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THE FIFTH CHAPTER
1
It was odd, that journey from Holyhead to London, odd and silent; for all the way from Wales to Euston they pa.s.sed but one train. They drove through the long stretch of England, past wide and windy fields where the harvesters were cutting the corn, through the dark towns of the Potteries, by the collieries where the wheels still revolved as the cages were lowered and raised, and then, plunging into the outer areas of London, they drove swiftly up to the station. In the evening, they went to Hampstead to see Roger and Rachel, and found them reading newspapers.
"I don't seem able to do anything else," said Roger. "I buy every edition that comes out. I read the d.a.m.n things over and over, and then I read them again...."
Rachel nodded her head. "So do I," she said.
A girl came in, a friend of Rachel, who had been in Finland when the war began. She had hurried home by Berlin, where she had spent an hour or two, while waiting for a train, before England declared war on Germany....
"What were they like?" Gilbert asked.
"Wild with excitement. We went to a restaurant to get something to eat, and while we were there, the news came that Russia was at war with them.... My goodness! There was a Russian in the room, and they went for him!... I had my aunt with me, and I was afraid she'd get hurt, so we cleared out as quickly as we could, and when we got to the station, we had to fight to get into the train. My aunt fainted ... and they were beastly to us, oh, beastly! I tried to get things for her, but they wouldn't give us anything! They kept on telling us we'd be shot, and threatening us!... They were frightened, those big fat men were frightened. If you'd touched them suddenly, they'd have squealed ...
like panic-stricken rabbits!..."
They sat and talked and talked, and gloom settled on them. What was to be the end of this horrible thing which no one had desired, but no one was able to prevent.
"I believe they all lost their nerve at the last," Roger said, "and they just ... just let things rip. They call it a brain-storm in America.
They lost their heads ... and they let things rip. My G.o.d, what a thing to have happened!"
They sat in silence, full of foreboding, and then the girl who had come from Finland went home.
"It's all up with the Bar, I suppose!" said Roger, when he had let her out. "Whatever else people want to do, they won't want to go to law.
Having a youngster makes things awkward!..."
"If you should need any money, Roger," said Gilbert, "you might let me know!"
"And me, Roger!" said Henry.
"Thanks awfully!" Roger replied. "I won't forget. I've got some, of course, and Rachel has a little. I daresay we'll manage. It can't last long. A couple of months, perhaps!..."
"I can't see how it can last longer. It's too big, and ... oh, it can't last longer!"
"Kitchener says three years!..."
"He wants to be on the safe side, I suppose, but my G.o.d, three years of ... of that!..."
2
Rachel got up suddenly. "You haven't seen my baby yet," she said.
"So we haven't," Gilbert exclaimed. "Where is it?"
"She's upstairs asleep. You must come quietly!..."
"It's a girl, then?" said Henry.
Rachel nodded, and led the way upstairs to the bedroom where the baby lay in her cot.
"Isn't she a darling?" she said, bending over the child.
They did not answer, afraid, as men are in the presence of a sleeping child, that they might disturb her; and while they stood looking at the cot, Rachel bent closer to her baby, and lightly kissed her cheek.
They moved away on tiptoe.
"What do you call her?" Henry whispered to Roger, as they left the bedroom.
"Eleanor," he answered. "That was my mother's name. Jolly little kid, isn't she?"
Gilbert turned and went back to the bedroom. Rachel was still bending over the baby, and she looked up at him warningly. He went up to the cot and, leaning towards Rachel, whispered, "Do you mind if I kiss her, too, Rachel? I'm going to enlist to-morrow, and perhaps I won't get so good a chance as this!..."
She stood up quickly and put her arms round him. "Oh, Gilbert!" she said, and then she drew him down, so that he could kiss the baby easily.
3
Henry told Roger of Gilbert's intention, while Rachel and Gilbert were in the bedroom with the baby.
"Enlist?" said Roger.
Henry nodded his head.
"Well, of course!..." Roger began, and then he stopped. "I suppose so,"
he said, moving towards the tray which Rachel had brought into the room earlier in the evening. "Whisky?" he said.
"No, thanks, Roger!" Henry answered. "He's going down to-morrow!"
"He'd better wait a few days. There's been a h.e.l.l of a scrum already to join. Queues and queues of chaps, standing outside Scotland Yard all day. He'd better wait 'til the rush is over...."
"I think he'd rather like to be in the rush," Henry said.
Then Rachel came into the room, followed by Gilbert.
"Roger," she said, "Gilbert's going to enlist!..."
"So Quinny's just been telling me. Have a whisky, Gilbert?"
"No, thanks, old chap," said Gilbert, "but if you have a cigarette!..."
"I'll get them," Rachel exclaimed.
She brought the box of cigarettes to him, and while he was choosing one, she said to Roger, "I was so excited when he told me, that I got up and hugged him!"