Part 30 (1/2)

One of Ours Willa Cather 43600K 2022-07-22

Wherever they are, I'm at home.”

”Were you at Vera Cruz?” Claude asked.

”I guess! We thought that was quite a little party at the time, but I suppose it will seem small potatoes when we get over there.

I'm figuring on seeing some first-rate sc.r.a.pping. How long have you been in the army?”

”Year ago last April. I've had hard luck about getting over. They kept me jumping about to train men.”

”Then yours is all to come. Are you a college graduate?”

”No. I went away to school, but I didn't finish.”

Usher frowned at the gilded path on the water where the sun lay half submerged, like a big, watchful eye, closing. ”I always wanted to go to college, but I never managed it. A man in Laramie offered to stake me to a course in the University there, but I was too restless. I guess I was ashamed of my handwriting.” He paused as if he had run against some old regret. A moment later he said suddenly, ”Can you parlez-vous?”

”No. I know a few words, but I can't put them together.”

”Same here. I expect to pick up some. I pinched quite a little Spanish down on the Border.”

By this time the sun had disappeared, and all over the west the yellow sky came down evenly, like a gold curtain, on the still sea that seemed to have solidified into a slab of dark blue stone,--not a twinkle on its immobile surface. Across its dusky smoothness were two long smears of pale green, like a robin's egg.

”Do you like the water?” Usher asked, in the tone of a polite host. ”When I first s.h.i.+pped on a cruiser I was crazy about it. I still am. But, you know, I like them old bald mountains back in Wyoming, too. There's waterfalls you can see twenty miles off from the plains; they look like white sheets or something, hanging up there on the cliffs. And down in the pine woods, in the cold streams, there's trout as long as my fore-arm.”

That evening Claude was on deck, almost alone; there was a concert down in the ward room. To the west heavy clouds had come up, moving so low that they flapped over the water like a black was.h.i.+ng hanging on the line.

The music sounded well from below. Four Swedish boys from the Scandinavian settlement at Lindsborg, Kansas, were singing ”Long, Long Ago.” Claude listened from a sheltered spot in the stern.

What were they, and what was he, doing here on the Atlantic? Two years ago he had seemed a fellow for whom life was over; driven into the ground like a post, or like those Chinese criminals who are planted upright in the earth, with only their heads left out for birds to peck at and insects to sting. All his comrades had been tucked away in prairie towns, with their little jobs and their little plans. Yet here they were, attended by unknown s.h.i.+ps called in from the four quarters of the earth. How had they come to be worth the watchfulness and devotion of so many men and machines, this extravagant consumption of fuel and energy? Taken one by one, they were ordinary fellows like himself. Yet here they were. And in this ma.s.sing and movement of men there was nothing mean or common; he was sure of that. It was, from first to last, unforeseen, almost incredible. Four years ago, when the French were holding the Marne, the wisest men in the world had not conceived of this as possible; they had reckoned with every fortuity but this. ”Out of these stones can my Father raise up seed unto Abraham.”

Downstairs the men began singing ”Annie Laurie.” Where were those summer evenings when he used to sit dumb by the windmill, wondering what to do with his life?

IV

The morning of the third day; Claude and the Virginian and the Marine were up very early, standing in the bow, watching the Anchises mount the fresh blowing hills of water, her prow, as it rose and fell, always a dull triangle against the glitter. Their escorts looked like dream s.h.i.+ps, soft and iridescent as sh.e.l.l in the pearl-coloured tints of the morning. Only the dark smudges of smoke told that they were mechanical realities with stokers and engines.

While the three stood there, a sergeant brought Claude word that two of his men would have to report at sick-call. Corporal Tannhauser had had such an attack of nose-bleed during the night that the sergeant thought he might die before they got it stopped. Tannhauser was up now, and in the breakfast line, but the sergeant was sure he ought not to be. This Fritz Tannhauser was the tallest man in the company, a German-American boy who, when asked his name, usually said that his name was Dennis and that he was of Irish descent. Even this morning he tried to joke, and pointing to his big red face told Claude he thought he had measles. ”Only they ain't German measles, Lieutenant,” he insisted.

Medical inspection took a long while that morning. There seemed to be an outbreak of sickness on board. When Claude brought his two men up to the Doctor, he told them to go below and get into bed. As they left he turned to Claude.

”Give them hot tea, and pile army blankets on them. Make them sweat if you can.” Claude remarked that the hold wasn't a very cheerful place for sick men.

”I know that, Lieutenant, but there are a number of sick men this morning, and the only other physician on board is the sickest of the lot. There's the s.h.i.+p's doctor, of course, but he's only responsible for the crew, and so far he doesn't seem interested.

I've got to overhaul the hospital and the medical stores this morning.”

”Is there an epidemic of some sort?”

”Well, I hope not. But I'll have plenty to do today, so I count on you to look after those two.” The doctor was a New Englander who had joined them at Hoboken. He was a brisk, trim man, with piercing eyes, clean-cut features, and grey hair just the colour of his pale face. Claude felt at once that he knew his business, and he went below to carry out instructions as well as he could.

When he came up from the hold, he saw the aviator--whose name, he had learned, was Victor Morse--smoking by the rail. This cabin-mate still piqued his curiosity.

”First time you've been up, isn't it?”