Joan of Arc Book
The Broken Soldier and the Maid of France
Chapter 3 - The Victorious Penance
IT never occurred to Pierre Duval, as he trudged
those
long kilometers toward the front, that he was doing a penance.
The joy of a mind made up is a potent cordial.
The greetings of comrades on the road put gladness
into
his heart and strength into his legs.
It was a hot and dusty journey, and a sober one.
But
it was not a sad one. He was going toward that for which he was born.
He
was doing that which France asked o£ him, that which God told
him to
do. Josephine would be glad and proud of him. He would never be ashamed
to
meet her eyes. As he went, alone or in company with others, he whistled
and
sang a bit. He thought of "L'Alouette' a good deal. But not too much.
He
thought also of the forts of Douaumont and Vaux.
"Dame!" he cried to himself. "If I could help to
win
them back again! That would be fine! How sick that would make those
cursed
Boches and their knock-kneed Crown Prince!"
At the little village of the headquarters behind
Verdun
he found many old friends and companions. They greeted him with
cheerful
irony.
"Behold the prodigal! You took your time about
coming
back, didn't you? Was the hospital to your taste, the nurses pretty?
How
is the wife? Any more children? How goes it, old man?"
"No more children yet," he answered, grinning;
"but all
goes well. I have come back from a far country, but I find the pigs are
still
grunting. What have you done to our old cook?"
"Nothing at all," was the joyous reply. "He tried
to
swim in his own soup and he was drowned."
When Pierre reported to the officer of the day,
that
busy functionary consulted the record.
"You are a day ahead of your time, Pierre Duval,"
he
said, frowning slightly.
"Yes, sir," answered the soldier. "It costs less
to be
a day ahead than a day too late."
"That is well," said the officer, smiling in his
red
beard. "You will report tomorrow to your regiment at the citadel. You
have
a new colonel, but the regiment is busy in the old way."
As Pierre saluted and turned to go out his eye
caught
the look of a general officer who stood near, watching, lie was a
square,
alert, vigorous man, his face bronzed by the suns of many African
campaigns,
his eyes full of intelligence, humor, and courage. It was Guillaumat,
the
new commander of the Army of Verdun.
"You are prompt, my son," said he, pleasantly,
"but you
must remember not to be in a hurry. You have been in hospital. Are you
well
again? Nothing broken?"
"Something was broken, my General," responded the
soldier,
gravely, "but it is mended."
"Good!" said the general. "Now for the front, to
beat
the Germans at their own game. 'We shall get them.' It may be long, but
we
shall get them?'
That was the autumn of the offensive of 1916, by
which
the French retook, in ten days, what it had cost the Germans many
months
to gain.
Pierre was there in that glorious charge in the
end of
October, which carried the heights of Douaumont and took six thousand
prisoners.
He was there at the recapture of the Fort de Vaux which the Germans
evacuated
in the first week of November. In the last rush up the slope, where he
had
fought long ago, a stray shell, an inscrutable messenger of fate,
coming
from far away, no one knows whence, caught him and ripped him horribly
across
the body.
It was a desperate mass of wounds. But the men of
his
squad loved their corporal. He still breathed. They saw to it that he
was
carried back to the little transit hospital just behind the Fort de
Souville.
It was a rude hut of logs, covered with sand-bags,
on
the slope of the hill. The ruined woods around it were still falling to
the
crash of far-thrown shells. In the close, dim shelter of the 'tuner
room
Pierre came to himself.
He looked up into the face of Father Courcy. A
light
of recognition and gratitude flickered in his eyes. It was like finding
an
old friend in the dark.
"Welcome! -- But the fort?" he gasped.
"It is ours," said the priest.
Something like a smile passed over the face of
Pierre.
He could not speak for a long time. The blood in his throat choked him.
At
last he whispered: "Tell Joséphine -- love."
Father Courcy bowed his head and took Pierre's
hand.
"Surely," he said. "But now, my dear son Pierre, I must prepare you."
The struggling voice from the cot broke in,
whispering
slowly, with long intervals:
"Not necessary .... I know already .... The
penance ....
France .... Jeanne d'Arc … It is done."
A few drops of blood gushed from the comer of his
mouth.
The look of peace that often comes to those who die of gunshot wounds
settled
on his face. His eyes grew still as the priest laid the sacred wafer on
his
lips. The broken soldier was made whole.
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