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Prostrate bodies in olive drab hid the patch of tender green gra.s.s by the roadside. The company was resting. Chrisfield sat on a stump morosely whittling at a stick with a pocket knife. Judkins was stretched out beside him.
"What the h.e.l.l do they make us do this d.a.m.n hikin' for, Corp?"
"Guess they're askeered we'll forgit how to walk."
"Well, ain't it better than loafin' around yer billets all day, thinkin'
an' cursin' an' wis.h.i.+n' ye was home?" spoke up the man who sat the other side, pounding down the tobacco in his pipe with a thick forefinger.
"It makes me sick, trampin' round this way in ranks all day with the G.o.ddam frawgs starin' at us an'..."
"They're laughin' at us, I bet," broke in another voice.
"We'll be movin' soon to the Army o' Occupation," said Chrisfield cheerfully. "In Germany it'll be a reglar picnic."
"An' d'you know what that means?" burst out Judkins, sitting bolt upright. "D'you know how long the troops is goin' to stay in Germany?
Fifteen years."
"Gawd, they couldn't keep us there that long, man."
"They can do anythin' they G.o.ddam please with us. We're the guys as is gettin' the raw end of this deal. It ain't the same with an' edicated guy like Andrews or Sergeant Coffin or them. They can suck around after 'Y' men, an' officers an' get on the inside track, an' all we can do is stand up an' salute an' say 'Yes, lootenant' an' 'No, lootenant' an' let 'em ride us all they G.o.ddam please. Ain't that gospel truth, corporal?"
"Ah guess you're right, Judkie; we gits the raw end of the stick."
"That d.a.m.n yellar dawg Andrews goes to Paris an' gets schoolin' free an'
all that."
"h.e.l.l, Andy waren't yellar, Judkins."
"Well, why did he go bellyachin' around all the time like he knew more'n the lootenant did?"
"Ah reckon he did," said Chrisfield.
"Anyway, you can't say that those guys who went to Paris did a G.o.ddam thing more'n any the rest of us did.... Gawd, I ain't even had a leave yet."
"Well, it ain't no use crabbin'."
"No, onct we git home an' folks know the way we've been treated, there'll be a great ole investigation. I can tell you that," said one of the new men.
"It makes you mad, though, to have something like that put over on ye.... Think of them guys in Paris, havin' a h.e.l.l of a time with wine an' women, an' we stay out here an' clean our guns an' drill.... G.o.d, I'd like to get even with some of them guys."
The whistle blew. The patch of gra.s.s became unbroken green again as the men lined up along the side of the road.
"Fall in!" called the Sergeant.
"Atten-shun!"
"Right dress!"
"Front! G.o.d, you guys haven't got no snap in yer.... Stick yer belly in, you. You know better than to stand like that."
"Squads, right! March! Hep, hep, hep!"
The Company tramped off along the muddy road. Their steps were all the same length. Their arms swung in the same rhythm. Their faces were cowed into the same expression, their thoughts were the same. The tramp, tramp of their steps died away along the road.
Birds were singing among the budding trees. The young gra.s.s by the roadside kept the marks of the soldiers' bodies.
PART FIVE: THE WORLD OUTSIDE
Andrews, and six other men from his division, sat at a table outside the cafe opposite the Gare de l'Est. He leaned back in his chair with a cup of coffee lifted, looking across it at the stone houses with many balconies. Steam, scented of milk and coffee, rose from the cup as he sipped from it. His ears were full of a rumble of traffic and a clacking of heels as people walked briskly by along the damp pavements. For a while he did not hear what the men he was sitting with were saying. They talked and laughed, but he looked beyond their khaki uniforms and their boat-shaped caps unconsciously. He was taken up with the smell of the coffee and of the mist. A little rusty suns.h.i.+ne shone on the table of the cafe and on the thin varnish of wet mud that covered the asphalt pavement. Looking down the Avenue, away from the station, the houses, dark grey tending to greenish in the shadow and to violet in the sun, faded into a soft haze of distance. Dull gilt lettering glittered along black balconies. In the foreground were men and women walking briskly, their cheeks whipped a little into color by the rawness of the morning.
The sky was a faintly roseate grey.
Walters was speaking:
"The first thing I want to see is the Eiffel Tower."
"Why d'you want to see that?" said the small sergeant with a black mustache and rings round his eyes like a monkey.
"Why, man, don't you know that everything begins from the Eiffel Tower? If it weren't for the Eiffel Tower, there wouldn't be any sky-sc.r.a.pers...."
"How about the Flatiron Building and Brooklyn Bridge? They were built before the Eiffel Tower, weren't they?" interrupted the man from New York.
"The Eiffel Tower's the first piece of complete girder construction in the whole world," reiterated Walters dogmatically.
"First thing I'm going to do's go to the Folies Berd-jairs; me for the w.w.'s."
"Better lay off the wild women, Bill," said Walters.
"I ain't goin' to look at a woman," said the sergeant with the black mustache. "I guess I seen enough women in my time, anyway.... The war's over, anyway."
"You just wait, kid, till you fasten your lamps on a real Parizianne,"
said a burly, unshaven man with a corporal's stripes on his arm, roaring with laughter.
Andrews lost track of the talk again, staring dreamily through half-closed eyes down the long straight street, where greens and violets and browns merged into a bluish grey monochrome at a little distance.
He wanted to be alone, to wander at random through the city, to stare dreamily at people and things, to talk by chance to men and women, to sink his life into the misty sparkling life of the streets. The smell of the mist brought a memory to his mind. For a long while he groped for it, until suddenly he remembered his dinner with Henslowe and the faces of the boy and girl he had talked to on the b.u.t.te. He must find Henslowe at once. A second's fierce resentment went through him against all these people about him. Christ! He must get away from them all; his freedom had been hard enough won; he must enjoy it to the uttermost.
"Say, I'm going to stick to you, Andy." Walters's voice broke into his reverie. "I'm going to appoint you the corps of interpreters."
Andrews laughed.
"D'you know the way to the School Headquarters?"
"The R. T. O. said take the subway."