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The Day of the Beast Page 3


  “Daren, you served a while under Captain Thesel in the war,” she said.

  “Yes, I guess I did,” replied Lane, with sombre memory resurging.

  “Do you know he lives here?”

  “I knew him here in Middleville several years before the war.”

  “He's danced with me at the Armory. Some swell dancer! He and Dick Swann and Hardy MacLean sometimes drop in at the Armory on Saturday nights. Captain Thesel is chasing Mrs. Clemhorn now. They're always together.... Daren, did he ever have it in for you?”

  “He never liked me. We never got along here in Middleville. And naturally in the service when he was a captain and I only a private—we didn't get along any better.”

  “Well, I've heard Captain Thesel was to blame for—for what was said about you last summer when he came home.”

  “And what was that, Lorna?” queried Lane, curiously puzzled at her, and darkly conscious of the ill omen that had preceded him home.

  “You'll not hear it from me,” declared Lorna, spiritedly. “But thatCroix de Guerre doesn't agree with it, I'll tell the world.”

  A little frown puckered her smooth brow and there was a gleam in her eye.

  “Seems to me I heard some of the kids talking last summer,” she mused, ponderingly. “Vane Thesel was stuck on Mel Iden and Dot Dalrymple both before the war. Dot handed him a lemon. He's still trying to rush Dot, and the gossip is he'd go after Mel even now on the sly, if she'd stand for it.”

  “Why on the sly?” inquired Lane. “Before I left home Mel Iden was about the prettiest and most popular girl in Middleville. Her people were poor, and ordinary, perhaps, but she was the equal of any one.”

  “Thesel couldn't rush Mel now and get away with it, unless on the q-t,” replied Lorna. “Haven't you heard about Mel?”

  “No, you see the fact is, my few correspondents rather neglected to send me news,” said Lane.

  The significance of this was lost upon his sister. She giggled. “Hot dog! You've got some kicks coming, I'll say!”

  “Is that so,” returned Lane, with irritation. “A few more or less won't matter.... Lorna, do you know Helen Wrapp?”

  “That red-headed dame!” burst out Lorna, with heat. “I should smile I do. She's one who doesn't shake a shimmy on tea, believe me.”

  Lane was somewhat at a loss to understand his sister's intimation, but as it was vulgarly inimical, and seemed to hold some subtle personal scorn or jealousy, he shrank from questioning her. This talk with his sister was the most unreal happening he had ever experienced. He could not adjust himself to its verity.

  “Helen Wrapp is nutty about Dick Swann,” went on Lorna. “She drives down to the office after——”

  “Lorna, do you know Helen and I are engaged?” interrupted Lane.

  “Hot dog!” was that young lady's exposition of utter amaze. She stared at her brother.

  “We were engaged,” continued Lane. “She wore my ring. When I enlisted she wanted me to marry her before I left. But I wouldn't do that.”

  Lorna promptly recovered from her amaze. “Well, it's a damn lucky thing you didn't take her up on that marriage stuff.”

  There was a glint of dark youthful passion in Lorna's face. Lane felt rise in him a desire to bid her sharply to omit slang and profanity from the conversation. But the desire faded before his bewilderment. All had suffered change. What had he come home to? There was no clear answer. But whatever it was, he felt it to be enormous and staggering. And he meant to find out. Weary as was his mind, it grasped peculiar significances and deep portents.

  “Lorna, where do you work?” he began, shifting his interest.

  “At Swann's,” she replied.

  “In the office—at the foundry?” he asked.

  “No. Mr. Swann's at the head of the leather works.”

  “What do you do?”

  “I type letters,” she answered, and rose to make him a little bow that held the movement and the suggestion of a dancer.

  “You've learned stenography?” he asked, in surprise.

  “I'm learning shorthand,” replied Lorna. “You see I had only a few weeks in business school before Dick got me the job.”

  “Dick Swann? Do you work for him?”

  “No. For the superintendent, Mr. Fryer. But I go to Dick's office to do letters for him some of the time.”

  She appeared frank and nonchalant, evidently a little proud of her important position. She posed before Lane and pirouetted with fancy little steps.

  “Say, Dare, won't you teach me a new dance—right from Paris?” she interposed. “Something that will put the shimmy and toddle out of biz?”

  “Lorna, I don't know what the shimmy and toddle are. I've only heard of them.”

  “Buried alive, I'll say,” she retorted.

  Lane bit his tongue to keep back a hot reprimand. He looked at his mother, who was clearing off the supper table. She looked sad. The light had left her worn face. Lane did not feel sure of his ground here. So he controlled his feelings and directed his interest toward more news.

  “Of course Dick Swann was in the service?” he asked.

  “No. He didn't go,” replied Lorna.

  The information struck Lane singularly. Dick Swann had always been a prominent figure in the Middleville battery, in those seemingly long past years since before the war.

  “Why didn't Dick go into the service? Why didn't the draft get him?”

  “He had poor eyesight, and his father needed him at the iron works.”

  “Poor eyesight!” ejaculated Lane. “He was the best shot in the battery—the best hunter among the boys. Well, that's funny.”

  “Daren, there are people who called Dick Swann a slacker,” returned Lorna, as if forced to give this information. “But I never saw that it hurt him. He's rich now. His uncle left him a million, and his father will leave him another. And I'll say it's the money people want these days.”

  The materialism so pregnant in Lorna's half bitter reply checked Lane's further questioning. He edged closer to the stove, feeling a little cold. A shadow drifted across the warmth and glow of his mind. At home now he was to be confronted with a monstrous and insupportable truth—the craven cowardice of the man who had been eligible to service in army or navy, and who had evaded it. In camp and trench and dug-out he had heard of the army of slackers. And of all the vile and stark profanity which the war gave birth to on the lips of miserable and maimed soldiers, that flung on the slackers was the worst.

  “I've got a date to go to the movies,” said Lorna, and she bounced out of the kitchen into the hall singing:

  “Oh by heck

  You never saw a wreck

  Like the wreck she made of me.”

  She went upstairs, while Lane sat there trying to adapt himself to a new and unintelligible environment. His mother began washing the dishes. Lane felt her gaze upon his face, and he struggled against all the weaknesses that beset him.

  “Mother, doesn't Lorna help you with the house work?” he asked.

  “She used to. But not any more.”

  “Do you let her go out at night to the movies—dances, and all that?”

  Mrs. Lane made a gesture of helplessness. “Lorna goes out all the time. She's never here. She stays out until midnight—one o'clock—later. She's popular with the boys. I couldn't stop her even if I wanted to. Girls can't be stopped these days. I do all I can for her—make her dresses—slave for her—hoping she'll find a good husband. But the young men are not marrying.”

  “Good Heavens, are you already looking for a husband for Lorna?” broke out Lane.

  “You don't understand, Dare. You've been away so long. Wait till you've seen what girls—are nowadays. Then you'll not wonder that I'd like to see Lorna settled.”

  “Mother, you're right,” he said, gravely. “I've been away so—long. But I'm back home now. I'll soon get on to things. And I'll help you. I'll take Lorna in hand. I'll relieve you of a whole lot.”

  “You were alwa
ys a good boy, Daren, to me and Lorna,” murmured Mrs. Lane, almost in tears. “It's cheered me to get you home, yet.... Oh, if you were well and strong!”

  “Never mind, mother. I'll get better,” he replied, rising to take up his bag. “I guess now I'd better go to bed. I'm just about all in.... Wonder how Blair and Red are.”

  His mother followed him up the narrow stairway, talking, trying to pretend she did not see his dragging steps, his clutch on the banisters.

  “Your room's just as you left it,” she said, opening the door. Then on the threshold she kissed him. “My son, I thank God you have come home alive. You give me hope in—in spite of all.... If you need me, call. Good night.”

  Lane was alone in the little room that had lived in waking and dreaming thought. Except to appear strangely smaller, it had not changed. His bed and desk—the old bureau—the few pictures—the bookcase he had built himself—these were identical with images in his memory.

  A sweet and wonderful emotion of peace pervaded his soul—fulfilment at last of the soldier's endless longing for home, bed, quiet, rest.

  “If I have to die—I can do itnow without hate of all around me,” he whispered, in the passion of his spirit.

  But as he sat upon his bed, trying with shaking and clumsy hands to undress himself, that exalted mood flashed by. Some of the dearest memories of his life were associated with this little room. Here he had dreamed; here he had read and studied; here he had fought out some of the poignant battles of youth. So much of life seemed behind him. At last he got undressed, and extinguishing the light, he crawled into bed.

  The darkness was welcome, and the quiet was exquisitely soothing. He lay there, staring into the blackness, feeling his body sink slowly as if weighted. How cool and soft the touch of sheets! Then, the river of throbbing fire that was his blood, seemed to move again. And the dull ache, deep in the bones, possessed his nerves. In his breast there began a vibrating, as if thousands of tiny bubbles were being pricked to bursting in his lungs. And the itch to cough came back to his throat. And all his flesh seemed in contention with a slowly ebbing force. Sleep might come perhaps after pain had lulled. His heart beat unsteadily and weakly, sometimes with a strange little flutter. How many weary interminable hours had he endured! But to-night he was too far spent, too far gone for long wakefulness. He drifted away and sank as if into black oblivion where there sounded the dreadful roll of drums, and images moved under gray clouds, and men were running like phantoms. He awoke from nightmares, wet with cold sweat, and lay staring again at the blackness, once more alive to recurrent pain. Pain that was an old, old story, yet ever acute and insistent and merciless.

  The night wore on, hour by hour. The courthouse clock rang out one single deep mellow clang. One o'clock! Lane thrilled to the sound. It brought back the school days, the vacation days, the Indian summer days when the hills were golden and the purple haze hung over the land—the days that were to be no more for Daren Lane.

  In the distance somewhere a motor-car hummed, and came closer, louder down the street, to slow its sound with sliding creak and jar outside in front of the house. Lane heard laughter and voices of a party of young people. Footsteps, heavy and light, came up the walk, and on to the porch. Lorna was returning rather late from the motion-picture, thought Lane, and he raised his head from the pillow, to lean toward the open window, listening.

  “Come across, kiddo,” said a boy's voice, husky and low.

  Lane heard a kiss—then another.

  “Cheese it, you boob!”

  “Gee, your gettin' snippy. Say, will you ride out to Flesher's to-morrow night?”

  “Nothing doing, I've got a date. Good night.”

  The hall door below opened and shut. Footsteps thumped off the porch and out to the street. Lane heard the giggle of girls, the snap of a car-door, the creaking of wheels, and then a low hum, dying away.

  Lorna came slowly up stairs to enter her room, moving quietly. And Lane lay on his bed, wide-eyed, staring into the blackness. “My little sister,” he whispered to himself. And the words that had meant so much seemed a mockery.

  CHAPTER III.

  Lane saw the casement of his window grow gray with the glimmering light of dawn. After that he slept several hours. When he awoke it was nine o'clock. The long night with its morbid dreams and thoughts had passed, and in the sunshine of day he saw things differently.

  To move, to get up was not an easy task. It took stern will, and all the strength of muscle he had left, and when he finally achieved it there was a clammy dew of pain upon his face. With slow guarded movements he began to dress himself. Any sudden or violent action might burst the delicate gassed spots in his lungs or throw out of place one of the lower vertebrae of his spine. The former meant death, and the latter bent his body like a letter S and caused such excruciating agony that it was worse than death. These were his two ever-present perils. The other aches and pains he could endure.

  He shaved and put on clean things, and his best coat, and surveyed himself in the little mirror. He saw a thin face, white as marble, but he was not ashamed of it. His story was there to read, if any one had kind enough eyes to see. What would Helen think of him—and Margaret Maynard—and Dal—and Mel Iden? Bitter curiosity seemed his strongest feeling concerning his fiancee. He would hold her as engaged to him until she informed him she was not. As for the others, thought of them quickened his interest, especially in Mel. What had happened to her.

  It was going to be wonderful to meet them—and to meet everybody he had once known. Wonderful because he would see what the war had done to them and they would see what it had done to him. A peculiar significance lay between his sister and Helen—all these girls, and the fact of his having gone to war.

  “They may not think of it, butI know ,” he muttered to himself. And he sat down upon his bed to plan how best to meet them, and others. He did not know what he was going to encounter, but he fortified himself against calamity. Strange portent of this had crossed the sea to haunt him. As soon as he was sure of what had happened in Middleville, of the attitude people would have toward a crippled soldier, and of what he could do with the month or year that might be left him to live, then he would know his own mind. All he sensed now was that there had been some monstrous inexplicable alteration in hope, love, life. His ordeal of physical strife, loneliness, longing was now over, for he was back home. But he divined that his greater ordeal lay before him, here in this little house, and out there in Middleville. All the subtlety, intelligence, and bitter vision developed by the war sharpened here to confront him with terrible possibilities. Had his countrymen, his people, his friends, his sweetheart, all failed him? Was there justice in Blair Maynard's scorn? Lane's faith cried out in revolt. He augmented all possible catastrophe, and then could not believe that he had sacrificed himself in vain. He knew himself. In him was embodied all the potentiality for hope of the future. And it was with the front and stride of a soldier, facing the mystery, the ingratitude, the ignorance and hell of war, that he left his room and went down stairs to meet the evils in store.

  His mother was not in the kitchen. The door stood open. He heard her outside talking to a neighbor woman, over the fence.

  “—Daren looks dreadful,” his mother was saying in low voice. “He could hardly walk.... It breaks my heart. I'm glad to have him along—but to see him waste away, day by day, like Mary Dean's boy—“ she broke off.

  “Too bad! It's a pity,” replied the neighbor. “Sad—now it comes home to us. My son Ted came in last night and said he'd talked with a boy who'd seen young Maynard and the strange soldier who was with him. They must be worse off than Daren—Blair Maynard with only one leg and—”

  “Mother, where are you? I'm hungry,” called Lane, interrupting that conversation.

  She came hurriedly in, at once fearful he might have heard, and solicitous for his welfare.

  “Daren, you look better in daylight—not so white,” she said. “You sit down now, and let me get your
breakfast.”

  Lane managed to eat a little this morning, which fact delighted his mother.

  “I'm going to see Dr. Bronson,” said Lane, presently. “Then I'll go to Manton's, and round town a little. And if I don't tire out I'll call on Helen. Of course Lorna has gone to work?”

  “Oh yes, she leaves at half after eight.”

  “Mother, I was awake last night when she got home,” went on Lane, seriously. “It was one o'clock. She came in a car. I heard girls tittering. And some boy came up on the porch with Lorna and kissed her. Well, that might not mean much—but something about their talk, the way it was done—makes me pretty sick. Did you know this sort of thing was going on?”

  “Yes. And I've talked with mothers who have girls Lorna's age. They've all run wild the last year or so. Dances and rides! Last summer I was worried half to death. But we mothers don't think the girls are reallybad . They're just crazy for fun, excitement, boys. Times and pleasures have changed. The girls say the mothers don't understand. Maybe we don't. I try to be patient. I trust Lorna. I can't see through it all.”