It was not until dawn that the full extent of the disaster was
revealed. All night, by the flames from the sheds in the yard,
which were of wood and still burning, rescue parties had worked
frantically. Two of the long buildings, nearest to the fuse
department, had collapsed entirely. Above the piles of fallen
masonry might be seen, here and there, the black mass of some
machine or lathe, and it was there the search parties were
laboring. Luckily the fuse department had not gone double turn,
and the night shift in the machine-shop was not a full one.
The fuse department was a roaring furnace, and repeated calls
had brought in most of the fire companies of the city. Running
back and forth in the light of the flames were the firemen and such
volunteer rescuers as had been allowed through the police cordon.
Outside that line of ropes and men were gathered a tragic crowd,
begging, imploring to be allowed through to search for some beloved
body. Now and then a fresh explosion made the mob recoil, only to
press close again, importuning, tragic, hopeless.
The casualty list ran high. All night long ambulances stood in a
row along the street, backed up to the curb and waiting, and ever
so often a silent group, in broken step, carried out some quiet
covered thing that would never move again.
With the dawn Graham found his father. He had thrown off his coat
and in his shirt-sleeves was, with other rescuers, digging in the
ruins. Graham himself had been working. He was nauseated, weary,
and unutterably wretched, for he had seen the night superintendent
and had heard of his father's message.
"That was what he said. I was to find him and hold him until he
got here. But I couldn't find him. He may have got out. There's
no way of telling now."
Waves of fresh nausea swept over Graham. He sat down on a pile of
bricks and wiped his forehead, clammy with sweat.
"I hope to God he was burned alive," muttered the other man,
surveying the scene. His eyes were reddened with smoke from the
fire, his clothing torn.
"I was knocked down myself," he said. "I was out in the yard
looking for Klein, and I guess I lay there quite a while. If I
hadn't gone out?" He shrugged his shoulders.
"Not a lot. Twenty, perhaps. If I had my way I'd take every
German in the country and boil 'em in oil. I didn't want Klein
back, but he was a good workman. Well, he's done a good job now."
It was after that that Graham saw his father, a strange, wild-eyed
Clayton who drove his pick with a sort of mad strength, and at the
same time gave orders in an unfamiliar voice. Graham, himself a
disordered figure, watched him for a moment. He was divided between
fear and resolution. Some place in that debacle there lay his own
responsibility. He was still bewildered, but the fact that Anna's
father had done the thing was ominous.
The urge to confession was stronger than his fears. Somehow, during
the night, he had become a man. But now he only felt, that somehow,
during the night, he had become a murderer.
"I've had some coffee made at a house down the street. Won't you
come and have it?"
Clayton straightened. He was very tired, and the yard was full of
volunteers now, each provided at the gate with a pick or shovel. A
look at the boy's face decided him.
"I'll come," he said, and turned his pick over to a man beside him.
He joined Graham, and for a moment he looked into the boy's eyes.
Then he put a hand on his shoulder, and together they walked out,
past the line of ambulances, into a street where the scattered
houses showed not a single unshattered window, and the pavements
were littered with glass.
His father's touch comforted the boy, but it made even harder the
thing he had to do. For he could not go through life with this
thing on his soul. There had been a moment, after he learned of
Herman's implication, when he felt the best thing would be to kill
himself, but he had put that aside. It was too easy. If Herman
Klein had done this thing because of Anna and himself, then he was
a murderer. If he had done it because he was a German, then he
- Graham - had no right to die. He would live to make as many
Germans as possible pay for this night's work.
"I've got something to tell you, father," he said, as they paused
before the house where the coffee was ready. Clayton nodded, and
together they went inside. Even this house was partially destroyed.
A piece of masonry had gone through the kitchen, and standing on
fallen bricks and plaster, a cheerful old woman was cooking over a
stove which had somehow escaped destruction.
"It's bad," she said to Graham, as she poured the coffee into cups,
"but it might have been worse, Mr. Spencer. We're all alive. And
I guess I'll understand what my boy's writing home about now.
They've sure brought the war here this night."
Graham carried the coffee into the little parlor, where Clayton sat
dropped on a low chair, his hands between his knees. He was a
strange, disheveled figure, gray of face and weary, and the hand
he held out for the cup was blistered and blackened. Graham did not
touch his coffee. He put it on the mantel, and stood waiting while
Clayton finished his.
"Probably. I had a warning last night, but it was too late. I
should have known, of course, but somehow I didn't. He'd been with
us a long time. I'd have sworn he was loyal."
For the first time in his life Graham saw his father weaken, the
pitiful, ashamed weakness of a strong man. His voice broke, his
face twitched. The boy drew himself up; they couldn't both go to
pieces. He could not know that Clayton had worked all that night
in that hell with the conviction that in some way his own son was
responsible; that he knew already what Graham was about to tell him.
"If Herman Klein did it, father, it was because he was the tool of
a gang. And the reason he was a tool was because he thought I was
- living with Anna. I wasn't. I don't know why I wasn't. There
was every chance. I suppose I meant to some time. Anyhow, he
thought I was."
If he had expected any outbreak from Clayton, he met none. Clayton
sat looking ahead, and listening. Inside of the broken windows the
curtains were stirring in the fresh breeze of early morning, and in
the kitchen the old woman was piling the fallen bricks noisily.
"I had been flirting with her a little - it wasn't much more than
that, and I gave her a watch at Christmas. He found it out, and he
beat her. Awfully. She ran away and sent for me, and I met her.
She had to hide for days. Her face was all bruised. Then she got
sick from it. She was sick for weeks."
"I think not, or he'd have gone to get her. But Rudolph Klein knew
something. I took her out to dinner, to a roadhouse, a few days ago,
and she said she saw him there. I didn't. All that time, weeks,
I'd never - I'd never gone to her room. That night I did. I don't
know why. I - "
"Well, I went, but I didn't stay. I couldn't. I guess she thought
I was crazy. I went away, that's all. And the next day I felt that
she might be feeling as though I'd turned her down or something.
And I felt responsible. Maybe you won't understand. I don't quite
myself. Anyhow, I went back, to let her know I wasn't quite a brute,
even if - But she was gone. I'm not trying to excuse myself. It's
a rotten story, for I was engaged to Marion then."
Suddenly he sat down beside Clayton and buried his face in his hands.
For some reason or other Clayton found himself back in the hospital,
that night when Joey lay still and quiet, and Graham was sobbing like
a child, prostrate on the white covering of the bed. With the
incredible rapidity of thought in a mental crisis, he saw the last
months, the boy's desire to go to France thwarted, his attempt to
interest himself in the business, the tool Marion Hayden had made of
him, Anna's doglike devotion, all leading inevitably to catastrophe.
And through it all he saw Natalie, holding Graham back from war,
providing him with extra money, excusing him, using his confidences
for her own ends, insidiously sapping the boy's confidence in his
father and himself.
"We'll have to stand up to this together, Graham."
"If Herman Klein had not done it, there were others who would,
probably. It looks as though you had provided them with a tool,
but I suppose we were vulnerable in a dozen ways."
He rose, and they stood, eyes level, father and son, in the early
morning sunlight. And suddenly Graham's arms were around his
shoulders, and something tight around Clayton's heart relaxed.
Once again, and now for good, he had found his boy, the little boy
who had not so long ago stood on a chair for this very embrace.
Only now the boy was a man.
"I'm going to France, father," he said. "I'm going to pay them back
for this. And out of every two shots I fire one will be for you."
Perhaps he had found his boy only to lose him, but that would have
to be as God willed.
At ten o'clock he went up to the house, to change his wet and
draggled clothing. The ruins were being guarded by soldiers, and
the work of rescue was still going on, more slowly now, since there
was little or no hope of finding any still living thing in that
flame-swept wreckage. He found Natalie in bed, with Madeleine in
attendance, and he learned that her physician had just gone.
He felt that he could not talk to her just then. She had a morbid
interest in horrors, and with the sights of that night fresh in
his mind he could not discuss them. He stopped, however, in her
doorway.
"I'm glad you are resting," he said, "Better stay in bed to-day.
It's been a shock."
"I'll tell you about that later. I haven't given it much thought
yet. I don't know just how we stand."
"I shall never let Graham go back to it again. I warn you. I've
been lying here for hours, thinking that it might have happened as
easily as not while he was there."
"I hope so. It is almost noon. Oh, by the way," she called, as
he moved off, "there is a message for you. A woman named Gould,
from the Central Hospital. She wants to see you at once. They
ave kept the telephone ringing all the morning."
Clare Gould! That was odd. He had seen her taken out, a bruised
and moaning creature, her masses of fair hair over her shoulders,
her eyes shut. The surgeons had said she was not badly hurt. She
might be worse than they thought. The mention of her name brought
Audrey before him. He hoped, wherever she was, she would know that
he was all right.
As soon as he had changed he called the hospital. The message came
back promptly and clearly.
"We have a woman named Gould here. She is not badly hurt, but she
is hysterical. She wants to see you, but if you can't come at once
I am to give you a message. Wait a moment. She has written it,
but it's hardly legible."
"Perhaps it is. It's just a scrawl. But the first name is clear
enough - Audrey."
Afterward he did not remember hanging up the receiver, or getting
out of the house. He seemed to come to himself somewhat at the
hospital, and at the door to Clare's ward his brain suddenly cleared.
He did not need Clare's story. It seemed that he knew it all, had
known it long ages before. Her very words sounded like infinite
repetitions of something he had heard, over and over.
"She was right beside me, and I was showing her about the lathe.
They'd told me I could teach her. She was picking it up fast, too.
And she liked it. She liked it - "
The fact that Audrey had liked it broke down his scanty reserve of
restraint. Clayton found himself looking down at her from a great
distance. She was very remote. Clare pulled herself together.
"When the first explosion came it didn't touch us. But I guess she
knew it meant more. She said something about the telephone and
getting help and there'd be more, and she started to run. I just
stood there, watching her run, and waiting. And then the second
one came, and - "
Suddenly Clare seemed to disappear altogether. He felt something
catch his arm, and the nurse's voice, very calm and quiet:
"You might look for the person here," she suggested. "We have had
several brought in."
He was still dazed, but he followed her docilely. Audrey was not
there. He seemed to have known that, too. That there would be a
long search, and hours of agony, and at the end - the one thing he
did not know was what was to be at the end.
All that afternoon he searched, going from hospital to hospital.
And at each one, as he stopped, that curious feeling of inner
knowledge told him she was not there. But the same instinct told
him she was not dead. He would have known it if she was dead.
There was no reasoning in it. He could not reason. But he knew,
somehow.
Then, late in the afternoon, he found her. He knew that he had
found her. It was as though, at the entrance of the hospital, some
sixth sense had told him this was right at last. He was quite
steady, all at once. She was here, waiting for him to come. And
now he had come, and it would be all right.
Yet, for a time, it seemed all wrong. She was not conscious, had
not roused since she was brought it. There were white screens
around her bed, and behind them she lay alone. They had braided
her hair in two long dark braids, and there was a bandage on one
of her arms. She looked very young and very tired, but quite
peaceful.
His arrival bad caused a small stir of excitement, his own
prominence, the disaster with which the country was ringing. But
for a few minutes, before the doctors arrived, he was alone with
her behind the screen. It was like being alone with his dead.
Bent over her, his face pressed to one of her quiet hands, he
whispered to her all the little tendernesses, the aching want of
her, that so long he had buried in his heart. Things be could not
have told her, waking, he told her then. It seemed, too, that she
must rouse to them, that she must feel him there beside her,
calling her back. But she did not move.
It was then, for the first time, that he wondered what he would do
if she should die.
The doctors, coming behind the screen, found him sitting erect and
still, staring ahead of him, with a strange expression on his face.
He had just decided that he could not, under any circumstances,
live if she died.
It was rather a good thing for Clayton's sanity that they gave him
hope. He was completely unnerved, tired and desperate. Indeed,
when they came in he had been picturing Audrey and himself,
wandering hand in band, very quietly and contentedly, in some
strange world which was his rather hazy idea of the Beyond. It
seemed to him quite sane and extraordinarily happy.
The effort of meeting the staff roused him, and, with hope came a
return to normality. There was much to be done, special nurses,
a private room, and - rather reluctantly - friends and relatives
to be notified. Only for a few minutes, out of all of life, had
she been his. He must give her up now. Life had become one long
renunciation.
He did not go home at all that night. He divided his time between
the plant and the hospital, going back and forward. Each time he
found the report good. She was still strong; no internal injuries
had manifested themselves, and the concussion would probably wear
off before long. He wanted to be there when she first opened her
eyes. He was afraid she might be frightened, and there would be
a bad minute when she remembered - if she did remember.
At midnight, going into the room, he found Mrs. Haverford beside
Audrey's bed, knitting placidly. She seemed to accept his being
there as perfectly natural, and she had no sick-room affectations.
She did not whisper, for one thing.
"The nurse thinks she is coming round, Clayton," she said. "I
waited, because I thought she ought to see a familiar face when
she does."
Mrs. Haverford was eminently good for him. Her cheerful
matter-of-factuess her competent sanity, restored his belief in a
world that had seemed only chaos and death. How much, he wondered
later, had Mrs. Haverford suspected? He had not been in any
condition to act a part. But whatever she suspected he knew was
locked in her kindly breast.
Audrey moved slightly, and he went over to her. When he glanced
up again Mrs. Haverford had gone out.
So it was that Audrey came back to him, and to him alone. She asked
no questions. She only lay quite still on her white pillows, and
looked at him. Even when he knelt beside her and drew her toward
him, she said nothing, but she lifted her uninjured hand and softly
caressed his bent head. Clayton never knew whether Mrs. Haverford
had come back and seen that or not. He did not care, for that
matter. It seemed to him just then that all the world must know
what was so vitally important, so transcendently wonderful.
Not until Audrey's eyes closed again, and he saw that she was
sleeping, did he loosen his arms from around her.
When at last he went out to the stiffly furnished hospital parlor,
he found Mrs. Haverford sitting there alone, still knitting. But
he rather thought she had been crying. There was an undeniably
moist handkerchief on her knee.
"She roused a little while ago," he said, trying to speak quietly,
and as though Audrey's rousing were not the wonder that it was.
"She seemed very comfortable. And now she's sleeping."
"The dear child!" said Mrs. Haverford. "If she had died, after
everything - " Her plump face quivered. "Things have never been
very happy for her, Clayton."
"I'm afraid not." He went to a window and stood looking out. The
city was not quiet, but its mighty roar of the day was lowered to a
monotonous, drowsy humming. From the east, reflected against
low-hanging clouds, was the dull red of his own steel mills, looking
like the reflection of a vast conflagration.
"Some times," Mrs. Haverford was saying, "I wonder about things.
People go along missing the best things in life, and - I suppose
there is a reason for it, but some times I wonder if He ever meant
us to go on, crucifying our own souls."
Afterward, Clayton found that that bit of conversation with Mrs.
Haverford took on the unreality of the rest of that twenty-four
hours. But one part of it stood out real and hopelessly true.
There wasn't any answer!