"SEE that man in the black derby and the brown suit, coming this way, Noll? The one with the iron-gray hair?"
"Of course," replied Noll.
"Salute him, if we get close enough."
"Why?"
"He's an officer."
"Maybe," half-assented Noll, eyeing the man with iron-gray hair.
"There isn't much doubt about it," retorted Hal. "He boarded the train at Kansas City. It's summer, but he's going somewhere up in the hills, for he had an overcoat over one arm when he boarded the train, and that overcoat was an officer's coat. He's in the service, and he isn't any junior officer, either, judging by the color of his hair."
"But——"
"Sh! Be ready with your salute."
The two young recruits, their uniforms looking spick and span, despite their long journey by train, now brought their right hands smartly up to their cap visors as the man with iron-gray hair stepped close.
He gave Hal and Noll a prompt, smart acknowledgment of their salute, then suddenly paused, glanced at them, and asked:
"My men, how did you know me to be an officer?"
"I observed your overcoat, sir, when you boarded the train at Kansas City," Hal answered.
"You judged rightly, men," replied the officer, with a smile. "I am Major Davis, Seventeenth Cavalry. And you, as I see by your caps, belong to the Thirty-fourth Infantry."
"Yes, sir," Hal answered. "We are joining the first battalion at Fort Clowdry."
"Recruits?"
"Yes, sir."
"I wish you a pleasant life in the Army, men."
"Thank you, sir; we feel certain of finding it," Hal replied.
Both young soldiers saluted, again, as the major turned to resume his walk.
The train had stopped at Pueblo, Colorado, in the middle of the afternoon. It would be but half an hour's delay. Noll had been eager to step out away from the railway station and see as much of Pueblo as was possible. Hal had negatived this idea, through fear that they might be left behind.
"And we've not an hour to spare, you know, Noll. This is the last train for us to take if we're to report in season. So we'd better stay close to the conductor."
During the forenoon the train had rolled across the mesa or tableland below Pueblo. Hal and Noll, seated in one of the two day coaches of the train, had studied the mesa with longing eyes. Here they caught occasional glimpses of cowboys on ponies, for this mesa is still a favorite cattle region.
At this height of some five thousand feet above sea level even the late June day was not really hot. It was a glorious country on which the young recruits feasted their eyes.
"Where do we eat next?" asked Noll, of a trainman standing by.
"Any time and place you like, if you've got the chow with you," replied the trainman.
"What is the next eating station at which the train stops?" Noll insisted.
"Salida. We ought to stop there about nine o'clock to-night."
"Good eating place?"
"Great."
"It's a long time to wait," complained Noll, whom the mountain air was making furiously hungry. "Come along, Hal. We'll lay in a few sandwiches as a safety-valve."
"I hope they're not as bad as some we've bought along the way," Hal laughed, as they started toward the railroad restaurant. "Do you remember the sandwich we bought at Chicago that had the stamp on the under side, 'U. S. Army, 1863?'"
"No, and neither do you," grinned Noll.
"Fact," insisted Hal. "I found the stamp on the sandwich, and threw it out of the car. I'm sorry, now; I wish I had saved that sandwich for a curiosity. Father would have been proud of it."
Noll with a bag of sandwiches, Hal with a box of fruit, the two recruits turned toward the train again.
They were soon under way. After leaving Pueblo they forgot all about eating, for some time, for the train now bore them through some of the most picturesque parts of the lower Rocky Mountains. Both rookies spent their time on one of the car platforms, hanging far out at either side to get better views, as well as glimpses down steep cliffs into gullies below.
"Say, it's going to be dark, soon," remarked Noll, looking toward the western sky. "Why on earth didn't we get a train that would do the whole trip between Pueblo and Salida in daylight?"
"Because we didn't know the route wellenough," sighed Hal. "However, we may think we've had plenty of Rocky Mountains before our regiment's station is changed."
Halfanhour later both went back to their seat in the car. Black night had come on and shut out all further possibility of viewing the wonderful country through which the train was passing.
"We can eat, anyway," sighed Noll.
For the next fifteen minutes they regaled themselves, though they were careful not to eat enough to spoil their appetite for a good hot supper at Salida.
Then, as peering out of the window revealed nothing, Noll settled back in the seat.
"If I go to sleep, be sure to wake me at Salida," he begged. "What time is the train due at Fort Clowdry?"
"Two o'clock in the morning," Hal answered.
"That's a beastly time to have to be awake," growled Noll, and began to slumber.
Not for long, however. On a steep up-grade the train was barely crawling along.
Suddenly it stopped, and with a considerable jolt, too.
Bang, bang, bang! The whistle of bullets was heard alongside the train, wherever windows were open.
"What's that?" demanded Noll, jumping up.
But Hal was in the aisle before him. Both hastened to the rear door.
"Here, laddy-bucks," called a brakeman grimly, "stay inside! It's healthier!"
"What's up?" demanded Hal, without pausing.
"Judging by the sound, the train is held up, laddy-buck. It's a bad business going outside if that's the case."
But at this instant the door was opened before Hal's face. Major Davis bounded into the car.
"Come with me, men," he called sharply. "You're not armed, are you?"
"No, sir."
Even at that exciting moment Hal did not forget his salute.
"Then keep behind me," ordered the major, drawing his revolver. "This is a mail train, and, as a United States officer, I can't allow an attempt to rob it pass without an attempt at a protest."
MAJOR DAVIS backed quickly out of the car, holding his weapon behind his back as he dropped to the ground beside the car.
He did not look to see whether the rookies were behind him, but they were.
Ahead, and about them, all was black, save for the light that came through the car windows.
In a twinkling, out of the fringe of darkness, almost beside the recruits, stepped a masked man.
"Back, all three of you. Back into the car!" called the masked man sharply.
Major Davis wheeled like a flash, bringing his revolver to bear. But he could not use it. A sudden move of the recruits prevented.
"Noll!" called Hal sharply, and threw himself to the ground before the masked ruffian.
Like a flash Hal wrapped his arms around the knees of the masked robber. In almost the same instant Hal struggled to his feet, carrying the unknown's legs up with him.
Of course the ruffian toppled over backward. But Noll, who had darted to his chum's aid,hurled himself upon the fellow, striking him hard three times between the eyes.
The masked man's revolver was discharged as he toppled over backward, but the bullet sped harmlessly off into the night.
In another second Hal had the fellow's revolver.
"Fix him, Noll!" called Private Overton, darting forward to the officer's side.
"I have, already," muttered Noll. But he bent for an instant over the unconscious ruffian's body, then darted forward.
"Here's his box of cartridges, Hal," panted Noll.
All this had seemed to occupy but a few seconds.
"Splendidly done!" glowed Major Davis. "Now come forward, and support me."
At the moment of the discharge of the pistol the uncoupled engine started forward, away from the train, with a hissing of steam. This noise must have drowned out the noise of the single shot from the train robbers up forward.
Suddenly Major Davis shot out his left arm, and Hal, bumping against it, halted beside the officer.
"There are two of the men, standing by the mail car," whispered the major. "Raise your revolver. Ready! Fire!"
"Back, All Three of You!""Back, All Three of You!"
Both the major's revolver and Hal's spat out jets of flame. Both poured their shots in rapidly at the two men whom they could just make out in the darkness ahead.
Then Hal had a sudden, new sensation, not by any means agreeable.
The two men, neither hit so far, turned and raised their own weapons. It seemed like two bright cascades of flame just ahead, as the ruffians fired, kneeling.
Bullets whistled close to the major and the two recruits on either side.
Then, just as suddenly, one of the ruffians toppled over; it was impossible to tell whether Major Davis or Hal Overton had scored the hit.
Thereupon, the other man, lowering his weapon, leaped for the steps of the mail car and vanished.
Major Davis ran forward, followed by both recruits. Noll was intent on getting a revolver for himself.
But Davis, more accustomed to the ways of fighting men, suddenly crouched low, peering under the body of the car just behind the mail coach.
Almost immediately the major began to fire again, in answer to shots that came from underneath the car.
But Noll waited for nothing. His sole thought was to possess a weapon. He halted over the fallen one, snatched an empty revolver from his side, then saw that the man was wounded in the right breast.
"You must have some cartridges," muttered Noll, rummaging in the fellow's clothes.
He found the box just in time.
"Lie down, you two!" called Major Davis sharply to Hal and Noll. "You'll be fired on from ahead."
Hal threw himself flat, and none too soon, for now a gust of bullets swept down from the head of the train.
As coolly as he could Hal Overton reloaded. Noll, also lying flat on the ground, was similarly engaged.
Hal was ready to fire first. There was need of it, too, for he could dimly make out two men, near the extreme head of the train, who were firing rapidly and firing their weapons in a fashion that drove up spurts of dirt all about the recruits.
For a few seconds the fight seemed as serious to those engaged in it as battle on a larger scale could have been.
Major Davis now made the first direct move. He crawled swiftly under the car, putting himself on the same side with the man he was after.
There was more shooting on the other side of the train; then, suddenly it stopped.
The two ahead, who were engaging Hal and Noll, dodged off to the side of the track into the darkness. Now, all firing stopped, for all weapons were empty.
"I hope that other scoundrel didn't get the major!" throbbed Hal anxiously.
Yet he couldn't go to see. He had his own work on this side of the train.
"Where are our pair?" whispered Noll, creeping closer.
"I don't know," Hal answered, also in a whisper. "But crawl off a little way. Bunching together gives 'em a better mark to hit."
Lying flat on the ground, both recruits played the waiting game.
Had the pair ahead stolen off altogether in the darkness?
"I'll wait a few moments," Hal decided. "Then, if I don't hear from the scoundrels, I'll cross over to see what has happened to Major Davis."
Crack! crack! crack! The vanished pair of train robbers were opening fire again, from behind a boulder that sheltered them admirably. Hal and Noll had no protection other than they could get from lying close to the ground. But they answered the fire briskly.
Crack! crack! crack! As fast as revolvers were emptied the marksmen reloaded and again began firing. In daylight the execution would have been swifter, but all hits made in black darkness are made by the grace of luck.
In the first place the only target anyone in the combat had was the flash of an opponent's pistol.
The train robbers behind the ledge changed their positions after nearly every shot. And Hal and Noll, after the warm, uncomfortable experience of having bullets fan their faces persistently, found it advisable to crouch low and dart here and there, firing from new positions.
All this time the scores of people on the train were sitting in terrified silence. Passengers or train crews rarely interfere in a case of this kind.
Not even the train's lights aided either side, for the two young recruits had taken pains to close in on the ledge sufficiently to escape illumination by the train's lights.
Crack! crack! crack! This was a new note, coming from past the forward end of the ledge.
Almost in the same instant a howl sounded from behind the barrier of rock.
Then another voice was heard, shouting.
"Hold on! We surrender! Stop the shooting!"
Instantly this hail was answered by another. It sounded good to the young recruits as Major Davis roared from behind the forward end of the ledge:
"Then throw up your hands, keep them up, and walk into the train light where we can see you."
"You won't shoot?" demanded the voice of the surrendering one.
"Not unless you attempt tricks," replied the voice of Major Davis.
"All right. Here I come."
A lone figure rose over the edge of the ledge, and a tall, masked man, holding his hands very high, strode toward the train, passing between Hal and Noll, who instantly turned and covered him with their weapons.
"Where's the other man?" demanded Major Davis, still invisible in the blackness beyond.
"You'll find him behind the ledge," returned the surrendered one. "He's hurt too bad to move."
"Overton," called the major, "keep your weapon trained right on that prisoner. Terry, join me behind the ledge."
"Yes, sir," answered both recruits.
Noll was quickly with the major on the further side of the ledge. Here they speedily found a masked man, short and rather thick-set, who hadthe appearance of being unconscious. He was breathing with great effort, a deep crimson spot appearing on his right breast.
"May I ask, sir, about the man you went under the train to get?" queried Noll.
"He's dead, my man," replied Major Davis very quietly.
"Shall I try to lift this man, sir?"
"No; take his revolver, and search him for other weapons, as far as you can do so without disturbing the fellow and putting him in more pain. We'll let that hiding train crew move the casualties to the baggage car."
So Noll completed his search, while the conductor, baggage-master and some of the brakemen, noting that the firing had stopped, ventured forth.
"You trainmen take care of the dead and wounded," directed Major Davis crisply. "Terry, rejoin your comrade. I shall have to trouble you two men to stand guard over the prisoners in the baggage car until we reach Salida."
Both recruits saluted. Noll returned to the track in time to find that the first man whom he and Hal had bowled over was just coming back to his senses.
ONCE more the train was under way. The engineer had taken his uncoupled engine some distance up the track, but had returned when sent for, and now the train, twenty additional minutes late, was crawling up the steep grade.
The wounded men lay on the floor of the car, receiving the attentions of a physician who had been found among the passengers.
The unwounded ones stood in a corner at the forward end of the car, Private Hal Overton, revolver in hand, watching the men closely.
Noll, a revolver in either hand, stood a little past the middle of the car, looking wholly businesslike.
Major Davis, having gone back to make sure that his own belongings were safe, now returned to the baggage car.
"Fellow," he asked of the tall prisoner, "what on earth made you stop this train?"
"Hard up," replied the man sullenly. "And a friend told us that the last time he held up a mail train, he and his pal found twelve thousand dollars in the registered mail pouches."
"You'll find at least twelve years in the mail pouches this trip," retorted Major Davis grimly.
Half an hour later a stop was made at a little tank station, to enable Major Davis to wire ahead to Salida for officers to be in readiness when they arrived.
Then the train crawled on again through the inky darkness. Noll relieved Hal, presently, though there seemed little need of alertness. The two prisoners capable of fighting looked pretty well cowed. Down at the rear end of the car, covered with a rubber blanket, lay the rigid remains of the man killed by the major.
Something more than an hour late the train pulled in at Salida. There was a crowd on hand, including four sheriff's officers. These latter came to the baggage car just before the train stopped.
"Will you take full responsibility for the prisoners now?" asked Major Davis of one officer who led the rest and who displayed his badge.
"Yes, sir," replied the deputy sheriff.
"Then I'll go and have something to eat," smiled the major dryly. "My men, do you eat here, too?"
"Yes, sir," Hal answered, saluting.
It was not an invitation to join their officer. Both recruits fully understood that. The gulfof discipline prevents officers and men eating together.
On the platform before the station-building Major Davis halted long enough to say:
"My men, I appreciate your help to-night. It would have been too much for me alone. You men stood by me like soldiers. As a United States Army officer I would have felt disgraced had I allowed a United States mail car to be rifled without striking a blow to stop it."
"It was a daring thing to do, sir," Hal ventured, with another salute.
"It was my plainest sort of duty, as an officer," replied Major Davis, returning the salute.
"May I ask, sir," ventured Hal, "whether it would have been our duty, had we been armed, and you not on the train?"
"Not unless led by an officer," replied the major. "But where did you young men learn to obey so promptly, and without questioning or hesitation?"
"At the recruit rendezvous, sir."
"Which one?"
"At Bedloe's Island, sir."
"Who was your instructor?"
"One of them, sir, was a namesake of yours—Corporal Davis."
"He will be glad to hear of this," nodded the major, smiling. "Corporal Davis is my son."
"Your son, sir—an enlisted man?" stammered Hal.
"Yes. My son enlisted in order to try to win a commission. Thank you, men, and good-night. I will tell the sheriff's men that you will be found at Fort Clowdry if you are wanted as witnesses."
Again acknowledging their salutes, Major Davis stepped inside.
Hal and Noll waited a moment before entering the station. When they did so, and passed on to the lunch room, they saw Major Davis at a table in one corner, so the rookies passed on to stools before the lunch counter.
"How long have we to eat?" asked Hal, of one of the trainmen.
"You've about twenty-two minutes left."
"I feel as if I could make excellent use of all the time," laughed Hal.
He and Noll plunged into hot chicken, potatoes and gravy, and plenty of side dishes. The late excitement had not destroyed the appetite of either recruit.
When they had finished Hal asked the waiter:
"How much do we owe you?"
"Nothing," replied the waiter. "I was told to say that the account is settled, with Major Davis's compliments."
Both recruits turned, saluting in the major'sdirection, as token of their thanks. He nodded, smiling.
Out on the platform, just before the train started, the recruits saw Major Davis again. That officer was turned halfway from them, without seeing them, so they passed along to the day coach in which they had been riding.
Now a dozen men crowded about them, eager to talk with the young heroes of the night.
"Pretty gritty work that you boys did," grinned one of the men. "Do you often have things like that to do in the Army?"
"We never did, before to-night," Hal answered quietly.
"Must take a lot of nerve."
"We didn't think of it at the time," smiled Hal. "It seemed all in the way of business."
"You ought to have seen the folks you left behind here," put in another man.
"Oh, shut up," called others.
"No, I won't," retorted the last speaker. "What do you suppose we folks that you left behind in this car were doing?"
"Nothing very noisy, was it?" queried Hal.
"Not particularly," admitted the man, with a laugh. "We were lying along the aisle, or else we crawled under seats. At one time there were altogether too many bullets hitting the side of the car, or coming through the windows. Noneof us in here got hit, but that was because of the good care we took of ourselves."
"Oh, we might have done something," protested another man, "only we didn't have anything to shoot with."
"These two young soldiers didn't have anything to shoot with, either, at the outset of the trouble. They hustled outside and got their guns from the enemy."
"Got any of those guns now?" asked another passenger, crowding forward. "Want to sell any of 'em?"
"We haven't even a cartridge," Hal replied.
"What did you do with them?"
"Turned them over to the sheriff's officers, of course."
It was nearly an hour before the curious passengers would consent to leave the young soldiers to themselves. Noll finally managed to convey an excellent hint by leaning back in his seat and closing his eyes as if in sleep.
Hal dozed somewhat, but by one o'clock in the morning both recruits were wide awake.
"What time are we due at Clowdry?" Hal asked the passing brakeman.
"More'n an hour late," answered the trainman.
"Whew! That means we won't get there until after three in the morning," muttered Hal.
"I wish we wouldn't get there until daylight," rejoined Noll. "Then I'd feel like dropping back for another nap."
Nearly everyone else in the car was dozing, it being after midnight.
It was half-past three o'clock in the morning when the brakeman rested his hand on Hal's shoulder.
"We ought to be at Clowdry in five minutes now," said the brakeman.
"Much obliged," Overton answered. "Thank goodness, Noll."
By the time that the train slowed up both recruits were out on the rear platform of the car, each gripping his canvas case.
"Clowdry! Clowdry!" bawled the brakeman.
Hal and Noll dropped off into the black night. The only light was in the station, past which the train slowly rolled.
There was no one in the station save the telegraph operator. On these mountain divisions, where accidents may so easily happen, a night operator is kept at every station.
Hal and Noll stood on the station platform until the train had pulled out. Then, as their eyes became more accustomed to the darkness, they made out what appeared to be a small hotel on the other side of the track. There were twoor three other buildings near by that looked like dwellings.
"Clowdry is a pretty large city," observed Noll, with a grin.
The real town was nearly a mile away.
"I wonder where the fort is," returned Hal. "We'll ask the operator."
Apparently the operator was too well accustomed to seeing soldiers to take any deep interest in this new pair. But he was obliging, at any rate.
"Wait a minute," he called back, in answer to Private Overton's question, "and I'll go and show you the road."
So the two soldiers stood by their canvas cases until the operator had finished at his clicking instruments. Then the operator came out, heading for the rear door of the station.
"I'll show you from here, Jack," called the operator. "You see that road? Follow it about a half a mile; take the first turn to the left, and then keep straight on until you come to the fort."
"How far is Fort Clowdry?" Hal wanted to know.
"About three miles from here."
"Good road?" questioned Noll.
"Tenderfeet, ain't you?" asked the operator, smiling.
"Yes," admitted Hal.
"Thought you must be," nodded the operator, "else you'd know that the road between an Army post and the nearest freight station is always a good one. Them Army wagon bosses would put up a fearful holler if they had to drive the transport wagons over bad roads. Just joining?"
"Yes," assented Hal.
"Good luck to you! Well, follow the road and you can't have any trouble."
"Thank you, and good-night," came from both recruits. Then, each taking a new grip on his canvas case, which was fairly heavy, the recruits started down the road.
They came, finally, to the turn to the left.
"These equipment cases don't grow any lighter with distance, do they?" laughed Hal.
"Mine doesn't," grunted Noll.
When they had walked on a good deal farther Noll remarked:
"I wish we had that operator here!"
"What for?"
"He told us it was three miles. We could ask him what kind of miles."
"There's daylight coming," nodded Hal, pointing to the east. "That will make the distance seem shorter."
The sun up, at last, gave the recruits theirfirst glimpse of their first station in the Army. Fort Clowdry lay before them. There were no frowning parapets, no stone battlements, no cannon in sight. Fort Clowdry, as seen at the distance, consisted of a great number of buildings, of all sizes.
Boom! went a gun suddenly.
"Great!" cried Hal, his eyes shining. "That's the essence of the soldier's life—the sunrise gun. The Flag has just been hauled up."
In the middle distance the recruits caught sight of a soldier pacing, his gun, with bayonet fixed, at shoulder arms.
"That sentry will put us on the rest of our way," predicted Noll.
It being now broad daylight the sentry did not challenge the newcomers.
"SENTRY, we're recruit privates, joining the regiment at this station," announced Hal. "Where do we report?"
Bringing his rifle to port arms the soldier replied: "This is post number seven. You'll find post number one at that building under the fir-tree. That's the guard-house. Report, first, to the corporal of the guard."
"Thank you, Sentry."
"Welcome."
Bringing his piece to shoulder arms, the sentry resumed his pacing.
Hal and Noll now followed a well-kept road to the guard-house. Outside stood the corporal of the guard for this relief. As he gazed at the young soldiers, noting their canvas cases, he did not need to be told that they were recruits. None but recruits have cases the pattern they were carrying.
"Corporal," reported Hal, "we are Privates Overton and Terry, under orders to join the Thirty-fourth."
"Take seats inside, then," said the corporal. "Go to sleep in your chairs, if you want to."
Several other privates, belonging to the guard, were dozing in chairs. But Hal and Noll felt now too wide awake to think of dozing. They longed to step outside for a better look at this post, which was to be their future home. Yet, having been directed to remain inside, they obeyed.
It was a long while afterward before a bugler blew the first call to reveille, which is the "Army alarm clock," the signal to rise.
"Attention!" called the corporal, a few minutes afterward.
All the dozers sprang to their feet, standing at attention.
The officer of the day entered, looking over the men.
Then his glance fell upon the recruits.
"You are new men joining?" he asked.
"Yes, sir," Hal and Noll answered, presenting their orders.
"Corporal, when mess call sounds send a private of the guard with these men to put them in D Company's mess for their first meal."
"Very good, sir."
"Overton and Terry, you will report at the adjutant's office promptly at nine o'clock."
"Very good, sir."
The officer remained to glance over the guard report, then went away.
"When does that mess call sound, Corporal?" asked Hal.
"Five minutes more. Bates, you'll take the recruits to D Company's mess."
Nor did either recruit feel sorry when he was ushered into the enlisted men's mess, near barracks.
"Attention!" roared one waggish soldier.
As by instinct the men in the room stood at attention.
"Two new young generals are honoring us this morning," grinned the wag.
"Throw him out!" growled a sergeant. "It's bad enough to be a rookie without having it rubbed in."
The first sergeant now gave the seating order, and the men fell in at table. The wag sat at Noll's left.
"I find I'm mistaken," called the wag, down the table. "Our guests are only colonels."
"You'll be a general, one of these days, if you don't look out, Fowler," warned another soldier near by.
"The gypsies always told my mother I'd be a general," replied Fowler complacently.
"Yes, a general prisoner," continued the soldier who had just warned the wag.
This raised a prompt laugh, for, in the Army, a "general prisoner" is one who is serving aterm of confinement after sentence by a general court-martial.
"There are generals, and generals, of course," admitted Fowler.
"There'd be a general famine, Fowler, if you ever stopped talking at mess long enough to do all the eating that your mouth calls for."
"How long have you young gentlemen been out of West Point?" asked Fowler, turning to Noll.
Noll grinned, but did not make any answer to this question.
"I hope you are West Pointers," continued the company wag. "Nearly all of the gentlemen present are West Pointers."
"Give the rooks time to eat their meal in comfort," ordered a sergeant gruffly. "Have you forgotten the day, Fowler, when you were the greenest rook that the Thirty-fourth ever had?"
"I never was a rook," retorted Fowler.
"You never got beyond being one," retorted a corporal. "Don't mind this chin-bugler, lads. He doesn't know any better."
Hal was paying attention strictly to the meal before him. A good-sized piece of steak and a dish of baked potatoes had come his way, and he enjoyed them keenly. The men of this battalion had a first class commissary officer and lived well.
"You've visiting cards with you, of course?" continued Fowler, after a few moments.
"No," Noll admitted.
"Why, rook, you'll need cards. You've got to call on the K. O. (commanding officer) after breakfast. But we'll fix you out. I'll lend you my pack. The jack of clubs is the one you want to send in to the K. O. Then he'll know 'tis a husky lad that has honored the Thirty-fourth by joining."
"You'll live most of the time at the guard-house, if you take Fowler for your authority on doughboy life," broke in a quiet soldier across the table.
"More likely the happy house would be our address," laughed Hal.
"Doughboy" is the term applied to an infantry soldier. Hal and Noll, being in an infantry regiment, had thereby become doughboys. The "happy house" is the part of a military hospital where mild cases of insanity are confined.
The meal was soon over, and the first sergeant took the trouble to go up to the boys.
"When do you report at the adjutant's office?" he asked.
"At nine o'clock, Sergeant," Hal responded.
"Then, as long as you don't bother anyone else, you can just as well stroll where you please around the post, until nine," continued the sergeant."Of course you know that nine o'clock means nine to the very minute?"
"We were taught a lot about punctuality at the rendezvous station," Hal answered.
"Punctuality is about the greatest virtue in Army life," nodded the first sergeant of D Company, as he moved away.
In the interval of time at their disposal Hal and Noll were able to see a good deal of Fort Clowdry.
The center of the life there was the great parade ground, a level, grassy plain.
At the north end of this plain stood a row of pretty dwellings. The largest was the residence of Colonel North, commanding officer of the Thirty-fourth. Next to the colonel's residence was that of Major Silsbee, the battalion commander. Past the major's residence was a row of somewhat smaller cottages, each the home of a married officer. The name and rank of each officer was on a doorplate. At the furthest end of the row from Colonel North's dwelling was a building containing quarters for bachelor officers.
On another side of the parade ground were various buildings devoted to the life of the post. There was an Officers' Club, a library, a gymnasium, and at one corner, the post hospital.
Further away from the parade ground werethe quarters of enlisted married men, and, beyond that, the barracks of the four companies of the Thirty-fourth stationed at Fort Clowdry. Chapel also faced the parade ground, and, near it, a Y. M. C. A. building.
Further away was the power house, for the buildings and roads on the post were lighted by electricity.
"Have we time to go over to the power house?" asked Noll.
"We haven't," decided Hal, after consulting his watch. "In twelve minutes we must be at the adjutant's office."
"Here comes an officer," whispered Noll.
Both young soldiers were alert as a first lieutenant came down the road toward them. At the same instant Hal and Noll raised their right hands smartly in salute, which was promptly returned by that officer.
They had already inquired where the adjutant's office was located. Having passed the officer, our young recruits now hastened over to the headquarters building.
"Adjutant's office?" inquired Hal of an orderly before a door.
"Right inside," nodded the orderly.
Noll fell in behind Hal as the latter stepped into the office. At a flat-top desk sat a battalion sergeant-major, who is the non-commissionedassistant of the regimental adjutant.
At a roll-top desk in another corner of the office the adjutant himself, a first lieutenant, was seated.
"We are recruits reporting, Sergeant," announced Hal, in a low tone.
"You have your orders with you?" asked the sergeant-major.
"Yes, Sergeant." Hal handed both sets of papers to his questioner.
At the same time each recruit was alert to salute the officer at the roll-top desk, in case he should look up. But he didn't until the battalion sergeant-major placed the papers on his desk.
"Come here, men," directed the officer.
Both rookies stepped over to his desk, halted and saluted.
"Recruit Privates Overton and Terry?" asked the adjutant, after a glance at the papers.
"Yes, sir."
The adjutant turned to examine a list that lay on his desk.
"Private Overton to B Company. Private Terry to C Company."
From an inner room stepped out a gray-haired officer, wearing on his shoulder-straps thesilver eagles of a colonel. This must be Colonel North, the Thirty-fourth's K. O. Both recruits immediately came to the salute again.
"These are the young men I wanted to see, are they not, Wright?" asked the colonel.
"They are, sir," replied the adjutant, rising.
"Major Silsbee!" called the colonel, looking over one shoulder.
That officer entered, also from the inner room, and again the recruits saluted.
"Major," went on the colonel, "these are the young men I told you about, who are joining your battalion."
Major Silsbee looked them over keenly, even if briefly.
"They look the part, Colonel," was the major's comment.