<h2>XII</h2>
<p>Corporal Cameron did not soon return to his
native town. An epidemic of measles broke out in
camp just before Thanksgiving and pursued its
tantalizing course through his special barracks with
strenuous vigor. Quarantine was put on for three
weeks, and was but lifted for a few hours when a
new batch of cases came down. Seven weeks more
of isolation followed, when the men were not allowed
away from the barracks except for long lonely
walks, or gallops across camp. Even the mild excitements
of the Y.M.C.A. huts were not for them
in these days. They were much shut up to themselves,
and latent tendencies broke loose and ran
riot. Shooting crap became a passion. They
gambled as long as they had a dollar left or could
get credit on the next month’s pay day. Then they
gambled for their shirts and their bayonets. All
day long whenever they were in the barracks, you
could hear the rattle of the dice, and the familiar
call of “Phoebe,” “Big Dick,” “Big Nick,” and
“Little Joe.” When they were not on drill the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_176' name='page_176'></SPAN>176</span>
men would infest the barracks for hours at a time,
gathered in crouching groups about the dice, the air
thick and blue with cigarette smoke; while others
had nothing better to do than to sprawl on their
cots and talk; and from their talk Cameron often
turned away nauseated. The low ideals, the open
boasting of shame, the matter-of-course conviction
that all men and most women were as bad as themselves,
filled him with a deep boiling rage, and he
would close his book or throw down the paper with
which he was trying to while the hour, and fling
forth into the cold air for a solitary ride or walk.</p>
<p>He was sitting thus a cold cheerless December
day with a French book he had recently sent for,
trying to study a little and prepare himself for the
new country to which he was soon going.</p>
<p>The door of the barracks opened letting in a
rush of cold air, and closed again quickly. A tall
man in uniform with the red triangle on his arm
stood pulling off his woolen gloves and looking
about him. Nobody paid any attention to him.
Cameron was deep in his book and did not even
notice him. Off at his left a new crap game was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_177' name='page_177'></SPAN>177</span>
just starting. The phraseology beat upon his accustomed
ears like the buzz of bees or mosquitos.</p>
<p>“I’ll shoot a buck!”</p>
<p>“You’re faded!”</p>
<p>“Come on now there, dice! Remember the
baby’s shoes!”</p>
<p>Cameron had ceased to hear the voices. He was
struggling with a difficult French idiom.</p>
<p>The stranger took his bearings deliberately and
walked over to Cameron, sitting down with a
friendly air on the nearest cot.</p>
<p>“Would you be interested in having one of my
little books?” he asked, and his voice had a clear
ring that brought Cameron’s thoughts back to the
barracks again. He looked up for a curt refusal.
He did not wish to be bothered now, but something
in the young man’s earnest face held him. Y.M.C.A.
men in general were well enough, but Cameron
wasn’t crazy about them, especially when they
were young. But this one had a look about him
that proclaimed him neither a slacker nor a sissy.
Cameron hesitated:</p>
<p>“What kind of a book?” he asked in a somewhat
curt manner.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_178' name='page_178'></SPAN>178</span></p>
<p>The boy, for he was only a boy though he was
tall as a man, did not hedge but went straight to the
point, looking eagerly at the soldier:</p>
<p>“A pocket Testament,” he said earnestly, and
laid in Cameron’s hand a little book with limp
leather covers. Cameron took it up half curiously,
and then looked into the other’s face almost coldly.</p>
<p>“You selling them?” There was a covert sneer
in his tone.</p>
<p>“No, no!” said the other quickly, “I’m giving
them away for a promise. You see, I had an accident
and one of my eyes was put out a while ago.
Of course, they wouldn’t take me for a soldier, and
the next best thing was to be all the help I could to
the fellows that are going to fight. I figure that
book is the best thing I can bring you.”</p>
<p>The manly simplicity of the boy held Cameron’s
gaze firmly fixed.</p>
<p>“H’m! In what way?” Cameron was turning
the leaves curiously, enjoying the silky fineness and
the clear-cut print and soft leather binding. Life
in the barracks was so much in the rough that any
bit of refinement was doubly appreciated. He liked
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_179' name='page_179'></SPAN>179</span>
the feel of the little book and had a curious longing
to be its possessor.</p>
<p>“Why, it gives you a pretty straight line on
where we’re all going, what is expected of us, and
how we’re to be looked out for. It shows one how to
know God and be ready to meet death if we have to.”</p>
<p>“What makes you think anyone can know God
on this earth?” asked Cameron sharply.</p>
<p>“Because <i>I</i> have,” said the astonishing young
man quite as if he were saying he were related to the
President or something like that.</p>
<p>“You have! How did you get to know Him?”</p>
<p>“Through that little book and by following its
teachings.”</p>
<p>Cameron turned over the pages again, catching
familiar phrases here and there as he had heard
them sometimes in Sunday school years ago.</p>
<p>“You said something about a promise. What
was it?”</p>
<p>“That you’ll carry the book with you always,
and read at least a verse in it every day.”</p>
<p>“Well, that doesn’t sound hard,” mused Cameron.
“I guess I could stand for that.”</p>
<p>“The book is yours, then. Would you like to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_180' name='page_180'></SPAN>180</span>
put your name to that acceptance card in the front
of the book?”</p>
<p>“What’s that?” asked Cameron sharply as if
he had discovered the fly in the ointment for which
he had all along been suspicious.</p>
<p>“Well, I call it the first step in knowing God.
It’s your act of acceptance of the way God has
planned for you to be forgiven and saved from sin.
If you sign that you say you will accept Christ as
your Saviour.”</p>
<p>“But suppose you don’t believe in Christ? I
can’t commit myself to anything like that till I
know about it?”</p>
<p>“Well, you see, that’s the first move in getting
to know God,” said the stranger with a smile.
“God says he wants you to believe in his Son.
He asks that much of you if you want to get to
know Him.”</p>
<p>Cameron looked at him with bewildered interest.
Was here a possible answer to the questions of his
heart. Why did this curious boy have a light in his
face that never came from earth or air? What
was there about his simple earnestness that was
so convincing?
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_181' name='page_181'></SPAN>181</span></p>
<p>Another crap game had started up on the other
side of them. A musically inclined private was
playing ragtime on the piano, and another was
trying to accompany him on the banjo. The air
was hazier than ever. It seemed strange to be talking
of such things in these surroundings:</p>
<p>“Let’s get out of here and walk!” said Cameron,
“I’d like to understand what you mean.”</p>
<p>For two hours they tramped across the frozen
ground and talked, arguing this way and that, much
drawn toward one another. At last in the solemn
background of a wall of whispering pines that shut
them away from the stark gray rows of barracks,
Cameron took out his fountain pen and with his foot
on a prone log, opened the little book on his knee
and wrote his name and the date. Then he put it in
his breast pocket with the solemn feeling that he
had taken some kind of a great step toward what his
soul had been longing to find. They knelt on the
frozen ground beside that log and the stranger
prayed simply as if he were talking to a friend.
Thereafter that spot was hallowed ground to Cameron,
to which he came often to think and to read
his little book.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_182' name='page_182'></SPAN>182</span></p>
<p>That night he wrote to Ruth, telling in a shy
way of his meeting with the Testament man and
about the little book. After he had mailed the letter
he walked back again to the spot among the pines
and standing there looked up to the stars and somehow
committed himself again to the covenant he had
signed in the little book. It was then that he decided
that if he got home again after quarantine
before he went over, he would unite with the church.
Somehow the stranger’s talk that afternoon had
cleared away his objections. On his way back to
the barracks across the open field, up through the
woods and over the crest of the hill toward the road
as he walked thinking deeply, suddenly from down
below on the road a familiar voice floated up to him.
He parted the branches of oak underbrush that
made a screen between him and the road and
glanced down to get his bearings the better to avoid
an unwelcome meeting. It was inevitable when one
came near Lieutenant Wainwright that he would
overhear some part of a conversation for he had a
carrying voice which he never sought to restrain.</p>
<p>“You’re sure she’s a girl with pep, are you? I
don’t want to bother with any other kind. All right.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_183' name='page_183'></SPAN>183</span>
Tell her to wait for me in the Washington station
to-morrow evening at eight. I’ll look for her at the
right of the information booth. Tell her to wear a
red carnation so I’ll know her. I’ll show her a good
time, all right, if she’s the right sort. I’ll trust you
that she’s a good looker!”</p>
<p>Cameron could not hear the response, but the
two were standing silhouetted against a distant
light, and something in the attitude of the other
man held his attention. For a moment he could not
place him, then it flashed across his mind that this
was the soldier Chambers, who had been the means
of his missing the train at Chester on the memorable
occasion when Ruth Macdonald had saved the day.
It struck him as a strange thing that these two
enemies of his whom he would have supposed to be
strangers to one another should be talking thus intimately.
To make sure of the man’s identity he
waited until the two parted and Wainwright went
his way, and then at a distance followed the other
one until he was quite certain. He walked back
thoughtfully trying to make it out. Had Wainwright
then been at the bottom of his trouble that
day? It began to seem quite possible. And how
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_184' name='page_184'></SPAN>184</span>
had Ruth Macdonald happened to be so opportunely
present at the right moment? How had she
happened to turn down that road, a road that was
seldom used by people going to Baltimore? It was
all very strange and had never been satisfactorily
explained. Ruth had evaded the question most
plausibly every time he had brought it up. Could
it be that Wainwright had told her of a plot against
him and she had reached out to help him? His heart
leaped at the thought. Then at once he was sure
that Wainwright had never told her, unless perhaps
he had told some tale against him, and made
him the butt of a great joke. Well, if he had she
had cared enough to defend him and help him out
without ever giving away the fact that she knew.
But here, too, lay a thorn to disturb him. Why
had Ruth Macdonald not told him the plain truth
if she knew? Was she trying to shield Harry
Wainwright? Could she really care for that
contemptible scoundrel?</p>
<p>The thought in all its phases tore his mind and
kept him awake for hours, for the crux of the whole
matter was that he was afraid that Ruth Macdonald
was going to marry Lieutenant Wainwright, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_185' name='page_185'></SPAN>185</span>
he knew that it was not only for her sake, but for
his also that he did not want this—that it was agony
even to contemplate.</p>
<p>He told himself, of course, that his interest was
utterly unselfish. That she was nothing to him but
a friend and never would be, and that while it might
be hard to see her belong to some fine man and know
he never might be more than a passing friend, still it
would not be like seeing her tied to a rotten unprincipled
fellow like Wainwright. The queer part of
it was that the word “rotten” in connection with his
enemy played a great part in his thoughts that night.</p>
<p>Somewhere in the watches of the night a memory
came to him of the covenant he had made that day
and a vague wistful reaching of his heart after the
Christ to whom he was supposed to have surrendered
his life. He wondered if a Christ such as the
stranger had claimed He had, would take an interest
in the affairs of Ruth Macdonald. Surely, such
a flower of a girl would be protected if there was
protection for anyone! And somehow he managed
a queer little prayer for her, the first he had tried to
put up. It helped him a little, and toward morning
he fell asleep.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_186' name='page_186'></SPAN>186</span></p>
<p>A few days later in glancing through his newly
acquired Testament he came upon a verse which
greatly troubled him for a time. His eye had
caught it at random and somehow it lodged in
his mind:</p>
<p>“Forbearing one another, and forgiving one
another, if any man have a quarrel against any:
even as Christ forgave you, so also do ye.”</p>
<p>Somehow the principle of that verse did not fit
with his proud spirit. He thought instantly of
Wainwright’s distasteful face and form. It seemed
to loom before him with a smug triumphal sneer.
His enmity toward the fellow had been of years
standing, and had been deepened many times by
unforgetable acts. There was nothing about Wainwright
to make one forgive him. There was
everything about him to make one want to punish
him. When the verse first confronted Cameron he
felt a rising indignation that there had been so much
as a connection in his thoughts with his quarrel with
Wainwright. Why, anybody that knew him knew
Wainwright was wrong. God must think so, too.
That verse might apply to little quarrels but not to
his feeling about the way Wainwright had treated
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_187' name='page_187'></SPAN>187</span>
him ever since they were children. That was not to
be borne, of course. Those words he had called
Cameron’s father! How they made his blood boil
even now! No, he would not forbear nor forgive
Wainwright. God would not want him to do so.
It was right he should be against him forever!
Thus he dismissed the suggestion and turned to the
beginning of his testament, having determined to
find the Christ of whom the stranger had set him
in search.</p>
<p>On the flyleaf of the little book the stranger
had written a few words:</p>
<div class='blockquot'>
<p>“And ye shall find me, when ye shall search for me with
all your heart.”—Jeremiah xxix: 13.</p>
</div>
<p>That meant no half-way business. He could
understand that. Well, he was willing to put himself
into the search fully. He understood that it
was worth a whole-hearted search if one were really
to find a God as a reward.</p>
<p>That night he wrote a letter to the minister in
Bryne Haven asking for an interview when next
he was able to get leave from camp. In the meantime
he kept out of the way of Wainwright most
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_188' name='page_188'></SPAN>188</span>
adroitly, and found many ways to avoid a meeting.</p>
<p>There had been three awful days when his
“peach of a captain” about whom he had spoken
to Ruth, had been called away on some military
errand and Wainwright had been the commanding
officer. They had been days of gall and wormwood
to Cameron, for his proud spirit could not bend to
salute the man whom he considered a scoundrel,
and Wainwright took a fine delight in using his
power over his enemy to the limit. If it had not
been for the unexpected return of the captain a day
earlier than planned, Cameron might have had to
suffer humiliations far greater than he did.</p>
<p>The bitterness between the two grew stronger,
and Cameron went about with his soul boiling with
rage and rebellion. It was only when Ruth’s letters
came that he forgot it all for a few minutes and
lifted his thoughts to higher things.</p>
<hr class='major' />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_189' name='page_189'></SPAN>189</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />