Miss Farrar smiled vindictively. Her eyes shone. “You need not wait long,” she said. There was a crash of a falling stone wall, and of parting bushes, but not in time to give Lathrop warning. As though from the branches of the trees opposite two soldiers fell into the road; around his hat each wore the red band of the invader; each pointed his rifle at Lathrop.
“Hands up!” shouted one. “You’re my prisoner!” cried the other.
Mechanically Lathrop raised his hands, but his eyes turned to Miss Farrar.
“Did you know?” he asked.
“I have been watching them,” she said, “creeping up on you for the last ten minutes.”
Lathrop turned to the two soldiers, and made an effort to smile.
“That was very clever,” he said, “but I have twenty men up the road, and behind them a regiment. You had better get away while you can.”
The two Reds laughed derisively. One, who wore the stripes of a sergeant, answered: “That won’t do! We been a mile up the road, and you and us are the only soldiers on it. Gimme the gun!”
Lathrop knew he had no right to refuse. He had been fairly surprised, but he hesitated. When Miss Farrar was not in his mind his amateur soldiering was to him a most serious proposition. The war game was a serious proposition, and that, through his failure for ten minutes to regard it seriously, he had been made a prisoner, mortified him keenly. That his humiliation had taken place in the presence of Beatrice Farrar did not lessen his discomfort, nor did the explanation he must later make to his captain afford him any satisfaction. Already he saw himself playing the star part in a court-martial. He shrugged his shoulders and surrendered his gun.
As he did so he gloomily scrutinized the insignia of his captors.
“Who took me?” he asked.
“We took you,” exclaimed the sergeant.
“What regiment?” demanded Lathrop, sharply. “I have to report who took me; and you probably don’t know it, but your collar ornaments are upside down.” With genuine exasperation he turned to Miss Farrar.
“Lord!” he exclaimed, “isn’t it bad enough to be taken prisoner, without being taken by raw recruits that can’t put on their uniforms?”
The Reds flushed, and the younger, a sandy-haired, rat-faced youth, retorted angrily: “Mebbe we ain’t strong on uniforms, beau,” he snarled, “but you’ve got nothing on us yet, that I can see. You look pretty with your hands in the air, don’t you?”
“Shut up,” commanded the other Red. He was the older man, heavily built, with a strong, hard mouth and chin, on which latter sprouted a three days’ iron-gray beard. “Don’t you see he’s an officer? Officers don’t like being took by two-spot privates.”
Lathrop gave a sudden start. “Why,” he laughed, incredulously, “don’t you know—” He stopped, and his eyes glanced quickly up and down the road.


