Part 16 (1/2)

The next morning my maid announced _La Maison Bincteux_.

When I reached the hallway, I found the aforesaid _Maison_ to be a lad some fifteen years old, who might easily have pa.s.sed for twelve, so slight was his build. His long, pale, oval face, which seemed almost unhealthy, was relieved by a pair of snapping blue eyes.

”Did you bring a letter?”

”Oh, no, Madame, I am Monsieur Bincteux's son.”

”Then your father is coming later?”

”Oh, no, Madame, he can't, he is mechanician in the aviation corps at Verdun. My oldest brother is in the artillery, and the second one has just left for the front--so I quit school and am trying to help mother continue the business.”

”How old are you?”

”I belong to the Cla.s.s of 1923,” came the proud reply.

”Oh, I see. Come right in then, I'll show you what I need.”

With a most serious and important air he produced a note book, tapped on the part.i.tions, sounded the walls, took measures and jotted down a few lines.

”Very well, Madame, I've seen all that's necessary. I'll be back to-morrow morning with a workman.”

True to his word he appeared the next day, accompanied by a decrepit, coughing, asthmatic specimen of humanity, who was hardly worthy of the honorable t.i.tle his employer had seen fit to confer.

Our studio is extremely high, and when it was necessary to stretch out and raise our double extension ladder, it seemed as though disaster were imminent.

We offered our a.s.sistance, but from the glance he launched us, I felt quite certain that we had mortally offended the manager of the _Maison Bincteux_. He stiffened every muscle, gave a supreme effort, and up went the ladder. Truly his will power, his intelligence and his activity were remarkable.

After surveying the undertaking, he made his calculations, and then addressing his aid:

”We'll have to bore here,” he said. ”The wires will go through there, to the left and we'll put the switches to the right, just above; go ahead with the work and I'll be back in a couple of hours.”

The old man mumbled something disobliging.

”Do what I tell you and don't make any fuss about it. You're better off here than in the trenches, aren't you? We've heard enough from you, old slacker.”

The idea that any one dare insinuate that he ought to be at the front at his age, fairly suffocated the aid electrician, who broke into a fit of coughing.

”Madame, Madame,” he gasped. ”In the trenches? Why I'm seventy-three.

I've worked for his father and grandfather before him--but I've never seen his like! Why only this very morning he was grumbling because I didn't ride a bicycle so we could get to places faster!”

At noon the _Maison Bincteux_ reappeared, accompanied by the General Agent of the Electric Company. He discussed matters in detail with this awe inspiring person--objected, retaliated, and finally terminated his affairs, leaving us a few moments later, having accomplished the best and most rapid job of its kind I have ever seen.

With the Cla.s.s of 1919 now behind the lines, by the time this volume goes to press, there is little doubt but that the cla.s.s of 1920 shall have been called to the colours. All these lads are the little fellows we used to know in short trousers; the rascals who not so many summers since climbed to the house-tops, swung from trees, fell into the river, dropped torpedoes to frighten the horses or who when punished and locked in their rooms, would jump out the window and escape.

Then, there were those others, ”the good boys,” whose collars and socks were always immaculate, romantic little natures that would kiss your hand with so much ceremony and politeness, blus.h.i.+ng if one addressed them affectionately, spending whole days at a time lost in fantastic reveries.

To us they hardly seem men. And yet they are already soldiers, prepared to make the supreme sacrifice, well knowing from father, brothers or friends who have gone before, all the grandeur and abnegation through which their souls must pa.s.s to attain but an uncertain end.