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The letter was from Henslowe. Andrews read it with a smile of pleasure in the faint afternoon light, remembering Henslowe's constant drawling talk about distant places he had never been to, and the man who had eaten gla.s.s, and the day and a half in Paris.
"Andy," the letter began, "I've got the dope at last. Courses begin in Paris February fifteenth. Apply at once to your C. O. to study somethin'
at University of Paris. Any amount of lies will go. Apply all pull possible via sergeants, lieutenants and their mistresses and laundresses. Yours, Henslowe."
His heart thumping, Andrews ran after the sergeant, pa.s.sing, in his excitement, a lieutenant without saluting him.
"Look here," snarled the lieutenant.
Andrews saluted, and stood stiffly at attention.
"Why didn't you salute me?"
"I was in a hurry, sir, and didn't see you. I was going on very urgent company business, sir."
"Remember that just because the armistice is signed you needn't think you're out of the army; at ease."
Andrews saluted. The lieutenant saluted, turned swiftly on his heel and walked away.
Andrews caught up to the sergeant.
"Sergeant Coffin. Can I speak to you a minute?"
"I'm in a h.e.l.l of a hurry."
"Have you heard anything about this army students' corps to send men to universities here in France? Something the Y. M. C. A.'s getting up."
"Can't be for enlisted men. No I ain't heard a word about it. D'you want to go to school again?"
"If I get a chance. To finish my course."
"College man, are ye? So am I. Well, I'll let you know if I get any general order about it. Can't do anything without getting a general order about it. Looks to me like it's all bushwa."
"I guess you're right."
The street was grey dark. Stung by a sense of impotence, surging with despairing rebelliousness, Andrews hurried back towards the buildings where the company was quartered. He would be late for mess. The grey street was deserted. From a window here and there ruddy light streamed out to make a glowing oblong on the wall of a house opposite.
"G.o.ddam it, if ye don't believe me, you go ask the lootenant....
Look here, Toby, didn't our outfit see hotter work than any G.o.ddam engineers?"
Toby had just stepped into the cafe, a tall man with a brown bulldog face and a scar on his left cheek. He spoke rarely and solemnly with a Maine coast Yankee tw.a.n.g.
"I reckon so," was all he said. He sat down on the bench beside the other man who went on bitterly:
"I guess you would reckon so.... h.e.l.l, man, you ditch diggers ain't in it."
"Ditch diggers!" The engineer banged his fist down on the table. His lean pickled face was a furious red. "I guess we don't dig half so many ditches as the infantry does... an' when we've dug 'em we don't crawl into 'em an' stay there like G.o.ddam cottontailed jackrabbits."
"You guys don't git near enough to the front...."
"Like G.o.ddam cottontailed jackrabbits," shouted the pickle-faced engineer again, roaring with laughter. "Ain't that so?" He looked round the room for approval. The benches at the two long tables were filled with infantry men who looked at him angrily. Noticing suddenly that he had no support, he moderated his voice.
"The infantry's d.a.m.n necessary, I'll admit that; but where'd you fellers be without us guys to string the barbed wire for you?"
"There warn't no barbed wire strung in the Oregon forest where we was, boy. What d'ye want barbed wire when you're advancin' for?"
"Look here...I'll bet you a bottle of cognac my company had more losses than yourn did."
"Tek him up, Joe," said Toby, suddenly showing an interest in the conversation.
"All right, it's a go."
"We had fifteen killed and twenty wounded," announced the engineer triumphantly.
"How badly wounded?"
"What's that to you? Hand over the cognac?"
"Like h.e.l.l. We had fifteen killed and twenty wounded too, didn't we, Toby?"
"I reckon you're right," said Toby.
"Ain't I right?" asked the other man, addressing the company generally.
"Sure, G.o.ddam right," muttered voices.
"Well, I guess it's all off, then," said the engineer.
"No, it ain't," said Toby, "reckon up yer wounded. The feller who's got the worst wounded gets the cognac. Ain't that fair?"
"Sure."
"We've had seven fellers sent home already," said the engineer.
"We've had eight. Ain't we?"
"Sure," growled everybody in the room.
"How bad was they?"
"Two of 'em was blind," said Toby.
"h.e.l.l," said the engineer, jumping to his feet as if taking a trick at poker. "We had a guy who was sent home without arms nor legs, and three fellers got t.b. from bein' ga.s.sed."
John Andrews had been sitting in a corner of the room. He got up.
Something had made him think of the man he had known in the hospital who had said that was the life to make a feller feel fit. Getting up at three o'clock in the morning, you jumped out of bed just like a cat....
He remembered how the olive-drab trousers had dangled, empty from the man's chair.