PAGE 5
From "The Point" To The Plains
by
“That was Lieutenant Lee, sir.”
Uncle Jack turns and contemplates his niece with an expression of the liveliest admiration. “‘Pon my word, Miss Nan, you are a most comprehensive young person. You’ve indeed let no guilty man escape.”
CHAPTER II.
A CADET SCAPEGRACE.
The evening that opened so clear and sunshiny has clouded rapidly over. Even as the four gray companies come “trotting” in from parade, and, with the ease of long habit, quickly forming line in the barrack area, some heavy rain-drops begin to fall; the drum-major has hurried his band away; the crowd of spectators, unusually large for so early in the season, scatters for shelter; umbrellas pop up here and there under the beautiful trees along the western roadway; the adjutant rushes through “delinquency list” in a style distinguishable only to his stolid, silent audience standing immovably before him,–a long perspective of gray uniforms and glistening white belts. The fateful book is closed with a snap, and the echoing walls ring to the quick commands of the first sergeants, at which the bayonets are struck from the rifle-barrels, and the long line bursts into a living torrent sweeping into the hall-ways to escape the coming shower.
When the battalion reappears, a few moments later, every man is in his overcoat, and here and there little knots of upper classmen gather, and there is eager and excited talk.
A soldierly, dark-eyed young fellow, with the red sash of the officer of the day over his shoulder, comes briskly out of the hall of the fourth division. The chevrons of a cadet captain are glistening on his arm, and he alone has not donned the gray overcoat, although he has discarded the plumed shako in deference to the coming storm; yet he hardly seems to notice the downpour of the rain; his face is grave and his lips set and compressed as he rapidly makes his way through the groups awaiting the signal to “fall in” for supper.
“Stanley! O Stanley!” is the hail from a knot of classmates, and he halts and looks about as two or three of the party hasten after him.
“What does Billy say about it?” is the eager inquiry.
“Nothing–new.”
“Well, that report as good as finds him on demerit, doesn’t it?”
“The next thing to it; though he has been as close to the brink before.”
“But–great Scott! He has two weeks yet to run; and Billy McKay can no more live two weeks without demerit than Patsy, here, without ‘spooning.'”
Mr. Stanley’s eyes look tired as he glances up from under the visor of his forage cap. He is not as tall by half a head as the young soldiers by whom he is surrounded.
“We were talking of his chances at dinner-time,” he says, gravely. “Billy never mentioned this break of his yesterday, and was surprised to hear the report read out to-night. I believe he had forgotten the whole thing.”
“Who ‘skinned’ him?–Lee? He was there.”
“I don’t know; McKay says so, but there were several officers over there at the time. It is a report he cannot get off, and it comes at a most unlucky moment.”
With this remark Mr. Stanley turns away and goes striding through the crowded area towards the guard-house. Another moment and there is sudden drum-beat; the gray overcoats leap into ranks; the subject of the recent discussion–a jaunty young fellow with laughing blue eyes–comes tearing out of the fourth division just in time to avoid a “late,” and the clamor of tenscore voices gives place to silence broken only by the rapid calling of the rolls and the prompt “here”–“here,” in response.
If ever there was a pet in the corps of cadets he lived in the person of Billy McKay. Bright as one of his own buttons; jovial, generous, impulsive; he had only one enemy in the battalion,–and that one, as he had been frequently told, was himself. This, however, was a matter which he could not at all be induced to believe. Of the Academic Board in general, of his instructors in large measure, but of the four or five ill-starred soldiers known as “tactical officers” in particular, Mr. McKay entertained very decided and most unflattering opinions. He had won his cadetship through rigid competitive examination against all comers; he was a natural mathematician of whom a professor had said that he “could stand in the fives and wouldn’t stand in the forties;” years of his boyhood spent in France had made him master of the colloquial forms of the court language of Europe, yet a dozen classmates who had never seen a French verb before their admission stood above him at the end of the first term. He had gone to the first section like a rocket and settled to the bottom of it like a stick. No subject in the course was really hard to him, his natural aptitude enabling him to triumph over the toughest problems. Yet he hated work, and would often face about with an empty black-board and take a zero and a report for neglect of studies that half an hour’s application would have rendered impossible. Classmates who saw impending danger would frequently make stolen visits to his room towards the close of the term and profess to be baffled by the lesson for the morrow, and Billy would promptly knock the ashes out of the pipe he was smoking contrary to regulations and lay aside the guitar on which he had been softly strumming–also contrary to regulations; would pick up the neglected calculus or mechanics; get interested in the work of explanation, and end by having learned the lesson in spite of himself. This was too good a joke to be kept a secret, and by the time the last year came Billy had found it all out and refused to be longer hoodwinked.