The monstrous possibility that had
consumed Kurt Dorn for many months at last became
an event he had arrived on the battle-front
in France.
All afternoon the company of United
States troops had marched from far back of the line,
resting, as darkness came on, at a camp of reserves,
and then going on. Artillery fire had been desultory
during this march; the big guns that had rolled their
thunder miles and miles were now silent. But
an immense activity and a horde of soldiers back of
the lines brought strange leaden oppression to Kurt
Dorn’s heart.
The last slow travel of his squad
over dark, barren space and through deep, narrow,
winding lanes in the ground had been a nightmare ending
to the long journey. France had not yet become
clear to him; he was a stranger in a strange land;
in spite of his tremendous interest and excitement,
all seemed abstract matters of his feeling, the plague
of himself made actuality the substance of dreams.
That last day, the cumulation of months of training
and travel, had been one in which he had observed,
heard, talked and felt in a nervous and fevered excitement.
But now he imagined he could not remember any of it.
His poignant experience with the Blue Devils had been
a reality he could never forget, but now this blackness
of subterranean cavern, this damp, sickening odor
of earth, this presence of men, the strange, muffled
sounds all these were unreal. How had
he come here? His mind labored with a burden
strangely like that on his chest. A different,
utterly unfamiliar emotion seemed rising over him.
Maybe that was because he was very tired and very
sleepy. Sometime that night he must go on duty.
He ought to sleep. It was impossible. He
could not close his eyes. An effort to attend
to what he was actually doing disclosed the fact that
he was listening with all his strength. For what?
He could not answer then. He heard the distant,
muffled sounds, and low voices nearer, and thuds and
footfalls. His comrades were near him; he heard
their breathing; he felt their presence. They
were strained and intense; like him, they were locked
up in their own prison of emotions.
Always heretofore, on nights that
he lay sleepless, Dorn had thought of the two things
dearest on earth to him Lenore Anderson
and the golden wheat-hills of his home. This
night he called up Lenore’s image. It hung
there in the blackness, a dim, pale phantom of her
sweet face, her beautiful eyes, her sad lips, and
then it vanished. Not at all could he call up
a vision of his beloved wheat-fields. So the suspicion
that something was wrong with his mind became a certainty.
It angered him, quickened his sensitiveness, even
while he despaired. He ground his teeth and clenched
his fists and swore to realize his presence there,
and to rise to the occasion as had been his vaunted
ambition.
Suddenly he felt something slimy and
hairy against his wrist then a stinging
bite. A rat! A trench rat that lived on flesh!
He flung his arm violently and beat upon the soft
earth. The incident of surprise and disgust helped
Dorn at least in one way. His mind had been set
upon a strange and supreme condition of his being
there, of an emotion about to overcome him. The
bite of a rat, drawing blood, made a literal fact of
his being a soldier, in a dugout at the front waiting
in the blackness for his call to go on guard.
This incident proved to Dorn his limitations, and
that he was too terribly concerned with his feelings
ever to last long as a soldier. But he could not
help himself. His pulse, his heart, his brain,
all seemed to beat, beat, beat with a nameless passion.
Was he losing his nerve was
he afraid? His denial did not reassure him.
He understood that patriotism and passion were emotions,
and that the realities of a soldier’s life were
not.
Dorn forced himself to think of realities,
hoping thus to get a grasp upon his vanishing courage.
And memory helped him. Not so many days, weeks,
months back he had been a different man. At Bordeaux,
when his squad first set foot upon French soil!
That was a splendid reality. How he had thrilled
at the welcome of the French sailors!
Then he thought of the strenuous round
of army duties, of training tasks, of traveling in
cold box-cars, of endless marches, of camps and villages,
of drills and billets. Never to be forgotten was
that morning, now seemingly long ago, when an officer
had ordered the battalion to pack. “We
are going to the front!” he announced. Magic
words! What excitement, what whooping, what bragging
and joy among the boys, what hurry and bustle and
remarkable efficiency! That had been a reality
of actual experience, but the meaning of it, the terrible
significance, had been beyond the mind of any American.
“I’m here at
the front now,” whispered Dorn to
himself. “A few rods away are Germans!”
... Inconceivable no reality at all!
He went on with his swift account of things, with
his mind ever sharpening, with that strange, mounting
emotion flooding to the full, ready to burst its barriers.
When he and his comrades had watched their transport
trains move away when they had stood waiting
for their own trains had the idea of actual
conflict yet dawned upon them? Dorn had to answer
No. He remembered that he had made few friends
among the inhabitants of towns and villages where
he had stayed. What leisure time he got had been
given to a seeking out of sailors, soldiers, and men
of all races, with whom he found himself in remarkable
contact. The ends of the world brought together
by one war! How could his memory ever hold all
that had come to him? But it did. Passion
liberated it. He saw now that his eye was a lens,
his mind a sponge, his heart a gulf.
Out of the hundreds of thousands of
American troops in France, what honor it was to be
in the chosen battalion to go to the front! Dorn
lived only with his squad, but he felt the envy of
the whole army. What luck! To be chosen
from so many to go out and see the game
through quickly! He began to consider that differently
now. The luck might be with the soldiers left
behind. Always, underneath Dorn’s perplexity
and pondering, under his intelligence and spirit at
their best, had been a something deeply personal,
something of the internal of him, a selfish instinct.
It was the nature of man self-preservation.
Like a tempest swept over Dorn the
most significant ordeal and lesson of his experience
in France that wonderful reality when he
met the Blue Devils and they took him in. However
long he lived, his life must necessarily be transformed
from contact with those great men.
The night march over the unending
roads, through the gloom and the spectral starlight,
with the dull rumblings of cannon shocking his heart that
Dorn lived over, finding strangely a minutest detail
of observation and a singular veracity of feeling
fixed in his memory.
Afternoon of that very day, at the
reserve camp somewhere back there, had brought an
officer’s address to the soldiers, a strong and
emphatic appeal as well as order to obey,
to do one’s duty, to take no chances, to be
eternally vigilant, to believe that every man had advantage
on his side, even in war, if he were not a fool or
a daredevil. Dorn had absorbed the speech, remembered
every word, but it all seemed futile now. Then
had come the impressive inspection of equipment, a
careful examination of gas-masks, rifles, knapsacks.
After that the order to march!
Dorn imagined that he had remembered
little, but he had remembered all. Perhaps the
sense of strange unreality was only the twist in his
mind. Yet he did not know where he was what
part of France how far north or south on
the front line in what sector. Could
not that account for the sense of feeling lost?
Nevertheless, he was there at the
end of all this incomprehensible journey. He
became possessed by an irresistible desire to hurry.
Once more Dorn attempted to control the far-flinging
of his thoughts to come down to earth.
The earth was there under his hand, soft, sticky, moldy,
smelling vilely. He dug his fingers into it, until
the feel of something like a bone made him jerk them
out. Perhaps he had felt a stone. A tiny,
creeping, chilly shudder went up his back. Then
he remembered, he felt, he saw his little attic room,
in the old home back among the wheat-hills of the
Northwest. Six thousand miles away! He would
never see that room again. What unaccountable
vagary of memory had ever recalled it to him?
It faded out of his mind.
Some of his comrades whispered; now
and then one rolled over; none snored, for none of
them slept. Dorn felt more aloof from them than
ever. How isolated each one was, locked in his
own trouble! Every one of them, like himself,
had a lonely soul. Perhaps they were facing it.
He could not conceive of a careless, thoughtless,
emotionless attitude toward this first night in the
front-line trench.
Dorn gradually grew more acutely sensitive
to the many faint, rustling, whispering sounds in
and near the dugout.
A soldier came stooping into the opaque
square of the dugout door. His rifle, striking
the framework, gave out a metallic clink. This
fellow expelled a sudden heavy breath as if throwing
off an oppression.
“Is that you, Sanborn?”
This whisper Dorn recognized as Dixon’s.
It was full of suppressed excitement.
“Yes.”
“Guess it’s my turn next. How how
does it go?”
Sanborn’s laugh had an odd little
quaver. “Why, so far as I know, I guess
it’s all right. Damn queer, though.
I wish we’d got here in daytime.... But
maybe that wouldn’t help.”
“Humph!... Pretty quiet out there?”
“So Bob says, but what’s
he know more than us? I heard guns
up the line, and rifle-fire not so far off.”
“Can you see any ”
“Not a damn thing yet everything,”
interrupted Sanborn, enigmatically.
“Dixon!” called Owens, low and quickly,
from the darkness.
Dixon did not reply. His sudden
hard breathing, the brushing of his garments against
the door, then swift, soft steps dying away attested
to the fact of his going.
Dorn tried to compose himself to rest,
if not to sleep. He heard Sanborn sit down, and
then apparently stay very still for some time.
All of a sudden he whispered to himself. Dorn
distinguished the word “hell.”
“What’s ailin’ you, pard?”
drawled Brewer.
Sanborn growled under his breath,
and when some one else in the dugout quizzed him curiously
he burst out: “I’ll bet you galoots
the state of California against a dill pickle that
when your turn comes you’ll be sick in your
gizzards!”
“We’ll take our medicine,” came
in the soft, quiet voice of Purcell.
No more was said. The men all
pretended to fall asleep, each ashamed to let his
comrade think he was concerned.
A short, dull, heavy rumble seemed
to burst the outer stillness. For a moment the
dugout was silent as a tomb. No one breathed.
Then came a jar of the earth, a creaking of shaken
timbers. Some one gasped involuntarily.
Another whispered:
“By God! the real thing!”
Dorn wondered how far away that jarring
shell had alighted. Not so far! It was the
first he had ever heard explode near him. Roaring
of cannon, exploding of shell this had
been a source of every-day talk among his comrades.
But the jar, the tremble of the earth, had a dreadful
significance. Another rumble, another jar, not
so heavy or so near this time, and then a few sharply
connected reports, clamped Dorn as in a cold vise.
Machine-gun shots! Many thousand machine-gun shots
had he heard, but none with the life and the spite
and the spang of these. Did he imagine the difference?
Cold as he felt, he began to sweat, and continually,
as he wiped the palms of his hands, they grew wet again.
A queer sensation of light-headedness and weakness
seemed to possess him. The roots of his will-power
seemed numb. Nevertheless, all the more revolving
and all-embracing seemed his mind.
The officer in his speech a few hours
back had said the sector to which the battalion had
been assigned was alive. By this he meant that
active bombardment, machine-gun fire, hand-grenade
throwing, and gas-shelling, or attack in force might
come any time, and certainly must come as soon as
the Germans suspected the presence of an American force
opposite them.
That was the stunning reality to Dorn the
actual existence of the Huns a few rods distant.
But realization of them had not brought him to the
verge of panic. He would not flinch at confronting
the whole German army. Nor did he imagine he
put a great price upon his life. Nor did he have
any abnormal dread of pain. Nor had the well-remembered
teachings of the Bible troubled his spirit. Was
he going to be a coward because of some incalculable
thing in him or force operating against him? Already
he sat there, shivering and sweating, with the load
on his breast growing laborsome, with all his sensorial
being absolutely at keenest edge.
Rapid footfalls halted his heart-beats.
They came from above, outside the dugout, from the
trench.
“Dorn, come out!” called the corporal.
Dorn’s response was instant.
But he was as blind as if he had no eyes, and he had
to feel his way to climb out. The indistinct,
blurred form of the corporal seemed half merged in
the pale gloom of the trench. A cool wind whipped
at Dorn’s hot face. Surcharged with emotion,
the nature of which he feared, Dorn followed the corporal,
stumbling and sliding over the wet boards, knocking
bits of earth from the walls, feeling a sick icy gripe
in his bowels. Some strange light flared up died
away. Another rumble, distinct, heavy, and vibrating!
To his left somewhere the earth received a shock.
Dorn felt a wave of air that was not wind.
The corporal led the way past motionless
men peering out over the top of the wall, and on to
a widening, where an abutment of filled bags loomed
up darkly. Here the corporal cautiously climbed
up breaks in the wall and stooped behind the fortification.
Dorn followed. His legs did not feel natural.
Something was lost out of them. Then he saw the
little figure of Rogers beside him. Dorn’s
turn meant Rogers’s relief. How pale against
the night appeared the face of Rogers! As he peered
under his helmet at Dorn a low whining passed in the
air overhead. Rogers started slightly. A
thump sounded out there, interrupting the corporal,
who had begun to speak. He repeated his order
to Dorn, bending a little to peer into his face.
Dorn tried to open his lips to say he did not understand,
but his lips were mute. Then the corporal led
Rogers away.
That moment alone, out in the open,
with the strange, windy pall of night all-enveloping,
with the flares, like sheet-lightning, along the horizon,
with a rumble here and a roar there, with whistling
fiends riding the blackness above, with a series of
popping, impelling reports seemingly close in front that
drove home to Kurt Dorn a cruel and present and unescapable
reality.
At that instant, like bitter fate,
shot up a rocket, or a star-flare of calcium light,
bursting to expose all underneath in pitiless radiance.
With a gasp that was a sob, Dorn shrank flat against
the wall, staring into the fading circle, feeling
a creep of paralysis. He must be seen. He
expected the sharp, biting series of a machine-gun
or the bursting of a bomb. But nothing happened,
except that the flare died away. It had come
from behind his own lines. Control of his muscles
had almost returned when a heavy boom came from the
German side. Miles away, perhaps, but close!
That boom meant a great shell speeding on its hideous
mission. It would pass over him. He listened.
The wind came from that side. It was cold; it
smelled of burned powder; it carried sounds he was
beginning to appreciate shots, rumbles,
spats, and thuds, whistles of varying degree, all
isolated sounds. Then he caught a strange, low
moaning. It rose. It was coming fast.
It became an o-o-o-O-O-O! Nearer and nearer!
It took on a singing whistle. It was passing no falling!...
A mighty blow was delivered to the earth a
jar a splitting shock to windy darkness;
a wave of heavy air was flung afar and
then came the soft, heavy thumping of falling earth.
That shell had exploded close to the
place where Dorn stood. It terrified him.
It reduced him to a palpitating, stricken wretch, utterly
unable to cope with the terror. It was not what
he had expected. What were words, anyhow?
By words alone he had understood this shell thing.
Death was only a word, too. But to be blown to
atoms! It came every moment to some poor devil;
it might come to him. But that was not fighting.
Somewhere off in the blackness a huge iron monster
belched this hell out upon defenseless men. Revolting
and inconceivable truth!
It was Dorn’s ordeal that his
mentality robbed this hour of novelty and of adventure,
that while his natural, physical fear incited panic
and nausea and a horrible, convulsive internal retching,
his highly organized, exquisitely sensitive mind,
more like a woman’s in its capacity for emotion,
must suffer through imagining the infinite agonies
that he might really escape. Every shell then
must blow him to bits; every agony of every soldier
must be his.
But he knew what his duty was, and
as soon as he could move he began to edge along the
short beat. Once at the end he drew a deep and
shuddering breath, and, fighting all his involuntary
instincts, he peered over the top. An invisible
thing whipped close over his head. It did not
whistle; it cut. Out in front of him was only
thick, pale gloom, with spectral forms, leading away
to the horizon, where flares, like sheet-lightning
of a summer night’s storm, ran along showing
smoke and bold, ragged outlines. Then he went
to the other end to peer over there. His eyes
were keen, and through long years of habit at home,
going about at night without light, he could see distinctly
where ordinary sight would meet only a blank wall.
The flat ground immediately before him was bare of
living or moving objects. That was his duty as
sentinel here to make sure of no surprise
patrol from the enemy lines. It helped Dorn to
realize that he could accomplish this duty even though
he was in a torment.
That space before him was empty, but
it was charged with current. Wind, shadow, gloom,
smoke, electricity, death, spirit whatever
that current was, Dorn felt it. He was more afraid
of that than the occasional bullets which zipped across.
Sometimes shots from his own squad rang out up and
down the line. Off somewhat to the north a machine-gun
on the Allies’ side spoke now and then spitefully.
Way back a big gun boomed. Dorn listened to the
whine of shells from his own side with a far different
sense than that with which he heard shells whine from
the enemy. How natural and yet how unreasonable!
Shells from the other side came over to destroy him;
shells from his side went back to save him. But
both were shot to kill! Was he, the unknown and
shrinking novice of a soldier, any better than an
unknown and shrinking soldier far across there in
the darkness? What was equality? But these
were Germans! That thing so often said so
beaten into his brain did not convince out
here in the face of death.
Four o’clock! With the
gray light came a gradually increasing number of shells.
Most of them struck far back. A few, to right
and left, dropped near the front line. The dawn
broke such a dawn as he never dreamed of smoky
and raw, with thunder spreading to a circle all around
the horizon.
He was relieved. On his way in
he passed Purcell at the nearest post. The elegant
New-Yorker bore himself with outward calm. But
in the gray dawn he looked haggard and drawn.
Older! That flashed through Dorn’s mind.
A single night had contained years, more than years.
Others of the squad had subtly changed. Dixon
gave him a penetrating look, as if he wore a mask,
under which was a face of betrayal, of contrast to
that soldier bearing, of youth that was gone forever.