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"I don't know anything about war," suggested Peter.
"We don't want war stuff. I wouldn't give a d.a.m.n for the regular war correspondent stuff. You can humanize all that. You've got a light touch. Some of this is going to be funny. Most of the papers are overlooking that. And mark my words, by and by we're going to get in it."
"Maybe it won't be so funny then," said Peter.
Miles paid no attention. "Don't you see the big start you'll have if you're already over there when America comes in. You'll have the hang of the thing. You'll know a lot more about it than most of the generals.
You'll be on the spot to jump right into it."
Miles did not foresee that by the time America came into the war there wouldn't be much jump left in Peter. Blood and, more than that, a desperate boredom fell upon the light touch. Almost all of Peter's romantic enthusiasm was spent in his first two years on the fighting line of the English and the French. The American war correspondents used to tell with wonder and amus.e.m.e.nt of the afternoon upon which Peter started off to join the American army with the other correspondents.
They just filled the compartment, but a minute before the train left the Gare du Nord, a Y. M. C. A. man who had reserved his seat bustled in. He picked out Peter and slapped him on the back. "I'm very sorry, old scout," he said, "but you've got my seat."
Peter got up. "You can have the seat, you son of a----," he answered, "but don't you 'old scout' me."
Whatever romantic feeling might have been left in Peter about America and the war broke on the military bearing of John J. Pershing. Peter was with him the day he inspected the newly arrived First Division. Aides and war correspondents without number trailed at his heels. They followed him into a stable which had been transformed into a company kitchen. Just inside the door stood a youngster only a year or so older than Pat. He was peeling potatoes but when the General entered he dropped his work and stood at attention. Pershing went on to the far end of the stable and, as he pa.s.sed by, the boy who had never seen the commander-in-chief of all the American expeditionary forces, stole just a fleeting look over his shoulder. Pershing saw him and strode back, followed by all the war correspondents and his aides.
"What's the matter with you?" he shouted at the boy. "You don't know the first thing about being a soldier." Turning to a lieutenant he said, "Take this man out and make him stand at attention for two hours." Not even the dead men upon the wire ever moved Peter to the same violent revulsion against the war. Nor did he have a chance to write it out of himself. His cable dispatch which began, "They will never call him Papa Pershing," did not get by the censors.
Censorship was among the horrors of war which Peter never thought of as he stood in the office of Miles. He was a little hesitant about accepting the a.s.signment and the managing editor misunderstood him somewhat.
"You'll find your war stuff will sell in time just as well as sports,"
he said.
"I've got enough money, almost enough," Peter told him. "I don't know what to do about Pat, that's my son. He's here in school. He's fourteen.
There isn't a soul to look after him."
"Yes," said Miles, "that makes it hard. I tell you what I'll do. Will you let him come and live with me and Mrs. Miles? Next year he can go to boarding-school. This thing can't last forever. You'll be back in a little while."
"Well," said Peter, "that's nice of you but I don't know how it'll work out."
"What are you planning for the boy?"
"Why, I've always figured that as soon as he got old enough I'd try to get him on the paper. I want him to be a newspaper man."
Miles broke in so eagerly that he even neglected to do his three preliminary tilts. "That's fine. Don't you see how that all fits in? You go to France for us and I'll promise you a job for the boy on the Bulletin. You won't have to just think about it. The thing's done. He's nominated for the Bulletin right now. And you can start him off the minute you think he's old enough. Don't fret about that. I'll give him an ear full of shop. Is it a bargain?"
"All right," said Peter, "I'll go over for the paper for a little while."
The little while lasted almost five years.
CHAPTER II
It was a June night in the fourth year of the war when Peter saw Maria Algarez. He was walking up the Avenue de l'Opera when a woman cut across in front of him, turning into a side street. The street was crowded with soldiers and women, sauntering and peering, but this woman was walking fast. She almost b.u.mped into Peter. They were under a shaded light which fell on her face as she looked up. Peter looked at her without much curiosity. He did not want to invite friendliness. Hospitality had been hurled at him all the way down the avenue. He knew instantly that it was Maria. When she left him she had seemed a child. After seventeen years there was the same youthful quality in her face. The only change was, it was much more tired. And there was paint.
"h.e.l.lo," said Peter.
Maria smiled at him without obvious recognition, but made no answer.
"I'm Peter Neale."
Maria's smile grew broader. "I thought I have made a conquest," she said, "and it is a husband."
She held out her hand. Peter took it, but his eager surprise at seeing her was chilled by a sudden thought.
"You're not--," he said, but he could not phrase it. He tried again.
"You're not walking here alone?"
Maria's smile became a laugh. "And what then?" she asked.
"Good G.o.d!" said Peter in horror. And then almost to himself, "And it might have been any other soldier on the avenue."
"There, there," said Maria, checking her laughter and patting him on the arm. "It is not right for me to laugh at you. I should not forget to remember that you are the worrier. You think that maybe it is my living to walk in L'avenue de L'Opera and to look for the good-looking soldier.
It should please that it is you I have selected, Peter. But no, there, it is not so. Come with me. My car it is around the corner. Do not let us stand here where maybe you will be compromised. We will drive to my studio. There we can talk."
Peter followed Maria around the corner where a limousine was waiting and got in.
"How do you manage to have a car in war time?" he asked.
"It is because I am the important person. Yes, that is true. You have not heard of me, Peter? Really? That is so extraordinary. You do not know that I am the singer?"
"Well," said Peter, "of course I heard that phonograph record you sent for Pat but that was fifteen years ago. I never heard from you again.
Sometimes I went to the shops and asked if they had records of Maria Algarez but none of them had ever heard of you."
"Pooh," said Maria, "in America you do not know anything. But here in Paris do you never hear anybody speak of Maria Algarez?"
Peter shook his head. "I've been with the American army almost all the time. What would I know if I had heard? What do they say about you?"
"Maybe it is better that I should say it myself," answered Maria. "The others might not make it enough. When I send the phonograph record so long ago I say in my letter to you 'the voice is magnificent.' That is true. It is much more than that. Peter, sometimes it makes me sad that I cannot sit off a little way and hear the voice. The phonograph, it is not the same thing. That is the pity of it, I alone of everybody in Europe cannot truly hear Maria Algarez sing. It has been the great voice in the world. It is still the great voice."
"Oh," said Peter, "and that is what anybody would have told me if I asked."
Maria shook her head. "People, they are not so smart. You remember when I was a dancer they did not know about me all that you and I, we knew.
It is the same now. They do not know. A little, yes, but not all."
"But they realize it enough to give you a job, don't they?"
"The job, pooh! Yes, the job. First I sing in Comique. I sing in Russia and Spain and for the seven, eight years I am the leading soprano of the Paris opera house. Where is it that you hide yourself that all this you do not know?"
"In mud in Flanders, I guess."
"Yes, it is not your fault. The war, it is so loud in all the world there is no other noise. That is why I go away. I have the contract to sing in Argentine."
The limousine drew up in front of an apartment and Maria took Peter up to a studio on the top floor. They went into a big room with one great window of gla.s.s covering an entire wall. Through it Peter could see the defense of Paris aviators moving across the skyline like high riding fireflies.
"It's a nice place for air raids," suggested Peter.