It was late in the afternoon of a
long summer’s day in Belgium. Father Van
Hove was still at work in the harvest-field, though
the sun hung so low in the west that his shadow, stretching
far across the level, green plain, reached almost
to the little red-roofed house on the edge of the
village which was its home. Another shadow, not
so long, and quite a little broader, stretched itself
beside his, for Mother Van Hove was also in the field,
helping her husband to load the golden sheaves upon
an old blue farm-cart which stood near by.
Them were also two short, fat shadows
which bobbed briskly about over the green meadow as
their owners danced among the wheat-sheaves or carried
handfuls of fresh grass to Pier, the patient white
farm-horse, hitched to the cart. These gay shadows
belonged to Jan and Marie, sometimes called by their
parents Janke and Mie, for short. Jan and
Marie were the twin son and daughter of Father and
Mother Van Hove, and though they were but eight years
old, they were already quite used to helping their
father and mother with the work of their little farm.
They knew how to feed the chickens
and hunt the eggs and lead Pier to water and pull
weeds in the garden. In the spring they had even
helped sow the wheat and barley, and now in the late
summer they were helping to harvest the grain.
The children had been in the field
since sunrise, but not all of the long bright day
had been given to labor. Early in the morning
their father’s pitchfork had uncovered a nest
of field mice, and the Twins had made another nest,
as much like the first as possible, to put the homeless
field babies in, hoping that their mother would find
them again and resume her interrupted housekeeping.
Then they had played for a long time
in the tiny canal which separated the wheat-field
from the meadow, where Bel, their black and white cow,
was pastured. There was also Fidel, the dog, their
faithful companion and friend. The children had
followed him on many an excursion among the willows
along the river-bank, for Fidel might at any moment
come upon the rabbit or water rat which he was always
seeking, and what a pity it would be for Jan and Marie
to miss a sight like that!
When the sun was high overhead, the
whole family, and Fidel also, had rested under a tree
by the little river, and Jan and Marie had shared
with their father and mother the bread and cheese which
had been brought from home for their noon meal.
Then they had taken a nap in the shade, for it is
a long day that begins and ends with the midsummer
sun. The bees hummed so drowsily in the clover
that Mother Van Hove also took forty winks, while
Father Van Hove led Pier to the river for a drink;
and tied him where he could enjoy the rich meadow grass
for a while.
And now the long day was nearly over.
The last level rays of the disappearing sun glistened
on the red roofs of the village, and the windows of
the little houses gave back an answering flash of light.
On the steeple of the tiny church the gilded cross
shone like fire against the gray of the eastern sky.
The village clock struck seven and
was answered faintly by the sound of distant chimes
from the Cathedral of Malines, miles away across the
plain.
For some time Father Van Hove had
been standing on top of the load, catching the sheaves
which Mother Van Hove tossed up to him, and stowing
them away in the farm-wagon, which was already heaped
high with the golden grain. As the clock struck,
he paused in his labor, took off his hat, and wiped
his brow. He listened for a moment to the music
of the bells, glanced at the western sky, already
rosy with promise of the sunset, and at the weather-cock
above the cross on the church-steeple. Then he
looked down at the sheaves of wheat, still standing
like tiny tents across the field.
“It’s no use, Mother,”
he said at last; “we cannot put it all in to-night,
but the sky gives promise of a fair day to-morrow,
and the weather-cock, also, points east. We can
finish in one more load; let us go home now.”
“The clock struck seven,”
cried Jan. “I counted the strokes.”
“What a scholar is our Janke!”
laughed his mother, as she lifted the last sheaf of
wheat on her fork and tossed it at Father Van Hove’s
feet. “He can count seven when it is supper-time!
As for me, I do not need a clock; I can tell the time
of day by the ache in my bones; and, besides that,
there is Bel at the pasture bars waiting to be milked
and bellowing to call me.”
“I don’t need a clock
either,” chimed in Marie, patting her apron
tenderly; “I can tell time by my stomach.
It’s a hundred years since we ate our lunch;
I know it is.”
“Come, then, my starvelings,”
said Mother Van Hove, pinching Marie’s fat cheek,
“and you shall save your strength by riding home
on the load! Here, Ma mie, up
you go!”
She swung Marie into the air as she
spoke. Father Van Hove reached down from his
perch on top of the load, caught her in his arms, and
enthroned her upon the fragrant grain.
“And now it is your turn, my
Janke!” cried Mother Van Hove, “and you
shall ride on the back of old Pier like a soldier going
to the wars!” She lifted Jan to the horse’s
back, while Father Van Hove climbed down to earth
once more and took up the reins.
Fidel came back dripping wet from
the river, shook himself, and fell in behind the wagon.
“U-U!” cried Father Van Hove
to old Pier, and the little procession moved slowly
up the cart-path toward the shining windows of their
red-roofed house.
The home of the Van Hoves lay
on the very outskirts of the little hamlet of Meer.
Beside it ran a yellow ribbon of road which stretched
across the green plain clear to the city of Malines.
As they turned from the cart-path into the road, the
old blue cart became part of a little profession of
similar wagons, for the other men of Meer were also
late in coming home to the village from their outlying
farms.
“Good-evening, neighbor,”
cried Father Van Hove to Father Maes, whose home lay
beyond his in the village. “How are your
crops coming on?”
“Never better,” answered
Father Maes; “I have more wheat to the acre
than ever before.”
“So have I, thanks be to the
good God;” answered Father Van Hove. “The
winter will find our barns full this year.”
“Yes,” replied Father
Maes a little sadly; “that is, if we have no
bad luck, but Jules Verhulst was in the city yesterday
and heard rumors of a German army on our borders.
It is very likely only an idle tale to frighten the
women and children, but Jules says there are men also
who believe it.”
“I shall believe nothing of
the sort,” said Father Van Hove stoutly.
“Are we not safe under the protection of our
treaty? No, no, neighbor, there’s nothing
to fear! Belgium is neutral ground.”
“I hope you may be right,”
answered Father Maes, cracking his whip, and the cart
moved on.
Mother Van Hove, meanwhile, had hastened
ahead of the cart to stir up the kitchen fire and
put the kettle on before the others should reach home,
and when Father Van Hove at last drove into the farmyard,
she was already on the way to the pasture bars with
her milk-pail on her arm. “Set the table
for supper, ma Mie,” she called back,
“and do not let the pot boil over! Jan,
you may shut up the fowls; they have already gone
to roost.”
“And what shall I do, Mother?” laughed
Father Van Hove.
“You,” she called back,
“you may unharness Pier and turn him out in the
pasture for the night! And I’ll wager I
shall be back with a full milk-pail before you’ve
even so much as fed the pig, let alone the other chores-men
are so slow!” She waved her hand gayly and disappeared
behind the pasture bars, as she spoke.
“Hurry, now, my man,”
said Father Van Hove to Jan. “We must not
let Mother beat us! We will let the cart stand
right there near the barn, and to-morrow we can store
the grain away to make room for a new load. I
will let you lead Pier to the pasture, while I feed
the pig myself; by her squeals she is hungry enough
to eat you up in one mouthful.”