III
It was four in the morning when
he came out of the Prison of the Condemned with the Secretary of the American
Legation. A knot of people had gathered around the American Minister's
carriage, which stood in front of the prison, the horses stamping and pawing
in the icy street, the coachman huddled on the box, wrapped in furs. Southwark
helped the Secretary into the carriage, and shook hands with Trent, thanking
him for coming.
"How the scoundrel did stare," he
said; "your evidence was worse than a kick, but it saved his skin for the
moment at least,--and prevented complications."
The Secretary sighed; "we have done
our part. Now let them prove him a spy and we wash our hands of him. Jump
in, Captain! Come along, Trent!"
"I have a word to say to Captain
Southwark, I won't detain him," said Trent hastily, and dropping his voice,
"Southwark, help me now. You know the--the child is at his rooms. Get it,
and take it to my apartment, and if he is shot, I will provide a home for
it."
"I understand," said the Captain
gravely.
"Will you do this at once?"
"At once," he replied.
Their hands met in a warm clasp
and then Captain Southwark climbed into the carriage motioning Trent to
follow; but he shook his head saying, "good-bye!" and the carriage rolled
away.
He watched the carriage to the end
of the street, then started toward his own quarter, but after a step or
two, hesitated, stopped and finally turned away in the opposite direction.
Something--perhaps it was the sight of the prisoner he had so recently
confronted nauseated him. He felt the need of solitude and quiet to collect
his thoughts. The events of the evening had shaken him terribly, but he
would walk it off, forget, bury everything, and then go back to Silvia.
He started on swiftly and for a time the bitter thoughts seemed to fade,
but when he paused at last, breathless, under the Arc de Triomphe, the
bitterness and the wretchedness of the whole thing--yes, of his whole misspent
life came back with a pang. Then the face of the prisoner, stamped with
the horrible grimace of fear, grew in the shadows before his eyes.
Sick at heart he wandered up and
down under the great Arc, striving to occupy his mind, peering up at the
sculptured cornices to read the names of the heroes and battles which he
knew were engraved there, but always the ashen face of Hartman followed
him, grinning with terror!--or was it terror?-- was it not triumph?-- At
the thought he leaped like a man who feels a knife at his throat, but after
a savage tramp around the square, came back again and sat down to battle
with his misery.
The air was cold, but his cheeks
were burning with angry shame. Shame? Why? Was it because he had married
a girl whom chance had made a mother? Did he love her? Was this miserable
bohemian existence then his end and aim in life? He turned his eyes upon
the secrets of his heart, and read an evil story,--the story of the past,
and he covered his face for shame, while, keeping time to the dull pain
throbbing in his head, his heart beat out the story for the future. Shame
and disgrace.
Roused at last from a lethargy which
had begun to numb the bitterness of his thoughts, he raised his head and
looked about. A sudden fog had settled in the streets, the arches of the
Arc were choked with it. He would go home. A great horror of being alone
seized him. But he was not alone. The fog was peopled with phantoms. All
around him in the mist they moved drifting through the arches in lengthening
lines, and vanished, while from the fog others rose up, swept past and
were engulfed. He was not alone, for even at his side they crowded, touched
him, swarmed before him, beside him, behind him, pressed him back, seized,
and bore him with them through the mist. Down a dim avenue, through lanes
and alleys white with fog, they moved, and if they spoke their voices were
dull as the vapor which shrouded them. At last in front, a bank of masonry
and earth cut by a massive iron barred gate towered up in the fog. Slowly
and more slowly they glided, shoulder to shoulder and thigh to thigh. Then
all movement ceased. A sudden breeze stirred the fog. It wavered and eddied.
Objects became more distinct. A pallor crept above the horizon, touching
the edges of the watery clouds, and drew dull sparks from a thousand bayonets.
Bayonets--they were everywhere, cleaving the fog or flowing beneath it
in rivers of steel. High on the wall of masonry and earth a great gun loomed,
and around it figures moved in silhouettes. Below a broad torrent of bayonets
swept through the iron barred gateway, out into the shadowy plain. It became
lighter. Faces grew more distinct among the marching masses and he recognized
one.
"You, Philippe!"
The figure turned its head.
Trent cried,--"is there room for
me?" but the other only waved his arm in a vague adieu and was gone with
the rest. Presently the cavalry began to pass, squadron on squadron, crowding
out into the darkness, then many cannon, then an ambulance, then again
the endless lines of bayonets. Beside him a cuirassier sat on his streaming
horse, and in front, among the group of mounted officers he saw a general,
with the astrakan collar of his dolman turned up about his bloodless face.
Some women were weeping near him
and one was struggling to force a loaf of black bread into a soldier's
haversack. The soldier tried to aid her, but the sack was fastened, and
his rifle bothered him, so Trent held it, while the woman unbuttoned the
sack and forced in the bread, now all wet with her tears. The rifle was
not heavy. Trent found it wonderfully manageable. Was the bayonet sharp?
He tried it. Then a sudden longing, a fierce, imperative desire took possession
of him.
"Chouette!" cried a gamin, clinging
to the barred gate; "encore toi mon vieux?"
Trent looked up, and the rat-killer
laughed in his face. But when the soldier had taken the rifle again, and
thanking him, ran hard to catch his battalion, he plunged into the throng
about the gateway.
"Are you going?" he cried to a marine
who sat in the gutter bandaging his foot.
"Yes."
Then a girl,--a mere child caught
him by the hand and led him into the café which faced the gate.
The room was crowded with soldiers, some, white and silent, sitting on
the floor, others groaning on the leather-covered settees. The air was
sour and suffocating.
"Choose!" said the girl with a little
gesture of pity; "they can't go!"
In a heap of clothing on the floor
he found a capote and képi.
She helped him buckle his knapsack,
cartridge box, and showed him how to load the chasse-pot rifle, holding
it on her knees.
When he thanked her she started
to her feet.
"You are a foreigner!"
"American," he said, moving toward
the door, but the child barred his way.
"I am a Bretonne. My father is up
there with the cannon of the marine. He will shoot you if you are a spy."
They faced each other for a moment.
Then sighing, he bent over and kissed the child. "Pray for France, little
one," he murmured, and she repeated with a pale smile: "for France and
you, beau Monsieur."
He ran across the street and through
the gateway. Once outside, he edged into line and shouldered his way along
the road. A corporal passed, looked at him, repassed, and finally called
an officer. "You belong to the 60th," growled the corporal looking at the
number on his képi.
"We have no use for Franc-tireurs,"
added the officer, catching sight of his black trousers.
"I wish to volunteer in the place
of a comrade," said Trent, and the officer shrugged his shoulders and passed
on.
Nobody paid much attention to him,
one or two merely glancing at his trousers. The road was deep with slush
and mud ploughed and torn by wheels and hoofs. A soldier in front of him
wrenched his foot in an icy rut and dragged himself to the edge of the
embankment groaning. The plain on either side of them was gray with melting
snow. Here and there behind dismantled hedge-rows stood wagons bearing
white flags with red crosses. Sometimes the driver was a priest in rusty
hat and gown, sometimes a crippled Mobile. Once they passed a wagon driven
by a Sister of Charity. Silent empty houses with great rents in their walls,
and every window blank, huddled along the road. Further on, within the
zone of danger, nothing of human habitation remained except here and there
a pile of frozen bricks or a blackened cellar choked with snow.
For some time Trent had been annoyed
by the man behind him who kept treading on his heels. Convinced at last
that it was intentional he turned to remonstrate and found himself face
to face with a fellow-student from the Beaux Arts. Trent stared.
"I thought you were in the hospital!"
The other shook his head, pointing
to his bandaged jaw.
"I see, you can't speak. Can I do
anything?"
The wounded man rummaged in his
haversack and produced a crust of black bread.
"He can't eat it, his jaw is smashed,
and he wants you to chew it for him," said the soldier next to him.
Trent took the crust, and grinding
it in his teeth, morsel by morsel, passed it back to the starving man.
From time to time, mounted orderlies
sped to the front covering them with slush. It was a chilly silent march
through sodden meadows wreathed in fog. Along the railroad embankment across
the ditch, another column moved parallel to their own. Trent watched it,
a sombre mass, now distinct, now vague, now blotted out in a puff of fog.
Once for half an hour he lost it, but when again it came into view, he
noticed a thin line detach itself from the flank, and, bellying in the
middle, swing rapidly to the west. At the same moment a prolonged crackling
broke out in the fog in front. Other lines began to slough off from the
column, swinging east and west, and the crackling became continuous. A
battery passed at full gallop and he drew back with his comrades to give
it way. It went into action a little to the right of his battalion, and
as the shot from the first rifled piece boomed through the mist, the cannon
from the fortifications opened with a mighty roar. An officer galloped
by shouting something which Trent did not catch, but he saw the ranks in
front suddenly part company with his own, and disappear in the twilight.
More officers rode up and stood beside him peering into the fog. It was
dreary waiting. Trent chewed some bread for the man behind, who tried to
swallow it, and after a while shook his head, motioning Trent to eat the
rest of it himself. A corporal offered him a little brandy and he drank
it, but when he turned around to return the flask, the corporal was lying
on the ground. Alarmed, he looked at the soldier next to him, who shrugged
his shoulders and opened his mouth to speak, but something struck him and
he rolled over and over into the ditch below. At that moment the horse
of one of the officers gave a bound and backed into the battalion, lashing
out with his heels. One man was ridden down; another was kicked in the
chest and hurled through the ranks. The officer sank his spurs into the
horse and forced him to the front again, where he stood trembling. The
cannonade seemed to grow nearer. A staff officer, riding slowly up and
down the battalion suddenly collapsed in his saddle and clung to his horse's
mane. One of his boots dangled, crimsoned and dripping, from the stirrup.
Then out of the mist in front, men came running. The roads, the fields,
the ditches were full of them, and many of them fell. For an instant he
imagined he saw horsemen riding about like ghosts in the vapors beyond,
and a man behind him cursed horribly, declaring he too had seen them and
that they were Uhlans; but the battalion stood inactive and the mist fell
again over the meadows.
The colonel sat heavily upon his
horse, his bullet-shaped head buried in the astrakan collar of his dolman,
his fat legs sticking straight out in the stirrups.
The buglers clustered about him
with the bugles poised, and behind him a staff officer in a pale blue jacket,
smoked a cigarette and chatted with a captain of hussars. From the road
in front came the sound of furious galloping and an orderly reined up beside
the colonel, who motioned him to the rear without turning his head. Then
on the left confused murmur arose which ended in a shout. A hussar passed
like the wind, followed by another and another, an then squadron after
squadron whirled by them into the sheeted mists. At that instant the colonel
reared in his saddle, the bugles clanged and the whole battalion scrambled
down the embankment. Almost at once Trent lost his cap. Something snatched
it from his head, he thought it was a tree branch. A good many of his comrades
rolled over in the slush and ice, and he imagined that they had slipped.
One pitched right across his path and he stopped to help him up, but the
man screamed when he touched him and an officer shouted, "forward, forward!"
so he ran on again. It was a long jog through the mist, and he was often
obliged to shift his rifle. When at last they lay panting behind the railroad
embankment, he looked about him. He had felt the need of action, of a desperate
physical struggle, of killing and crushing. He had been seized with a desire
to fling himself among masses and tear right and left. He longed to fire,
to use the thin sharp bayonet on his chasse-pot. He had not expected this.
He wished to become exhausted, to struggle and cut until incapable of lifting
his arm. Then he had intended to go home. He heard a man say that half
the battalion had gone down in the charge, and he saw another examining
a corpse under the embankment. The body, still warm, was clothed in a strange
uniform, but even when he noticed the spiked helmet lying a few inches
further away, he did not realize what had happened.
The colonel sat on his horse a few
feet to the left, his eyes sparkling under the crimson képi. Trent
heard him reply to an officer: "I can hold it, but another charge, and
I won't have enough men left to sound a bugle."
"Wee the Prussians here?" Trent
asked of a soldier who sat wiping the blood trickling from his hair.
"Yes. The hussars cleaned them out.
We caught their cross fire."
"We are supporting a battery on
the embankment," said another.
Then the battalion crawled over
the embankment and moved along the lines of twisted rails. Trent rolled
up his trousers and tucked them into his woolen socks: but they halted
again, and some of the men sat down on the dismantled railroad track. Trent
looked for his wounded comrade from the Beaux Arts. He was standing in
his place, very pale. The cannonade had become terrific. For a moment the
mist lifted. He caught a glimpse of the first battalion motionless on the
railroad track in front, of regiments on either flank, and then, as the
fog settled again, the drums beat and the music of the bugles began away
on the extreme left. A restless movement passed among the troops, the colonel
threw up his arm, the drums rolled, and the battalion moved off through
the fog. They were near the front now, for the first battalion was firing
as it advanced. Ambulances galloped along the base of the embankment to
the rear, and the hussars passed and repassed like phantoms. They were
in the front at last, for all about them was movement and turmoil, while
from the fog, close at hand, came cries and groans and crashing volleys.
Shells fell everywhere, bursting along the embankment, splashing them with
frozen slush. Trent was frightened. He began to dread the unknown, which
lay there cracking and flaming in obscurity. The shock of the cannon sickened
him. He could even see the fog light up with a dull orange as the thunder
shook the earth. It was near, he felt certain, for the colonel shouted
"forward!" and the first battalion was hastening into it. He felt its breath,
he trembled, but hurried on. A fearful discharge in front terrified him.
Somewhere in the fog men were cheering, and the colonel's horse streaming
with blood plunged about in the smoke.
Another blast and shock, right in
his face, almost stunned him, and he faltered. All the men to the right
were down. His head swam; the fog and smoke stupefied him. He put out his
hand for a support and caught something. It was the wheel of a gun carriage,
and a man sprang from it, aiming a blow at his head with a rammer, but
stumbled back shrieking with a bayonet through his neck, and Trent knew
that he had killed. Mechanically he stooped to pick up his rifle, but the
bayonet was still in the man who lay, beating with red hands against the
sod. It sickened him and he leaned on the cannon. Men were fighting all
around him now and the air was foul with smoke and sweat. Somebody seized
him from behind and another in front, but others in turn seized them or
struck them solid blows. The click! click! click! of bayonets infuriated
him, and he grasped the rammer and struck out blindly until it was shivered
to pieces.
A man threw his arm around his neck
and bore him to the ground, but he throttled him and raised himself on
his knees. He saw a comrade seize the cannon, and fall across it with his
skull crushed in; he saw the colonel tumble clean out of his saddle into
the mud, then consciousness fled.
When he came to himself, he was
lying on the embankment among the twisted rails. On every side huddled
men who cried out and cursed and fled away into the fog, and he staggered
to his feet and followed them. Once he stopped to help a comrade with a
bandaged jaw, who could not speak but clung to his arm for a time and then
fell dead in the freezing mire; and again he aided another, who groaned:
"Trent, c'est moi--Philippe" until a sudden volley in the mist relieved
him of his charge.
An icy wind swept down from the
heights, cutting the fog into shreds. For an instant, with an evil leer
the sun peered through the naked woods of Vincennes, sank like a blood
clot in the battery smoke, lower, lower into the blood-soaked plain.
End of PART THREE..... GO TO PART
FOUR.....