<div><h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER IX</h2></div>
<p class='c006' >It was this having so much to do that not only saved
Dick, but it had saved Sabinsport, for Sabinsport
had gone into the war without enthusiasm. She had
accepted it fully as a thing she was obliged in honor to
carry through, but Dick felt more and more that neither
her heart was touched nor her spirit fired. He could
not get over the chill that her reception of the news that
war had been declared had given him—not a bell rang,
not a whistle blew, not a man stopped work. “Well,
we are in it,” they said as they met him on the street.
“It’s all right.”—“Nothing else to do.”—“I’m
for it.” That would be all, and the speaker would
walk away with bent head.</p>
<p class='c007' >How, Dick asked himself, a great wave of doubt
coming over him, could a town so unmoved, even if so
determined, ever carry out the prodigious piece of work
which the Government asked of it, at the time the declaration
was made? They were to put everything in—their sons,
their money, their industries, were to be conscripted.
They were to be asked to change all their
ways of living, and to do it at once. How could it be
that a town, seemingly so unstirred, would so completely
strip itself as Sabinsport was asked to do? Could this
determination, which he believed was in her, carry her
through the period of sacrifice and effort? Was she to
have none of the help of pride, the consciousness of a
great cause? How far would Sabinsport go?</p>
<p class='c007' >The first test came when the Government announced
that we were to have an army of two million men,
chosen on the principle of universal liability to service.
“Never,” declared the Rev. Mr. Pepper, “would
Sabinsport stand for that.” And there were not a few in
mills and mines, not a few representatives of various
peace parties, that gathered about him. They loudly
declared in the <i>Pro Bono Publico</i> column of the <i>Argus</i>
that we had been plunged into war against our will,
that it was still possible to negotiate, that the American
people wanted to negotiate, that the President was playing
a hypocrite’s part, that he was a puppet of Wall
Street, whose only interest was to protect foreign loans
and to carry on munition making. The Rev. Mr. Pepper,
encouraged by the swift gathering of pacifists
around him, engaged the Opera House and called for a
great mass meeting of protest. Sabinsport should
have a right to vote on our going into the war, if it had
been denied to the rest of the country.</p>
<p class='c007' >What would Sabinsport do? Dick asked himself
the question a little anxiously. Would she foregather
at the Opera House?</p>
<p class='c007' >She would not. At eight o’clock on the evening that
the meeting was called that great forum contained, not
the whole town and the mines and mills, as the Rev.
Mr. Pepper had been declaring all day that it would be,
but, by actual count, just two hundred people, of whom
the Rev. Richard Ingraham was one, for ever since the
beginning of his life in Sabinsport, he had made it a
practice not only to attend but to take part in all discussions,
whether held in opera houses or on street corners.</p>
<p class='c007' >But, as it turned out, the two hundred were not to be
allowed to take their vote on peace or war in the orderly,
quiet way which Dick himself insisted they should
have, for, before nine o’clock, a great tramping was
heard outside, and into the hall burst all of the active
youth of Sabinsport and at least half of its middle
aged. They carried banners on which were written
in bold letters, “Right is more precious than peace,”
“The world must be made safe for democracy,”
“Germany is a menace to mankind,” “Germany wars against
peace, we war against Germany.” They not only carried
their banners, but they brought their orators, who,
stationed in the galleries and on the floor, submerged
the protests of the Rev. Mr. Pepper and friends and
turned the gathering into a rousing declaration that, so
far as Sabinsport was concerned, she was in the war to
a finish.</p>
<p class='c007' >Each successive task the Government set provoked
a similar wave of protest. For days currents of unrest
would run through the town, but when the moment of
decision came always Sabinsport answered overwhelmingly
in favor of the Government. There was the
draft. As the day of registration approached, the
Rev. Mr. Pepper and his friends prophesied riots; and,
if not riots, at least a very general refusal to register—but
every man appeared. They came from the shops
and mines and banks and schools—a full quota. It
was unbelievable. Why were there such alarms of revolt
before, if in the end there was to be complete acceptance?
Reuben Cowder had his theory.</p>
<p class='c007' >“I tell you, Dick, the same gang are at work in this
town that stirred up the feeling against munition-making,
that brought that Peace Council here and so nearly
put it over. I expect Pepper and his friends to protest.
That’s all right, they belong here. That’s the way
they feel. We can gauge what they say, answer back.
I rather think they’re good for us, but it’s not Pepper
that is making the stir now. There’s somebody
spreading rumors of discontent that do not exist. Who
printed those handbills that rained all over town the
morning of Registration Day, denouncing the draft as
a form of slavery? Pepper didn’t. He was as surprised
as the police. Why can’t we get our fingers on
them?”</p>
<p class='c007' >But clever as he was, he did not get his fingers on
them. Waves of discontent, threats of riots and
strikes, protests against liberty loans and food laws,
continued to agitate the town, filling it with anxiety and
irritation. They kept her distrustful of herself, unhappy
in her undertaking, but never did they turn her
from her resolve to do her full part. Indeed, it seemed
to Dick sometimes as if the direct result was to drive
those of the town who felt the deepest foreboding, the
gravest doubt, to work the harder, thus really increasing
the amount accomplished. It was this that explained
why, in this admixture of irritation, Sabinsport
almost always did more than her part. The rumors
and prophecies that she would not respond this time
nerved her to fuller efforts.</p>
<p class='c007' >Just how things would have worked out in Sabinsport,
just when and how the war would have found its
way to her heart and she would have come to have the
supporting uplift of realizing the greatness of the enterprise
to which she was pledged, Dick never quite
decided, for what did happen was so largely shaped by
the news that came to them in the end of June that, in
the country twenty-five miles away, the Government
had decided to place one of the sixteen great cantonments
in which the boys that had been drafted were to
be trained into an army.</p>
<p class='c007' >Sabinsport herself had had nothing to do with securing
the cantonment. It was the only thing that had
happened in that part of the State in the last two or
three decades in which neither Cowder nor Mulligan
had had a hand. It was certain shrewd and powerful
gentlemen of the City that had persuaded the authorities
that this was the most perfect spot in the Union in
which to place 50,000 men.</p>
<p class='c007' >Luckily, it was a very good spot, though probably if
it had been very bad, it would have been selected, given
the power that was behind its support. The land was
rolling, naturally drained, the river which flowed close
by gave, by filtering, a splendid water supply. An important
trunk line ran within five miles of the camp,
making almost ideal transportation conditions possible,
and this same trunk line ran through Sabinsport.</p>
<p class='c007' >It was announced that the camp was to be ready in
twelve weeks for 40,000 men. The town, accustomed
to building in a fairly large scale, gasped in amazement.
Some jeered, others protested. It couldn’t be done.
It would take twelve months, not weeks, to make the
place habitable.</p>
<p class='c007' >All through the summer the town watched the growing
cantonment to see how things were going. The
highway which ran within a short distance of the selected
land was worn smooth with the cars which went
back and forth. The Sunday trains were often
crowded with workmen and their wives and sweethearts,
and all they saw increased their skepticism. So
far as they could make out, it was only a great confusion
of lumber, ditches, turned-up earth, scattered skeletons
of buildings; no evidence of planning. More than one
observer came back to say, sagely, “They don’t know
what they are about. It will never be a place in which
men can live. And as to being ready in September,
that is nonsense.”</p>
<p class='c007' >But ready or not, they found that the cantonment was
to be occupied at the time set, and to their anxiety over
the incompleteness of the camp, there now was added
a new concern—a doubt which was hardly voiced but
which gave the keenest anxiety. It was the doubt of
the recruits that began to appear. “How could you
ever make soldiers of such material?” It was her own
first contingent that had awakened this alarm. The
town had made an effort to do the proper thing when
the boys went off. They were to leave on an afternoon
train, and there was a luncheon given them and a little
parade through the streets. But the pathetic thing was
that these lads, who so often shambled, so many of
whom were poorly dressed, all of whom were a little
shamefaced at this effort to do them honor, did not look
like soldiers. Sabinsport had had so little experience
with armies that she could not visualize these country
lads, these stooped clerks, these slouching workmen, as
soldiers. She went back home not a little unhappy.
How were we ever going to make an army from such
stuff in time to do anything? That was becoming her
engrossing thought. How are we ever going to do
anything in time? Her pride was touched. And there
was a real but unspoken fear in Sabinsport’s heart lest
we were not going to come up to the mark before the
world.</p>
<p class='c007' >There were just two people in Sabinsport—that is,
two who talked and were listened to, that were not
worried about the camp or the making of an army—Captain
Billy and Nancy Cowder. To Uncle Billy,
all these boys were the boys of ’61, and every train load
side-tracked on the numerous switches that the main
line had provided on the edge of Sabinsport in preparation
for the handling of men and materials for the camp—every
train load filled him with more and more confidence.
“You’ll see,” he said. “We were like that—just
you wait.”</p>
<p class='c007' >As for Nancy, she was amazing to Dick. She was
one of those rare beings of unquenchable faith. With
it went an almost universal sympathy. Dick had expected
to find her as obsessed with the cause of Serbia
as Patsy had always been with that of Belgium, as deaf
to other calls, as impatient with Sabinsport’s diffused
interest as Patsy was. But he discovered at once that
her heart was open to every cry, and that her hand instinctively
reached out to aid any human being that
needed help.</p>
<p class='c007' >She had not been at home a fortnight before she was
busy planning with Ralph and Dick and her father for
better housing for the girls in the factory around the
Point; with Jack Mulligan for better schools at the
mines. When war came she was as sensitive as Dick
to what the town was going through. She realized,
even better than he, how utterly Sabinsport was cut off
from all outward manifestation of war, how she saw
and heard none of its martial sights and noise. She
was obliged to re-create without the help of outward
things. It made the girl extraordinarily sympathetic.
Indeed, in all Sabinsport at this period of uncertainty
and alarms there was no one who kept so confident and
serene an attitude or who treated with more humor and
commonsense the rumors and fears that ran the streets
or saw with more practical eye the things to be done.</p>
<p class='c007' >It was Nancy who first realized what a camp twenty-five
miles from Sabinsport might mean to the town—the
opportunity and the threat that were in it. Nancy,
it will be remembered, had been in London when the
war broke out. She had seen Kitchener’s army grow.
She had lived with soldiers, too, in hospitals and in
camps, and she quickly realized that Sabinsport had a
part to play. It was to Dick that she swiftly went for
consultation.</p>
<p class='c007' >“They will be twenty-five miles away,” said Dick.</p>
<p class='c007' >“Oh, yes,” said Nancy, “but what is twenty-five
miles with our factories full of girls, and the town wide
open? With all their homesickness and their need of
friends and life, we must get ready for them.”</p>
<p class='c007' >“But how?” said Dick. “What shall we do?”</p>
<p class='c007' >“Well,” said Nancy, practically, “we women must
have our canteen ready for their passing through.”</p>
<p class='c007' >But all that Nancy could say at the start had no
effect upon Sabinsport. Nothing in her experience
could give her an inkling of what it would mean to have
a camp of 50,000 men twenty-five miles away. The
distance was prohibitive. What would they have to do
with Sabinsport, with the City within five miles? It
was the City’s business to take care of the camp, not
hers.</p>
<p class='c007' >It was November before Sabinsport began to feel
any responsibility about the camp. By that time, the
boys had discovered the town. Naturally, it was the
City so near them that had drawn them first, and that
continued to draw them in the largest numbers. And it
was the City which from the start had accepted the responsibility
of guarding the boys who came to her.
The City had formed great committees of men and
women. She had passed ordinances, she had opened
canteens. Hundreds of her homes were open to the
boys, her clubs and churches and halls regularly on the
Wednesdays and Saturdays when they were off. The
City did wonderfully well from the start, and the commanding
officer had applauded the coöperation that she
gave him.</p>
<p class='c007' >In all this activity, Sabinsport, twenty-five miles away,
had not been asked to help. It was natural enough.
The City always had ignored Sabinsport. To be sure,
she was a nice little country town and had a quaint
hotel, with a wonderful cook; the best place in the country
round to motor out for supper. Sabinsport had
always resented this attitude. She was the older, she
had never quite gotten over feeling that she should have
been the City; she who was there so many years before,
and who was responsible for the discovery and first development
of this wealth which now the City handled
and from which she so wonderfully profited. That is,
Sabinsport was jealous of the City, her patronage, the
fact that she was never taken in. It was partly this
that made her unresponsive to all the pressure that Dick
and Nancy brought upon her in the early days of the
camp, to organize, to look after the soldiery that they
felt inevitably would seek the town. Always the same
answer came back: “Let the City look after them.
She has not asked us to help. It’s her business.”</p>
<p class='c007' >But, little by little, she discovered that, although she
might make no overtures to the camp, the camp had
found her out and was making good use of all she had
to offer in the way of pleasure and freedom. The boys
had discovered two things in Sabinsport, the two that
Nancy had predicted: that she had factories full of attractive
girls and that her saloons were wide open.
The better sort had discovered the Paradise and High
Town.</p>
<p class='c007' >The consequence of Sabinsport’s blindness and her
refusal to accept responsibility heaped up every day—the
girl question, as they called it. There were sudden
marriages which shocked and distressed her. There
were no marriages, that horrified her even more. A
new type of women began to appear in the streets.
And again and again on Saturday afternoons soldiers
were taken back to camp, but not to barracks—to the
guard house. Irritation and disgust with the camp
grew in the town, and then, late in November, sickness
began. It ran rampant through the camp, still insufficiently
equipped with hospitals and doctors and nurses
to handle anything like an epidemic. Heartbreaking
tales of deaths, from lack of care, it was charged, filled
the town. Nancy who, from the opening of the camp,
had given practically all of her time to whatever service
she could put her hands to, and who by her common
sense, her skill, her sweetness, had won completely officers,
doctors, and nurses, now gave herself up to regular
nursing, coming back only once a week for a half-day’s
rest—on Monday afternoon always, though nobody
at the time thought about that.</p>
<p class='c007' >Dick practically spent his days and nights in service.
He, too, had from the start been received by officers
and doctors as one of those rare civilians who can be
allowed the freedom of a camp and really help, not hinder,
its work.</p>
<p class='c007' >But Sabinsport was not rallying to the efforts of
Nancy and Dick. The town was horrified at the things
that she saw going on. She bitterly blamed the commanding
officer, the War Department, the Government.
She resented the intimations that she had had
from both the authorities in the City and in the camp
that her failure to deal resolutely with her saloons and
with the strange women who were finding shelter within
her limits, was a menace to the boys. Matters were
not at all helped by the kind of agitation which had begun
in the town, with the hope of controlling the situation.
The center of this agitation was Mrs. Susan
Katcham, president of an old-time temperance organization—a
good, aggressive, tactless woman, whose
main effect upon Sabinsport had always been to steel
even the sober to the support of the saloon.</p>
<p class='c007' >Mrs. Katcham now had no need to argue about the
disastrous effects of the open saloon. Every day was
demonstrating it, to the disgust and shame of the town.
There was just one man everybody knew that could put
a stop to this thing, and that was Jake Mulligan, for
Jake controlled the police, and Jake owned half or
two-thirds of the property in Sabinsport on which liquor
was sold. Mrs. Katcham went for him openly and
viciously, hammer and tongs; and all she did was to
make him take a terrible oath that he would not budge
an inch in the matter; that it was the business of the
camp to keep its soldiers at home, and not his to run
Sunday schools for the protection of grown men.</p>
<p class='c007' >The tragic thing to Dick was that he saw growing in
Sabinsport out of this clash, an increasing distaste for
a soldier.</p>
<p class='c007' >“Never, never,” he said, “would the heart of Sabinsport
be reached until this was blotted out.” But
what was to be done. He took it to the commanding
officer himself, and between them they laid out a plan
for capturing Sabinsport’s heart.</p>
<p class='c007' >“It’s melodrama,” said Dick.</p>
<p class='c007' >“It will do the work,” said the General.</p>
<p class='c007' >But that was to be done.</p>
<p class='c007' >The execution of the plan, which the General and
Dick had agreed upon for the siege and capture of Sabinsport’s
heart, was not easy, in the pressure and
anxiety which the epidemic in the camp had brought,
and its probable effect seemed to both men more and
more doubtful as the friction between the town and
camp grew.</p>
<p class='c007' >It was on Christmas night that it was to be carried
out. The Sunday night before Dick came home, white
with weariness and despondency. He had had a day
too hard for him, that he knew; one which his physician
would have called dangerous. But how could it
be helped? At daybreak a doctor at the camp had telephoned
that Peter Tompkins couldn’t live, that he had
asked for the “minister.” Would he go down? “Be
there in an hour,” Dick had answered—and he was.
The poor lad was almost gone. Dick sat with him to
the end, took his last message—winced, wondered,
and bowed his head at the sheer, cheerful bravery with
which the boy took what he called faintly his “medicine.”
“Didn’t take care like they told me,” he said.
“Tell Mother they’ve done the best they could.” But
Dick knew that while the loyal fellow might take upon
himself the cause of his own death, blundering orders
and unthinking friends were responsible. The boys
had been told to bring as little as possible to camp—only
a suit case which could be sent back with the clothes
they wore. Peter, like hundreds of others in that cruel
month of December had started from his home in his
oldest, thinnest clothes, without an overcoat. He was
going to throw everything away, he said, and not
trouble to send anything back; and there had been nobody
in the town with sufficient forethought and authority
to prevent the risk he took. He had reached camp
chilled to the bone. The supply of clothing was short.
He had to go about for days in his thin, old garments.
He could not get warm, exercise as he would, hug the
fire as he would.</p>
<p class='c007' >In the tremendous pressure of preparation and organization,
it was impossible that the physical condition
of each boy should be known to his officers. Peter had
to shift for himself in those first days. He was shy
and homesick. It was Dick, who was making a specialty
of the homesick, who had discovered how serious
his condition was and who had seen to it that he was
sent to the hospital; and it was Dick who had given
him the care which the one doctor and one nurse in a
ward where there were two hundred very sick boys
could not possibly give.</p>
<p class='c007' >It was too late. Peter was dead, and, two hours
before, Dick had seen his rough pine coffin on the platform,
ready for the journey home. A clumsy wreath
had been laid upon it by some sorrowing “buddy,” at
its foot stood a cheap suitcase, containing all the boy’s
few belongings. At the head a soldier kept guard.
Dick’s heart ached for the mother who must receive the
pitiful box. And he groaned as he thought of the
many, very many, he feared, that would follow it.</p>
<p class='c007' >Sabinsport’s temper at the moment weighed even
more heavily upon Dick that night than the sickness at
the camp. The inevitable scandal, that both he and
the General had feared, had come the night before.
Twenty boys, off for their Saturday holiday, had slipped
into Sabinsport for what they called a “blow out.”
They had gone to Beefsteak John’s, one of the cheap
workmen’s hotels, had taken rooms, laid off their uniforms,
put on pajamas and called up the barkeeper.
Of course he could give them what they wanted, for
they were not in uniform! And he had done it.</p>
<p class='c007' >The scandal had been made worse by the introduction
of a half dozen of the strange women who had
taken up their dwelling in Sabinsport. Before morning
the crowd was on the streets, rioting madly. The
boys had been arrested and were in jail. The whole
story was in the City’s Sunday morning paper. Sabinsport
was disgraced before the world.</p>
<p class='c007' >The General and Dick had talked the matter over in
the hour after he had closed poor Peter’s eyes, and both
had agreed that this probably put an end to their Christmas
celebration. “You can see,” the General had
said, “how impossible it will be for me to do my part
unless I know that every saloon in Sabinsport is absolutely
closed. That’s my ultimatum. They tell me
that there’s a man by the name of Mulligan that controls
the town. Could you get at him?”</p>
<p class='c007' >“I could,” said Dick, “but I don’t know whether it
would do any good. Mulligan is obstinate. I am
sure I could have persuaded him long ago to close every
house he owns in Sabinsport and willingly have stood
his losses if it had not been for Mrs. Katcham. So
long as she continues in the field, he will keep everything
open to spite her.”</p>
<p class='c007' >“I don’t wonder,” said the General, sympathetically.
“Same here. She’s been trying to force me to appoint
a mother for every fifty boys. Let ’em live in the
camp. Thinks I’m in league with the liquor interests
because I refuse—told me so to my face. You can’t
do anything with such women. But you must stop the
liquor selling there some way unless you want me to
appeal to Washington.”</p>
<p class='c007' >Dick had come back to town anxious and disheartened.
“It’s a nice situation, and Christmas only two
days away.” He was sitting perplexed and weary before
his fire, when who should come in but Mulligan
himself.</p>
<p class='c007' >“Can you give me a few minutes, Reverend?” he
called, in his hearty voice.</p>
<p class='c007' >Dick stared in amazement. “Of course,” he said.
“Come in.” He helped him with his coat, stirred the
fire, offered him a cigar, and sat down.</p>
<p class='c007' >“See here, Dick,” Mulligan began. “I wouldn’t
come telling anybody in this town I’m ashamed of myself
but you—I am. That thing last night was my
fault. If I’d ever given the boys round town a hint
that they weren’t to sell booze to soldiers, they’d never
done it, uniform or no uniform; but I never batted an
eye at ’em. I’ve known all along they got stuff whenever
they wanted it. I never tipped the police not to
see things, but I never tipped ’em to see ’em, and that’s
what they was waitin’ for. If it hadn’t been for that
Katcham woman, I’d ’a’ done it. I’m that mean I
couldn’t stand it to see her get her way. Now, she’s
gettin’ up a mass meetin’ for Christmas—think of that,
a mass meetin’ on Christmas. Well, I’m goin’ to beat
her to it.</p>
<p class='c007' >“I control ten saloons in this town—all except
the pikers—I’m closing every blamed one of them
to-day—canceled the leases. I’ll turn out every doggone
man that don’t shut down. And I’m warnin’ the
little fellows that they’ve got to follow suit. They’re
howling, but let ’em. I have told them I’d treat them
square, pay them for six months. They know me.
Let them sue if they want to. They know that I can
prove that they’ve been selling to the boys. There’s
not a jury in the State that would give them damages.
The bar at Beefsteak Jim’s is closed now. I’m going
to make this town clean, so clean that the boys can
play dominoes without being laughed at.</p>
<p class='c007' >“And I’ve seen the Chief. I’ve told him if his men
so much as wink at a glass of beer sold to a soldier,
I’ll fire him. I’ve told him he’s to run out any shady
woman that shows her bleached head in this burg, and
put the camp onto any boy that tries to sneak into any
mischief. I’m goin’ to make this town clean, Dick, so
clean all these doggone camp towns around the country
that are rolling up their eyes at Sabinsport’s wickedness
and calling attention to how good they are and rejoicing
that we’ve got it in the neck, will sing another
song. I’ll show them. And what tickles me most is
getting ahead of the Katcham woman. She’s not going
to spoil our Christmas by her mass meetin’. When
the town gets up to-morrow morning, they will find
that things are shut down. I have seen to it that it
gets out. Everybody will know without waiting for
the <i>Argus</i>, and you ought to see what’s going in the
<i>Argus</i> to-morrow night. I’m letting it be known that
the landlords in this town made a voluntary agreement—note
that, Reverend, voluntary agreement, for the
good of the army and the good of Sabinsport, not to
sell another glass of beer as long as this war lasts.
Don’t that sound noble? Won’t that shut up those
neighborhoods in the State that are taking pains to say
how depraved this burg is?</p>
<p class='c007' >“I don’t want you to tell anybody I had a hand in
this, Reverend. Just tellin’ you because I care about
what <i>you</i> think, and because I want you to know the
straight goods. It’s goin’ to be done, and so you can
stop worryin’. That’s got me more than once—see
you lookin’ so anxious. And then there’s Jack. I hate
to have him know over there in France what happened
Saturday night. I’m sending him the paper and along
with it a copy of the agreement. That’s all. I’m not
going to have <i>his</i> town disgraced again. So long, Reverend,
and get some sleep. You need it.”</p>
<p class='c007' >There were tears in Dick’s eyes as he wrung Mulligan’s
hand. “You better believe I’ll sleep,” he said.
“Now, we’ll have our festival, and I’m counting on
your being there. The General and his staff are coming,
and we’ll have a surprise which couldn’t have been
sprung if it hadn’t been for what you’ve done. You’ve
saved Sabinsport more than once, Mulligan, but you
never did it so good a turn as to-day.”</p>
<p class='c007' >“Nothing in that, Reverend. Thank the Katcham
woman. I had to beat her to it.”</p>
<p class='c007' >Dick went back to his pipe. He was too happy to
sleep. He remembered a remark of Katie’s, made
months ago, and he repeated it aloud, “The Lord sure
is a wonder!”</p>
<hr class='c014' />
<p class='c007' >For several years now Sabinsport had had a Christmas
tree on the square at five <span class='sc'>P. M.</span> of Christmas eve,
with carols and prayers and the free distribution to all
the children of large and enticing stockings filled with
candies. At six, almost every house in town had
lighted candles in its windows. This year they were to
have their Christmas tree as usual, but, in deference to
Mr. Hoover, the candies and candles were to be saved.
At nine o’clock on Christmas night, there was to be a
community celebration, the details of which nobody
seemed to know, but the program had been hinted at in
every quarter of the town in such a mysterious way that
the anticipation was high.</p>
<p class='c007' >Dick and Nancy had been responsible for drawing
everybody in. The mines and mills, as well as High
Town, had representatives. Every quarter knew that
somebody from its ranks was to do something, though
what that something was was an entire secret.</p>
<p class='c007' >Sabinsport had a wonderful place for a great
community celebration—the Opera House. When Mulligan
and Cowder planned the Opera House they had
been in their most optimistic mood. They wanted it
big—big enough for conventions and expositions—“a
stage on which you could have a circus,” was Jake’s
idea. The result was a great, gaudy barn with a stage
which would have done for a hippodrome. Financially,
the size of the thing had defeated its purpose,
but for a great town celebration it was magnificent. It
was none too big for the affair in which Dick was interested.</p>
<p class='c007' >By seven o’clock of Christmas night, the Opera
House was packed. At seven-thirty the program began—songs
and tableaux and speeches and impersonations.
It went without a hitch—swift, compelling,
and, oh, so merry. In an hour after it began the house
was a happy, cheering crowd, helped not a little in their
joyfulness by the presence of scores upon scores of soldiers,
guests from the camp, and by the aid which the
applause was getting from two boxes filled with officers,
the General among them.</p>
<p class='c007' >The program was almost finished—all but a single
number which appeared simply as Music and Tableaux.
If the audience had not been so interested, it would
have noticed that up to this point there had been but
the scantiest of reference to army or navy, to war or
country. The very absence of these topics hushed
them to silence when suddenly the orchestra broke into
“Over There.”</p>
<p class='c007' >It was like a call, penetrating, stirring. It hushed
and thrilled them beyond applause. The hush deepened
when suddenly, across the long drop curtain there
flashed the words:—</p>
<p class='c007' >SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE</p>
<p class='c007' >The orchestra played on, every brain fitting the
words to the notes:</p>
<div class='lg-container-b'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>“Over there, over there,</div>
<div class='line'>Send the word over there,</div>
<div class='line'>That the Yanks are coming, the Yanks are coming,</div>
<div class='line'>The drums rum-tumming ev’rywhere.</div>
<div class='line'>So prepare, say a pray’r,</div>
<div class='line'>Send the word, send the word to beware,</div>
<div class='line'>We’ll be over, we’re coming over,</div>
<div class='line'>And we won’t come back till it’s over, over there.”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007' >Slowly the curtain rose on a scene that much looking
in the last few months at photographs and picture papers
had made familiar to them—a French town, the
kind they knew the boys were billeted in, with its long
row of gray-faced houses, its red-tiled roofs, its quaint
church with its simple, very simple statue of Joan of
Arc; and behind, rising perpetually, mountains, along
which ran a highway, climbing up and up. A company
of boys in khaki swarmed over the place. They were
resting on their arms, waiting orders. They hung out
of the windows, sat in the doorways, grouped carelessly
in the roadway, swarmed over the pedestal up to the
very feet of the figure of Joan.</p>
<p class='c007' >The house watched the scene with swelling heart.
Then from an upper window, there suddenly came a
clear baritone. A boy, leaning out, his eyes on the little
statue, began to sing a song new to Sabinsport.
Alone he sang through the first verse, then the wonderful
refrain was taken up,</p>
<div class='lg-container-b'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>“Joan of Arc, Joan of Arc,</div>
<div class='line'>Do your eyes</div>
<div class='line'>From the skies</div>
<div class='line'>See the foe?</div>
<div class='line'>Don’t you see the drooping fleur-de-lis?</div>
<div class='line'>Can’t you hear the tears of Normandy?</div>
<div class='line in2'>Joan of Arc, Joan of Arc,</div>
<div class='line'>Let your spirit guide us through,</div>
<div class='line'>Come, lead your France to victory.</div>
<div class='line'>Joan of Arc, they are calling you, calling you.”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007' >It was but the beginning. It had put the waiting
boys in the mood for song, and the appealing refrain
had scarcely died away when the tension was broken
by a merry voice starting, “Where do we go from
here, Boys? Where do we go from here?” From
gay they swung to grave, and then back to gay. “The
Star Spangled Banner” brought everybody to their
feet. “I don’t want to get well, I don’t want to get
well,” set everybody to laughing. Then came “Christmas
Night” and then—“Home, Sweet Home.” It
was almost too much for the singers themselves, for
more than one lad on the stage dropped his head, unable
to go on. As the song rose, so sweet, and familiar,
so ladened with memories, the audience sat with
quivering faces and eyes grown wet. If it had not been
for the emotion which had seized it, it would have been
sooner conscious that there was an unusual accompaniment
to the words, a rhythmical beating, which grew
louder and louder until it became a steady tramp. It
had grown so near that it would have broken the spell
which held the house, if suddenly a bugle had not sent
every man on the stage to his feet.</p>
<p class='c007' >They fell in line, and just as the outside tramp came
too distinct to be mistaken, an order, “Forward,
March,” came quick and sharp. They filed out and
behind them came others, an interminable stream,
across the stage, only to reappear, mounting upward
along the road in the background. And as they started
upward, at the right and top of the height, a great luminous
American flag was suddenly flung out. It waved
and waved as if in salute to the mounting men. They
went up, up. Their young faces, turned to their banner,
wore looks of such resolve, such exultation, that
the hearts of the men and women watching, breathless
below, swelled with pride and hope.</p>
<p class='c007' >The host came on, wave after wave; the orchestra
played on the wrought up audience as on a viol. They
broke into cheers, dropped into silence, sobbed, then
cheered and cheered and cheered; and when the light
gradually faded, the curtain slowly dropped, the music
little by little subsided; they sat unstrung, listening to
the tramping grow dimmer and dimmer until it was lost
in the sounds of the town.</p>
<p class='c007' >It was a new Sabinsport that went home that night.
Whatever might happen, never again would she doubt,
or close her heart to the soldier. She was his. The
General, waiting in his box for Dick, said as he grasped
his hand, “That’s settled, Ingraham. We’ll have no
more trouble with this town.”</p>
<p class='c007' >But if Sabinsport had been chastened and her heart
opened, she still had to grope her way into the organized
service that alone could restore her hurt pride and
give her some realizing sense of being a part of the
great undertaking; and it was a hard moment for that.</p>
<p class='c007' >In all the war there was not a month more difficult
than January of 1918. The camp and the town were
in the clutch of the most cruel weather that part of the
world had ever seen. Again and again in these weeks,
the miles of switches and sidings in the valley were
blocked with long trains of cars filled with coal, with
every conceivable kind of freight for the camp, as well
as with materials needed for the shipyards and overseas.
Although every effort was made to keep tracks
clear for troop trains, every now and then, one filled
with tired and shivering men would be held up. They
sang—oh, yes, they always sang; but you could not go
among them and not know that the singing often hid
frightened and homesick hearts.</p>
<p class='c007' >The town itself, surrounded as she was by mines underlaid
with coal, was suffering. Sabinsport was startled
to find some of her own families in actual danger
of death by freezing. In a town which all its life had
been accustomed to wait until the last minute and then
call up and ask that a load of coal be delivered at once,
and to get it as it would get its roast from the butcher’s,
it was natural that many prosperous families were low
in fuel supplies.</p>
<p class='c007' >It was hard for the man of influence then not to
throw aside all sense of responsibility for anybody but
his family. Queer stories of the tricks that men played
in order to get coal, headed for their neighbors, were
told. And as for the poor, they waited in long lines,
with pails and scuttles, to get their little lot, and many a
time went home without it.</p>
<p class='c007' >Unreasonably enough, storm and snow classed themselves
in Sabinsport’s mind as part of the war, and her
uneasiness grew. Was it all to be like this—failure,
sorrow, shame, suffering? Was she never to see anything
orderly, sufficient, successful? Was there nothing
in war that was brave, glorious and stirring? Sabinsport
was seeing only the fringe of the great undertaking,
and it looked ragged enough in the early part
of 1918.</p>
<p class='c007' >In all this, Dick was going from depth to depth of
discouragement. Inveterate believer that he was in
this town, which he had come so to love, in the country
in whose institutions he so believed, doubt and despair
of the outcome of the great undertaking grew upon
him. We were not going to be able to handle even
the physical side of it. It was not alone what he saw
at home; it was what he heard from his friends in
Washington. Their letters, once hopeful, became
despairing. “It looks to me to-day,” one of them wrote
him along in the middle of January, “as if the whole
war machine had broken down. I have believed and
believed, but the fact is we are not getting men over.
It’s all nonsense about our having 400,000 on the other
side; there are not over 100,000. It’s all nonsense
about our building ships—the whole business is simply
tangled up. It’s an awful, humiliating failure, I am
afraid, Dick. The men at the top are camouflaging
the whole situation. I cannot endure it that we men
back here should fail the fine fellows who gave themselves
so utterly, so fearlessly.”</p>
<p class='c007' >This letter was the last straw to Dick’s despair. He
was overwhelmed with the futility of all the gigantic
effort, sickened by the inability of Sabinsport properly
to even take care of its own in a stress of weather, sickened
by what he saw in the camp. Sabinsport was
failing, the camp was failing, the country was failing.
And why should he expect anything else? What was
the human race, after all, but a set of selfish, limited
bunglers?</p>
<p class='c007' >And so, night after night, he tossed and groaned, and
slept fitfully. Things grinned at him. He wakened
feverish and worn. In the day things said, “What’s
the use? Why talk about democracy? Why talk
about ideals?” And he? Why, he was an utter failure.
To get into it, to have a turn in the trenches, to be
soaked with filth, to be broken with fatigue, to struggle
to his feet, to feel a blessed death wound—that, that
was the only thing that would count.</p>
<p class='c007' >He worked, of course; wore every day his mask of
courage and good cheer; but day by day it was growing
harder to keep it on. Day by day his strength was
failing, for Dick, for the first time in his life, was recklessly
disobeying the boundaries which had been set for
his physical existence. The over-fatigue which he had
always conscientiously avoided he not only sought but
coveted; the strains which he had been told might at
any time be fatal to him, he took almost gladly. Finally
his friends among the physicians at the camp
warned him, “You will break down, Ingraham, as sure
as the world if you don’t take things easier.” His
friends grew worried. Nancy came to him and begged
him to stop, to go away for a while; but he laughed at
them all. In the bitterness of his soul he had come to
feel that here was his way out; he could give himself
here.</p>
<p class='c007' >The break came suddenly in the hospital at the camp;
one day he collapsed utterly and was taken home unconscious.
An almost superhuman effort of doctors and
nurses brought him around, and a month later, very
white and humble, he was taken from Sabinsport to the
South by Reuben Cowder himself.</p>
<p class='c007' >His desire to die had left him. He was his normal
self, save for his physical weakness. He meant to get
well and come back to Sabinsport—Sabinsport, whose
grief and anxiety over his illness had touched him to the
heart? And he did his part. Three months later he
came back—a little thinner, a little quieter, but quite
himself again and capable of steady effort.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />