The next morning he strode in while
I was at breakfast, handsome, erect, deep-chested,
the incarnation of physical strength, with a glad
light in his eyes.
“Congratulate me, old man,”
he cried, gripping my frail shoulder. “I’ve
three days’ extra leave. And more than that,
I go out in command of the regiment. No temporary
business but permanent rank. Gazetted in due
course. Bannatyne-that’s our
colonel-damned good soldier!-has
got a staff appointment. I take his place.
I promise you the Fourth King’s Rifles are going
to make history. Either history or manure.
History for choice. As I say, Bannatyne’s
a damned good soldier, and personally as brave as
a lion, but when it comes to the regiment, he’s
too much on the cautious side. The regiment’s
only longing to make things hum, and I’m going
to let ’em do it.”
I congratulated him in politely appropriate
terms and went on with my bacon and eggs. He
sat on the window-seat and tapped his gaiters with
his cane life-preserver. He wore his cap.
“I thought you’d like
to know,” said he. “You’ve been
so good to the old mother while I’ve been away
and been so charitable, listening to my yarns, while
I’ve been here, that I couldn’t resist
coming round and telling you.”
“I suppose your mother’s delighted,”
said I.
He threw back his head and laughed,
as though he had never a black thought or memory in
the world.
“Dear old mater! She has
the impression that I’m going out to take charge
of the blessed campaign. So if she talks about
’my dear son’s army,’ don’t
let her down, like a good chap-for she’ll
think either me a fraud or you a liar.”
He rose suddenly, with a change of expression.
“You’re the only man in
the world I could talk to like this about my mother.
You know the sterling goodness and loyalty that lies
beneath her funny little ways.”
He strode to the window which looks
out on to the garden, his back turned on me.
And there he stood silent for a considerable time.
I helped myself to marmalade and poured out a second
cup of tea. There was no call for me to speak.
I had long realized that, whatever may have been the
man’s sins and weaknesses, he had a very deep
and tender love for the Dresden china old lady that
was his mother. There was London of the clubs
and the theatres and the restaurants and the night-clubs,
a war London full and alive, not dead as in Augusts
of far-off tradition, all ready to give him talk and
gaiety and the things that matter to the man who escapes
for a brief season from the never-ending hell of the
battlefield; ready, too, to pour flattery into his
ear, to touch his scars with the softest of its lingers.
Yet he chose to stay, a recluse, in our dull little
town, avoiding even the kindly folk round about, in
order to devote himself to one dear but entirely uninteresting
old woman. It is not that he despised London,
preferring the life of the country gentleman.
On the contrary, before the war Leonard Boyce was
very much the man about town. He loved the glitter
and the chatter of it. From chance words during
this spell of leave, I had divined hankering after
its various fleshpots. For the sake of one old
woman he made reckless and gallant sacrifice.
When he was bored to misery he came round to me.
I learned later that in visiting Wellingsford he faced
more than boredom. All of this you must put to
the credit side of his ledger.
There he stood, his great broad shoulders
and bull-neck silhouetted against the window.
That broad expanse, a bit fleshy, below the base of
the skull indicates brutality. Never before, to
my eyes, had the sign asserted itself with so much
aggression. I had often wondered why, apart from
the Vilboek Farm legend, I had always disliked and
distrusted him. Now I seemed to know. It
was the neck not of a man, but of a brute. The
curious repulsion of the previous evening, when he
had carried me into the house, came over me again.
From junction of arm and body protruded six inches
of the steel-covered life-preserver, the washleather
that hid its ghastly knob staring at me blankly.
I hated the thing. The gallant English officer-and
in my time I have known and loved a many of the most
gallant-does not go about in private life
fondling a trophy reeking with the blood of his enemies.
It is the trait of a savage. That truculent knob
and that truculent bull-neck correlated themselves
most horribly in my mind. And again, with a shiver,
I had the haunting flash of a vision of him, out of
the tail of my eye, standing rigid and gaping between
the two cars, while my rugged old Marigold, in a businesslike,
old-soldier sort of way, without thought of danger
or death, was swaying at the head of the runaway horse.
Presently he turned, and his brows
were set above unfathomable hard eyes. The short-cropped
moustache could not hide the curious twitch of the
lips which I had seen once before. It was obvious
that these few minutes of silence had been spent in
deep thought and had resulted in a decision.
A different being from the gay, successful soldier
who had come in to announce his honours confronted
me. He threw down cap and stick and passed his
hand over his crisp brown hair.
“I don’t know whether
you’re a friend of mine or not,” he said,
hands on hips and gaitered legs slightly apart.
“I’ve never been able to make out.
All through our intercourse, in spite of your courtesy
and hospitality, there has been some sort of reservation
on your part.”
“If that is so,” said
I, diplomatically, “it is because of the defects
of my national quality.”
“That’s possibly what
I’ve felt,” said he. “But it
doesn’t matter a damn with regard to what I
want to say. It’s a question not of your
feelings towards me, but my feelings towards you.
I don’t want to make polite speeches-but
you’re a man whom I have every reason to honour
and trust. And unlike all my other brother-officers,
you have no reason to be jealous-”
“My dear fellow,” I interrupted,
“what’s all this about? Why jealousy?”
“You know what a pot-hunter
is in athletics? A chap that is simply out for
prizes? Well, that’s what a lot of them
think of me. That I’m just out to get orders
and medals and distinctions and so forth.”
“That’s nonsense,”
said I. “I happen to know. Your reputation
in the brigade is unassailable.”
“In the way of my having done
what I’m credited with, it is,” he answered.
“But all the same, they’re right.”
“What do you mean?” I asked.
“What I say. They’re
right. I’m out for everything I can get.
Now I’m out for a V.C. I see you think
it abominable. That’s because you don’t
understand. No one but I myself could understand.
I feel I owe it to myself.” He looked at
me for a second or two and then broke into a sardonic
sort of laugh. “I suppose you think me a
conceited ass,” he continued. “Why
should Leonard Boyce be such a vastly important person?
It isn’t that, I assure you.”
I lit a cigarette, having waved an
invitation to join me, which with a nod he refused.
“What is it, then?”
“Has it ever struck you that
often a man’s most merciless creditor is himself?”
Here was a casuistical proposition
thrown at my head by the last person I should have
suspected of doing so. It was immensely interesting,
in view of my long puzzledom. I spoke warily.
“That depends on the man-on
the nice balance of his dual nature. On the one
side is the power to demand mercilessly; on the other,
the instinct to respond. Of course, the criminal-”
“What are you dragging in criminals
for?” he said sharply. “I’m
talking about honourable men with consciences.
Criminals haven’t consciences. The devil
who has just been hung for murdering three women in
their baths hadn’t any dual nature, as you call
it. Those murders didn’t represent to him
a mountain of debt to God which his soul was summoned
to discharge. He went to his death thinking himself
a most unlucky and hardly used fellow.”
His fingers went instinctively into
the cigarette-box. I passed him the matches.
“Precisely,” said I.
“That was the point I was about to make.”
He puffed at his cigarette and looked
rather foolish, as though regretting his outburst.
“We’ve got away,”
he said, after a pause, “from what I was meaning
to tell you. And I want to tell you because I
mayn’t have another chance.” He turned
to the window-seat and picked up his life-preserver.
“I’m out for two things. One is to
kill Germans-” He patted the covered
knob-and there flashed across my mind a
boyhood’s memory of Martin-wasn’t
it Martin?-in “Hereward the Wake,”
who had a deliciously blood-curdling habit of patting
his revengeful axe.-“I’ve done
in eighty-five with this and my revolver. That,
I consider, is my duty to my country. The other
is to get the V.C. That’s for payment to
my creditor self.”
“In full, or on account?” said I.
“There’s only one payment
in full,” he answered grimly, “and that
I’ve been offering for the past twelve months.
And it’s a thousand chances to one it will be
accepted before the end of this year. And that,
after all this palaver, is what I’ve just made
up my mind to talk to you about.”
“You mean your death?”
“Just that,” said he.
“A man pot-hunting for Victoria Crosses takes
a thousand to one chance.” He paused abruptly
and shot an eager and curiously wavering glance at
me. “Am I boring you with all this?”
“Good Heavens, no.”
And then as the insistence of his great figure towering
over me had begun to fret my nerves-“Sit
down, man,” said I, with an impatient gesture,
“and put that sickening toy away and come to
the point.”
He tossed the cane on the window-seat
and sat near me on a straight-backed chair.
“All right,” he said.
“I’ll come to the point. I shan’t
see you again. I’m going out in command.
Thank God we’re in the thick of it. Round
about Loos. It’s a thousand to one I’ll
be killed. Life doesn’t matter much to
me, in spite of what you may think. There are
only two people on God’s earth I care for.
One, of course, is my old mother. The other is
Betty Fairfax-I mean Betty Connor.
I spoke to you once about her-after I had
met her here-and I gave you to understand
that I had broken off our engagement from conscientious
motives. It was an awkward position and I had
to say something. As a matter of fact I acted
abominably. But I couldn’t help it.”
The corners of his lips suddenly worked in the odd
little twitch. “Sometimes circumstances,
especially if a man’s own damn foolishness has
contrived them, tie him hand and foot. Sometimes
physical instincts that he can’t control.”
He narrowed his eyes and bent forward, looking at
me intently, and he repeated the phrase slowly-“Physical
instincts that he can’t control-”
Was he referring to the incident of
yesterday? I thought so. I also believed
it was the motive power of this strangely intimate
conversation.
He rose again as though restless,
and once more went to the window and seemed to seek
inspiration or decision from the sight of my roses.
After a short while he turned and dragged up from his
neck a slim chain at the end of which hung a round
object in a talc case. This he unfastened and
threw on the table in front of me.
“Do you know what that is?”
“Yes,” said I. “Your identification
disc.”
“Look on the other side.”
I took it up and found that the reverse
contained the head cut out from some photograph of
Betty. After I had handed back the locket, he
slipped it on the chain and dropped it beneath his
collar.
“I’m not a damned fool,” said he.
I nodded understandingly. No
one would have accused him of mawkish sentiment.
The woman whose portrait he wore night and day next
his skin was the woman he loved. He had no other
way of proving his sincerity than by exhibiting the
token.
“I see,” said I. “What do you
propose to do?”
“I’ve told you. The V.C. or-”
He snapped his fingers.
“But if it’s the V.C.
and a Brigade, and perhaps a Division-if
it’s everything else imaginable except-”
I snapped my fingers in imitation-“What
then?”
Again the hateful twitch of the lips,
which he quickly dissimulated in a smile.
“I’ll begin to try to
be a brave man.” He lit another cigarette.
“But all that, my dear Meredyth,” he continued,
“is away from the point. If I live, I’ll
ask you to forget this rotten palaver. But I have
a feeling that I shan’t come back. Something
tells me that my particular form of extermination
will be a head knocked into slush. I’m absolutely
certain that I shall never see you again. Oh,
I’m not morbid,” he said, as I raised
a protesting hand. “You’re an old
soldier and know what these premonitions are.
When I came in-before I had finally made
up my mind to pan out to you like this-I
felt like a boy who has been made captain of the school.
But all the same, I know I shan’t see you again.
So I want you to promise me two things-quite
honourable and easy.”
“Of course, my dear fellow,”
said I rather tartly, for I did not like the wind-up
of his sentence. It was unthinkable that an officer
and a gentleman should inveigle a brother-officer
into a solemn promise to do anything dishonourable.
“Of course. Anything you like.”
“One is to look after the old mother-”
“That goes without promising,” said I.
“The other is to-what
shall I say?-to rehabilitate my memory in
the eyes of Betty Connor. She may hear all kinds
of things about me-some true, others false-I
have my enemies. She has heard things already.
I didn’t know it till our last meeting here.
There’s no one else on God’s earth can
do what I want but you. Do you think I’m
putting you into an impossible position?”
“I don’t think so,” said I.
“Go on.”
“Well-there’s
not much more to be said. Try to make her realise
that, whatever may be my faults-my crimes,
if it comes to that-I’ve done my
damndest out there to make reparation. By God!
I have,” he cried, in a sudden flash of passion.
“See that she realises it. And-”
he thumped the hidden identification disc, “tell
her that she is the only woman that has ever really
mattered in the whole of my blasted life.”
He threw his half-smoked cigarette
into the fire-place and walked over to the sideboard,
where stood decanters and syphon.
“May I help myself to a drink?”
“Certainly,” said I.
He gulped down half a whisky and soda and turned on
me.
“You promise?”
“Of course,” said I.
“She may have reasons to think
the worst of me. But whatever I am there is some
good in me. I’m not altogether a worthless
hound. If you promise to make her think the best
of me, I’ll go away happy. I don’t
care a damn whether I die or live. That’s
the truth. As long as I’m alive I can take
care of myself. I’m not dreaming of asking
you to say a word to win her favour. That would
be outrageous impudence. You clearly understand.
I don’t want you ever to mention my name unless
I’m dead. If I feel that I’ve an
advocate in you-advocatus diaboli,
if you like-I’ll go away happy.
You’ve got your brief. You know my life
at home. You know my record.”
“My dear fellow,” said
I, “I promise to do everything in my power to
carry out your wishes. But as to your record-are
you quite certain that I know it?”
You must realise that there was a
curious tension in the situation, at any rate as far
as it affected myself. Here was a man with whom,
for reasons you know, I had studiously cultivated
the most formal social relations, claiming my active
participation in the secret motives of his heart.
Since his first return from the front a bluff friendliness
had been the keynote of our intercourse. Nothing
more. Now he came and without warning enmeshed
me in this intimate net of love and death. I
promised to do his bidding-I could not do
otherwise. I was in the position of an executor
according to the terms of a last will and testament.
Our comradeship in arms-those of our old
Army who survive will understand-forbade
refusal. Besides, his intensity of purpose won
my sympathy and admiration. But I loved him none
the more. To my cripple’s detested sensitiveness,
as he stood over me, he loomed more than ever the
hulking brute. His semi-confessions and innuendoes
exacerbated my feelings of distrust and repulsion.
And yet, at the same tune, I could not-nor
did I try to-repress an immense pity for
the man; perhaps less for the man than for the soul
in pain. At the back of his words some torment
burned at red heat, remorselessly. He sought
relief. Perhaps he sought it from me because I
was as apart as a woman from his physical splendour,
a kind of bodiless creature with just a brain and
a human heart, the ghost of an old soldier, far away
from the sphere of poor passions and little jealousies.
I felt the tentacles of the man’s
nature blindly and convulsively groping after something
within me that eluded them. That is the best
way in which I can describe the psychology of these
strange moments. The morning sun streamed into
my little oak-panelled dining-room and caught the
silver and fruit on the breakfast table and made my
frieze of old Delft glow blue like the responsive
western sky. With his back to the vivid window,
Leonard Boyce stood cut out black like a silhouette.
That he, too, felt the tension, I know; for a wasp
crawled over his face, from cheek-bone, across his
temples, to his hair, and he did not notice it.
Instinctively I said the words:
“Your record. Are you quite certain that
I know it?”
With what intensity, with what significance
in my eyes, I may have said them, I know not.
I repeat that I had a subconsciousness, almost uncanny,
that we were souls rather than men, talking to each
other. He sat down once more, drawing the chair
to the table and resting his elbow on it.
“My record,” said he. “What
about it?”
Again please understand that I felt
I had the man’s soul naked before me. An
imponderable hand plucked away my garments of convention.
“Some time ago,” said
I, “you spoke of my attitude towards you being
marked by a certain reserve. That is quite true.
It dates back many years. It dates back from
the South African War. From an affair at Vilboek’s
Farm.”
Again his lips twitched; but otherwise he did not
move.
“I remember,” he answered.
“My men saw me run away. I came out of it
quite clean.”
I said: “I saw the man
afterwards in hospital at Cape Town. His name
was Somers. He told me quite a different story.”
His face grew grey. He glanced
at me for a fraction of a second. “What
did he tell you?” he asked quietly.
In the fewest possible words I repeated
what I have set down already in this book. When
I had ended, he said in the same toneless way:
“You have believed that all these years?”
“I have done my best not to
believe it. The last twelve months have disproved
it.”
He shook his head. “They
haven’t. Nothing I can do in this world
can disprove it. What that man said was true.”
“True?”
I drew a deep breath and stared at
him hard. His eyes met mine. They were very
sad and behind them lay great pain. Although I
expressed astonishment, it proceeded rather from some
reflex action than from any realised shock to my consciousness.
I say the whole thing was uncanny. I knew, as
soon as he sat down by the table, that he would confess
to the Vilboek story. And yet, at last, when
he did confess and there were no doubts lingering
in my mind, I gasped and stared at him.
“I was a bloody coward,”
he said. “That’s frank enough.
When they rode away and left me, I tried to shoot
myself-and I couldn’t. If the
man Somers hadn’t returned, I think I should
have waited until they sent to arrest me. But
he did come back and the instinct of self-preservation
was too strong. I know my story about the men’s
desertion and my forcing him to back me up was vile
and despicable. But I clung to life and it was
my only chance. Afterwards, with the horror of
the thing hanging over me, I didn’t care so
much about life. In the little fighting that
was left for me I deliberately tried to throw it away.
I ask you to believe that.”
“I do,” I said. “You
were mentioned in dispatches for gallantry in action.”
He passed his hand over his eyes. Looking up,
he said:
“It is strange that you of all
men, my neighbour here, should have heard of this.
Not a whisper of its being known has ever reached me.
How many people do you think have any idea of it?”
I told him all that I knew and concluded
by showing him Reggie Dacre’s letter, which
I had kept in the letter-case in my pocket. He
returned it to me without a word. Presently he
broke a spell of silence. All this time he had
sat fixed in the one attitude-only shifted
once, when Marigold entered to clear away the breakfast
things and was dismissed by me with a glance and a
gesture.
“Do you remember,” he
said, “a talk we had about fear, in April, the
first time I was over? I described what I knew.
The paralysis of fear. Since we are talking as
I never thought to talk with a human being, I may
as well make my confession. I’m a man of
strong animal passions. When I see red, I daresay
I’m just a brute beast. But I’m a
physical coward. Owing to this paralysis of fear,
this ghastly inhibition of muscular or nervous action,
I have gone through things even worse than that South-African
business. I go about like a man under a curse.
Even out there, when I don’t care a damn whether
I live or die, the blasted thing gets hold of me.”
He swung himself away from the table and shook his
great clenched firsts. “By the grace of
God, no one yet has seemed to notice it. I suppose
I have a swift brain and as soon as the thing is over
I can cover it up. It’s my awful terror
that one day I shall be found out and everything I’ve
gained shall be stripped away from me.”
“But what about a thing like
this?” said I, tapping Colonel Dacre’s
letter.
“That’s all right,”
he answered grimly. “That’s when I
know what I’m facing. That’s deliberate
pot-hunting. It’s saving face as the Chinese
say. It’s doing any damned thing that will
put me right with myself.”
He got up and swung about the room.
I envied him, I would have given a thousand pounds
to do the same just for a few moments. But I was
stuck in my confounded chair, deprived of physical
outlet. Suddenly he came to a halt and stood
once more over me.
“Now you know what kind of a
fellow I am, what do you think of me?”
It was a brutal question to fling
at my head. It gave me no time to co-ordinate
my ideas. What was one to make of a man avowedly
subject to fits of the most despicable cowardice from
the consequences of which he used any unscrupulous
craftiness to extricate himself, and yet was notorious
in his achievement of deeds of the most reckless courage?
It is a problem to which I have devoted all the months
occupied in waiting this book. How the dickens
could I solve it at a minute’s notice? The
situation was too blatant, too raw, too near bedrock,
too naked and unashamed, for me to take refuge in
platitudinous generalities of excuse. The bravest
of men know Fear. They know him pretty intimately.
But they manage to kick him to Hades by the very reason
of their being brave men. I had to take Leonard
Boyce as I found him. And I must admit that I
found him a tragically miserable man. That is
how I answered his question-in so many
words.
“You’re not far wrong,” said he.
He picked up cap and stick.
“When I get up to town I shall
make my will. I’ve never worried about
it before. Can I appoint you my executor?”
“Certainly,” said I.
“I’m very grateful.
I’ll assure you a fireworks sort of finish, so
that you shan’t be ashamed. And-I
don’t ask impossibilities-I can’t
hold you to your previous promise-but what
about Betty Connor?”
“You may count,” said
I, “on my acting like an officer and a gentleman,
and, if I may say so, like a Christian.”
He said: “Thank you, Meredyth.
Good-bye.” Then he stuck on his cap, brought
his fingers to the peak in salute and marched to the
door.
“Boyce!” I cried sharply.
He turned. “Yes?”
“Aren’t you going to shake hands with
me?”
He retraced the few steps to my chair.
“I didn’t know whether
it would be-” he paused, seeking for
a word-“whether it would be agreeable.”
Then I broke down. The strain
had been too great for my sick man’s nerves.
I forgot all about the brutality of his bull-neck,
for he faced me in all his gallant manhood and there
was a damnable expression in his eyes like that of
a rated dog. I stretched out my hand.
“My dear good fellow,” I cried, “what
the hell are you talking about?”