"Gentlemen, may I introduce Captain Dunbar, your sky-pilot, padre,
chaplain, anything you like? They say he's a devil of a good
preacher. The Lord knows you need one."
So Barry's commanding officer introduced him to the mess.
He bowed in different directions to the group of officers who, in
the ante-room of the mess, were having a pre-prandial cocktail.
Barry found a place near the foot of the table and for a few
minutes sat silent, getting his bearings.
Some of the officers were known to him. He had met the commanding
officer, Colonel Leighton, a typical, burly Englishman, the owner
of an Alberta horse ranch, who, well to do to begin with, had made
money during his five years in the country. He had the reputation
of being a sporting man, of easy morality, fond of his glass and of
good living. He owed his present position, partly to political
influence, and partly to his previous military experience in the
South African war. His popularity with his officers was due
largely to his easy discipline, and to the absence of that rigidity
of manner which is supposed to go with high military command, and
which civilians are wont to find so irksome.
Barry had also met Major Bustead, the Senior Major of the Battalion,
and President of the mess, an eastern Canadian, with no military
experience whatever, but with abounding energy and ambition; the
close friend and boon companion of Colonel Leighton, he naturally
had become his second in command. Barry was especially delighted to
observe Major Bayne, whom he had not seen since his first meeting
with him some months ago on the Red Pine Trail. Captain Neil Fraser
and Lieutenant Stewart Duff were the only officers about the table
whom he recognised, except that, among the junior lieutenants, he
caught the face of young Duncan Cameron, the oldest son of his
superintendent, and a fine, clean-looking young fellow he appeared.
Altogether Barry was strongly attracted by the clean, strong faces
about him. He would surely soon find good friends among them, and
he only hoped he might be able to be of some service to them.
The young fellow on his right introduced himself as Captain
Hopeton. He was a young English public school boy, who, though a
failure as a rancher, had proved an immense success in the social
circles of the city. Because of this, and also of his family
connections "at home," he had been appointed to a Civil Service
position. A rather bored manner and a supercilious air spoiled
what would otherwise have been a handsome and attractive face.
After a single remark about the "beastly bore" of military duty,
Hopeton ignored Barry, giving such attention as he had to spare
from his dinner to a man across the table, with whom, apparently,
he had shared some rather exciting social experiences in the city.
For the first half hour of the meal, the conversation was of the
most trivial nature, and was to Barry supremely uninteresting.
"Shop talk" was strictly taboo, and also all reference to the war.
The thin stream of conversation that trickled from lip to lip ran
the gamut of sport, spiced somewhat highly with society scandal
which, even in that little city, appeared to flourish.
To Barry it was as if he were in a strange land and among people of
a strange tongue. Of sport, as understood by these young chaps, he
knew little, and of scandal he was entirely innocent; so much so
that many of the references that excited the most merriment were to
him utterly obscure. After some attempts to introduce topics of
conversation which he thought might be of mutual interest, but
which had fallen quite flat, Barry gave up, and sat silent with a
desolating sense of loneliness growing upon his spirit.
"After the port," when smoking was permitted, he was offered a
cigarette by Hopeton, and surprised that young man mightily by
saying that he never smoked. This surprise, it is to be feared,
deepened into disgust when, a few moments later, he declined a
drink from Hopeton's whisky bottle, which a servant brought him.
Liquors were not provided at the mess, but officers were permitted
to order what they desired.
As the bottles circulated, tongues were loosened. There was nothing
foul in the talk, but more and more profanity, with frequent apology
to the chaplain, began to decorate the conversation. Conscious of a
deepening disgust with his environment, and of an overwhelming sense
of isolation, Barry cast vainly about for a means of escape. Of
military etiquette he was ignorant; hence he could only wait in
deepening disgust for the O. C. to give the signal to rise. How
long he could have endured is doubtful, but release came in a
startling, and, to most of the members of the mess, a truly
horrifying manner.
In one of those strange silences that fall upon even the noisiest
of companies, Colonel Leighton, under the influence of a somewhat
liberal indulgence in his whisky bottle, began the relation of a
tale of very doubtful flavour. In the midst of the laughter that
followed the tale, Barry rose to his feet, his face white and his
eyes aflame, and in a voice vibrating with passion, said:
"Why, certainly," said the colonel pleasantly, adding after a
moment's hesitation, "is there anything wrong, Dunbar? Are you
ill?"
"No, sir." Barry's voice had the resonant quality of a cello
string. "I mean, yes, sir," he corrected. "I am ill. The
atmosphere surrounding such a tale is nauseating to me."
In the horrified silence that followed his remark, he walked out
from the room. Upon his ears, as he stood in the ante-room,
trembling with the violence of his passion, a burst of laughter
fell. A sudden wrath like a hot flame swept his body. He wheeled
in his tracks, tore open the door, and with head high and face set,
strode to his place at the table and sat down.
Astonishment beyond all words held the company in tense stillness.
From Barry's face they looked toward the colonel, who, too
dumfounded for speech or action, sat gazing at his chaplain. Then
from the end of the table a few places down from Barry, a voice was
heard.
"Feel better, Dunbar?" The cool, clear voice cut through the tense
silence like the zip of a sword.
"I do, thank you, sir," looking him straight in the eye.
"The fresh air, doubtless," continued the cool voice. "I always
find myself that even a whiff of fresh air is a very effective
antidote for threatening vertigo. I remember once--" continued the
speaker, dropping into a conversational tone, and leaning across
the table slightly toward Barry, "I was in the room with a company
of men--" And the speaker entered upon a long and none too
interesting relation of an experience of his, the point of which no
one grasped, but the effect of which every one welcomed with the
profoundest relief. He was the regimental medical officer, a tall,
slight man, with a keen eye, a pleasant face crowned by a topknot
of flaming hair, and with a little dab of hair of like colour upon
his upper lip, which he fondly cherished, as an important item in
his military equipment.
"Say, the old doc is a lifesaver, sure enough," said a young
subaltern, answering to the name of "Sally," colloquial for
Salford, as he stood amid a circle of officers gathered in the
smoking room a few minutes later. "A lifesaver," repeated Sally,
with emphasis. "He can have me for his laboratory collection after
I'm through."
"He is one sure singing bird," said another sub, a stout, overgrown
boy by the name of Booth. "The nerve of him," added Booth in
admiration.
"Nerve!" echoed a young captain, "but what about the pilot's nerve?"
"Sui generis, Train, I should say," drawled Hopeton.
"Suey, who did you say?" inquired Sally. "What's her second name?
But let me tell you I could have fallen on his neck and burst into
tears of gratitude. For me," continued Sally, glancing about the
room, "I don't hold with that dirt stuff at mess. It isn't
necessary."
"Beastly bad form," said Hopeton, "but, good Lord! Your Commanding
Officer, Sally! There's such a thing as discipline, you know."
"What extraordinary thing is it that Sally knows?" inquired Major
Bustead, who lounged up to the group.
"We were discussing the padre's break, Major, which for my part,"
drawled Hopeton, "I consider rotten discipline."
"Discipline!" snorted the major. "By Gad, it was a piece of the
most damnable cheek I have ever heard at a mess table. He ought to
be sent to Coventry. I only hope the O. C. will get him exchanged."
The major made no effort to subdue his voice, which was plainly
audible throughout the room.
"Hush, for God's sake," warned Captain Train, as Barry entered the
door. "Here he is."
But Barry had caught the major's words. For a moment he stood
irresolute; then walked quietly toward the group.
"I couldn't help hearing you, Major Bustead," he said, in a voice
pleasant and under perfect control. "I gather you were referring
to me."
"And why should I be sent to Coventry, or exchanged, may I ask?"
Barry's voice was that of an interested outsider.
"Because," stuttered the Major, "I consider, sir, that--that--you
have been guilty of a piece of damnable impertinence toward your
Commanding Officer. I never heard anything like it in my life.
Infernal cheek, I call it, sir."
While the major was speaking, Barry stood listening with an air of
respectful attention.
"I wonder!" he said, after a moment's thought. "If I thought I had
been impertinent, I should at once apologise. But, sir, do you
think it is part of my duty to allow any man, even my Commanding
Officer, to--pardon the disgusting metaphor, it is not so
disgusting as the action complained of--to spit in my soup, and
take it without protest? Do you, sir?"
"I--you--" The major grew very red in the face. "You need to
learn your place in this battalion, sir."
"I do," said Barry, still preserving his quiet voice and manner.
"I want to learn--I am really anxious to learn it. Do you mind
answering my question?" His tone was that of a man who is
earnestly but quite respectfully seeking information from a
superior officer.
"Your question, sir?" stuttered the major, "your--your--question.
Damn your question, and yourself too."
The major turned abruptly away. Barry heard him quite unmoved,
stood looking after him in silence a moment or two, then, shaking
his head, with a puzzled expression on his face, moved slowly away
from the group.
"Oh, my aunt Caroline," breathed Sally into his friend Hopeton's
ear, resting heavily meanwhile against his shoulder. "What a
score! What a score!"
"A bull, begad! a clean bull!" murmured Hopeton, supporting his
friend out of the room as he added, "A little fresh air, as a
preventative of vertigo, as the old doc says, eh, Sally."
"Good Lord, is he just a plain ass, or what?" inquired young Booth,
his eye following Barry down the room.
"Ass! A mule, I should say. And one with a good lot of kick in
him," replied Captain Train. "I don't know that I care for that
kind of an animal, though."
Before many hours had passed, the whole battalion had received with
undiluted joy an account of the incident, for though the Commanding
Officer was popular with his men, to have him called down at his
own mess by one of his own officers was an event too thrilling to
give anything but unalloyed delight to those who had to suffer in
silence similar indignities at the hands of their officers.
A notable exception in the battalion, however, was Sergeant Major
McFetteridge, who, because of his military experience, and of his
reputation as a disciplinarian, had been recently transferred to
the battalion. To the sergeant major this act of Barry's was but
another and more flagrant example of his fondness for "buttin' in,"
and the sergeant major let it be known that he strongly condemned
the chaplain for what he declared was an unheard of breach of
military discipline.
Of course there were others who openly approved, and who admired
the chaplain's "nerve in standing up to the old man." In their
opinion he was entirely justified in what he had said. The O. C.
had insulted him, and every officer at the mess, by his off-colour
story, but on the whole the general result of the incident was that
Barry's life became more and more one of isolation from both
officers and men. For this reason and because of a haunting sense
of failure the months of training preceding the battalion's departure
for England were for Barry one long and almost uninterrupted misery.
It seemed impossible to establish any point of contact with either
the officers or the men. In their athletics, in their social
gatherings, in their reading, he was quietly ignored and made to
feel that he was in no way necessary. An impalpable but very real
barrier prevented his near approach to those whom he was so eager
to serve.
This unexpressed opposition was quickened into active hostility by
the chaplain's uncompromising attitude on the liquor question. By
the army regulations, the battalion canteen was dry, but in spite
of this many, both of the officers and the men, freely indulged in
the use of intoxicating drink. The effect upon discipline was, of
course, deplorable, and in his public addresses as well as private
conversation, Barry constantly denounced these demoralising habits,
winning thereby the violent dislike of those especially affected,
and the latent hostility of the majority of the men who agreed with
the sergeant major in resenting the chaplain's "buttin' in."
It was, therefore, with unspeakable joy that Barry learned that the
battalion was warned for overseas service. Any change in his lot
would be an improvement, for he was convinced that he had reached
the limit of wretchedness in the exercise of his duty as chaplain
of the battalion.
In this conviction, however, he was mistaken. On shipboard, he
discovered that there were still depths of misery which he was
called upon to plumb. Assigned to a miserable stateroom in an
uncomfortable part of the ship, he suffered horribly from
seasickness, and for the first half of the voyage lay foodless and
spiritless in his bunk, indifferent to his environment or to his
fate. His sole friend was his batman, Harry Hobbs, but, of course,
he could not confide to Harry the misery of his body, or the deeper
misery of his soul.
It was Harry, however, that brought relief, for it was he that
called the M. O. to his officer's bedside. The M. O. was shocked
to find the chaplain in a state of extreme physical weakness, and
mental depression. At once, he gave orders that Barry should be
removed to his own stateroom, which was large and airy and open to
the sea breezes. The effect was immediately apparent, for the
change of room, and more especially the touch of human sympathy,
did much to restore Barry to his normal health and spirits. A
friendship sprang up between the M. O. and the chaplain. With
this friendship a new interest came into Barry's life, and with
surprising rapidity he regained both his physical and mental tone.
The doctor took him resolutely in hand, pressed him to take his
part in the daily physical drill, induced him to share the daily
programme of sports, and, best of all, discovering a violin on
board, insisted on his taking a place on the musical programme
rendered nightly in the salon. As might be expected, his violin
won him friends among all of the music lovers on board ship, and
life for Barry began once more to be bearable.
Returning strength, however, recalled him to the performance of his
duties as chaplain, and straightway in the exercise of what he
considered his duty, he came into conflict with no less a personage
than the sergeant major himself. The trouble arose over his
batman, Harry Hobbs.
Harry was a man who, in his youthful days, had been a diligent
patron of the London music halls, and in consequence had become
himself an amateur entertainer of very considerable ability. His
sailor's hornpipes, Irish jigs, his old English North-country
ballads and his coster songs were an unending joy to his comrades.
Their gratitude and admiration took forms that proved poor Harry's
undoing, and besides some of them took an unholy joy in sending the
chaplain's batman to his officer incapable of service.
Barry's indignation and grief were beyond words. He dealt
faithfully with the erring Hobbs, as his minister, as his officer,
as chaplain, but the downward drag of his environment proved too
great for his batman's powers of resistance. Once and again Barry
sought the aid of the sergeant major to rescue Harry from his
downward course, but the old sergeant major was unimpressed with
the account of Harry's lapses.
"Is your batman unfit for duty, sir?" he inquired.
"Then, sir, I am afraid that until you do your duty I can do
nothing," answered the sergeant major, with suave respect.
"If you did your duty," Barry was moved to say, "then Hobbs would
not need to be reported. The regulations governing that canteen
should prevent these frequent examples of drunkenness, which are a
disgrace to the battalion."
"Do I understand, sir," inquired the sergeant major, with quiet
respect, "that you are accusing me of a failure in duty?"
"I am saying that if the regulations were observed my batman and
others would not be so frequently drunk, and the enforcing of these
regulations, I understand, is a part of your duty."
"Then, sir," replied the sergeant major, "perhaps I had better
report myself to the Commanding Officer."
"You can please yourself," said Barry, shortly, as he turned away.
"Very good, sir," replied the sergeant major. "I shall report
myself at once."
The day following, the chaplain received an order to appear before
the O. C. in the orderly room.
"Captain Dunbar, I understand that you are making a charge against
Sergeant Major McFetteridge," was Colonel Leighton's greeting.
"I am making no charge against any one, sir," replied Barry
quietly.
"What do you say to that, Sergeant Major McFetteridge?"
In reply, the sergeant major gave a full and fair statement of the
passage between the chaplain and himself the day before.
"Is this correct, Captain Dunbar?" asked the O. C.
"Substantially correct, sir, except that the sergeant major is here
on his own suggestion, and on no order of mine."
"Then I understand that you withdraw your charge against the
sergeant major."
"I withdraw nothing, sir. I had no intention of laying a charge,
and I have laid no charge against the sergeant major; but at the
same time I have no hesitation in saying that the regulations
governing the canteen are not observed, and, as I understand that
the responsibility for enforcing these regulations is in the
sergeant major's hands, in that sense I consider that he has failed
in his duty."
But the sergeant major was too old a soldier to be caught napping.
He had his witnesses ready at hand to testify that the canteen was
conducted according to regulations, and that if the chaplain's
batman or any others took more liquor than they should, neither the
corporal in charge of the canteen nor the sergeant major was to be
blamed.
"All I can say, sir," replied Barry, "is that soldiers are
frequently drunk on this ship, and I myself have seen them when the
worse for liquor going into the canteen."
"And did you report these men to their officers or to me, Captain
Dunbar, or did you report the corporal in charge of the canteen?"
The colonel hesitated a moment, fumbled with his papers, and then
blurted out:
"Certainly, sir. And let me say, Captain Dunbar, that an officer,
especially an officer in your position, ought to be very careful in
making a charge against a N. C. O., more particularly the sergeant
major of his battalion. Nothing is more calculated to drag down
discipline. The case is dismissed."
"Sir," said Barry, maintaining his place before the table. "May I
ask one question?"
"The case is dismissed, Captain Dunbar. What do you want?" asked
the colonel brusquely.
"I want to be quite clear as to my duty, in the future, sir. Do I
understand that if any man or officer is found under the influence
of liquor, anywhere in this ship, and at any hour of the day or
night, he is to be reported at once to the orderly room, even
though that officer should be, say, even the adjutant or yourself?"
Barry said, gazing up at the colonel with a face in which
earnestness and candour were equally blended.
The colonel gazed back at him with a face in which rage and
perplexity were equally apparent. For some moments, he was
speechless, while the whole orderly room held its breath.
"I mean--that you--you understand--of course," stuttered the
colonel, "that an officer must use common sense. He must be damned
sure of what he says, in other words," said the colonel, rushing
his speech.
"Is the man an infernal and condemned fool, or what is the matter
with him?" exclaimed the colonel, turning to his adjutant in a
helpless appeal, while the orderly room struggled with its grins.
"The devil only knows," said Major Bustead. "He beats me. He is
an interfering and impertinent ass, in my opinion, but what else he
is, I don't know."
It is fair to say that the sergeant major bore the chaplain no
grudge for his part in the affair. The whole battalion, however,
soon became possessed of the tale, adorned and expanded to an
unrecognisable extent, and revelled in ecstasy over the discomfort
of the C. O. The consensus of opinion was that on the whole the
sergeant major had come off with premier honours, and as between
the "old man" and the "Sky Pilot," as Barry was coming to be
called, it was about an even break. As for the Pilot, he remained
more than ever a mystery, and on the whole, the battalion was
inclined to leave him alone.
The chaplain, however, had partially, at least, achieved his aim,
in that the regulations governing the canteen were more strictly
enforced, to the vast improvement of discipline generally, and to
the immense advantage of Harry Hobbs in particular.
Soon after this, another event occurred which aided materially in
bringing about this same result, and which also led to a modification
of opinion in the battalion in regard to their chaplain.
To the civilian soldier the punctilio of military etiquette is
frequently not only a bore, but at times takes on the appearance of
wilful insult which no grown man should be expected to tolerate.
To the civilian soldier born and brought up in wide spaces of the
far Northwest this is especially the case.
It is not surprising, therefore, that McCuaig, fresh from his
thirty-five years of life in the Athabasca wilds, should find the
routine of military discipline extremely irksome and the niceties
of military etiquette as from a private to an officer not only
foolish but degrading both to officer and man. Under the patient
shepherding of Barry's father, he had endured much without protest
or complaint, but, with the advent of Sergeant Major McFetteridge,
with his rigid military discipline and his strict insistence upon
etiquette, McCuaig passed into a new atmosphere. To the freeborn
and freebred recruit from the Athabasca plains, the stiff and
somewhat exaggerated military bearing of the sergeant major was at
first a source of quiet amusement, later of perplexity, and finally
of annoyance. For McFetteridge and his minutiae of military
discipline McCuaig held only contempt. To him, the whole business
was a piece of silly nonsense unworthy of serious men.
It was inevitable that the sergeant major should sooner or later
discover this opinion in Private McCuaig, and that he should
consider the holding of this opinion as a tendency toward
insubordination. It was also inevitable that the sergeant major
should order a course of special fatigues calculated to subdue the
spirit of the insubordinate private.
It took McCuaig some days to discover that in these frequent
fatigues and special duties, he was undergoing punishment, but once
made, the discovery wrought in him a cold and silent rage, which
drove him to an undue and quite unwonted devotion to the canteen,
which in turn transformed the reserved, self-controlled man of the
wilds into a demonstrative, disorderly and quarrelsome "rookie"
aching for trouble.
Under these circumstances, an outburst was inevitable. Corporal
Ferry, in charge of the canteen, furnished the occasion.
"No more for you, McCuaig. You've got more aboard now than you can
carry."
To the injury of being denied another beer was added the insult of
suggesting his inability to carry what he had. This to a man of
McCuaig's experience in every bar and camp and roadhouse from
Edmonton to the Arctic circle, was not to be endured.
He leaned over the improvised bar, until his face almost touched
the corporal's.
"What?" he ejaculated, but in the single expletive there darted out
such concentrated fury, that the little corporal sprang back as
from a striking snake.
"You can't have any more beer, McCuaig," said the corporal, from a
safe distance.
With a single sweep of his hand, he snatched two bottles from the
ledge behind the corporal's head. Holding one aloft, he knocked
the top off the other, drank its contents slowly and smashed the
empty bottle at the spot where the corporal's head had been;
knocked the top off the second bottle and was proceeding to drink
it, in a more or less leisurely fashion.
"Private Timms! Private Mulligan!" shouted Corporal Ferry,
reappearing from beneath the counter. "Arrest that man!"
"Wait, sonny; give me a chance," cried McCuaig, in a wild, high,
singsong voice. Lifting his bottle to his lips, he continued to
drink slowly, keeping his eye upon the two privates, who were
considering the best method of carrying out their orders.
"There, sonny, fill that up again," cried McCuaig, good-naturedly,
when he had finished his drink, tossing the second bottle at the
head of the corporal, who, being on the alert, again made a
successful disappearance.
"Now, then, boys, come on," said McCuaig, backing toward the wall,
and dropping his hands to his hips. With a curse of disappointment
that he found himself without his usual weapons of defence, McCuaig
raised a shout, sprang into the air, cracked his heels together in
a double rap, and swinging his arms around his head, yelled:
"Come on, my boys! I'm hungry, I am! Meat! Meat! Meat!"
With each "meat," his white teeth came together with a snap like
that of a hungry wolf. Such was the beastly ferocity in his face
and posture that both Private Timms and Private Mulligan,
themselves men of more than average strength, paused and looked at
the corporal for further orders.
"Arrest that man," said the corporal again, preserving at the same
time an attitude that revealed a complete readiness for swift
disappearance. "Private McTavish," he added, calling upon a tall
Highlander who was gazing with admiring eyes upon the raging
McCuaig, "assist Private Timms and Private Mulligan in arresting
that man."
"Why don't you come yourself, sonny?" inquired McCuaig. With a
swift sidestep and a swifter swoop of his long arm, he reached for
the corporal, who once more found safety in swift disappearance.
At that instant, the Highlander, seeing his opportunity, flung
himself upon McCuaig, and winding his arms around him, hung to him
grimly, crying out:
When the sergeant major, attracted by the unwonted uproar, appeared
upon the scene, there was a man on every one of McQuaig's limbs,
and another one astride his stomach. "Heavin' like sawlogs
shootin' a rapid," as Private Corbin, a lumberjack from the Eau
Claire, was later heard to remark.
"What is he like now?" inquired the colonel, after listening to the
sergeant major's report of the Homeric combat.
"He is in a compartment in the hold, sir, and raging like one
demented. He very nearly did for Major Bustead, smashing at him
with a scantling that he ripped from the ship's timbers, sir. He
still has the scantling, sir."
"Let him cool off all night," said the Commanding Officer, after
consultation with the adjutant.
Barry, who with difficulty had restrained himself during the
sergeant major's report, slipped from the room, found the M. O., to
whom he detailed the story and dragged him off to visit the raging
McCuaig.
"Excuse me, sir," said the corporal, "it is not safe. At present,
he is clean crazy. He is off his nut entirely."
The M. O. stood listening at the door. From within came moaning
sounds as from a suffering beast.
"That man is suffering. Open the door!" ordered the M. O.
peremptorily.
The corporal, with great reluctance, unlocked the padlock, shot
back the bolt, and then stood away from the door.
"It is the medical officer, McCuaig," said the doctor, opening the
door slightly.
Bang! Crash! came the scantling upon the door jamb, shattering it
to pieces. The whole guard flung themselves against the door,
shoved it shut, and shot the bolt.
"I warned you, sir," said the panting corporal. "Better leave him
until morning. He's a regular devil!"
"He is no more a devil than you are, corporal," said Barry, in a
loud, clear voice. "He is one of the best men in the battalion.
More than that, he is my friend, and if he spends the night there,
I spend it with him."
So saying, and before any one could stop him, Barry shot back the
bolt, opened the door, and with his torchlight flashing before him,
stepped inside.
"Hello, McCuaig," he called, in a quiet, clear voice, "where are
you? It's Dunbar, you know."
He drew the door shut after him. The corporal was for following
him, but the M. O. interposed.
"Stop out!" he ordered. "Stay where you are! You have done enough
mischief already."
"This is my case," said the M. O. sharply. "Fall back all of you,
out of sight!"
Together they stood listening in awestruck silence, expecting every
moment to hear sounds of conflict, and cries for help, but all they
heard was the cool, even flow of a quiet voice, and after some
minutes had passed, the sound of moans, mingled with a terrible
sobbing.
The M. O., moving toward the corporal and his guard, said in a low
tone:
"Take your men down the passage and keep them there until I call
for you."
"Will you obey my orders?" said the M. O. "I'm in command here!
Go!"
Without further words, the corporal moved his men away.
Half an hour later, the sergeant major, going his rounds, received
a rude shock. In the passage leading to McCuaig's compartment, he
met four men, bearing on a stretcher toward the sick bay a long
silent form.
"Who have you got there, corporal?" he inquired in a tone of kindly
interest.
"Silence there," said a sharp voice in the rear. "Carry on, men."
And past the astonished sergeant major, the procession filed with
the medical officer and the chaplain at its tail end.
After the sergeant major had made his report to the O. C., as was
his duty, the M. O. was sent for. What took place at that
interview was never divulged to the mess, but it was known that
whereas the conversation began in very loud tones by the Officer
Commanding, it ended half an hour later with the M. O. being shown
out of the room by the colonel himself, who was heard to remark:
"A very fine bit of work. Tell him I want to see him when he has a
few minutes, and thank you, doctor, thank you!"
"Who does the old man want to see?" inquired Sally, who, with
Hopeton and Booth, happened to be passing.
"The chaplain," snapped the M. O., going on his way.
The M. O. turned sharply back, and coming very close to Sally, said
in a wrathful voice:
"A queer one? Yes, a queer one! But if some of you damned young
idiots that sniff at him had just half his guts, you'd be twice the
men you are.--Shut up, Hopeton! Listen to me--" and in words of
fiery rage that ran close to tears, he recounted his experience of
the last hour.
"By Jove! Doc, some guts, eh?" said Sally in a low tone, as he
moved away.