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PAGE 10

The Miracle Of Las Palmas
by [?]

Meehan laid the key upon the desk, and with Bullard stood at attention, waiting.

“Give him time,” whispered Standish. “Let it sink in!”

At the end of half an hour Standish heard Aintree calling, and, with Meehan carrying a lantern, stepped into the yard and stopped at the cell door.

Aintree was quite sober. His face was set and white, his voice was dull with suffering. He stood erect, clasping the bars in his hands.

“Standish,” he said, “you gave me a chance a while ago, and I refused it. I was rough about it. I’m sorry. It made me hot because I thought you were forcing my hand, blackmailing me into doing something I ought to do as a free agent. Now, I am a free agent. You couldn’t give me a chance now, you couldn’t let me go now, not if I swore on a thousand Bibles. I don’t know what they’ll give me–Leavenworth for life, or hanging, or just dismissal. But, you’ve got what you wanted–I’m leaving the army!” Between the bars he stretched out his arms and held a hand toward Meehan and Standish. In the same dull, numbed voice he continued.

“So, now,” he went on, “that I’ve nothing to gain by it, I want to swear to you and to this man here, that whether I hang, or go to jail, or am turned loose, I will never, so help me God, take another drink.”

Standish was holding the hand of the man who once had been his hero. He clutched it tight.

“Aintree,” he cried, “suppose I could work a miracle; suppose I’ve played a trick on you, to show you your danger, to show you what might come to you any day–does that oath still stand?”

The hand that held his ground the bones together.

“I’ve given my word!” cried Aintree. “For the love of God, don’t torture me. Is the man alive?”

As Standish swung open the cell door, the hero of Batangas, he who could thrash any man on the isthmus, crumpled up like a child upon his shoulder.

And Meehan, as he ran for water, shouted joyfully.

“That nigger,” he called to Bullard, “can go home now. The lieutenant don’t want him no more. “