A RACE TO LUTHA
Barney’s fall was not more than
four or five feet. He found himself upon a slippery
floor of masonry over which two or three inches of
water ran sluggishly. Above him he heard the soldiers
pass the open manhole. It was evident that in
the darkness they had missed it.
For a few minutes the fugitive remained
motionless, then, hearing no sounds from above he
started to grope about his retreat. Upon two
sides were blank, circular walls, upon the other two
circular openings about four feet in diameter.
It was through these openings that the tiny stream
of water trickled.
Barney came to the conclusion that
he had dropped into a sewer. To get out the
way he had entered appeared impossible. He could
not leap upward from the slimy, concave bottom the
distance he had dropped. To follow the sewer
upward would lead him nowhere nearer escape.
There remained no hope but to follow the trickling
stream downward toward the river, into which his judgment
told him the entire sewer system of the city must
lead.
Stooping, he entered the ill-smelling
circular conduit, groping his way slowly along.
As he went the water deepened. It was half way
to his knees when he plunged unexpectedly into another
tube running at right angles to the first. The
bottom of this tube was lower than that of the one
which emptied into it, so that Barney now found himself
in a swiftly running stream of filth that reached above
his knees. Downward he followed this flood faster
now for the fear of the deadly gases which might overpower
him before he could reach the river.
The water deepened gradually as he
went on. At last he reached a point where, with
his head scraping against the roof of the sewer, his
chin was just above the surface of the stream.
A few more steps would be all that he could take in
this direction without drowning. Could he retrace
his way against the swift current? He did not
know. He was weakened from the effects of his
wound, from lack of food and from the exertions of
the past hour. Well, he would go on as far as
he could. The river lay ahead of him somewhere.
Behind was only the hostile city.
He took another step. His foot
found no support. He surged backward in an attempt
to regain his footing, but the power of the flood
was too much for him. He was swept forward to
plunge into water that surged above his head as he
sank. An instant later he had regained the surface
and as his head emerged he opened his eyes.
He looked up into a starlit heaven!
He had reached the mouth of the sewer and was in
the river. For a moment he lay still, floating
upon his back to rest. Above him he heard the
tread of a sentry along the river front, and the sound
of men’s voices.
The sweet, fresh air, the star-shot
void above, acted as a powerful tonic to his shattered
hopes and overwrought nerves. He lay inhaling
great lungsful of pure, invigorating air. He listened
to the voices of the Austrian soldiery above him.
All the buoyancy of his inherent Americanism returned
to him.
“This is no place for a minister’s
son,” he murmured, and turning over struck out
for the opposite shore. The river was not wide,
and Barney was soon nearing the bank along which he
could see occasional camp fires. Here, too, were
Austrians. He dropped down-stream below these,
and at last approached the shore where a wood grew
close to the water’s edge. The bank here
was steep, and the American had some difficulty in
finding a place where he could clamber up the precipitous
wall of rock. But finally he was successful, finding
himself in a little clump of bushes on the river’s
brim. Here he lay resting and listening always
listening. It seemed to Barney that his ears
ached with the constant strain of unflagging duty that
his very existence demanded of them.
Hearing nothing, he crawled at last
from his hiding place with the purpose of making his
way toward the south and to the frontier as rapidly
as possible. He could hope only to travel by night,
and he guessed that this night must be nearly spent.
Stooping, he moved cautiously away from the river.
Through the shadows of the wood he made his way for
perhaps a hundred yards when he was suddenly confronted
by a figure that stepped from behind the bole of a
tree.
“Halt! Who goes there?” came the
challenge.
Barney’s heart stood still.
With all his care he had run straight into the arms
of an Austrian sentry. To run would be to be shot.
To advance would mean capture, and that too would
mean death.
For the barest fraction of an instant
he hesitated, and then his quick American wits came
to his aid. Feigning intoxication he answered
the challenge in dubious Austrian that he hoped his
maudlin tongue would excuse.
“Friend,” he answered
thickly. “Friend with a drink have
one?” And he staggered drunkenly forward, banking
all upon the credulity and thirst of the soldier who
confronted him with fixed bayonet.
That the sentry was both credulous
and thirsty was evidenced by the fact that he let
Barney come within reach of his gun. Instantly
the drunken Austrian was transformed into a very sober
and active engine of destruction. Seizing the
barrel of the piece Barney jerked it to one side and
toward him, and at the same instant he leaped for the
throat of the sentry.
So quickly was this accomplished that
the Austrian had time only for a single cry, and that
was choked in his windpipe by the steel fingers of
the American. Together both men fell heavily to
the ground, Barney retaining his hold upon the other’s
throat.
Striking and clutching at one another
they fought in silence for a couple of minutes, then
the soldier’s struggles began to weaken.
He squirmed and gasped for breath. His mouth
opened and his tongue protruded. His eyes started
from their sockets. Barney closed his fingers
more tightly upon the bearded throat. He rained
heavy blows upon the upturned face. The beating
fists of his adversary waved wildly now the
blows that reached Barney were pitifully weak.
Presently they ceased. The man struggled violently
for an instant, twitched spasmodically and lay still.
Barney clung to him for several minutes
longer, until there was not the slightest indication
of remaining life. The perpetration of the deed
sickened him; but he knew that his act was warranted,
for it had been either his life or the other’s.
He dragged the body back to the bushes in which he
had been hiding. There he stripped off the Austrian
uniform, put his own clothes upon the corpse and rolled
it into the river.
Dressed as an Austrian private, Barney
Custer shouldered the dead soldier’s gun and
walked boldly through the wood to the south.
Momentarily he expected to run upon other soldiers,
but though he kept straight on his way for hours he
encountered none. The thin line of sentries along
the river had been posted only to double the preventive
measures that had been taken to keep Serbian spies
either from entering or leaving the city.
Toward dawn, at the darkest period
of the night, Barney saw lights ahead of him.
Apparently he was approaching a village. He went
more cautiously now, but all his care did not prevent
him from running for the second time that night almost
into the arms of a sentry. This time, however,
Barney saw the soldier before he himself was discovered.
It was upon the edge of the town, in an orchard, that
the sentinel was posted. Barney, approaching through
the trees, darting from one to another, was within
a few paces of the man before he saw him.
The American remained quietly in the
shadow of a tree waiting for an opportunity to escape,
but before it came he heard the approach of a small
body of troops. They were coming from the village
directly toward the orchard. They passed the
sentry and marched within a dozen feet of the tree
behind which Barney was hiding.
As they came opposite him he slipped
around the tree to the opposite side. The sentry
had resumed his pacing, and was now out of sight momentarily
among the trees further on. He could not see the
American, but there were others who could. They
came in the shape of a non-commissioned officer and
a detachment of the guard to relieve the sentry.
Barney almost bumped into them as he rounded the tree.
There was no escape the non-commissioned
officer was within two feet of him when Barney discovered
him. “What are you doing here?” shouted
the sergeant with an oath. “Your post is
there,” and he pointed toward the position where
Barney had seen the sentry.
At first Barney could scarce believe
his ears. In the darkness the sergeant had mistaken
him for the sentinel! Could he carry it out?
And if so might it not lead him into worse predicament?
No, Barney decided, nothing could be worse. To
be caught masquerading in the uniform of an Austrian
soldier within the Austrian lines was to plumb the
uttermost depth of guilt nothing that he
might do now could make his position worse.
He faced the sergeant, snapping his
piece to present, hoping that this was the proper
thing to do. Then he stumbled through a brief
excuse. The officer in command of the troops that
had just passed had demanded the way of him, and he
had but stepped a few paces from his post to point
out the road to his superior.
The sergeant grunted and ordered him
to fall in. Another man took his place on duty.
They were far from the enemy and discipline was lax,
so the thing was accomplished which under other circumstances
would have been well night impossible. A moment
later Barney found himself marching back toward the
village, to all intents and purposes an Austrian private.
Before a low, windowless shed that
had been converted into barracks for the guard, the
detail was dismissed. The men broke ranks and
sought their blankets within the shed, tired from their
lonely vigil upon sentry duty.
Barney loitered until the last.
All the others had entered. He dared not, for
he knew that any moment the sentry upon the post from
which he had been taken would appear upon the scene,
after discovering another of his comrades. He
was certain to inquire of the sergeant. They
would be puzzled, of course, and, being soldiers,
they would be suspicious. There would be an investigation,
which would start in the barracks of the guard.
That neighborhood would at once become a most unhealthy
spot for Barney Custer, of Beatrice, Nebraska.
When the last of the soldiers had
entered the shed Barney glanced quickly about.
No one appeared to notice him. He walked directly
past the doorway to the end of the building. Around
this he found a yard, deeply shadowed. He entered
it, crossed it, and passed out into an alley beyond.
At the first cross-street his way was blocked by the
sight of another sentry the world seemed
composed entirely of Austrian sentries. Barney
wondered if the entire Austrian army was kept perpetually
upon sentry duty; he had scarce been able to turn
without bumping into one.
He turned back into the alley and
at last found a crooked passageway between buildings
that he hoped might lead him to a spot where there
was no sentry, and from which he could find his way
out of the village toward the south. The passage,
after devious windings, led into a large, open court,
but when Barney attempted to leave the court upon
the opposite side he found the ubiquitous sentries
upon guard there.
Evidently there would be no escape
while the Austrians remained in the town. There
was nothing to do, therefore, but hide until the happy
moment of their departure arrived. He returned
to the courtyard, and after a short search discovered
a shed in one corner that had evidently been used
to stable a horse, for there was straw at one end
of it and a stall in the other. Barney sat down
upon the straw to wait developments. Tired nature
would be denied no longer. His eyes closed, his
head drooped upon his breast. In three minutes
from the time he entered the shed he was stretched
full length upon the straw, fast asleep.
The chugging of a motor awakened him.
It was broad daylight. Many sounds came from
the courtyard without. It did not take Barney
long to gather his scattered wits in an
instant he was wide awake. He glanced about.
He was the only occupant of the shed. Rising,
he approached a small window that looked out upon
the court. All was life and movement. A
dozen military cars either stood about or moved in
and out of the wide gates at the opposite end of the
enclosure. Officers and soldiers moved briskly
through a doorway that led into a large building that
flanked the court upon one side. While Barney
slept the headquarters of an Austrian army corps had
moved in and taken possession of the building, the
back of which abutted upon the court where lay his
modest little shed.
Barney took it all in at a single
glance, but his eyes hung long and greedily upon the
great, high-powered machines that chugged or purred
about him.
Gad! If he could but be behind
the wheel of such a car for an hour! The frontier
could not be over fifty miles to the south, of that
he was quite positive; and what would fifty miles
be to one of those machines?
Barney sighed as a great, gray-painted
car whizzed into the courtyard and pulled up before
the doorway. Two officers jumped out and ran
up the steps. The driver, a young man in a uniform
not unlike that which Barney wore, drew the car around
to the end of the courtyard close beside Barney’s
shed. Here he left it and entered the building
into which his passengers had gone. By reaching
through the window Barney could have touched the fender
of the machine. A few seconds’ start in
that and it would take more than an Austrian army
corps to stop him this side of the border. Thus
mused Barney, knowing already that the mad scheme
that had been born within his brain would be put to
action before he was many minutes older.
There were many soldiers on guard
about the courtyard. The greatest danger lay
in arousing the suspicions of one of these should he
chance to see Barney emerge from the shed and enter
the car.
“The proper thing,” thought
Barney, “is to come from the building into which
everyone seems to pass, and the only way to be seen
coming out of it is to get into it; but how the devil
am I to get into it?”
The longer he thought the more convinced
he became that utter recklessness and boldness would
be his only salvation. Briskly he walked from
the shed out into the courtyard beneath the eyes of
the sentries, the officers, the soldiers, and the
military drivers. He moved straight among them
toward the doorway of the headquarters as though bent
upon important business which, indeed, he
was. At least it was quite the most important
business to Barney Custer that that young gentleman
could recall having ventured upon for some time.
No one paid the slightest attention
to him. He had left his gun in the shed for
he noticed that only the men on guard carried them.
Without an instant’s hesitation he ran briskly
up the short flight of steps and entered the headquarters
building. Inside was another sentry who barred
his way questioningly. Evidently one must state
one’s business to this person before going farther.
Barney, without any loss of time or composure, stepped
up to the guard.
“Has General Kampf passed in
this morning?” he asked blithely. Barney
had never heard of any “General Kampf,”
nor had the sentry, since there was no such person
in the Austrian army. But he did know, however,
that there were altogether too many generals for any
one soldier to know the names of them all.
“I do not know the general by
sight,” replied the sentry.
Here was a pretty mess, indeed.
Doubtless the sergeant would know a great deal more
than would be good for Barney Custer. The young
man looked toward the door through which he had just
entered. His sole object in coming into the spider’s
parlor had been to make it possible for him to come
out again in full view of all the guards and officers
and military chauffeurs, that their suspicions might
not be aroused when he put his contemplated coup to
the test.
He glanced toward the door.
Machines were whizzing in and out of the courtyard.
Officers on foot were passing and repassing. The
sentry in the hallway was on the point of calling his
sergeant.
“Ah!” cried Barney.
“There is the general now,” and without
waiting to cast even a parting glance at the guard
he stepped quickly through the doorway and ran down
the steps into the courtyard. Looking neither
to right nor to left, and with a convincing air of
self-confidence and important business, he walked directly
to the big, gray machine that stood beside the little
shed at the end of the courtyard.
To crank it and leap to the driver’s
seat required but a moment. The big car moved
smoothly forward. A turn of the steering wheel
brought it around headed toward the wide gates.
Barney shifted to second speed, stepped on the accelerator
and the cut-out simultaneously, and with a noise like
the rattle of a machine gun, shot out of the courtyard.
None who saw his departure could have
guessed from the manner of it that the young man at
the wheel of the gray car was stealing the machine
or that his life depended upon escape without detection.
It was the very boldness of his act that crowned it
with success.
Once in the street Barney turned toward
the south. Cars were passing up and down in
both directions, usually at high speed. Their
numbers protected the fugitive. Momentarily he
expected to be halted; but he passed out of the village
without mishap and reached a country road which, except
for a lane down its center along which automobiles
were moving, was blocked with troops marching southward.
Through this soldier-walled lane Barney drove for half
an hour.
From a great distance, toward the
southeast, he could hear the boom of cannon and the
bursting of shells. Presently the road forked.
The troops were moving along the road on the left
toward the distant battle line. Not a man or
machine was turning into the right fork, the road
toward the south that Barney wished to take.
Could he successfully pass through
the marching soldiers at his right? Among all
those officers there surely would be one who would
question the purpose and destination of this private
soldier who drove alone in the direction of the nearby
frontier.
The moment had come when he must stake
everything on his ability to gain the open road beyond
the plodding mass of troops. Diminishing the
speed of the car Barney turned it in toward the marching
men at the same time sounding his horn loudly.
An infantry captain, marching beside his company,
was directly in front of the car. He looked up
at the American. Barney saluted and pointed toward
the right-hand fork.
The captain turned and shouted a command
to his men. Those who had not passed in front
of the car halted. Barney shot through the little
lane they had opened, which immediately closed up behind
him. He was through! He was upon the open
road! Ahead, as far as he could see, there was
no sign of any living creature to bar his way, and
the frontier could not be more than twenty-five miles
away.