<h2>V</h2>
<p>A week from the succeeding Saturday, Mr. Skinner did not come
down to the office, but a telephone message from his home informed
the chief clerk that Mr. Skinner was at home and somewhat
indisposed. The chief clerk was to advise Mr. Peck that he, Mr.
Skinner, had contemplated having a conference with the latter that
day, but that his indisposition would prevent this. Mr. Skinner
hoped to be feeling much better tomorrow, and since he was very
desirous of a conference with Mr. Peck before the latter should
depart on his next selling pilgrimage, on Monday, would Mr. Peck be
good enough to call at Mr. Skinner's house at one o'clock Sunday
afternoon? Mr. Peck sent back word that he would be there at the
appointed time and was rewarded with Mr. Skinner's thanks, via the
chief clerk.</p>
<p>Promptly at one o'clock the following day, Bill Peck reported at
the general manager's house. He found Mr. Skinner in bed, reading
the paper and looking surprisingly well. He trusted Mr. Skinner
felt better than he looked. Mr. Skinner did, and at once entered
into a discussion of the new customers, other prospects he
particularly desired Mr. Peck to approach, new business to be
investigated, and further details without end. And in the midst of
this conference Cappy Riggs telephoned.</p>
<p>A portable telephone stood on a commode beside Mr. Skinner's
bed, so the latter answered immediately. Comrade Peck watched
Skinner listen attentively for fully two minutes, then heard him
say:</p>
<p>"Mr. Ricks, I'm terribly sorry. I'd love to do this errand for
you, but really I'm under the weather. In fact, I'm in bed as I
speak to you now. But Mr. Peck is here with me and I'm sure he'll be
very happy to attend to the matter for you."</p>
<p>"By all means," Bill Peck hastened to assure the general
manager. "Who does Mr. Ricks want killed and where will he have the
body delivered?"</p>
<p>"Hah-hah! Hah-Hah!" Mr. Skinner had a singularly annoying,
mirthless laugh, as if he begrudged himself such an unheard-of
indulgence. "Mr. Peck says," he informed Cappy, "that he'll be
delighted to attend to the matter for you. He wants to know whom
you want killed and where you wish the body delivered. Hah-hah!
Hah! Peck, Mr. Ricks will speak to you."</p>
<p>Bill Peck took the telephone. "Good afternoon, Mr. Ricks."</p>
<p>"Hello, old soldier. What are you doing this afternoon?"</p>
<p>"Nothing--after I conclude my conference with Mr. Skinner. By
the way, he has just given me a most handsome boost in salary, for
which I am most appreciative. I feel, however, despite Mr.
Skinner's graciousness, that you have put in a kind word for me
with him, and I want to thank you--"</p>
<p>"Tut, tut. Not a peep out of you, sir. Not a peep. You get
nothing for nothing from Skinner or me. However, in view of the
fact that you're feeling kindly toward me this afternoon, I wish
you'd do a little errand for me. I can't send a boy and I hate to
make a messenger out of you--er--ah--ahem! That is
har-umph-h-h--!"</p>
<p>"I have no false pride, Mr. Ricks."</p>
<p>"Thank you, Bill. Glad you feel that way about it. Bill, I was
prowling around town this forenoon, after church, and down in a
store on Sutter Street, between Stockton and Powell Street, on the
right hand side as you face Market Street, I saw a blue vase in a
window. I have a weakness for vases, Bill. I'm a sharp on them,
too. Now, this vase I saw isn't very expensive as vases go--in
fact, I wouldn't buy it for my collection--but one of the finest
and sweetest ladies of my acquaintance has the mate to that blue
vase I saw in the window, and I know she'd be prouder than Punch if
she had two of them--one for each side of her drawing room mantel,
understand?</p>
<p>"Now, I'm leaving from the Southern Pacific depot at eight
o'clock tonight, bound for Santa Barbara to attend her wedding
anniversary tomorrow night. I forget what anniversary it is, Bill,
but I have been informed by my daughter that I'll be very much
<i>de trop</i> if I send her any present other than something in
porcelain or China or Cloisonné--well, Bill, this crazy
little blue vase just fills the order. Understand?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir. You feel that it would be most graceful on your part
if you could bring this little blue vase down to Santa Barbara with
you tonight. You have to have it tonight, because if you wait until
the store opens on Monday the vase will reach your hostess
twenty-four hours after her anniversary party."</p>
<p>"Exactly, Bill. Now, I've simply got to have that vase. If I had
discovered it yesterday I wouldn't be asking you to get it for me
today, Bill."</p>
<p>"Please do not make any explanations or apologies, Mr. Ricks.
You have described the vase--no you haven't. What sort of blue is
it, how tall is it and what is, approximately, its greatest
diameter? Does it set on a base, or does it not? Is it a solid
blue, or is it figured?"</p>
<p>It's a Cloisonné vase, Bill--sort of old Dutch blue, or
Delft, with some Oriental funny-business on it. I couldn't describe
it exactly, but it has some birds and flowers on it. It's about a
foot tall and four inches in diameter and sets on a teak-wood
base."</p>
<p>"Very well, sir. You shall have it."</p>
<p>"And you'll deliver it to me in stateroom A, car 7, aboard the
train at Third and Townsend Streets, at seven fifty-five
tonight?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"Thank you, Bill. The expense will be trifling. Collect it from
the cashier in the morning, and tell him to charge it to my
account." And Cappy hung up.</p>
<p>At once Mr. Skinner took up the thread of the interrupted
conference, and it was not until three o'clock that Bill Peck left
his house and proceeded downtown to locate Cappy Rick's blue
vase.</p>
<p>He proceeded to the block in Sutter Street between Stockton and
Powell Streets, and although he walked patiently up one side of the
street and down the other, not a single vase of any description
showed in any shop window, nor could he find a single shop where
such a vase as Cappy had described might, perchance, be displayed
for sale.</p>
<p>"I think the old boy has erred in the co-ordinates of the
target," Bill Peck concluded, "or else I misunderstood him. I'll
telephone his house and ask him to repeat them."</p>
<p>He did, but nobody was at home except a Swedish maid, and all
she knew was that Mr. Ricks was out and the hour of his return was
unknown. So Mr. Peck went back to Sutter Street and scoured once
more every shop window in the block. Then he scouted two blocks
above Powell and two blocks below Stockton. Still the blue vase
remained invisible.</p>
<p>So he transferred his search to a corresponding area on Bush
Street, and when that failed, he went painstakingly over four
blocks of Post Street. He was still without results when he moved
one block further west and one further south and discovered the
blue vase in a huge plate-glass window of a shop on Geary Street
near Grant Avenue. He surveyed it critically and was convinced that
it was the object he sought.</p>
<p>He tried the door, but it was locked, as he had anticipated it
would be. So he kicked the door and raised an infernal racket,
hoping against hope that the noise might bring a watchman from the
rear of the building. In vain. He backed out to the edge of the
sidewalk and read the sign over the door:</p>
<blockquote>B. Cohen's Art Shop</blockquote>
<p>This was a start, so Mr. Peck limped over to the Palace Hotel
and procured a telephone directory. By actual count there were
nineteen B. Cohens scattered throughout the city, so before
commencing to call the nineteen, Bill Peck borrowed the city
directory from the hotel clerk and scanned it for the particular B.
Cohen who owned the art shop. His search availed him nothing. B.
Cohen was listed as an art dealer at the address where the blue
vase reposed in the show window. That was all.</p>
<p>"I suppose he's a commuter," Mr. Peck concluded, and at once
proceeded to procure directories of the adjacent cities of
Berkeley, Oakland and Alameda. They were not available, so in
despair he changed a dollar into five cent pieces, sought a
telephone booth and commenced calling up all the B. Cohens in San
Francisco. Of the nineteen, four did not answer, three were
temporarily disconnected, six replied in Yiddish, five were not the
B. Cohen he sought, and one swore he was Irish and that his name
was spelled Cohan and pronounced with an accent on both
syllables.</p>
<p>The B. Cohens resident in Berkeley, Oakland, Alameda, San
Rafael, Sausalito, Mill Valley, San Mateo, Redwood City and Palo
Alto were next telephoned to, and when this long and expensive task
was done, Ex-Private Bill Peck emerged from the telephone booth
wringing wet with perspiration and as irritable as a clucking hen.
Once outside the hotel he raised his haggard face to heaven and
dumbly queried of the Almighty what He meant by saving him from
quick death on the field of honor only to condemn him to be talked
to death by B. Cohens in civil life.</p>
<p>It was now six o'clock. Suddenly Peck had an inspiration. Was
the name spelled Cohen, Cohan, Cohn, Kohn or Coen?</p>
<p>"If I have to take a Jewish census again tonight I'll die," he
told himself desperately, and went back to the art shop.</p>
<p>The sign read: B. COHN'S ART SHOP.</p>
<p>"I wish I knew a bootlegger's joint," poor Peck complained. "I'm
pretty far gone and a little wood alcohol couldn't hurt me much
now. Why, I could have sworn that name was spelled with an E. It
seems to me I noted that particularly."</p>
<p>He went back to the hotel telephone booth and commenced calling
up all the B. Cohns in town. There were eight of them and six of
them were out, one was maudlin with liquor and the other was very
deaf and shouted unintelligibly.</p>
<p>"Peace hath its barbarities no less than war," Mr. Peck sighed.
He changed a twenty-dollar bill into nickles, dimes and quarters,
returned to the hot, ill-smelling telephone booth and proceeded to
lay down a barrage of telephone calls to the B. Cohns of all towns
of any importance contiguous to San Francisco Bay. And he was
lucky. On the sixth call he located the particular B. Cohn in San
Rafael, only to be informed by Mr. Cohn's cook that Mr. Cohn was
dining at the home of a Mr. Simons in Mill Valley.</p>
<p>There were three Mr. Simons in Mill Valley, and Peck called them
all before connecting with the right one. Yes, Mr. B. Cohn was
there. Who wished to speak to him? Mr. Heck? Oh, Mr. Lake! A
silence. Then--Mr. Cohn says he doesn't know any Mr. Lake and wants
to know the nature of your business. He is dining and doesn't like
to be disturbed unless the matter is of grave importance."</p>
<p>"Tell him Mr. Peck wishes to speak to him on a matter of very
great importance," wailed the ex-private.</p>
<p>"Mr. Metz? Mr. Ben Metz?</p>
<p>"No, no, no. Peck--p-e-c-k."</p>
<p>"D-e-c-k?"</p>
<p>"No, P."</p>
<p>"C?"</p>
<p>"P."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, E. E-what?"</p>
<p>"C-K--"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, Mr. Eckstein."</p>
<p>"Call Cohn to the 'phone or I'll go over there on the next boat
and kill you, you damned idiot," shrieked Peck. "Tell him his store
is on fire."</p>
<p>That message was evidently delivered for almost instantly Mr. B.
Cohn was puffing and spluttering into the phone.</p>
<p>"Iss dot der fire marshal?" he managed to articulate.</p>
<p>"Listen, Mr. Cohn. Your store is not on fire, but I had to say
so in order to get you to the telephone. I am Mr. Peck, a total
stranger to you. You have a blue vase in your shop window on Geary
Street in San Francisco. I want to buy it and I want to buy it
before seven forty-five tonight. I want you to come across the bay
and open the store and sell me that vase."</p>
<p>"Such a business! Vot you think I am? Crazy?"</p>
<p>"No, Mr. Cohn, I do not. I'm the only crazy man talking. I'm
crazy for that vase and I've got to have it right away."</p>
<p>"You know vot dot vase costs?" Mr. B. Cohn's voice dripped
syrup.</p>
<p>"No, and I don't give a hoot what it costs. I want what I want
when I want it. Do I get it?"</p>
<p>"Ve-ell, lemme see. Vot time iss it?" A silence while B. Cohn
evidently looked at his watch. "It iss now a quarter of seven, Mr.
Eckstein, und der nexd drain from Mill Valley don't leaf until
eight o'clock. Dot vill get me to San Francisco at eight-fifty--und
I am dining mit friends und haf just finished my soup."</p>
<p>"To hell with your soup. I want that blue vase."</p>
<p>"Vell, I tell you, Mr. Eckstein, if you got to have it, call up
my head salesman, Herman Joost, in der Chilton Apardments--Prospect
three--two--four--nine, und tell him I said he should come down
right avay qvick und sell you dot blue vase. Goodbye, Mr.
Eckstein."</p>
<p>And B. Cohn hung up.</p>
<p>Instantly Peck called Prospect 3249 and asked for Herman Joost.
Mr. Joost's mother answered. She was desolated because Herman was
not at home, but vouchsafed the information that he was dining at
the country club. Which country club? She did not know. So Peck
procured from the hotel clerk a list of the country clubs in and
around San Francisco and started calling them up. At eight o'clock
he was still being informed that Mr. Juice was not a member, that
Mr. Luce wasn't in, that Mr. Coos had been dead three months and
that Mr. Boos had played but eight holes when he received a
telegram calling him back to New York. At the other clubs Mr. Joust
was unknown.</p>
<p>"Licked," murmured Bill Peck, "but never let it be said that I
didn't go down fighting. I'm going to heave a brick through that
show window, grab the vase and run with it."</p>
<p>He engaged a taxicab and instructed the driver to wait for him
at the corner of Geary and Stockton Streets. Also, he borrowed from
the chauffeur a ball peen hammer. When he reached the art shop of
B. Cohn, however, a policeman was standing in the doorway,
violating the general orders of a policeman on duty by
surreptitiously smoking a cigar.</p>
<p>"He'll nab me if I crack that window," the desperate Peck
decided, and continued on down the street, crossed to the other
side and came back. It was now dark and over the art shop B. Cohn's
name burned in small red, white and blue electric lights.</p>
<p>And lo, it was spelled B. Cohen!</p>
<p>Ex-private William E. Peck sat down on a fire hydrant and cursed
with rage. His weak leg hurt him, too, and for some damnable
reason, the stump of his left arm developed the feeling that his
missing hand was itchy.</p>
<p>"The world is filled with idiots," he raved furiously. "I'm
tired and I'm hungry. I skipped luncheon and I've been too busy to
think of dinner."</p>
<p>He walked back to his taxicab and returned to the hotel where,
hope springing eternal in his breast, he called Prospect 3249 again
and discovered that the missing Herman Joost had returned to the
bosom of his family. To him the frantic Peck delivered the message
of B. Cohn, whereupon the cautious Herman Joost replied that he
would confirm the authenticity of the message by telephoning to Mr.
Cohn at Mr. Simon's home in Mill Valley. If Mr. B. Cohn or Cohen
confirmed Mr. Kek's story he, the said Herman Joost, would be at
the store sometime before nine o'clock, and if Mr. Kek cared to, he
might await him there.</p>
<p>Mr. Kek said he would be delighted to wait for him there.</p>
<p>At nine-fifteen Herman Joost appeared on the scene. On his way
down the street he had taken the precaution to pick up a policeman
and bring him along with him. The lights were switched on in the
store and Mr. Joost lovingly abstracted the blue vase from the
window.</p>
<p>"What's the cursed thing worth?" Peck demanded.</p>
<p>"Two thousand dollars," Mr. Joost replied without so much as the
quiver of an eyelash. "Cash," he added, apparently as an
afterthought.</p>
<p>The exhausted Peck leaned against the sturdy guardian of the law
and sighed. This was the final straw. He had about ten dollars in
his possession.</p>
<p>"You refuse, absolutely, to accept my check?" he quavered.</p>
<p>"I don't know you, Mr. Peck," Herman Joost replied simply.</p>
<p>"Where's your telephone?"</p>
<p>Mr. Joost led Peck to the telephone and the latter called up Mr.
Skinner.</p>
<p>"Mr. Skinner," he announced, "this is all that is mortal of Bill
Peck speaking. I've got the store open and for two thousand
dollars--cash--I can buy the blue vase Mr. Ricks has set his heart
upon."</p>
<p>"Oh, Peck, dear fellow," Mr. Skinner purred sympathetically.
"Have you been all this time on that errand?"</p>
<p>"I have. And I'm going to stick on the job until I deliver the
goods. For God's sake let me have two thousand dollars and bring it
down to me at B. Cohen's Art Shop on Geary Street near Grant
Avenue. I'm too utterly exhausted to go up after it."</p>
<p>"My dear Mr. Peck, I haven't two thousand dollars in my house.
That is too great a sum of money to keep on hand."</p>
<p>"Well, then, come downtown, open up the office safe and get the
money for me."</p>
<p>"Time lock on the office safe, Peck. Impossible."</p>
<p>"Well then, come downtown and identify me at hotels and
cafés and restaurants so I can cash my own check."</p>
<p>"Is your check good, Mr. Peck?"</p>
<p>The flood of invective which had been accumulating in Mr. Peck's
system all the afternoon now broke its bounds. He screamed at Mr.
Skinner a blasphemous invitation to betake himself to the lower
regions.</p>
<p>"Tomorrow morning," he promised hoarsely, "I'll beat you to
death with the stump of my left arm, you miserable, cold-blooded,
lazy, shiftless slacker."</p>
<p>He called up Cappy Ricks' residence next, and asked for Captain
Matt Peasley, who, he knew, made his home with his father-in-law.
Matt Peasley came to the telephone and listened sympathetically to
Peck's tale of woe.</p>
<p>"Peck, that's the worst outrage I ever heard of," he declared.
"The idea of setting you such a task. You take my advice and forget
the blue vase."</p>
<p>"I can't," Peck panted. "Mr. Ricks will feel mighty chagrined if
I fail to get the vase to him. I wouldn't disappoint him for my
right arm. He's been a dead game sport with me, Captain
Peasley."</p>
<p>"But it's too late to get the vase to him, Peck. He left the
city at eight o'clock and it is now almost half past nine."</p>
<p>"I know, but if I can secure legal possession of the vase I'll
get it to him before he leaves the train at Santa Barbara at six
o'clock tomorrow morning."</p>
<p>"How?"</p>
<p>"There's a flying school out at the Marina and one of the pilots
there is a friend of mine. He'll fly to Santa Barbara with me and
the vase."</p>
<p>"You're crazy."</p>
<p>"I know it. Please lend me two thousand dollars."</p>
<p>"What for?"</p>
<p>"To pay for the vase."</p>
<p>"Now I know you're crazy--or drunk. Why if Cappy Ricks ever
forgot himself to the extent of paying two hundred dollars for a
vase he'd bleed to death in an hour."</p>
<p>"Won't you let me have two thousand dollars, Captain
Peasley?"</p>
<p>"I will not, Peck, old son. Go home and to bed and forget
it."</p>
<p>"Please. You can cash your checks. You're known so much better
than I, and it's Sunday night--"</p>
<p>"And it's a fine way to keep holy the Sabbath day," Matt Peasley
retorted and hung up.</p>
<p>"Well," Herman Joost queried, "do we stay here all night?"</p>
<p>Bill Peck bowed his head. "Look here," he demanded suddenly, "do
you know a good diamond when you see it?"</p>
<p>"I do," Herman Joost replied.</p>
<p>"Will you wait here until I go to my hotel and get one?"</p>
<p>"Sure."</p>
<p>Bill Peck limped painfully away. Forty minutes later he returned
with a platinum ring set with diamonds and sapphires.</p>
<p>"What are they worth?" he demanded.</p>
<p>Herman Joost looked the ring over lovingly and appraised it
conservatively at twenty-five hundred dollars.</p>
<p>"Take it as security for the payment of my check," Peck pleaded.
"Give me a receipt for it and after my check has gone through
clearing I'll come back and get the ring."</p>
<p>Fifteen minutes later, with the blue vase packed in excelsior
and reposing in a stout cardboard box, Bill Peck entered a
restaurant and ordered dinner. When he had dined he engaged a taxi
and was driven to the flying field at the Marina. From the night
watchman he ascertained the address of his pilot friend and at
midnight, with his friend at the wheel, Bill Peck and his blue vase
soared up into the moonlight and headed south.</p>
<p>An hour and a half later they landed in a stubble field in the
Salinas Valley and, bidding his friend good-bye, Bill Peck trudged
across to the railroad track and sat down. When the train bearing
Cappy Ricks came roaring down the valley, Peck twisted a Sunday
paper with which he had provided himself, into an improvised torch,
which he lighted. Standing between the rails he swung the flaming
paper frantically.</p>
<p>The train slid to a halt, a brakeman opened a vestibule door,
and Bill Peck stepped wearily aboard.</p>
<p>"What do you mean by flagging this train?" the brakeman demanded
angrily, as he signaled the engineer to proceed. "Got a
ticket?"</p>
<p>"No, but I've got the money to pay my way. And I flagged this
train because I wanted to change my method of travel. I'm looking
for a man in stateroom A of car 7, and if you try to block me
there'll be murder done."</p>
<p>"That's right. Take advantage of your half-portion arm and abuse
me," the brakeman retorted bitterly. "Are you looking for that
little old man with the Henry Clay collar and the white mutton-chop
whiskers?"</p>
<p>"I certainly am."</p>
<p>"Well, he was looking for you just before we left San Francisco.
He asked me if I had seen a one-armed man with a box under his good
arm. I'll lead you to him."</p>
<p>A prolonged ringing at Cappy's stateroom door brought the old
gentleman to the entrance in his nightshirt.</p>
<p>"Very sorry to have to disturb you, Mr. Ricks," said Bill Peck,
"but the fact is there were so many Cohens and Cohns and Cohans,
and it was such a job to dig up two thousand dollars, that I failed
to connect with you at seven forty-five last night, as per orders.
It was absolutely impossible for me to accomplish the task within
the time limit set, but I was resolved that you should not be
disappointed. Here is the vase. The shop wasn't within four blocks
of where you thought it was, sir, but I'm sure I found the right
vase. It ought to be. It cost enough and was hard enough to get, so
it should be precious enough to form a gift for any friend of
yours."</p>
<p>Cappy Ricks stared at Bill Peck as if the latter were a
wraith.</p>
<p>"By the Twelve Ragged Apostles!" he murmured. "By the Holy
Pink-toed Prophet! We changed the sign on you and we stacked the
Cohens on you and we set a policeman to guard the shop to keep you
from breaking the window, and we made you dig up two thousand
dollars on Sunday night in a town where you are practically
unknown, and while you missed the train at eight o'clock, you
overtake it at two o'clock in the morning and deliver the blue
vase. Come in and rest your poor old game leg, Bill. Brake-man, I'm
much obliged to you."</p>
<p>Bill Peck entered and slumped wearily down on the settee. "So it
was a plant?" he cracked, and his voice trembled with rage. "Well,
sir, you're an old man and you've been good to me, so I do not
begrudge you your little joke, but Mr. Ricks, I can't stand things
like I used to. My leg hurts and my stump hurts and my heart
hurts------"</p>
<p>He paused, choking, and the tears of impotent rage filled his
eyes. "You shouldn't treat me that way, sir," he complained
presently. "I've been trained not to question orders, even when
they seem utterly foolish to me; I've been trained to obey them--on
time, if possible, but if impossible, to obey them anyhow. I've
been taught loyalty to my chief--and I'm sorry my chief found it
necessary to make a buffoon of me. I haven't had a very good time
the past three years and--and--you can--pa-pa-pass your skunk
spruce and larch rustic and short odd length stock to some slacker
like Skinner--and you'd better--arrange--to replace--Skinner,
because he's young--enough to--take a beating--and I'm going
to--give it to him--and it'll be a hospital--job--sir--"</p>
<p>Cappy Ricks ruffled Bill Peck's aching head with a paternal
hand.</p>
<p>"Bill, old boy, it was cruel--damnably cruel, but I had a big
job for you and I had to find out a lot of things about you before
I entrusted you with that job. So I arranged to give you the Degree
of the Blue Vase, which is the supreme test of a go-getter. You
thought you carried into this stateroom a two thousand dollar vase,
but between ourselves, what you really carried in was a ten
thousand dollar job as our Shanghai manager."</p>
<p>"Wha--what!"</p>
<p>"Every time I have to pick out a permanent holder of a job worth
ten thousand dollars, or more, I give the candidate the Degree of
the Blue Vase," Cappy explained. "I've had two men out of a field
of fifteen deliver the vase, Bill."</p>
<p>Bill Peck had forgotten his rage, but the tears of his recent
fury still glistened in his bold blue eyes. "Thank you, sir. I
forgive you--and I'll make good in Shanghai."</p>
<p>"I know you will, Bill. Now, tell me, son, weren't you tempted
to quit when you discovered the almost insuperable obstacles I'd
placed in your way?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir, I was. I wanted to commit suicide before I'd finished
telephoning all the C-o-h-e-n-s in the world. And when I started on
the C-o-h-n-s--well, it's this way, sir. I just couldn't quit
because that would have been disloyal to a man I once knew."</p>
<p>"Who was he?" Cappy demanded, and there was awe in his
voice.</p>
<p>"He was my brigadier, and he had a brigade motto: It shall be
done. When the divisional commander called him up and told him to
move forward with his brigade and occupy certain territory, our
brigadier would say: 'Very well, sir. It shall be done.' If any
officer in his brigade showed signs of flunking his job because it
appeared impossible, the brigadier would just look at him once--and
then that officer would remember the motto and go and do his job or
die trying.</p>
<p>"In the army, sir, the <i>esprit de corps</i> doesn't bubble up
from the bottom. It filters down from the top. An organization is
what its commanding officer is--neither better nor worse. In my
company, when the top sergeant handed out a week of kitchen police
to a buck, that buck was out of luck if he couldn't muster a grin
and say: 'All right, sergeant. It shall be done.'</p>
<p>"The brigadier sent for me once and ordered me to go out and get
a certain German sniper. I'd been pretty lucky--some days I got
enough for a mess--and he'd heard of me. He opened a map and said
to me: 'Here's about where he holes up. Go get him, Private Peck.'
Well, Mr. Ricks, I snapped into it and gave him a rifle salute, and
said, 'Sir, it shall be done'--and I'll never forget the look that
man gave me. He came down to the field hospital to see me after I'd
walked into one of those Austrian 88's. I knew my left wing was a
total loss and I suspected my left leg was about to leave me, and I
was downhearted and wanted to die. He came and bucked me up. He
said: 'Why, Private Peck, you aren't half dead. In civil life
you're going to be worth half a dozen live ones--aren't you?' But I
was pretty far gone and I told him I didn't believe it, so he gave
me a hard look and said: 'Private Peck will do his utmost to
recover and as a starter he will smile.' Of course, putting it in
the form of an order, I had to give him the usual reply, so I
grinned and said: 'Sir, it shall be done.' He was quite a man, sir,
and his brigade had a soul--his soul----"</p>
<p>"I see, Bill. And his soul goes marching on, eh? Who was he,
Bill?"</p>
<p>Bill Peck named his idol.</p>
<p>"By the Twelve Ragged Apostles!" There was awe in Cappy Ricks'
voice, there was reverence in his faded old eyes. "Son," he
continued gently, "twenty-five years ago your brigadier was a candidate
for an important job in my employ--and I gave him the Degree of the
Blue Vase. He couldn't get the vase legitimately, so he threw a
cobble-stone through the window, grabbed the vase and ran a mile
and a half before the police captured him. Cost me a lot of money
to square the case and keep it quiet. But he was too good, Bill,
and I couldn't stand in his way; I let him go forward to his
destiny. But tell me, Bill. How did you get the two thousand
dollars to pay for this vase?"</p>
<p>"Once," said ex-Private Peck thoughtfully, "the brigadier and I
were first at a dug-out entrance. It was a headquarters dug-out and
they wouldn't surrender, so I bombed them and then we went down. I
found a finger with a ring on it--and the brigadier said if I
didn't take the ring somebody else would. I left that ring as
security for my check."</p>
<p>"But how could you have the courage to let me in for a two
thousand dollar vase? Didn't you realize that the price was absurd
and that I might repudiate the transaction?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not. You are responsible for the acts of your
servant. You are a true blue sport and would never repudiate my
action. You told me what to do, but you did not insult my
intelligence by telling me how to do it. When my late brigadier
sent me after the German sniper he didn't take into consideration
the probability that the sniper might get me. He told me to get the
sniper. It was my business to see to it that I accomplished my
mission and carried my objective, which, of course, I could not
have done if I had permitted the German to get me."</p>
<p>"I see, Bill. Well, give that blue vase to the porter in the
morning. I paid fifteen cents for it in a five, ten and fifteen
cent store. Meanwhile, hop into that upper berth and help yourself
to a well-earned rest."</p>
<p>"But aren't you going to a wedding anniversary at Santa Barbara,
Mr. Ricks?"</p>
<p>"I am not. Bill, I discovered a long time ago that it's a good
idea for me to get out of town and play golf as often as I can.
Besides which, prudence dictates that I remain away from the office
for a week after the seeker of blue vases fails to deliver the
goods and--by the way, Bill, what sort of a game do you play? Oh,
forgive me, Bill. I forgot about your left arm."</p>
<p>"Say, look here, sir," Bill Peck retorted, I'm big enough and
ugly enough to play one-handed golf."</p>
<p>"But, have you ever tried it?"</p>
<p>"No, sir," Bill Peck replied seriously, "but--it shall be
done!"</p>
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