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"She's there now. She runs a sort of hostel for youngsters on short leave. She's supposed to charge a small fee, but doesn't. And there's drinks galore for all comers. She's extraordinarily popular, of course, but I--er--well, one hates saying it. Still, you made me sit up and take notice when you mentioned the Intelligence Department. Mrs. Saumarez has a wonderful acquaintance with the British front. She tells you things--don't you know--and one is led on to talk--sort of reciprocity, eh?"
Martin drew a deep breath. He almost dreaded putting the inevitable question.
"Is her daughter with her--a girl of twenty-one, named Angle?"
"No. Never heard Mrs. Saumarez so much as mention her."
"Thanks. We've done a good night's work, I fancy. And--this for yourself only--there may be a sc.r.a.p to-morrow afternoon."
"Fine! I want to stretch my legs. Been in this bally hole nine days.
Well, here's your corporal. Good-night, sir."
"Good-night!"
And Martin trudged through the mud with Sergeant Mason behind von Struben and the escort.
CHAPTER XXI
NEARING THE END
Sixty hours elapsed before Martin was able to unwrap the puttees from off his stiff legs and cut the laces of boots so caked with mud that he was too weary to untie them. In that time, as the official report put it, "enemy trenches extending from Rue du Bois to Houplines, over a front of nearly three miles, were occupied to an average depth of one thousand yards, and our troops are now consolidating the new territory."
A bald announcement, indeed! Martin was one of the few who knew what it really meant. He had helped to organize the victory; he could sum up its costs. But this record is not a history of the war, nor even of one young soldier's share in it. Martin himself has developed a literary style noteworthy for its simple directness. Some day, if he survives, he may tell his own story.
When the last of twelve hundred prisoners had been mustered in the Grande Place of Armentires, when the attacking battalions had been relieved and the reserve artillery was sh.e.l.ling Fritz's hastily formed gun positions, when the last ambulance wagon of the "special" division had sped over the _pav_ to the base hospital at Bailleul, Martin thought he was free to go to bed.
As a matter of fact, he was not. Utterly spent, he had thrown himself on a cot and had slept the sleep of complete exhaustion for half an hour, when a brigade major discovered that "Captain Grant" was at liberty, and detailed him for an immediate inquiry. The facts were set forth on Army Form 122: "On the night of the 10th inst. a barrel of rum, delivered at Brigade Dump No. 35, was stolen or mislaid. It was last seen in trench 77. For investigation and report to D.A.Q.M.G. 50th Div." That barrel of rum will never be seen again, though it was destined to roll through reams of variously numbered army forms during many a week.
But it did not disturb Martin's slumbers. A brigadier general happened to hear his name given to an orderly.
"Who's that?" he inquired sharply. "Grant, did you say?"
"Yes, sir," answered the brigade major.
"Don't be such a Heaven-condemned idiot!" said the general, or, rather, he used words to that effect. "Grant was all through that push. Find some other fellow."
Brigade majors are necessarily inhuman. It is nothing to them what a man may have done--they think only of the next job. They are steeled alike to pity and reproach. This one was no exception among the tribe. He merely thumbed a list and said to the orderly:
"Give that chit to Mr. Fortescue."
So a subaltern began the chase. He smelt the rum through a whole company of Gordons, but the barrel lies hid a fathom deep in the mud of Flanders.
That same afternoon Martin woke up, refreshed in mind and body. He secured a hot bath, "dolled up" in clean clothes, and strolled out to buy some socks from "Madame," the famous Frenchwoman who has kept her shop open in Armentires throughout three years of sh.e.l.l fire.
A Yorkshire battalion was "standing at ease" in the street while their officers and color sergeants engaged in a wrangle about billets. The regiment had taken part in the "push" and bore the outward and visible signs of that inward grace which had carried them beyond the third line German trench. A lance corporal was playing "Tipperary" on a mouth-organ.
Someone shouted: "Give us 'Home Fires,' Jim"--and "Jim" ran a preliminary flourish before Martin recognized the musician.
"Why, if it isn't Jim Bates!" he cried, advancing with outstretched hand.
The lance corporal drew himself up and saluted. His brown skin reddened as he shook hands, for it is not every day that a staff captain greets one of the rank and file in such democratic fashion.
"I'm main glad te see you, sir," he said. "I read of your promotion in t' _Messenger_, an' we boys of t' owd spot were real pleased. We were, an' all."
"You're keeping fit, I see," and Martin's eye fell to a _pickelhaube_ tied to the sling of Bates's rifle.
"Pretty well, sir," grinned Bates. "I nearly had a relapse yesterday when that mine went up. Did ye hear of it?"
"If you mean the one they touched off at L'Epinette Farm, I saw it,"
said Martin. "I was at the crossroads at the moment."
"Well, fancy that, sir! I couldn't ha' bin twenty yards from you."
"Queer things happen in war. Do you remember Mrs. Saumarez's German chauffeur, a man named Fritz Bauer?"
"Quite well, sir."
"We caught him in 'No Man's Land' three nights ago. He is a major now."
Jim was so astonished that his mouth opened, just as it would have done ten years earlier.
"By gum!" he cried. "That takes it! An' it's hardly a month since I saw Miss Angle in Amiens."
Martin's pulse quickened. The mouth-organ in Bates's hand brought him back at a bound to the night when he had forbidden Jim to play for Angle's dancing. And with that memory came another thought. Mrs.
Saumarez in Paris--her daughter in Amiens--why this devotion to such nerve centers of the war?
"Are you sure?" he said. "You would hardly recognize her. She is ten years older--a woman, not a child."
Bates laughed. He dropped his voice.
"She was always a bit owd-fashioned, sir. I'm not mistakken. It kem about this way. It was her, right enough. Our colonel's shover fell sick, so I took on the car for a week. One day I was waitin' outside the Hotel dew Nord at Amiens when a French Red Cross auto drove up, an' out stepped Miss Angle. I twigged her at once. I'd know them eyes of hers anywheres. She hopped into the hotel, walkin' like a ballet-dancer.
Hooiver, I goes up to her shover an' sez: 'Pardonnay moy, but ain't that Mees Angle Saumarez?' He talked a lot--these Frenchies always do--but I med out he didn't understand. So I parlay-vooed some more, and soon I got the hang of things. She's married now, an' I have her new name an'
address in my kit-bag. But I remember 'em, all right. I can't p.r.o.nounce 'em, but I can spell 'em."
And Lance Corporal Bates spelled: "La Comtesse Barthlemi de Saint-Ivoy, 2 bis, Impa.s.se Fautet, Rue Blanche, Paris."
"It looks funny," went on Jim anxiously, "but it's just as her shover wrote it."
Martin affected to treat this information lightly.
"I'm exceedingly glad I came across you," he said. "How would you like to be a sergeant, Jim?"
Bates grinned widely.
"It's a lot more work, but it does mean better grub, sir," he confided.