“They’re fighting the Garde Républicaine now before the Gare de l’Est,” said the Chink in an expressionless voice. “What do you want down here? You’ld better stay in the back. You never know what the police may put over on us.”
“Give us two bottles of vin blank, Chink,” said Chrisfield.
“When’ll you pay?”
“Right now. This guy’s given me fifty francs.”
“Rich, are you?” said the Chink with hatred in his voice, turning to Andrews. “Won’t last long at that rate. Wait here.”
He strode into the bar, closing the door carefully after him. A sudden jangling of the bell was followed by a sound of loud voices and stamping feet. Andrews and Chrisfield tiptoed into the dark corridor, where they stood a long time, waiting, breathing the foul air that stung their nostrils with the stench of plaster-damp and rotting wine. At last the Chink came back with three bottles of wine.
“Well, you’re right,” he said to Andrews. “They are putting up barricades on the Avenue Magenta.”
On the stairs they met a girl sweeping. She had untidy hair that straggled out from under a blue handkerchief tied under her chin, and a pretty-colored fleshy face. Chrisfield caught her up to him and kissed her, as he passed.
“We all calls her the dawg-faced girl,” he said to Andrews in explanation. “She does our work. Ah like to had a fight with Slippery over her yisterday… Didn’t Ah, Slippery?”
When he followed Chrisfield into the room, Andrews saw a man sitting on the window ledge smoking. He was dressed as a second lieutenant, his puttees were brilliantly polished, and he smoked through a long, amber cigarette-holder. His pink nails were carefully manicured.
“This is Slippery, Andy,” said Chrisfield. “This guy’s an ole buddy o’ mine. We was bunkies together a hell of a time, wasn’t we, Andy?”
“You bet we were.”
“So you’ve taken your uniform off, have you? Mighty foolish,” said Slippery. “Suppose they nab you?”
“It’s all up now anyway. I don’t intend to get nabbed,” said Andrews. “We got booze,” said Chrisfield.
Slippery had taken dice from his pocket and was throwing them meditatively on the floor between his feet, snapping his fingers with each throw.
“I’ll shoot you one of them bottles, Chris,” he said.
Andrews walked over to the bed. Al was stirring uneasily, his face flushed and his mouth twitching.
“Hello,” he said. “What’s the news?”
“They say they’re putting up barricades near the Gare de l’Est. It may be something.”
“God, I hope so. God, I wish they’d do everything here like they did in Russia; then we’ld be free. We couldn’t go back to the States for a while, but there wouldn’t be no M.P.’s to hunt us like we were criminals… I’m going to sit up a while and talk.” Al giggled hysterically for a moment.
“Have a swig of wine?” asked Andrews.
“Sure, it may set me up a bit; thanks.” He drank greedily from the bottle, spilling a little over his chin.
“Say, is your face badly cut up, Al?”
“No, it’s just scotched, skin’s off; looks like beefsteak, I reckon… Ever been to Strasburg?”
“No.”
“Man, that’s the town. And the girls in that costume… Whee!”
“Say, you’re from San Francisco, aren’t you?”
“Sure.”
“Well, I wonder if you knew a fellow I knew at training camp, a kid named Fuselli from ’Frisco?”
“Knew him! Jesus, man, he’s the best friend I’ve got… Ye don’t know where he is now, do you?”
“I saw him here in Paris two months ago.”
“Well, I’ll be damned… God, that’s great!” Al’s voice was staccato from excitement. “So you knew Dan at training camp? The last letter from him was ’bout a year ago. Dan’d just got to be corporal. He’s a damn clever kid, Dan is, an’ ambitious too, one of the guys always makes good… Gawd, I’d hate to see him this way. D’you know, we used to see a hell of a lot of each other in ’Frisco, an’ he always used to tell me how he’d make good before I did. He was goddam right, too. Said I was too soft about girls… Did ye know him real well?”
“Yes. I even remember that he used to tell me about a fellow he knew who was called Al… He used to tell me about how you two used to go down to the harbor and watch the big liners come in at night, all aflare with lights through the Golden Gate. And he used to tell you he’d go over to Europe in one, when he’d made his pile.”
“That’s why Strasburg made me think of him,” broke in Al, tremendously excited. “’Cause it was so picturesque like… But honest, I’ve tried hard to make good in this army. I’ve done everything a feller could. An’ all I did was to get into a cushy job in the regimental office… But Dan, Gawd, he may even be an officer by this time.”
“No, he’s not that,” said Andrews. “Look here, you ought to keep quiet with that hand of yours.”
“Damn my hand. Oh, it’ll heal all right if I forget about it. You see, my foot slipped when they shunted a car I was just climbing into, an’… I guess I ought to be glad I wasn’t killed. But, gee, when I think that if I hadn’t been a fool about that girl I might have been home by now… ”
“The Chink says they’re putting up barricades on the Avenue Magenta.”
“That means business, kid!”
“Business nothin’,” shouted Slippery from where he and Chrisfield leaned over the dice on the tile floor in front of the window. “One tank an’ a few husky Senegalese’ll make your goddam socialists run so fast they won’t stop till they get to Dijon… You guys ought to have more sense.” Slippery got to his feet and came over to the bed, jingling the dice in his hand. “It’ll take more’n a handful o’ socialists paid by the Boches to break the army. If it could be broke, don’t ye think people would have done it long ago?”
“Shut up a minute. Ah thought Ah heard somethin’,” said Chrisfield suddenly, going to the window. They held their breath. The bed creaked as Al stirred uneasily in it.
“No, warn’t anythin’; Ah’d thought Ah’d heard people singin’.”
“The Internationale,” cried Al.
“Shut up,” said Chrisfield in a low gruff voice.
Through the silence of the room they heard steps on the stairs.
“All right, it’s only Smiddy,” said Slippery, and he threw the dice down on the tiles again.
The door opened slowly to let in a tall, stoop-shouldered man with a long face and long teeth.
“Who’s the frawg?” he asked in a startled way, with one hand on the door knob.
“All right, Smiddy; it ain’t a frawg; it’s a guy Chris knows. He’s taken his uniform off.’
“’Lo, buddy,” said Smiddy, shaking Andrews’ hand. “Gawd, you look like a frawg.”
“That’s good,” said Andrews.
“There’s hell to pay,” broke out Smiddy breathlessly. “You know Gus Evans and the little black-haired guy goes ’round with him? They been picked up. I seen ’em myself with some M. P.’s at Place de la Bastille. An’ a guy I talked to under the bridge where I slep’ last night said a guy’d tole him they were goin’ to clean the A.W.O.L.’s out o’ Paris if they had to search through every house in the place.”
“If they come here they’ll git somethin’ they ain’t lookin’ for,” muttered Chrisfield.
“I’m goin’ down to Nice; getting too hot around here,” said Slippery. “I’ve got travels orders in my pocket now.”
“How did you get ’em?”
“Easy as pie,” said Slippery, lighting a cigarette and puffing affectedly towards the ceiling. “I met up with a guy, a second loot, in the Knickerbocker Bar. We gets drunk together, an’ goes on a party with two girls I know. In the morning I get up bright an’ early, and now I’ve got five thousand francs, a leave slip and a silver cigarette case, an’ Lootenant J. B. Franklin’s runnin’ around sayin’ how he was robbed by a Paris whore, or more likely keepin’ damn quiet about it. That’s my system.”