'So I was right,' the other said. 'You were afraid,'
'I respected him as an articulated creature capable of locomotion and vulnerable to self-interest,'
'you were afraid,' the Quartermaster General said. 'Who with two armies which had already been beaten once and a third one not yet blooded to where it was a calculable quantity had never-theless managed to stalemate the most powerful and skillful and dedicated force in Europe, yet had had to call upon that enemy for help against the simple unified hope and dream of simple man. No, you arc afraid. And so I am well to be. That's why I brought it back. There it lies. Touch it, put your hand on it. Or take my word for it that it's real, the same one, not defiled since the defilement was mine who shirked it in the middle of a battle, and a concomitant of your rank is the right and privilege to obliterate the human in-strument of a failure,'
'But can you bring it back here? To me?' the old general said mildly.
'Why not? Weren't you the one who gave it to me?'
'But can you?' the old general said. 'Dare you ask me to grant you a favor, let alone accept it from me? This favor,' the old general said in that gentle and almost inflectionless voice. 'A man is to die what the world will call the basest and most ignominious of deaths: execution for cowardice while defending his native-anyway adopted-land. That's what the ignorant world will call it, who will not know that he was murdered for that principle which, by your own bitter self-flagellation, you were incapable of risking death and honor for. Yet you dont demand that life. You demand instead merely to be relieved of a commission. A gesture. A martyrdom. Does it match his?'
'He wont accept that life!' the other cried. 'If he does-' and stopped, amazed, aghast, foreknowing and despaired while the gentle voice went on: 'If he does, if he accepts his life, keeps his life, he will have abro-gated his own gesture and martyrdom. If I gave him his life tonight, I myself could render null and void what you call the hope and the dream of his sacrifice. By destroying his life tomorrow morning, I will establish forever that he didn't even live in vain, let alone die so. Now tell me who's afraid?'
Now the other began to turn, slowly, a little jerkily, as though he were blind, turning on until he faced the small door again and stopping not as though he saw it but as if he had located its position and direction by some other and lesser and less exact sense, like smell, the old general watching him until he had completely turned before he spoke: 'You've forgotten your paper.'
'Of course,' the other said. 'So I have,' He turned back, jerkily, blinking rapidly; his hand fumbled on the table top for a moment, then it found the folded paper and put it back inside the tunic, and he stood again, blinking rapidly. 'Yes,' he said. 'So I did,' Then he turned again, a little stiffly still but moving almost quickly now, directly anyhow, and went on across the blanched rug, toward the door; at once it opened and the aide entered, carrying the door with him and already turning into rigid attention, holding it while the Quartermaster General walked toward it, a little stiffly and awkwardly, too big too gaunt too alien, then stopped and half-turned his head and said: 'Good-bye,'
'Good-bye,' the old general said. The other went on, to the door now, almost into it, beginning to bow his head a little as though from long habit already too tall for most doors, stopping almost in the door now, his head still bowed a little even after he turned it Thursday Night not quite toward where the old general sat immobile and gaudy as a child's toy behind the untouched bowl and jug and the still un-crumbled bread.
'And something else,' the Quartermaster General said. 'To say. Something else-'
'With God,' the old general said.
'Of course,' the Quartermaster General said. 'That was it. I al-most said it,'
The door clashed open; the sergeant with his slung rifle entered first, followed by a private carrying his unslung one, unbelievably long now with the fixed bayonet, like a hunter dodging through a gap in a fence. They took position one on either side of the door, the thirteen prisoners turning their thirteen heads as one to watch quietly while two more men carried in a long wooden bench-attached mess table and set it in the center of the cell and went back out.
'Going to fatten us up first, huh?' one of the prisoners said. The sergeant didn't answer; he was now working at his front teeth with a gold toothpick.
'If the next thing they bring is a tablecloth, the third will be a priest/ another prisoner said. But he was wrong, although the num-ber of casseroles and pots and dishes (including a small caldron obviously soup) which did come next, followed by a third man car-rying a whole basket of bottles and a jumble of utensils and cutlery, was almost as unnerving, the sergeant speaking now though still around, past the toothpick: 'Hold it now. At least let them get their hands and arms out of the way.' Though the prisoners had really not moved yet to rush upon the table, the food: it was merely a shift, semicircular, poised while the third orderly set the wine (there were seven bottles) on the table and then began to place the cups, vessels, whatever any- one wanted to call them-tin cups, pannikins from mess kits, two or three cracked tumblers, two flagons contrived by bisecting later-ally one canteen.
'Dont apologise, garden,' the wit said. 'Just so it's got a bottom at one end and a hole at the other,' Then the one who had brought the wine scuttled back to the door after the two others, and out of it; the private with the bayonet dodged his seven-foot-long im-plement through it again and turned, holding the door half closed for the sergeant.
'All right, you bastards,' the sergeant said. 'Be pigs,'
'Speak for yourself, maitre,' the wit said. 'If we must dine in stink, we prefer it to be our own,' Then suddenly, in unpremedi-tated concert as though they had not even planned it or instigated it, they had not even been warned of it but instead had been over-taken from behind by it like wind, they had all turned on the ser-geant, or perhaps not even the sergeant, the human guards, but just the rifles and the bayonets and the steel lockable door, not moving, rushing toward them but just yelling at them-a sound hoarse, loud, without language, not of threat or indic'I'ment either: just a hoarse concerted affirmation of repudiation which continued for another moment or so even after the sergeant had passed through the door and it had clashed shut again. Then they stopped. Yet they still didn't rush at the table, still hovering, semicircular, almost diffidently, merely enclosing it, their noses trembling questing like those of rabbits at the odors from it, grimed, filthy, reeking still of the front lines and uncertainty and perhaps despair; unshaven, faces not alarming nor even embittered but harassed-faces of men who had already borne not only more than they expected but than they believed they could and who knew that it was still not over and-with a sort of amazement, even terror-that no matter how much more there would be, they would still bear that too.
'Come on, Corp,' a voice said. 'Let's go,'
'All right,' the corporal said. 'Watch it now,' But still there was no stampede, rush. It was just a crowding, a concentration, a jostling itself almost inattentive, not of famishment, hunger but Thursday Night rather of the watchful noncomitance of people still-so far at least-keeping pace with, holding their own still within the fringe of a fading fairy-tale, the cursing itself inattentive and impersonal, not eager: just pressed as they crowded in onto both the fixed benches, five on one side and six on the other facing them until the twelfth man dragged up the cell's one stool to the head of the table for the corporal and then himself took the remaining place at the foot end of the unfilled bench like the Vice to the Chair in a Dickcnsian tavern's back room-a squat powerful weathered man with the blue eyes and reddish hair and beard of a Breton fisherman, captain, say, of his own small tough and dauntless boat-laden doubtless with contraband. The corporal filled the bowls while they passed them hand to hand. But still there was no voracity. A leashed quality, but even, almost unimpatient as they sat holding each his upended un-soiled spoon like a boat-crew.