Peace Manoeuvres | Page 6

Richard Harding Davis
she returned, coldly. "I never saw you looking so well-- and
you know it." She gave a gasp of comprehension. "You came here
because you knew your uniform was becoming!"
Lathrop regarded himself complacently.
"Yes, isn't it?" he assented. "I brought on this war in order to wear it. If
you don't mind," he added, "I think I'll accept your invitation and come
inside. I've had nothing to eat in four days."
Miss Farrar's eyes flashed indignantly.
"You're NOT coming inside," she declared; "but if you'll only promise
to go away at once, I'll bring you everything in the house."
"In that house," exclaimed Lathrop, dramatically, "there's only one
thing that I desire, and I want that so badly that 'life holds no charm
without you.'"
Miss Farrar regarded him steadily.
"Do you intend to drive me away from my own door, or will you go?"
Lathrop picked his wheel out of the dust.
"Good-by," he said. "I'll come back when you have made up your
mind."
In vexation Miss Farrar stamped her foot upon the path.
"I HAVE made up my mind!" she protested.
"Then," returned Lathrop, "I'll come back when you have changed it."
He made a movement as though to ride away, but much to Miss Farrar's
dismay, hastily dismounted. "On second thoughts," he said, "it isn't
right for me to leave you. The woods are full of tramps and hangers-on
of the army. You're not safe. I can watch this road from here as well as
from anywhere else, and at the same time I can guard you."
To the consternation of Miss Farrar he placed his bicycle against the
fence, and, as though preparing for a visit, leaned his elbows upon it.
"I do not wish to be rude," said Miss Farrar, "but you are annoying me.
I have spent fifteen summers in Massachusetts, and I have never seen a
tramp. I need no one to guard me."
"If not you," said Lathrop easily, "then the family silver. And think of

your jewels, and your mother's jewels. Think of yourself in a house
filled with jewels, and entirely surrounded by hostile armies! My duty
is to remain with you."
Miss Farrar was so long in answering, that Lathrop lifted his head and
turned to look. He found her frowning and gazing intently into the
shadow of the woods, across the road. When she felt his eyes upon her
she turned her own guiltily upon him. Her cheeks were flushed and her
face glowed with some unusual excitement.
"I wish," she exclaimed breathlessly--"I wish," she repeated, "the Reds
would take you prisoner!"
"Take me where?" asked Lathrop.
"Take you anywhere!" cried Miss Farrar. "You should be ashamed to
talk to me when you should be looking for the enemy!"
"I am WAITING for the enemy," explained Lathrop. "It's the same
thing."
Miss Farrar smiled vindictively. Her eyes shone. "You need not wait
long," she said. There was a crash of a falling stone wall, and of parting
bushes, but not in time to give Lathrop warning. As though from the
branches of the trees opposite two soldiers fell into the road; around his
hat each wore the red band of the invader; each pointed his rifle at
Lathrop.
"Hands up!" shouted one. "You're my prisoner!" cried the other.
Mechanically Lathrop raised his hands, but his eyes turned to Miss
Farrar.
"Did you know?" he asked.
"I have been watching them," she said, "creeping up on you for the last
ten minutes."
Lathrop turned to the two soldiers, and made an effort to smile.
"That was very clever," he said, "but I have twenty men up the road,
and behind them a regiment. You had better get away while you can."
The two Reds laughed derisively. One, who wore the stripes of a
sergeant, answered: "That won't do! We been a mile up the road, and
you and us are the only soldiers on it. Gimme the gun!"
Lathrop knew he had no right to refuse. He had been fairly surprised,
but he hesitated. When Miss Farrar was not in his mind his amateur
soldiering was to him a most serious proposition. The war game was a
serious proposition, and that, through his failure for ten minutes to

regard it seriously, he had been made a prisoner, mortified him keenly.
That his humiliation had taken place in the presence of Beatrice Farrar
did not lessen his discomfort, nor did the explanation he must later
make to his captain afford him any satisfaction. Already he saw himself
playing the star part in a court-martial. He shrugged his shoulders and
surrendered his gun.
As he did so he gloomily scrutinized the insignia of his captors.
"Who took me?" he asked.
"WE took you," exclaimed the sergeant.
"What regiment?" demanded Lathrop, sharply.
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