Three Soldiers by John Dos Passos (best e book reader android .txt) đ
- Author: John Dos Passos
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âOh, I donât know; theyâve got to let us out some day.â
âShâŠshâŠ.â
Kid put his hand suddenly over Andrewsâs mouth. They stood rigid, so that they could hear their hearts pounding.
Outside there was a brisk step on the gravel. The sentry halted and saluted. The steps faded into the distance, and the sentryâs humming began again.
âThey put two fellers in the jug for a month for talking like we areâŠ. In solitary,â whispered Kid.
âBut, Kid, I havenât got the guts to try anything now.â
âSure you have, Skinny. You anâ meâs got more guts than all the rest of âem put together. God, if people had guts, you couldnât treat âem like they were curs. Look, if I can ever get out oâ this, Iâve got a hunch I can make a good thing writing movie scenarios. I want to get on in the world, Skinny.â
âBut, Kid, you wonât be able to go back to the States.â
âI donât care. New Rochelleâs not the whole world. They got the movies in Italy, ainât they?â
âSure. Letâs go to bed.â
âAll right. Look, you anâ me are buddies from now on, Skinny.â
Andrews felt the Kidâs hand press his arm.
In his dark, airless bunk, in the lowest of three tiers, Andrews lay awake a long time, listening to the snores and the heavy breathing about him. Thoughts fluttered restlessly in his head, but in his blank hopelessness he could only frown and bite his lips, and roll his head from side to side on the rolled-up tunic he used for a pillow, listening with desperate attention to the heavy breathing of the men who slept above him and beside him.
When he fell asleep he dreamed that he was alone with Genevieve Rod in the concert hall of the Schola Cantorum, and that he was trying desperately hard to play some tune for her on the violin, a tune he kept forgetting, and in the agony of trying to remember, the tears streamed down his cheeks. Then he had his arms round Genevieveâs shoulders and was kissing her, kissing her, until he found that it was a wooden board he was kissing, a wooden board on which was painted a face with broad forehead and great pale brown eyes, and small tight lips, and all the while a boy who seemed to be both Chrisfield and the Kid kept telling him to run or the M.P.âs would get him. Then he sat frozen in icy terror with a bottle in his hand, while a frightful voice behind him sang very loud:
âThereâs the smile that makes you happy, Thereâs the smile that makes you sad.â
The bugle woke him, and he sat up with such a start that he hit his head hard against the bunk above him. He lay back cringing from the pain like a child. But he had to hurry desperately to get his clothes on in time for roll call. It was with a feeling of relief that he found that mess was not ready, and that men were waiting in line outside the kitchen shack, stamping their feet and clattering their mess kits as they moved about through the chilly twilight of the spring morning. Andrews found he was standing behind Hoggenback.
âHowâs she cominâ, Skinny?â whispered Hoggenback, in his low mysterious voice.
âOh, weâre all in the same boat,â said Andrews with a laugh.
âWish itâd sink,â muttered the other man. âDâye know,â he went on after a pause, âI kinder thought an edicated guy like youâd be able to keep out of a mess like this. I wasnât brought up without edication, but I guess I didnât have enough.â
âI guess most of âem can; I donât sec that itâs much to the point. A man suffers as much if he doesnât know how to read and write as if he had a college education.â
âI dunno, Skinny. A feller whoâs led a rough life can put up with an awful lot. The thing is, Skinny, I might have had a commission if I hadnât been so damned impatientâŠ. Iâm a lumberman by trade, and my dadâs cleaned up a pretty thing in war contracts jusâ a short time ago. He could have got me in the engineers if I hadnât gone off anâ enlisted.â
âWhy did you?â
âI was restless-like. I guess I wanted to see the world. I didnât care about the goddam war, but I wanted to see what things was like over here.â
âWell, youâve seen,â said Andrews, smiling.
âIn the neck,â said Hoggenback, as he pushed out his cup for coffee.
In the truck that was taking them to work, Andrews and the Kid sat side by side on the jouncing backboard and tried to talk above the rumble of the exhaust.
âLike Paris?â asked the Kid.
âNot this way,â said Andrews.
âSay, one of the guys said you could parlay French real well. I want you to teach me. A guyâs got to know languages to get along in this country.â
âBut you must know some.â
âBedroom French,â said the Kid, laughing.
âWell?â
âBut if I want to write a movie scenario for an Eytalian firm, I canât just write âvoulay-vous couchezavecmoaâ over and over again.â
âBut youâll have to learn Italian, Kid.â
âIâm goinâ to. Say, ainât they taking us a hell of a ways today, Skinny?â
âWeâre goinâ to Passy Wharf to unload rock,â said somebody in a grumbling voice.
âNo, itâs a cementâŠcement for the stadium weâre presentinâ the French Nation. Ainât you read in the âStars and Stripesâ about it?â
âIâd present âem with a swift kick, and a hell of a lot of other people, too.â
âSo we have to sweat unloadinâ cement all day,â muttered Hoggenback, âto give these goddam frawgs a stadium.â
âIf it werenât that itâd be somethinâ else.â
âBut, ainât we got folks at home to work for?â cried Hoggenback. âMightnât all this sweat be doinâ some good for us? Building a stadium! My gawd!â
âPile out thereâŠ. Quick!â rasped a voice from the driverâs seat.
Through the haze of choking white dust, Andrews got now and then a glimpse of the grey-green river, with its tugboats sporting their white cockades of steam and their long trailing plumes of smoke, and its blunt-nosed barges and its bridges, where people walked jauntily back and forth, going about their business, going where they wanted to go. The bags of cement were very heavy, and the unaccustomed work sent racking pains through his back. The biting dust stung under his finger nails, and in his mouth and eyes. All the morning a sort of refrain went through his head: âPeople have spent their livesâŠdoing only this. People have spent their lives doing only this.â As he crossed and recrossed the narrow plank from the barge to the shore, he looked at the black water speeding seawards and took extraordinary care not to let his foot slip. He did not know why, for one-half of him was thinking how wonderful it would be to drown, to forget in eternal black silence the hopeless struggle. Once he saw the Kid standing before the sergeant in charge in an attitude of complete exhaustion, and caught a glint of his blue eyes as he looked up appealingly, looking like a child begging out of a spanking. The sight amused him, and he said to himself: âIf I had pink cheeks and cupidâs bow lips, I might be able to go through life on my blue eyesâ; and he pictured the Kid, a fat, cherubic old man, stepping out of a white limousine, the way people do in the movies, and looking about him with those same mild blue eyes. But soon he forgot everything in the agony of the heavy cement bags bearing down on his back and hips.
In the truck on the way back to the mess the Kid, looking fresh and smiling among the sweating men, like ghosts from the white dust, talking hoarsely above the clatter of the truck, sidled up very close to Andrews.
âDâyou like swimminâ, Skinny?â
âYes. Iâd give a lot to get some of this cement dust off me,â said Andrews, without interest.
âI once won a boyâs swimminâ race at Coney,â said the Kid. Andrews did not answer.
âWere you in the swimminâ team or anything like that, Skinny, when you went to school?â
âNoâŠ. It would be wonderful to be in the water, though. I used to swim way out in Chesapeake Bay at night when the water was phosphorescent.â
Andrews suddenly found the Kidâs blue eyes, bright as flames from excitement, staring into his.
âGod, Iâm an ass,â he muttered.
He felt the Kidâs fist punch him softly in the back. âSergeant said they was goinâ to work us late as hell tonight,â the Kid was saying aloud to the men round him.
âIâll be dead if they do,â muttered Hoggenback.
âAnâ you a lumberjack!â
âIt ainât that. I could carry their bloody bags two at a time if I wanted ter. A feller gets so goddam mad, thatâs all; so goddam mad. Donât he, Skinny?â Hoggenback turned to Andrews and smiled.
Andrews nodded his head.
After the first two or three bags Andrews carried in the afternoon, it seemed as if every one would be the last he could possibly lift. His back and thighs throbbed with exhaustion; his face and the tips of his fingers felt raw from the biting cement dust.
When the river began to grow purple with evening, he noticed that two civilians, young men with buff-colored coats and canes, were watching the gang at work.
âThey says theyâs newspaper reporters, writing up how fast the armyâs being demobilized,â said one man in an awed voice.
âThey come to the right place.â
âTell âem weâre leavinâ for home now. Loadinâ our barracks bags on the steamer.
The newspaper men were giving out cigarettes. Several men grouped round them. One shouted out:
âWeâre the guys does the light work. Blackjack Pershingâs own pet labor battalion.â
âThey like us so well they just canât let us go.â
âDamn jackasses,â muttered Hoggenback, as, with his eyes to the ground, he passed Andrews. âI could tell âem some thingsâd make their goddam ears buzz.â
âWhy donât you?â
âWhat the hellâs the use? I ainât got the edication to talk up to guys like that.â
The sergeant, a short, red-faced man with a mustache clipped very short, went up to the group round the newspaper men.
âCome on, fellers, weâve got a hell of a lot of this cement to get in before it rains,â he said in a kindly voice; âthe sooner we get it in, the sooner we get off.â
âListen to that bastard, ainât he juss too sweet for pie when thereâs company?â muttered Hoggenback on his way from the barge with a bag of cement.
The Kid brushed past Andrews without looking at him.
âDo what I do, Skinny,â he said.
Andrews did not turn round, but his heart started thumping very fast. A dull sort of terror took possession of him. He tried desperately to summon his will power, to keep from cringing, but he kept remembering the way the room had swung round when the M.P. had hit him, and heard again the cold voice of the lieutenant saying: âOne of you men teach him how to salute.â Time dragged out interminably.
At last, coming back to the edge of the wharf, Andrews saw that there were no more bags in the barge. He sat down on the plank, too exhausted to think. Blue-grey dusk was closing down on everything. The Passy bridge stood out, purple against a great crimson afterglow.
The Kid sat down beside him, and threw an arm trembling with excitement round his shoulders.
âThe guardâs lookinâ the other way. They wonât miss us till they get to
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