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The Deserter
by
It was no business of mine, but I had to look up. The stranger was now pacing the floor. I noticed that while his face was almost black with tan, his upper lip was quite white. I noticed also that he had his hands in the pockets of one of John’s blue serge suits, and that the pink silk shirt he wore was one that once had belonged to the Kid. Except for the pink shirt, in the appearance of the young man there was nothing unusual. He was of a familiar type. He looked like a young business man from our Middle West, matter-of-fact and unimaginative, but capable and self-reliant. If he had had a fountain pen in his upper waistcoat pocket, I would have guessed he was an insurance agent, or the publicity man for a new automobile. John picked up his hat, and said, “That’s good advice. Give me your steamer ticket, Fred, and I’ll have them change it.” He went out; but he did not ask Fred to go with him.
Uncle Jim rose, and murmured something about the Cafe Roma, and tea. But neither did he invite Fred to go with him. Instead, he told him to make himself at home, and if he wanted anything the waiter would bring it from the cafe downstairs. Then the Kid, as though he also was uncomfortable at being left alone with us, hurried to the door. “Going to get you a suit-case,” he explained. “Back in five minutes.”
The stranger made no answer. Probably he did not hear him. Not a hundred feet from our windows three Greek steamers were huddled together, and the eyes of the American were fixed on them. The one for which John had gone to buy him a new ticket lay nearest. She was to sail in two hours. Impatiently, in short quick steps, the stranger paced the length of the room, but when he turned and so could see the harbor, he walked slowly, devouring it with his eyes. For some time, in silence, he repeated this manoeuvre; and then the complaints of the typewriter disturbed him. He halted and observed my struggles. Under his scornful eye, in my embarrassment I frequently hit the right letter. “You a newspaper man, too?” he asked. I boasted I was, but begged not to be judged by my typewriting.
“I got some great stories to write when I get back to God’s country,” he announced. “I was a reporter for two years in Kansas City before the war, and now I’m going back to lecture and write. I got enough material to keep me at work for five years. All kinds of stuff– specials, fiction, stories, personal experiences, maybe a novel.”
I regarded him with envy. For the correspondents in the greatest of all wars the pickings had been meagre. “You are to be congratulated,” I said. He brushed aside my congratulations. “For what?” he demanded. “I didn’t go after the stories; they came to me. The things I saw I had to see. Couldn’t get away from them. I’ve been with the British, serving in the R. A. M. C. Been hospital steward, stretcher bearer, ambulance driver. I’ve been sixteen months at the front, and all the time on the firing-line. I was in the retreat from Mons, with French on the Marne, at Ypres, all through the winter fighting along the Canal, on the Gallipoli Peninsula, and, just lately, in Servia. I’ve seen more of this war than any soldier. Because, sometimes, they give the soldier a rest; they never give the medical corps a rest. The only rest I got was when I was wounded.”