Part 7 (2/2)
”Now, John,” said Lannes, ”Be careful! Your hardest task is before you, to land. But I've noticed that with you the harder the task the better you do it. Make for that wide green s.p.a.ce to the left of the stream and come down as slowly and gently as you can. Just slide down.”
John had a fleeting glimpse of thousands of faces looking upward, but he held a true course for the gra.s.sy area, and with a mult.i.tude looking on his nerve was never steadier. Amid great cheering the _Arrow_ came safely to rest at her appointed place. John and Lannes stepped forth, as an elderly man in a quiet uniform came forward to meet them.
Lannes, holding himself stiffly erect, drew a paper from his pocket and extended it to the general.
”A letter, sir, from the commander-in-chief of all our armies,” he said, saluting proudly.
As the general took the letter, Lannes' knees bent beneath him, and he sank down on his face.
CHAPTER III
IN THE FRENCH CAMP
John rushed forward and grasped his comrade. The sympathetic hands of others seized him also, and they raised him to his feet, while an officer gave him stimulant out of a flask, John meanwhile telling who his comrade was. Lannes' eyes opened and he flushed through the tan of his face.
”Pardon,” he said, ”it was a momentary weakness. I am ashamed of myself, but I shall not faint again.”
”You've been shot,” said the officer, looking at his sanguinary cap and face.
”So I have, but I ask your pardon for it. I won't let it occur again.”
Lannes was now standing stiffly erect, and his eyes shone with pride, as the general, a tall, elderly man, rapidly read the letter that Philip had delivered with his own hand. The officer who had spoken of his wound looked at him with approval.
”I've heard of you, Philip Lannes,” he said, ”you're the greatest flying man in the world.”
Lannes' eyes flashed now.
”You do me too much honor,” he said, ”but it was not I who brought our aeroplane here. It was my American friend, John Scott, now standing beside me, who beat off an attack upon us and who then, although he had had no practical experience in flying, guided the machine to this spot.
Born an American, he is one of us and France already owes him much.”
John raised his hand in protest, but he saw that Lannes was enjoying himself. His dramatic instinct was finding full expression. He had not only achieved a great triumph, but his best friend had an important share in it. There was honor for both, and his generous soul rejoiced.
Both John and Lannes stood at attention until the general had read the letter not once but twice and thrice. Then he took off his gla.s.ses, rubbed them thoughtfully a moment or two, replaced them and looked keenly at the two. He was a quiet man and he made no gestures, but John met his gaze serenely, read his eyes and saw the tremendous weight of responsibility back of them.
”You have done well, you two, perhaps far better than you know,” said the general, ”and now, since you are wounded, Philip Lannes, you must have attention. De Rougemont, take care of them.”
De Rougemont, a captain, was the man to whom they had been talking, and he gladly received the charge. He was a fine, well built officer, under thirty, and it was obvious that he already took a deep interest in the two young aviators. Noticing Lannes' anxious glances toward his precious machine, he promptly detailed two men to take care of the _Arrow_ and then he led John and Lannes toward the group of tents.
”First I'll get a surgeon for you,” he said to the Frenchman, ”and after that there's food for you both.”
”I hope you'll tell the surgeon to be careful how he takes off my cap,”
said Lannes, ”because it's fastened to my head now by my own dried blood.”
”Trust me for that,” said de Rougemont. ”I'll bring one of our best men.”
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