<p><SPAN name="chap14"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER XIV. </h3>
<h3> THE LOYALTY OF THE ARMY. </h3>
<p>The military force of the Lauranian
Republic was proportioned to the duties of
protecting its territories from invasion and of
maintaining law and order within them, but
was by the wisdom of former days restricted
to limits which did not encourage great
schemes of foreign conquest nor any aggressive
meddling in the affairs of the neighbouring
principalities. Four regiments of cavalry,
twenty battalions of foot, and eight
field-batteries comprised the Army of the Line.
Besides these there was the Republican Guard,
which consisted of a regiment of Lancers and
three strong battalions of veteran infantry and
supported by their discipline the authority,
and by their magnificence the dignity, of the
State.</p>
<p>The great capital city, which exceeded in
wealth, population, and turbulence the
aggregate of the provincial towns, had for its
garrison the Guard and half of the entire army.
The remaining troops were scattered in small
country stations and on the frontiers.</p>
<p>All the pains that the President had taken
to maintain the good will of the soldiery had
proved vain. The revolutionary movement
had grown apace in the ranks of the army,
till they were now thoroughly disaffected,
and the officers felt that their orders would
be obeyed only so far as they were agreeable.
With the Guard it was different. All, or
nearly all, had borne their part in the late
war and had marched to victory under the
generalship of the President. They
honoured and trusted their former commander,
and were in turn honoured and trusted by
him; indeed the favour he had shewn them
may have been among the causes which had
alienated the rest.</p>
<p>It was the greater part of this Guard that
Molara, in his heavy need, was about to send
against the invaders. He well knew the
danger of depriving himself of the only
troops he could rely on, should the city itself
rise; but the advancing forces must be
stopped at all hazards, and the Guard alone
were able and willing to do the work. He
would be left almost alone amid the populace
who detested him, in the city he had ruled
so sternly, with mutinous soldiers as his only
defenders. It was not an inviting prospect,
yet it presented some chances of success.
It displayed a confidence which, though
assumed, might decide the waverers and
disgust his foes; and it dealt with the most
pressing emergency, which was after all the
first duty of the Executive. He did not
doubt the ability of the troops he had
despatched to disperse, if not to destroy, the
rabble that had crossed the frontier. That
danger at least was removed by his action.
In two days the fleet would return, and under
its guns his Government might still continue,
feared and respected. The intervening
period was the crisis, a crisis which he hoped
to pass safely through, partly by the force of
his personality, and partly by the ridicule
and contempt in which he intended to plunge
his terrible rival.</p>
<p>Punctually at eleven o'clock he left his
private office to attire himself in his full
uniform as a general of the army, in order that
at the parade the troops might be reminded
that he too was a soldier and one who had
seen much war.</p>
<p>At the door Lieutenant Tiro presented
himself, in a great state of perturbation.
"Sir," he said, "you will allow me to go with
my squadron to the front? There will be
nothing for me to do here."</p>
<p>"On the contrary," replied the President,
"there will be a great deal for you to do
here. You must stay."</p>
<p>Tiro turned pale. "I do beg you, Sir,
to allow me to go," he said earnestly.</p>
<p>"Impossible,—I want you here."</p>
<p>"But, Sir——"</p>
<p>"Oh, I know," said Molara impatiently;
"you want to get shot at. Stay here, and
I promise you shall hear bullets in plenty
before you have done." He turned away,
but the look of bitter disappointment on
the young officer's face induced him to
pause. "Besides," he added, assuming that
charm of manner of which few great men
are destitute, "I require you for a service
of difficulty and extreme danger. You have
been specially selected."</p>
<p>The Subaltern said no more, but he was
only half consoled. He thought ruefully of
the green country, the glinting lances, the
crack of the rifles, and all the interest and
joy of war. He would miss everything; his
friends would be there, but he would not
share their perils. They would talk of their
adventures in after days and he would have
no part in their discussions; they would
even laugh at him as a "tame cat" of the
palace, an aide-de-camp for ornamental
purposes only. And as he mourned, a distant
trumpet-call stung him like the cut of a
whip. It was Boots and Saddles,—the
Lancers of the Guard were turning out.
The President hurried off to array himself,
and Tiro descended the stairs to order the
horses.</p>
<p>Molara was soon ready, and joined his
aide-de-camp on the steps of the palace.
Attended by a small escort they rode to
the railway-station, passing, on the way,
through groups of sullen citizens who stared
insolently, and even spat on the ground in
hatred and anger.</p>
<p>The artillery had already been despatched,
but the entraining of the rest of the troops
had not commenced when the President
arrived, and they were drawn up (the
cavalry in mass, the infantry in line of
quarter-columns) in the open space in front of the
terminus. Colonel Brienz, who commanded
the force, was mounted at their head. He
advanced and saluted; the band struck up
the Republican Hymn, and the infantry
presented arms with a clash of precision. The
President acknowledged these compliments
with punctilious care; and then, as the rifles
were shouldered, he rode towards the ranks.</p>
<p>"You have a splendid force, Colonel
Brienz," he said addressing the Colonel,
but speaking loud enough to be heard by
the troops. "To your skill and to their
courage the Republic entrusts its safety,
and entrusts it with confidence." He then
turned to the troops: "Soldiers, some of
you will remember the day I asked you to
make a great effort for your country and
your honour; Sorato is the name that
history has given to the victory which was
your answer to my appeal. Since then we
have rested in peace and security, protected
by the laurels that have crowned your
bayonets. Now, as the years have passed, those
trophies are challenged, challenged by the
rabble whose backs you have seen so often.
Take off the old laurels, soldiers of the
Guard, and with the bare steel win new
ones. Once again I ask you to do great
things, and when I look along your ranks,
I cannot doubt that you will do them.
Farewell, my heart goes with you; would
to God I were your leader!"</p>
<p>He shook hands with Brienz and with
the senior officers amid loud cheers from
the troops, some of whom broke from the
ranks to press around him, while others
raised their helmets on their bayonets in
warlike enthusiasm. But as the shouting
ceased, a long, discordant howl of derision,
till then drowned by the noise, was heard
from the watching crowds,—a sinister comment!</p>
<p>Meanwhile at the other end of the town
the mobilisation of the Reserve Brigade
revealed the extreme contrast between the
loyalty and discipline of the Guard and
the disaffection of the regiments of the Line.</p>
<p>An ominous silence reigned throughout
the barracks. The soldiers walked about
moodily and sullenly, making little attempt
to pack their kits for the impending march.
Some loitered in groups about the
parade-ground and under the colonnade which ran
round their quarters; others sat sulking on
their cots. The habit of discipline is hard
to break, but here were men steeling
themselves to break it.</p>
<p>These signs did not pass unnoticed by
the officers who awaited in anxious suspense
the hour of parade.</p>
<p>"Don't push them," Sorrento had said to
the colonels, "take them very gently;" and
the colonels had severally replied that they
would answer with their lives for the loyalty
of their men. It was nevertheless thought
advisable to try the effect of the order upon a
single battalion, and the 11th Regiment was
the first to receive the command to turn out.</p>
<p>The bugles blew briskly and cheerily, and
the officers, hitching up their swords and
pulling on their gloves, hurried to their
respective companies. Would the men obey
the summons? It was touch and go.
Anxiously they waited. Then by twos and
threes the soldiers shuffled out and began
to form up in their ranks. At length the
companies were complete, sufficiently
complete, that is to say, for there were many
absentees. The officers inspected their units.
It was a dirty parade; the accoutrements
were uncleaned, the uniforms carelessly put
on, and the general appearance of the men
was slovenly to a degree. But of these
things no notice was taken, and as they
walked along the ranks the subalterns found
something to say in friendly chaff to many
of their soldiers. They were greeted however
with a forbidding silence, a silence not
produced by discipline or by respect.
Presently <i>Markers</i> sounded, the companies moved
to the general parade-ground, and soon the
whole battalion was drawn up in the middle
of the barrack-square.</p>
<p>The Colonel was on his horse, faultlessly
attired, and attended by his Adjutant. He
looked calmly at the solid ranks before him,
and nothing in his bearing revealed the
terrible suspense which filled his mind and
gripped his nerve. The Adjutant cantered
along the column collecting the reports.
"All present, Sir," said the company
commanders, but there were several whose voices
quavered. Then he returned to the Colonel,
and fell into his place. The Colonel looked
at his regiment, and the regiment at their
Colonel.</p>
<p>"Battalion,—attention!" he cried, and
the soldiers sprang up with a clatter and
a click. "Form,—fours."</p>
<p>The word of command was loud and
clear. About a dozen soldiers moved at
the call of instinct—moved a little—looked
about them, and shuffled back to their places
again. The rest budged not an inch. A
long and horrid silence followed. The
Colonel's face turned grey.</p>
<p>"Soldiers," he said, "I have given you
an order; remember the honour of the
regiment. Form,—fours." This time not a
man moved. "As you were," he shouted
desperately, though it was an unnecessary
command. "The battalion will advance in
quarter-column. Quick march!"</p>
<p>The battalion remained motionless.</p>
<p>"Captain Lecomte," said the Colonel,
"what is the name of the right-hand man
of your company?"</p>
<p>"Sergeant Balfe, Sir," replied the officer.</p>
<p>"Sergeant Balfe, I order you to advance.
Quick—march!"</p>
<p>The sergeant quivered with excitement;
but he held his ground.</p>
<p>The Colonel opened his pouch and
produced his revolver with much deliberation.
He looked carefully at it, as if to see that it
was well cleaned; then he raised the
hammer and rode up close to the mutineer. At
ten yards he stopped and took aim.
"Quick—march!" he said in a low menacing
voice.</p>
<p>It was evident that a climax had been
reached, but at this instant Sorrento, who,
concealed in the archway of the barrack-gate,
had watched the proceedings, rode
into the square and trotted towards the
soldiers. The Colonel lowered his pistol.</p>
<p>"Good-morning," said the War-Minister.</p>
<p>The officer replaced his weapon and saluted.</p>
<p>"Is the regiment ready to move off?"
and then before a reply could be given he
added: "A very smart parade, but after all
it will not be necessary to march to-day.
The President is anxious that the men
should have a good night's rest before
starting, and," raising his voice, "that they
should drink a bumper to the Republic and
confusion to her enemies. You may dismiss
them, Colonel."</p>
<p>"Fall out," said the Colonel, not even
caring to risk going through the correct
procedure for dismissing.</p>
<p>The parade broke up. The ordered
ranks dissolved in a crowd, and the
soldiers streamed off towards their barracks.
The officers alone remained.</p>
<p>"I should have shot him, Sir, in another
instant," said the Colonel.</p>
<p>"No good," said Sorrento, "to shoot one
man; it would only infuriate them. I will
have a couple of machine-guns down here
to-morrow morning, and we shall see then
what will happen."</p>
<p>He turned suddenly, interrupted by a
storm of broken and confused cheering.
The soldiers had almost reached their
barracks; one man was raised on the shoulders
of others, and surrounded by the rest of the
regiment, waving their helmets, brandishing
their rifles, and cheering wildly.</p>
<p>"It is the sergeant," said the Colonel.</p>
<p>"So I perceive," replied Sorrento bitterly.
"A popular man, I suppose. Have you
many non-commissioned officers like that?" The
Colonel made no reply. "Gentlemen,"
said the War-Minister to the officers who
loitered on the square, "I would recommend
you to go to your quarters. You are rather
tempting targets here, and I believe your
regiment is a particularly good shooting
regiment. Is it not, Colonel?"</p>
<p>With which taunt he turned and rode
away, sick at heart with anger and anxiety,
while the officers of the 11th Regiment of
Lauranian Infantry retired to their quarters
to hide their shame and face their danger.</p>
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