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The fifteenth of February, he had expected to be in Paris, free, or half-free; at least able to work. It was the first of March and here he was still helpless, still tied to the monotonous wheel of routine, incapable of any real effort, spending his spare time wandering like a lost dog up and down this muddy street, from the Y. M. C. A. hut at one end of the village to the church and the fountain in the middle, and to the Divisional Headquarters at the other end, then back again, looking listlessly into windows, staring in people's faces without seeing them. He had given up all hope of being sent to Paris. He had given up thinking about it or about anything; the same dull irritation of despair droned constantly in his head, grinding round and round like a broken phonograph record.
After looking a long while in the window of the cafe of the Braves Allies, he walked a little down the street and stood in the same position staring into the Repos du Poilu, where a large sign "American spoken" blocked up half the window. Two officers pa.s.sed. His hand snapped up to the salute automatically, like a mechanical signal. It was nearly dark. After a while he began to feel serious coolness in the wind, s.h.i.+vered and started to wander aimlessly down the street.
He recognised Walters coming towards him and was going to pa.s.s him without speaking when Walters b.u.mped into him, muttered in his ear "Come to Baboon's," and hurried off with his swift business-like stride.
Andrews, stood irresolutely for a while with his head bent, then went with unresilient steps up the alley, through the hole in the hedge and into Babette's kitchen. There was no fire. He stared morosely at the grey ashes until he heard Walters's voice beside him:
"I've got you all fixed up."
"What do you mean?"
"Mean... are you asleep, Andrews? They've cut a name off the school list, that's all. Now if you shake a leg and somebody doesn't get in ahead of you, you'll be in Paris before you know it."
"That's d.a.m.n decent of you to come and tell me."
"Here's your application," said Walters, drawing a paper out of his pocket. "Take it to the colonel; get him to O. K. it and then rush it up to the sergeant-major's office yourself. They are making out travel orders now. So long."
Walters had vanished. Andrews was alone again, staring at the grey ashes. Suddenly he jumped to his feet and hurried off towards headquarters. In the anteroom to the colonel's office he waited a long while, looking at his boots that were thickly coated with mud.
"Those boots will make a bad impression; those boots will make a bad impression," a voice was saying over and over again inside of him. A lieutenant was also waiting to see the colonel, a young man with pink cheeks and a milky-white forehead, who held his hat in one hand with a pair of khaki-colored kid gloves, and kept pa.s.sing a hand over his light well-brushed hair. Andrews felt dirty and ill-smelling in his badly-fitting uniform. The sight of this perfect young man in his whipcord breeches, with his manicured nails and immaculately polished puttees exasperated him. He would have liked to fight him, to prove that he was the better man, to outwit him, to make him forget his rank and his important air.... The lieutenant had gone in to see the colonel.
Andrews found himself reading a chart of some sort tacked up on the wall. There were names and dates and figures, but he could not make out what it was about.
"All right! Go ahead," whispered the orderly to him; and he was standing with his cap in his hand before the colonel who was looking at him severely, fingering the papers he had on the desk with a heavily veined hand.
Andrews saluted. The colonel made an impatient gesture.
"May I speak to you, Colonel, about the school scheme?"
"I suppose you've got permission from somebody to come to me."
"No, sir." Andrews's mind was struggling to find something to say.
"Well, you'd better go and get it."
"But, Colonel, there isn't time; the travel orders are being made out at this minute. I've heard that there's been a name crossed out on the list."
"Too late."
"But, Colonel, you don't know how important it is. I am a musician by trade; if I can't get into practice again before being demobilized, I shan't be able to get a job.... I have a mother and an old aunt dependent on me. My family has seen better days, you see, sir. It's only by being high up in my profession that I can earn enough to give them what they are accustomed to. And a man in your position in the world, Colonel, must know what even a few months of study in Paris mean to a pianist."
The colonel smiled.
"Let's see your application," he said.
Andrews handed it to him with a trembling hand. The colonel made a few marks on one corner with a pencil.
"Now if you can get that to the sergeant-major in time to have your name included in the orders, well and good."
Andrews saluted, and hurried out. A sudden feeling of nausea had come over him. He was hardly able to control a mad desire to tear the paper up. "The sons of b.i.t.c.hes... the sons of b.i.t.c.hes," he muttered to himself.
Still he ran all the way to the square, isolated building where the regimental office was.
He stopped panting in front of the desk that bore the little red card, Regimental Sergeant-Major. The regimental sergeant-major looked up at him enquiringly.
"Here's an application for School at the Sorbonne, Sergeant. Colonel Wilkins told me to run up to you with it, said he was very anxious to have it go in at once."
"Too late," said the regimental sergeant-major.
"But the colonel said it had to go in."
"Can't help it.... Too late," said the regimental sergeant-major.
Andrews felt the room and the men in their olive-drab s.h.i.+rt sleeves at the typewriters and the three nymphs creeping from behind the French War Loan poster whirl round his head. Suddenly he heard a voice behind him:
"Is the name Andrews, John, Sarge?"
"How the h.e.l.l should I know?" said the regimental sergeant-major.
"Because I've got it in the orders already.... I don't know how it got in." The voice was Walters's voice, staccatto and businesslike.
"Well, then, why d'you want to bother me about it? Give me that paper."
The regimental sergeant-major jerked the paper out of Andrews's hand and looked at it savagely.
"All right, you leave tomorrow. A copy of the orders'll go to your company in the morning," growled the regimental sergeant-major.
Andrews looked hard at Walters as he went out, but got no glance in return. When he stood in the air again, disgust surged up within him, bitterer than before. The fury of his humiliation made tears start in his eyes. He walked away from the village down the main road, splas.h.i.+ng carelessly through the puddles, slipping in the wet clay of the ditches.
Something within him, like the voice of a wounded man swearing, was whining in his head long strings of filthy names. After walking a long while he stopped suddenly with his fists clenched. It was completely dark, the sky was faintly marbled by a moon behind the clouds. On both sides of the road rose the tall grey skeletons of poplars. When the sound of his footsteps stopped, he heard a faint lisp of running water.
Standing still in the middle of the road, he felt his feelings gradually relax. He said aloud in a low voice several times: "You are a d.a.m.n fool, John Andrews," and started walking slowly and thoughtfully back to the village.
V
Andrews felt an arm put round his shoulder.
"Ah've been to h.e.l.l an' gone lookin' for you, Andy," said Chrisfield's voice in his ear, jerking him out of the reverie he walked in. He could feel in his face Chrisfield's breath, heavy with cognac.
"I'm going to Paris tomorrow, Chris," said Andrews.
"Ah know it, boy. Ah know it. That's why I was that right smart to talk to you.... You doan want to go to Paris.... Why doan ye come up to Germany with us? Tell me they live like kings up there."
"All right," said Andrews, "let's go to the back room at Babette's."
Chrisfield hung on his shoulder, walking unsteadily beside him. At the hole in the hedge Chrisfield stumbled and nearly pulled them both down.
They laughed, and still laughing staggered into the dark kitchen, where they found the red-faced woman with her baby sitting beside the fire with no other light than the flicker of the rare flames that shot up from a little ma.s.s of wood embers. The baby started crying shrilly when the two soldiers stamped in. The woman got up and, talking automatically to the baby all the while, went off to get a light and wine.
Andrews looked at Chrisfield's face by the firelight. His cheeks had lost the faint childish roundness they had had when Andrews had first talked to him, sweeping up cigarette b.u.t.ts off the walk in front of the barracks at the training camp.
"Ah tell you, boy, you ought to come with us to Germany... nauthin' but wh.o.r.es in Paris."
"The trouble is, Chris, that I don't want to live like a king, or a sergeant or a major-general.... I want to live like John Andrews."