Just what happened, and how it happened, within the minute, led to

conflicting stories on the morrow. First man examined by Major Plume

was Lieutenant Truman of the Infantry, who happened to be officer of

the day. He had been over at Blakely's about midnight, he said; had

found the patient sleeping under the influence of soothing medicine,

and, after a whispered word with Todd, the hospital attendant, had

tiptoed out again, encountering Downs, the lieutenant's striker, in

the darkness on the rear porch. Downs said he was that excited he

couldn't sleep at all, and Mr. Truman had come to the conclusion that

Downs's excitement was due, in large part, to local influences totally

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disconnected with the affairs of the early evening. Downs was an

Irishman who loved the "craytur," and had been known to resort to

unconventional methods of getting it. At twelve o'clock, said Mr.

Truman, the striker had obviously been priming. Now Plume's standing

orders were that no liquor should be sold to Downs at the store and

none to other soldiers except in "pony" glasses and for use on the

spot. None could be carried away unconsumed. The only legitimate

spirits, therefore, to which Downs could have access were those in

Blakely's locked closet--spirits hitherto used only in the

preservation of specimens, and though probably not much worse than the

whisky sold at the store, disdainfully referred to by votaries as

"Blakely's bug juice." Mr. Truman, therefore, demanded of Downs the

possession of the lieutenant's keys, and, with aggrieved dignity of

mien, Downs had referred him to the doctor, whose suspicions had been

earlier aroused. Intending to visit his sentries after the change of

guard at 1.30, Truman had thrown himself into a reclining chair in his

little parlor, while Mrs. Truman and the little Trumans slumbered

peacefully aloft. After reading an hour or so the lieutenant fell into

a doze from which he awoke with a start. Mrs. Truman was bending over

him. Mrs. Truman had been aroused by hearing voices in cautious, yet

excited, colloquy in the shadows of Blakely's back porch. She felt

sure that Downs was one and thought from the sound that he must be

intoxicated, so Truman shuffled out to see, and somebody, bending

double in the dusk, scurried away at his approach. He heard rather

than saw. But there was Downs, at least, slinking back into the house,

and him Truman halted and accosted. "Who was that with you?" he asked,

and Downs thickly swore he hadn't seen a soul. But all the while Downs

was clumsily stuffing something into a side pocket, and Truman,

seizing his hand, dragged it forth into the light. It was one of the

hospital six-ounce bottles, bearing a label indicative of glycerine

lotion, but the color of the contained fluid belied the label. A sniff

was sufficient. "Who gave you this whisky?" was the next demand, and

Downs declared 'twas a hospital "messager" that brought it over,

thinking the lieutenant might need it. Truman, filled with wrath, had

dragged Downs into the dimly lighted room to the rear of that in which

lay Lieutenant Blakely, and was there upbraiding and investigating

when startled by the stifled cry that, rising suddenly on the night

from the open mesa just without, had so alarmed so many in the

garrison. Of what had led to it he had then no more idea than the

dead.




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