Jefferson unfurled the flag; Marsh gave the word of command, the band began to play a quick-step, and the procession moved forward down the cheering lane of people, who waved little flags and handkerchiefs and threw their hats in the air as they shouted. But, contrary to expectation, the parade was not directly along Main Street to the river. “Right wheel! March!” commanded Tappingham, hoarsely, waving his sword, and Jefferson led the way into Carewe Street.
“For God’s sake, don’t cry now!” and Tappingham, with a large drop streaking down his own cheek, turned savagely upon Lieutenant Cummings. “That isn’t what he wants. He wants to see us looking cheery and smiling. We can do it for him this once, I guess! I never saw him any other way.”
“You look damn smiling yourself!” snuffled Will.
“I will when we turn in at the gates,” retorted his Captain. “On my soul, I swear I’ll kill every sniffling idiot that doesn’t! — In line, there!” he stormed ferociously at a big recruit.
The lively strains of the band and the shouting of the people grew louder and louder in the room where Crailey lay. His eyes glistened as he heard, and he smiled, not the old smile of the worldly prelate, but merrily, like a child when music is heard. The room was darkened, save for the light of the one window which fell softly upon his head and breast and upon another fair head close to his, where Fanchon knelt. In the shadows at one end of the room were Miss Betty and Mrs. Tanberry and Mrs. Bareaud and the white-haired doctor who had said, “Let him have his own way in all he asks.” Tom stood alone, close by the head of the couch.
“Hail to the band!” Crailey chuckled, softly. “How the rogues keep the time! It’s ‘Rosin the Bow,’ all right! Ah, that is as it should be. Mrs. Tanberry, you and I have one thing in common, if you’ll let me flatter myself so far: we’ve always believed in good cheer in spite of the devil and all, you and I, eh? The best of things, even if things are bad, dear lady, eh?”
“You darling vagabond!” Mrs. Tanberry murmured, trying to smile back to him.
“Hark to ’em!” said Crailey. “They’re very near! Only hear the people cheer them! They’ll ‘march away so gaily,’ won’t they? — and how right that is!” The vanguard appeared in the street, and over the hedge gleamed the oncoming banner, the fresh colors flying out on a strong breeze. Crailey greeted it with a breathless cry. “There’s the flag — look, Fanchon, your flag! — . waving above the hedge; and it’s Jeff who carries it. Doesn’t it always make you want to dance! Bravo, bravo!”
The procession halted for a moment in the street and the music ceased. Then, with a jubilant flourish of brass and the roll of drums, the band struck up “The Star Spangled Banner,” and Jefferson Bareaud proudly led the way through the gates and down the driveway, the bright silk streaming overhead. Behind him briskly marched the volunteers, with heads erect and cheerful faces, as they knew Corporal Gray wished to see them, their Captain flourishing his sword in the air.
“Here they come! Do you see, Fanchon?” cried Crailey, excitedly. “They are all there, Jeff and Tappingham, and the two Madrillons and Will, the dear old fellow — he’ll never write a decent paragraph as long as he lives, God bless him! — and young Frank — what deviltries I’ve led the boy into! — and there’s the old General, forgetting all the tiffs we’ve had. God bless them all and grant them all a safe return! What on earth are they taking off their hats for? — Ah, good-by, boys, good-by!”
They saw the white face at the window, and the slender hand fluttering its farewell, and Tappingham halted his men.
“Three times three for Corporal Gray!” he shouted, managing, somehow, to keep the smile upon his lips. “Three times three, and may he rejoin his company before we enter the Mexican capital!”
He beat the time for the thunderous cheers that they gave; the procession described a circle on the lawn, and then, with the band playing and colors flying, passed out of the gates and took up the march to the wharf.
“The flag, the flag!” whispered Crailey, following it with his eyes. “It shows that you helped make it, Fanchon, it’s so beautiful. Ah, Tom, they’ve said we abused it, sometimes — it was only that we loved it so well we didn’t like to see anyone make it look silly or mean. But, after all, no man can do that — no, nor no group of men, nor party!” His voice grew louder as the last strains of the music came more faintly from the street. “They’ll take your banner across the Rio Grande, Fanchon, but that is not all — some day its stars must spread over the world! Don’t you all see that they will?”
After a little while, he closed his eyes with a sigh; the doctor bent over him quickly, and Miss Betty started forward unconsciously and cried out.
But the bright eyes opened again and fixed themselves upon her with all their old, gay inscrutability.
“Not yet,” said Crailey. “Miss Carewe, may I tell you that I am sorry I could not have known you sooner? Perhaps you might have liked me for Fanchon’s sake — I know you care for her.”
“I do — I do!” she faltered. “I love her, and — ah! — I do like you, Mr. Gray, for I know you, though I never — met you until — last night. God bless you — God bless you!”
She wavered a moment, like a lily in the wind, and put out a hand blindly. “Not you!” she said sharply, as Tom Vanrevel started toward her. Mrs. Tanberry came quickly and put an arm about her, and together they went out of the room.
“You must be good to her, Tom,” said Crailey then, in a very low voice.
“I!” answered Tom, gently. “There was never a chance of that, lad.”
“Listen,” whispered Crailey. “Lean down — no — closer.” He cast a quick glance at Fanchon, kneeling at the other side of the bed, her golden head on the white coverlet, her outstretched hand clutching his; and he spoke so close to Tom’s ear and in so low a tone that only Tom could hear. “She never cared for me. She felt that she ought to — but that was only because I masqueraded in your history. She wanted to tell me before I went away that there was no chance for me. She was telling me that, when he called from the window. It was at the dance, the night before, that she knew. I think there has been someone else from the first — God send it’s you! Did you speak to her that night or she to you?”
“Ah, no,” said Tom Vanrevel. “All the others.”
Mrs. Tanberry and Betty and Mr. Bareaud waited in the library, the two women huddled together on a sofa, with their arms round each other, and all the house was very still. By and by, they heard a prolonged, far-away cheering and the steamer’s whistle, and knew that the boat was off. Half an hour later, Will Cummings came back alone, entered the room on tip-toe, and silently sank into a chair near Mr. Bareaud, with his face away from Miss Betty. He was to remain in Rouen another week, and join his regiment with Tom. None of the three appeared to notice his coming more than dimly, and he sat with his face bowed in his hands, and did not move.
Thus perhaps an hour passed, with only a sound of footsteps on the gravel of the driveway, now and then, and a low murmur of voices in the rear of the house where people came to ask after Crailey; and when the door of the room where he lay was opened, the four watchers started as at a loud explosion. It was Mrs. Bareaud and the old doctor, and they closed the door again, softly, and came in to the others. They had left Crailey alone with Fanchon and Tom Vanrevel, the two who loved him best.
The warm day beyond the windows became like Sunday, no voices sounded from without in the noon hush, though sometimes a little group of people would gather across the street to eye the house curiously and nod and whisper. The strong, blue shadows of the veranda pillars stole slowly across the white floor of the porch in a lessening slant, and finally lay all in a line, as the tall clock in a corner of the library asthmatically coughed the hour of noon. In this jarring discordance there was something frightful to Miss Betty. She rose abruptly, and, imperiously waving back Mrs. Tanberry, who would have detained her — for there was in her face and manner the incipient wildness of control overstrained to the breaking-p
oint — she went hurriedly out of the room and out of the house, to the old bench in the garden. There she sank down, her face hidden in her arms; there on the spot where she had first seen Crailey Gray.
From there, too, had risen the serenade of the man she had spurned and insulted; and there she had come to worship the stars when Crailey bade her look to them. And now the strange young teacher was paying the bitter price for his fooleries — and who could doubt that the price was a bitter one? To have the spirit so suddenly, cruelly riven from the sprightly body that was, but a few hours ago, hale and alert, obedient to every petty wish, could dance, run, and leap; to be forced with such hideous precipitation to leave the warm breath of June and undergo the lonely change, merging with the shadow; to be flung from the exquisite and commonplace day of sunshine into the appalling adventure that should not have been his for years — and hurled into it by what hand! — ah, bitter, bitter price for a harlequinade! And, alas, alas! for the brave harlequin!
A gentle touch fell upon her shoulder, and Miss Betty sprang to her feet and screamed. It was Nelson who stood before her, hat in hand, his head deeply bowed.
“Is he with you?” she cried, clutching at the bench for support.
“No’m,” answered the old man, humbly. “I reckon we all ain’ goin’ see dat man no mo’.”
“Where is he?”
“On de way, honey, on de way.”
“The way — to Rouen!” she gasped.
“No’m; he goin’ cross de big water.” He stretched out his hand and pointed solemnly to the east. “Him an’ me we cotch de boat, an’ yo’ pa mek ’em taken de hosses on bode. Den we git off at Leeville, five mile’ down de rivuh, an’ yo’ pa hol’ de boat whiles I rid back alone an’ git de news, an’ what de tale is you all is tole, f’um ole Mist’ Chen’eth; an’ Mist’ Chen’eth, he rid back wid me an’ see yo’ pa at Leeville, an’ dey talk in de shed by de landin’, an’ yo’ pa tell Mist’ Chen’eth what ‘rangements he goin’ make wid de proprety. ‘Den he git on de boat ag’in an’ dey sto’t her agoin’; an’ he ain’ wave no good-by, ner say no mo’ wu’ds. Mist’ Chen’eth rid back whens de light come; but I res’ de hosses an’ come back slow, ‘case I ponduh on de worl’, an’ I mighty sorry fer yo’ pa, Missy. He am’ comin’ back no mo’, honey, an’ Miz Tanberry an’ me an’ Mamie, we goin’ take keer er you. Yo’ pa gone back dah to de F’enchmun, whuh he ‘uz a young man. He mighty sick, an’ he scairt, honey; an’ he ain’ goin’ git ovah dat, neider. ‘Peah to me, Missy, like he done had a vizhum er he own soul, when he come an’ look down at dat young man layin’ on de grass, las’ night!”
The old fellow bent his back before her in a solemn bow, as a feudal retainer in allegiance to the heir, but more in deference to the sorrow written upon her, and respecting its magnitude. With no words of comfort, for he knew she wanted only to be alone, he moved away, with infirm steps and shaking head, toward the rear of the house.
Miss Betty threw herself upon the bench again, face downward in her arms. And still the house lay in silence under the sunshine.
An hour had passed, and the shadows slanted strongly to the east, when the stillness was broken by a sound, low and small at first, then rising fearfully, a long, quavering wail of supreme anguish, that clutched and shook the listener’s heart. No one could have recognized the voice as Fanchon’s, yet everyone who heard it knew that it was hers; and that the soul of Crailey Gray had gone out upon the quest for the Holy Grail.
Miss Betty’s hands clenched convulsively round the arm of the bench and a fit of shuddering seized her as if with the grip of a violent chill, though her eyes were dry. Then she lay quiet.
A long time afterward, she became aware of a step that paced the garden path behind her, and turned her face upon her arm so that she saw, but made no other motion. It was Tom Vanrevel, walking slowly up and down, his hands behind his back and his hat pulled far down over his eyes. He had not seen her.
She rose and spoke his name.
He turned and came to her. “Almost at the very last,” he said, “Crailey whispered to me that he knew you thought him a great scamp, but to tell you to be sure to remember that it was all true about the stars.”
CHAPTER XX. “Goodby”
IT WAS BETWEEN twilight and candlelight, the gentle half-hour when the kind old Sand Man steals up the stairs of houses where children are; when rustic lovers stroll with slow and quiet steps down country lanes, and old bachelors are loneliest and dream of the things that might have been. Through the silence of the clear dusk came the whistle of the evening boat that was to bear Tom Vanrevel through the first stage of his long journey to the front of war, and the sound fell cheerlessly upon Miss Betty’s ear, as she stood leaning against the sun-dial among the lilac bushes. Her attitude was not one of reverie; yet she stood very still, so still that, in the wan shimmer of the faded afterglow, one might have passed close by her and not have seen her. The long, dark folds of her gown showed faintly against the gray stone, and her arms, bare from the elbow, lay across the face of the dial with unrelaxed fingers clenching the cornice; her head drooping, not languidly but with tension, her eyes half-closed, showing the lashes against a pale cheek; and thus, motionless, leaning on the stone in the dusk, she might have been Sorrow’s self.
She did not move, there was not even a flicker of the eyelashes, when a step sounded on the gravel of the driveway, and Vanrevel came slowly from the house. He stopped at a little distance from her, hat in hand. He was very thin, worn and old-looking, and in the failing light might have been taken for a tall, gentle ghost; yet his shoulders were squared and he held himself as straight as he had the first time she had ever seen him.
“Mrs. Tanberry told me I should find you here,” he said, hesitatingly. “I have come to say good-by.”
She did not turn toward him, nor did more than her lips move as she answered, “Good-by,” and her tone was neither kind nor cold, but held no meaning whatever, not even indifference.
There was an interval of silence; then, without surprise, he walked sadly to the gate, paused, wheeled about suddenly, and returned with a quick, firm step.
“I will not go until I know that I do not misunderstand you,” he said, “not even if there is only the slightest chance that I do. I want to say something to you, if you will let me, though naturally I remember you once asked me never to speak to you again. It is only that I have thought you did that under a misconception, or else I should still obey you. If you—”
“What is it that you wish to say?” Her tone was unchanged.
“Only that I think the hardest time for you has passed, and that—”
“Do you?” she interrupted.
“Yes,” he returned, “the saddest of your life. I think it has gone forever. And I think that what will come to you will be all you wish for. There will be a little time of waiting—”
“Waiting for what?”
He drew a step nearer, and his voice became very gentle. “Cummings and I reach our regiment tomorrow night; and there in the camp is a group of men on the way to the war, and they all go the more bravely because each one of them has you in his heart; — not one but will be a better soldier because of you. I want you to believe that if all of them don’t come back, yet the one whose safety you think of and fear for will return. For, you see, Crailey told me what you said to him when — when he met you here the last time. I have no way to know which of them you meant; but — he will come back to you! I am sure of it, because I believe you are to be happy. Ah, you’ve had your allotment of pain! After all, there is so little to regret: the town seems empty without its young men, yet you may rejoice, remembering how bravely they went and how gaily! They will sing half the way to Vera Cruz! You think it strange I should say there is so little to regret, when I’ve just laid away my best friend. It was his own doctrine, and the selfish personal grief and soreness grows less when I think of the gallant end he made, for it was he who went away most bravely and jauntily of all. Crail
ey was no failure, unless I let what he taught me go to no effect. And be sure he would have told you what I tell you now, that all is well with all in the world.”
“Please!” she cried, with a quick intake of breath through closed teeth.
“I will do anything in the world to please you,” he answered, sorrowfully. “Do you mean that—”
She turned at last and faced him, but without lifting her eyes. “Why did you come to say good-by to me?”
“I don’t understand.”
“I think you do.” Her voice was cold and steady, but it was suddenly given to him to perceive that she was trembling from head to heel.
An exclamation of remorse broke from him.
“Ah! You came here to be alone. I—”
“Stop,” she said. “You said good-by to me once before. Did you come to see — what you saw then?”
He fell back in utter amazement, but she advanced upon him swiftly. “Was it that?” she cried.
The unfortunate young man could make no reply, and remained unable to defend himself from her inexplicable attack.
“You have not forgotten,” she went on, impetuously. “It was in the crowd, just before they gave you the flag. You saw — I know you saw — and it killed me with the shame of it! Now you come to me to look at the same thing again — and the boat waiting for you! Is it in revenge for that night at the Bareauds’? Perhaps this sounds wild to you — I can’t help that — but why should you try to make it harder for me?”
From the porch came a strong voice: “Vanrevel!”
Collected Works of Booth Tarkington Page 62