggling under torture, but consciously,
it seemed to Claude, like a brave boy giving
back what was not his to keep.
Claude returned to his cabin, roused
Fanning once more, and then threw himself upon his
tipping bunk. The boat seemed to wallow and sprawl
in the waves, as he had seen animals do on the farm
when they gave birth to young. How helpless the
old vessel was out here in the pounding seas, and
how much misery she carried! He lay looking up
at the rusty water pipes and unpainted joinings.
This liner was in truth the “Old Anchises”;
even the carpenters who made her over for the service
had not thought her worth the trouble, and had done
their worst by her. The new partitions were hung
to the joists by a few nails.
Big Tannhauser had been one of those
who were most anxious to sail. He used to grin
and say, “France is the only climate that’s
healthy for a man with a name like mine.”
He had waved his good-bye to the image in the New
York harbour with the rest, believed in her like the
rest. He only wanted to serve. It seemed
hard.
When Tannhauser first came to camp
he was confused all the time, and couldn’t remember
instructions. Claude had once stepped him out
in front of the line and reprimanded him for not knowing
his right side from his left. When he looked
into the case, he found that the fellow was not eating
anything, that he was ill from homesickness.
He was one of those farmer boys who are afraid of
town. The giant baby of a long family, he had
never slept away from home a night in his life before
he enlisted.
Corporal Tannhauser, along with four
others, was buried at sunrise. No band this time;
the chaplain was ill, so one of the young captains
read the service. Claude stood by watching until
the sailors shot one sack, longer by half a foot than
the other four, into a lead-coloured chasm in the
sea. There was not even a splash. After
breakfast one of the Kansas orderlies called him into
a little cabin where they had prepared the dead men
for burial. The Army regulations minutely defined
what was to be done with a deceased soldier’s
effects. His uniform, shoes, blankets, arms,
personal baggage, were all disposed of according to
instructions. But in each case there was a residue;
the dead man’s toothbrushes, his razors, and
the photographs he carried upon his person. There
they were in five pathetic little heaps; what should
be done with them?
Claude took up the photographs that
had belonged to his corporal; one was a fat, foolish-looking
girl in a white dress that was too tight for her,
and a floppy hat, a little flag pinned on her plump
bosom. The other was an old woman, seated, her
hands crossed in her lap. Her thin hair was drawn
back tight from a hard, angular face unmistakably
an Old-World face and her eyes squinted
at the camera. She looked honest and stubborn
and unconvinced, he thought, as if she did not in
the least understand.
“I’ll take these,”
he said. “And the others just
pitch them over, don’t you think?”
CHAPTER VII
B Company’s first officer, Captain
Maxey, was so seasick throughout the voyage that he
was of no help to his men in the epidemic. It
must have been a frightful blow to his pride, for
nobody was ever more anxious to do an officer’s
whole duty.
Claude had known Harris Maxey slightly
in Lincoln; had met him at the Erlichs’ and
afterward kept up a campus acquaintance with him.
He hadn’t liked Maxey then, and he didn’t
like him now, but he thought him a good officer.
Maxey’s family were poor folk from Mississippi,
who had settled in Nemaha county, and he was very
ambitious, not only to get on in the world, but, as
he said, to “be somebody.” His life
at the University was a feverish pursuit of social
advantages and useful acquaintances. His feeling
for the “right people” amounted to veneration.
After his graduation, Maxey served on the Mexican
Border. He was a tireless drill master, and threw
himself into his duties with all the energy of which
his frail physique was capable. He was slight
and fair-skinned; a rigid jaw threw his lower teeth
out beyond the upper ones and made his face look stiff.
His whole manner, tense and nervous, was the expression
of a passionate desire to excel.
Claude seemed to himself to be leading
a double life these days. When he was working
over Fanning, or was down in the hold helping to take
care of the sick soldiers, he had no time to think, did
mechanically the next thing that came to hand.
But when he had an hour to himself on deck, the tingling
sense of ever-widening freedom flashed up in him again.
The weather was a continual adventure; he had never
known any like it before. The fog, and rain,
the grey sky and the lonely grey stretches of the ocean
were like something he had imagined long ago memories
of old sea stories read in childhood, perhaps and
they kindled a warm spot in his heart. Here on
the Anchises he seemed to begin where childhood had
left off. The ugly hiatus between had closed up.
Years of his life were blotted out in the fog.
This fog which had been at first depressing had become
a shelter; a tent moving through space, hiding one
from all that had been before, giving one a chance
to correct one’s ideas about life and to plan
the future. The past was physically shut off;
that was his illusion. He had already travelled
a great many more miles than were told off by the
ship’s log. When Bandmaster Fred Max asked
him to play chess, he had to stop a moment and think
why it was that game had such disagreeable associations
for him. Enid’s pale, deceptive face seldom
rose before him unless some such accident brought it
up. If he happened to come upon a group of boys
talking about their sweethearts and war-brides, he
listened a moment and then moved away with the happy
feeling that he was the least married man on the boat.
There was plenty of deck room, now
that so many men were ill either from seasickness
or the epidemic, and sometimes he and Albert Usher
had the stormy side of the boat almost to themselves.
The Marine was the best sort of companion for these
gloomy days; steady, quiet, self-reliant. And
he, too, was always looking forward. As for Victor
Morse, Claude was growing positively fond of him.
Victor had tea in a special corner of the officers’
smoking-room every afternoon he would have
perished without it and the steward always
produced some special garnishes of toast and jam or
sweet biscuit for him. Claude usually managed
to join him at that hour.
On the day of Tannhauser’s funeral
he went into the smoking-room at four. Victor
beckoned the steward and told him to bring a couple
of hot whiskeys with the tea. “You’re
very wet, you know, Wheeler, and you really should.
There,” he said as he put down his glass, “don’t
you feel better with a drink?”
“Very much. I think I’ll
have another. It’s agreeable to be warm
inside.”
“Two more, steward, and bring
me some fresh lemon.” The occupants of
the room were either reading or talking in low tones.
One of the Swedish boys was playing softly on the
old piano. Victor began to pour the tea.
He had a neat way of doing it, and today he was especially
solicitous. “This Scotch mist gets into
one’s bones, doesn’t it? I thought
you were looking rather seedy when I passed you on
deck.”
“I was up with Tannhauser last
night. Didn’t get more than an hour’s
sleep,” Claude murmured, yawning.
“Yes, I heard you lost your
big corporal. I’m sorry. I’ve
had bad news, too. It’s out now that we’re
to make a French port. That dashes all my plans.
However, c’est la guerre!”
He pushed back his cup with a shrug. “Take
a turn outside?”
Claude had often wondered why Victor
liked him, since he was so little Victor’s kind.
“If it isn’t a secret,” he said,
“I’d like to know how you ever got into
the British army, anyway.”
As they walked up and down in the
rain, Victor told his story briefly. When he
had finished High School, he had gone into his father’s
bank at Crystal Lake as bookkeeper. After banking
hours he skated, played tennis, or worked in the strawberry-bed,
according to the season. He bought two pairs of
white pants every summer and ordered his shirts from
Chicago and thought he was a swell, he said.
He got himself engaged to the preacher’s daughter.
Two years ago, the summer he was twenty, his father
wanted him to see Niagara Falls; so he wrote a modest
check, warned his son against saloons Victor
had never been inside one against expensive
hotels and women who came up to ask the time without
an introduction, and sent him off, telling him it
wasn’t necessary to fee porters or waiters.
At Niagara Falls, Victor fell in with some young Canadian
officers who opened his eyes to a great many things.
He went over to Toronto with them. Enlistment
was going strong, and he saw an avenue of escape from
the bank and the strawberry bed. The air force
seemed the most brilliant and attractive branch of
the service. They accepted him, and here he was.
“You’ll never go home
again,” Claude said with conviction. “I
don’t see you settling down in any little Iowa
town.”
“In the air service,”
said Victor carelessly, “we don’t concern
ourselves about the future. It’s not worth
while.” He took out a dull gold cigarette
case which Claude had noticed before.
“Let me see that a minute, will
you? I’ve often admired it. A present
from somebody you like, isn’t it?”
A twitch of feeling, something quite
genuine, passed over the air-man’s boyish face,
and his rather small red mouth compressed sharply.
“Yes, a woman I want you to meet. Here,”
twitching his chin over his high collar, “I’ll
write Maisie’s address on my card: `Introducing
Lieutenant Wheeler, A.E.F.’ That’s
all you’ll need. If you should get to London
before I do, don’t hesitate. Call on her
at once. Present this card, and she’ll receive
you.”
Claude thanked him and put the card
in his pocketbook, while Victor lit a cigarette.
“I haven’t forgotten that you’re
dining with us at the Savoy, if we happen in London
together. If I’m there, you can always
find me. Her address is mine. It will really
be a great thing for you to meet a woman like Maisie.
She’ll be nice to you, because you’re my
friend.” He went on to say that she had
done everything in the world for him; had left her
husband and given up her friends on his account.
She now had a studio flat in Chelsea, where she simply
waited his coming and dreaded his going. It was
an awful life for her. She entertained other
officers, of course, old acquaintances; but it was
all camouflage. He was the man.
Victor went so far as to produce her
picture, and Claude gazed without knowing what to
say at a large moon-shaped face with heavy-lidded,
weary eyes, the neck clasped by a pearl
collar, the shoulders bare to the matronly swell of
the bosom. There was not a line or wrinkle in
that smooth expanse of flesh, but from the heavy mouth
and chin, from the very shape of the face, it was
easy to see that she was quite old enough to be Victor’s
mother. Across the photograph was written in
a large splashy hand, ’A mon aigle!’
Had Victor been delicate enough to leave him in any
doubt, Claude would have preferred to believe that
his relations with this lady were wholly of a filial
nature.
“Women like her simply don’t
exist in your part of the world,” the aviator
murmured, as he snapped the photograph case. “She’s
a linguist and musician and all that. With her,
every-day living is a fine art. Life, as she
says, is what one makes it. In itself, it’s
nothing. Where you came from it’s nothing a
sleeping sickness.”
Claude laughed. “I don’t
know that I agree with you, but I like to hear you
talk.”
“Well; in that part of France
that’s all shot to pieces, you’ll find
more life going on in the cellars than in your home
town, wherever that is. I’d rather be a
stevedore in the London docks than a banker-king in
one of your prairie States. In London, if you’re
lucky enough to have a shilling, you can get something
for it.”
“Yes, things are pretty tame
at home,” the other admitted.
“Tame? My God, it’s
death in life! What’s left of men if you
take all the fire out of them? They’re
afraid of everything. I know them; Sunday-school
sneaks, prowling around those little towns after dark!”
Victor abruptly dismissed the subject. “By
the way, you’re pals with the doctor, aren’t
you? I’m needing some medicine that is
somewhere in my lost trunk. Would you mind asking
him if he can put up this prescription? I don’t
want to go to him myself. All these medicos blab,
and he might report me. I’ve been lucky
dodging medical inspections. You see, I don’t
want to get held up anywhere. Tell him it’s
not for you, of course.”
When Claude presented the piece of
blue paper to Doctor Trueman, he smiled contemptuously.
“I see; this has been filled by a London chemist.
No, we have nothing of this sort.” He handed
it back. “Those things are only palliatives.
If your friend wants that, he needs treatment, and
he knows where he can get it.”
Claude returned the slip of paper
to Victor as they left the dining-room after supper,
telling him he hadn’t been able to get any.
“Sorry,” said Victor,
flushing haughtily. “Thank you so much!”
CHAPTER VIII
Tod Fanning held out better than many
of the stronger men; his vitality surprised the doctor.
The death list was steadily growing; and the worst
of it was that patients died who were not very sick.
Vigorous, clean-blooded young fellows of nineteen and
twenty turned over and died because they had lost their
courage, because other people were dying, because
death was in the air. The corridors of the vessel
had the smell of death about them. Doctor Trueman
said it was always so in an epidemic; patients died
who, had they been isolated cases, would have recovered.
“Do you know, Wheeler,”
the doctor remarked one day when they came up from
the hospital together to get a breath of air, “I
sometimes wonder whether all these inoculations they’ve
been having, against typhoid and smallpox and whatnot,
haven’t lowered their vitality. I’ll
go off my head if I keep losing men! What would
you give to be out of it all, and safe back on the
farm?” Hearing no reply, he turned his head,
peered over his raincoat collar, and saw a startled,
resisting look in the young man’s blue eyes,
followed by a quick flush.
“You don’t want to be
back on the farm, do you! Not a little bit!
Well, well; that’s what it is to be young!”
He shook his head with a smile which might have been
commiseration, might have been envy, and went back
to his duties.
Claude stayed where he was, drawing
the wet grey air into his lungs and feeling vexed
and reprimanded. It was quite true, he realized;
the doctor had caught him. He was enjoying himself
all the while and didn’t want to be safe anywhere.
He was sorry about Tannhauser and the others, but
he was not sorry for himself. The discomforts
and misfortunes of this voyage had not spoiled it for
him. He grumbled, of course, because others did.
But life had never seemed so tempting as it did here
and now. He could come up from heavy work in
the hospital, or from poor Fanning and his everlasting
eggs, and forget all that in ten minutes. Something
inside him, as elastic as the grey ridges over which
they were tipping, kept bounding up and saying:
“I am all here. I’ve left everything
behind me. I am going over.”
Only on that one day, the cold day
of the Virginian’s funeral, when he was seasick,
had he been really miserable. He must be heartless,
certainly, not to be overwhelmed by the sufferings
of his own men, his own friends but he
wasn’t. He had them on his mind and did
all he could for them, but it seemed to him just now
that he took a sort of satisfaction in that, too, and
was somewhat vain of his usefulness to Doctor Trueman.
A nice attitude! He awoke every morning with
that sense of freedom and going forward, as if the
world were growing bigger each day and he were growing
with it. Other fellows were sick and dying, and
that was terrible, but he and the boat went
on, and always on.
Something was released that had been
struggling for a long while, he told himself.
He had been due in France since the first battle of
the Marne; he had followed false leads and lost precious
time and seen misery enough, but he was on the right
road at last, and nothing could stop him. If
he hadn’t been so green, so bashful, so afraid
of showing what he felt, and so stupid at finding his
way about, he would have enlisted in Canada, like Victor,
or run away to France and joined the Foreign Legion.
All that seemed perfectly possible now. Why hadn’t
he?
Well, that was not “the Wheelers’
way.” The Wheelers were terribly afraid
of poking themselves in where they weren’t wanted,
of pushing their way into a crowd where they didn’t
belong. And they were even more afraid of doing
anything that might look affected or “romantic.”
They couldn’t let themselves adopt a conspicuous,
much less a picturesque course of action, unless it
was all in the day’s work. Well, History
had condescended to such as he; this whole brilliant
adventure had become the day’s work. He
had got into it after all, along with Victor and the
Marine and other fellows who had more imagination
and self-confidence in the first place. Three
years ago he used to sit moping by the windmill because
he didn’t see how a Nebraska farmer boy had
any “call,” or, indeed, any way, to throw
himself into the struggle in France. He used enviously
to read about Alan Seeger and those fortunate American
boys who had a right to fight for a civilization they
knew.
But the miracle had happened; a miracle
so wide in its amplitude that the Wheelers, all
the Wheelers and the roughnecks and the low-brows
were caught up in it. Yes, it was the rough-necks’
own miracle, all this; it was their golden chance.
He was in on it, and nothing could hinder or discourage
him unless he were put over the side himself which
was only a way of joking, for that was a possibility
he never seriously considered. The feeling of
purpose, of fateful purpose, was strong in his breast.
CHAPTER IX
“Look at this, Doctor!”
Claude caught Dr. Trueman on his way from breakfast
and handed him a written notice, signed D. T. Micks,
Chief Steward. It stated that no more eggs or
oranges could be furnished to patients, as the supply
was exhausted.
The doctor squinted at the paper.
“I’m afraid that’s your patient’s
death warrant. You’ll never be able to keep
him going on anything else. Why don’t you
go and talk it over with Chessup? He’s
a resourceful fellow. I’ll join you there
in a few minutes.”
Claude had often been to Dr. Chessup’s
cabin since the epidemic broke out,-rather liked to
wait there when he went for medicines or advice.
It was a comfortable, personal sort of place with
cheerful chintz hangings. The walls were lined
with books, held in place by sliding wooden slats,
padlocked at the ends. There were a great many
scientific works in German and English; the rest were
French novels in paper covers. This morning he
found Chessup weighing out white powders at his desk.
In the rack over his bunk was the book with which
he had read himself to sleep last night; the title,
“Un Crime d’Amour,” lettered in black
on yellow, caught Claude’s eye. The doctor
put on his coat and pointed his visitor to the jointed
chair in which patients were sometimes examined.
Claude explained his predicament.
The ship’s doctor was a strange
fellow to come from Canada, the land of big men and
rough. He looked like a schoolboy, with small
hands and feet and a pink complexion. On his left
cheekbone was a large brown mole, covered with silky
hair, and for some reason that seemed to make his
face effeminate. It was easy to see why he had
not been successful in private practice. He was
like somebody trying to protect a raw surface from
heat and cold; so cursed with diffidence, and so sensitive
about his boyish appearance that he chose to shut
himself up in an oscillating wooden coop on the sea.
The long run to Australia had exactly suited him.
A rough life and the pounding of bad weather had fewer
terrors for him than an office in town, with constant
exposure to human personalities.
“Have you tried him on malted
milk?” he asked, when Claude had told him how
Farming’s nourishment was threatened.
“Dr. Trueman hasn’t a
bottle left. How long do you figure we’ll
be at sea?”
“Four days; possibly five.”
“Then Lieutenant Wheeler will
lose his pal,” said Dr. Trueman, who had just
come in.
Chessup stood for a moment frowning
and pulling nervously at the brass buttons on his
coat. He slid the bolt on his door and turning
to his colleague said resolutely: “I can
give you some information, if you won’t implicate
me. You can do as you like, but keep my name
out of it. For several hours last night cases
of eggs and boxes of oranges were being carried into
the Chief Steward’s cabin by a flunky of his
from the galley. Whatever port we make, he can
get a shilling each for the fresh eggs, and perhaps
sixpence for the oranges. They are your property,
of course, furnished by your government; but this
is his customary perquisite. I’ve been
on this boat six years, and it’s always been
so. About a week before we make port, the choicest
of the remaining stores are taken to his cabin, and
he disposes of them after we dock. I can’t
say just how he manages it, but he does. The
skipper may know of this custom, and there may be some
reason why he permits it. It’s not my business
to see anything. The Chief Steward is a powerful
man on an English vessel. If he has anything
against me, sooner or later he can lose my berth for
me. There you have the facts.”
“Have I your permission to go
to the Chief Steward?” Dr. Trueman asked.
“Certainly not. But you
can go without my knowledge. He’s an ugly
man to cross, and he can make it uncomfortable for
you and your patients.”
“Well, we’ll say no more
about it. I appreciate your telling me, and I
will see that you don’t get mixed up in this.
Will you go down with me to look at that new meningitis
case?”
Claude waited impatiently in his stateroom
for the doctor’s return. He didn’t
see why the Chief Steward shouldn’t be exposed
and dealt with like any other grafter. He had
hated the man ever since he heard him berating the
old bath steward one morning. Hawkins had made
no attempt to defend himself, but stood like a dog
that has been terribly beaten, trembling all over,
saying “Yes, sir. Yes, sir,” while
his chief gave him a cold cursing in a low, snarling
voice. Claude had never heard a man or even an
animal addressed with such contempt. The Steward
had a cruel face, white as cheese, with
limp, moist hair combed back from a high forehead, the
peculiarly oily hair that seems to grow only on the
heads of stewards and waiters. His eyes were exactly
the shape of almonds, but the lids were so swollen
that the dull pupil was visible only through a narrow
slit. A long, pale moustache hung like a fringe
over his loose lips.
When Dr. Trueman came back from the
hospital, he declared he was now ready to call on
Mr. Micks. “He’s a nasty looking customer,
but he can’t do anything to me.”
They went to the Chief Steward’s cabin and knocked.
“What’s wanted?” called a threatening
voice.
The doctor made a grimace to his companion
and walked in. The Steward was sitting at a big
desk, covered with account books. He turned in
his chair. “I beg your pardon,” he
said coldly, “I do not see any one here.
I will be ”
The doctor held up his hand quickly.
“That’s all right, Steward. I’m
sorry to intrude, but I’ve something I must say
to you in private. I’ll not detain you
long.” If he had hesitated for a moment,
Claude believed the Steward would have thrown him out,
but he went on rapidly. “This is Lieutenant
Wheeler, Mr. Micks. His fellow officer lies very
ill with pneumonia in stateroom 96. Lieutenant
Wheeler has kept him alive by special nursing.
He is not able to retain anything in his stomach but
eggs and orange juice. If he has these, we may
be able to keep up his strength till the fever breaks,
and carry him to a hospital in France. If we
can’t get them for him, he will be dead within
twenty-four hours. That’s the situation.”
The steward rose and turned out the
drop-light on his desk. “Have you received
notice that there are no more eggs and oranges on
board? Then I am afraid there is nothing I can
do for you. I did not provision this ship.”
“No. I understand that.
I believe the United States Government provided the
fruit and eggs and meat. And I positively know
that the articles I need for my patient are not exhausted.
Without going into the matter further, I warn you
that I’m not going to let a United States officer
die when the means of saving him are procurable.
I’ll go to the skipper, I’ll call a meeting
of the army officers on board. I’ll go
any length to save this man.”
“That is your own affair, but
you will not interfere with me in the discharge of
my duties. Will you leave my cabin?”
“In a moment, Steward.
I know that last night a number of cases of eggs and
oranges were carried into this room. They are
here now, and they belong to the A.E.F. If you
will agree to provision my man, what I know won’t
go any further. But if you refuse, I’ll
get this matter investigated. I won’t stop
till I do.”
The Steward sat down, and took up
a pen. His large, soft hand looked cheesy, like
his face. “What is the number of the cabin?”
he asked indifferently.
“Ninety-six.”
“Exactly what do you require?”
“One dozen eggs and one dozen
oranges every twenty-four hours, to be delivered at
any time convenient to you.”
“I will see what I can do.”
The Steward did not look up from his
writing pad, and his visitors left as abruptly as
they had come.
At about four o’clock every
morning, before even the bath stewards were on duty,
there was a scratching at Claude’s door, and
a covered basket was left there by a messenger who
was unwashed, half-naked, with a sacking apron tied
round his middle and his hairy chest splashed with
flour. He never spoke, had only one eye and an
inflamed socket. Claude learned that he was a
half-witted brother of the Chief Steward, a potato
peeler and dish-washer in the galley.
Four day after their interview with
Mr. Micks, when they were at last nearing the end
of the voyage, Doctor Trueman detained Claude after
medical inspection to tell him that the Chief Steward
had come down with the epidemic. “He sent
for me last night and asked me to take his case, won’t
have anything to do with Chessup. I had to get
Chessup’s permission. He seemed very glad
to hand the case over to me.”
“Is he very bad?”
“He hasn’t a look-in,
and he knows it. Complications; chronic Bright’s
disease. It seems he has nine children. I’ll
try to get him into a hospital when we make port,
but he’ll only live a few days at most.
I wonder who’ll get the shillings for all the
eggs and oranges he hoarded away. Claude, my
boy,” the doctor spoke with sudden energy, “if
I ever set foot on land again, I’m going to
forget this voyage like a bad dream. When I’m
in normal health, I’m a Presbyterian, but just
now I feel that even the wicked get worse than they
deserve.”
A day came at last when Claude was
wakened from sleep by a sense of stillness. He
sprang up with a dazed fear that some one had died;
but Fanning lay in his berth, breathing quietly.
Something caught his eye through the
porthole, a great grey shoulder of land
standing up in the pink light of dawn, powerful and
strangely still after the distressing instability of
the sea. Pale trees and long, low fortifications...
close grey buildings with red roofs... little sailboats
bounding seaward... up on the cliff a gloomy fortress.
He had always thought of his destination
as a country shattered and desolated, “bleeding
France”; but he had never seen anything that
looked so strong, so self-sufficient, so fixed from
the first foundation, as the coast that rose before
him. It was like a pillar of eternity. The
ocean lay submissive at its feet, and over it was
the great meekness of early morning.
This grey wall, unshaken, mighty,
was the end of the long preparation, as it was the
end of the sea. It was the reason for everything
that had happened in his life for the last fifteen
months. It was the reason why Tannhauser and the
gentle Virginian, and so many others who had set out
with him, were never to have any life at all, or even
a soldier’s death. They were merely waste
in a great enterprise, thrown overboard like rotten
ropes. For them this kind release, trees
and a still shore and quiet water, was
never, never to be. How long would their bodies
toss, he wondered, in that inhuman kingdom of darkness
and unrest?
He was startled by a weak voice from behind.
“Claude, are we over?”
“Yes, Fanning. We’re over.”