The Sky Pilot in No Man's Land
High upon a rock, poised like a bird for flight, stark naked, his satin skin shining like gold and silver in the rising sun, stood a youth, tall, slim of body, not fully developed but with muscles promising, in their faultless, gently swelling outline, strength and suppleness to an unusual degree. Gazing down into the pool formed by an eddy of the river twenty feet below him, he stood as if calculating the distance, his profile turned toward the man who had just emerged from the bushes and was standing on the sandy strand of the river, paddle in hand, looking up at him with an expression of wonder and delight in his eyes.
“Ye gods, what a picture!” said the man to himself.
Noiselessly, as if fearing to send the youth off in flight, he laid his paddle on the sand, hurriedly felt in his pockets, and swore to himself vigorously when he could find no sketch book there.
“What a pose! What an Apollo!” he muttered.
The sunlight glistening on the beautiful white skin lay like pools of gold in the curving hollows of the perfectly modelled body, and ran like silver over the rounded swellings of the limbs. Instinct with life he seemed, something in his pose suggesting that he had either alighted from the golden, ambient air, or was about to commit himself to it. The man on the sand continued to gaze as if he were beholding a creature of another world.
“Oh, Lord! What lines!” he breathed.
Slowly the youth began to move his arms up to the horizontal, then to the perpendicular, reaching to the utmost of his height upon his toe tips, breathing deep the while. Smoothly, slowly, the muscles in legs and thighs, in back, in abdomen, in chest, responding to the exercise moved under the lustrous skin as if themselves were living things. Over and over again the action was repeated, the muscles and body moving in rhythmic harmony like some perfect mechanism running in a bath of oil.
“Ye gods of Greece!” breathed the man. “What is this thing I see? Flesh or spirit? Man or god?” Again he swore at himself for neglecting to bring his sketch book and pencil.
Ralph Connor
THE SKY PILOT IN NO MAN'S LAND
Contents
THE SKY PILOT IN NO MAN'S LAND
CHAPTER I
ONLY A MISSIONARY
CHAPTER II
ON THE RED PINE TRAIL
CHAPTER III
A QUESTION OF CONSCIENCE
CHAPTER IV
REJECTED
CHAPTER V
THE WAR DRUM CALLS
CHAPTER VI
THE MEN OF THE NORTH
CHAPTER VII
BARRICADES AND BAYONETS
CHAPTER VIII
A QUESTION OF NERVE
CHAPTER IX
SUBMARINES, BULLPUPS, AND OTHER THINGS
CHAPTER X
FRANCE
CHAPTER XI
THE NEW MESSAGE
CHAPTER XII
A MAN OF GOD
CHAPTER XIII
INTENSIVE TRAINING
CHAPTER XIV
A TOUCH OF WAR
CHAPTER XV
THINNING RANKS
CHAPTER XVI
THE PASSING OF McCUAIG
CHAPTER XVII
LONDON LEAVE AND PHYLLIS
CHAPTER XVIII
A WEDDING JOURNEY
CHAPTER XIX
THE PILOT'S LAST PORT
CHAPTER XX
“CARRY ON”