Part 36 (1/2)

”Well, we'll see what a court-martial has to say to that.”

”Ah doan give a hoot in h.e.l.l what ye do.”

Sergeant Anderson turned on his heel and went out, twisting the corner b.u.t.ton of his tunic in his big fingers. Already the sound of tramping feet was heard and the shouted order, ”Dis-missed.” Then men crowded into the shack, laughing and talking. Chrisfield sat still on the end of the bunk, looking at the bright oblong of the door. Outside he saw Anderson talking to Sergeant Higgins. They shook hands, and Anderson disappeared. Chrisfield heard Sergeant Higgins call after him.

”I guess the next time I see you I'll have to put my heels together an'

salute.”

Andersen's booming laugh faded as he walked away.

Sergeant Higgins came into the shack and walked straight up to Chrisfield, saying in a hard official voice:

”You're under arrest.... Small, guard this man; get your gun and cartridge belt. I'll relieve you so you can get mess.”

He went out. Everyone's eyes were turned curiously on Chrisfield. Small, a red-faced man with a long nose that hung down over his upper lip, shuffled sheepishly over to his place beside Chrisfield's cot and let the b.u.t.t of his rifle come down with a bang on the floor. Somebody laughed. Andrews walked up to them, a look of trouble in his blue eyes and in the lines of his lean tanned cheeks.

”What's the matter, Chris?” he asked in a low voice.

”Tol' that b.a.s.t.a.r.d Ah didn't give a hoot in h.e.l.l what he did,” said Chrisfield in a broken voice.

”Say, Andy, I don't think I ought ter let anybody talk to him,” said Small in an apologetic tone. ”I don't see why Sarge always gives me all his dirty work.”

Andrews walked off without replying.

”Never mind, Chris; they won't do nothin' to ye,” said Jenkins, grinning at him good-naturedly from the door.

”Ah doan give a hoot in h.e.l.l what they do,” said Chrisfield again.

He lay back in his bunk and looked at the ceiling. The barracks was full of a bustle of cleaning up. Judkins was sweeping the floor with a broom made of dry sticks. Another man was knocking down the swallows' nests with a bayonet. The mud nests crumbled and fell on the floor and the bunks, filling the air with a flutter of feathers and a smell of birdlime. The little naked bodies, with their orange bills too big for them, gave a soft plump when they hit the boards of the floor, where they lay giving faint gasping squeaks. Meanwhile, with shrill little cries, the big swallows flew back and forth in the shanty, now and then striking the low roof.

”Say, pick 'em up, can't yer?” said Small. Judkins was sweeping the little gasping bodies out among the dust and dirt.

A stoutish man stooped and picked the little birds up one by one, puckering his lips into an expression of tenderness. He made his two hands into a nest-shaped hollow, out of which stretched the long necks and the gaping orange mouths. Andrews ran into him at the door.

”h.e.l.lo, Dad,” he said. ”What the h.e.l.l?”

”I just picked these up.”

”So they couldn't let the poor little devils stay there? G.o.d! it looks to me as if they went out of their way to give pain to everything, bird, beast or man.”

”War ain't no picnic,” said Judkins.

”Well, G.o.d d.a.m.n it, isn't that a reason for not going out of your way to raise more h.e.l.l with people's feelings than you have to?”

A face with peaked chin and nose on which was stretched a parchment-colored skin appeared in the door.

”h.e.l.lo, boys,” said the ”Y” man. ”I just thought I'd tell you I'm going to open the canteen tomorrow, in the last shack on the Beaucourt road.

There'll be chocolate, ciggies, soap, and everything.”