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From "The Point" To The Plains
by
“Mr. Stanley cares too little what his classmates think, and too much of what Mr. Lee may say or do.”
“Mr. Stanley isn’t the only one who thinks a deal of Lieutenant Lee,” is the spirited answer. “Mr. Burton says he is the most popular tactical officer here, and many a cadet–good friends of your brother’s, Nannie–has said the same thing. You don’t like him because Will doesn’t.”
“I wouldn’t like or respect any officer who reports cadets on suspicion,” is the stout reply. “If he did that to any one else I would despise it as much as I do because Willy is the victim.”
The discussion is waxing hot. “Miss Mischief’s” blood is up. She likes Phil Stanley; she likes Mr. Lee; she has hosts of friends in the corps, and she is just as loyal and quite as pronounced in her views as her little adversary. They are fond of each other, too, and were great chums all through the previous summer; but there is danger of a quarrel to-day.
“I don’t think you are just in that matter at all, Nannie. I have heard cadets say that if they had been in Mr. Lee’s place or on officer-of-the-day duty they would have had to give Will that report you take so much to heart. Everybody knows his voice. Half the corps heard him call out to Mr. Pennock.”
“I don’t believe a single cadet who’s a friend of Will’s would say such a thing,” bursts in Miss Nan, her eyes blazing.
“He is a friend, and a warm friend, too.”
“You said there were several, Kitty, and I don’t believe it possible.”
“Well. There were two or three. If you don’t believe it, you can ask Mr. Stanley. He said it, and the others agreed.”
Fancy the mood in which she meets him this particular evening, when his card was brought to her door. Twice has “Miss Mischief” essayed to enter the room and “make up.” Conscience has been telling her savagely that in the impulse and sting of the moment she has given an unfair coloring to the whole matter. Mr. Stanley had volunteered no such remark as that she so vehemently quoted. Asked point blank whether he considered as given “on suspicion” the report which Mrs. McKay and Nannie so resented, he replied that he did not; and, when further pressed, he said that Will alone was blamable in the matter: Mr. Lee had no alternative, if it was Mr. Lee who gave the report, and any other officer would have been compelled to do the same. All this “Miss Mischief” would gladly have explained to Nannie could she have gained admission, but the latter “had a splitting headache,” and begged to be excused.
It has been such a lovely afternoon. The halls were filled with cadets “on permit,” when she came out from the dining-room, but nothing but ill-luck seemed to attend her. The young gentleman who had invited her to walk to Fort Putnam, most provokingly twisted an ankle at cavalry drill that very morning, and was sent to hospital. Now, if Mr. Stanley were all devotion, he would promptly tender his services as substitute. Then she could take him to task and punish him for his disloyalty to Will. But Mr. Stanley was not to be seen: “Gone off with another girl,” was the announcement made to her by Mr. Werrick, a youth who dearly loved a joke, and who saw no need of explaining that the other girl was his own sister. Sorely disappointed, yet hardly knowing why, she accepted her mother’s invitation to go with her to the barracks where Will was promenading the area on what Mr. Werrick called “one of his perennial punishment tours.” She went, of course; but the distant sight of poor Will, duly equipped as a sentry, dismally tramping up and down the asphalt, added fuel to the inward fire that consumed her. The mother’s heart, too, yearned over her boy,–a victim to cruel regulations and crueler task-masters. “What was the use of the government’s enticing young men away from their comfortable homes,” Mrs. McKay had once indignantly written, “unless it could make them happy?” It was a question the “tactical department” could not answer, but it thought volumes.