At dawn he had not returned. He did not come before midday. His camel

collapsed under him, rather than knelt.

He realized that he must excuse himself, but he waited till we were

alone at lunch.

"I am so sorry to have caused you any anxiety. But the dunes were so

beautiful under the moon! I let myself be carried farther and

farther...."

"I have no reproaches to make, dear fellow, you are free, and the

chief here. Only allow me to recall to you certain warnings concerning

the Chaamba brigands, and the misfortunes that might arise from a

Commandant of a post absenting himself too long."

He smiled.

"I don't dislike such evidence of a good memory," he said simply.

He was in excellent, too excellent spirits.

"Don't blame me. I set out for a short ride as usual. Then, the moon

rose. And then, I recognized the country. It is just where, twenty

years ago next November, Flatters followed the way to his destiny in

an exaltation which the certainty of not returning made keener and

more intense."

"Strange state of mind for a chief of an expedition," I murmured.

"Say nothing against Flatters. No man ever loved the desert as he

did ... even to dying of it."

"Palat and Douls, among many others, have loved it as much," I

answered. "But they were alone when they exposed themselves to it.

Responsible only for their own lives, they were free. Flatters, on the

other hand, was responsible for sixty lives. And you cannot deny that

he allowed his whole party to be massacred."

The words were hardly out of my lips before I regretted them, I

thought of Chatelain's story, of the officers' club at Sfax, where

they avoided like the plague any kind of conversation which might lead

their thoughts toward a certain Morhange-Saint-Avit mission.

Happily I observed that my companion was not listening. His brilliant

eyes were far away.

"What was your first garrison?" he asked suddenly.

"Auxonne."

He gave an unnatural laugh.

"Auxonne. Province of the Cote d'Or. District of Dijon. Six thousand

inhabitants. P.L.M. Railway. Drill school and review. The Colonel's

wife receives Thursdays, and the Major's on Saturdays. Leaves every

Sunday,--the first of the month to Paris, the three others to Dijon.

That explains your Judgment of Flatters.

"For my part, my dear fellow, my first garrison was at Boghar. I

arrived there one morning in October, a second lieutenant, aged

twenty, of the First African Batallion, the white chevron on my black

sleeve.... Sun stripe, as the bagnards say in speaking of their

grades. Boghar! Two days before, from the bridge of the steamer, I had

begun to see the shores of Africa. I pity all those who, when they see

those pale cliffs for the first time, do not feel a great leap at

their hearts, at the thought that this land prolongs itself thousands

and thousands of leagues.... I was little more than a child, I had

plenty of money. I was ahead of schedule. I could have stopped three

or four days at Algiers to amuse myself. Instead I took the train that

same evening for Berroughia.




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